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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55727 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55727)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Early Oxford Press, by Falconer Madan
-
-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'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Early Oxford Press
- A Bibliography of Printing and Publishing at Oxford
- '1468'-1640 With Notes, Appendixes and Illustrations
-
-Author: Falconer Madan
-
-Release Date: October 10, 2017 [EBook #55727]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EARLY OXFORD PRESS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Adrian Mastronardi and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- 1. Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
- 2. Enclosed underlined font in ¤currency signs¤.
- 3. Enclosed a change of font size in ¿inverted question marks¿.
- 4. Enclosed blackletter font in ±plus-minus signs±.
- 5. Enclosed citations in ©copyright signs©.
- 6. Enclosed bold font in ¬not signs¬.
- 7. Enclosed raised font in ®registered signs®.
- 8. Enclosed lowered font in «angle quotation marks».
- 9. Superscripts are denoted by a caret before a single superscript
- character or a series of superscripted characters enclosed in
- curly braces, e.g. M^r. or M^{ister}.
-10. Subscripts are denoted by an underscore before a series of
- subscripted characters enclosed in curly braces, e.g. H_{2}O.
-11. All asterisms with two asterisks were above the single asterisk in
- the original were changed to "⁂". Asterisms with more than three
- asterisks were changed to two asterisms "⁂⁂".
-12. [Reversed Q] indicates a reversed character Q.
-13. [/] indicates an oblique single hyphen.
-14. [EE] and [ee] indicates ligature characters.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- EARLY OXFORD PRESS
-
- _MADAN_
-
-
-
-
- London
-
- HENRY FROWDE
-
- OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE
- AMEN CORNER, E.C.
-
-[Illustration: DOMINVS ILLUMINATIO MEA]
-
- New York
-
- MACMILLAN & CO., 66 FIFTH AVENUE
-
-[Illustration:
-
- INSTAVR·MAG·P·I·
-
- OF THE
- ADVANCEMENT AND
- PROFICIENCE OF LEARNING
- or the
- _PARTITIONS OF SCIENCES_
-
- I̅X̅ Bookes
-
- _Written in Latin by the Most Eminent
- Illustrious & Famous LORD
- FRANCIS BACON
- Baron̄ of Verulam Vicont S^t Alban
- Counsilour of Estate and Lord
- Chancellor of England._
-
- Interpreted
- _by_ GILBERT WATS.
-
- _Multi pertransibunt & augebitur Scientia._
-
- OXFORD
- _Printed by_ Leon: Lichfield,
- _Printer to the_ University, _for_
- Rob: Young, & Ed: Forrest.
-
- C|Ↄ|ↃC XL
-
- _W. Marshall sculpsit._
-
- AN OXFORD TITLE-PAGE, 1640
-]
-
-
-
-
- _The
- Early Oxford Press_
-
- A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PRINTING AND PUBLISHING AT OXFORD
- ‘1468’–1640
- _WITH NOTES, APPENDIXES AND ILLUSTRATIONS_
-
-
- BY
-
- FALCONER MADAN, M. A.
- FELLOW OF BRASENOSE COLLEGE, OXFORD
-
-
- Oxford
- AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
-
- 1895
-
-
-
-
- Oxford
- PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
- BY HORACE HART, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE
-
-
-The present work was undertaken early in 1889, and is an attempt to
-describe in detail the products and working of the Oxford Press in its
-early days. Though eclipsed by the glories of the later University
-Press, the first period, included in this book, has a natural importance
-of its own. The Fifteenth and early Sixteenth Century presses[1] are
-necessarily of interest, and when printing became firmly established in
-1585 it began to reflect faithfully the current tendencies of thought
-and study in the University. Theology is predominant, animated on its
-controversial side with fierce opposition to the Church of Rome, but the
-quieter fields of classical work are well represented, and side by side
-is seen an increasing study of English literature. Of lighter books
-there are few, and of chapbooks perhaps only one (1603, no. 5).
-
-The most important works produced at Oxford between 1585 and 1640 were
-Richard de Bury’s Philobiblon (1599), Wycliff’s treatises (1608), capt.
-John Smith’s Map of Virginia (1612), Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy
-(1621, &c.), Field on the Church (1628, &c.), Sandys’ translations of
-Ovid’s Metamorphoses (1633), the University Statutes (1634), Chaucer’s
-Troilus and Cressida in English and Latin (1635), Chillingworth’s
-Religion of Protestants (1638), and Bacon’s Advancement and Proficience
-of Learning, in English (1640: see frontispiece). There are of course
-many books on logic, philosophy and the like, intended for the
-University curriculum, and many collections of the rhetorical poems by
-which the University was expected to condole or rejoice with every
-change in the royal estate. 180 pages of mechanical grief at Elizabeth’s
-death in 1603 are at once followed by 200 pages of equally mechanical
-congratulations to James I: and the metrical tears dropped in turn on
-the grave of the latter monarch in March 1625, are in May succeeded with
-indecorous haste by songs of joy on the marriage of his successor. Some
-volumes of English poems and plays occur, by Skelton, Nicholas Breton,
-Churchyard, Fitz-Geffrey, Randolph, Cartwright, Fletcher, and others,
-and a few still lighter pieces, such as a Masque at Richmond, partly in
-Wiltshire dialect, and “Bushell’s Rock,” both in 1636. There are traces
-of the study of Spanish, French and Welsh, as well as of Latin and
-Greek; and an attempt to introduce phonetic writing and spelling was
-made by Charles Butler in 1633 and 1634. Even theological disputes are
-lightened by the solemn account of certain Jesuits in the East, who
-dressed up a carcase as that of a queen recently deceased, obtained much
-glory from the miracles it wrought, until the real corpse arrived and
-the priests vacated the vicinity (1633, Gregorius). There is something
-surprising in Oxford being chosen as the printing-place of a book to
-persuade mothers to nurse their own children (1622, Clinton); and an
-episcopal alchemist is not often to be met with in real life (1621,
-Thornborough). It is less to be wondered at that a college which had
-leased land to Queen Elizabeth for a quiet five thousand years, should
-try to be relieved of its agreement within fifty (1623, Oxford).
-
-There is no need of a general history of the University Press at this
-time, as distinguished from the annals which the Appendixes of this work
-present. The printers were privileged members of the University, and
-occasionally printed “cum privilegio,” but there is little to invest
-their personal proceedings with importance. Though it is true that money
-was advanced in 1585 by the Earl of Leicester, Chancellor of the
-University, to set up Joseph Barnes with a new press, and that the
-charter of privileges in 1632 gave the University direct control of the
-printing, there are as yet few signs of actual academical patronage or
-interference, and the failures and successes of the printers and
-publishers, which can be traced in detail in Appendixes C and F, are the
-ordinary fluctuations of trade. Nor can the Oxford press at this time
-claim much connexion with the greater world of the English Court or
-Church. After it was placed on a permanent footing by the Earl of
-Leicester, its one great patron and protector within our period was
-Archbishop Laud, who occupied a similar position to that of Bishop Fell
-at a later period in the same century.
-
-The year 1640 has been chosen as the inferior limit of this
-bibliography, partly because both the British Museum Catalogue of early
-English books and Arber’s Transcript of the Registers of the Stationers’
-Company stop at that point, partly because the interest in the products
-of the press as such was found to be rapidly diminishing, and partly in
-consequence of the break-up of all quiet progress during the convulsions
-of the Rebellion, combined with the dismal prospect of that trackless
-wilderness—the literature of the Civil War.
-
-The present bibliography presents, it is believed, four features of
-novelty:—the better representation of the titlepage by the use of Roman
-and Italic capitals as well as ordinary type; the mention of the chief
-type used in each book; the furnishing of the first words of certain
-pages, to facilitate the identification of imperfect copies; and the
-insertion of actual pages[2] of books printed at Oxford, selected from
-works which are cheap and common. These points are explained and
-discussed in a paper on ©Method in Bibliography©, printed at pp. 91–106
-of vol. 1 of the Transactions of the Bibliographical Society (1893), to
-which the reader is referred, if he wishes to see a fuller account of
-the whole aim and method of the present book.
-
-The best thanks of the writer are due for general help to Mr. E. Gordon
-Duff, Librarian of the John Rylands (late Spencer) Library at
-Manchester, to Mr. F. J. H. Jenkinson, Librarian of the Cambridge
-University Library, and to Mr. W. H. Allnutt of the Bodleian: but
-especially to the Delegates of the Clarendon Press both for undertaking
-on liberal terms a work which can scarcely prove remunerative, and for
-enabling the Oxford Historical Society to supply copies to its members,
-as vol. xxix, at a price far below its actual cost[3]. Mr. Horace Hart,
-the Controller of the Press, has taken a warm personal interest in the
-printing, and any merits of form which may be found are due to his
-experience and to the co-operation of his compositors. Nothing, however,
-can relieve the writer of responsibility for the errors and shortcomings
-which will be detected; and he can only plead that it is better to bring
-out an imperfect book, if it is a useful one and the result of hard
-work, than, by straining after an unattainable completeness, to delay
-indefinitely its publication.
-
- F. MADAN.
-
- OXFORD, _Dec._, 1894.
-
-
- MINOR POINTS.
-
- _Dates._ The books classed under a given year, such as 1615, are
- necessarily such as were issued between 25 March 1615 and 24 March
- 1616, since no means exist for dividing them according to the
- historical year. In recording a date between Jan. 1 and March 24, the
- form used is invariably the double one, such as 23 Feb. 1615/6, by
- which is implied what we understand by 23 Feb. 1616.
-
- _Numbers of books._ Some notes on the number of books printed at
- Oxford will be found on p. 291, and of books printed or published at
- Oxford on p. 292, among the Notanda.
-
- _References._ The usual style of reference throughout the book
- (including index) is to the _year_ followed by the _initial letter_ of
- the particular heading; as 1634 C, when the reference is to no. 9 on
- p. 177 (Cosin). A few references will be found in the earlier pages to
- years beyond 1640, made before it was decided to close the work at
- that year.
-
- _Titles._ The heading usually presents the author’s name in the form
- by which he is generally known to posterity, as “James ii, king,”
- although at the time of the book referred to he was prince James.
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- See Appendixes A, B.
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Separate leaves from rare and costly books are given in G. E.
- Klemming’s ©Sveriges äldre liturgiska literatur©, Stockholm, 1879—a
- practice which cannot be approved—but no local press has as yet been
- similarly illustrated.
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Separate copies can _only_ be obtained by ordering them from the
- Clarendon Press, and are not supplied by the Society.
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PREFACE v
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND TABLES x
-
- PLAN OF THE BIBLIOGRAPHY xi
-
- THE OXFORD PRESS:—
-
- Fifteenth Century 1
-
- Early Sixteenth Century 5
-
- Fictitious or Lost Oxford books, &c., 1459–1584 8
-
- The Oxford University Press, 1585–1640 14
-
- Periodical 225
-
- Supplement of Additions and Corrections 227
-
- List of Undated books 236
-
- APPENDIX A—The Fifteenth Century Press (a detailed account of
- books, type, copies known, &c.) 237
-
- APPENDIX B—The Early Sixteenth Century Press 263
-
- APPENDIX C—A chronological list of persons and proceedings
- connected with book-production at Oxford, A.D. 1180–1640 266
-
- — Discussion of the authorship of the ©Praise of Music©, 1586 279
-
- APPENDIX D—Documents (Statute, 1373—Charters, 1632, 1632/3,
- 1636/7—Statute, 1636) 281
-
- APPENDIX E—Woodcut and metal ornaments, tables of use of type,
- notanda 289
-
- APPENDIX F—Lists of Imprints and tables of Oxford printers and
- publishers, 1585–1640 293
-
- INDEX 315
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND TABLES
-
-
- PLATE
-
- I. A collotype (as are also plates II-VII) of the
- titlepage of Wats’s translation of Bacon’s
- ©Advancement of Learning© (Oxford, 1640), see
- p. 217: here reduced one-third in length and
- breadth _Frontispiece_
-
-
- OXFORD TYPE, “1468”-86.
-
- II. Type 1 (see p. 241). The last page of the first
- Oxford book, bearing the famous colophon with
- date MCCCCLXVIII, discussed on pp. 245–52 _At end._
-
- III. Types 2 and 3 (see pp. 242–3). The upper part of
- the first page of the Latteburius, printed in
- 1482. Parts of the curious woodcut border are
- also shown, which is the first used in English
- printing _At end._
-
- IV. Types 3, 4, 5, 6 (see pp. 243–4). The upper part
- of K7^v of the Lyndewoode, printed in 1483 (?).
- The coloured initials are of course inserted by
- hand in the original _At end._
-
- V. Types 5, 7 (see pp. 243–4). The text of f2^v of
- the ©Festial©, printed in 1486/7 (?), showing
- one of the smaller woodcuts and the woodcut
- capital G _At end._
-
-
- OXFORD TYPE, 1517–19.
-
- VI. (_a_) The titlepage of Burley on the Posterior
- Analytics of Aristotle, printed in 1517 (see
- pp. 5, 263), showing the large wood-engraving
- of the University Arms and the ordinary large
- type.
-
- (_b_) The four last lines of the back of the
- titlepage reproduced above, showing the
- ordinary large and small type _At end._
-
- VII. The titlepage of Burley de Materia et Forma,
- printed in 1518 by John Scolar. The woodcut
- represents a master and scholar. The type is
- the largest, used in titles only _At end._
-
-
- OXFORD PRINTING, 1585–1640.
-
- Each of the first seven hundred copies of this work contains three
- specimens of actual pages from old Oxford books, copies of which are
- both common and cheap. Thus nos. 1–200 contain pages from (1) Ursinus’s
- Summe of Christian Religion, 1587, (2), N. Fuller’s Miscellanea Sacra,
- 1616, (3) Carpenter’s Philosophia Libera, 1636: nos. 201–322 (1)
- Ursinus, (2) Fuller, (3) Reusner’s Symbola, 1638: nos. 323–500 (1)
- Ursinus, (2) Sanderson’s Logica, 1618, (3) Reusner: nos. 501–700 (1)
- Ursinus’s Summe of Christian Religion, 1589, (2) Du Moulin’s
- Accomplishment of the prophecies, 1613, (3) Grotius’s Defensio fidei
- catholicæ, 1636.
-
- After no. 700, at least one actual page will be given, and its
- provenance will be indicated by a note of the form “38.20,” implying a
- page from the 20th book of 1638 (Reusner).
-
-
- LIST OF TABLES.
-
- PAGE
-
- Details of the 15th century books 238–9
-
- Owners of copies of ditto 240
-
- Details of the early 16th century books 265
-
- Type used in Oxford books, 1585–1640 291
-
- The relations of Oxford printers and publishers,
- 1585–1640 311–3
-
-
-
-
- PLAN OF THE BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
- 15th and early 16th century.
-
-The books of these periods are in some respects exceptionally treated,
-but the general plan is similar to that of the later press. Pages 1–7
-(printed off in 1889) must be taken in close connexion with Appendixes A
-and B, which correct and supplement those pages in important points.
-
-
- 1585–1640.
-
-1. After the heading (which in all cases is the author or a body
-representing the author, if known; otherwise the catch-title) comes the
-title, reproduced faithfully so far as was possible with the employment
-of four types. A fifth minute type indicates letters represented by
-contractions in the original. The occurrence of a “motto” (whether a
-text or quotation), a device (see p. 289) or woodcuts (see p. 290) is
-noted in square brackets. A * before the heading implies “undated”: a †
-“no place of printing mentioned.”
-
-2. Next follows the technical description, comprising:—
-
- _a._ The number of the imprint (see pp. 292–310: it would have been
- better to add the names of the printer and publisher to the bare
- reference).
-
- _b._ The date.
-
- _c._ The apparent size of a page of an ordinary uncut copy, according
- to the scale,
-
- _for narrow sizes_ _for broad sizes_
- in. in.
- 12–18 folio 12–18 large 4^o
- 9–12 large 8^o 9–12 4^o
- 7–9 8^o 7–9 small 4^o
- 6–7 12^o 6–7 square 12^o
- 5–6 16^o &c.
- 4–5 24^o
-
- The number of leaves in a section (quire or gathering) precedes,
- within round brackets, when different from what is suggested by the
- apparent size: as “(eights) small 4^o.” When it has been desirable to
- indicate further the way in which the original sheets of paper have
- been folded, the words _single_, _double_, or _treble_ (for once,
- twice, or thrice folded) are used on p. 238.
-
- _d._ The number of pages of a perfect copy, in square brackets when
- there is no printed pagination, as “pp. [16] + 121 + [9].” When
- printed pagination does not occur in the book at all, the signatures
- are also given.
-
- _e._ The first words of the 11th page, and of later ones in the case
- of a large work, always in italics.
-
- _f._ The common type of the body of the work, followed by the terms
- Roman, Italic, or English (i. e. Black-letter): see pp. 291–2.
-
- _g._ The contents. _Every page not mentioned is blank_, without
- exception.
-
-3. Notes on the book. A reference to Wood’s ©Athenæ© and ©Fasti
-Oxonienses©, as edited by Bliss (1813–20), has been considered as
-superseding in most instances any biographical account of the author.
-And the limitation of the present work to a bibliography of a press, not
-of books connected with the University, has been borne in mind.
-
-
-
-
- THE OXFORD PRESS.
-
-
-
-
- The Fifteenth Century Press[4].
-
-
- “1468.”
-
-[¬Rufinus¬, of Aquileia]. [Sign. a 1^r:—] Incipit exposicio sancti
-Ieronimi in | simbolum apostolorum ad papam laure¿n¿tiu¿m¿. [Sign. e
-9^v:—] Explicit exposicio sancti Ieronimi in | simbolo apostolorum ad
-papam laure¿n¿|cium Impressa Oxonie Et finita An|no domini . M . cccc .
-lxviij . xvij . die | decembris.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, “1468”: 8^o: pp. [84], signn. a-d^8 e^{10}:
- sign. b 1^r beg. _tali generacione_. Contents:—pp. (1–82) the
- treatise.
-
- The work here ascribed to St. Jerome is in reality by Tyrannius
- Rufinus of Aquileia, _d._ 610.
-
-
- 1479.
-
-1. ¬Aegidius¬ de Columna, of Rome. [Sign. a 2^r:—] Incipit tractatus
-sole¿n¿nis fratris Egi|dij de ordine fratrum Augustinensium de | peccato
-originali [Sign. c 7^v:—] Explicit tractatus breue [altered by hand to
-_breuis_] et vtilis de | origi¿n¿ali peccato Editus a fratre Egidio |
-Romano ordinis fratru¿m¿ heremita¿rum¿ san|cti augustini. Impresso
-[altered by hand to _impressus_] et finito [_finitus_, as before]
-Oxonie. | A natiuitate d¿omi¿ni . M . cccc . lxxix . xiiij . die |
-mensis marcij
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, probably 1479/80: 8^o: pp. [48], signn. a-c^8:
- sign. b 1^r beg. _quod contrahamus_. Contents:—pp. (3–46) the
- treatise.
-
- The _editio princeps_ of this work by bp. Aegidius de Columna, of
- Rome.
-
-
-2. ¬Aristotle.¬ [Sign. y 6^r:—] Explicit textus ethicorum Aristotelis |
-per leonardu¿m¿ arretinu¿m¿ lucidissime transla|tus correctissimeq¿ue¿.
-Imp ressus Oxoniis | Anno d¿omi¿ni . M . cccc. lxxix.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, 1479: 8^o: pp. [348], signn. a-x^8 y^6: sign.
- b 1^r beg. _Mnis ars_. Contents:—pp. (3–4) “prefacio leonardi arretini
- in libros ethicorum”: (5–15) “prologus” by the same: (17–347) the
- treatise.
