The
historie
of foure-footed beastes .
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v04
, R.
An olde thrift newly revived .
.
.
the manner of planting, preserving,
and husbanding yong trees. 1612.
Fitzherbert, J. A newe tracte or treatyse moost profytable for all husband-
men. Pynson (not later than 1523). Ed. Skeat, W. W. , English Dialect
Soc. , 1882. (See Eng. Hist. Review, XII, 225 (1897). )
The boke of surveying. Pynson, 1523.
Henley, Walter of. Boke of Husbandry. Ed. by Lamond, E. and Cunning-
ham, W. 1890.
Mascall, L. The husbandlye ordring and governmente of poultrie. 1581.
Plat, H. The jewell house of art and nature. Conteining divers rare and
profitable inventions, together with sundry new experimentes in the art
of husbandry, distillation, and moulding. 1594.
· The new and admirable arte of setting corne. (About 1596. )
Sundrie new and artificiall remedies against famine. 1596.
Standish, A. The commons complaint. . . . The generall destruction and waste
of woods in this kingdome. . . . 1611.
New directions of experience to the commons complaint . . . for the
planting of timber and fire-wood. 1613.
Surflet, R. Maison rustique or the countrie-farme. 1600.
Tusser, T. (See bibl. to vol. III, chap. vii. )
## p. 542 (#564) ############################################
542
Bibliography
a
Gardening, Bees, etc.
Butler, C. The feminine monarchie, or a treatise concerning bees. Oxford,
1609.
F. , N. The fruiterers secrets. 1604.
Gardiner, R. Profitable instructions for the manuring, sowing, and planting
of kitchen gardens. 1599.
Harward, S. The art of propagating plants, in Lawson's New Orchard. 1626.
Hill, T. (Didymus Mountain). A most briefe and pleasaunt treatyse, teachynge
how to dress, sowe, and set a garden. 1563, 1568, etc.
A pleasaunt instruction of the parfit ordering of bees. 1568.
The gardeners labyrinth (completed by Henry Dethick). 1577.
Lawson, W. A new orchard and garden. 1618.
Mascall, L. A booke of the arte and maner, howe to plant and graffe all
sortes of trees. 1572.
Orchard (The), and the garden: containing certaine necessarie, secret, and
ordinarie knowledges in grafting and gardening. . . . 1602.
Parkinson, J. Paradisi in sole, paradisus terrestris, or a garden of all sorts of
pleasant flowers . . . with a kitchen garden . . . and an orchard. 1629.
Passe, C. de. A garden of flowers. (Trans. by E. W. ) Utrecht, 1615.
Platt, H. Floraes paradise, beautified and adorned with sundry sorts of
delicate fruites and flowers. 1608.
Scot, R. A perfite platforme of a hoppe-garden. 1574.
Herbals.
Andrew, L. The vertuose boke of distyllacyon of the waters of all maner of
herbes. 1527.
Ascham, A. A little herball. 1550.
C. , W (W. Copland ? ). A boke of the propreties of herbes. 1549 (? ). A re-
issue of A newe mater, 1525.
Gerard, J. The herball, or generall historie of plantes. 1597. (Revised and
enlarged by Thomas Johnson, 1633. )
Grete herball (The). P. Treveris, Southwark, 1526.
Hollybush, J. A most excellent and perfecte homish apothecarye, or a homely
physick booke. Cologne, 1561.
Langham, W. The garden of health, conteyning the sundry rare and hidden
vertues and properties of all kindes of simples and plants. 1579.
Lyte, H. A niewe herball or historie of plantes . . . set foorth in the Doutche
or Almaigne tongue by . . . Rembert Dodoens. . . . Nowe first translated
ont of French. 1578.
Macers herbal practysid by Doctor Linacro. (About 1530. )
A new herball of Macer. (About 1535. )
Parkinson, J. Theatrum botanicum. The theater of plants, or an universall
and compleate herball. 1640.
