The Project Gutenberg eBook of English fragments from Latin medieval service-books This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: English fragments from Latin medieval service-books with two coloured facsimiles from medieval prymers Editor: Henry Littlehales Release date: May 11, 2025 [eBook #76070] Language: English Credits: David Starner and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH FRAGMENTS FROM LATIN MEDIEVAL SERVICE-BOOKS *** Transcriber’s Note: This e-text includes a few characters that will only display in UTF-8 (Unicode) text readers, including ȝ (yogh) þ (thorn) ħ (Latin small letter h with stroke) If any of these characters do not display properly, or if the quotation marks in this paragraph appear as garbage, make sure your text reader’s “character set” or “file encoding” is set to Unicode (UTF-8). You may also need to change the default font. _Italics and other text markings:_ Italicized letters within words, representing expanded abbreviations, are shown in the e-text with braces (“curly brackets”): Pat{er} n{oste}r. Readers who find this added information distracting may globally delete all braces; they are not used for any other purpose. Whole-word italics are shown in the usual way with _lines_, and boldface or blackletter type with =marks=. _Page Layout:_ In the original book, the EETS catalogue material was wrapped around the body of the text, with pp. 1-6 at the start of the book and 7-12 at the end. This has all been moved to the end. _Headnotes_ appeared at the top of some pages, like subsidiary chapter headings. They have been retained and moved to the beginning of the most appropriate paragraph. _Footnotes_ were numbered separately for each page. In this e-text, footnotes are numbered for each section, and grouped at the end of the section. In one section, there are two types of footnotes, referring to two parallel texts. One type of these footnotes uses numbers, the other uses letters a, b, c etc, as in the original book. Footnote markers [1]like so[1] denote that the footnote applies to the passage of text that appears between the markers; the footnote itself is numbered [1-1]. English Fragments from Latin Medieval Service-Books. Early English Text Society, Extra Series, XC. 1903. BERLIN: ASHER & CO., 13, UNTER DEN LINDEN. NEW YORK: C. SCRIBNER & CO.; LEYPOLDT & HOLT. PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. English Fragments from Latin Medieval Service-Books WITH TWO COLOURED FACSIMILES FROM Medieval Prymers. EDITED BY HENRY LITTLEHALES. LONDON: PUBLISHED FOR THE EARLY ENGLISH TEXT SOCIETY BY KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO., LIMITED, DRYDEN HOUSE, 43, GERRARD STREET, SOHO, W. 1903 NOTE. The two coloured facsimiles of this little pamphlet explain themselves. The Manual, which was the medieval priest’s handbook for the services of Baptism, Marriage, Visitation of the Sick, Burial, etc., is virtually the only one of the medieval Latin service-books which contained invariably a certain proportion of its text in English. The text of the English varies in a measure in different MSS. Extra Series, XC. RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BUNGAY. _From the British Museum Manual, MS. 30,506_ (XV cent.). FROM THE SERVICE FOR BAPTISM. * * * * * [1]N. I cristene þe in þe name of þe fader, and of þe sone, and of þe holy gost. * * * * * [2]Godfaderis and godmoderis, I charge ȝow, and þe fader and þe moder, that þis child be kept þis seuen ȝer fro wat{er}, fro feer, fro hors [3]fot, fro hondes toth; and þat he ligge not be þe fader an be þe moder vn-to tyme he co{n}ne sey “ligge outter,” and þat he be confermyd of a byschop that next cometh to contre be seuen myle behalue, and þat [he] be tauȝt his beleue, þat is for to sey, Pat{er} n{oste}r, Aue maria, and Credo; And þat ȝe wasche ȝo{ur} hondes er ȝe goon owt of chirche, in peyne of fastyng xl fridayes. FOOTNOTES: [1] leaf 23. [2] leaf 23, back. [3] leaf 24. FROM THE MARRIAGE SERVICE. * * * * * [1]I aske þe banes betwen I de B and A de C. ȝif any man or woman kan sey or put any lettenge of sybrede, wherfor they may not, ne owght not, to come togedere be lawe of holy chirche, do vs to wete. * * * * * [2]Lo, syres, we been her gadered togedere befor god and alle his aungelis and his seyntis, in þe sith of holi cherche, to knette togedere two bodies, that is to sey, þis man and þis woman, to þis ende, þat fro{m} þis tyme forward þei moste be o flesch, and two sowles in þe feith and in þe lawe of god, to deserue togedere euer lastyng lyf in amendement of that þat þei haue do amys herbefore: wherfor I amones ȝow alle, that, ȝif þer be any of ȝow þat knowe any lawful lettyng whi þis man and þis woma{n} mai not be wedded togedere lawfulli, þat now he sey and knowliche it. * * * * * Also I charge ȝow, bothe man and woman, þat ȝif ony of ȝow haue made any contract p{r}iuyli [3]before þis tyme, or any avow mad, or ony other cause knowe, whi þat ȝe mai not come to-gedere lawfulli, now knowliche it. * * * * * N. Wiltow haue þis woman to þin wyf, and loue here, and worshipe here, and holde hire, and kepe here in seknes and in hele, as an hosbonde owyth to his wif, and alle oþer women to forsaken for hire, and only to drawe to hire as longe as ȝowre bothe lyues to ged{er}e lasten? * * * * * [4]N. Wiltow haue þis man to þin housbonde, to been buxum to hym, and serue hym, and loue hym, and worschipe hym, and kepe hym in syknes and in hele, as a wif owith to do here housbonde, and alle oþer men forsaken for hym, and only to drawe to hym as longe as ȝowre bothyn lyues to-gedere lasten? * * * * * I .N. take the N. to myn wedded wyf, to haue and to holde from þis day forward, for beter, for wers, for richere, for porere, for fayrere, for fowlere, in seknes and in helthe, til deth vs departe, ȝif holy chirche it wil ordeyne: and therto I plithe þe myn trewthe. * * * * * I .N. take the N, to myn weddid housbonde, to haue and to holde from þis day forward, for beter, for wers, for richer, for porere, for fayrere, for fowlere, in seknes and in hele, to be boner and buxu{m}, [5]as a wyf owyd to hur husb[an]dd,[5] til deth vs departe, as holi cherche it [5]wil[5] ordeyne: and therto i plith the myn trowthe. * * * * * [6]With þis ryng I þe wedde, and þis gold and siluer I þe ȝeue, and with al myn bodi I the worschepe, and with al myn wordlich catel I the honowre. FOOTNOTES: [1] leaf 25. [2] leaf 25, back. [3] leaf 26. [4] leaf 26, back. [5-5] In a later hand. [6] leaf 27, back. FROM THE OFFICE FOR THE VISITATION OF THE SICK. _From the British Museum Manual, MS. 32,320_ (xv cent.). How men þat ben in hele sculde visite sike men. [1]Beleuyst þow in god, fader [a]My dere sone or douȝtere in god, almythi, makere of heuene and hyt semith þat þou hyest þe of erthe? faste in þe wey fro þis life to * * * * * godward, þere þou schalt cee I beleue. al þy forme-fadris, apostelis, martiris, confessouris and Beleuyst þow i{n} his sone, þe uirgynis, & all men and secunde p{er}sone in trinite, [b]wo{m}men þat bene saued; and crist ih{es}u, the whiche was fore gladnes of suche felauschip conseyuyd be þe myght of þe holy be þou of good co{n}fort in god, gost, and born of þe blessid þynke how þow muste after þis mayden, owre ladi seynt marie? lyfe leye a stone in þe waỻ of þe cite of heuene, sclely witħ Credo. outen noise or strife, and þ{er}fore, or þou wende out of þis Beleuest thow that he leued here world, þou polisscħ þi stoon and two and thritty ȝer and more, make it redi, ȝif þou wolt not and suffred at þe last, deth on þere be lettid. þe cros for þe loue of mankende? ¶ Þis stoon is þy soule, whiche Credo. þou muste make stronge þorougħ right bileue; and faire Beleuyst þow that he wente to þ{o}u muste hit clense, þorougħ helle & took owt adam and eue hope of goddis m{er}ci and and the sowles þat were þerynne, p{er}fite charite, the whiche the whych myȝth not come to coueritħ þe multitude of synnes. blysse til cristes passiou{n}? þe noyse ..—— Credo. Beleuyst thow þat he ros vp fro [c]How a man schulde conforte deth on estir day, and dwellede annothere, þ{a}t he gruche nought her til ascensiou{n} day, to preue when he is seke. ve[2]rily his resurrecciou{n}? Credo. Beleuyst þow that thanne he Broþer or sisterʼ, louyst þou god þi styed vp in-to heuene be his lorde? he or sche, ȝif þey may myȝth, god and man, and there speke, woỻ sey ‘ȝhee,’ [d]or is euyn in maieste w{i}t{h} his p{er}auenture, ȝif þey may not fader? speke, þenke ‘ȝhee.’ Credo. ¶ þan þus, ȝif þou lovest god.... Beleuyst þow þat he schal come [e]Ȝiffe detħ goo faste on a man, at the day of dome to deme þe Speke to hym thesse wordis. gode and þe badde? Broþer or Systere in god, ȝif þou Credo. see or.... Beleuyst þow in þe holi gost, the [f]Now when þou hast seyde aỻ þis, thridde p{er}sone in trinite, and or ȝif þow maist not seye aỻ for in holy cherche, and þat þe hastynge of detħ, beginne her{e} sacrementis of holy chirche or his mynde go from hy{m}. Broþer aren ordeyned in remissiou{n} of or sister, art þou glad þ{a}t ma{n}nys senne? þow schalt dye in cristyn feythe? Credo. Beleuyst þow in þe sacrament of R’. ȝhe. þe auter, þat is cristes bodi whiche was born of marie, knowlechist þou ... wiche criste lefte her among vs [_Rest missing._] as for þe most p{re}ciows iewel, whan he schulde departe be deth from his disciples? Credo. Beleuest þow þat alle tho þat been in good lif schul haue part of alle [3]the[3] gode dedys, and preyeres that been doon in holy chirche, and [þat] alle tho þat been knet to-gedere here in holy chirche be grace, schul ben knet to-gedere in eu{er}lastyng ioye? Credo. Trustis thow in þe mercy of god, wiche wil not the deth of a synful man ȝif he be sory of hys senne and schreuen, and in wyl to amende hym? Credo. Trustis þow þat thow schal haue mercy ȝif þow be sori of þin senne? Credo. Trustis thow þat thow, and eu{er}y man and woman, schal rise vp at þe day of dome in body and in sowle, the badde to be dampned in endeles peyne, and þe gode to be take, bodi and sowle, in-to euerelasty{n}g blisse? [4]Credo. Art þow in wil fulli to forȝeue alle maner of men and women that þat þey haue trespased to the, so that þow art in wil to kepe no rancowr ne malise to hym in þe herte, but to be in loue and charite with eche man and woman? * * * * * I knowliche to god, and to owre lady seynt marie, and to alle þe halwen of heuene, that I haue senned, with mowth spoken, with feet goon, w{i}t{h} eyen seyen, with eren hered, with nose smelled, with herte þowht, and with al myn senful body myswrowth; therfore i preye owre ladi seynt marie and alle the halwyn of heuene, prey for me; and the prest, þat thow beseche for me, and me asoyle, for charite. Ȝif the seke mai speke after that he is schriue, and hath mad his gen{er}al confessiou{n}, asoyle the prest hym on þis wyse. * * * * * [5]Now, brodir or sister, ȝif þow beholde any cros, or ony ymage mad with ma{n}nes hond, wite wel þat it is not god; therfore thinke or seye in þin herte: I wot well that þow art not my{n} god, but maked aft{er} hym, to make me haue more mynde on myn god; therfore, lord fader þat art in heuene, m{er}ci i aske of alle þe sennes that i haue trespased aȝens the wilful passiou{n} of owre lord ih{es}u crist, the whiche he suffred for al mankende. merciful fader, of thi goodnesse and thi grete mercy, do awey al my{n} wikkednesse! FOOTNOTES: [1] leaf 50, back. [2] leaf 51. [3-3] In a later hand. [4] leaf 51, back. [5] leaf 52. [a] leaf 13, back. [b] leaf 14. [c] leaf 15, back. [d] leaf 16. [e] leaf 18. [f] leaf 19, back. THE GENERAL SENTENCE. This form of excommunication, read four times a year, has been printed from an excellent text in the Early English Text Society’s volume entitled _Instructions for Parish Priests_. The General Sentence is commonly found in the printed or later Manuals, but appears to have had no distinct place in any medieval service-book. _Mr. Henry Littlehales, who, in 1898, gave the Chaucer Society his ~Notes on the Road from London to Canterbury~, no. 30 of the Society’s Second Series, and who also edited for the Early English Text Society “The Prymer, or Lay Folk’s Prayer-Book,” from a Cambridge University MS. ab. 1420, nos. 105, 109 in the Original Series, has kindly given the Chaucer Society 250 copies of each of the Facsimiles of two Illuminated pages in Fifteenth-Century MS. Prymers in the British Museum._ _They are issued herewith, but are not made one of the Society’s publications, because we cannot undertake to reproduce them when the present copies run out. Every Member will decide for himself whether he puts these Facsimiles into one of the Society’s Texts, or keeps them apart in his picture-album._ _All will join in thanking Mr. Littlehales for his pretty and welcome gift._ _F. J. Furnivall._ _1 August, 1903._ [Illustration: A page of a fifteenth century Prymer, (the common medieval layfolks prayer book) From the Brit. Mus. MS. 2 A. XVIII. Full size.] [Illustration: A page of a fifteenth century Prymer, Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 2915. This is the common picture before the Office for the Dead. Full Size.] Early English Text Society. Extra Series, XC. English Fragments from Latin Medieval Service-Books WITH TWO COLOURED FACSIMILES FROM Medieval Prymers. EDITED BY HENRY LITTLEHALES. LONDON: PUBLISHED FOR THE EARLY ENGLISH TEXT SOCIETY BY KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO., LIMITED, DRYDEN HOUSE, 43, GERRARD STREET, SOHO, W. 1903 _Price Five Shillings._ Early English Text Society. =Committee of Management:= =Director:= DR. FREDERICK J. FURNIVALL, M.A. =Treasurer:= HENRY B. WHEATLEY, ESQ. =Hon. Sec.:= W. A. DALZIEL, ESQ., 67 VICTORIA ROAD, FINSBURY PARK, N. =Hon. Secs. for America:= { North & East: Prof. G. L. KITTREDGE, Harvard Coll., Cambr., Mass. { South & West: Prof. J. W. BRIGHT, Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore. LORD ALDENHAM, M.A. ISRAEL GOLLANCZ, M.A. SIDNEY L. LEE, M.A., D.LIT. REV. PROF. J. E. B. MAYOR, M.A. DR. J. A. H. MURRAY, M.A. PROF. NAPIER, M.A., PH.D. EDWARD B. PEACOCK, ESQ. ALFRED W. POLLARD, M.A. REV. PROF. WALTER W. SKEAT, LITT.D. DR. HENRY SWEET, M.A. DR. W. ALDIS WRIGHT, M.A. (_With power to add Workers to their number._) =Bankers:= THE UNION BANK OF LONDON, 2, PRINCES STREET, E.C. The Early English Text Society was started by Dr. Furnivall in 1864 for the purpose of bringing the mass of Old English Literature within the reach of the ordinary student, and of wiping away the reproach under which England had long rested, of having felt little interest in the monuments of her early language and life. On the starting of the Society, so many Texts of importance were at once taken in hand by its Editors, that it became necessary in 1867 to open, besides the _Original Series_ with which the Society began, an _Extra Series_ which should be mainly devoted to fresh editions of all that is most valuable in printed MSS. and Caxton’s and other black-letter books, though first editions of MSS. will not be excluded when the convenience of issuing them demands their inclusion in the Extra Series. During the thirty-nine years of the Society’s existence, it has produced, with whatever shortcomings, an amount of good solid work for which all students of our Language, and some of our Literature, must be grateful, and which has rendered possible the beginnings (at least) of proper Histories and Dictionaries of that Language and Literature, and has illustrated the thoughts, the life, the manners and customs of our forefathers and foremothers. But the Society’s experience has shown the very small number of those inheritors of the speech of Cynewulf, Chaucer, and Shakspere, who care two guineas a year for the records of that speech. ‘Let the dead past bury its dead’ is still the cry of Great Britain and her Colonies, and of America, in the matter of language. The Society has never had money enough to produce the Texts that could easily have been got ready for it; and many Editors are now anxious to send to press the work they have prepared. The necessity has therefore arisen for trying to increase the number of the Society’s members, and to induce its well-wishers to help it by gifts of money, either in one sum or by instalments. The Committee trust that every Member will bring before his or her friends and acquaintances the Society’s claims for liberal support. Until all Early English MSS. are printed, no proper History of our Language or Social Life is possible. The Subscription to the Society, which constitutes membership, is £1 1_s._ a year for the ORIGINAL SERIES, and £1 1_s._ for the EXTRA SERIES, due in advance on the 1st of JANUARY, and should be paid by Cheque, Postal Order, or Money-Order, crost ‘Union Bank of London,’ to the Hon. Secretary, W. A. DALZIEL, Esq., 67, Victoria Rd., Finsbury Park, London, N. Members who want their Texts posted to them, must add to their prepaid Subscriptions 1_s._ for the Original Series, and 1_s._ for the Extra Series, yearly. The Society’s Texts are also sold separately at the prices put after them in the Lists; but Members can get back-Texts at one-third less than the List-prices by sending the cash for them in advance to the Hon. Secretary. ☞ The Society intends to complete, as soon as its funds will allow, the Reprints of its out-of-print Texts of the year 1866, and also of nos. 20, 26 and 33. Prof. Skeat has finisht _Partenay_; Dr. McKnight of Ohio _King Horn_ and _Floris and Blancheflour_; and Dr. Furnivall his _Political, Religious and Love Poems_ and _Myrc’s Duties of a Parish Priest_. Dr. Otto Glauning has undertaken _Seinte Marherete_; and Dr. Furnivall has _Hali Meidenhad_ in type. As the cost of these Reprints, if they were not needed, would have been devoted to fresh Texts, the Reprints will be sent to all Members in lieu of such Texts. Though called ‘Reprints,’ these books are new editions, generally with valuable additions, a fact not noticed by a few careless receivers of them, who have complained that they already had the volumes. As the Society’s copies of the _Facsimile of the Epinal MS._ issued as an Extra Volume in 1883 are exhausted, Mr. J. H. Hessels, M.A., of St. John’s Coll., Cambridge, has kindly undertaken an edition of the MS. for the Society. This will be substituted for the Facsimile as an 1883 book, but will be also issued to all the present Members. [Sidenote: _Original and Extra Series Books 1903-1906._] =July 1904.