-
- A Latin translation of the Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle by
- Leonardus Brunus of Arezzo (Arretium).
-
-
- 1480.
-
-*†¬Cicero¬, Marcus Tullius. [M. Tulli Ciceronis Oratio pro T. Annio
-Milone.]
-
- [Oxford, about 1480]: 6^o: probably 60 pages, signn. a-e^6.
- Contents:—pp. (probably 3–60) the oration.
-
- Only known from fragments containing signn. b 3, b 4, e 3, e 4, in the
- Bodleian Library at Oxford. It is still not absolutely certain that
- this book was printed at Oxford. If it was, this, and not the Andria
- of Terence printed by Pynson in 1497, was the first English edition of
- any part of a classic author in the original language.
-
-
- 1481.
-
-1. ¬Alexander¬ de Hales, the _doctor irrefragabilis_. [Sign. g 5^v:—]
-Explicit expositio venerabilis | Alexandri sup¿er¿ primu¿m¿ lib¿rum¿ de
-a¿n¿i¿m¿a. [Sign. y 7^v:—] Explicit elucidantissima exposi⸗|tio egregij
-Alexandri sup¿er¿ secundu¿m¿ | libru¿m¿ de anima. [Sign. H 8^r:—]
-Explicit sentenciosa atq¿ue¿ studio | digna expositio venerabilis
-Alexan|dri sup¿er¿ terciu¿m¿ lib¿rum¿ de anima. Imp⸗|pressum p¿er¿ me
-Theodericu¿m¿ rood de | Colonia in alma vniu¿er¿sitate Oxon̄. | Anno
-incarnac¿i¿onis d¿omi¿nice. M . cccc . | lxxxi . xi . die mensis
-Octobris.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, 1481: la. 8^o, perhaps (eights) fol.: pp.
- [480], signn. a-f^8, g^6, h-s^8, t-x^6, y-z and A-H^8: sign. b 1^r
- beg. _vel non sit_, B 1^r beg. _vna natura_. Contents:—signn. a 2^r-g
- 5^v, bk. 1, with short preface: h 1^r-y 7^v, bk. 2: z 1^r-H 8^r, bk 3.
-
- The _editio princeps_ et unica of the Latin Commentary on the De Anima
- (περὶ ψυχῆς) of Aristotle, made by Alexander de Hales (i.e. probably
- Hailes near Winchcombe) the _doctor irrefragabilis_ (_d._ 1245), to be
- distinguished from Alexander de Ales or Alesius. Of this book there
- are two issues, the earlier with no border, the later with an
- elaborate woodcut border, the first ever found in an English printed
- book, surrounding the entire printed text of sign. a 2^r. There are
- two similar issues of the Lathbury, 1482.
-
-
-2. *†¬Latin Grammar.¬ [A Latin Grammar in English with examples, only
-known from two leaves in the British Museum, signn. b 2 and (presumably)
-b 5: b 2 beg. “case As I muste”, ends “adyectyuys and voy”: b 5 beg.
-“Also when y haue”, ends “que¿m¿ queris”. Date probably 1481: probably
-sm. 4^o (but in eights), the chain lines being across the page.]
-
-
- 1482.
-
-†¬Lathbury¬, John. [Sign. b 8^v:—] Explicit p¿ro¿logus Sequitur li⸗|ber
-moraliu¿m¿ sup¿er¿ trenis Iheremie p¿ro¿⸗|phete &c̄. [Sign. z 8^v:—] Et
-sic e¿st¿ fmis huius op¿er¿is mo⸗|raliu¿m¿ sup¿er¿ ca . I . treno¿rum¿
-ihere. p¿ro¿ph¿et¿e In | cipit treno¿rum¿ Capitulum s¿ecundu¿m. [A
-similar colophon follows chapter 2 on sign. K (“k k”) 7^v.] [Sign. L
-7^v:—] Explicit exposicio ac moralisacio | tercij capituli trenoru¿m¿
-Iheremie pro|phete . Anno d¿omi¿ni M . cccc . lxxxij vlti⸗|ma die mensis
-Iulij | [Sign. O 5^v:—] Explicit tabula sup¿er¿ opus trenoru¿m¿ |
-compilatu¿m¿ per Iohannem Lattebu . | rij ordinis minorum.
-
- Impr. as above, [Oxford] 1482: la. 8^o, perhaps (eights) fol.: pp.
- [584], signn. a-z, A-I, kk, L-M^8, N-O^6: sign. b 1^r beg.
- _strennuitatem_, B 1^r beg. _didit &c̄._ Contents:—signn. a 2^r-b 8^v,
- prologue: c 1^r-L 7^v, the work in 3 chapters: M 1^r-O 5^v,
- alphabetical index.
-
- The _editio princeps_ et unica of the Latin Commentary on the
- Lamentations of Jeremiah, made by John Lathbury. Of this book there
- are two issues, with and without the woodcut border mentioned under
- the Alexander de Hales, 1481.
-
-
- 1483.
-
-1. [*†¬Anwykyll¬, John]. [Compendium totius grammaticae]. [Sign. n
-1^r:—] Uulgaria quedam abs Terentio in Anglica¿m¿ ling|uam traducta.
-
- No doubt printed at Oxford, probably in 1483: sm. 4^o: pp. [256?],
- signn. a-q^8(?). Contents:—signn. a-m, the work(?), n 1^r-q 8^v,
- Vulgaria Terentii.
-
- A Latin Grammar in Latin believed to be by John Anwykyll, of which
- this edition is only known from fragments, but which was reprinted at
- Deventer in 1489. The Vulgaria Terentii (sentences from Terence with
- English translation) was sold as a separate part, and still exists
- complete in itself. There are two issues of the Grammar, not at
- present clearly distinguished.
-
-
-2. *†¬Hampole¬, Richard Rolle of. [Sign. a 2^r:—] Explanationes
-notabiles deuotissimi viri Ricardi | Hampole heremite sup¿er¿
-lectio¿n¿es illas beati Iob q¿ue¿ solent | in exequijs defunctoru¿m¿
-legi q¿ue¿ no¿n¿ minus historia¿m¿ q¿uam¿ tropo|logiam & anagogiam ad
-studentiu¿m¿ vtilitatem exactissi⸗|me annotauit. [Sign. k 6^v:—] Sermo
-beati Augustiui de misericordia | et pia oracione pro defunctis. |
-
- [Oxford, probably 1483]: (sixes) 12^o: pp. [128], signn. a-k [“lr”]^6
- l^4: sign. b 1^r beg. _visitat ad_. Contents:—sign. a 2^r-k 6^r,
- Hampole on Job: k 6^v-l 3^v, Augustine.
-
-
-3. *¬Logic.¬ [Sign. A 2^r:—] Uonia¿m¿ ex t¿er¿mi¿ni¿s fiu¿n¿t
-p¿ro¿p¿osici¿o¿n¿es ... [19 Latin treatises on logical subjects].
-
- No place or date [Oxf., about 1483]: (sixes) 8^o: pp. [328], signn.
- A-Z, Aa-Cc^6: Dd^8: sign. B 1^r beg. _nulla proposicio_, Bb 1^r _illis
- superfluum_. Contents:—signn. A 2^r-Dd 5^v nineteen logical treatises,
- the last ending “Explicit tractatus de motu velocitatis. Sequitur
- tabula”: Dd 6^r-8^r, a table in Latin giving the heads of the parts of
- each treatise, each group preceded by “Tractatus”: Dd 8^r “Ad lectores
- carmen” and “Registrum cartarum”.
-
- These nineteen logical treatises are strung together to form a
- systematic work on Logic: at the end of the 17th, on sign. Bb 3^v, is
- “Et sic finiuntur insolubilia swynishede.”, i. e. Roger Swineshede
- (Suinesheved, Swincet &c.), but he was probably only the author of
- that part. The last treatise is physical rather than logical.
-
-
-4. *¬Lyndewoode¬, William. [Sign. S 9^v:—] Explicit opus magistri
-wil|helmi lyndewoode Super con⸗|stituc¿i¿ones prouinciales laus deo.
-[Sign. dd 7^v:—] Explicit tabula co¿m¿pendiosa super librum | qui
-intitulatur p¿ro¿uincialis co¿m¿pilata per wil⸗|helmu¿m¿ de Tylia nemore
-completa In festo | co¿n¿uersacionis Sancti Pauli . Anno d¿omi¿ni |
-Millesimo . CCCC . xxxiij.
-
- No imprint, but Oxford about 1483: (eights) fol.: pp. [732], signn.
- a-c^8, d^6, e-i^8, k^6, l-o^8, p^6, q-s^8, t^6, v-y^8, z^6, A-D^8,
- E^6, F-N^8, O^6, P-R^8, S^{10}, aa-cc^8, dd^{10}: sign. b 1^r beg. _de
- hijs habes_, B 1^r beg. _supra c. proxi._, bb 1^r beg. _eas
- delinquat_. Contents:—sign. a 1^v, woodcut of a doctor at his desk: a
- 2^r, “Prologus”: a 2^v-S 9^v, the work in five books: aa 2^r-aa 2^v
- “tabula constitucionum prouincialium”: aa 3^r-dd 7^v, an index: dd
- 8^r-10^r, table of Constitutions according to author.
-
- The _editio princeps_ of the Provincial Constitutions of England, in
- Latin, with a Latin Commentary on them by William Lyndewoode (_d._
- 1446). See 1664 L, 1679 L.
-
-
- 1485.
-
-1. *†¬Alexander¬ de Villa Dei. [Textus Alexandri cum sententiis].
-
- [Oxford, about 1485]: sm. 4^o.
-
- Only known from two leaves (signn. c^2-c^3) in the Library of St.
- John’s College, Cambridge. A grammatical work, of which other editions
- were printed in London by Wynkin de Worde (sine anno) and Pynson
- (1516), and elsewhere.
-
-
-2. ¬Phalaris.¬ [Sign. a 2^r:—] Francisci Aretini Oratoris
-p¿re¿⸗|clarissimi in eloq¿ue¿ntissimas Phala|ridis tyranni epistolas per
-ipsum | e greco in latinu¿m¿ versas. Prohe⸗|mium foeliciter incipit
-[Sign. m 6^r:—] Hoc oposculu¿m¿ in alma vniuersi⸗|tate Oxonie. A Natali
-christiano | Duce¿n¿tesima & nonagesi¿m¿a septima. | Olimpiade
-foeliciter impressum e¿st¿.
-
- Oxford, 1485, printed by Theodoric Rood and Thomas Hunte: (eights)
- squ. 12^o: pp. [176], signn. a-d^8, e^6, f^8, g^6, h^8, i^6, k-l^8,
- m^6: sign. b 1^r beg. _Udio vos_. Contents:—sign. a 1^v “Carmeliani
- Brixiensis Poete ad lectorem Carmen,” 12 elegiac lines: a 2^r-m 6^r,
- the work: on m 6^v after the colophon “Hoc Teodericus rood quem
- collonia misit | Sanguine germanus nobile pressit opus | Atque sibi
- socius thomas fuit anglicus hunte. | Dij dent vt venetos exuperare
- queant | Quam ienson venetos decuit vir gallicus artem | Ingenio
- didicit terra britanna suo. | Celatos veneti nobis transmittere libros
- | Cedite nos alijs vendimus o veneti | Que fuerat vobis ars primum no
- ta latini | Est eadem nobis ipsa reperta patres. | Quamuis semotos
- toto canit orbe britannos | Uirgilius. placet his lingua latina tamen.
-
- A Latin translation of the spurious Letters of Phalaris.
-
-
- 1486.
-
-[†¬Mirk¬, John]. [Sign. ( ) 2^r:—] Incipit liber qui | vocatur festialis
-[Sign. z 3^r:—] Here endith the boke | that is callid festiuall. | the
-yere of oure lord M | cccc . lxxxvi . the day aftir | seint Edward the
-kyng.
-
- Imprint as above, n. pl., but Oxford 1486 (probably 19 Mar. 1486/7):
- la. 8^o: pp. [348], signn. ( )^8, a-b^8, c^6, d^8, d⸴^8, e^6, f^8,
- g^4, h^8, i^6, k-l^8, m^6, n-o^8, p^6, q^8, r^6, s^8, t-v^6, x^8, y^6,
- z^4: sign. b 1^r beg. _diuerse skylles_. Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r,
- woodcut of Crucifixion: ( ) 1^v-z 3^r, the work.
-
- English sermons on the holy days and a few of the Sundays of the year:
- written or collected by John Mirk, canon of Lilleshall. Other early
- English printed editions exist, beginning with one by Caxton in about
- 1483. Variations are found in the setting up of signn. h and i. The
- first two leaves are not at present known to exist.
-
------
-
-Footnote 4:
-
- For a discussion of special points connected with the Fifteenth
- Century Oxford Press, see Appendix A.
-
-
-
-
- The Early Sixteenth Century Press[5].
-
-
- 1517.
-
-¬Burley¬, Walter. ¶ Tractatus expositorius ⁄ super libros
-poste⸗|rioru¿m¿ Arestotilis: preclarissimi philisophi | Walteri Burlei
-artium liberalium | et trium philosophiaru¿m¿ magi⸗|stri meritissimi: ac
-in sacra | theologia doctoris perspi|cacissimi planissimiq¿ue¿ | suis
-posteris Oxoniensibus admodum vtilis incipit feli⸗|citer cum summa
-diligentia. | recognitus. [Then _woodcut_]. [Sign. B 6^v:—] Explicit
-scriptum planissimi doctoris Walteri | Burlei super libros posterioru¿m¿
-Impressum | in academia Oxonie anno dominice i¿n¿|carnatio¿n¿is . M .
-CCCCC . xvii . | Die vero dece¿m¿bris quar|to ad laudem dei | &
-profectum | stude¿n¿tiu¿m¿. [Then _woodcut_: then] Fata regunt finem:
-spero dij cepta secundent. |
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford 1517: sm. 4^o: pp. [20], signn. A^4, B^6: sign.
- B 1^r beg. _Sed quia_. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title, with arms of
- University: A 1^v-B 5^v, the work: B 6^r, royal arms: B 6^v, colophon
- with arms of University repeated.
-
- A Latin Commentary by Walter Burley on the Posterior Analytics of
- Aristotle.
-
-
- 1518.
-
-1. ¬Burley¬, Walter. ¶ Tractat¿us¿ p¿er¿breuis de materia & forma: |
-M¿a¿g¿ist¿ri Walteri Burlei doctoris planissimi. [Then _woodcut_: then]
-¶ Aliud perbreue co¿m¿pendiu¿m¿ de relatiuis e⸗|iusdem doctoris vtile
-tamen admodum | nouellis logicis. [Sign. B 3^r:—] ¶ Finit tractatus
-duorum principio⸗|rum et de relatiuis. M¿a¿g¿ist¿ri Walte|ri Burley
-Oxoniensis. | ¶ Finis. [Sign. B 4^v:—] ¶ Impositus est finis tractatui
-doctoris planissimi | de duobus principijs . s.[iue] mater ia et forma
-et de rela⸗|tiuis cum speciali priuilegio p¿er¿ septe¿n¿niu¿m¿ ex edicto
-dig|nissimi cancellarii Oxonie. [Then _woodcut_: then] ¶ Impressum est
-presens opusculum in celeberima | vniuersitate Oxoniensi per me Ioannem
-Scolar in | viculo diui Ioannis baptiste moram trahentem An⸗|no d¿omi¿ni
-. M . CCCCC . deci¿m¿ooctauo. Mensis vero Iu⸗|nij die septimo.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, 1518: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _est dare_. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-B 3^r, the
- work in two parts: B 3^v, woodcut of royal arms: B 4^v, colophon.
-
-
-2. ¬Dedicus¬, Joannes. Questiones | moralissime super li⸗|bros
-Ethicoru¿m¿ eruditissimi | viri Ioannis Dedicus artium libe⸗|ralium
-triumq¿ue¿ philosophiarum magistri | optime meriti / et in moralibus
-pre ceteris satis pe⸗|riti feliciter incipiunt subtilissimis
-Oxoniensibus in philo⸗|sophia morali lucubrare cupientibus non magis |
-vtiles q¿uam¿ necessarie. | [Then _engraving of the University arms_].
-[Sign. N 4^v:—] ¶ Explicitum est Ioannis Dedici Oxoniensis in | morali
-philosophia eruditissimi preclaru¿m¿ opusculum | questionu¿m¿ /
-subtilissimediscucientiu¿m¿ (licet sparsim cu¿m¿ | quada¿m¿ tame¿n¿
-depende¿n¿tia) singulas materias in dece¿m¿ | libris ethicoru¿m¿
-Arestotilis inuestigatas / vti summa | industria lucubranti patebit.
-Impressumq¿ue¿ in cele⸗|berima vniuersitate Oxoniensi per me Iohannem
-| Scolar in viculo sancti Ioannis Baptiste mora¿m¿ tra⸗|hente¿m¿ .
-Anno d¿omi¿ni . M . CCCCC . decimooctauo . Men⸗|sis vero Maij die
-decimoquinto . [_ornament_] | ¶ Cu¿m¿ priuilegio . | ¶ Uetitum est per
-edictum sub sigillo ca¿n¿cellariatus | ne quis in septennio hoc
-insigne op¿us¿ imprimat | vel aliorum ductu impensis venditet in
-vni⸗|uersitate Oxonie: aut infra precinctum | eiusdem: sub pena
-amissionis omnium | librorum et quinq¿ue¿ libraru¿m¿ ster⸗|lingorum
-pro singulis sic ve¿n¿|ditis ubiubi impressi fue⸗|rint preter pena¿m¿
-pretax⸗|atam in decreto. | ¶ Cornicum oculos configere noli.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxf. 1518: (eights & fours) sm. 4^o: pp. [152], foll.
- 75 + [1], signn. A^8, B^4, C^8, D^4, E^8, F^4, G^8, H^4, I^8, K^4,
- L^8, M-N^4: sign. B 1^r beg. _pertinet ad_. Contents:—p. (1) Title and
- large woodcut: (2) large woodcut of the royal arms with supporters
- &c.: (3–152) the work: (152) colophon, &c.
-
- Of Johannes Dedicus (perhaps, as has been suggested by prof. H. W.
- Chandler, Dethick) nothing is known. The Quaestiones extend to the end
- of the 5th book of the Ethics, and the last paragraph is a summary of
- the 6th.
-
-
-3. *¬Laet¬, Jaspar. [at end:—] FIniunt prenostica exerpta a prenosticis
-egregii viri magistri Iasparis | Laet angligenis cognitu maxime vtilia.
-Et in celebe⸗|rima oxoniensi academia | [_woodcuts_] impressa
-[_woodcuts_]. |
-
- Imprint as above, Oxford, [probably 1518]: 4^o[?]: broadside.
- Contents:—on 1st page, the Praenostica.
-
- Only known from the lower half of the sheet preserved in the Cambridge
- University Library, where the upper half is also believed to be.
-
-
-4. ¬Lux.¬ ¶ Co¿m¿pendium questionu¿m¿ de luce et lumine [followed by a
-small woodcut and the four quaestiones]. [Sign. B 4^v:—] ¶ Cum
-priuilegio dignissi⸗|mi Cancellarij vniuer⸗|sitatis Oxonie. [Then a
-large _woodcut_: then] ¶ Finit compendium questiuncularum de luce & de |
-lumine nouiter recognitum. Impressu¿m¿q¿ue¿ in celiberi⸗|ma vniuersitate
-Oxoniensi per me Ioannem Sco⸗|lar in viculo diui Ioannis baptiste moram
-trahentem | Anno d¿omi¿ni . M . CCCCC . deci¿m¿ooctauo . Mensis vero |
-Iunij die quinto.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, 1518: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _vt intentio_. Contents:—A 1^r, title: A 1^v-B 4^r, the work:
- B 4^v, the colophon.