Ram, W. Rams little Dodeon. A briefe epitome of Lyte (see above). 1606.
Turner, W. The names of herbes in Greke, Latin, Englishe, Duche and
Frenche, with the commune names that herbaries and apotecaries use.
(About 1548. )
A new herball. 1551. Second part. Cologne, 1562.
Tobacco.
(See bibliography to chap. xvi. )
Natural History, etc.
Bacon, F. Sylva sylvarum: or a naturall historie. 1627.
Goffe, N. The perfcct use of silk-wormes. 1607.
9
•
## p. 543 (#565) ############################################
Chapter XVII
543
Maplet, J. A greene forest, or, naturall historie: wherein may bee seene
first the most sufferaigne vertues in all the whole kinde of stones and
mettals: next of plants . . . lastly of brute beastes, foules, etc. 1567.
Moffet, T. Insectorum sive minimorum animalium theatrum. 1634.
S. , W. Instructions for the increasing of mulberie trees, and the breeding of
silke-wormes for the making of silke in this kingdome. 1609.
Topsell, E.
The historie of foure-footed beastes . . . collected out of all the
volumes of Conradus Gesner, etc. 1607.
The historie of serpents, or the second book of living creatures. 1608.
Housewifery.
Boke of cookery. Pynson, 1500.
Butts, H. Dyets dry dinner. 1599.
Closet (A) for ladies and gentlewomen, or, the art of preserving, conserving,
and candying. 1608.
Dawson, T. The good huswifes jewell . . . most excellent and rare devises
for conceites in cookery. 1596.
Murrell, J. A delightfull daily exercise for ladies and gentlewomen. Where-
by is set foorth the secrete misteries of the purest preservings in glasses
and other confrictionaries. 1621.
- A new booke of cookerie, with the newest art of carving and serving.
(About 1630. )
Plat, H. Delightes for ladies, to adorne their persons, tables, closets, and
distillatories. With beauties, bouquets, perfumes and waters. 1602.
Tasso, T. The householders philosophie. 1558.
Xenophon's treatise of householde. 1534. (Translated by Gentian Hervet. )
Heraldry.
Bolton, E. The elements of armories. 1610.
Book of honor and arms. 1590. (Sir Wm Segar ? . )
Book of St Albans. St Albans (about 1486). (Part in treats of coat-armour. )
Bossewell, J. Workes of armorie. 1572.
Brooke, R. A catalogue and succession of the kings, princes, dukes,
marquesses, earles, and viscounts of this realme . . . with their armes,
wives, and children. 1619.
Favine, A. The theater of honour and knight-hood. 1623.
Ferne, J. The blazon of gentrie. 1586.
Guillim, J. A display of heraldrie. 1611 (1610).
Holland, H. Basiliologia . . . effigies of all our English kings . . . with their
severall coats of arms, impresses, and devices. 1618.
Legh, G. The accedens of armory. 1562.
Milles, T. The catalogue of honor, or tresury of true nobility. 1610.
Peacham, H. The compleat gentleman. 1622. (Contains chapters on
heraldry. )
Robinson, R. A rare, true, and proper blazon of coloures in armoryes and
ensigns. 1583.
Segar, W. Honor military and civill. 1602.
Wyrley, W. The true use of armorie. 1592. (See, also, Camden, Seiden, etc. )
## p. 544 (#566) ############################################
544
Bibliography
CHAPTER XVIII
THE BOOK TRADE, 1557-1625
Arber, E. A transcript of the registers of the Company of Stationers of
London, 1554-1640. 5 vols. Privately printed, 1875–94.
British Museum catalogue of books printed in England, Scotland and
Ireland, and of books in English printed abroad to the year 1640.
3 vols. 1884.
Dibdin, T. F. Typographical antiquities. Begun by Joseph Ames, aug-
mented by William Herbert. 4 vols. 1810-19.
Hazlitt, W. C. Hand-book to the popular, poetical, and dramatic literature
of Great Britain. 1867. Bibliographical Collections and Notes. 6 vols.