= The Original-Series Texts for 1903 were: No. 122, Part II of _The Laud MS. Troy-Book_, edited from the unique Laud MS. 595 by Dr. J. E. Wülfing; and No. 123, Part II of Robert of Brunne’s _Handlyng Synne_, and its French original, ed. by Dr. F. J. Furnivall. The Extra-Series Texts for 1903 are to be: No. LXXXVIII, _Le Morte Arthur_, in 8-line stanzas, re-edited from the unique MS. Harl. 2252, by Prof. J. Douglas Bruce (issued), No. LXXXIX, Lydgate’s _Reason and Sensuality_, edited by Dr. Ernst Sieper, Part II, and No. XC, _English Fragments from Latin Medieval Service-Books_, edited, and given to the Society, by Mr. Henry Littlehales. The Original-Series Texts for 1904 will be No. 124, t. Hen. V, _Twenty-six Political and other Poems_ from the Digby MS. 102, &c., edited by Dr. J. Kail, and No. 125, Part I of the _Medieval Records of a London City Church_ (St. Mary-at-Hill), A.D. 1420-1559, copied and edited by Mr. Henry Littlehales from the Church Records in the Guildhall, the cost of the setting and corrections of the text being generously borne by its Editor. This book will show the income and outlay of the church; the drink provided for its Palm-Sunday players, its officers’ excursions into Kent and Essex, its dealing with the Plague, the disposal of its goods at the Reformation, &c., &c., and will help our members to realize the church-life of its time. The third Text will be Part I of _An Alphabet of Tales_, a very interesting collection, englisht in the Northern Dialect, about 1440, from the Latin _Alphabetum Narrationum_ by Etienne de Bésançon, and edited by Mrs. M. M. Banks from the unique MS. in the King’s Library in the British Museum; the above-named three texts are now ready for issue. Those for 1905 and 1906 will probably be chosen from Part II of the _Exeter Book_—Anglo-Saxon Poems from the unique MS. in Exeter Cathedral—re-edited by Israel Gollancz, M.A.; Part II of Prof. Dr. Holthausen’s _Vices and Virtues_; Part II of _Jacob’s Well_, edited by Dr. Brandeis; the Alliterative _Siege of Jerusalem_, edited by the late Prof. Dr. E. Kölbing and Prof. Dr. Kaluza; an Introduction and Glossary to the _Minor Poems of the Vernon MS._ by H. Hartley, M.A.; Alain Chartier’s _Quadrilogue_, edited from the unique MS. Univ. Coll. Oxford MS. No. 85, by Mr. J. W. H. Atkins of Owen’s College; a Northern Verse _Chronicle of England_ to 1327 A.D., in 42,000 lines, about 1420 A.D., edited by M. L. Perrin, B.A.; Prof. Bruce’s Introduction to _The English Conquest of Ireland_, Part II; and Dr. Furnivall’s edition of the _Lichfield Gilds_, which is all printed, and waits only for the Introduction, that Prof. E. C. K. Gonner has kindly undertaken to write for the book. Canon Wordsworth of Marlborough has given the Society a copy of the Leofric Canonical Rule, Latin and Anglo-Saxon, Parker MS. 191, C. C. C. Cambridge, and Prof. Napier will edit it, with a fragment of the englisht Capitula of Bp. Theodulf. The _Coventry Leet Book_ is being copied for the Society by Miss M. Dormer Harris—helpt by a contribution from the Common Council of the City,—and will be publisht by the Society (Miss Harris editing), as its contribution to our knowledge of the provincial city life of the 15th century. Dr. Brie of Berlin has undertaken to edit the prose _Brut_ or _Chronicle of Britain_ attributed to Sir John Mandeville, and printed by Caxton. He has already examined more than 100 English MSS. and several French ones, to get the best text, and find out its source. The Extra-Series Texts for 1904 will be chosen from Lydgate’s _DeGuilleville’s Pilgrimage of the Life of Man_, Part III, edited by Miss Locock; Dr. M. Konrath’s re-edition of _William of Shoreham’s Poems_, Part II; Dr. E. A. Kock’s edition of Lovelich’s _Merlin_ from the unique MS. in Corpus Christi Coll., Cambridge; the _Macro Plays_, edited from Mr. Gurney’s MS. by Dr. Furnivall and A. W. Pollard, M.A.; Prof. Erdmann’s re-edition of Lydgate’s _Siege of Thebes_ (issued also by the Chaucer Society); Miss Rickert’s re-edition of the Romance of _Emare_; Prof. I. Gollancz’s re-edition of two Alliterative Poems, _Winner and Waster_, &c., ab. 1360, lately issued for the Roxburghe Club; Dr. Norman Moore’s re-edition of _The Book of the Foundation of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London_, from the unique MS. ab. 1425, which gives an account of the Founder, Rahere, and the miraculous cures wrought at the Hospital; _The Craft of Nombrynge_, with other of the earliest englisht Treatises on Arithmetic, edited by R. Steele, B.A.; and Miss Warren’s two-text edition of _The Dance of Death_ from the Ellesmere and other MSS. These Extra-Series Texts ought to be completed by their Editors: the Second Part of the prose Romance of _Melusine_—Introduction, with ten facsimiles of the best woodblocks of the old foreign black-letter editions, Glossary, &c., by A. K. Donald, B.A. (now in India); and a new edition of the famous Early-English Dictionary (English and Latin), _Promptorium Parvulorum_, from the Winchester MS., ab. 1440 A.D.: in this, the Editor, the Rev. A. L. Mayhew, M.A., will follow and print his MS. not only in its arrangement of nouns first, and verbs second, under every letter of the Alphabet, but also in its giving of the flexions of the words. The Society’s edition will thus be the first modern one that really represents its original, a point on which Mr. Mayhew’s insistence will meet with the sympathy of all our Members. [Sidenote: _Texts preparing: The Texts for 1906, 1907 &c._] The Texts for the Extra Series in 1906 and 1907 will be chosen from _The Three Kings’ Sons_, Part II, the Introduction &c. by Prof. Dr. Leon Kellner; Part II of _The Chester Plays_, re-edited from the MSS., with a full collation of the formerly missing Devonshire MS., by Mr. G. England and Dr. Matthews; the Parallel-Text of the only two MSS. of the _Owl and Nightingale_, edited by Mr. G. F. H. Sykes (at press); Prof. Jespersen’s editions of John Hart’s _Orthographie_ (MS. 1551 A.D.; blackletter 1569), and _Method to teach Reading_, 1570; Deguilleville’s _Pilgrimage of the Sowle_, in English prose, edited by Prof. Dr. L. Kellner. (For the three prose versions of _The Pilgrimage of the Life of Man_—two English, one French—an Editor is wanted.) Members are askt to realise the fact that the Society has now 50 years’ work on its Lists,—at its present rate of production,—and that there is from 100 to 200 more years’ work to come after that. The year 2000 will not see finisht all the Texts that the Society ought to print. The need of more Members and money is pressing. Offers of help from willing Editors have continually to be declined because the Society has no funds to print their Texts. An urgent appeal is hereby made to Members to increase the list of Subscribers to the E. E. Text Society. It is nothing less than a scandal that the Hellenic Society should have nearly 1000 members, while the Early English Text Society has not 300! [Sidenote: _Deguilleville._] Before his death in 1895, Mr. G. N. Currie was preparing an edition of the 15th and 16th century Prose Versions of Guillaume de Deguilleville’s _Pilgrimage of the Life of Man_, with the French prose version by Jean Gallopes, from Lord Aldenham’s MS., he having generously promist to pay the extra cost of printing the French text, and engraving one or two of the illuminations in his MS. But Mr. Currie, when on his deathbed, charged a friend to burn _all_ his MSS. which lay in a corner of his room, and unluckily all the E. E. T. S.’s copies of the Deguilleville prose versions were with them, and were burnt with them, so that the Society will be put to the cost of fresh copies, Mr. Currie having died in debt. Guillaume de Deguilleville, monk of the Cistercian abbey of Chaalis, in the diocese of Senlis, wrote his first verse _Pèlerinaige de l’Homme_ in 1330-1 when he was 36.[1] Twenty-five (or six) years after, in 1355, he revised his poem, and issued a second version of it,[2] a revision of which was printed ab. 1500. Of the prose representative of the first version, 1330-1, a prose Englishing, about 1430 A.D., was edited by Mr. Aldis Wright for the Roxburghe Club in 1869, from MS. Ff. 5. 30 in the Cambridge University Library. Other copies of this prose English are in the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow, Q. 2. 25; Sion College, London; and the Laud Collection in the Bodleian, no. 740.[3] A copy in the Northern dialect is MS. G. 21, in St. John’s Coll., Cambridge, and this is the MS. which will be edited for the E. E. Text Society. The Laud MS. 740 was somewhat condenst and modernised, in the 17th century, into MS. Ff. 6. 30, in the Cambridge University Library:[4] “The Pilgrime or the Pilgrimage of Man in this World,” copied by Will. Baspoole, whose copy “was verbatim written by Walter Parker, 1645, and from thence transcribed by G. G. 1649; and from thence by W. A. 1655.” This last copy may have been read by, or its story reported to, Bunyan, and may have been the groundwork of his _Pilgrim’s Progress_. It will be edited for the E. E. T. Soc., its text running under the earlier English, as in Mr. Herrtage’s edition of the _Gesta Romanorum_ for the Society. In February 1464,[5] Jean Gallopes—a clerk of Angers, afterwards chaplain to John, Duke of Bedford, Regent of France—turned Deguilleville’s first verse _Pèlerinaige_ into a prose _Pèlerinage de la vie humaine_.