-
-
-5. ¬Whittington¬, Robert. ¶ De heteroclitis nominibus. | ¶ Editio
-Roberti Whittintoni lichfeldien|sis Grammatice magistri: et protouatis |
-anglie in florentissima Oxoniensi achade|mia Laureati ⁄ de heteroclitis
-nominibus | et gradibus comparat¿i¿onis. [Then _woodcut_: then a
-“tetrastichon” and a “distichon.”] [Sign. B 4^v:—] [Roberti] whittintoni
-lichfeldiensis de heteroclitis no|[minibus & de] gradibus
-co¿m¿parationis Oxonie impressa p¿er¿ | [me Ioannem] Scolar in viculo
-diui Ioannis baptiste mo|[ram tra]hentem Anno d¿omi¿ni . M . CCCCC .
-decimooctauo | [M]ensis vero Iunij . die vicesimoseptimo.
-
- Impr. as above, Oxford, 1518: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A^6, B^4:
- sign. B 1^r beg. _Hic tapes_. Contents:—A 1^r, title &c. as above: A
- 2^r-B 4^v, the work (on B 4^v also occur a woodcut of the arms of the
- University and the colophon).
-
- Only known from an imperfect copy in the Bodleian rescued from the
- binding of a book.
-
-
- 1519.
-
-¬Compotus.¬ ¶ Compotus manualis | ad vsu¿m¿ Oxoniensiu¿m¿. | [_device_].
-[sign. B 4^v:—] ¶ Impressum est presens opusculu¿m¿ in ce⸗|leberrima
-vniuersitate Oxoniensi p¿er¿ | me Carolum Kyrfoth. In vico | diui
-Joa¿n¿nis baptiste mora¿m¿ | trahe¿n¿te¿m¿ Anno d¿omi¿ni . M . D . xix.
-Me¿n¿sis | vero Februarij . die V. |
-
- Imprint as above, Oxford, 1519: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign.
- B 1^r beg. ¶ _Februarius_. Contents:—A 1^r, title, and woodcut: A
- 1^v-B 4^r, the Compotus: B 4^v, University arms and colophon.
-
- A system of arithmetic illustrated by wood engravings of the open
- hand, values being attached to each part. Panzer after Maittaire
- mentions a Paris ed. of 1498 “cum commento.”
-
------
-
-Footnote 5:
-
- For a general discussion of the circumstances of the Early Sixteenth
- Century Oxford Press, see Appendix B.
-
-
-
-
- Fictitious Or Lost Oxford Books.
- 1459–1584.
-
-
- 1459.
-
-A small sheet of paper printed on the ice-bound Thames at London 18 Jan.
-1716 ascribes to Oxford the first printing in England, in the year 1459.
-Most of the information on the sheet is derived from Atkyns’s ©Original
-and Growth of Printing© (Lond. 1664).
-
-
- 1461.
-
-Printing was “practised in Oxford in 1461,” according to Randle Holmes’s
-©Academy of Armory© (Chester, 1688), quoted in Bigmore, i. 337.
-
-
- 1469–70.
-
-In Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1393 we read:—“In the late Tho. Osborne’s
-catalogue of books for sale in June 1756, No. 1345 ‘Plinii Secundi
-Epistolarum, Liber primus. Exemplar elegans, literis initial. colorat.
-corio turcico, fol. deaur. lineis rubris & auro elegans ornat. 15l. 15s.
-Oxon. apud F. Corsellis. 1469.’ To which is added this note, ‘Hocce
-unicum est exemplar notum, a variis allegatum, et vix uni visum adeo ut
-Phoenix librorum dici mereratur [_sic_], certe primus est ex libris a
-Corcellis impressis, cui nomen suum adjunxerit, secundus vero ordine
-omnium quos unquam ille impressit, priorem scilicet scimus fuisse,
-Jeronymi Expositionem in Symbol. Apostol. Oxoniae 1468. Anno 1470, varia
-idem typographus impressit Opuscula, addito in fine nomine, sed nec
-unicum eorum reperitur hodie integrum. Possident quidam amatores
-fragmenta aliqua poematum Latinorum, ut Gerardi Lystrii Rhenensis, &c.
-Carmen Listrii lividorum hominum venenosas linguas, &c.’ This raised the
-curiosity of the book collectors, who considered this article as a
-confirmation of what R. Atkins had asserted about printing at Oxford.
-They all flocked to Osborne’s shop, who instead of the book, produced a
-letter from a man at Amsterdam, filled with frivolous excuses for not
-sending them to him. They were disappointed, and looked on the whole as
-a HVM; however the Plinii Epistolæ, and Ger. Listrii Oratio, &c.
-afterwards appeared at an auction at Amsterdam, and were bought for the
-late Dr. Ant. Askew; and were sold again at an auction of his books, by
-Baker and Leigh, in Feb. 1775. Lot 2064, and 2622, to which articles are
-annexed, viz. to Lot 2064, ‘Ad finem hæc verba, _Impr. Oxon. apud F.
-Corsellis_, 1470, Manu recentiore exarata sunt.’ Also to lot 2622, ‘Hæc
-verba, _Imprim. Oxon. ap. Corsellis_, 1469, Manu recentiore exarata
-sunt.’ To those who are at all conversant in early printing, the dates
-will appear at first sight a bungling forgery.” So far Herbert’s Ames,
-cf. Bowyer and Nichols’s ©Origin of Printing©, 2nd ed. (Lond. 1776), p.
-171. The full entry of art. 2064 is “Listrii (Ger.) Oratio habita in
-Enarrationem Dionysii Halicarnassii; Dionysii Orbis expositio e Greco
-tralata Prisciano interprete; Ejusdem Carmen in venenosas Linguas
-Hominum, & Epicedium doctissimi Adoloscentis Ingenisissimique Petri
-Thessaliensis”: sold to Mr. Dent for £2 3_s._: art. 2622 has 1569 for
-1469, and was sold to Capt. Smith for £1 6_s._
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the Auction Catalogue of the Library of Dr. Abr. de Vries of Haarlem
-(Amsterdam, Frederick Muller, 1864) art. 181 was:—“CORCELLIS.—Collection
-de lettres, copies authentiques, déclarations et notices en 1756 et 57
-sur l’imposture fameuse du falsaire G. SMITH, à Amsterdam et la Haye,
-qui fabriqua une édition de ©Plinii epistolae©, avec souscription:
-_Oxoniae_, _Corcellis_. 1469. ©Hedwigii liber© 16. ibidem. 1470, etc. et
-trompa Mr. P. v. Damme et autres en Angleterre.—Recueillie et conservée
-pour prouver son innocence à la falsification et annotée par Mr. v.
-Damme. 12 pc. MS. Collection très-curieuse, contenant e. a. 7 lettres de
-Smith à v. Damme, une lettre forgée ou falsifié du Comte de Pembroke,
-une lettre de P. Burman Sec., copie d’une déclaration de Meerman, etc.
-etc.” It is to be hoped that this interesting collection will be brought
-to light again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the ©Monthly Miscellany, or Memoirs for the Curious© (June 1708), p.
-177 it is stated that in the Bishop of Ely’s Library (now at Cambridge)
-are books “of the first printing in England at Oxford in 1469.”
-
-
- 1480.
-
-“Guido de Columnia de historia Trojana, per T. R. (_Theodore Rood_).
-Quarto. 1480.” So Herbert’s Ames, p. 1393. The source of the error was
-discovered by Cotton to be a forgery in a copy of Guido sine anno et
-loco preserved in the Earl of Pembroke’s Library at Wilton (©Typ. Gaz.©,
-1st ser., 2nd ed., p. 209.)
-
-
- Before 1487.
-
-“Books from the Oxford Press.... 208*. The Chronicles of England. Folio.
-Lent by the Earl of Jersey.” So in the Catalogue of the Caxton
-Celebration, 1877, p. 28. Some error. The reference is no doubt to
-Caxton’s Chronicle of England, printed in 1482.
-
-
- 1489.
-
-When Cotton printed his ©Typographical Gazetteer©, 2nd series, (Oxf.
-1866) he believed that an Indulgence of 1489 (altered to 1499), in the
-Library of Trinity College, Dublin, was printed at Oxford. It is “a
-small broadside on vellum, consisting of 24 lines only, printed very
-closely and occupying a space of about nine inches by six.” The
-Indulgence is from Johannes de Gigliis alias de Liliis Apostolicus
-Subdiaconus, granted by Pope Innocent iii: and is dated 1499, there
-being no name of place or date of printing. There is no doubt that
-Cotton was mistaken in attributing this piece to the Oxford press.
-
-
- 1498.
-
-1. Bagford, in his inaccurate way, gives the title of an edition of the
-Greek text of the Ethics of Aristotle by Aretinus “Oxon. 1498” (Brit.
-Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 3). He mentions the 1479 edition of the Latin
-text separately, but the former date can only be due to some confusion
-with the latter.
-
-
-2. The Rufinus of 1468 appears as dated 1498 in Panzer, who quotes
-Schoenemann i. 585, and also in Migne’s ©Patrologia Latina©, xxi. col.
-17.
-
-
- 1499.
-
-Indulgence: see 1489.
-
-
- 1500.
-
-1. Buridanus: see next article.
-
-
-2. “Gualtheri Burley Tractatus de materia et forma ac de relativis.
-Oxonii 1500. 4.” So in Panzer ii (1794) p. 244, quoting Maittaire p.
-739, ex Bibl. Bodl. p. 117 (an allusion to an error in the Bodleian
-Catalogue of 1674, repeated in the 1738 Catalogue p. 206). Bagford makes
-the same mistake, twisting the author’s name into Johannes Buridanus
-(Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 3). Even Hain (no. 4142) has copied
-from Panzer. The colophon of 1518. B shows how the error arose, as
-Cotton points out (©Typ. Gaz.©, 1st ser., 2nd ed., p. 209).
-
-
-3, 4. Bagford is responsible for two more fictitious Oxford books of
-1500. a ©Quaestiones de lumine et luce© (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol.
-3, Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, fol. 103: a confusion with 1518. L) and a
-Whitinton _de heteroclytis nominibus_ printed at Oxford by Peter
-Treveris (!) (Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, fol. 103: see 1518. W).
-
-
- 1506.
-
-The following book though not printed at Oxford supplies information
-about an Oxford bookseller:—[sign. a 1^r:—] “Principia seu
-introduc-tiones f_rat_ris peregrini ytalici de lugo in via doctoris
-subtilis: adipisci eiusde_m_ doctoris doctrinam cupientibus. [at foot:—]
-Uenu_n_dant_ur_ autem in alma ac florentissima vniuersitate Oxonie_n_se.
-in intacte v_ir_g_in_is ac i_m_maculate / vico: s_an_cti ioha_n_nis
-eua_n_geliste / ad intersignium. [Then follow 4 tractatus: then on sign.
-g 4^r:—] Expliciunt principia seu introductiones (pro iuuenib_us_)
-fratris peregrini de lugo ... Imp_re_ssa aut_em_ Londini. p_er_
-Richardu_m_ pyns_on_. cum solerti cura ac diligentia Honestissimi
-Iuuenis ac prudentissimi Hugonis Meslier. Expe_n_s_is_ aut_em_ georgii
-castellani / oxonii morantis / ad intersignium sancti Ioha_n_nis
-euangeliste: in quo venundatur op_us_ hoc. Finis....” Then follows a 5th
-treatise, ending with a letter from Peregrinus de Lugo dated “Tholose
-quarto Kalendas Februarij . M . ccccc . vj.” Herbert’s Ames (iii. 1396)
-refers this book to Oxford, although at i. 252 it is referred rightly to
-Pynson’s press at London.
-
-
- 1510.
-
-References to a ©Compendium quaestiuncularum de luce et lumine©, Oxford
-1510, will be found in Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 22^v,
-Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, p. 104), no doubt from the ©Catalogus librorum
-MSS^{rum} Angliæ et Hiberniæ© (Oxf. 1697, fol.), tom. 2, p. 280, col. 1,
-among the printed books of John Moore bp. of Norwich. An error for 1518.
-
- 1511.
-
-The 1481 Alexander de Hales appears in Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl.
-5901, fol. 23, Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, p. 104) as of 1511, printed at
-Oxford.
-
-
- 1512.
-
-“Walterus Burleius, super libros Posteriorum. 1512. 4^o.” So in Cotton’s
-©Typ. Gaz.©, 2nd ser., p. 169, and in a longer form in Herbert’s Ames
-iii. 1396, and Panzer vii. p. 494, quoting Brüggemann i. 172. The source
-of the mistake is easily found in the colophon of 1517. B, a “v” having
-been overlooked. The error is repeated in the ©Bookworm© (1868) p. 126.
-
-
- Before 1519.
-
-According to Cotton (©Typ. Gaz.©, 2nd ser., p. 169) an edition of “Jo.
-Duns Scotus, Scriptum Oxoniense super primum Sententiarum” (Paris 1519)
-professes to be “impressa juxta editionem Oxoniensem.” This cannot be
-correct, unless _editio_ refers only to some traditional method of
-exposition or arrangement at Oxford.
-
-
- About 1519.
-
-“The following book printed at the charge of Cardinal Wolsey, with the
-King’s arms on one side, and the cardinal’s on the other; though it has
-neither date nor printer’s name, was probably performed about this time
-[1519] at this place [Oxford].” ‘Libellus prim. epistol. M. Tullii
-Cicer. Decus Oxoniensium, finitum universitate Oxoniensi. Quarto.’ So in
-Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1398, and substantially in Bagford’s account (Brit.
-Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 24^v, Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, fol. 103): see
-Cotton’s ©Typ. Gaz.©, 2nd ser., p. 169. Clearly a blunder. The book
-which is said to be at Trinity College, Dublin, could not be found there
-in 1885.
-
-
- 1519.
-
-“Roberti Whitintoni Lichfeldiensis Protovatis Angliæ in Florentissimâ
-Oxoniensi Academiâ Laureati, Opusculum de Concinnitate Grammatices &
-Constructione recognitum Anno Domini xix supra Sesquimillesimum, in
-4to.” So Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 23^v, cf. Bodl. MS.
-Rawl. D. 375, p. 103). Probably not printed at Oxford.
-
-
- Before 1520.
-
-John Dorne, bookseller in Oxford, sold in 1520 several copies of a small
-book described in his day-book as “Bene fundatum,” “Bene fundatum
-Oxonie” or “Bene fundatum uosgraf.” This seems to be a trace of a real
-Oxford book now lost, but no such printer as Vosgraf or Foxgrave (Dorne
-was from the Low Countries) is known. It would probably belong to the
-1517–19 press. See Dorne’s book edited in the ©Collectanea© vol. i of
-the Oxford Historical Society, 1885. Cotton erroneously reads the title
-as “Bene sum datum.”
-
-
- 1542.
-
-Shepery’s ©Hippolytus©: see under 1586. S.
-
-
- 1549.
-
-“P. Martyr de Sacramento Eucharistiæ, disputatio hab. in acad., 1549,”
-4^o. So in the ©Catalogus librorum R. Davisii©, pt. 4 (1692), p. 7, cf.
-p. 10. Some error.
-
-
- 1564.
-
-“Analysis libri Aristotelis de Sophisticis Elenchis, opera et studio
-Griff. Poweli.” So in the ©Catalogus librorum R. Davisii©, pt. 2 (1686),
-p. 72. Error for 1594, which see.
-
-
- 1565.
-
-“Ιωαννοῦ τοῦ Χρυσοστομου Ομιλιαι. Oxonii 1565 in forma minore.” So in
-the ©Bibliotheca Gudiana© (Hamb. 1706), p. 75: thence in Brüggemann, p.
-422. An error for 1586, which see.
-
-
- 1569.
-
-1. Guild’s ©Throne of David or an Exposition of the 2nd of Samuel©.
-Error in the ©Catalogus librorum R. Davisii©, pt. 1 (1686), p. 164, for
-1659, which see.
-
-
-2. “1569. An account of the Lithuanian translation of the Bible is in
-the Brit. Museum. Quarto.” So Herbert’s Ames, iii. p. 1398. For 1659,
-which see under _Chylinski_, Samuel B.
-
-
- 1576.
-
-Fabricius, J. S.: “Meditationes Sacræ de unitate Ecclesiæ Britannicæ.
-1576,” 8vo. So _twice_ in the ©Catalogus librorum R. Davisii©, pt. 2
-(1686) p. 20, pt. 3 (1688) p. 11. For 1676, which see.
-
-
- 1578.
-
-“Thesaurus œconomiæ ... Johanne Caso Authore. 1597 ... Again 1578.” So
-Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1407. Perhaps for 1598, which see, but even that is
-perhaps an error for 1597!
-
-
- 1584.
-
-Shepery’s ©Hippolytus©: see under 1586. S.
-
-
-
-
- The Oxford University Press.
-
-
- 1585.
-
-1. ¬Bilson¬, Thomas. THE TRVE DIFFE-|RENCE BETWEENE CHRI-|STIAN
-SUBIECTION AND | VNCHRISTIAN REBELLION: | WHEREIN THE PRINCES LAWFULL |
-power to commaund for trueth, and indepriuable | right to beare the
-sword are defended against the | Popes censures and the Iesuits
-sophismes vt-|tered in their APOLOGIE and DE-|FENCE OF ENGLISH |
-CATHOLIKES: | _With a demonstration that the thinges refourmed in the
-Church of England by the_ | _Lawes of this Realme are truely Catholike,
-notwithstanding the vaine shew_ | _made to the contrary in their late_
-Rhemish Testament: _by_ | THOMAS BILSON Warden of Winchester. | Perused
-and allowed by publike authoritie. | [_Device_: then _two mottos_].
-
- Impr. 2: 1585 (CIↃIↃXXCV): (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 820 + [10]: p.
- 11 beg. _wee bee farre_, p. 111 _be not Judges_: chiefly Pica English.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–12) Epistle dedicatorie to queen Elizabeth:
- (13) “the generall contents of euerie part”: (14–22) “To the Christian
- Reader”: 1–820 the work, in 4 parts: (1–9) “the speciall contents of
- euery part”: (9) “Faultes escaped”, i.e. errata.
-
- For the author &c. see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 169: where it is
- pointed out that the book has a curious history. Its ostensible
- purpose is to uphold the doctrine afterwards called “passive
- obedience” by refuting two books which were regarded as subversive of
- the Queen’s temporal power, (1) ©An apologie and true declaration of
- the institution ... of the tvvo English colleges ... in Rome ... (and)
- in Rhemes©, 1581 (ascribed to card. Will. Allen), (2) ©A true, sincere
- and modest defence of English catholiques that suffer for their
- faith©, n. d. (asserted by Antony à Wood to be also by card. Allen).
- But Wood declares that the Queen “conceiving it convenient for her
- worldly designs to take on her the protection of the Low-Countries
- against the King of Spain, did employ our author ... to write the said
- book” to _justify_ the Netherland revolt. And certain it is that in
- consequence of the temperance and fairness with which Bp. Bilson
- treats his subject, the parliamentary party in Charles I’s time used
- this book to _oppose_ “passive obedience.”
-
- * * * * *
-
- Probably issued about the end of November, 1585. Greek type is used on
- p. 263 and perhaps elsewhere. Another ed. appeared at London in 1586:
- an extract from pp. 520–21 was reprinted in 1641 and again in Somers’s
- Tracts, 2nd ed., iv. 29 (Lond. 1810).
-
-
-2. ¬Case¬, John. [_Ornament_] SPECVLVM MORALIVM | QVAESTIONVM IN
-VNIVERSAM ETHICEN | Aristotelis, Authore Magistro IOHANNE CASO |
-Oxoniensi, olim Collegij Diui Io-|hannis Præcursoris | Socio. | [then
-the University Arms: then a _motto_ from Seneca].
