As in the case of the
bibliography
to chap.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v02
Anglia, XXI, 312 ff.
Fränkel, L. Zur Gesch. von Robin Hood. Eng. Stud. XVII, 316.
Gilchrist, J. A collection of Scottish Ballads, etc. 2 vols. Edinburgh,
1815.
Görbing, F. Beispiele von realisierten Mythen in den engl. u. schott. Balladen.
Anglia, XXIII, 1 ff.
Grundtvig, 8. H. Danmarks gamle Folkeviser. 5 vols. Copenhagen,
1853 ff.
Gutch, J. M. A Lytyll Geste of Robin Hode. 2 vols. 1847.
Hales, J. W. Folio Litteraria. 1893. For Chevy Chase.
Herd, D. Ancient and Modern Scots Songs, etc. Edinburgh, 1769. 2nd ed.
1776.
Jamieson, R. Popular Ballads and Songs. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1806.
Johnson, J. The Scots Musical Museum. 6 vols. Edinburgh, 1787-1803.
Ed. Stenhouse, W. and Laing, D. 4 vols. 1853.
Kinloch, G. Ancient Scottish Ballads. 1827.
Laing, D. Select Remains of the Ancient Popular Poetry of Scotland. 1822.
Ed. Small, J. 1885.
Early Popular Poetry of Scotland and the Border. 1822-6. Ed.
Hazlitt, W. C. 2 vols. 1895.
Lang, A. Myth, Ritual and Religion. 2 vols. 1887.
In Quarterly Review, July 1898; Chambers's Cyclopaedia of English Lit. ,
vol. 1, pp. 520 ff. , 1901; Blackwood's Magazine, CLVIII, Sept. 1895.
Lemcke, C. , in Jahrbuch f. rom, u. engl. Lit. iv, 1, 142, 297 ff.
Maidment, J. A North Countrie Garland. Edinburgh, 1824.
Scottish Ballads. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1868.
Motherwell, W. Minstrelsy, Ancient and Modern. Glasgow, 1827.
Newell, W. W. Games and Songs of American Children. New York, 1883.
Percy, T. Reliques of Ancient English Poetry. 3 vols. 1765. Ed. Wheatley
H. B. 3 vols. 1876–7. Ed. Schröer, A. 2 Hälften. Heilbronn, 1889-93.
Pinkerton, J. Scottish Tragic Ballads. 1781. See also Select Scottish
Ballads, 2 vols. , 1783.
[Phillips, A. ] A Collection of Old Ballads. 3 vols. 1723-5.
Ramsay, A. The Ever Green. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1724.
The Tea Table Miscellany. 1724 ff. 4 vols.
## p. 495 (#513) ############################################
Chapter XVII
495
:
Reliquiae Antiquae, ed. Halliwell, J. O. and Wright, T. , for the Judas
ballad (p. 144).
Ritson, J. Ancient Songs and Ballads. 2 vols. 1792. Ed. Hazlitt, W. C.
1877.
Ancient Popular Poetry. 1791. Ed. Goldsmid, E. 1884.
Scotish Song. 2 vols. 1794.
Select Collection of English Songs. 1783. Ed. Park, T. 3 vols. 1813.
Romantic Scottish Ballads: their epoch and authorship. n. d.
Russell, J. The Haigs of Bemersyde. Edinburgh, 1881. _(Chap. xiv for
social conditions of Old Border life, is quoted by Davidson, T. , in Chambers's
Encyclopaedia. )
Saintsbury, G. A History of English Prosody. Vol. 1. 1906.
Sharpe, C. K. A Ballad Book. Edinburgh, 1823. New ed. by Laing, D. ,
1880.
Scottish Minstrel, The. 1808.
Songster, Universal, The, or museum of mirth. 3 vols. (1825-6. ]
Veitch, J. History and Poetry of the Scottish Border. 1878. New ed.
2 vols. Glasgow, 1893.
Whitelaw, A. The Book of Scottish Ballads. Glasgow, 1844.