[6] By the kindness of Lord Aldenham, as above mentiond, Gallopes’s French text will be printed opposite the early prose northern Englishing in the Society’s edition. The Second Version of Deguilleville’s _Pèlerinaige de l’Homme_, A.D. 1355 or -6, was englisht in verse by Lydgate in 1426. Of Lydgate’s poem, the larger part is in the Cotton MS. Vitellius C. xiii (leaves 2-308). This MS. leaves out Chaucer’s englishing of Deguilleville’s _A B C_ or _Prayer to the Virgin_, of which the successive stanzas start with A, B, C, and run all thro’ the alphabet; and it has 2 main gaps, besides many small ones from the tops of leaves being burnt in the Cotton fire. All these gaps (save the A B C) have been fild up from the Stowe MS. 952 (which old John Stowe completed) and from the end of the other imperfect MS. Cotton, Tiberius A vii. Thanks to the diligence of the old Elizabethan tailor and manuscript-lover, a complete text of Lydgate’s poem can be given, though that of an inserted theological prose treatise is incomplete. The British Museum French MSS. (Harleian 4399,[7] and Additional 22,937[8] and 25,594[9]) are all of the First Version. Besides his first _Pèlerinaige de l’homme_ in its two versions, Deguilleville wrote a second, “de l’ame separee du corps,” and a third, “de nostre seigneur Iesus.” Of the second, a prose Englishing of 1413, _The Pilgrimage of the Sowle_ (with poems by Hoccleve, already printed for the Society with that author’s _Regement of Princes_), exists in the Egerton MS. 615,[10] at Hatfield, Cambridge (Univ. Kk. 1. 7, and Caius), Oxford (Univ. Coll. and Corpus), and in Caxton’s edition of 1483. This version has ‘somewhat of addicions’ as Caxton says, and some shortenings too, as the maker of both, the first translater, tells us in the MSS. Caxton leaves out the earlier englisher’s interesting Epilog in the Egerton MS. This prose englishing of the _Sowle_ will be edited for the Society by Prof. Dr. Leon Kellner after that of the _Man_ is finisht, and will have Gallopes’s French opposite it, from Lord Aldenham’s MS., as his gift to the Society. Of the Pilgrimage of Jesus, no englishing is known. [Sidenote: _Anglo-Saxon Psalters._] As to the MS. Anglo-Saxon Psalters, Dr. Hy. Sweet has edited the oldest MS., the Vespasian, in his _Oldest English Texts_ for the Society, and Mr. Harsley has edited the latest, c. 1150, Eadwine’s Canterbury Psalter. The other MSS., except the Paris one, being interlinear versions,—some of the Roman-Latin redaction, and some of the Gallican,—Prof. Logeman has prepared for press, a Parallel-Text edition of the first twelve Psalms, to start the complete work. He will do his best to get the Paris Psalter—tho’ it is not an interlinear one—into this collective edition; but the additional matter, especially in the Verse-Psalms, is very difficult to manage. If the Paris text cannot be parallelised, it will form a separate volume. The Early English Psalters are all independent versions, and will follow separately in due course. [Sidenote: _More Money wanted._] Through the good offices of the Examiners, some of the books for the Early-English Examinations of the University of London will be chosen from the Society’s publications, the Committee having undertaken to supply such books to students at a large reduction in price. The net profits from these sales will be applied to the Society’s Reprints. Members are reminded that _fresh Subscribers are always wanted_, and that the Committee can at any time, on short notice, send to press an additional Thousand Pounds’ worth of work. [Sidenote: _Saints’ Lives._] The Subscribers to the Original Series must be prepared for the issue of the whole of the Early English _Lives of Saints_, sooner or later. The Society cannot leave out any of them, even though some are dull. The Sinners would doubtless be much more interesting. But in many Saints’ Lives will be found valuable incidental details of our forefathers’ social state, and all are worthful for the history of our language. The Lives may be lookt on as the religious romances or story-books of their period. The Standard Collection of Saints’ Lives in the Corpus and Ashmole MSS., the Harleian MS. 2277, &c. will repeat the Laud set, our No. 87, with additions, and in right order. (The foundation MS. (Laud 108) had to be printed first, to prevent quite unwieldy collations.) The Supplementary Lives from the Vernon and other MSS. will form one or two separate volumes. Besides the Saints’ Lives, Trevisa’s englishing of _Bartholomæus de Proprietatibus Rerum_, the mediæval Cyclopædia of Science, &c., will be the Society’s next big undertaking. Dr. R. von Fleischhacker will edit it. Prof. Napier of Oxford, wishing to have the whole of our MS. Anglo-Saxon in type, and accessible to students, will edit for the Society all the unprinted and other Anglo-Saxon Homilies which are not included in Thorpe’s edition of Ælfric’s prose,[11] Dr. Morris’s of the Blickling Homilies, and Prof. Skeat’s of Ælfric’s Metrical Homilies. The late Prof. Kölbing left complete his text, for the Society, of the _Ancren Riwle_, from the best MS., with collations of the other four, and this will be edited for the Society by Dr. Thümmler. Mr. Harvey means to prepare an edition of the three MSS. of the _Earliest English Metrical Psalter_, one of which was edited by the late Mr. Stevenson for the Surtees Society. Members of the Society will learn with pleasure that its example has been followed, not only by the Old French Text Society which has done such admirable work under its founders Profs. Paul Meyer and Gaston Paris, but also by the Early Russian Text Society, which was set on foot in 1877, and has since issued many excellent editions of old MS. Chronicles, &c. Members will also note with pleasure the annexation of large tracts of our Early English territory by the important German contingent, the late Professors Zupitza and Kölbing, the living Hausknecht, Einenkel, Haenisch, Kaluza, Hupe, Adam, Holthausen, Schick, Herzfeld, Brandeis, Sieper, Konrath, Wülfing, &c. Scandinavia has also sent us Prof. Erdmann and Dr. E. A. Kock; Holland, Prof. H. Logeman, who is now working in Belgium; France, Prof. Paul Meyer—with Gaston Paris as adviser (alas, now dead);—Italy, Prof. Lattanzi; Austria, Dr. von Fleischhacker; while America is represented by the late Prof. Child, by Dr. Mary Noyes Colvin, Miss Rickert, Profs. Mead, McKnight, Triggs, Perrin, &c. The sympathy, the ready help, which the Society’s work has cald forth from the Continent and the United States, have been among the pleasantest experiences of the Society’s life, a real aid and cheer amid all troubles and discouragements. All our Members are grateful for it, and recognise that the bond their work has woven between them and the lovers of language and antiquity across the seas is one of the most welcome results of the Society’s efforts. =ORIGINAL SERIES.= 1. =Early English Alliterative Poems=, ab. 1360 A.D., ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 16_s._ 1864 2. =Arthur=, ab. 1440, ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A. 4_s._ „ 3. =Lauder on the Dewtie of Kyngis, &c.=, 1556, ed. F. Hall, D.C.L. 4_s._ „ 4. =Sir Gawayne and the Green Knight=, ab. 1360, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 10_s._ „ 5. =Hume’s Orthographie and Congruitie of the Britan Tongue=, ab. 1617, ed. H. B. Wheatley. 4_s._ 1865 6. =Lancelot of the Laik=, ab. 1500, ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat. 8_s._ „ 7. =Genesis & Exodus=, ab. 1250, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 8_s._ „ 8. =Morte Arthure=, ab. 1440, ed. E. Brock. 7_s._ „ 9. =Thynne on Speght’s ed. of Chaucer=, A.D. 1599, ed. Dr. G. Kingsley and Dr. F. J. Furnivall. 10_s._ „ 10. =Merlin=, ab. 1440, Part I., ed. H. B. Wheatley. 2_s._ 6_d._ „ 11. =Lyndesay’s Monarche, &c.=, 1552, Part I., ed. J. Small, M.A. 3_s._ „ 12. =Wright’s Chaste Wife=, ab. 1462, ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A. 1_s._ „ 13. =Seinte Marherete=, 1200-1330, ed. Rev. O. Cockayne; re-edited by Dr. Otto Glauning. [_Out of print._ 1866 14. =Kyng Horn, Floris and Blancheflour, &c.=, ed. Rev. J. R. Lumby, B.D., re-ed. Dr. G. H. McKnight. 5_s._ „ 15. =Political, Religious, and Love Poems=, ed. F. J. Furnivall. 7_s._ 6_d._ „ 16. =The Book of Quinte Essence=, ab. 1460-70, ed. F. J. Furnivall. 1_s._ „ 17. =Parallel Extracts from 45 MSS. of Piers the Plowman=, ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat. 1_s._ „ 18. =Hali Meidenhad=, ab. 1200, ed. Rev. O. Cockayne, re-edited by Dr. F. J. Furnivall. [_At Press._ „ 19. =Lyndesay’s Monarche, &c.=, Part II., ed. J. Small, M.A. 3_s._ 6_d._ „ 20. =Hampole’s English Prose Treatises=, ed. Rev. G. G. Perry. 1_s._ [_Out of print._ „ 21. =Merlin=, Part II., ed. H. B. Wheatley. 4_s._ „ 22. =Partenay= or =Lusignen=, ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat. „ 23. =Dan Michel’s Ayenbite of Inwyt=, 1340, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 10_s._ 6_d._ „ 24. =Hymns to the Virgin and Christ; the Parliament of Devils, &c.=, ab. 1430, ed. F. J. Furnivall. 1867 25. =The Stacions of Rome, the Pilgrims’ Sea-voyage, with Clene Maydenhod=, ed. F. J. Furnivall. 1_s._ „ 26. =Religious Pieces in Prose and Verse=, from R. Thornton’s MS., ed. Rev. G. G. Perry. 2_s._ [_Out of print._ „ 27. =Levins’s Manipulus Vocabulorum, a ryming Dictionary=, 1570, ed. H. B. Wheatley. 12_s._ „ 28. =William’s Vision of Piers the Plowman=, 1362 A.D.; Text A, Part I., ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat. 6_s._ „ 29. =Old English Homilies= (ab. 1220-30 A.D.). Series I, Part I. Edited by Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 7_s._ „ 30. =Pierce the Ploughmans Crede=, ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat. 2_s._ „ 31. =Myrc’s Duties of a Parish Priest=, in Verse, ab. 1420 A.D., ed. E. Peacock. 4_s._ 1868 32. =Early English Meals and Manners: the Boke of Norture of John Russell, the Bokes of Keruynge, Curtasye, and Demeanor, the Babees Book, Urbanitatis, &c.=, ed. F. J. Furnivall. 