Edmund Waller

Edmund Waller
Portrait by John Riley, c. 1685
Member of Parliament
for Saltash
In office
May 1685 – November 1685 (suspended)
Member of Parliament
for Hastings
In office
1661–1679
Member of Parliament
for St Ives
In office
December 1640 – July 1643 (expelled)
Member of Parliament
for Amersham
1628
In office
April 1640 – May 1640
Member of Parliament
for Wycombe
In office
December 1625 – June 1626
Member of Parliament
for Ilchester
In office
February 1624 – March 1625
Personal details
Born(1606-03-03)3 March 1606
Died21 October 1687(1687-10-21) (aged 81)
St James's, London, England
Cause of deathOedema
Resting placeSt Mary and All Saints Church, Beaconsfield
EducationRGS Wycombe, Eton College
Alma materKing's College, Cambridge
OccupationPoet and Politician

Edmund Waller, 3 March 1606 to 21 October 1687, was a poet and politician from Buckinghamshire. He sat as MP for various constituencies between 1624 and 1687, and was one of the longest serving members of the English House of Commons. Although considered a major poet by contemporaries, his literary reputation declined after his death, and he is now rarely read.

Waller first entered Parliament in 1624, although he played little part in the political struggles prior to the outbreak of the First English Civil War in 1642. Unlike his relatives William and Hardress Waller, he was Royalist in sympathy. In 1643, he was accused of plotting to seize London for Charles I, and allegedly escaped execution by paying a large bribe.

After his sentence was commuted to banishment, he lived in France and Switzerland until allowed home in 1651 by Oliver Cromwell, a distant relative. He returned to Parliament after the 1660 Stuart Restoration, but retired from active politics in 1677, and died of oedema in October 1687.