See also under Ballads, in W. P. Courtney's Register of National Biblio-
graphy, vol. I, p. 47, 1905, for catalogues of broadsides, eto.
F. B. G. & A. R. W.
CHAPTER XVIII
POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS VERSE TO THE CLOSE OF
THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY-FINAL WORDS
SUPPLEMENTARY BIBLIOGRAPHY AND NOTES.
As in the case of the bibliography to chap. XVII, vol. 1, a few works on the
social and political history of England during the Middle Ages are included
in the following bibliography; and advantage has been taken of the
opportunity afforded by a concluding chapter to add a few notes on books
and writers not specifically dealt with elsewhere. References to other histories
of English literature have been added in cases where fuller details are given
than has been either possible or deemed desirable in this work.
In addition to the general bibliographies mentioned on p. 419, vol. I,
W. Swan Sonnenschein's Best Books, 1891, and Reader's Guide to Con-
temporary Literature, 1895, may be mentioned as very useful aids, and, in
their respective spheres, G. K. Fortescue's Index of Printed Books added
to the British Museum during the past 25 years, and C. Sayle’s Early English
Printed Books in the University Library, Cambridge (1475-1640), 4 vols. ,
Cambridge, 1900-7, are invaluable. The catalogue of the London Library,
1903, and its various supplements, will also be found useful.
The Appendix volume to W. T. Lowndes's Bibliographer's Manual, compiled
by H. G. Bohn (1864), contains a useful list of the publications of the Rox-
burghe, Bannatyne and Maitland Clubs, Surtees Society, Abbotsford Club,
Camden Society, Spalding Club, Irish Archaeological, Parker, Percy, Aelfrio
## p. 496 (#514) ############################################
496
Bibliography
Chetham, Philobiblon, Caxton, English Historical and Ossianic Societies,
Warton Club, and other literary, learned and scientific societies; of books
printed at private presses (Auchinleck, Lee Priory, etc. ); and of privately
printed series (J. Payne Collier, Halliwell, Maidment, Turnbull, Russell
Smith, etc. ). A revised edition of Lowndes, brought up to date, would be
a very great boon indeed to all workers in English literature.
English and Latin Writers and Texts.
Adam of Usk (A. 1400), chronicler (1377-1404). Ed. Thompson, E. M.
1876.
Audelay, John. Poems: a specimen of the Shropshire dialect in the 15th cent.
Ed. Halliwell, J. 0. Percy Society. 1844.
Baker, Geoffrey (A. 1350). For Baker's chronicles and for Sir Thomas de la
More, see Stubbs, W. , Chronicles of Edw. I and II, Rolls Series, 1882–3;
and ed. Thompson, E. M. , Oxford, 1889.
Baston, Robert (A. 1300), scholar of Oxfor and poet, of whom it is asserted
that, when captured by Robert Bruce, he was obliged to buy his release
by composing poems of exultation over the defeat of the English.
Cott. MS, Titus A. XX.
Berners, Dame Juliana. Cf. Le Venery de Twety, Reliq. Ant. , vol. I, p. 149,
and also The Booke of Hawkyng, Rel. Ant. , vol. 1. p. 293.
Blaneforde, Henry (f. 1330), chronicler. Ed. Riley, H. T. , in Chronica
Monast. S. Albani. Rolls Series. 1866.
Brampton, T. Paraphrase on the Seven Penitential Psalms (1414). Percy
Society. 1842.
Elmbam, Thomas (d. 1440 ? ), chronicler of St Augustine's monastery,
Canterbury, and biographer of Henry V. Ed. Hardwick, C. Rolls
Series. 1858. Memorials of Henry V. Ed. Cole, C. A. Rolls Series.
1858. See also ed. Hearn, T. , Oxford, 1727.
Fabyan, Robert (d. 1513), a careful will-maker, if a poor chronicler, whose
Concordance of Histories, printed by Pynson, 1516, ed. Ellis, H. , 1811,
is not without its value with respect to the history of London. See
Warton, T. , Hist. Eng. Poet. , vol. 11 (1840), sect. XXVII.