12_s._ „ 33. =The Knight de la Tour Landry=, ab. 1440 A.D. A Book for Daughters, ed. T. Wright, M.A. [_Out of print._ „ 34. =Old English Homilies= (before 1300 A.D.). Series I, Part II., ed. R. Morris, LL.D. 8_s._ „ 35. =Lyndesay’s Works=, Part III.: The Historie and Testament of Squyer Meldrum, ed. F. Hall. 2_s._ „ 36. =Merlin=, Part III. Ed. H. B. Wheatley. On Arthurian Localities, by J. S. Stuart Glennie. 12_s._ 1869 37. =Sir David Lyndesay’s Works=, Part IV., Ane Satyre of the Three Estaits. Ed. F. Hall, D.C.L. 4_s._ „ 38. =William’s Vision of Piers the Plowman=, Part II. Text B. Ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 10_s._ 6_d._ „ 39. =Alliterative Romance of the Destruction of Troy.= Ed. D. Donaldson & G. A. Panton. Pt. I. 10_s._ 6_d._ „ 40. =English Gilds=, their Statutes and Customs, 1389 A.D. Edit. Toulmin Smith and Lucy T. Smith, with an Essay on Gilds and Trades-Unions, by Dr. L. Brentano. 21_s._ 1870 41. =William Lauder’s Minor Poems.= Ed. F. J. Furnivall. 3_s._ „ 42. =Bernardus De Cura Rei Famuliaris=, Early Scottish Prophecies, &c. Ed. J. R. Lumby, M.A. 2_s._ „ 43. =Ratis Raving=, and other Moral and Religious Pieces. Ed. J. R. Lumby, M.A. „ 44. =The Alliterative Romance of Joseph of Arimathie=, or =The Holy Grail=: from the Vernon MS.; with W. de Worde’s and Pynson’s Lives of Joseph: ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 5_s._ 1871 45. =King Alfred’s West-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Pastoral Care=, edited from 2 MSS., with an English translation, by Henry Sweet, Esq., B.A., Balliol College, Oxford. Part I. 10_s._ „ 46. =Legends of the Holy Rood, Symbols of the Passion and Cross Poems=, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 10_s._ „ 47. =Sir David Lyndesay’s Works=, Part V., ed. Dr. J. A. H. Murray. 3_s._ „ 48. =The Times’ Whistle=, and other Poems, by R. C., 1616; ed. by J. M. Cowper, Esq. 6_s._ „ 49. =An Old English Miscellany=, containing a Bestiary, Kentish Sermons, Proverbs of Alfred, and Religious Poems of the 13th cent., ed. from the MSS. by the Rev. R. Morris, LL.D. 10_s._ 1872 50. =King Alfred’s West-Saxon Version of Gregory’s Pastoral Care=, ed. H. Sweet, M.A. Part II. 10_s._ „ 51. =The Life of St Juliana=, 2 versions, A.D. 1230, with translations; ed. T. O. Cockayne & E. Brock. 2_s._ „ 52. =Palladius on Husbondrie=, englisht (ab. 1420 A.D.), ed. Rev. Barton Lodge, M.A. Part I. 10_s._ „ 53. =Old-English Homilies=, Series II., and three Hymns to the Virgin and God, 13th-century, with the music to two of them, in old and modern notation; ed. Rev. R. Morris, LL.D. 8_s._ 1873 54. =The Vision of Piers Plowman=, Text C: =Richard the Redeles= (by William, the author of the _Vision_) and =The Crowned King=; Part III., ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 18_s._ „ 55. =Generydes=, a Romance, ab. 1440 A.D., ed. W. Aldis Wright, M.A. Part I. 3_s._ „ 56. =The Gest Hystoriale of the Destruction of Troy=, in alliterative verse; ed. by D. Donaldson, Esq., and the late Rev. G. A. Panton. Part II. 10_s._ 6_d._ 1874 57. =The Early English Version of the “Cursor Mundi”=; in four Texts, edited by the Rev. R. Morris, M.A., LL.D. Part I, with 2 photolithographic facsimiles. 10_s._ 6_d._ „ 58. =The Blickling Homilies=, 971 A.D., ed. Rev. R. Morris, LL.D. Part I. 8_s._ „ 59. =The “Cursor Mundi,”= in four Texts, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. Part II. 15_s._ 1875 60. =Meditacyuns on the Soper of our Lorde= (by Robert of Brunne), edited by J. M. Cowper. 2_s._ 6_d._ „ 61. =The Romance and Prophecies of Thomas of Erceldoune=, from 5 MSS.; ed. Dr. J. A. H. Murray. 10_s._ 6_d._ „ 62. =The “Cursor Mundi,”= in four Texts, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. Part III. 15_s._ 1876 63. =The Blickling Homilies=, 971 A.D., ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. Part II. 7_s._ „ 64. =Francis Thynne’s Embleames and Epigrams=, A.D. 1600, ed. F. J. Furnivall. 7_s._ „ 65. =Be Domes Dæge= (Bede’s _De Die Judicii_), &c., ed. J. R. Lumby, B.D. 2_s._ „ 66. =The “Cursor Mundi,”= in four Texts, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. Part IV., with 2 autotypes. 10_s._ 1877 67. =Notes on Piers Plowman=, by the Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. Part I. 21_s._ „ 68. =The “Cursor Mundi,”= in 4 Texts, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. Part V. 25_s._ 1878 69. =Adam Davie’s 5 Dreams about Edward II., &c.=, ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A. 5_s._ „ 70. =Generydes=, a Romance, ed. W. Aldis Wright, M.A. Part II. 4_s._ „ 71. =The Lay Folks Mass-Book=, four texts, ed. Rev. Canon Simmons. 25_s._ 1879 72. =Palladius on Husbondrie=, englisht (ab. 1420 A.D.). Part II. Ed. S. J. Herrtage, B.A. 15_s._ „ 73. =The Blickling Homilies=, 971 A.D., ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. Part III. 10_s._ 1880 74. =English Works of Wyclif=, hitherto unprinted, ed. F. D. Matthew, Esq. 20_s._ „ 75. =Catholicon Anglicum=, an early English Dictionary, from Lord Monson’s MS. A.D. 1483, ed., with Introduction & Notes, by S. J. Herrtage, B.A.; and with a Preface by H. B. Wheatley. 20_s._ 1881 76. =Aelfric’s Metrical Lives of Saints=, in MS. Cott. Jul. E 7., ed. Rev. Prof. Skeat, M.A. Part I. 10_s._ „ 77. =Beowulf=, the unique MS. autotyped and transliterated, edited by Prof. Zupitza, Ph.D. 25_s._ 1882 78. =The Fifty Earliest English Wills=, in the Court of Probate, 1387-1439, ed. by F. J. Furnivall, M.A. 7_s._ „ 79. =King Alfred’s Orosius=, from Lord Tollemache’s 9th century MS., Part I, ed. H. Sweet, M.A. 13_s._ 1883 79 _b._ =The Epinal Glossary=, 8th cent., ed. J. H. Hessels, M.A. 15_s._ [_Preparing._ „ 80. =The Early-English Life of St. Katherine= and its Latin Original, ed. Dr. Einenkel. 12_s._ 1884 81. =Piers Plowman=: Notes, Glossary, &c. Part IV, completing the work, ed. Rev. Prof. Skeat, M.A. 18_s._ „ 82. =Aelfric’s Metrical Lives of Saints=, MS. Cott. Jul. E 7., ed. Rev. Prof. Skeat, M.A., LL.D. Part II. 12_s._ 1885 83. =The Oldest English Texts, Charters, &c.=, ed. H. Sweet, M.A. 20_s._ „ 84. =Additional Analogs to ‘The Wright’s Chaste Wife,’= No. 12, by W. A. Clouston. 1_s._ 1886 85. =The Three Kings of Cologne.= 2 English Texts, and 1 Latin, ed. Dr. C. Horstmann. 17_s._ „ 86. =Prose Lives of Women Saints=, ab. 1610 A.D., ed. from the unique MS. by Dr. C. Horstmann. 12_s._ „ 87. =Early English Verse Lives of Saints= (earliest version), Laud MS. 108, ed. Dr. C. Horstmann. 20_s._ 1887 88. =Hy. Bradshaw’s Life of St. Werburghe= (Pynson, 1521), ed. Dr. C. Horstmann. 10_s._ „ 89. =Vices and Virtues=, from the unique MS., ab. 1200 A.D., ed. Dr. F. Holthausen. Part I. 8_s._ 1888 90. =Anglo-Saxon and Latin Rule of St. Benet=, interlinear Glosses, ed. Dr. H. Logeman. 12_s._ „ 91. =Two Fifteenth-Century Cookery-Books=, ab. 1430-1450, edited by Mr. T. Austin. 10_s._ „ 92. =Eadwine’s Canterbury Psalter=, from the Trin. Cambr. MS., ab. 1150 A.D., ed. F. Harsley, B.A. Pt. I. 12_s._ 1889 93. =Defensor’s Liber Scintillarum=, edited from the MSS. by Ernest Rhodes, B.A. 12_s._ „ 94. =Aelfric’s Metrical Lives of Saints=, MS. Cott. Jul. E 7, Part III., ed. Prof. Skeat, Litt.D., LL.D. 12_s._ 1890 95. =The Old-English version of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History=, re-ed. by Dr. Thomas Miller. Part I, § 1. 18_s._ „ 96. =The Old-English version of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History=, re-ed. by Dr. Thomas Miller. Pt. I, § 2. 15_s._ 1891 97. =The Earliest English Prose Psalter=, edited from its 2 MSS. by Dr. K. D. Buelbring. Part I. 15_s._ „ 98. =Minor Poems of the Vernon MS.=, Part I., ed. Dr. C. Horstmann. 20_s._ 1892 99. =Cursor Mundi.= Part VI. Preface, Notes, and Glossary, ed. Rev. Dr. R. Morris. 10_s._ „ 100. =Capgrave’s Life of St. Katharine=, ed. Dr. C. Horstmann, with Forewords by Dr. Furnivall. 20_s._ 1893 101. =Cursor Mundi.= Part VII. Essay on the MSS., their Dialects, &c., by Dr. H. Hupe. 10_s._ „ 102. =Lanfranc’s Cirurgie=, ab. 1400 A.D., ed. Dr. R. von Fleischhacker. Part I. 20_s._ 1894 103. =The Legend of the Cross=, from a 12th century MS., &c., ed. Prof. A. S. Napier, M.A., Ph.D. 7_s._ 6_d._ „ 104. =The Exeter Book= (Anglo-Saxon Poems), re-edited from the unique MS. by I. Gollancz, M.A. Part I. 20_s._ 1895 105. =The Prymer= or =Lay-Folks’ Prayer-Book=, Camb. Univ. MS., ab. 1420, ed. Henry Littlehales. Part I. 10_s._ „ 106. =R. Misyn’s Fire of Love and Mending of Life= (Hampole), 1434, 1435, ed. Rev. R. Harvey, M.A. 15_s._ 1896 107. =The English Conquest of Ireland=, A.D. 1166-1185, 2 Texts, 1425, 1440, Pt. I., ed. Dr. Furnivall. 15_s._ „ 108. =Child-Marriages and -Divorces, Trothplights, &c.= Chester Depositions, 1561-6, ed. Dr. Furnivall. 15_s._ 1897 109. =The Prymer= or =Lay-Folks’ Prayer-Book=, ab. 1420, ed. Henry Littlehales. Part II. 10_s._ „ 110. =The Old-English Version of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History=, ed. Dr. T. Miller. Part II, § 1. 15_s._ 1898 111. =The Old-English Version of Bede’s Ecclesiastical History=, ed. Dr. T. Miller. Part II, § 2. 15_s._ „ 112. =Merlin=, Part IV: =Outlines of the Legend of Merlin=, by Prof. W. E. Mead, Ph.D. 15_s._ 1899 113. =Queen Elizabeth’s Englishings of Boethius, Plutarch &c. &c.=, ed. Miss C. Pemberton. 15_s._ „ 114. =Aelfric’s Metrical Lives of Saints=, Part IV and last, ed. Prof. Skeat, Litt.D., LL.D. 10_s._ 1900 115. =Jacob’s Well=, edited from the unique Salisbury Cathedral MS. by Dr. A. Brandeis. Part I. 10_s._ „ 116. =An Old-English Martyrology=, re-edited by Dr. G. Herzfeld. 