-
- Impr. 1, so also colophon: 1585: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [28] + 401 +
- [19]: p. 11 beg. _Opp. Iuuenes_, p. 111, _Distinctio_: chiefly Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) Title: (3–7) Epistola nuncupatoria to Robert
- Dudley, earl of Leicester, chancellor of the University, signed
- “Iohannes Casus”: (8–10) “Ad studiosos iuuenes vtriusque academiae”:
- (10) “Prosopopœia Libri Ad Lectorem”: (11) “Honoratissimo suo domino
- et patrono Comiti Leicestrensi &c. Iosephus Barnesius Typographus
- Oxonie nsis”: (12–23) Complimentary Latin verses to the author:
- between (24) and (25), “Tabula virtutum et vitiorum omnium”, a folio
- leaf printed on one side only: (25–28) Præfatio: 1–401 the work in 6
- books: (1–2) “Peroratio ad lectorem”: (4–17) Index: (17) Errata and
- colophon.
-
- The first book printed at the new Oxford press. The allusions to this
- and kindred facts are (1) in the “Epistola Nuncupatoria.” Case says of
- the reasons for dedicating the work to the Earl of Leicester “Unum est
- nouum hoc præli beneficium, quod te authore nostra Academia nuper
- recepit ... Prælum hoc nouum (cuius author existis) hunc nouum de
- moribus libellum pressit. Ne ergo author libelli præli authori
- videatur ingratus, tibi primùm eiusdem fructum ex animo propinauit
- ...” (2) the printer himself writes “Admirabilem hanc artem
- typographicam (Mecęnas amplissime) primum Iohannes Faustus Moguntiæ
- fauste genuit [the marg. supplies “Anno 1450”], eandem Guilielmus
- Caxtonus ciuis Londinensis probè aluit & perpoliuit: Laus summa
- debetur authori qui invenit, laus magna debetur mercatori qui primùm
- ad nos transuexit ... Londinum diù in hac arte floruit, & non inuideo:
- Cantabrigia eandem nunc didicit, Oxonia recepit, & certè gaudeo. Nam
- si characteres typographi sint vera insignia & arma Mineruæ; vbi
- terrarum potius floreret hæc nobilis scientia, quàm vbi vera publicè
- docetur sapientia? vt enim à fonte in riuum dulcis aqua, ita hîc
- quidem à mente in prælum dulcissima Musa fluet. Non nugæ, non aniles
- fabulæ, non Aristarchi dentata opera hîc excudentur: ea solùm ex his
- prælis in lucem venient quȩ sapientum calculis approbentur, & Sybillȩ
- foliis sint veriora. Hoc vnum nunc restat (vir inclytissime) vt hunc
- librum opus alterius ingenij & pignus laboris mei tuo honori offeram
- ... Vt ergo Thomas Thomasius collega meus [Cantabrigiensis] suo, ita
- ego Iosephus Barnesius tibi (vir summe) meo patrono dominoque
- gratulor: nos ambo & publico pro multis, & priuato nomine pro magnis
- in nos meritis vobis vtriusque Academiæ patronis deuincti sumus,
- gratias immortales vterque agimus, maiores in posterum pollicemur”:
- (3) the Vice-chancellor, J. Underhill, writes “Non dedit hoc seclo
- prælum Oxoniense priorem [librum] | Doctrinâque dabunt secula nulla
- parem.” (4) Laurence Humfrey says “Hoc Speculum vobis nunc Oxoniensis
- alumnus | Porrigit, en præli dat quoque primitias.”
-
- It is clear that neither the Vice-chancellor nor the printer of this
- volume had any suspicion that there had been printing in Oxford
- previous to the publication of the present volume, unless “recepit” be
- a vague allusion to it.
-
- The work is a companion one to the same author’s ©Summa veterum
- interpretum in universam dialecticam Aristotelis©, Lond., Tho.
- Vautrollerius, 1584, see 1592. C, 1598. C: and there is even a
- typographical connexion between the two.
-
- For an account of the author, see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 685. The
- method adopted by Case is by _quaestiones_, _oppositiones_ and
- _responsiones_ in the manner of the disputations in the schools at the
- time. Other editions were issued at Oxford in 1596, and at Frankfurt
- in 1589, 1610 and 1625. See 1596. C.
-
-
-3. Corro, Antonio de. Sermons on Ecclesiastes: see 1586. E.
-
-
-4. ¬Dudley¬, Robert, earl of Leicester. [_ornament_] IN | ADVENTVM
-ILLVSTRIS-|_SIMI LECESTRENSIS COMITIS AD_ | _Collegium Lincolniense_. |
-
- Impr. 3: “tertio idus Ianuarij” 1585: (one) 8^o: pp. [2]: chiefly Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title as above: large device of University
- arms: then “Carmen gratulatorium” of 8 elegiac lines, _beg._ “Comiter
- hoc factum est”: then imprint.
-
- Very rare. The visit appears from Wood’s ©Annals© ii. 223 to have been
- in Jan. 1584/5, and the date of printing 11 Jan. 1584/5. The
- difficulties in the way of regarding this sheet as the first printing
- of the new Oxford Press are the form of the date, which usually
- implies Jan. 1585/6, the assertion of Barnes that the Case was the
- first production, and the improbability that the Committee of
- Convocation appointed to consider “de libris imprimendis” on 23 Dec.
- 1584 would proceed to action so soon as 11 Jan. 1584/5. But the
- fitness of the earlier date is too obvious to be gainsaid. This piece
- is probably the first printed sheet issued by Barnes.
-
-
-5. ¬Parsons¬, Robert. A | BOOKE OF | CHRISTIAN EX-|ERCISE APPERTAI-|ning
-to RESOLVTI-|ON, that is, shewing | how that we should re-|solue our
-selues to be-|come Christians in-|deede. _By R. P._ | _Perused, and
-accompanied_ | _nowe with a treatise ten-_|_ding to pacificati-_|_on,
-By_ | EDMVND BVNNY. [Then a _motto_ from Hebr. xiii. 8: the whole title
-and imprint is within a border of ornament.]
-
- Impr. 2_a_ (colophon 4): 1585: sm. 12^o: pp. [28] + 494 + [2] + 140:
- p. 11 beg. _ons, or if_, 111 _confidence_, 2nd p. 11 _helpes
- whatsoeuer_, 111 _hel should_: chiefly Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–8) Bunny’s Epistle dedicatorie to Edwin Sandys, archbp.
- of York (9–18) Bunny’s “Preface to the reader”: (19–28) “The contentes
- of ... this booke”: 1–493 [misprinted 439], the work, in 2 parts: (1)
- title of Bunny’s treatise: 1–140, the treatise: before p. 1 of the
- treatise is an oblong sheet 5 × 11 in., folded, containing on one side
- in two divisions “A table ... of the treatise following”: on p. 140 is
- also a colophon.
-
- Of this book also there is a curious history. Gaspare Loarte, a
- Spanish Jesuit who spent most of his life at Rome, wrote an
- “Essercitio della vita christiana” some time before 1569. In 1570, J.
- Sancer, a friend of Robert Parsons the Jesuit, published a translation
- into English of one of the three parts of the work. In 1582 Parsons
- himself published “The firste booke of the Christian Exercise,
- appertayning to resolution” in two parts, which is practically a new
- work based on part of the original “Essercitio.” Loarte is mentioned
- in the preface, but the author only signs his name by the initials, R.
- P. This was again issued without Parsons’ knowledge in 1584.
-
- In 1585 (or according to Wood and Ames, copied by Herbert and Dibdin,
- in 1584) Edmund Bunny printed and published the first edition of an
- adaptation of Parsons’ book fitted for Protestant readers “at London,
- by N. Newton, for Iohn Wight,” 8^o. The dedication is to the archbp.
- of York and the preface dated 9 July 1584 at Bolton-Percy. The book
- was entered at Stationers’ Hall on 28 Aug. 1584. The Oxford edition
- before us is a reprint of this London edition with no intentional
- variation, except the omission of the arms of the archbishop of York
- on the _verso_ of the title of the London issue. Some of the woodcut
- ornaments and capitals of the two issues are identical.
-
- In “1585, Aug. 30” Parsons again put out his book in a revised and
- largely augmented form with a new title “A Christian Directorie” which
- when complete was to consist of three books, the first of which,
- treating of Resolution, is alone contained in this edition. The
- preface contains a criticism of the London issue of Bunny’s
- adaptation, which provoked “A briefe answer vnto those idle and
- friuolous quarrels of R. P. against the late edition of the
- Resolution: By Edmund Bunny.” Lond., 1589, 8^o.
-
- Other editions of Bunny’s adaptation of Parsons’ “Christian exercise”
- are 1586 (Lond., “by I. Iackson and Ed. Bollifant for John Wight,”
- 12^o; in Herbert’s possession), 1589 (Lond., 12^o: Bohn), 1594 (Lond.,
- 24^o: Bohn), 1609 (Lond., 12^o: Bohn), 1615 (Lond., 12^o). See also
- next art. Parsons’ own work was several times reprinted: and in 1591
- appeared an edition of his “Christian Directorie,” anonymously
- adapted, as the former work, for the use of Protestants, and with the
- deceptive title “The second part of the booke of Christian Exercise,
- appertayning to Resolution, or a Christian directorie ... written by
- the former authour R. P.” (Lond., 12^o). This was several times
- reprinted, as in 1592, 1594, 1598, 1615. See also Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©,
- ii. 221: and the next art.
-
-
-6. ¬Parsons¬, Robert. A | BOOKE OF | CHRISTIAN EX-|ERCISE APPERTAI-|NING
-TO RESOLVTION, | that is, shewing how that | wee shoulde resolue
-our|selues to become Christi-|ans indeede, _By R. P._ | _Perused, and
-accompanied now_ | _with a treatise tending to_ | _Pacification, By_ |
-EDMVND BVNNY. | [_motto._ The whole title is within a border.]
-
- Impr. 2_a_ (colophon 4): 1585: sm. 12^o: pp. [30] + 492 + [2] + 140:
- p. 11 beg. _what man_, 111 _Gospell, which_: also p. 11 _nounce all_,
- 111 _it they should_: chiefly Long Primer Roman. Contents:—as
- preceding article, without the folded “Table” to Bunny’s treatise,
- viz.:—p. (1) title: (3–9) epistle: (10–19) preface: (20–29) contents:
- 1–491, the treatise: (1) title: 1–140 Bunny’s treatise, with colophon.
-
- This volume is apparently identical in text (not spelling or
- punctuation) with the preceding art., but is entirely reset: from p.
- 252 of this edition (= 254 of the other) the two correspond page for
- page in Parsons’ treatise.
-
-
-7. ¬Prime¬, John. A SERMON BRIEF-|LY COMPARING THE E-|STATE OF KING
-SALOMON AND | his Subiectes togither with the condi-|tion of Queene
-ELIZABETH | and her people. | PREACHED IN SAINCT MA-|_ries in Oxford
-the_ 17. _of Nouember, and_ | _now printed with some small alteration_,
-| _by_ IOHN PRIME, | 1585. | [_ornament._]
-
- Impr. 4: 1585: sm. 8^o: pp. [32], signn. A-B^8: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _passion, that_: chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
- Epistle “to the Christian reader”: (6–30), the sermon, on 1 Kings x.
- 9: (31–32) “A praier in consideration of the former respects.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 653. The Epistle is dated 27 Nov. 1585,
- and alludes to Bilson’s book as “euen now comming foorth.”
-
-
-8. Shepery, John. See 1586. S.
-
-
-9. ¬Sparke¬, Thomas. “‘A Sermon preached at Cheanies the 14. of
-September, 1585, at the burial of the right Honorable the Earle of
-Bedford, by Thomas Sparke Doctor of Diuinitie.’ The university’s arms.
-‘Imprinted at Oxford by _him_ Printer to that famous Vniuersitie.’ My
-copy is cut so close at bottom that it is uncertain whether there was
-any date added. Dedicated ‘To—Arthur Lord Gray of Wilton, Knight of—the
-Garter.—At Bletchley the 25 of September, 1585.—Thomas Sparke.’ The
-text, ‘Apocal. 14. 13. I heard a voice from heauen’ &c. At the end of
-the sermon ‘September 22. An. Do. 1585,’ Besides; 110 pages, W. H.
-16^o.”
-
- The above is the account of the book in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1399, in
- the account of Joseph Barnes’s press at Oxford in 1585. The copy sold
- in the Heber sale, 9 April 1835, Catal. pt. vi, p. 248, art. 3559 for
- 8_s._ was probably Herbert’s. Ames in his ©Typographical Antiquities©
- (Lond. 1749) gives a shorter title and describes the book as a quarto.
- Other edd. are Lond. 1585, in eights (pp. [10] + 106), and Oxf. 1594
- (with 25 _December_ at end of dedication, pp. [10] + 110): but both
- are different from the present book, if Herbert’s description may be
- trusted.
-
-
- 1586.
-
-1. ¬Case¬, John. “‘Reflexus speculi moralis, seu commentarius in magna
-moralia Aristotelis. Authore Johanne Caso.’ Again 1596. Octavo.”
-
- The above is from Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1401, slightly altered from
- Ames, p. 453: but both are probably errors for 1596: see 1596. C.
-
-
-2. ¬Catilinariae proditiones.¬ “‘In Catilinarias proditiones, ac
-proditores domesticos, Odæ 6.’ The university arms. ‘Oxoniæ, ex Officina
-Typographica Josephi Barnesii, & veneunt in cœmeterio Paulino sub signo
-capitis Tygurini. Anno 1586.’ On the back, in a lozenge form, ‘Odæ sex
-ornatissimis viris D. Doctori Jameso Ædis Christi Oxon. decano, et
-doctori Hetono prodecano, cæterisque clarissimis atque optimis viris
-eiusdem ecclesiæ præbendariis, & privatæ observantiæ, et publicæ
-pietatis ergô dicatæ.’ 8 leaves, the first has only signature A. Brit.
-Museum. Octavo.”
-
- The above is from Herbert’s Ames, iii. p. 1401. In May 1886 the
- officials of the British Museum were unable to find the book. A copy
- was sold at the Bliss sale in 1858 (Catal. pt. 2, art. 7) to Stenson a
- bookseller for £4 4_s._
-
-
-3. ¬Chardon¬, John. A SERMON | VPON PART OF | THE NINTH CHAPTER | OF THE
-HOLY GOSPEL | OF IESVS CHRIST | _ACCORDING TO_ | S. IOHN: | Preached at
-S. Maries in | Oxford by _Iohn Chardon_ | Doctor of Diuinitie. |
-[_motto._]
-
- Impr. 2_b_: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _streight waie_: chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–10) Epistle dedicatory to Ambrose earl of Warwick, Oxf. 6 Oct.
- 1586: (11–44) the sermon, on John ix. 1–3: (45–47) “The prayer.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 716.
-
-
-4. ¬Chardon¬, bp. John. “‘A comfortable sermon for all such as thirst
-and desire to be ioined with their head Jesus Christ, &c. Preached at
-the funerals of Syr Gawen Carewe, very worshipfully buried in the
-Cathedral Church of Exeter, 22d April, 1584, By John Charden bachelor of
-Divinity.’ The text, 1 Thes. 4; 13–18. Octavo.”
-
- So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1400: see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 716,
- Maunsell i. 97.
-
-
-5. ¬Chrysostom¬, St. D. IOANNIS CHRY-|SOSTOMI ARCHIE-|PISCOPI
-CONSTANTI-|NOPOLITANI, _Homiliæ sex_, | Ex manuscriptis Codicibus Noui
-Collegij; | IOANNIS HARMARI, eiusdem Col-|legij socij, & Græcarum
-literarum in | inclyta OXONIENSI Academia | Professoris Regij, opera & |
-industria nunc primùm | græcè in lucem | editæ. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 5: 1586 (CIↃIↃXXCVI): (eights) 16^o: pp. [12] + 138: p. 11 beg.
- σίον ἀυτοῦ, 111 πάντες συμφωνοῦσιν: chiefly Long Primer Greek.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–12) Epistola dedicatoria to sir Thomas
- Bromley, lord chancellor of England, Oxf. 28 Dec. [1585]: 1–138, the
- six Homilies, in Greek.
-
- “Primitiæ typographici nostri in græcis literis preli,” as the
- dedication says. The first Greek book printed in England was also a
- Chrysostom (Two Homilies, Lond., Reg. Wolfe, 1543), but separate Greek
- words occur in the first book printed at Cambridge (Cujusdam ...
- Christiani Epistola, 1521), and single words cut in wood still
- earlier. The six homilies are 1. Κατὰ τῶν παρατηρούντων τὰς νεομηνίας
- (Migne, ©Patrol. Gr.©, Chrysost., i. 953.) 2–5. Εἰς τὸν Λάζαρον, αʹ,
- βʹ, γʹ, δʹ (ibid. 963, 981, 991, 1005). 6. Εἰς τὸ Περὶ δὲ τῶν
- κεκοιμημένων (ibid. 1017). See p. 12 (1565), Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii.
- 138.
-
- An imperfect book, (signn. A 2-D 7), containing Isocrates Πρὸς
- Δημόνικον, Πρὸς Νικοκλέα, Νικόκλης ἢ συμβουλευτικὸς λόγος τρίτος,
- Plutarch Περὶ παιδῶν ἀγωγῆς and “Luciani Cupido,” all in Greek, once
- owned by Thomas Hearne and now in the Bodleian Library, is in similar
- type to this Chrysostom and is accordingly assigned by Hearne to
- Barnes’s Press. But minute inspection shows that some of the woodcuts
- of the book are not identical with any used at Oxford. It is probably
- London printing (not Bynneman 1581 nor 1621: perhaps Bishop 1599: see
- Brüggemann, p. 128.)
-
-
-6. ¬Ecclesiastes.¬ SOLOMONS SERMON: | OF MANS CHIEF | FELICITIE: CALLED
-| IN HEBREW KOHELETH, | IN GREEKE AND LATIN | ECCLESIASTES. | With a
-learned, godly, and familiar pa-|raphrase vppon the same: gathe-|red out
-of the Lectures of A. | C. & now englished for | the benefit of the |
-vnlearned. | [_motto & device._]
-
- Impr. 4: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 219 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _that
- is brought_, 111 _and this meditation_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–7) Epistle dedicatorie to the “lady Marie Dudley,” Oxford, 8
- Mar. 1586, signed “T. P.”: (8–16) “To the Christian reader ...” with
- the writer’s name, Th. Pie: 1–219, the paraphrase, the text of
- Ecclesiastes occurring in the margin.
-
- This book is a translation into English of “Sapientissimi regis
- Salomonis concio de summo hominis bono quam ... Latini Ecclesiasten
- vocant, in Latinam linguam ab Antonio Corrano ... versa et ex eiusdem
- prælectionibus paraphrasi illustrata: accesserunt & notæ quædam”
- (Lond., 1579) with the omission of the notes. For Ant. de Corro see
- Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 578: and for Thomas Pye, _ibid._ ii. 59. Wood
- was not acquainted with this earliest work of Pye, but alludes to the
- book (as above, i. 581) as Corro’s “Sermons on Ecclesiastes. Abridged
- by Thomas Pitt. Oxon 1585, oct., which is called by some Pitt’s
- Paraphrase on Ecclesiastes”! The name Pitt, but not the error of date,
- may be taken from Maunsell, who three times (i. 38, 81, 104) alludes
- to the book as by Tho. Pitt. Pye in his Epistle states with respect to
- the original Latin edition, “which treatise, as it came first to the
- print, myselfe by occasion being charged with som ouerseeing of the
- presse, at the earnest request aswel of the author himself, as of
- other many, I translated into English: being the rather a greate deale
- moued thereunto, because there was no comment or like exposition then
- extant in our vulgar tongue vpon this part of Scripture.” This latter
- statement is not strictly true, since “An exposition of Salomon’s
- booke called Ecclesiastes” was printed in London in 1573. In 1585
- Serranus’s commentary translated into English by T. Wilcocke was
- printed in London.