Gascoigne, T. (1403-58). Dictionarium Theologicum. Extracts printed by
J. E. Thorold Rogers, Oxford, 1881, illustrative of matters concerning
church and state.
Geoffrey the Grammarian, or Starkey (A. 1440), author of an English-Latin
dictionary, Promptorium Parvulorum or Promptuarium Parvulorum
Clericorum. A work of much importance with respect to 15th cent. East
Anglian English. Printed by Pynson, Wynkyn de Worde, etc. Ed.
Way, A. 3 vols. Camden Soc. 1843-65. The E. E. T. S. has an edition
in hand. A Hortus, or Latin-English dictionary, printed by Wynkyn de
Worde in 1500, may be based on another of Starkey's works.
Grey, Wm. (d. 1478), scholar of Oxford, bishop of Ely, humanist and
collector of books, many of which are still among the treasures of Balliol.
See vol. 111 of the present work, chapter I.
Hardyng, John (1378–1465 ? ), chronicler. Of the literary merit of Hardyng's
English Chronicle in Metre fro the first Begynning of Englande unto
the Reigne of Edwarde the Fourth (printed by Grafton in 1543 and
reprinted by Ellis, H. , in 1812), little can be said save that, though be
‘poisoned the wells' by manufacturing certain of his documents, he
carried on the work of the earlier chroniclers. See Palgrave, F. , Docu-
ments and records illustrating the history of Scotland, 1837.
## p. 497 (#515) ############################################
Chapter XVIII
497
a
Humphrey, duke of Gloucester (1391-1447). The 'good duke Humphrey,
a lover of books and a beneficent disposer of them, patron and friend
of many scholars, of Ashley, Capgrave, Lydgate, Pecock, Whethamstede,
'kept such a house as was never yet kept in England' (Latimer),
gave his books to a university which still cherishes his name in its library
and should be remembered among the people of importance' in the 15th
century. The part taken by him in the foundation of libraries will be con-
sidered in a later section of the present work devoted to book-collections.
See Ten Brink, B. , Hist. Eng. Lit. , vol. 11, Eng. trans. , 1901, pp. 310 ff. and
319 ff. ; Warton, T. , History of English Poetry, 1840, vol. II, sect. xx,
pp. 264 ff. ; and Pauli, R. , Pictures of Old England (Eng. trans. ),
1861.
Ingulph (d. 1109), abbot of Crowland or Croyland. For the fourteenth and
fifteenth century chronicle erroneously associated with his name, see
Savile, H. , Scriptores post Bedam, 1596; Riley, H. T. , 1854; Liebermann,
F. , Über ostenglische Geschichtsquellen des 12, 13, 14 Jahrhunderts
besonders den falschen Ingulf (N. Archiv f. ält. deutsche Gesch. -Kunde,
Bd. XVIII, Hanover, 1892); Birch, W. de G. , Chronicle of Croyland
Abbey, 1883; Searle, W. G. , Ingulf and the Historia Croylandensis, Camb.
Antiq. Soc. , 1894.
John of Bury (A. 1460), Cambridge scholar and opponent of Pecock. MS of
Gladius Salomonis in Bodleian, extracts in Babington's ed. of Pecock's
Repressor.
Knighton (or Cnitthon), Henry (ft. 1363), chronicler (from the days of
Edgar to 1366). The continuation of Knighton's work, by another hand,
is valuable in respect of Wyclif and the peasants' revolt. Ed. Lumby,
J. R. Rolls Series. 1889-95.
Lanercost Chronicle (1201-1346), useful for the history of the Border, etc.
Ed. Stevenson, J. 1839. Imbedded in this chronicle, under date 1244, is
the English couplet
Wille Gris, Wille Gris,
Thinche twat you was, and qwat you es,
which refers to the Norfolk peasant boy who went to seek his fortune
possessing naught but a little pig. The swineboy married a rich widow
and he kept his former state before him by a picture of himself and
his pig inscribed as above. See Craik, G. L. , Hist. of Eng. Lit.