10_s._ „ 117. =Minor Poems of the Vernon MS.=, edited by Dr. F. J. Furnivall. Part II. 15_s._ 1901 118. =The Lay Folks’ Catechism=, ed. by Canon Simmons and Rev. H. E. Nolloth, M.A. 5_s._ „ 119. =Robert of Brunne’s Handlyng Synne= (1303), and its French original, re-ed. by Dr. Furnivall. Pt. I. 10_s._ „ 120. =The Rule of St. Benet=, in Northern Prose and Verse, & Caxton’s Summary, ed. Dr. E. A. Kock. 15_s._ 1902 121. =The Laud MS. Troy-Book=, ed. from the unique Laud MS. 595, by Dr. J. E. Wülfing. Part I. 15_s._ „ 122. =The Laud MS. Troy-Book=, ed. from the unique Laud MS. 595, by Dr. J. E. Wülfing. Part II. 20_s._ 1903 123. =Robert of Brunne’s Handlyng Synne= (1303), and its French original, re-ed. by Dr. Furnivall. Pt. II. 10_s._ „ 124. =Twenty-six Political and other Poems= from Digby MS. 102 &c., ed. by Dr. J. Kail. Part I. 10_s._ 1904 125. =Medieval Records of a London City Church=, ed. Henry Littlehales. Pt. I. 20_s._ „ 126. =An Alphabet of Tales=, in Northern English from Latin, ed. Mrs. M. M. Banks. Part I. 10_s._ „ 127. 1905 =EXTRA SERIES.= _The Publications for 1867-1901 (one guinea each year) are_:— I. =William of Palerne=; or, =William and the Werwolf=. Re-edited by Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 13_s._ 1867 II. =Early English Pronunciation= with especial Reference to Shakspere and Chaucer, by A. J. Ellis, F.R.S. Part I. 10_s._ „ III. =Caxton’s Book of Curtesye=, in Three Versions. Ed. F. J. Furnivall. 5_s._ 1868 IV. =Havelok the Dane.= Re-edited by the Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 10_s._ „ V. =Chaucer’s Boethius.= Edited from the two best MSS. by Rev. Dr. R. Morris 12_s._ „ VI. =Chevelere Assigne.= Re-edited from the unique MS. by Lord Aldenham, M.A. 3_s._ „ VII. =Early English Pronunciation=, by A. J. Ellis, F.R.S. Part II. 10_s._ 1869 VIII. =Queene Elizabethes Achademy, &c.= Ed. F. J. Furnivall. Essays on early Italian and German Books of Courtesy, by W. M. Rossetti and Dr. E. Oswald. 13_s._ „ IX. =Awdeley’s Fraternitye of Vacabondes, Harman’s Caveat, &c.= Ed. E. Viles & F. J. Furnivall. 7_s._ 6_d._ „ X. =Andrew Boorde’s Introduction of Knowledge, 1547, Dyetary of Helth, 1542, Barnes in Defence of the Berde, 1542-3.= Ed. F. J. Furnivall. 18_s._ 1870 XI. =Barbour’s Bruce=, Part I. Ed. from MSS. and editions, by Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 12_s._ „ XII. =England in Henry VIII.’s Time=: a Dialogue between Cardinal Pole & Lupset, by Thom. Starkey, Chaplain to Henry VIII. Ed. J. M. Cowper. Part II. 12_s._ (Part I. is No. XXXII, 1878, 8_s._) 1871 XIII. =A Supplicacyon of the Beggers=, by Simon Fish, 1528-9 A.D., ed. F. J. Furnivall; with =A Supplication to our Moste Soueraigne Lorde=; =A Supplication of the Poore Commons=; and =The Decaye of England by the Great Multitude of Sheep=, ed. by J. M. Cowper, Esq. 6_s._ „ XIV. =Early English Pronunciation=, by A. J. Ellis, Esq., F.R.S. Part III. 10_s._ „ XV. =Robert Crowley’s Thirty-One Epigrams, Voyce of the Last Trumpet, Way to Wealth, &c.=, A.D. 1550-1, edited by J. M. Cowper, Esq. 12_s._ 1872 XVI. =Chaucer’s Treatise on the Astrolabe.= Ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 6_s._ „ XVII. =The Complaynt of Scotlande=, 1549 A.D., with 4 Tracts (1542-48), ed. Dr. Murray. Part I. 10_s._ „ XVIII. =The Complaynt of Scotlande=, 1549 A.D., ed. Dr. Murray. Part II. 8_s._ 1873 XIX. =Oure Ladyes Myroure=, A.D. 1530, ed. Rev. J. H. Blunt, M.A. 24_s._ „ XX. =Lovelich’s History of the Holy Grail= (ab. 1450 A.D.), ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A., Ph.D. Part I. 8_s._ 1874 XXI. =Barbour’s Bruce=, Part II., ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 4_s._ „ XXII. =Henry Brinklow’s Complaynt of Roderyck Mors= (ab. 1542): and =The Lamentacion of a Christian against the Citie of London=, made by Roderigo Mors, A.D. 1545. Ed. J. M. Cowper. 9_s._ „ XXIII. =Early English Pronunciation=, by A. J. Ellis, F.R.S. Part IV. 10_s._ „ XXIV. =Lovelich’s History of the Holy Grail=, ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A., Ph.D. Part II. 10_s._ 1875 XXV. =Guy of Warwick=, 15th-century Version, ed. Prof. Zupitza. Part I. 20_s._ „ XXVI. =Guy of Warwick=, 15th-century Version, ed. Prof. Zupitza. Part II. 14_s._ 1876 XXVII. =Bp. Fisher’s English Works= (died 1535), ed. by Prof. J. E. B. Mayor. Part I, the Text. 16_s._ „ XXVIII. =Lovelich’s Holy Grail=, ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A., Ph.D. Part III. 10_s._ 1877 XXIX. =Barbour’s Bruce.= Part III., ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat, M.A. 21_s._ „ XXX. =Lovelich’s Holy Grail=, ed. F. J. Furnivall, M.A., Ph.D. Part IV. 15_s._ 1878 XXXI. =The Alliterative Romance of Alexander and Dindimus=, ed. Rev. W. W. Skeat. 6_s._ „ XXXII. =Starkey’s “England in Henry VIII’s time.”= Pt. I. =Starkey’s Life and Letters=, ed. S. J. Herrtage. 8_s._ „ XXXIII. =Gesta Romanorum= (englisht ab. 1440), ed. S. J. Herrtage, B.A. 15_s._ 1879 XXXIV. =The Charlemagne Romances:—1. Sir Ferumbras=, from Ashm. MS. 33, ed. S. J. Herrtage. 15_s._ „ XXXV. =Charlemagne Romances:—2. The Sege off Melayne, Sir Otuell, &c.=, ed. S. J. Herrtage. 12_s._ 1880 XXXVI. =Charlemagne Romances:—3. Lyf of Charles the Grete=, Pt. I., ed. S. J. Herrtage. 16_s._ „ XXXVII. =Charlemagne Romances:—4. Lyf of Charles the Grete=, Pt. II., ed. S. J. Herrtage. 15_s._ 1881 XXXVIII. =Charlemagne Romances:—5. The Sowdone of Babylone=, ed. Dr. Hausknecht. 15_s._ „ XXXIX. =Charlemagne Romances:—6. Rauf Colyear, Roland, Otuel, &c.=, ed. S. J. Herrtage, B.A. 15_s._ 1882 XL. =Charlemagne Romances:—7. Huon of Burdeux=, by Lord Berners, ed. S. L. Lee, B.A. Part I. 15_s._ „ XLI. =Charlemagne Romances:—8. Huon of Burdeux=, by Lord Berners, ed. S. L. Lee, B.A. Pt. II. 15_s._ 1883 XLII. =Guy of Warwick=: 2 texts (Auchinleck MS. and Caius MS.), ed. Prof. Zupitza. Part I. 15_s._ „ XLIII. =Charlemagne Romances:—9. Huon of Burdeux=, by Lord Berners, ed. S. L. Lee, B.A. Pt. III. 15_s._ 1884 XLIV. =Charlemagne Romances:—10. The Four Sons of Aymon=, ed. Miss Octavia Richardson. Pt. I. 15_s._ „ XLV. =Charlemagne Romances:—11. The Four Sons of Aymon=, ed. Miss O. Richardson. Pt. II. 20_s._ 1885 XLVI. =Sir Bevis of Hamton=, from the Auchinleck and other MSS., ed. Prof. E. Kölbing, Ph.D. Part I. 10_s._ „ XLVII. =The Wars of Alexander=, ed. Rev. Prof. Skeat, Litt.D., LL.D. 20_s._ 1886 XLVIII. =Sir Bevis of Hamton=, ed. Prof. E. Kölbing, Ph.D. Part II. 10_s._ „ XLIX. =Guy of Warwick=, 2 texts (Auchinleck and Caius MSS.), Pt. II., ed. Prof. J. Zupitza, Ph.D. 15_s._ 1887 L. =Charlemagne Romances:—12. Huon of Burdeux=, by Lord Berners, ed. S. L. Lee, B.A. Part IV. 5_s._ „ LI. =Torrent of Portyngale=, from the unique MS. in the Chetham Library, ed. E. Adam, Ph.D. 10_s._ „ LII. =Bullein’s Dialogue against the Feuer Pestilence, 1578= (ed. 1, 1564). Ed. M. & A. H. Bullen. 10_s._ 1888 LIII. =Vicary’s Anatomie of the Body of Man, 1548=, ed. 1577, ed. F. J. & Percy Furnivall. Part I. 15_s._ „ LIV. =Caxton’s Englishing of Alain Chartier’s Curial=, ed. Dr. F. J. Furnivall & Prof. P. Meyer. 5_s._ „ LV. =Barbour’s Bruce=, ed. Rev. Prof. Skeat, Litt.D., LL.D. Part IV. 5_s._ 1889 LVI. =Early English Pronunciation=, by A. J. Ellis, Esq., F.R.S. Pt. V., the present English Dialects. 25_s._ „ LVII. =Caxton’s Eneydos=, A.D. 1490, coll. with its French, ed. M. T. Culley, M.A. & Dr. F. J. Furnivall. 13_s._ 1890 LVIII. =Caxton’s Blanchardyn & Eglantine=, c. 1489, extracts from ed. 1595, & French, ed. Dr. L. Kellner. 17_s._ „ LIX. =Guy of Warwick=, 2 texts (Auchinleck and Caius MSS.), Part III., ed. Prof. J. Zupitza, Ph.D. 15_s._ 1891 LX. =Lydgate’s Temple of Glass=, re-edited from the MSS. by Dr. J. Schick. 15_s._ „ LXI. =Hoccleve’s Minor Poems, I.=, from the Phillipps and Durham MSS., ed. F. J. Furnivall, Ph.D. 15_s._ 1892 LXII. =The Chester Plays=, re-edited from the MSS. by the late Dr. Hermann Deimling. Part I. 15_s._ „ LXIII. =Thomas a Kempis’s De Imitatione Christi=, englisht ab. 1440, & 1502, ed. Prof. J. K. Ingram. 15_s._ 1893 LXIV. =Caxton’s Godfrey of Boloyne=, or =Last Siege of Jerusalem=, 1481, ed. Dr. Mary N. Colvin. 15_s._ „ LXV. =Sir Bevis of Hamton=, ed. Prof. E. Kölbing, Ph.D. Part III. 15_s._ 1894 LXVI. =Lydgate’s and Burgh’s Secrees of Philisoffres=, ab. 1445-50, ed. R. Steele, B.A. 15_s._ „ LXVII. =The Three Kings’ Sons=, a Romance, ab. 1500, Part I., the Text, ed. Dr. Furnivall. 10_s._ 1895 LXVIII. =Melusine=, the prose Romance, ab. 1500, Part I, the Text, ed. A. K. Donald. 20_s._ „ LXIX. =Lydgate’s Assembly of the Gods=, ed. Prof. Oscar L. Triggs, M.A., Ph.D. 15_s._ 1896 LXX. =The Digby Plays=, edited by Dr. F. J. Furnivall. 15_s._ „ LXXI. =The Towneley Plays=, ed. Geo. England and A. W. Pollard, M.A. 15_s._ 1897 LXXII. =Hoccleve’s Regement of Princes=, 1411-12, =and 14 Poems=, edited by Dr. F. J. Furnivall. 15_s._ „ LXXIII. =Hoccleve’s Minor Poems, II.=, from the Ashburnham MS., ed. I. Gollancz, M.A. [_At Press._ „ LXXIV. =Secreta Secretorum=, 3 prose Englishings, by Jas. Yonge, 1428, ed. R. Steele, B.A. Part I. 20_s._ 1898 LXXV. =Speculum Guidonis de Warwyk=, edited by Miss G. L. Morrill, M.A., Ph.D. 10_s._ „ LXXVI. =George Ashby’s Poems, &c.=, ed. Miss Mary Bateson. 15_s._ 1899 LXXVII. =Lydgate’s DeGuilleville’s Pilgrimage of the Life of Man=, 1426, ed. Dr. F. J. Furnivall. Part I. 10_s._ „ LXXVIII. =The Life and Death of Mary Magdalene=, by T. Robinson, c. 1620, ed. Dr. H. O. Sommer. 