-
-
-7. ¬Hutchins¬, Edward. A SERMON | PREACHED IN S. | PETERS CHURCH AT |
-WEST-CHESTER THE XXV | OF _SEPTEMBER_, 1586. | CONTAINING MATTER | FIT
-FOR THE TIME: | By Edward Hutchins Maister | of Arts, and Fellowe of
-Bra-|zennose College. |
-
- Impr. 6: (1586): (eights) 16^o: pp. [32]: sign. B 2^r beg. _the
- fould_: chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
- to Roger Puleston: (5–30) the sermon, on Gal. 5. 12.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 453. The only copy seen, that in
- the British Museum, wants the last leaf, presumably blank.
-
-
-8. ¬Hutchins¬, Edward. A | SERMON PREA-|CHED IN WEST-|CHESTER THE VIII.
-| OF OCTOBER, 1586. | _BEFORE THE IVD-_|GES AND CERTAIN | _RECVSANTES_:
-| Wherein the conditions of al he-|retiques, but especiallie of
-stub-|born and peruerting Papists, | are discouered, & the duty | of al
-magistrats concer-|ning such persons, ap-|plied & opened | _By_ EDWARD
-HVTCHINS, _Ma-_|_ster of Artes, & Fellowe of_ BRA-|SENNOSE Colledge. |
-...
-
- Impr. 6: (1586): (eights) 16^o: pp. [32], signn. A-B^8: sign. B 2^r
- beg. _are they_: chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication to Thomas Egerton: (5–32) the sermon, on Canticles ii. 15.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 452.
-
-
-9. ¬Massie¬, William. A | SERMON PREA-|CHED AT TRAFFORD | IN LANCASHIRE
-AT | _THE MARIAGE OF A_ | DAVGHTER OF THE | right Worshipfull Sir
-ED-|MOND TRAFFORDE | Knight, the 6. of Sep-|_tember Anno_, 1586. | By
-WILLIAM MASSIE bacheler in di-|uinity, and fellow of Brasen-nose
-Col-|ledge in Oxforde. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [32], signn. A-B^8: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _of body, sorrow_: chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication to sir E. Trafford: (5–32) the sermon, on Ps. cxxviii.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 237. The marriage was between Margaret
- Trafford and Sir Urian Legh, kt., of Adlington, a member of the same
- College as the preacher.
-
-
-10. ¬Music.¬ THE PRAISE | OF MVSICKE: | Wherein besides the antiquitie,
-| dignitie, delectation, & vse there-|of in ciuill matters, is also
-decla-|red the sober and lawfull vse of the | same in the congregation
-and | Church of God. [_device, then motto._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 152: p. 11 beg. _Musicke of_,
- 111 _proper place_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication by the printer to “sir Walter Rawley”: (5–8) “The preface
- to the Reader”: 1–152, the work in 12 chapters, with the sub-title
- “The antiquitie and original of Musicke ...”
-
- This work has been constantly attributed to John Case, the author of
- the ©Apologia Musices©, Oxf. 1588, but the present writer believes
- that from internal evidence it cannot be regarded as his. See Appendix
- C, and Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 686. It was reprinted in the ©Choir and
- Musical Record© 1864, by dr. Rimbault, who contributed an
- introduction.
-
-
-11. ¬Overton¬, John. IACOBS | TROVBLE-|SOME IOVR-|NEY TO BE-|THEL:
-Conteining a briefe ex-|position, or excellent | Treatise of the four
-first | verses of the 33. Chapter | of GENESIS: | _Set foorth by_ IOHN
-OVER-|TON, _Maister of Arts_. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 75 + [5]: p. 11 beg. _many
- wise_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) Epistle dedicatory
- to William Brent, Welsborne, 1 Apr. 1586: (8) Gen. xxxiii. 1–3: 1–75,
- the treatise: (1–5) “A prayer against the enimies of the Church of
- Christ ...”
-
- This book was the “first fruits” of the author’s study.
-
-
-12. *†¬Philosophy.¬ DE | PHILOSO-|PHIA, | PANATHENA-|ICAE DUAE: | IN
-COMITIIS OXONII HABITAE. | [_woodcuts and motto._ The whole title is
-within a border.]
-
- N. pl.: n. d. (1586?): (eights) 12^o: pp. [32], signn. A-B^8: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _lem, Demosthenem_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1–2) unknown:
- (3) title: (5) three Quaestiones: (6–18) “Panathenaica prima, v. Id.
- Iulii 1585. habita”: (19–20) three Quaestiones: (20–31) “Panathenaica
- secunda, iii Id. Iulii 1586. habita.”
-
- The Bodleian Catalogue suggests that these speeches are perhaps by
- Thomas Savile (see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 591), brother of sir Henry
- Savile, both of Merton. There is no place of imprint, but probably it
- is Oxford printing. Wood did not know the book.
-
-
-13. ¬Rainolds¬, John. A SERMON | VPON PART | OF THE EIGH-|TEENTH PSALM:
-| Preached to the publik assem-|blie of Scholers in the Vniuer-|sitie of
-Oxford the last day | of August, 1586. by | IOHN RAINOLDS: | Vpon
-occasion of their meeting to giue | thankes to God for the late
-detection | _and apprehension of Traitours, who_ | wickedlie conspired
-against the _Queens Maiestie and the_ | state of the Realme. |
-[_motto._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [40], signn. A-B^8 C^4: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _But al this_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r “Aj.”: A 2^r,
- title: A 3^r-A 4^r, “Iohn Rainoldes, to the Reader,” Oxford, 24 Oct.
- 1586: A 4^v, Ps. xvii. 47–51: A 5^r-C 4^v, the sermon, on Ps. xviii.
- 47–51: C 4^v, Ps xxi. 7–9.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 15. Reprinted at Oxford in 1613.
- Occasioned by “Babington’s conspiracy”: there are several references
- to current events.
-
-
-14. *¬Shepery¬, John. HYPPOLITVS OVIDIANÆ | PHAEDRAE RES-|PONDENS, PER
-IOAN-|NEM SCHEPREVVM SOMA-|TO CHRISTIANVM. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 8: [1586]: (eights) 12^o: pp. [80], signn. *,A-D^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Scilicet expectas_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign. *1^r, title:
- *2^r-*7^v, “Ioannis Schepreui præfatio, in epistolam Hyppoliti sui ad
- Phædram, ad M. Guadum dedicatam,” in Latin elegiacs: *8^r-*8^v,
- “Candido lectori Georgius Edrychus medicus S. P. D.,” a Latin preface:
- A 1^r-D 8^r, the poem.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 135. This work is an imaginary reply of
- Hippolytus to the temptations of Phaedra, in Ovidian elegiacs. The
- author, John Shepery, of Corpus Christi College (“Somatochristianus”),
- tells us in the preface that it was composed as a return for kindness
- shown him by one Guadus (Wade ?, whom the editor describes as a
- chaplain to Henry viii), but delayed for some years. Shepery died in
- 1542, aged 32 years. George Etheridge (“Edrychus”) was a pupil of
- Shepery, fellow of Corpus, and a Roman Catholic.
-
- The date is fixed at 1586 by two passages: Etheridge in his preface
- states that for about 53 years he had been a member of the University:
- he was admitted scholar of Corpus in Nov. 1534. Also Dr. Humphrey in
- his introduction to the ©Summa et synopsis© (see below) alludes to the
- ©Hippolytus© as “nuperrime impressum.” Wood places the date at about
- 1584, and the Bodleian catalogue of 1843 assigns the book to 1542,
- owing to the date of Shepery’s death, which happens to occur
- prominently at the end of Etheridge’s preface.
-
-
-15. ¬Shepery¬, John. SVMMA | ET SYNOPSIS | NOVI TESTAMEN-|TI DISTICHIS
-DV-|CENTIS SEXAGIN-|TA, QVAE TOTI-|DEM CAPITIBVS | RESPONDENT, |
-_comprehensa_: | Prior a IOANNE SCHEPREVO | Oxoniensi olim conscripta:
-Posterior ex ERASMI | ROTERODAMI _Editione decerpta: Tyrunculis &
-om-_|nibus pietatis & Theologiæ candidatis non inutilis, à | LAVRENTIO
-HVMFREDO _recognita, & iu-_|uandæ memoriæ causâ, edita: | Cui præmissa
-est eiusdem | _De Scholis & studijs Christianorum piè & metho-_|_dicè
-instituendis breuis Admonitio_. | [_motto_ by L. H.(umfrey).]
-
- Impr. 5: 1586: (eights) 16^o: pp. [62], signn. A-B^8 C^9 (see below)
- D^6: sign. B 1^r beg. _disticha Ioannis_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
- A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A 8^r “Admonitio Laurentii Humfredi ad Studiosos”:
- A 8^v, “Librorum Novi Testamenti elenchus & ordo per Cor. Graphæ ...”:
- B 1^r-C 3^v “Disticha Ioannis Sheprevi ...”: verso of leaf after C 3-D
- 6^r, “Disticha ... in Editione Erasmi Roterodami inserta.”
-
- The “Summa Ioannis Sheprevi” is a set of elegiac stanzas, each stanza
- describing the contents of a chapter in the New Testament, and
- beginning successively with the letters of the alphabet, written by
- John Shepery, of Corpus Christi College, Reader of the Hebrew Lecture
- from about 1537 to his death in 1542. The ©Summa© is stated by Wood to
- have been first published at Strasburg in about 1556 by John Parkhurst
- bp. of Norwich, next in Lond. 1560 (Wood), and from Humfrey’s ed. in
- “Gemma Fabri,” Lond. 1598, and “Biblii (or Bibliorum) summula,” Lond.
- 1621, etc. The first distich is “A priscis oritur Christus, turbatur
- Ioseph, | Angelus hunc retinet, virgo beata parit.” MS. C. C. C.
- (Oxf.) 266 contains these verses.
-
- The “Synopsis” is a similar set of elegiac stanzas, without the
- alphabetical succession of first letters, first inserted in the Latin
- editions of Erasmus’s New Testament, from that of 1542 on. The author
- appears to be unknown: the first distich is “Angelus in somnis iustum
- solatur Ioseph, | Prototoco Mariæ nomen Iesus erit.”
-
- In the preface Dr. Humfrey states that his object in editing the book
- was to recall young students to the study of the text of the Bible,
- and that he had collated a MS. copy of the ©Summa© with bp.
- Parkhurst’s edition, and had compared different editions of the
- ©Synopsis©: he alludes also to the Hippolytus of Shepery as “nuperrime
- impressum.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 135, 560. Dr. Philip Bliss noted in his
- copy “Whoever wants to write a history of the Oxford press should
- first get together all the little vols printed by Jo. Barnes, of which
- this is one of the rarest.”
-
-
-16. ¬Spanish.¬ REGLAS GRAM-|MATICALES PARA A|PRENDER LA LENGVA
-ESPA-|n̄ola y Francesa, confiriendo la | vna con la otra, segun el
-or-|den de las partes de la o-|ration Latinas. | ⁂ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 9*: 1586: 12^o in size.
-
- Only known from a title-page in the British Museum (Bagford
- Collection, 463. h. 8, no. 456). Mentioned in Ames and Herbert’s Ames,
- but not in such terms as to prove that either editor had seen the book
- complete. For the reference to the British Museum and a transcript of
- the title I am indebted to Mr. E. G. Duff, of Wadham College, Oxford.
-
-
-17. ¬Westfaling¬, Herbert. “‘Articles Ecclesiasticall to be inquired of
-by the Church-wardens and the Sworne-men within the dioces of Hereford
-in the first visitation of the reuerend father in God, Harbart Bishop of
-the said dioces: this present yeare M . D . lxxxvi and the xxviii. yeare
-of the raigne of our most gracious soueraigne Lady Queene Elizabeth, &c.
-And so hereafter, till the next visitation, and from time to time to be
-presented.’ B, in fours: 70 articles. W. H. Quarto.”
-
- So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1401.
-
-
- 1587.
-
-1. [Bailey, Walter.] A briefe discours of certain Bathes ... neare vnto
-... Newnam Regis, 1587.
-
- Probably not printed at Oxford, but at London, though ascribed to the
- former place in the British Museum Catalogue.
-
-
-2. ¬Beza¬, Theodorus. MASTER BEZAES SER-|MONS VPON THE THREE | FIRST
-CHAPTERS OF THE | CANTICLE OF CANTICLES: | WHEREIN ARE HANDLED THE |
-CHIEFEST POINTS OF RELIGION | _CONTROVERSED AND DEBATED BE-_|_TWEENE VS
-AND THE ADVERSA-_|RIE AT THIS DAY, ESPECIALLY TOV-|_CHING THE TRVE IESVS
-CHRIST AND_ | THE TRVE CHVRCH, AND THE CER-|TAINE & INFALLIBLE MARKS |
-BOTH OF THE ONE AND | OF THE OTHER. | _TRANSLATED OVT OF FRENCH INTO_ |
-ENGLISH BY IOHN HARMAR, HER HIGHNES | _PROFESSOR IN THE GREEKE TOVNG_ |
-IN THE VNIVERSITIE OF OXFORD, | AND FELOWE OF THE NEWE | COLLEGE THERE.
-| [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 6_a_: 1587: (fours) 8^o: pp. [12] + 435 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _and
- because no_, 111 _with all rigor_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) epistle dedicatory to the earl of Leicester: (7–12) “The
- Argument of the xlv. Psalme, seruing for an Argument of ... the
- Canticle of Canticles ...”: 1–435, the sermons (thirty-one) on the
- Song of Solomon chapp. 1–3.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 138. The best account of this work will
- be extracts from the Epistle dedicatory. John Harmar the translator
- was in this year Proctor, Regius professor of Greek and Fellow of New
- College. He says, “I was requested, right honorable, by manie of my
- friends to emploie the time of this last vacation of mine from my
- publique readinges in the Vniuersitie, in the translating of Master
- Bezaes Sermons vpon the Canticle of Canticles, which I had a little
- before receaued from the Francfurt mart in French, into our vulgare
- and Mother tongue.” The patronage of Lord Dudley is acknowledged and
- details of the translator’s life are given, as that he attended Beza’s
- lectures and sermons at Geneva. The work translated was no doubt
- Beza’s “Sermons sur les trois premiers chapitres du Cantique des
- cantiques de Salomon,” _Genève, Jehan le Preux_, 1586, 8^o (Brunet).
-
-
-3. ¬Case¬, John. “‘Thesaurus oeconomiae, seu commentarius oeconomica
-Aristotelis. Authore Johanne Caso.’ Again 1598. Quarto.”
-
- So Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1402, after Ames: but perhaps an error for
- 1597.
-
-
-4. ¬Legatus.¬ DE LEGATO ET ABSOLV-|TO PRINCIPE PERDV-|ELLIONIS REO. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 10: 1587: (eight) 12^o: pp. [16], sign. A^8: p. (11) beg. _su
- fortuito_: Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–16) the treatise.
-
- This anonymous treatise is a formal and precise legal argument on the
- question “Utrum legatus alicuius principis absoluti vel ipse princeps
- absolutus morte sit afficiendus, si in aliena republica, contra vitam
- principis vel salutem totius reipublicae, nefariam coniurationem
- fuerint machinati.” It was intended to support Queen Elizabeth in her
- resolution to execute Mary Queen of Scots, and seems to have been
- written after 4 Dec. 1586 (p. 13) and before the execution 8 Feb.
- 1587: but there is no clue to the author.
-
-
-5. [¬Penry¬, John.] A TREATISE | CONTAINING | THE AEQVITY OF | AN HVMBLE
-SVPPLI-|CATION WHICH IS TO BE | _EXHIBITED VNTO HIR_ | GRACIOVS MAIESTY
-AND | this high Court of Parliament | _in the behalfe of the Countrey
-of_ | Wales, that some order may | _be taken for the preaching of_ | the
-Gospell among those | people. | Wherein also is set downe as much of the
-| estate of our people as without offence | could be made known, to the
-end that | our case (if it please God) may be piti-|ed by them who are
-not of this assem-|bly, and so they also may be driuen to | labour on
-our behalfe. |
-
- Impr. 6: 1587: (eights) 16^o: pp. 62 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _The
- Necessity_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–10, “To al
- that mourn in Sion ...”: 11–62, the work: (1) “To the reader”
- explanation and erratum.
-
- The author’s name nowhere occurs, but there can be but little doubt
- that the volume was written by John Penry of St. Alban hall, Oxford
- (B.A. 1586), who is conspicuous in the Marprelate controversy and who
- published ©An exhortation vnto the Gouernours and people of Wales, to
- labour earnestly to haue the preaching of the Gospell planted among
- them© (n. pl. or d., and n. pl. 1588): and also ©A View of ... publike
- wants & disorders ... in the service of God ... within Wales©, n. pl.
- 1588. The author says, p. 63, “Some rumor of the speedy dissolution of
- the Parliament enforced me from the 32 Pag. or there abouts (so much
- being already vnder the presse) to cut off more of the booke by two
- parts than is now in the whole.” Parliament sat in 1586 from 28 Oct.
- to 2 Dec. and not during 1587. At pp. 53–4 Penry alludes to the state
- of the Universities. Wood does not know of this work, and the best
- account of the author is in Cooper’s ©Athenæ Cantabr.©, ii. 154.
-
-
-6. ¬Prime¬, John. AN | EXPOSITION, | AND OBSERVATI-|ONS VPON SAINT |
-PAUL TO THE GALA-|THIANS, TOGETHER | with incident Qæstions de-|_bated,
-and Motives re-_|moued, by | IOHN PRIME. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1587: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 317 + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _moment_, 111 _dangerous_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–7), dedication to John Pierce bishop of Salisbury, Oxford, 30 Jan.
- “1587”: 1–317, the work: (2–3) unknown.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 653. Compiled from notes of fortnightly
- discourses at Abingdon.
-
-
-7. ¬Rainolds¬, John. IOHANNIS RAINOLDI | ORATIONES DU_Æ_: | Ex ijs quas
-habuit in Collegio | Corporis Christi, quum | linguam Graecam |
-profiteretur. | HABITÆ, QVVM STUDIA, DE | more per ferias intermissa, |
-repeterentur: | _Prior, quæ duodecima, post vaca-_|_tionem Natalitiam;_
-| _Posterior, decima tertia, post va-_|_cationem Paschalem;_ | _Anno_
-1576. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 5: 1587: (eights) 16^o: pp. [88]: p. 11 beg. _ignorantiam_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. 1 “A”: 3, title: 5–8, “Iohannes Rainoldus
- Academicis Oxoniensibus S. P. D.,” with preface following, Oxf. 2
- Feb.: 9–85, the two Orations.
-
- These are general exhortations to study, selected out of twenty
- orations of the kind. They are reprinted in the various editions of
- Rainolds’s Orations. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 15.
-
-
-8. ¬Sidney¬, sir Philip. EXEQVIÆ | ILLVSTRISSIMI | EQVITIS, D.
-PHILIP-|PI SIDNAEI, GRATISSI-|MAE MEMORIAE AC NO-|_MINI IMPENSÆ_. |
-[_device_: then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 5: 1587: sm. 4^o: pp. [96], signn. *, A-L^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Et verò_: Pica Roman and Italic. Contents:—sign. *1^r, title:
- *2^r-3^v, Epistola dedicatoria to the earl of Leicester, signed
- “Guilielmus Gagerus,” Oxf., 22 Oct. 1587: *4^v, Latin poem by Laurence
- Humfrey: A 1^r-L 4^v, the poems, in Latin: L 4^v, an erratum.