1876-1903. Index by Gray, G. J. 1893.
Herbert, W. Typographical antiquities: or an historical account of printing
in Great Britain and Ireland. Begun by Joseph Ames. 3 vols. 1785-90.
Sayle, C. E. Early English printed books in the University Library, Cam-
bridge (1475-1640). 4 vols. Cambridge, 1900-7.
8
Arber, E. A list of 837 London publishers between 1553 and 1640.
Birmingham, 1890. (An advance issue of part of vol. V of the
Transcript of the Stationers' register. )
Ballads. See bibliography to chap. XVI.
Bibliographical Society. Transactions and Monographs. 1893 ff.
Bigmore, E. C. and Wyman, C. W. H. A bibliography of printing. 3 vols.
1880-6.
Chatto, W. A. and Jackson, J. A treatise on wood engraving. 1861.
Colvin, S. Early engraving and engravers in England (1545-1695). 1905.
Contributions towards a dictionary of English book-collectors. Parts 1-XIII.
Quaritch, B. , 1892-9.
Duff, E. G. A century of the English book trade, 1457-1557. Bibliographical
Society. 1905.
Notes on stationers from the Lay Subsidy Rolls of 1523-4. The Library,
1908, pp. 257-266.
The printers, stationers and bookbinders of Westminster and London
from 1476 to 1535. Cambridge, 1906.
The stationers at the sign of the Trinity. Bibliographica, vol. 1, 1895.
Elton, C. I. and M. A. The great book-collectors. 1893.
Fletcher, W. Y. English book collectors. 1902.
Greg, W. W. A list of English plays written before 1643 and printed before
1700. Bibliographical Society. 1900.
A list of masques, pageants, etc. ; supplementary to A list of English
plays. Bibliographical Society. 1902.
On certain false dates in Shakespearian quartos. The Library, 1908,
pp. 113-131, 381-409. See also Athenæum, 1908, vol. 1, 544, 574, 669.
,
Griffiths, L. M. Evenings with Shakspere. 1887.
and husbanding yong trees. 1612.
Fitzherbert, J. A newe tracte or treatyse moost profytable for all husband-
men. Pynson (not later than 1523). Ed. Skeat, W. W. , English Dialect
Soc. , 1882. (See Eng. Hist. Review, XII, 225 (1897). )
The boke of surveying. Pynson, 1523.
Henley, Walter of. Boke of Husbandry. Ed. by Lamond, E. and Cunning-
ham, W. 1890.
Mascall, L. The husbandlye ordring and governmente of poultrie. 1581.
Plat, H. The jewell house of art and nature. Conteining divers rare and
profitable inventions, together with sundry new experimentes in the art
of husbandry, distillation, and moulding. 1594.
· The new and admirable arte of setting corne. (About 1596. )
Sundrie new and artificiall remedies against famine. 1596.
Standish, A. The commons complaint. . . . The generall destruction and waste
of woods in this kingdome. . . . 1611.
New directions of experience to the commons complaint . . . for the
planting of timber and fire-wood. 1613.
Surflet, R. Maison rustique or the countrie-farme. 1600.
Tusser, T. (See bibl. to vol. III, chap. vii. )
## p. 542 (#564) ############################################
542
Bibliography
a
Gardening, Bees, etc.
Butler, C. The feminine monarchie, or a treatise concerning bees. Oxford,
1609.
F. , N. The fruiterers secrets. 1604.
Gardiner, R. Profitable instructions for the manuring, sowing, and planting
of kitchen gardens. 1599.
Harward, S. The art of propagating plants, in Lawson's New Orchard. 1626.
Hill, T. (Didymus Mountain). A most briefe and pleasaunt treatyse, teachynge
how to dress, sowe, and set a garden. 1563, 1568, etc.
A pleasaunt instruction of the parfit ordering of bees. 1568.
The gardeners labyrinth (completed by Henry Dethick). 1577.
