Which bite and barke at the
fantasticall
humorists and abusers of the
time.
time.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v04
1597.
Sixe Bookes, three last bookes of byting Satyres.
1598. Rptd 1599; 1602; 1879, Grosart, A. B. , Complete Poems,
Manchester. (For Hall's indebtedness to Scaliger, J. C. , see article by
Bensly, E. , shortly to appear in Modern Language Review. See, also,
Hall's works, ed. Pratt, J. , 1808; ed. Hall, P. , Oxford, 1837; ed.
Wynter, P. , Oxford, 1863. ]
Guilpin, Edward. Skialetheia, or a Shadowe of Truth in certain Epigrams
and Satyres. 1598. Rptd 1878, Grosart, A. B.
Marston, John. The Metamorphosis of Pygmalion's Image, and certain
Satyres. 1598 (published anonymously). The Scourge of Villanie,
three Bookes of Satyres. 1598. Rptd 1856, Halliwell, J. O. , Library of
Old Authors; 1879, Grosart, A. B.
Rankins, William. Seaven Satyres applyed to the weeke. 1598.
Anon. Tyros Roving Megge. Planted against the walles of Melancholy.
Bastard, Thomas. Chrestoleros: Seven bookes of Epigrammes. 1598. Rptd
1880, Grosart, A. B.
Barnfield, Richard. Encomion of Lady Pecunia. 1598. Rptd 1605. (Vide
Collier, J. P. , Bibl. Cat. , 1865, vol. 1, pp. 47-50. )
Weever, John. Epigrammes in the oldest Cut and Newest Fashion. 1599.
M. , T. (Possibly Thomas Middleton, prob. Thomas Moffat). Micro-cynicon,
Sixe Snarling Satyres. 1599.
(1 June 1599, edict of Jo[hn Whitgift] Cantuar, and Ric[hard Bancroft]
London entered in Stationers' register to the effect that Virgidemiarum,
Pigmalion with certaine other Satyres, The Scourge of Villanye, The
Shadowe of Truthe in Epigrams and Satyres, Snarlinge Satyres, Caltha
Poetarum, Davyes Epigrams with Marlowes Elegyes, the booke againste
woemen, viz. of marriage and wyvinge, the xv joyes of marriage, should be
barnt and that noe Satyres or Epigrams be printed hereafter . . . that all
Nasshes bookes and Doctor Harveyes bookes be taken wheresoever they
maye be found and that none of theire bookes be ever printed hereafter. '
Pygmalion, The Scourge of Villany, Skialetheia, Snarling Satires, Davies's
Epigrams, Marriage and Wyving, xv Joyes of Marriage, and the Harvey-
Nashe books were burnt. Hall's Satires and Caltha Poetarum (by Cutwode, T. ,
mostly love poems, rptd 1815, Roxburghe Club) were 'staied. ')
Rowlands, Samuel. The letting of humours blood in the Head Vaine. 1600.
Humors Looking-glasse. 1608. (Anonymous, attributed to Rowlands. )
Thypne, Francis. Emblemes and Epigrames. 1600. 1876, Furnivall, F. J.
Breton, Nicholas. Pasquils Mad-Cappe and his Message. Pasquil's Fooles-
cap. Pasquils Mistresse, or the Worthy and Unworthy Woman. Pasquil's
Passe and Passeth Not, set downe in three pees, his Passe, Precession,
and Prognostication. All in 1600.
Woodhouse, Peter. The Flea. 1605. Rptd 1877.
P[arrot], Henry). Mous-Trap. 1606. Epigrams by H. P. 1608. Laquei
Ridiculosi, or Springes to catch Woodcocks. 1613. The Mastive, or
Young-Whelpe of the Old-Dogge. Epigrams and Satyres. 1615. VIII
Cures for the Itch. Characters, Epigrams, Epitaphs, by H. P. 1626.
Walkington, T. (d. 1621). The Optick Glasse of Humors. 1607. [A prede-
cessor of Burton. ]
## p. 520 (#542) ############################################
520
Bibliography
West, Richard. The Court of Conscience or Dick Whippers Sessions. 1607.
