Probably descended from a namesake who was twice mayor of Lynn in the 1380s, Waryn was almost certainly the man who became a freeman of the town in December 1427. Assuming his father was a burgess, he was a younger son because he purchased his freedom, the automatic right to which pertained only to first-born sons.
Waryn was a merchant, and in the late 1420s he, Thomas Burgh* and Bartholomew Petipas* sued a number of foreign merchants from Hamburg in England’s admiralty court for allegedly seizing goods belonging to them. They won their suit, but in response the defendants appealed to the King, claiming that the court had pronounced an unjust sentence against them.
By the mid 1430s, Waryn was a prominent local figure, listed among those in Norfolk whom the government expected to swear the oath to keep the peace administered throughout the country in 1434.
Waryn sat in his only Parliament a couple of years before becoming alderman of the Trinity guild. Within a month of the Parliament of 1437 opening at Westminster, he and his fellow MP, Thomas Burgh, sent a letter to the mayor, who prepared a response for them.
Besides sitting in Parliament, Waryn participated in negotiations concerning Lynn with its feudal lord, the bishop of Norwich, on several occasions in the late 1430s and early 1440s.
By that date, Waryn no longer held any official position at Lynn, save his place on the 24. Still a member of that council at Michaelmas 1450, he was dead by the following May when John Pygot, one of his executors, went to his house to take charge of a chest.