Lawson, W. A new orchard and garden. 1618.
Mascall, L. A booke of the arte and maner, howe to plant and graffe all
sortes of trees. 1572.
Orchard (The), and the garden: containing certaine necessarie, secret, and
ordinarie knowledges in grafting and gardening. . . . 1602.
Parkinson, J. Paradisi in sole, paradisus terrestris, or a garden of all sorts of
pleasant flowers . . . with a kitchen garden . . . and an orchard. 1629.
Passe, C. de. A garden of flowers. (Trans. by E. W. ) Utrecht, 1615.
Platt, H. Floraes paradise, beautified and adorned with sundry sorts of
delicate fruites and flowers. 1608.
Scot, R. A perfite platforme of a hoppe-garden. 1574.
Herbals.
Andrew, L. The vertuose boke of distyllacyon of the waters of all maner of
herbes. 1527.
Ascham, A. A little herball. 1550.
C. , W (W. Copland ? ). A boke of the propreties of herbes. 1549 (? ). A re-
issue of A newe mater, 1525.
Gerard, J. The herball, or generall historie of plantes. 1597. (Revised and
enlarged by Thomas Johnson, 1633. )
Grete herball (The). P. Treveris, Southwark, 1526.
Hollybush, J. A most excellent and perfecte homish apothecarye, or a homely
physick booke. Cologne, 1561.
Langham, W. The garden of health, conteyning the sundry rare and hidden
vertues and properties of all kindes of simples and plants. 1579.
Lyte, H. A niewe herball or historie of plantes . . . set foorth in the Doutche
or Almaigne tongue by . . . Rembert Dodoens. . . . Nowe first translated
ont of French. 1578.
Macers herbal practysid by Doctor Linacro. (About 1530. )
A new herball of Macer. (About 1535. )
Parkinson, J. Theatrum botanicum. The theater of plants, or an universall
and compleate herball. 1640.
Ram, W. Rams little Dodeon. A briefe epitome of Lyte (see above). 1606.
Turner, W. The names of herbes in Greke, Latin, Englishe, Duche and
Frenche, with the commune names that herbaries and apotecaries use.
(About 1548. )
A new herball. 1551. Second part. Cologne, 1562.
Tobacco.
(See bibliography to chap. xvi. )
Natural History, etc.
Bacon, F. Sylva sylvarum: or a naturall historie. 1627.
Goffe, N. The perfcct use of silk-wormes. 1607.
9
•
## p. 543 (#565) ############################################
Chapter XVII
543
Maplet, J. A greene forest, or, naturall historie: wherein may bee seene
first the most sufferaigne vertues in all the whole kinde of stones and
mettals: next of plants . . . lastly of brute beastes, foules, etc. 1567.
Moffet, T. Insectorum sive minimorum animalium theatrum. 1634.
S. , W. Instructions for the increasing of mulberie trees, and the breeding of
silke-wormes for the making of silke in this kingdome. 1609.
Topsell, E.
The historie of foure-footed beastes . . . collected out of all the
volumes of Conradus Gesner, etc. 1607.
The historie of serpents, or the second book of living creatures. 1608.
Housewifery.
Boke of cookery. Pynson, 1500.
Butts, H. Dyets dry dinner. 1599.
Closet (A) for ladies and gentlewomen, or, the art of preserving, conserving,
and candying. 1608.
Dawson, T. The good huswifes jewell . . . most excellent and rare devises
for conceites in cookery. 1596.
Murrell, J. A delightfull daily exercise for ladies and gentlewomen. Where-
by is set foorth the secrete misteries of the purest preservings in glasses
and other confrictionaries. 1621.
- A new booke of cookerie, with the newest art of carving and serving.
(About 1630. )
Plat, H. Delightes for ladies, to adorne their persons, tables, closets, and
distillatories. With beauties, bouquets, perfumes and waters. 1602.
Tasso, T. The householders philosophie. 1558.
Xenophon's treatise of householde. 1534. (Translated by Gentian Hervet. )
Heraldry.