A Century of Epigrams. 1608. (Vide Warton's Hist. of Eng. Poetry,
vol. iv. ) [See D. of N. B. for other works by, or attributed to him. ]
Anon. Epigrams or Humours Lottery. 1608.
Tofte, Robert. Translation of Ariosto’s Satyres. 1608.
Heath, John. Two Centuries of Epigrammes. 1610.
Sharpe, Roger. More fooles yet. 1610. (Epigrams. )
Scot, T. Philomythie or Philomythologie. Wherein ontlandish birds, beasts
and fishes are taught to speake true English verse. 1610, 1616.
Davies, John, of Hereford. The Scourge of Folly. (See ante, p. 475. )
Taylor, John. The Scoller . . . or Gallimawfry of Sonnets, Satyres and
Epigrams. 1612. Rptd 1614. Taylor's Water-Worke. Epigrammes . . .
being ninety in number, besides two new made Satyres. 1651.
Wither, George. Abuses Stript and Whipt. 1613 ff.
Freeman, Thomas. Rubbe and a Great Cast: and Runne and a Great Cast.
The second Bowle. In 200 Epigrams. 1614.
C. , R. The Times Whistle: or A Newe Daunce of Seven Satires, and other
Poems. C. 1614. Rptd 1871, Cowper, J. M. , E. E. T. S.
Brathwaite, Richard. A Strappado for the Divell. Epigrams and Satyres
alluding to the time. 1615. Rptd 1878, Ebsworth, J. W. (with intro. ).
Natures Embassie: or, the Wilde-mans Measures: Danced naked by
twelve Satyres. 1621. [See Hales, J. W. , Folia Litteraria, 1893. ]
Goddard, William. A Neaste of Waspes latelie found out and discovered in
the Law (Low) Countreys yealding as sweete hony as some of our
English bees. 1615. A Satyricall Dialogue, or a sharplye-invective
Conference betweene Alexander the Great and that trulye woman-hater
Diogynes. Imprinted in the Lowe Countryes for all such gentlewomen
as are not altogether Idle nor yet well ocupyed. n. d. A Mastif Whelp,
with other ruff-Island-lik Currs fetcht from amongst the Antipodes.
Which bite and barke at the fantasticall humorists and abusers of the
time. . . . Imprinted amongst the Antipodes and are to be sould where
they are to be bought. n. d. (Assigned by Collier, J. P. , Poetical
Decameron, to T. M. and dated c. 1600. )
Anton, Robert. Philosophers Satyrs. 1616. Of which a 2nd ed. was produced
as Vices Anotimie scourged and corrected in new satirs. 1617.
Harington, Sir John. The most elegant and witty Epigrams of Sir John
Harrington. 1618. Rptd 1625, etc. (A few had been appended to Alcilia
by J. C. , 1613. For miscellaneous remnants in prose and verse and
especially for letters, vide Harington, R. H. , Nugae Antiquae, 1769.
Rptd 1779; 1792; 1804, re-ed. by Park, T. )
Jonson, Ben. Epigrams. Published with Workg. 1616.
Hutton, Henry, Dunelmensis: Follie's Anatomie or Satyres and Satyricall
Epigrams with a Compendious History of Ixion's Wheele. 1619. Rptd
1842, Rimbault, E. F. , Percy Soc.
Wroth, Thomas. An Abortive of an idle Hour, or a century of Epigrams.
1620.
Peacham, Henry. Thalia's Banquet. 1620.
Martyn, Joseph. Newe Epigrams, having in their Company a mad Satyre.
Licensed to George Eld, 1619. Earliest extant copy, 1621.
Hayman, Robert. Quolibets. 1628.
Randolph, Thomas. Aristippos or, The Joviall Philosopher. 1630.
Anon. Epigrammes, mirroar of New Reformation. 1634.
The following books should be consulted :
Alden, R. M. The Rise of Formal Satire in England. Philadelphia. 1899.
Collier, J. P. Poetical Decameron. 1820. 3rd, 4th, 5th conversations.