Fränkel, L. Zur Gesch. von Robin Hood. Eng. Stud. XVII, 316.
Gilchrist, J. A collection of Scottish Ballads, etc. 2 vols. Edinburgh,
1815.
Görbing, F. Beispiele von realisierten Mythen in den engl. u. schott. Balladen.
Anglia, XXIII, 1 ff.
Grundtvig, 8. H. Danmarks gamle Folkeviser. 5 vols. Copenhagen,
1853 ff.
Gutch, J. M. A Lytyll Geste of Robin Hode. 2 vols. 1847.
Hales, J. W. Folio Litteraria. 1893. For Chevy Chase.
Herd, D. Ancient and Modern Scots Songs, etc. Edinburgh, 1769. 2nd ed.
1776.
Jamieson, R. Popular Ballads and Songs. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1806.
Johnson, J. The Scots Musical Museum. 6 vols. Edinburgh, 1787-1803.
Ed. Stenhouse, W. and Laing, D. 4 vols. 1853.
Kinloch, G. Ancient Scottish Ballads. 1827.
Laing, D. Select Remains of the Ancient Popular Poetry of Scotland. 1822.
Ed. Small, J. 1885.
Early Popular Poetry of Scotland and the Border. 1822-6. Ed.
Hazlitt, W. C. 2 vols. 1895.
Lang, A. Myth, Ritual and Religion. 2 vols. 1887.
In Quarterly Review, July 1898; Chambers's Cyclopaedia of English Lit. ,
vol. 1, pp. 520 ff. , 1901; Blackwood's Magazine, CLVIII, Sept. 1895.
Lemcke, C. , in Jahrbuch f. rom, u. engl. Lit. iv, 1, 142, 297 ff.
Maidment, J. A North Countrie Garland. Edinburgh, 1824.
Scottish Ballads. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1868.
Motherwell, W. Minstrelsy, Ancient and Modern. Glasgow, 1827.
Newell, W. W. Games and Songs of American Children. New York, 1883.
Percy, T. Reliques of Ancient English Poetry. 3 vols. 1765. Ed. Wheatley
H. B. 3 vols. 1876–7. Ed. Schröer, A. 2 Hälften. Heilbronn, 1889-93.
Pinkerton, J. Scottish Tragic Ballads. 1781. See also Select Scottish
Ballads, 2 vols. , 1783.
[Phillips, A. ] A Collection of Old Ballads. 3 vols. 1723-5.
Ramsay, A. The Ever Green. 2 vols. Edinburgh, 1724.
The Tea Table Miscellany. 1724 ff. 4 vols.
## p. 495 (#513) ############################################
Chapter XVII
495
:
Reliquiae Antiquae, ed. Halliwell, J. O. and Wright, T. , for the Judas
ballad (p. 144).
Ritson, J. Ancient Songs and Ballads. 2 vols. 1792. Ed. Hazlitt, W. C.
1877.
Ancient Popular Poetry. 1791. Ed. Goldsmid, E. 1884.
Scotish Song. 2 vols. 1794.
Select Collection of English Songs. 1783. Ed. Park, T. 3 vols. 1813.
Romantic Scottish Ballads: their epoch and authorship. n. d.
Russell, J. The Haigs of Bemersyde. Edinburgh, 1881. _(Chap. xiv for
social conditions of Old Border life, is quoted by Davidson, T. , in Chambers's
Encyclopaedia. )
Saintsbury, G. A History of English Prosody. Vol. 1. 1906.
Sharpe, C. K. A Ballad Book. Edinburgh, 1823. New ed. by Laing, D. ,
1880.
Scottish Minstrel, The. 1808.
Songster, Universal, The, or museum of mirth. 3 vols. (1825-6. ]
Veitch, J. History and Poetry of the Scottish Border. 1878. New ed.
2 vols. Glasgow, 1893.
Whitelaw, A. The Book of Scottish Ballads. Glasgow, 1844.
See also under Ballads, in W. P. Courtney's Register of National Biblio-
graphy, vol. I, p. 47, 1905, for catalogues of broadsides, eto.