-
- Sir Philip Sidney died at Arnheim 7 Oct. 1586. Dr. William James, dean
- of Christ Church, urged W. Gager to collect and edit poems which had
- been privately made at the time of Sidney’s death: the editor found it
- necessary from considerations of space to reject Hebrew, Greek, French
- and Italian poems, but it may be doubted whether the printer possessed
- Hebrew type. See next art.
-
-
-9. ¬Sidney¬, sir Philip. PEPLVS | ILLVSTRISSIMI | VIRI D. PHILIPPI |
-SIDNAEI SVPRE-|MIS HONORIBVS | DICATVS. | [_woodcut_, then two
-_mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1587: sm. 4^o: pp. 54 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Cur temet_: Pica
- Roman and Italic. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–4, dedication to Henry
- Herbert earl of Pembroke, in Latin, by “Ioannes Luidus,” New college,
- Oxford, 26 Aug. 1587: 5–54, the work: 54, two errata.
-
- The title is an allusion to the spurious Peplus of Aristotle, a
- commemoration of the heroes who fell before Troy. The editor was John
- Lhuyd, and the poems (almost all Latin) are all by New College men,
- among whom the earl of Pembroke, Sidney’s brother-in-law, had been
- educated. See preceding art., and Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 523.
-
-
-10. ¬Sprint¬, John. AD | ILLVSTRIS-|SIMOS COMI-|TES WARWICENSEM | ET
-LEICESTRENSEM ORA-|_TIO GRATVLATORIA_ | BRISTOLLIÆ HABITA | _APRIL.
-ANNO_ | 1587. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 5: (1587): (eight) 16^o: pp. [16], sign. A^8: p. (11) beg.
- _Atque hic_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign. A 1 unknown: A 2^r, title: A
- 2^v, introduction to the speech, in Latin: A 3^r, dedication to lord
- Leicester by “Ioh. Sprint” dean of Bristol: A 3^r-A 7^v, the speech,
- 16 Apr. 1587: A 8^r, “In aduentum Illustrissimi Comitis Leicestrensis
- cùm primùm Cancellarius Oxoniensis Academiam accederet” (29 Aug.
- 1566?), a poem of 13 hexameters, the initial letters of the words
- forming a complimentary wish.
-
- Extremely rare: see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 333, where the poem &c.
- is reprinted.
-
-
-11. ¬Ursinus¬, Zacharias. THE SVMME | OF CHRISTIAN | _RELIGION_: |
-Deliuered by ZACHA-|RIAS VRSINVS in his Le-|_ctures vpon the Cateckism
-auto-_|rised by the noble Prince FREDE-|RICK, throughout his dominions:
-| _Wherein are debated and re-_|solued the Questions of whatsoe-|_uer
-new points of moment, which haue beene_ | _or are contro-_|_uersed in
-Diuinitie._ | _Translated into English by_ HEN-|RIE PARRIE, _out of the
-last & best_ | _Latin Editions, together with some sup-_|_plie of wants
-out of his Discourses of Di-_|_uinitie, and with correction of sundrie_
-| _faults & imperfections, which ar as yet_ | _remaining in the best
-corrected Latine._
-
- Impr. 6: 1587: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 1047 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _alone
- is it_, 111 _iecting it of_, 1001 _Now we haue_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within a border: (3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to
- the earl of Pembroke, signed by Parry: (9–15) “To the Christian
- readers,” by Parry: 1–1047, the work: (2–9), “A table ...” of
- contents.
-
- Other editions were printed at Oxford in 1589, 1591, 1595, 1601. The
- work, which is a commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism, appears to be
- a cento from the Tractationes Theologicae of Ursinus (vol. 1, 1587,
- fol.). See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 192. Parry’s Prefaces are
- reprinted in 1600. U.
-
-
- 1588.
-
-1. ¬Ca[se]¬, Jo[hn]. APOLOGIA MV-|SICES TAM VO-|CALIS QVAM |
-INSTRUMEN-|_TALIS ET_ | MIXTÆ. | [four _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1588: (eights) 16^o: pp. [6] + 78 (“77”): p. 11 beg. _am,
- Lydiam_: Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) dedication
- “Henrico Vntono et Guilielmo Hattono ... Io. Ca. S. P. D.,” with
- preface signed “I. C.,” Oxf. 30 Nov. 1588: 1-“77” the work.
-
- Rare. By John Case, cf. 1586. M, Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 686. The
- dedication is to two persons for their fathers’ interest in music.
- Sign. F consists of F 1 & F 3 only, paged 74–77 instead of 75–78.
- Copies usually have a border, &c. of red ink lines, throughout.
-
-
-2. ¬Case¬, John. SPHÆRA CIVITATIS, | AVTHORE MAGISTRO | IOHANNE CASO
-OXONI-|ENSI, OLIM COLLEGII DIVI | Iohannis Præcursoris socio. |
-[_device_, then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1588: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [36] + 740 + [12]: p. 11 beg.
- _regni plusquam_, 111 _Communitas_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (2) 4 verses to the author from the “Sphæra Civitatis”! with a
- curious engraving of the sphere surmounted by the head and shoulders
- of the queen: (3) Latin poem to the author signed “Richardus Late-War”
- pres. of St. John’s college: (5–9) Epistola dedicatoria to Christopher
- lord Hatton: (10–25) “Ad Christianum lectorem,” 11 May 1588: (26–28)
- complimentary poems: (29–36) “Quæstiones et dubia quæ in octo libris
- Politicorum continentur,” a table of contents: (36) two complimentary
- poems: 1–740, the work: (1–4) “Peroratio operis,” 11 May, 1588: (5–11)
- “Rerum contentarum index.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 686. A commentary on the Politics of
- Aristotle, made into a general political treatise. On 16 July 1590
- Barnes petitioned for a decree of Convocation that every determining
- bachelor should purchase this work, but it does not appear that any
- action was taken on the petition. Reprinted at Frankfurt in 1616.
-
-
-3. ¬Catechism.¬ A CATECHISME, | OR SHORT KIND OF IN-|STRVCTION, WHEREBY
-| TO TEACH CHILDREN AND | THE IGNORAVNTER SORT, THE | _CHRISTIAN
-RELIGION_. | _Whereunto is prefixed a learned Treatise of the necessity
-and vse of_ | _Catechising: together with Godly praiers most fit for al
-estates at al_ | _times._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1588: sm. 4^o: pp. [10] + 212 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _God,
- committed_, 111 _lowest partes_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title:
- (3–9) Epistle dedicatory by Thomas Sparke and John Seddon to Arthur
- lord Grey of Wilton, Bletchley, 30 Jan. 1587: 1–61, the treatise on
- catechising, signed by Sparke: 62, a prayer: 63–194, the catechism:
- 195–211, prayers, with a confession of the faith: 212 “Causes why men
- doe not vnderstand the holie Scriptures,” &c.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 190 (bis). This is the Heidelberg
- Catechism translated into English by Thomas Sparke and John Seddon,
- with scriptural proofs annexed to each paragraph, and a long treatise
- on catechising. See next art.
-
-
-4. ¬Catechism.¬ A CATECHISME, OR SHORT | KIND OF INSTRVCTION, WHEREBY, |
-_TO TEACH CHILDREN, AND_ | THE IGNORAVNTER SORT, THE | _CHRISTIAN
-RELIGION_ | _Whereunto, is prefixed, a learned Treatise, of the
-necessity, & vse of Ca-_|_techising: together, with Godly praiers, most
-fit, for al estates, at al times._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1588: (eights) 12^o: pp. [12] + 274 (?): p. 11 beg. _the
- greatnes_, 111 _I beleeue_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–11)
- Epistle, as before: 1–80, the treatise, as before: 81, “The causes
- ...” &c. as before at end: 82, a prayer: 83–254, the catechism:
- 255–274, prayers &c. as above.
-
- This is a reprint of the preceding quarto edition, with slight
- varieties of spelling, arrangement, &c.: the type is newly set up
- throughout.
-
-
-5. ¬Humfrey¬, Laurence. A VIEW | OF THE ROMISH | HYDRA AND MON-|STER
-TRAISON A-|GAINST THE LORDS | _ANNOINTED: CON-_|DEMNED BY DAVID | 1.
-_SAM._ 26 _AND NOWE_ | CONFVTED IN SE-|VEN SERMONS | To perswade
-Obedience to Prin-|ces, Concord among ourselues, and a | _generall
-Reformation and Repen-_|taunce in all states | By L. H. | [_two
-mottos._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1588: (eights) 16^o: pp. [24] + 192: p. 11 beg. _as R.
- Holcot_, 111 _Kent, Roger_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
- “The Dialogue and talk of Dauid ...” (1 Sam. xxvi. 8–12): (3–17)
- Epistle dedicatory to the earl of Leicester, Oxf., “Decemb. 28”
- [1587], furnishing the author’s full name: (18–24) “A table of the
- special points and common places”: (24) “Faultes escaped correct
- thus,” six: 1–192, the seven sermons, on 1 Sam. xxvi. 8–12.
-
- Very rare. Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© (i. 560) represents this as a London
- book, but Maunsell (i. 100) and Herbert (iii. 1403) testify to this
- Oxford edition. The Bodleian copy wants the title and all after p.
- 186, the account of which is from a very accurate description
- obligingly supplied from a copy in the Peterborough Cathedral Library
- by the Bishop of Leicester in Dec. 1888.
-
-
-6. ¬Prime¬, John. [_woodcut._] THE CONSO-|LATIONS OF DAVID, | BREEFLY
-APPLIED TO | QVEENE ELIZABETH: IN A | Sermon preached in Ox-|ford the
-17. of Nouember. | By IOHN PRIME, | 1588. | [_motto_: then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 6_b_: 1588: (eights) 16^o: pp. [32], signn. A-B^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _ventereth his_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-A 3^v, Epistle dedicatorie to the bp. of Winchester, Oxf. 7 Dec.
- 1588: A 4^r-B 7^r, the sermon, on Ps. xxiii. 4: B 7^v, 2 Kings vi.
- 15–16.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 653. The Marprelate controversy and the
- defeat of the Armada are mentioned.
-
-
-7. ¬Sparke¬, Thomas. “Treatise to prove that Ministers publicly, and
-Householders privately, are bound to catechise their Parishioners and
-Families &c. Oxon. 1588. oct.”
-
- So Wood (©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 190): the treatise is part of the Catechism
- above, and is unlikely to have been separately issued.
-
-
-8. ¬Theocritus.¬ SIXE IDILLIA | THAT IS | _SIXE SMALL, OR PETTY_ |
-POEMS, OR ÆGLOGVES, CHO-|_sen out of the right famous Sicilian_ | Poet
-THEOCRITUS, and tran-|_slated into English verse_. | [_motto_: then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1588: (eight) 12^o: pp. [16], sign. A^8: p. (11) beg. _The
- heauens_: Long Primer Italic. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title, within a
- border: A 1^v “E. D. _Libenter hic & omnis exantlabitur_ | _Labor, in
- tuæ spem gratiæ_,” [Hor. Epod i. 23–4], within a border: “H” 2^r-A
- 8^r, Idylls 8, 11, 16, 18, 21, 31 of Theocritus.
-
- The only copy known is in the Bodleian. It was reprinted in 1883 at
- the private press of Mr. C. H. Daniel of Worcester College, Oxford.
- Each idyll is preceded by an “argument” and followed by an “embleme”
- or motto. It has been suggested that E. D. to whom the dedication is
- addressed, may be Edward Dyer. This is the first Oxford _édition de
- luxe_, except perhaps the xvth. cent. issues on vellum.
-
-
- 1589.
-
-1. ¬Hermaica gymnasmata.¬ HERMAICA GYM-|NASMATA. | Literarum nobilitas,
-& gloria. | LITERAE ORTV CAELESTES, | genere divinæ, authoritate &
-gratia illustres, | _studijs sapientum præclaræ, fructu saluta-_|_res,
-iucunditate præstantes_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 1_a_: 1589: (eights) 12^o: pp. [88], signn. A-E^8, F^4: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _luat: aut_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 1^v, “Tituli” of the 22 Exercises: A 2^r, “Philologo”: A 3^r-F 3 (“A
- 3”)^v, the exercises: F 3^v, note that the 3rd Exercise is out of its
- place: F 4, unknown.
-
- Very rare. Twenty-two short anonymous exercises in Latin prose, such
- as would serve for College or University disputations. By a Magdalen
- man, the “Epitaphius” being on William of Waynfleet, cf. the Phasma,
- &c.
-
-
-2. ¬Hutchins¬, Edward. A SERMON | PREACHED AT | S. MARIES IN OXFORD |
-VPON THE FEAST OF EPI-|_PHANY CONCERNING_ | THE TRVE COMFORT OF | _GOD
-HIS CHVRCH TRVLY_ | MILLITANT AND APOLO-|_gie of the same_. | Ianuary 6.
-1589. | By Edwarde Hutchins Maister | of Arts, and fellow of
-Brazen-|nose College in Oxford. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 6_b_: (1589): (eights) 12^o: pp. [32], signn. A-B^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _blessing: no_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-A 2^v, dedication to Thomas Egerton: A 3^r-B 8^r, the sermon, on
- Cant. iv. 7.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 452, where the book is divided into two,
- without cause.
-
-
-3. ¬Rider¬, John. BIBLIOTHECA | SCHOLASTICA. | A DOVBLE DICTIONARIE, |
-Penned for all those that would haue within short | space the vse of the
-Latin tongue, either to speake, or write. | _Verie profitable and
-necessarie for Scholers, Courtiers, Lawyers and their_ | Clarkes,
-Apprentices of London, Travellers, Factors for Marchants, | and briefly
-for all Discontinuers within her Majesties realmes | of England and
-Ireland. | _Compiled by_ Iohn Rider, _Master of Artes, and preacher of
-Gods word_. | [_device._] |
-
- { First reade
- { With others c...
- { Then censure
-
-_Read the Preface, Le..._ | [_imprint_] | Cum privile... |
-
- Impr. 12: 1589: (eights) sm. 4^o. pp. [12] + 1800 columns. 3 in a page
- + ? : col. 111 beg. _Belching_, 1001, _Notched_: Minion.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to sir Francis Walsingham,
- signed “Iohannes Riderus,” Oxford, 1 Oct. [1589], in Latin: (5) “To
- the Reader,” signed “Ioh. Ridir,” 30 Sept.: (6) “Directions for the
- Reader”: (7) “Rideri gratitudinis carmen, ad suum prænobilem
- Mecænatem,” acrostics “Comiti Sussexio” and “VVilielmo VVaddo”: (8–12)
- complimentary Latin verses to the author: coll. 1–1800, the work,
- English-Latin: (?)
-
- Very rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 457, ©Notes and Queries©, 6th
- S. iv. 274. The above description is from a copy of the first part,
- with damaged title, in the Bodleian. Rider claims that the Dictionarie
- is the first “that hath the English before the Latine, with a ful
- Index of al such latine words as are in any one common Dictionarie”
- and that it has 4000 more words than any other. He acknowledges the
- pecuniary help of the earl of Sussex and Will. Waade. The book is a
- “retort courteous” to the Cambridge dictionary by Tho. Thomas of 1588.
- Several edd. were subsequently issued (see 1627. H), and Thomas
- Holyoke refashioned it.
-
-
-4. ¬Skelton¬, John. “A Skeltonicall salutation, | or condigne
-gratulation | and iust vexation | of the Spanish nation, | that in a
-bravado | spent many a crusado | in setting forth an armado | England to
-invado | 4to, Oxf. J. Barnes, 1589.”
-
- So in the ©Catalogue of the ... library of ... Benjamin Heywood Bright
- ... which will be sold by auction ... 1845©, art. 5276, p. 331.
- Extremely rare. J. Payne Collier once saw a copy (©Notes and Queries©,
- 1st S. i. 18, 1849), the imprint being nearly as No. 5_b_. There were
- copies in the Farmer sale (1798, sold to lord Spencer) and Inglis sale
- (1826). In ©Notes and Queries©, _ibid._, p. 12 is printed a letter
- from John Aylmer bp. of London to the Lord Treasurer about “this
- foolish rime.” The London reprint, which contains a Latin version said
- not to be in the Oxford edition (but query?) “imprinted at London for
- Toby Cooke, 1589” (sm. 4^o, 8 leaves), is not uncommon. See also
- Brydges, ©Censura Literaria©, 2nd ed., p. 18, Ames and Herbert’s Ames.
-
-
-5. ¬Ursinus¬, Zacharias. THE SVMME | OF CHRISTIAN | RELIGION: |
-Delivered by ZACHARIAS VRSINVS in | his Lectures vpon the Catechisme,
-authori-|_sed by the noble Prince_ FREDERICKE | throughout his
-Dominions: | Wherein are debated and resolved the Questions | _of
-whatsoever points of moment, which haue beene_, | or are controversed in
-Divinity. | _Translated into English by_ HENRY PARRY, _out of the last
-and_ | best Latine Editions, together with some supplie of | _wants out
-of his Discourses of Divinity, and with correction_ | of sundry faults &
-imperfections, which are | as yet remaining in the best corrected
-Latine. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1589: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 966 + [10]: p. 11 beg.
- _nister comfort_, 111 _might fal?_, 501 _father al_: Long Primer
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to the earl
- of Pembroke, signed by Parry: (9–15) “To the Christian readers,” by
- Parry: 1–966, the work: (1–9) “A Table ...” of contents.
-
- See 1587. U. It is noteworthy that the change from u consonantal to v
- can be traced in progress by a comparison of this title with that of
- the first edition.
-
-
- 1590.
-
-1. ¬Bacon¬, Roger. LIBELLVS ROGERII BA-|CONI ANGLI, DOCTISSIMI
-MA-|thematici & medici, De retardandis senectu-|_tis accidentibus, & de
-sensibus_ | conservandis. | Item, | LIBELLVS VRSONIS | MEDICI, DE
-PRIMARVM QVALI-|tatum arcanis & effectibus. Vterq¿ue¿ affixis ad |
-_marginem notulis illustratus, & emendatus_, | in lucem prodijt, operâ
-Iohannis Willi-|_ams Oxoniensis, cuius_ | sequitur | Tractatus
-Philosophicus, de humo-|rum numero & natura, complexionis, morbi, |
-_perturbationum origine, caloris & humidi nati-_|vi virtute & munere in
-humano corpore, & de | _aëris infectione, vndè non rarò humores_ | &
-spiritus coinquinantur. |
-
- Impr. 5: 1590: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 31 + [1] + 134 + [2],
- (signatures continuous): p. 11 beg. _cana rerum_, also _tur. Sed
- potest_, 111 _li, tendones_: Brevier Roman (1st part), Pica Italic
- (2nd and 3rd parts). Contents:—p. (1), title: (3–5) epistola
- dedicatoria to Christopher lord Hatton by J. Williams: (6–7) “Ad
- lectorem,” a preface, mentioning some errata: (8) title of Bacon’s
- treatise, and a poetical Latin “R. Baconi vita”: 1–31, Bacon’s
- treatise: 1–29, Urso’s treatise: 33–134, Williams’s treatise, signed
- at end by the author.
-
- The preface contains curious critical principles. See Wood’s ©Ath.
- Oxon.©, ii. 132.
-
-
-2. ¬Gentilis¬, Albericus. ALBERICI GEN-|TILIS I. C. PROFES-|SORIS REGII
-| DE INIVSTITIA BELLICA | ROMANORVM ACTIO. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 13: 1590: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 23 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _rum vos non_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1), “¶j”: (3) title: (5–8) dedication
- “Roberto Devoraxio ... comiti Essexio,” Oxford, 24 Dec. 1590: 1–23,
- the treatise.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 91. The author says that he has a
- treatise ready prepared defending the precise opposite of the present
- argument.