## p. 521 (#543) ############################################
Chapter XVI
521
10
***
di
Seccombe, T. and Allen, J. W. The age of Shakespeare. 1904. Vol. I,
bk. 1, § 9.
Shade, O. Satiren u. Pasquille a. d. Reformationszeit. 1862-3.
Warton, T. History of English Poetry from the Twelfth to the close of the
Sixteenth century. Ed. by Hazlitt, W. C. 1871. Vol. iv, sections
LXII-LXVI.
CHARACTER WRITERS.
Anticipations of the Genre.
Vision concerning Piers the Plowman (allegorical portraits, ante, vol. II,
chap. I); Bartholomaeus Anglicns and Higden (description of national and
social types, ibid. chap. III); Skelton (Bowge of Court: types of courtiers,
vol. III, chap. IV); Barclay (Ship of Fools: types of folly discussed rather
than portrayed, ibid. ); Cock Lorell (glimpses of individual types of lower
classes, chap. v); Mock Testaments (classification according to some dominant
characteristic, ibid. ); Copland's Hye Waye to the Spittel Hous (vivid descrip-
tions of character and appearance from the view of failure in life, ibid. );
Fraternitye of Vagabonds, Caveat and xxv Orders of Knaves (precise
definitions of rogue-nomenclature, ibid. ); T. Lodge's Wits Miserie (portrayal
of devils as impersonations of specifio vices, see above); T. Greene's Quip;
T. Nashe, especially Pierce Penilesse.
Classical Sources.
Aristotle: Rhetoric, Bk 11. Ed. Cope, E. M. , and Sandys, J. E. , 1877.
Ethics, Bk. iv. Ed. Grant, Sir A. , 1857-8. (Except in the case of Earle and
Bacon, Aristotle's influence can be traced only through Theophrastus. )
Theophrastus. Trans. : Casaubon, I. , 1592; Editio ultima recognita . . . aucta
et locupletata, 1617; Healey, J. , 1616; Jebb, R. O. , revised by Sandys, J. E. ,
1909.
English Writers.
Ormerod, Oliver. The Picture of a Papist, and a Discourse of Popish
Paganisme. 1605. The Picture of a Puritane. 1605.
Hall, Joseph. Characters of Virtues and Vices. 1608.
Anon. The Cobler of Canterburie. 1608. ("The exposition of the eight
degrees of Cuckolds. ')
M. , W. The Man in the Moone telling Strange Fortunes. 1609. Rptd
1849, Halliwell, J. O. , Peroy Soc.
Overbury, Thomas. A Wife: now the Widdow of Sir Thomas Overburye.
Being a most exquisite and singular Poem of the Choice of a Wife.
Whereunto are added many witty characters, and conceited Newes,
written by himself and other learned Gentlemen his friends. 1614 ff.
(There had already appeared in the same year A wife, now a Widowe,
without characters). Note contemporary imitations, The Husband, with
commendatory
verses by Ben Jonson, 1614; A second Select Husband, by
John Davies of Hereford, in 1616; The Description of a Good Wife, by
Brathwaite, and the Happy Husband, by Patrick Hannay, 1619; Picturae
loquentes, by Saltonstall, W. , with a Poem of a Maid, 1631 (3); A Wife
not ready made but bespoken, Robert Aylett, 1653. (See D. of N. B.
art. Overbury. ) 1890, Rimbault, E. F. , Library of Old Authors, rpt of
ninth ed. (i. e. in 1616). See Fox, A. W. , A Book of Bachelors, 1899.
Stephens, John. Satyrical Essayes, characters and others. 1615. New
Essayes and Characters. With a new Satyre in defence of the Common
Law and Lawyers: mixt with reproofe against their enemy Ignoramus.
1631. (Vide Brydges, Restituta, vol. iv, 503 ff. (N. & Q. Ser. iv, vol. III,
550). )
race
KE
ברוך
3
## p. 522 (#544) ############################################
522
Bibliography
Breton, Nicholas. Characters upon Essaies, morall and divine. 1615. The
Good and the Badde, or Descriptions of the Worthies and Unworthies of
this Age. 1616. 2nd ed. 1643, under title England's selected characters.