F. B. G. & A. R. W.
CHAPTER XVIII
POLITICAL AND RELIGIOUS VERSE TO THE CLOSE OF
THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY-FINAL WORDS
SUPPLEMENTARY BIBLIOGRAPHY AND NOTES.
As in the case of the bibliography to chap. XVII, vol. 1, a few works on the
social and political history of England during the Middle Ages are included
in the following bibliography; and advantage has been taken of the
opportunity afforded by a concluding chapter to add a few notes on books
and writers not specifically dealt with elsewhere. References to other histories
of English literature have been added in cases where fuller details are given
than has been either possible or deemed desirable in this work.
In addition to the general bibliographies mentioned on p. 419, vol. I,
W. Swan Sonnenschein's Best Books, 1891, and Reader's Guide to Con-
temporary Literature, 1895, may be mentioned as very useful aids, and, in
their respective spheres, G. K. Fortescue's Index of Printed Books added
to the British Museum during the past 25 years, and C. Sayle’s Early English
Printed Books in the University Library, Cambridge (1475-1640), 4 vols. ,
Cambridge, 1900-7, are invaluable. The catalogue of the London Library,
1903, and its various supplements, will also be found useful.
The Appendix volume to W. T. Lowndes's Bibliographer's Manual, compiled
by H. G. Bohn (1864), contains a useful list of the publications of the Rox-
burghe, Bannatyne and Maitland Clubs, Surtees Society, Abbotsford Club,
Camden Society, Spalding Club, Irish Archaeological, Parker, Percy, Aelfrio
## p. 496 (#514) ############################################
496
Bibliography
Chetham, Philobiblon, Caxton, English Historical and Ossianic Societies,
Warton Club, and other literary, learned and scientific societies; of books
printed at private presses (Auchinleck, Lee Priory, etc. ); and of privately
printed series (J. Payne Collier, Halliwell, Maidment, Turnbull, Russell
Smith, etc. ). A revised edition of Lowndes, brought up to date, would be
a very great boon indeed to all workers in English literature.
English and Latin Writers and Texts.
Adam of Usk (A. 1400), chronicler (1377-1404). Ed. Thompson, E. M.
1876.
Audelay, John. Poems: a specimen of the Shropshire dialect in the 15th cent.
Ed. Halliwell, J. 0. Percy Society. 1844.
Baker, Geoffrey (A. 1350). For Baker's chronicles and for Sir Thomas de la
More, see Stubbs, W. , Chronicles of Edw. I and II, Rolls Series, 1882–3;
and ed. Thompson, E. M. , Oxford, 1889.
Baston, Robert (A. 1300), scholar of Oxfor and poet, of whom it is asserted
that, when captured by Robert Bruce, he was obliged to buy his release
by composing poems of exultation over the defeat of the English.
Cott. MS, Titus A. XX.
Berners, Dame Juliana. Cf. Le Venery de Twety, Reliq. Ant. , vol. I, p. 149,
and also The Booke of Hawkyng, Rel. Ant. , vol. 1. p. 293.
Blaneforde, Henry (f. 1330), chronicler. Ed. Riley, H. T. , in Chronica
Monast. S. Albani. Rolls Series. 1866.
Brampton, T. Paraphrase on the Seven Penitential Psalms (1414). Percy
Society. 1842.
Elmbam, Thomas (d. 1440 ? ), chronicler of St Augustine's monastery,
Canterbury, and biographer of Henry V. Ed. Hardwick, C. Rolls
Series. 1858. Memorials of Henry V. Ed. Cole, C. A. Rolls Series.
1858. See also ed. Hearn, T. , Oxford, 1727.
Fabyan, Robert (d. 1513), a careful will-maker, if a poor chronicler, whose
Concordance of Histories, printed by Pynson, 1516, ed. Ellis, H. , 1811,
is not without its value with respect to the history of London. See
Warton, T. , Hist. Eng. Poet. , vol. 11 (1840), sect. XXVII.