5_s._ „ LXXIX. =Caxton’s Dialogues, English and French=, c. 1483, ed. Henry Bradley, M.A. 10_s._ 1900 LXXX. =Lydgate’s Two Nightingale Poems=, ed. Dr. Otto Glauning. 5_s._ „ LXXXI. =Gower’s Confessio Amantis=, edited by G. C. Macaulay, M.A. Vol. I. 15_s._ „ LXXXII. =Gower’s Confessio Amantis=, edited by G. C. Macaulay, M.A. Vol. II. 15_s._ 1901 LXXXIII. =Lydgate’s DeGuilleville’s Pilgrimage of the Life of Man=, 1426, ed. Dr. F. J. Furnivall. Pt. II. 10_s._ „ LXXXIV. =Lydgate’s Reason and Sensuality=, edited by Dr. E. Sieper. Part I. 5_s._ „ LXXXV. =Alexander Scott’s Poems=, 1568, from the unique Edinburgh MS., ed. A. K. Donald, B.A. 10_s._ 1902 LXXXVI. =William of Shoreham’s Poems=, re-ed. from the unique MS. by Dr. M. Konrath. Part I. 10_s._ „ LXXXVII. =Two Coventry Corpus-Christi Plays=, re-edited by Hardin Craig, M.A. 10_s._ [_At Press._ „ LXXXVIII. =Le Morte Arthur=, re-edited from the Harleian MS. 2252 by Prof. Bruce, Ph.D. 15_s._ 1903 LXXXIX. =Lydgate’s Reason and Sensuality=, edited by Dr. E. Sieper. Part II. 15_s._ „ XC. =English Fragments from Latin Medieval Service-Books=, ed. by Hy. Littlehales. 5_s._ „ XCI. =William of Shoreham’s Poems=, re-ed. from the unique MS. by Dr. M. Konrath. Part II. [_At Press._ 1904 EARLY ENGLISH TEXT SOCIETY TEXTS PREPARING. Besides the Texts named as at press on p. 12 of the Cover of the Early English Text Society’s last Books, the following Texts are also slowly preparing for the Society:— =ORIGINAL SERIES.= =The Earliest English Prose Psalter=, ed. Dr. K. D. Buelbring. Part II. =The Earliest English Verse Psalter=, 3 texts, ed. Rev. R. Harvey, M.A. =Anglo-Saxon Poems=, from the Vercelli MS., re-edited by Prof. I. Gollancz, M.A. =Anglo-Saxon Glosses= to Latin Prayers and Hymns, edited by Dr. F. Holthausen. =All the Anglo-Saxon Homilies and Lives of Saints= not accessible in English editions, including those of the Vercelli MS. &c., edited by Prof. Napier, M.A., Ph.D. =The Anglo-Saxon Psalms=; all the MSS. in Parallel Texts, ed. Dr. H. Logeman and F. Harsley, B.A. =Beowulf=, a critical Text, &c., edited by a Pupil of the late Prof. Zupitza, Ph.D. =Byrhtferth’s Handboc=, edited by Prof. G. Hempl. =The Seven Sages=, in the Northern Dialect, from a Cotton MS., edited by Dr. Squires. =The Master of the Game, a Book of Huntynge= for Hen. V. when Prince of Wales. (_Editor wanted._) =Ailred’s Rule of Nuns, &c.=, edited from the Vernon MS., by the Rev. Canon H. R. Bramley, M.A. =Early English Verse Lives of Saints=, Standard Collection, from the Harl. MS. (_Editor wanted._) =Early English Confessionals=, edited by Dr. R. von Fleischhacker. =A Lapidary=, from Lord Tollemache’s MS., &c., edited by Dr. R. von Fleischhacker. =Early English Deeds and Documents=, from unique MSS., ed. Dr. Lorenz Morsbach. =Gilbert Banastre’s Poems=, and other =Boccaccio englishings=, ed. by Prof. Dr. Max Förster. =Lanfranc’s Cirurgie=, ab. 1400 A.D., ed. Dr. R. von Fleischhacker, Part II. =William of Nassington’s Mirror of Life=, from Jn. of Waldby, edited by J. A. Herbert, M.A. =More Early English Wills from the Probate Registry at Somerset House.= (_Editor wanted._) =Early Lincoln Wills and Documents from the Bishops’ Registers, &c.=, edited by Dr. F. J. Furnivall. =Early Canterbury Wills=, edited by William Cowper, B.A., and J. Meadows Cowper. =Early Norwich Wills=, edited by Walter Rye and F. J. Furnivall. =The Cartularies of Oseney Abbey and Godstow Nunnery=, englisht ab. 1450, ed. Rev. A. Clark, M.A. =Early Lyrical Poems= from the Harl. MS. 2253, re-edited by Prof. Hall Griffin, M.A. =Alliterative Prophecies=, edited from the MSS. by Prof. Brandl, Ph.D. =Miscellaneous Alliterative Poems=, edited from the MSS. by Dr. L. Morsbach. =Bird and Beast Poems=, a collection from MSS., edited by Dr. K. D. Buelbring. =Scire Mori, &c.=, from the Lichfield MS. 16, ed. Mrs. L. Grindon, LL.A., and Miss Florence Gilbert. =Nicholas Trivet’s French Chronicle=, from Sir A. Acland-Hood’s unique MS., ed. by Miss Mary Bateson. =Early English Homilies= in Harl. 2276 &c., c. 1400, ed. J. Friedländer. =Extracts from the Registers of Boughton=, ed. Hy. Littlehales, Esq. =The Diary of Prior Moore of Worcester=, A.D. 1518-35, from the unique MS., ed. Henry Littlehales, Esq. =The Pore Caitif=, edited from its MSS., by Mr. Peake. =Thomas Berkley’s englisht Vegetius on the Art of War=, MS. 30 Magd. Coll. Oxf., ed. L. C. Wharton, M.A. =Richard Maydenstone’s Poems=, MS. Rawl. A 389, edited by Dr. W. Heuser. =Early Middle-English Charters=, edited by Dr. W. Heuser. =EXTRA SERIES.= =Bp. Fisher’s English Works=, Pt. II., with his =Life and Letters=, ed. Rev. Ronald Bayne, B.A. [_At Press._ =Sir Tristrem=, from the unique Auchinleck MS., edited by George F. Black. =John of Arderne’s Surgery=, c. 1425, ed. J. F. Payne, M.D. =De Guilleville’s Pilgrimage of the Sowle=, edited by Prof. Dr. Leon Kellner. =Vicary’s Anatomie, 1548=, from the unique MS. copy by George Jeans, edited by F. J. & Percy Furnivall. =Vicary’s Anatomie, 1548=, ed. 1577, edited by F. J. & Percy Furnivall. Part II. [_At Press._ =A Compilacion of Surgerye=, from H. de Mandeville and Lanfrank, A.D. 1392, ed. Dr. J. F. Payne. =William Staunton’s St. Patrick’s Purgatory, &c.=, ed. Mr. G. P. Krapp, U.S.A. =Trevisa’s Bartholomæus de Proprietatibus Rerum=, re-edited by Dr. R. von Fleischhacker. =Bullein’s Dialogue against the Feuer Pestilence=, 1564, 1573, 1578. Ed. A. H. and M. Bullen. Pt. II. =The Romance of Boctus and Sidrac=, edited from the MSS. by Dr. K. D. Buelbring. =The Romance of Clariodus=, re-edited by Dr. K. D. Buelbring. =Sir Amadas=, re-edited from the MSS. by Dr. K. D. Buelbring. =Sir Degrevant=, edited from the MSS. by Dr. K. Luick. =Robert of Brunne’s Chronicle of England=, from the Inner Temple MS., ed. by Prof. W. E. Mead, Ph.D. =Maundeville’s Voiage and Travaile=, re-edited from the Cotton MS. Titus C. 16, &c., by Miss M. Bateson. =Avowynge of Arthur=, re-edited from the unique Ireland MS. by Dr. K. D. Buelbring. =Guy of Warwick=, Copland’s version, edited by a pupil of the late Prof. Zupitza, Ph.D. =Awdelay’s Poems=, re-edited from the unique MS. Douce 302, by Prof. Dr. E. Wülfing. =The Wyse Chylde= and other early Treatises on Education, Northwich School, Harl. 2099 &c., ed. G. Collar, B.A. =Caxton’s Dictes and Sayengis of Philosophirs, 1477=, with Lord Tollemache’s MS. version, ed. S. I. Butler, Esq. =Caxton’s Book of the Ordre of Chyualry=, collated with Loutfut’s Scotch copy. (_Editor wanted._) =Lydgate’s Court of Sapience=, edited by Dr. Borsdorf. =Lydgate’s Lyfe of oure Lady=, ed. by Prof. Georg Fiedler, Ph.D. =Lydgate’s Dance of Death=, edited by Miss Florence Warren. =Lydgate’s Life of St. Edmund=, edited from the MSS. by Dr. Axel Erdmann. =Lydgate’s Triumph Poems=, edited by Dr. E. Sieper. =Lydgate’s Minor Poems=, edited by Dr. Otto Glauning. =Richard Coer de Lion=, re-edited from Harl. MS. 4690, by Prof. Hausknecht, Ph.D. =The Romance of Athelstan=, re-edited by a pupil of the late Prof. J. Zupitza, Ph.D. =The Romance of Sir Degare=, re-edited by Dr. Breul. =Mulcaster’s Positions= 1581, and =Elementarie= 1582, ed. Dr. Th. Klaehr, Dresden. =Walton’s verse Boethius de Consolatione=, edited by Mark H. Liddell, U.S.A. =The Gospel of Nichodemus=, edited by Ernest Riedel. =Sir Landeval and Sir Launfal=, edited by Dr. Zimmermann. =Rolland’s Seven Sages=, the Scottish version of 1560, edited by George F. Black. The Subscription to the Society, which constitutes membership, is £1 1_s._ a year for the ORIGINAL SERIES, and £1 1_s._ for the EXTRA SERIES, due in advance on the 1st of JANUARY, and should be paid by Cheque, Postal Order or Money-Order, crost ‘Union Bank of London,’ to the Hon. Secretary, W. A. DALZIEL, Esq., 67, Victoria Road, Finsbury Park, London, N. Members who want their Texts posted to them must add to their prepaid Subscriptions 1_s._ for the Original Series, and 1_s._ for the Extra Series, yearly. The Society’s Texts are also sold separately at the prices put after them in the Lists; but Members can get back-Texts at one-third less than the List-prices by sending the cash for them in advance to the Hon. Secretary. _MSS. and Books that Editors are wanted for._ Among the MSS. and old books which need copying or re-editing, are:— =ORIGINAL SERIES.= =English Inventories= and other MSS. in Canterbury Cathedral (5th Report, Hist. MSS. Com.). =Maumetrie=, from Lord Tollemache’s MS. =The Romance of Troy.= Harl. 525. =Biblical MS.=, Corpus Cambr. 434 (ab. 1375). =Hampole’s= unprinted Works. =Þe Clowde of Unknowyng=, from Harl. MSS. 2373, 959, Bibl. Reg. 17 C 26, &c. Univ. Coll. Oxf. 14. =A Lanterne of Liȝt=, from Harl. MS. 2324. =Soule-hele=, from the Vernon MS. =Lydgate’s= unprinted Works. =Boethius de Consol.=; =Pilgrim=, 1426, &c. &c. =Early Treatises on Music: Descant, the Gamme, &c.= =Skelton’s englishing of Diodorus Siculus.= =Boethius=, in prose, MS. Auct. F. 3. 5, Bodley. =Penitential Psalms=, by Rd. Maydenstoon, Brampton, &c. (Rawlinson, A. 389, Douce 232, &c.). =Documents from the early Registers of the Bishops of all Dioceses in Great Britain.= =Ordinances and Documents of the City of Worcester.= =Chronicles of the Brute.= =T. Breus’s Passion of Christ, 1422.= Harl. 2338. =Jn. Crophill or Crephill’s Tracts=, Harl. 1735. =Burgh’s Cato.= =Memoriale Credencium=, &c., Harl. 2398. =Book for Recluses=, Harl. 2372. =Lollard Theological Treatises=, Harl. 2343, 2330, &c. =H. Selby’s Northern Ethical Tract=, Harl. 2388, art. 20. =Hilton’s Ladder of Perfection=, Cott. Faust. B 6, &c. =Supplementary Early English Lives of Saints.