Mynshul, Geffray. Essayes and Characters of a Prison and Prisoners.
1618.
1598. Rptd 1599; 1602; 1879, Grosart, A. B. , Complete Poems,
Manchester. (For Hall's indebtedness to Scaliger, J. C. , see article by
Bensly, E. , shortly to appear in Modern Language Review. See, also,
Hall's works, ed. Pratt, J. , 1808; ed. Hall, P. , Oxford, 1837; ed.
Wynter, P. , Oxford, 1863. ]
Guilpin, Edward. Skialetheia, or a Shadowe of Truth in certain Epigrams
and Satyres. 1598. Rptd 1878, Grosart, A. B.
Marston, John. The Metamorphosis of Pygmalion's Image, and certain
Satyres. 1598 (published anonymously). The Scourge of Villanie,
three Bookes of Satyres. 1598. Rptd 1856, Halliwell, J. O. , Library of
Old Authors; 1879, Grosart, A. B.
Rankins, William. Seaven Satyres applyed to the weeke. 1598.
Anon. Tyros Roving Megge. Planted against the walles of Melancholy.
Bastard, Thomas. Chrestoleros: Seven bookes of Epigrammes. 1598. Rptd
1880, Grosart, A. B.
Barnfield, Richard. Encomion of Lady Pecunia. 1598. Rptd 1605. (Vide
Collier, J. P. , Bibl. Cat. , 1865, vol. 1, pp. 47-50. )
Weever, John. Epigrammes in the oldest Cut and Newest Fashion. 1599.
M. , T. (Possibly Thomas Middleton, prob. Thomas Moffat). Micro-cynicon,
Sixe Snarling Satyres. 1599.
(1 June 1599, edict of Jo[hn Whitgift] Cantuar, and Ric[hard Bancroft]
London entered in Stationers' register to the effect that Virgidemiarum,
Pigmalion with certaine other Satyres, The Scourge of Villanye, The
Shadowe of Truthe in Epigrams and Satyres, Snarlinge Satyres, Caltha
Poetarum, Davyes Epigrams with Marlowes Elegyes, the booke againste
woemen, viz. of marriage and wyvinge, the xv joyes of marriage, should be
barnt and that noe Satyres or Epigrams be printed hereafter . . . that all
Nasshes bookes and Doctor Harveyes bookes be taken wheresoever they
maye be found and that none of theire bookes be ever printed hereafter. '
Pygmalion, The Scourge of Villany, Skialetheia, Snarling Satires, Davies's
Epigrams, Marriage and Wyving, xv Joyes of Marriage, and the Harvey-
Nashe books were burnt. Hall's Satires and Caltha Poetarum (by Cutwode, T. ,
mostly love poems, rptd 1815, Roxburghe Club) were 'staied. ')
Rowlands, Samuel. The letting of humours blood in the Head Vaine. 1600.
Humors Looking-glasse. 1608. (Anonymous, attributed to Rowlands. )
Thypne, Francis. Emblemes and Epigrames. 1600. 1876, Furnivall, F. J.
Breton, Nicholas. Pasquils Mad-Cappe and his Message. Pasquil's Fooles-
cap. Pasquils Mistresse, or the Worthy and Unworthy Woman. Pasquil's
Passe and Passeth Not, set downe in three pees, his Passe, Precession,
and Prognostication. All in 1600.
Woodhouse, Peter. The Flea. 1605. Rptd 1877.
P[arrot], Henry). Mous-Trap. 1606. Epigrams by H. P. 1608. Laquei
Ridiculosi, or Springes to catch Woodcocks. 1613. The Mastive, or
Young-Whelpe of the Old-Dogge. Epigrams and Satyres. 1615. VIII
Cures for the Itch. Characters, Epigrams, Epitaphs, by H. P. 1626.
Walkington, T. (d. 1621). The Optick Glasse of Humors. 1607. [A prede-
cessor of Burton. ]
## p. 520 (#542) ############################################
520
Bibliography
West, Richard. The Court of Conscience or Dick Whippers Sessions. 1607.