Gascoigne, T. (1403-58). Dictionarium Theologicum. Extracts printed by
J. E. Thorold Rogers, Oxford, 1881, illustrative of matters concerning
church and state.
Geoffrey the Grammarian, or Starkey (A. 1440), author of an English-Latin
dictionary, Promptorium Parvulorum or Promptuarium Parvulorum
Clericorum. A work of much importance with respect to 15th cent. East
Anglian English. Printed by Pynson, Wynkyn de Worde, etc. Ed.
Way, A. 3 vols. Camden Soc. 1843-65. The E. E. T. S. has an edition
in hand. A Hortus, or Latin-English dictionary, printed by Wynkyn de
Worde in 1500, may be based on another of Starkey's works.
Grey, Wm. (d. 1478), scholar of Oxford, bishop of Ely, humanist and
collector of books, many of which are still among the treasures of Balliol.
See vol. 111 of the present work, chapter I.
Hardyng, John (1378–1465 ? ), chronicler. Of the literary merit of Hardyng's
English Chronicle in Metre fro the first Begynning of Englande unto
the Reigne of Edwarde the Fourth (printed by Grafton in 1543 and
reprinted by Ellis, H. , in 1812), little can be said save that, though be
‘poisoned the wells' by manufacturing certain of his documents, he
carried on the work of the earlier chroniclers. See Palgrave, F. , Docu-
ments and records illustrating the history of Scotland, 1837.
## p. 497 (#515) ############################################
Chapter XVIII
497
a
Humphrey, duke of Gloucester (1391-1447). The 'good duke Humphrey,
a lover of books and a beneficent disposer of them, patron and friend
of many scholars, of Ashley, Capgrave, Lydgate, Pecock, Whethamstede,
'kept such a house as was never yet kept in England' (Latimer),
gave his books to a university which still cherishes his name in its library
and should be remembered among the people of importance' in the 15th
century. The part taken by him in the foundation of libraries will be con-
sidered in a later section of the present work devoted to book-collections.
See Ten Brink, B. , Hist. Eng. Lit. , vol. 11, Eng. trans. , 1901, pp. 310 ff. and
319 ff. ; Warton, T. , History of English Poetry, 1840, vol. II, sect. xx,
pp. 264 ff. ; and Pauli, R. , Pictures of Old England (Eng. trans. ),
1861.
Ingulph (d. 1109), abbot of Crowland or Croyland. For the fourteenth and
fifteenth century chronicle erroneously associated with his name, see
Savile, H. , Scriptores post Bedam, 1596; Riley, H. T. , 1854; Liebermann,
F. , Über ostenglische Geschichtsquellen des 12, 13, 14 Jahrhunderts
besonders den falschen Ingulf (N. Archiv f. ält. deutsche Gesch. -Kunde,
Bd. XVIII, Hanover, 1892); Birch, W. de G. , Chronicle of Croyland
Abbey, 1883; Searle, W. G. , Ingulf and the Historia Croylandensis, Camb.
Antiq. Soc. , 1894.
John of Bury (A. 1460), Cambridge scholar and opponent of Pecock. MS of
Gladius Salomonis in Bodleian, extracts in Babington's ed. of Pecock's
Repressor.
Knighton (or Cnitthon), Henry (ft. 1363), chronicler (from the days of
Edgar to 1366). The continuation of Knighton's work, by another hand,
is valuable in respect of Wyclif and the peasants' revolt. Ed. Lumby,
J. R. Rolls Series. 1889-95.
Lanercost Chronicle (1201-1346), useful for the history of the Border, etc.
Ed. Stevenson, J. 1839. Imbedded in this chronicle, under date 1244, is
the English couplet
Wille Gris, Wille Gris,
Thinche twat you was, and qwat you es,
which refers to the Norfolk peasant boy who went to seek his fortune
possessing naught but a little pig. The swineboy married a rich widow
and he kept his former state before him by a picture of himself and
his pig inscribed as above. See Craik, G. L. , Hist. of Eng. Lit.