-
-
-3. ¬Josephus.¬ ΦΛΑΒΙΟΥ ΙΩΣΗΠΟΥ ΕΙΣ ΜΑΚΚΑ-|βαίους λόγος: ἢ περὶ
-ἀυτοκράτορος λογισμοῦ. | Flavij Iosephi de Maccabæ-|_is; seu de Rationis
-imperio liber_. | MANUSCRIPTI CODICIS | _OPE, LONGE, QVAM_ | antehac, &
-emendatior, & au-|_ctior: cum Latina interpreta-_|_tione ac notis
-Ioannis Luidi_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1590: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 33 + [4] + 39 + [4], signn.
- ¶^4, A-E^8: p. 11 beg. οὐχ οὕτως, also _ramo Moses_ or _sim vt_: Long
- Primer Greek and Latin. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication to
- Roger Gifford physician to the King by Ioannes Luidus, in Latin,
- Oxford, 29 Sept. 1590: 1–33, & (1), text of Josephus: (2–4) “Veterum
- de hocce Iosephi libello elogia”: 1 (“6”)-39, Latin tr. of Josephus:
- (1–3) “Adversaria” including various readings: (3–4) “Castigationes.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 738 for John Lhuyd or Lloyd. The paging of
- the second part is very irregular up to p. 12.
-
-
-4. ¬Trigge¬, Francis. “Comment. in cap. 12. ad Rom. Ox. 1590.”
-
- So in Bliss’s ed. of Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 759.
-
-
-5. ¬Trigge¬, Francis. “Noctes sacræ seu lucubrationes in primam partem
-apocalypseos in quibus perspicue docetur quænam sit vera ecclesia, et
-quæ falsa, quod hoc seculo tam multos in religione et fide suspensos
-tenet, &c. Oxon. 1590, 4to. RAWLINSON.”
-
- So in Bliss’s ed. of Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 760. A copy was sold in
- the Davis sale at Oxford in 1686 (Catal. pt. 1, p. 26).
-
-
- 1591.
-
-1. ¬Barne¬, Thomas. A | SERMON PREA-|CHED AT PAVLS CROSSE | THE
-THIRTEENTH OF IVNE, THE SE-|cond Sunday in Trinitie tearme 1591. by |
-THωMAS BARNE _student in Diuinity_. [_three mottos_, then a _metal
-engraving_ (arms of the University &c.)].
-
- Impr. 4: 1591: 8^o in size.
-
- Extremely rare. Only known from a titlepage preserved in the Bodleian
- Library. Probably this is the source of Herbert’s description (iii.
- 1405). He calls the book a quarto: the size of the close-cut titlepage
- is 6–9/16 in. × 3¾ in. The metal engraving is curious: see 1591. T.
-
-
-2. ¬Hacket¬, Roger. “Roger Hacket, his sermon at Paules Crosse on 1 Sam.
-xi; 5, 6, 7 ... Octavo.”
-
- So Herbert’s Ames, p. 1404, from Maunsell, i. 100. See Wood’s ©Ath.
- Oxon.©, ii. 317.
-
-
-3. ¬Herodotus.¬ FEBRVARII.Υ Α῾ΛΙΚΑ´ΡΝΑΣΣΕ´ΩΣ Ι῾ΣΤΟΡΙ-|Ω῀Ν ΠΡΩ´ΤΗ,
-ΚΛΕΙΩ´. | HERODOTI HALICAR-|NASSENSIS HISTORIARVM | liber primus, Clio.
-| [_device._]
-
- Impr. 15: 1591: sm. 4^o: pp. 69 + [3]: p. 11 beg. βιώτατον: Pica
- Greek. Contents:—p. 1, title: 2, “Herodoti vita ex Suida,” &c.: 3–69,
- Herodotus, bk. 1: 69, “Errata graviora sic corrigenda.”
-
-
-4. ¬Sparke¬, Thomas. AN ANSWERE TO MA-|STER IOHN DE ALBINES, | NOTABLE
-DISCOVRSE AGAINST | heresies (as his frendes call his booke) | _Compiled
-by_ THOMAS SPARK _pastor_ | of Blechley in the county of Buck. | [two
-_mottos_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 4: 1591: 8^o: pp. [76] + 426 + [6]: p. 11 beg. _you are quite_,
- 111 _thing which it_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) Title: (3–14)
- Epistle dedicatorie to Arthur lord Grey of Wilton, signed “Thomas
- Sparke”: (15–76) “The preface to the Reader,” including (27–76) an
- answer to the preface to Albines’ book: 1–407, the treatise: 408–426,
- “A short answere to a new offer ... an enumeration of six ... signes
- of Antichristians ...”: (1–4) “A Table”: (5) “Faults escaped in
- printing, through the absence of the author, the hardnes and smalnes
- of the hand, wherein the copy was offered to the presse, and the
- vnacquaintance of the ouerseers with the same.”
-
- In answer to Jean de Albin’s treatise against heresies printed in
- English at Douai in 1575: the text of which appears to be entirely
- reprinted in this edition. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 190.
-
-
-5. ¬Tacitus.¬ THE | ENDE OF NERO | AND BEGINNING OF | GALBA. | FOWER
-BOOKES OF THE HISTO-|RIES OF CORNELIVS TACITVS. | THE LIFE OF AGRICOLA.
-|
-
- [Colophon on sign. H 2^r:—] impr. 14: [on titlepage:—M . D . LXXXXI]
- 1591: (sixes) la. 8^o: pp. [6] + 17 + [1] + 267 + [1] + 80 + [4]: p.
- 11 beg. _so good a_, and _another Prince_, 111 _xxix. The setting_, 11
- _ted to all_: 1st pt. Great Primer, 2nd pt. Pica, Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–4) dedication to the Queen, signed “Henry Savile”: (5–6)
- “A. B. To the Reader”: 1–17, the Ende of Nero, &c.: 1–267, the
- translation of Tacitus’s Histories bks. 1–4, and (p. 237) his Life of
- Agricola: 1–48, Annotations upon the four books and the Life: 49–75,
- “A view of certain militar matters,” with plan of Roman camp at p. 59:
- 75–77, “The explication of a place in Polybius” about Greek money:
- 78–80, “Translations of the marginall Greeke”: (1) “A note of the
- editions vsed in such authors as are cited by page”: (2) “Errours of
- the printe, or changes”: (3) colophon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 312. The A. B. of the preface was
- believed to be lord Essex (Edm. Bolton’s ©Hypercritica© ad fin., Oxf.
- 1722). There is something peculiar about this edition, for
- bibliographers describe it as London, and the woodcut in the
- dedication is not otherwise known to belong to Barnes. The titlepage
- and form are rather of London than Oxford. A metal engraving in the
- text is perhaps Barnes’s: see 1591. B.
-
-
-6. ¬Trigge¬, Francis. ANALYSIS CAPI-|TIS VICESIMI QVARTI | EVANGELII
-SECVNDVM MATTHÆVM, | in qua Prophetiæ omnes, & quæ ad Sinagogam, | _&
-quæ ad Antichristum seductorem illum, & quæ ad nostra_ | _tempora
-spectant, clarè explicantur, nec non ministerium ec-_|_clesiasticum cum
-omnibus suis adiunctis declaratur_ | _ac delineatur_. | Authore
-FRANCISCO TRIGGO. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 1_a_: 1591: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 128: p. 11 beg. _loquutus est_,
- 111 _ti ora vult_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication to Will. James, dean of Christ Church, vice-chancellor, “ex
- Welburnia mea” 19 Apr. 1591: 1–128, the Analysis.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 759.
-
-
-7. ¬Ursinus¬, Zacharias. THE SVMME | OF CHRISTIAN | RELIGION: | [&c. as
-1589. U, except in l. 7 : for ., l. 9 comma added after _beene_, l. 15
-is in italic, in imprint “Ty|_gres head_. 1591” for “Tygres | _head_.
-1589”].
-
- Impr. 6: 1591: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 966 + [10]: p. 11 beg.
- _nister comfort_, 111 _might fall?_, 501 _father al_: Long Primer
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–16), as 1589. U: 1–966, the
- catechism: (1–9) “A table ...” of contents.
-
- See 1587. U.
-
-
- 1592.
-
-1. ¬Barlaamus.¬ ΤΟΥ῀ ΣΟΦΩΤΑ´ΤΟΥ ΒΑΡΛΑΑ`Μ ΛΟ´ΓΟΣ ΠΕΡΙ` | ΤΗ῀Σ ΤΟΥ῀ ΠΑ´ΠΑ
-ἈΡΧΗ῀Σ. | BARLAAMI DE PAPAE PRINCI-|PATV LIBELLVS. | _Nunc primùm Græcé
-& Latiné editus opera_ IOANNIS | LVIDI _Procuratoris Academiæ
-Oxoniensis_. | Ad | Illustrissimum Dominum Bucchurstium | eiusdem
-Academiæ Cancellarium | Amplissimum. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1592: sm. 4^o: pp. [40], signn. ¶, A-D^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- ἀξιοῦσθαι χειροτονίας: Pica Greek and Roman. Contents:—¶ 1^r, “¶ j”: ¶
- 2^r, title: ¶ 2^v, arms of Buckhurst engraved on metal: ¶ 3^r-¶ 4^r,
- epistle dedicatory to Thomas Sackville lord Buckhurst, afterwards earl
- of Dorset, 1 Jan. “1592,” i. e. 1591/2: A 1^r-B 3^r, the Greek text: B
- 4^r-D 3^v, the Latin text.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 739. This is the editio princeps of the
- work of bp. Barlaamus. A copy presented by the author to John Selden,
- now in the Bodleian, is without the device on the titlepage.
-
-
-2. ¬Brasbridge¬, Thomas. Quæstiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis,
-compendiariam totius Opusculi Epitomen continentes. 16^o: (Impr. 5).
-
- From notes of a copy belonging to lord Robartes, seen by me in Dec.
- 1879. The dedication is dated 1586, of which date there is a copy of
- the book in Christ Church Library, Oxford: see 1615. B, an edition
- noticed in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 526.
-
-
-3. ¬Breton¬, Nicholas. THE PILGRIMAGE TO PARA-|DISE, IOYNED WITH THE |
-Countesse of Pembrookes loue, compiled | _in verse by_ NICHOLAS BRETON |
-_Gentleman_. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 6: 1592: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 102 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _But, waking_:
- Primer (Great Primer?) Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4), epistle
- dedicatory to Mary Countess of Pembroke: (5) “To the Gentlemen
- studients and Scholers of Oxforde,” 12 Apr. 1592, with a note
- disclaiming an edition “of late printed in london by one Richarde
- Ioanes ... entituled _Bretons bower of delight_,” as unauthorized and
- to a large extent not his own poems: (6) “To my honest true friende
- Master Nicholas Breton,” signed “Iohn Case”: (7–8) poems by Will.
- Gager and Henry Price to Breton: 1–65, the pilgrimage: 66–102, the
- countess of Pembroke’s love, both poems in 6-line stanzas: (1) 7
- “Errata.”
-
- Very rare. See Hazlitt’s ©Handbook©, p. 56.
-
-
-4. ¬Case¬, John. SVMMA | VETERVM INTER-|PRETVM IN VNIVER-|SAM
-DIALECTICAM ARISTO-|_TELIS; QVAM VERE FALSO-_|ue Ramus in Aristotelem
-inueha-|tur, ostendens. | _Auctore._ | IOANNE CASE OXONIENSI, | olim
-Collegii D. Ioannis Præcurso-|ris socio. | _Omnibus Socraticæ
-Peripateticæq¿ue¿ philosophiæ studiosis in_ | _primis vtilis ac
-necessaria._ | _Recognita & emendata._ | Cum INDICE rerum & verborum
-locupletiss. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1592: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 201 + [7]: p. 11 beg. _Resp.
- Definitio_, 111 _Opponens Aliquid_: Brevier Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (2) “Ioannis Readi carmen, in dialecticam Ioannis Casi”: (3–5)
- Epistola nuncupatoria to Rob. Dudley earl of Leicester: (6–8) “Ad
- benevolum lectorem,” dated “Idibus August.”: 1–201 the work: (1–6)
- Index.
-
- The first edition of this book was issued at London by Thomas
- Vautrollier in 1584. The text of the treatise appears to be an
- inaccurate reprint of the 1584 edition, but most of the complimentary
- verses, with Nicholas Maurice’s preface dated Sept. 1582, are here
- omitted: and there are other slight alterations. See 1598. C. See
- Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 686.
-
-
-5. ¬Churchyard¬, Thomas. A | HANDEFVL OF | GLADSOME VERSES, | giuen to
-the Queenes Maiesty | _at Woodstocke this Prograce_. | 1592. | By |
-THOMAS CHVRCHYARDE. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1592: sm. 4^o (perhaps [fours] 8^o): pp. [20]. signn. A-B^4
- C^2: sign. B 2^r beg. _That pleaseth_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A
- 1^r title, within border: A 2^r-A 2^v, dedication to the Queen: A
- 3^r-A 4^v, “A few volu ntary verses to the general readers”: B 1^r-C
- 2^r, the Handful of Verses: C 2^v “[A V]erse of variety to all those
- that honors the onely Phœnix of the world” i. e. the Queen.
-
- Extremely rare: a copy is in the British Museum. Reprinted in H.
- Huth’s ©Fugitive Tracts in Verse©, 1st Ser., no. xxxi (privately
- printed, Lond. 1875.)
-
-
-6. ¬Elizabeth¬, queen. [Speeches delivered | to Her Majesty this last
-Progress | at the Rt. Hon. the Lady Russels, at | Bissam; the Lord
-Chandos | at Sudeley; the Lord | Norris, at Ricott.]
-
- [Impr. 7_a_: 1592]: sm. 4^o: pp. [24], signn. A-C^4: sign. B 2^r beg.
- _Daphnes mischance_: Pica Roman. Contents:—[A 1^r, title?]: A 2^r-C
- 4^r, the speeches, &c.
-
- Very rare. In the British Museum copy, the only one at present known
- (?), the titlepage (A 1) is lost, a transcript being supplied
- apparently from some other copy: also B 1 is lost. The text is
- reprinted in John Nichols’ ©Progresses ... of Queen Elizabeth©, new
- edition, iii. (London. 1823), p. 130, but the source is not stated. A
- copy was sold in the Heber sale (Catal. pt. ii, p. 198, lot 3800) in
- 1834. Herbert’s Ames in the Additions iii. 1813 mentions the book.
-
-
-7. ¬Gager¬, William. MELEAGER. | Tragœdia noua. | BIS PVBLICE ACTA IN |
-_ÆDE CHRISTI_ | Oxoniæ. [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1592: (eights) 16^o: pp. [96], signn. A-F^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Non leuior_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r-A
- 3^r, letter dedicatory to Robert earl of Essex, 1 Jan. “1592”
- (1592/3?), signed “Guilielmus Gagerus”: A 3^v-A 4^r, Complimentary
- poems to the author, one by Albericus Gentilis: A 4^v-A 5^r, short
- poetical and prose account of the play by the author: A 5^v
- “Personae”: A 6^r-E 7^v, the play with prologues, argument and
- epilogues: E 8^r-F 5^v, “Panniculus Hippolyto Senecæ Tragœdiæ assutus
- 1591,” a short play: F 6^r “Apollo προλογίζει ad Serenissimam Reginam
- Elizabetham 1592,” a poem: F 6^v-F 7^r, Prologue and Epilogue to
- “Bellum Grammaticale.” [F 8 not seen].
-
- For the controversy caused by the publication of this play (which had
- been acted according to the letter dedicatory in 1581 or 1582 and 1584
- or 1585), see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 88.
-
-
-8. ¬Gager¬, William. VLYSSES REDVX | TRAGOEDIA NOVA. | IN AEDE CHRISTI
-OXONIAE | _PVBLICE ACADEMICIS RE-_|_CITATA, OCTAVO IDVS_ | FEBRVARII.
-1591. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1591: (eights) 12^o: pp. [96], signn. A-F^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Viæque fessum_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-A 2^v, “Prologus ad Academicos” in verse: A 3^r-A 4^r, epistle
- dedicatory to lord Buckhurst, Ch. Ch., 10 May 1592, signed “Guilielmus
- Gagerus”: A 4^v-A 7^r, complimentary poems, &c., one by Albericus
- Gentilis: A 7^v, “Personæ”: A 8^r-F 1^r, the play: F 2^r-F 6^v, five
- Latin pieces by Gager, including a “Prologus in Rivales, Comœdiam.” [F
- 8 not seen].
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 89.
-
-
-9. ¬Lycophron.¬ ΛΥΚΟΦΡΟΝΟΣ ΤΟΥ | ΧΑΛΚΙΔΕΩΣ | Αλεξάνδρα. | LYCOPHRONIS
-CHAL-|cidensis Alexandra. | _In vsum Academiæ Oxoniensis._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 13_a_: 1592: (fours) 12^o: pp. [2] + 44 + [2] : p. 11 beg.
- ὠνητὸς ἀιθαλω: Pica Greek. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a border:
- 1–44, the work: (1–2) (not seen.)
-
- The poem is better known as the ©Cassandra©, which is the running
- title throughout. Some various readings are printed in the margin.
-
-
-10. ¬Sanford¬, John. APOLLINIS ET MVSARVM | ἘΥΚΤΙΚΑ` ἘΙΔΎΛΛΙΑ, | _IN
-SERENISSIMÆ REGINÆ_ ELIZABETHAE | auspicatissimum Oxoniam aduentum,
-de-|_cimo die Calend. Octobris, An: M . D . LXXXXII._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1592 : sm. 4^o: pp. [24], signn. A-C^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Cernis vt_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 1^v,
- Latin poetical dedication to dr. Nicholas Bond, vice-chancellor and
- president of Magdalen college, signed “Ioannes Sanfordus”: A 2^r-C
- 4^r, the Idylls.
-
- Very rare, unknown even to Wood and Nichols (©Progresses of Qu.
- Elizabeth©). Two copies are in the British Museum, and lord Robartes
- has an imperfect one, seen in 1881. Reprinted literatim in the Oxford
- Historical Society’s viii^{th} volume, (Oxf., 1887, 8v^o), where see
- notes by the editor, the rev. Charles Plummer. The poems are ‘in
- honour of the Queen’s Visit, and especially in connection with a
- banquet given by the President and Fellows of Magdalen to the nobles
- and Privy Councillors of the Queen’s retinue,’ 22 Sept. 1592.
-
-
-11. ¬Thorne¬, William. DVCENTE DEO. | WILLELMI THORNI | TVLLIVS, SEV
-Ρ῾ΉΤΩΡ IN TRIA | _STROMATA DIVISVS_. | [_motto._] | E NOVO BEATÆ MARIÆ |
-WINTON IN OXON COLLEGIO. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 16: 1592: (eights) 12^o: pp. [32] + 253 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Primi
- Stromatis_, 111 ‘Πρόληψις: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (2) Engraved arms and motto of lord Pembroke, with verses: (3–8)
- epistle dedicatory to William Herbert heir of lord Pembroke: (9–25)
- “Eidem Willelmi Thorni parænesis ad Rhetoricam ἐγκωμιαστική”: (26–30)
- complimentary verses to Thorn: (31–32) address to the reader, in
- Latin: (32) 3 lines of errata: 1–253, the work, in three Stromata and
- an appendix: (1) “Errata sic corrigenda.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 480. A treatise on Rhetoric. A poem on p.
- (30) shows that John Sanford of Magdalen was ‘Corrector Typograph.’
-
-
- 1593.