A Century of Epigrams. 1608. (Vide Warton's Hist. of Eng. Poetry,
vol. iv. ) [See D. of N. B. for other works by, or attributed to him. ]
Anon. Epigrams or Humours Lottery. 1608.
Tofte, Robert. Translation of Ariosto’s Satyres. 1608.
Heath, John. Two Centuries of Epigrammes. 1610.
Sharpe, Roger. More fooles yet. 1610. (Epigrams. )
Scot, T. Philomythie or Philomythologie. Wherein ontlandish birds, beasts
and fishes are taught to speake true English verse. 1610, 1616.
Davies, John, of Hereford. The Scourge of Folly. (See ante, p. 475. )
Taylor, John. The Scoller . . . or Gallimawfry of Sonnets, Satyres and
Epigrams. 1612. Rptd 1614. Taylor's Water-Worke. Epigrammes . . .
being ninety in number, besides two new made Satyres. 1651.
Wither, George. Abuses Stript and Whipt. 1613 ff.
Freeman, Thomas. Rubbe and a Great Cast: and Runne and a Great Cast.
The second Bowle. In 200 Epigrams. 1614.
C. , R. The Times Whistle: or A Newe Daunce of Seven Satires, and other
Poems. C. 1614. Rptd 1871, Cowper, J. M. , E. E. T. S.
Brathwaite, Richard. A Strappado for the Divell. Epigrams and Satyres
alluding to the time. 1615. Rptd 1878, Ebsworth, J. W. (with intro. ).
Natures Embassie: or, the Wilde-mans Measures: Danced naked by
twelve Satyres. 1621. [See Hales, J. W. , Folia Litteraria, 1893. ]
Goddard, William. A Neaste of Waspes latelie found out and discovered in
the Law (Low) Countreys yealding as sweete hony as some of our
English bees. 1615. A Satyricall Dialogue, or a sharplye-invective
Conference betweene Alexander the Great and that trulye woman-hater
Diogynes. Imprinted in the Lowe Countryes for all such gentlewomen
as are not altogether Idle nor yet well ocupyed. n. d. A Mastif Whelp,
with other ruff-Island-lik Currs fetcht from amongst the Antipodes.
Which bite and barke at the fantasticall humorists and abusers of the
time. . . . Imprinted amongst the Antipodes and are to be sould where
they are to be bought. n. d. (Assigned by Collier, J. P. , Poetical
Decameron, to T. M. and dated c. 1600. )
Anton, Robert. Philosophers Satyrs. 1616. Of which a 2nd ed. was produced
as Vices Anotimie scourged and corrected in new satirs. 1617.
Harington, Sir John. The most elegant and witty Epigrams of Sir John
Harrington. 1618. Rptd 1625, etc. (A few had been appended to Alcilia
by J. C. , 1613. For miscellaneous remnants in prose and verse and
especially for letters, vide Harington, R. H. , Nugae Antiquae, 1769.
Rptd 1779; 1792; 1804, re-ed. by Park, T. )
Jonson, Ben. Epigrams. Published with Workg. 1616.
Hutton, Henry, Dunelmensis: Follie's Anatomie or Satyres and Satyricall
Epigrams with a Compendious History of Ixion's Wheele. 1619. Rptd
1842, Rimbault, E. F. , Percy Soc.
Wroth, Thomas. An Abortive of an idle Hour, or a century of Epigrams.
1620.
Peacham, Henry. Thalia's Banquet. 1620.
Martyn, Joseph. Newe Epigrams, having in their Company a mad Satyre.
Licensed to George Eld, 1619. Earliest extant copy, 1621.
Hayman, Robert. Quolibets. 1628.
Randolph, Thomas. Aristippos or, The Joviall Philosopher. 1630.
Anon. Epigrammes, mirroar of New Reformation. 1634.
The following books should be consulted :
Alden, R. M. The Rise of Formal Satire in England. Philadelphia. 1899.
Collier, J. P. Poetical Decameron. 1820. 3rd, 4th, 5th conversations.
## p. 521 (#543) ############################################
Chapter XVI
521
10
***
di
Seccombe, T. and Allen, J. W. The age of Shakespeare. 1904. Vol. I,
bk. 1, § 9.