= =The Early and Later Festialls=, ab. 1400 and 1440 A.D. Cotton Claud. A 2; Univ. Coll. Oxf. 102, &c. =Select Prose Treatises from the Vernon MS.= =Jn. Hyde’s MS. of Romances and Ballads=, Balliol 354. =Metrical Homilies=, Edinburgh MS. =Lyrical Poems from the Fairfax MS. 16=, &c. =Prose Life of St. Audry=, A.D. 1595, Corp. Oxf. 120. =English Miscellanies from MSS.=, Corp. Oxford. =Miscellanies from Oxford College MSS.= =Disce Mori=, Jesus Coll. Oxf. 39; Bodl. Laud 99. =The Romance of Raymond of Toulouse=, MS. in Trin. Coll. Cambridge. =Mirrour of the blessed lijf of Ihesu Crist.= MSS. of Sir Hy. Ingilby, Bart., Lord Aldenham, Univ. Coll. Oxf. 123, &c. =Poem on Virtues and Vices=, &c., Harl. 2260. =Maundevyle’s Legend of Gwydo=, Queen’s, Oxf. 383. =Book of Warrants of Edw. VI.=, &c., New Coll. Oxf. 328. =Adam Loutfut’s Heraldic Tracts=, Harl. 6140-50. =Rules for Gunpowder and Ordnance=, Harl. 6355. =John Watton’s englisht Speculum Christiani=, Corpus, Oxf. 155, Laud G. 12, Thoresby 530, Harl. 2250, art. 20. =Verse and Prose= in Harl. MS. 4012. =EXTRA SERIES.= =Erle of Tolous.= =Ypotis.= =Sir Eglamoure.= =Miscellaneous Miracle Plays.= =Sir Gowther.= =Dame Siriz, &c.= =Orfeo= (Digby, 86). =Dialogues between the Soul and Body.= =Barlaam and Josaphat.= =Amis and Amiloun.= =Ipomedon.= =Sir Generides=, from Lord Tollemache’s MS. =The Troy-Book fragments= once cald Barbour’s, in the Cambr. Univ. Library and Douce MSS. =Poems of Charles, Duke of Orleans.= =Carols and Songs.= =Songs and Ballads=, Ashmole MS. 48. =The Siege of Rouen=, from Harl. MSS. 2256, 753, Egerton 1995, Bodl. 3562, E. Museo 124, &c. =Octavian.= =Ywain and Gawain.= =Libeaus Desconus.= =Aunturs of Arther.= =Avowyng of King Arther.= =Sir Perceval of Gallas.= =Sir Isumbras.= =Partonope of Blois=, Univ. Coll. Oxf. 188, &c. =Pilgrimage to Jerusalem=, Queen’s Coll. Oxf. 357. =Other Pilgrimages to Jerusalem=, Harl. 2333, &c. =Horæ, Penitential Psalms=, &c., Queen’s Coll. Oxf. 207. =St. Brandon’s Confession=, Queen’s Coll. Oxf. 210. =Scotch Heraldry Tracts=, copy of =Caxton’s Book of Chivalry=, &c., Queen’s Coll. Oxford 161. =Stevyn Scrope’s Doctryne and Wysedome of the Auncyent Philosophers=, A.D. 1450, Harl. 2266. The Founder and Director of the E. E. T. Soc. is Dr. F. J. Furnivall, 3, St. George’s Sq., Primrose Hill, London, N.W. Its _Hon. Sec._ is W. A. Dalziel, Esq., 67, Victoria Road, Finsbury Park, London, N. The Subscription to the Society is 21_s._ a year for the _Original Series_, and 21_s._ for the _Extra Series_ of re-editions. Early English Text Society. =ORIGINAL SERIES.= _The Publications for 1902 (one guinea) are_:— 120. =The Rule of St. Benet=: Two Early English Versions and Caxton’s Abstract, ed. Dr. E. A. Kock. 15_s._ 121. =The Laud Troy-Book=, edited from the unique MS. Laud 595, by Dr. J. Ernst Wülfing. Part I. 15_s._ _The Publications for 1903 are_:— 122. =The Laud Troy-Book=, edited from the unique MS. Laud 595, by Dr. J. Ernst Wülfing. Part II. 20_s._ 123. =Robert of Brunne’s Handlyng Synne= (1303), and its French original, re-ed. by Dr. Furnivall. Pt. II. 10_s._ _The Publications for 1904 are_:— 124. =Twenty-six Political and other Poems= from Digby MS. 102, &c., edited by Dr. J. Kail. Part I. 10_s._ 125. =The Medieval Records of a London City Church (St. Mary-at-Hill)=, edited by Hy. Littlehales. Pt. I. 10_s._ 126. =An Alphabet of Tales=, in Northern English from Latin, ed. Mrs. M. M. Banks. Part I. 10_s._ _The Publications for 1905 and 1906 will be chosen from_:— =The Medieval Records of a London City Church (St. Mary-at-Hill)=, edited by Hy. Littlehales. Part II. =An Alphabet of Tales=, in Northern English from Latin, ed. Mrs. M. M. Banks. Part II. [_At Press._ =Twenty-six Political and other Poems= from Digby MS. 102, &c., edited by Dr. J. Kail. Part II. =The Coventry Leet Book=, edited by Miss M. Dormer Harris. Part I. [_At Press._ =The Laud Troy-Book=, edited from the unique MS. Laud 595, by Dr. J. Ernst Wülfing. Part III. =The Old-English Rule of Bp. Chrodegang=, and the =Capitula of Bp. Theodulf=, edited from the unique MS. 191, C. C. C. Camb., by Prof. Napier, Ph.D. =Robert of Brunne’s Handlyng Synne= (1303), and its French original, re-ed. by Dr. Furnivall. Part III. The Alliterative =Siege of Jerusalem=, edited by Prof. E. Kölbing, Ph.D., and Prof. Kaluza, Ph.D. [_At Press._ =Minor Poems of the Vernon MS.= Part III. Introduction and Glossary by H. Hartley, M.A. =Sir David Lyndesay’s Works.= Part VI. and last. Edited by the Rev. Wm. Bayne, M.A. [_At Press._ =Jacob’s Well=, edited from the unique Salisbury Cathedral MS. by Dr. A. Brandeis. Part II. [_At Press._ =Vices and Virtues=, from the unique MS., ab. 1200 A.D., ed. Prof. Dr. F. Holthausen, Part II. [_At Press._ =The Exeter Book (Anglo-Saxon Poems)=, re-ed. from the unique MS., by Prof. Gollancz, M.A. Part II. [_At Press._ =A Chronicle of England to 1327 A.D.=, Northern verse (42,000 lines), ab. 1400 A.D., ed. M. L. Perrin, B.A. =Prayers and Devotions=, from the unique MS. Cotton Titus C. 19, ed. Hy. Littlehales, Esq. [_Copied._ =North-English Metrical Homilies= from Ashmole MS. 42 &c., ed. G. H. Gerould, D.Litt. =Vegetius on the Art of War=, edited from the MSS. by L. C. Wharton, M.A. =The Godstow Chartulary=, edited from the unique MS. by the Rev. Andrew Clark, M.A. =EXTRA SERIES.= _The Publications for 1902 (one guinea) are_:— LXXXV. =Alexander Scott’s Poems=, 1568, from the unique Edinburgh MS., ed. A. K. Donald, B.A. 10_s._ LXXXVI. =William of Shoreham’s Poems=, re-edited by Dr. M. Konrath. Part I. 10_s._ LXXXVII. =Two Coventry Corpus-Christi Plays=, re-edited by Hardin Craig, M.A. 10_s._ [_At Press._ _The Publications for 1903 will probably be_:— LXXXVIII. =Le Morte Arthur=, in 8-line stanzas, re-edited from Harl. MS. 2252, by Prof. Bruce, Ph.D. 10_s._ LXXXIX. =Lydgate’s Reason and Sensuality=, edited by Ernst Sieper, Ph.D. Part II. 15_s._ XC. =English Fragments from Latin Medieval Service-Books=, ed. by Hy. Littlehales. 5_s._ _The Publications for 1904 and 1905 will be chosen from_:— =William of Shoreham’s Poems=, re-edited by Dr. M. Konrath. Part II. [_At Press._ =Lydgate’s DeGuilleville’s Pilgrimage of the Life of Man.= Part III, Introduction, &c., by Miss Locock. =The Macro Plays=, edited from Mr. Gurney’s unique MS. by Dr. Furnivall and A. W. Pollard, M.A. [_At Press._ =Lovelich’s Romance of Merlin=, ed. from the unique MS. in Corp. Chr. Coll. Camb. by Dr. E. A. Kock. [_At Press._ =Melusine=, the prose Romance, from the unique MS., ab. 1500, ed. A. K. Donald. B.A. Part II. [_At Press._ =Promptorium Parvulorum=, c. 1440, from the Winchester MS., ed. Rev. A. L. Mayhew, M.A. Part I. [_At Press._ =Lydgate’s Dance of Death=, edited from the MSS. by Miss Florence Warren. =Secreta Secretorum=: three prose Englishings, ab. 1440, ed. R. Steele, B.A. Part II. [_At Press._ =The Craft of Nombrynge, the earliest English Treatise on Arithmetic=, ed. R. Steele, B.A. [_At Press._ =The Book of the Foundation of St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, London=, MS. ab. 1425, ed Dr. Norman Moore. [_Set._ =The Chester Plays=, Part II., re-edited by Dr. Matthews. [_At Press._ =Lichfield Gilds=, ed. Dr. F. J. Furnivall; Introduction by Prof. E. C. K. Gonner. [_Text done._ =John Hart’s Orthographie=, from his unique MS. 1551, and his black-letter text, 1569, ed. Prof. Otto Jespersen, Ph.D. =John Hart’s Methode to teach Reading, 1570=, ed. Prof. Otto Jespersen, Ph.D. =Extracts from the Rochester Diocesan Registers=, ed. Hy. Littlehales, Esq. =The Owl and Nightingale=, 2 Texts parallel, ed. G. F. H. Sykes, Esq. [_At Press._ =The Three Kings’ Sons=, Part II, French collation, Introduction, &c., by Dr. L. Kellner. =The Coventry Plays=, re-edited from the unique MS. by Dr. Matthews. =Emare=, re-edited from the MSS. by Miss Rickert. =The Ancren Riwle=, edited from its five MSS., by the late Prof. E. Kölbing, Ph.D., and Dr. Thümmler. =Mandeville’s prose Brut, or Chronicle of England=, edited from the MSS. by Dr. Brie. LONDON: KEGAN PAUL, TRENCH, TRÜBNER & CO., LTD. BERLIN: ASHER & CO., 13, UNTER DEN LINDEN. Footnotes: EETS Texts [1] He was born about 1295. See Abbé GOUJET’S _Bibliothèque française_, Vol. IX, p. 73-4.—P. M. The Roxburghe Club printed the 1st version in 1893. [2] The Roxburghe Club’s copy of this 2nd version was lent to Mr. Currie, and unluckily burnt too with his other MSS. [3] These 3 MSS. have not yet been collated, but are believed to be all of the same version. [4] Another MS. is in the Pepys Library. [5] According to Lord Aldenham’s MS. [6] These were printed in France, late in the 15th or early in the 16th century. [7] 15th cent., containing only the _Vie humaine_. [8] 15th cent., containing all the 3 Pilgrimages, the 3rd being Jesus Christ’s. [9] 14th cent., containing the _Vie humaine_ and the 2nd Pilgrimage, _de l’Ame_: both incomplete. [10] Ab. 1430, 106 leaves (leaf 1 of text wanting), with illuminations of nice little devils—red, green, tawny, &c.—and damnd souls, fires, angels &c. [11] Of these, Mr. Harsley is preparing a new edition, with collations of all the MSS. Many copies of Thorpe’s book, not issued by the Ælfric Society, are still in stock. Of the Vercelli Homilies, the Society has bought the copy made by Prof. G. Lattanzi. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ENGLISH FRAGMENTS FROM LATIN MEDIEVAL SERVICE-BOOKS *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. 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