William Vallans (fl. 1578–1590) was an English poet.
His poem is one of the earliest examples of the employment of blank verse in English literature outside drama, and he was perhaps induced to attempt this form of metre by his admiration for Abraham Fraunce, from whose translation of Thomas Watson's Latin Odes he quotes. His book is rare: it was reprinted by Thomas Hearne (1678–1735) in 1711 in the fifth volume of his edition of Leland's Itinerary from a copy in the possession of Thomas Rawlinson (1681–1725) Another poem by "William Vallans, salter", is preserved in the Harleian manuscripts (No. 367, f. 129). It complains of the injustice of suffering John Stowe to go unrewarded after compiling his Survey of London.
Vallans had some commendatory verses prefixed to Whartons Dreame, published in 1578; and Hearne assigned to him the authorship of The Honourable Prentice; or thys Tayler is a Man; shewed in the Life and Death of Sir John Hawkewood, by W. V., London, 1615 and 1616.
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