Shade, O. Satiren u. Pasquille a. d. Reformationszeit. 1862-3.
Warton, T. History of English Poetry from the Twelfth to the close of the
Sixteenth century. Ed. by Hazlitt, W. C. 1871. Vol. iv, sections
LXII-LXVI.
CHARACTER WRITERS.
Anticipations of the Genre.
Vision concerning Piers the Plowman (allegorical portraits, ante, vol. II,
chap. I); Bartholomaeus Anglicns and Higden (description of national and
social types, ibid. chap. III); Skelton (Bowge of Court: types of courtiers,
vol. III, chap. IV); Barclay (Ship of Fools: types of folly discussed rather
than portrayed, ibid. ); Cock Lorell (glimpses of individual types of lower
classes, chap. v); Mock Testaments (classification according to some dominant
characteristic, ibid. ); Copland's Hye Waye to the Spittel Hous (vivid descrip-
tions of character and appearance from the view of failure in life, ibid. );
Fraternitye of Vagabonds, Caveat and xxv Orders of Knaves (precise
definitions of rogue-nomenclature, ibid. ); T. Lodge's Wits Miserie (portrayal
of devils as impersonations of specifio vices, see above); T. Greene's Quip;
T. Nashe, especially Pierce Penilesse.
Classical Sources.
Aristotle: Rhetoric, Bk 11. Ed. Cope, E. M. , and Sandys, J. E. , 1877.
Ethics, Bk. iv. Ed. Grant, Sir A. , 1857-8. (Except in the case of Earle and
Bacon, Aristotle's influence can be traced only through Theophrastus. )
Theophrastus. Trans. : Casaubon, I. , 1592; Editio ultima recognita . . . aucta
et locupletata, 1617; Healey, J. , 1616; Jebb, R. O. , revised by Sandys, J. E. ,
1909.
English Writers.
Ormerod, Oliver. The Picture of a Papist, and a Discourse of Popish
Paganisme. 1605. The Picture of a Puritane. 1605.
Hall, Joseph. Characters of Virtues and Vices. 1608.
Anon. The Cobler of Canterburie. 1608. ("The exposition of the eight
degrees of Cuckolds. ')
M. , W. The Man in the Moone telling Strange Fortunes. 1609. Rptd
1849, Halliwell, J. O. , Peroy Soc.
Overbury, Thomas. A Wife: now the Widdow of Sir Thomas Overburye.
Being a most exquisite and singular Poem of the Choice of a Wife.
Whereunto are added many witty characters, and conceited Newes,
written by himself and other learned Gentlemen his friends. 1614 ff.
(There had already appeared in the same year A wife, now a Widowe,
without characters). Note contemporary imitations, The Husband, with
commendatory
verses by Ben Jonson, 1614; A second Select Husband, by
John Davies of Hereford, in 1616; The Description of a Good Wife, by
Brathwaite, and the Happy Husband, by Patrick Hannay, 1619; Picturae
loquentes, by Saltonstall, W. , with a Poem of a Maid, 1631 (3); A Wife
not ready made but bespoken, Robert Aylett, 1653. (See D. of N. B.
art. Overbury. ) 1890, Rimbault, E. F. , Library of Old Authors, rpt of
ninth ed. (i. e. in 1616). See Fox, A. W. , A Book of Bachelors, 1899.
Stephens, John. Satyrical Essayes, characters and others. 1615. New
Essayes and Characters. With a new Satyre in defence of the Common
Law and Lawyers: mixt with reproofe against their enemy Ignoramus.
1631. (Vide Brydges, Restituta, vol. iv, 503 ff. (N. & Q. Ser. iv, vol. III,
550). )
race
KE
ברוך
3
## p. 522 (#544) ############################################
522
Bibliography
Breton, Nicholas. Characters upon Essaies, morall and divine. 1615. The
Good and the Badde, or Descriptions of the Worthies and Unworthies of
this Age. 1616. 2nd ed. 1643, under title England's selected characters.
Mynshul, Geffray. Essayes and Characters of a Prison and Prisoners.
1618.