Bolton, E. The elements of armories. 1610.
Book of honor and arms. 1590. (Sir Wm Segar ? . )
Book of St Albans. St Albans (about 1486). (Part in treats of coat-armour. )
Bossewell, J. Workes of armorie. 1572.
Brooke, R. A catalogue and succession of the kings, princes, dukes,
marquesses, earles, and viscounts of this realme . . . with their armes,
wives, and children. 1619.
Favine, A. The theater of honour and knight-hood. 1623.
Ferne, J. The blazon of gentrie. 1586.
Guillim, J. A display of heraldrie. 1611 (1610).
Holland, H. Basiliologia . . . effigies of all our English kings . . . with their
severall coats of arms, impresses, and devices. 1618.
Legh, G. The accedens of armory. 1562.
Milles, T. The catalogue of honor, or tresury of true nobility. 1610.
Peacham, H. The compleat gentleman. 1622. (Contains chapters on
heraldry. )
Robinson, R. A rare, true, and proper blazon of coloures in armoryes and
ensigns. 1583.
Segar, W. Honor military and civill. 1602.
Wyrley, W. The true use of armorie. 1592. (See, also, Camden, Seiden, etc. )
## p. 544 (#566) ############################################
544
Bibliography
CHAPTER XVIII
THE BOOK TRADE, 1557-1625
Arber, E. A transcript of the registers of the Company of Stationers of
London, 1554-1640. 5 vols. Privately printed, 1875–94.
British Museum catalogue of books printed in England, Scotland and
Ireland, and of books in English printed abroad to the year 1640.
3 vols. 1884.
Dibdin, T. F. Typographical antiquities. Begun by Joseph Ames, aug-
mented by William Herbert. 4 vols. 1810-19.
Hazlitt, W. C. Hand-book to the popular, poetical, and dramatic literature
of Great Britain. 1867. Bibliographical Collections and Notes. 6 vols.
1876-1903. Index by Gray, G. J. 1893.
Herbert, W. Typographical antiquities: or an historical account of printing
in Great Britain and Ireland. Begun by Joseph Ames. 3 vols. 1785-90.
Sayle, C. E. Early English printed books in the University Library, Cam-
bridge (1475-1640). 4 vols. Cambridge, 1900-7.
8
Arber, E. A list of 837 London publishers between 1553 and 1640.
Birmingham, 1890. (An advance issue of part of vol. V of the
Transcript of the Stationers' register. )
Ballads. See bibliography to chap. XVI.
Bibliographical Society. Transactions and Monographs. 1893 ff.
Bigmore, E. C. and Wyman, C. W. H. A bibliography of printing. 3 vols.
1880-6.
Chatto, W. A. and Jackson, J. A treatise on wood engraving. 1861.
Colvin, S. Early engraving and engravers in England (1545-1695). 1905.
Contributions towards a dictionary of English book-collectors. Parts 1-XIII.
Quaritch, B. , 1892-9.
Duff, E. G. A century of the English book trade, 1457-1557. Bibliographical
Society. 1905.
Notes on stationers from the Lay Subsidy Rolls of 1523-4. The Library,
1908, pp. 257-266.
The printers, stationers and bookbinders of Westminster and London
from 1476 to 1535. Cambridge, 1906.
The stationers at the sign of the Trinity. Bibliographica, vol. 1, 1895.
Elton, C. I. and M. A. The great book-collectors. 1893.
Fletcher, W. Y. English book collectors. 1902.
Greg, W. W. A list of English plays written before 1643 and printed before
1700. Bibliographical Society. 1900.
A list of masques, pageants, etc. ; supplementary to A list of English
plays. Bibliographical Society. 1902.
On certain false dates in Shakespearian quartos. The Library, 1908,
pp. 113-131, 381-409. See also Athenæum, 1908, vol. 1, 544, 574, 669.
,
Griffiths, L. M. Evenings with Shakspere. 1887.