-
-1. ¬Aristophanes.¬ ΑΡΙΣΤΟΦΑΝΟΥΣ | ἹΠΠΕΙΣ. | ⁂ | ARISTOPHANIS | EQVITES |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1593: sm. 4^o: pp. [56], signn. A-G^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- Κλέπτων τὸν οἶνον: Pica Greek. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title within
- border: A 2^r, Ὑπόθεσις and Δράματος πρόσωπα: A 3^r-G 4^r, the play.
-
- The first separate edition of this comedy.
-
-
-2. ¬Demosthenes.¬ “‘Demosthenis Orationes 15, cum interpretatione
-Nicolai Carri; 3 Olynthiacarum, 4 Philippicarum.’ Quarto.”
-
- So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1405. Possibly a mistake for 1597.
-
-
-3. ¬Gentilis¬, Albericus. “‘Albericus Gentilis Commentarii de Malificis
-& Mathemat. & aliis similibus.’ Quarto.”
-
- So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1405. In the reprint (©Hanover©, 1604) the
- title is ‘Alberici Gentilis, I. C., Professoris Regii, Ad Tit. C. de
- Maleficis et Math. & ceter. similibus commentarius ...;’ the preface
- is dated Oxford 26 June 1593, and addressed to dr. Toby Matthew.
-
-
-4. ¬G[winne]¬, M[atthew], and Henry Price. EPICEDIVM | IN OBITVM
-ILLVS-|TRISSIMI HEROIS HEN-|RICI COMITIS DER-|BEIENSIS. &C. | [_device_:
-then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1593: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Epitaphium_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-A 2^v, epistle dedicatory to Ferdinand Stanley (“Sanleio”) earl of
- Derby, signed M[atthew] G[winne], H[enry] P[rice]: A 3^r-B 4^v, seven
- Latin poems or epitaphs, the last signed in full “Henricus Priceus.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 702, ii. 415.
-
-
-5. ¬Parry¬, Henry. “Concio de Victoria Christianâ, in Apoc. 3. 21. Oxon.
-1593–94. Lond. 1606.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 193: see 1594. P.
-
-
-6. ¬Sparke¬, Thomas. A | SERMON PREA-|_CHED AT WHADDON_ | in
-Buckinghamshyre the 22. of | _Nouember_ 1593. _at the buriall of_ | the
-Right Honorable, ARTHUR | _Lorde_ GREY _of Wilton, Knight of the_ | most
-Honorable order of the Garter, | _by_ | THOMAS SPARKE Pastor of |
-_Blechley_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1593: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 87 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _talkes
- of_: Pica English. Contents:—(1) title, within border: (3–7) Epistle
- dedicatorie to the countess of Bedford, her daughter lady Grey and
- Thomas lord Grey of Wilton, Bletchley, 1 Dec. 1593: (8) “In obitum
- clarissimi Herois, Domini Arthuri Greij. θρηνῳδία,” a Latin hexameter
- poem by “Ioannes Sanfordus”: 1–87, the sermon, on Is. lvii. 1–2: 87,
- “Faultes escaped,” eight errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 190.
-
-
- 1594.
-
-1. ¬Beacon¬, Richard. SOLON HIS FOLLIE, | _OR_ | A POLITIQVE
-DIS-|COVRSE, TOVCHING THE | Reformation of common-weales conque-|red,
-declined or corrupted. | BY RICHARD BEACON GENT. STV-|_DENT OF GRAYES
-INNE, AND SOME-_|times her Maiesties Attorney of the province | _of
-Mounster in Irelande_. | ⁂ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1594: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 114 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _nius. Sol:_,
- 111, _the thirde matter_: Pica English. Contents:—pp. (1–2) (not seen,
- but presumably blank): (3) title: (5–8) Epistle dedicatorie to the
- queen: (9) “The Authour to the Reader,” (10) “The booke vnto the
- Reader”: (1–114) the treatise: (1–2) (not seen, but presumably blank).
-
-
-2. [¬Lewes¬, Richard.] [_woodcuts_] APOLOGIA | INNOCENTIAE ET |
-INTEGRITATIS R. L. | _SACRÆ THEOLOGIÆ BAC-_|calaurei adversus
-inquissimas | E. Osb. transfugæ sacrifi-|culi calumnias ad Acade-|micos
-Oxonienses. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1594: (eights) 12^o: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _& Apostolus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r-A
- 7^v, the Apologia: A 8^r-C 8^r, “Concio habita Oxoniæ festo cineritio,
- A. D. 1594 per R. L. B. S. Th. Textus ex 3. cap. Ep. D. Pau. ad
- Philipp. Ver. 1.”
-
- Very rare. A diatribe against Edward Osberne’s ©Palinodia©, printed in
- the ©Concertatio ecclesiae catholicae in Anglia© by Johannes
- Aquepontanus (Bridgwater), _Augsburg_ 1594, p. 240, in which Osberne
- who had been twice converted to the Roman Catholic religion had made
- reflexions on Lewes a Protestant. The clue to the author’s name is
- sign. A 5^v compared with p. 241 of the Concertatio. Some account of
- the author is in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 227.
-
-
-3. ¬Lewes¬, R[ichard]. A | SERMON PREA-|_CHED AT PAVLES_ | Crosse, by R.
-LEWES, Bacche-|ler of Divinitie, concerning _Isaac_ | his Testament,
-disposed by the | Lord to _Iacobs_ comfort, though it | were intended to
-_Esau_ by his fa-|ther; shewing, that the counsel of | God shal stand,
-albeit the whole | worlde withstande it. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2_a_: 1594: (eights) 12^o: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Isaac, see_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title, within
- a border: A 2^r-A 3^r, Epistle dedicatory to sir Henry Unton, dated
- “This xviij of June”: A 4^r-C 8^v, the sermon, on Gen. xxvii. 1–10.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 227.
-
-
-4. ¬Parry¬, Henry. VICTORIA CHRISTIANA. | CONCIO AD | CLERVM: HABITA |
-OXONIAE ANNO | Domini. 1591. | _H. Parry Auctore._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1594: (eights) 16^o: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _culeo suo_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A
- 4^v, epistle dedicatory to William Herbert, lord Cardiff: sign. A
- 5^r-C 7^r(?: C 7 not seen), the sermon, on Rev. iii. 21: C 8 (not
- seen, probably blank.).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 193, where an edition of 1593 is
- mentioned, perhaps by error.
-
-
-5. ¬Powel¬, Griffith. ANALYSIS | ANALYTICO-|RVM POSTERIORVM | _SIVE
-LIBRORVM ARISTO_-|telis de Demonstratione, in | qua singula capita per
-quæ-|stiones & responsiones | perspicuè exponuntur: | _adhibitis_ |
-QVIBVSDAM SCHOLIIS, | ex optimis quibusq¿ue¿ interpretibus | _desumptis,
-operâ & studio G. P. Oxoniensis_ | _confecta & edita in vsum iuniorum_.
-| [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1594: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + “344” [really 333] + [3]: p.
- 11 beg. _mia magnitudinem_, “111” _singularis_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) epistle dedicatory to Robert earl of
- Essex, signed “Griffinus Powel,” Jesus coll. Oxford, Feb. 27: (7–10)
- “Ad Lectorem Academicum”: (11–15) “Prolegomena”: 1-“344,” the
- Analysis.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 283. In the preface the author promises a
- similar analysis of the Topica, Sophistici Elenchi (see 1598. P) and
- Physica, and says that his method is derived from that of Ursinus. The
- paging is very wild: the signatures are ¶, A-X^8 = 352 pages. See
- 1564. Diagrams occur in the text and margins.
-
-
-6. Powel, Griffith. “Analysis libri Aristot. de Sophisticis Elenchis.
-Ox. 1594.” A mistake in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 283 for
-1598: see 1598. P.
-
-
-7. ¬Sparke¬, A | SERMON | _PREACHED AT_ | Cheanies the 14. of |
-_September_, 1585, _at the bu-_|riall of the Right Honora-|_ble the
-Earle of_ BEDFORDE, | _by_ | THOMAS SPARKE DO-|_ctor of Divinitie._ |
-_Newly perused and corrected by_ | _the Authour._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1594: (eights) 16^o: pp. [10] + 110: p. 11 beg. _as good_:
- Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title, within border: (3–10) Epistle
- dedicatorie to Arthur lord Grey of Wilton, dated Bletchley. 25 Dec.
- 1585: 1–110, the sermon, dated at end 22 Sept. 1594.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 193. A new ed. of 1585. S.
-
-
-8. ¬Trigge¬, Francis. A | GODLY AND FRVIT-|FVLL SERMON PREA-|_CHED AT
-GRANTHAM_. | Anno. Dom. 1592. | by | FRANCIS TRIGGE. | Wherein as in a
-glasse, every de-|gree may plainely see their spots and staines: | _and
-may bee thereby made in deede beautifull_ | (if they doe not hate to be
-reformed) | _against the appearance of_ | _Jesus Christ_. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1594: (eights) 16^o: pp. [96], signn. A-F^8: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _state of Christes_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-A 4^v, address “To the Christian Reader”: A 5^r-F 8^r, the sermon,
- on Is. xxiv. 1–3.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 759: and 1595. T.
-
-
- 1595.
-
-1. ¬Moore¬, Robert. DIARIVM HISTORICOPOETICVM, | IN QVO | PRAETER
-CONSTELLATIO-|NVM VTRIVSQVE HEMISPHAE-|RII, ET ZODIACI, ORTVS, ET
-OCCA-|sus, numerum stellarum causarum-|q́¿ue¿, ad poesin spectantium,
-vari-|_etatem, declarantur_ | CVIVSQUE MENSIS DIES FERE | _SINGVLI,
-REGVM, IMPERATORVM_, | Principum, Pontificum, virorumq̄¿ue¿ doctorum,
-na-|_talibus_, _nuptiis, inaugurationibus, morte de_⸗|_niq̄¿ue¿, aut re
-alia quacunq¿ue¿ insig-_|_niore, celebriores_, | sic, | VT NIHIL PAENE
-DESIDERARI POSSIT, | ad perfectam rerum gestarum Chronolo-|giam, cum, ex
-auctoribus probatissimis, accu-|_rata quoq¿ue¿ annorum ratio margini_ |
-_ascribatur_. | [_motto_] | Suasu, & permissu superiorum. |
-
- Impr. 11: 1595: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 102 + [6]: p. 11 beg. _Sic
- respiraram_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) Epistola
- Dedicatoria to sir (?) John Wolley and his wife Elizabeth, signed
- “Robertus Moore,” New College, Oxford, 6 July 1595: (7–8) address “Ad
- Lectorem Benevolum”: (8) “Auctoris ad libellum parænesis,” a short
- poem: 1–102, the work: (1–6) Index: (6) five errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 654. The book is a long hexameter poem,
- divided into twelve books, one for each month, in which historical
- events are successively alluded to.
-
-
-2. ¬Trigge¬, Francis. “Trigge (F.) Godly and Fruitfull Sermon, at
-Grantham, 1592, _black letter_, _Oxford_, 1595.”
-
- So in the Pyne Auction sale catalogue at Sotheby’s, art. 1058, sold on
- 8 July 1886. Quaritch ascertained that the date was correct. Probably
- a reissue of 1594. T.
-
-
-3. ¬Ursinus¬, Zacharias. THE SVMME | OF CHRISTIAN | RELIGION: |
-Delivered by ZACHARIAS VRSINVS in | his Lectures vpon the Catechisme,
-authori-|_sed by the noble Prince_ FREDERICKE | throughout his
-dominions. | Wherein are debated and resolved the Questions | _of
-whatsoever pointes of moment, which have beene_ | or are controversed in
-Divinity. | _Translated into English by_ HENRY PARRY, _out of the last
-and_ | best Latine Editions, together with some supply of | _wantes out
-of his Discourses of Divinity, and with correction_ | of sundry faults &
-imperfections. which are | _as yet remaining in the best corrected
-Latine_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 6: 1595: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 966 + [10]: p. 11 beg.
- _nister comfort_, 111 _might fall_, 801 _he that hath_: Long Primer
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to the earl
- of Pembroke: (9–15) “To the Christian readers”: 1–966, the treatise:
- (1–9) “A table ...”.
-
- See 1587. U.
-
-
-4. ¬Wermueller¬, Otto. PERL MEWN ADFYD | neu, | ±Perl ysprydawl,
-gwyrthfawrocaf±, | _yn dyscu i bôb dyn garu, a chofleidio y groes_, |
-_meis peth hyfryd angenrheidiawl ir enaid, pa_|_gonffordd sy yw gael o
-honi, ple, ac ym ha fodd_, | _y dylid ceisiaw diddanwch, a chymorth ym
-hob_ | _adfyd: a thrachefn, pa wedd y dyle bawb i ym-_|_ddwyn i hunain
-mewn blinder, yn ol gair duw_, | _a escrifennwyd yn gyntaf mewn Dwitch_
-| _gann bregethwr dyscedig_ Otho Wer-|mulerus, _ac a droed ir Saesonaeg_
-| _gann D. Miles Coverdal_, | _ac yrawrhon yn hwyr ir_ | _Gambraeg
-gann._ | H L. | [Welsh _motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 17: 1595: 12^o: pp. [24] + 246 + [6]: pp. 11 beg. _mal i
- llefarod’_, 111 _duw, er_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–11) dedication to dr. Richard Vychan (Vaughan), archdn. of
- Middlesex, signed “Huw Lewys”: (12–13) poem “At yr vnrhyw wr” by
- Lewys: (15–23) “Ir darlennydd Christnogaidd rhad a thangneddyf
- Ynghrist”: 1–246 the work: (1–4) poem “Cowydd ir Iesu” by Lewys: (5)
- “Gweddi ferr yw doedyd mewn adfyd.”
-
- A translation into Welsh by Hugh Lewis of Wermueller’s ©Spiritual and
- most precious Pearl©, a religious treatise, translated from the German
- into English by Miles Coverdale (_Lond._ 1550). See M. Williams’s
- ©Cofrestr o’r holl Lyfrau printjedig ... yn y Faith Gymraeg ...©
- (Lond. 1717), ©Cambrian Bibliography© by the rev. William Rowlands,
- ed. by the rev. D. S. Evans (©Llandidloes©, 1869, 8v^o), p. 71. This
- is the first Welsh book printed at Oxford and the first occurrence of
- Rhydychen (Oxenford) in Oxford imprints. The translator begs the
- reader to excuse the absence of _y_ in some places before _n_ and _r_,
- the printer’s stock being too small. For the same reason _dd_ is
- usually _d’_ and _ll_ _l’_. If a word is here and there omitted it
- should be remembered that the printing is done by Englishmen!
-
-
- 1596.
-
-1. ¬Case¬, John. REFLEXVS | SPECVLI MORALIS | QVI COMMENTARII VICE |
-esse poterit in Magna Moralia Aristo-|telis: auctore JOHANNE CASO, | in
-Medicina Doctore, Collegij | Divi Iohannis Præcursoris | Oxon. olim
-socio. | [_five mottos_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 5_a_: 1596: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 271 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _one
- ab_, 111 _Quæst._ 3: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
- Epistola dedicatoria to Richardus Phetiplacius, Oxf. 20 Sept. 1596:
- (7–11) address “Ad Lectorem, Benevolum” 26 Nov. 1596: (13–15) 5 Latin
- poems on the book: 1–198, the work: 199–200, “Peroratio operis, ad
- lectorem” 20 Sept. 1596: 201–206, “Quæstionum ... ordo ...”: 207–208,
- “Index Capitum”: 209–268, “A B Cedarium moralis philosophiæ Johanni
- Phetipacio Richardi Phetiplacii filiolo: omnibusque Tyronibus virtutum
- studiosis, scriptum & commendatum,” by question and answer: 269–271,
- “Peroratio ad adolescentem studiosum lectorem,” 30 Nov. (1596).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 687. The first address shows that for a
- time the printer refused to produce the work, which is related to the
- ©Speculum© of 1585, for fear that it might be reprinted at once
- elsewhere, and he suffer loss as in the case of the ©Sphæra Civitatis©
- of 1588. See 1586. C. A presentation copy has red lines round the
- page, on three sides double. This book is strictly the second part of
- the next art., Case’s ©Speculum©.
-
-
-2. ¬Case¬, John. SPECVLVM | QVÆSTIONVM | MORALIVM, IN VNI-|VERSAM
-ARISTOTELIS | Philosophi summi Ethicen, cui ad-|ditur brevis
-commentarius in magna | Moralia Aristotelis, qui ab Autho-|re Reflexus
-speculi Moralis | nominatur, | IOHANNE CASO OXONIENSI | Doctore in
-Medicina olim Collegii præ-|cursoris socio Authore, | _NVNC DENVO
-RECOGNITVM_, | _& à mendis plerisque repurgatum_. | CVM INDICE VERBORVM
-ET RERVM | præcipuè memorabilium locuplete. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 20: 1596: (eights) 12^o: pp. [32] + folded sheet + 533 + [27]:
- p. 11 beg. _empli causa_, 111 _tur: quod_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–9) epistola nuncupatoria to the earl of Leicester, dated
- 7 Mar. “1585”: (11–15), address “ad studiosos iuvenes utriusque
- academiæ,” with a short poem: (17–31) complimentary Latin verses: a
- “Tabula virtutum et vitiorum omnium,” folio sheet printed on one side
- only: 1–531, the work: 532–533, “Peroratio ad lect orem”: (1–26)
- Index.
-
- A reprint of 1585. C. The above title covers the preceding article,
- Case’s ©Reflexus Speculi©, but for convenience they are separately
- treated.
-
-
-3. ¬Fitz-Geffrey¬, Charles. SIR | FRANCIS DRAKE | _His_ | Honorable
-lifes com-|mendation, and his | Tragicall Deathes lamentation. | ⁂ |
-[_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 19: 1596: (eights) 12^o: pp. [106], signn. A^4, one leaf, B-G^8:
- sign. B 2^r beg. _See how Apollo_: Long Primer English. Contents:
- sign. A 1^r title, within border: A 2^r poetical dedication to lady
- Elizabeth widow of sir F. Drake, signed by the author of the book
- “Charles Fitz-geffrey”: A 3^r “To the Authour,” poem, beg. _Once
- dead_, signed “Richard Rous”: A 3^v “To C. F.,” poem, beg. _When to_,
- signed “Francis Rous”: A 4^r “To the Authour,” poem, beg. _Englands
- Vlysses_, signed “D. W.”: 5th leaf^r “In Dracum redivivum; Carmen,”
- beg. _Quis vostrûm_, signed “Thomas Michelborne”: B 1^r-G 8^v, the
- poem.
-
- Very rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 607. The book was reprinted in
- the same year with small differences in the text chiefly of spelling,
- but with considerable changes in the prefatory matter: see below. It
- was also reprinted in 1819 at the Lee Priory Press, and edited by dr.
- Grosart in 1881⁂. The poem is in 7-line stanzas, rhyming ABABBCC.
- Woodcut ornaments occur at the top and bottom of almost every page,
- and the book has the appearance of an _édition de luxe_.
-
-
-4. ¬Fitz-Geffrey¬, Charles. SIR | FRANCIS DRAKE | _his_ | Honorable
-lifes com-|mendation, and his | Tragicall Deathes | lamentation. | ⁂ |
-[_motto._] | Newly Printed with additions. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 19: 1596: (eights) 12^o: pp. [112], signn. A-G^8: sign. B 2^r
- beg. _See how Apollo_: Long Primer English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r
- title, within border: A 2^r poetical dedication to lady Elizabeth
- Drake, signed “Charles Fitz-geffrey”: A 2^v “To C. F.,” poem, beg.
- _Once dead_, signed “Richard Rous”: A 3^r “To C. F.,” poem, beg. _When
- to_, signed “Francis Rous”: A 3^v “To C. F.”, poem, beg. _Many
- greate_, signed “Thomas Mychelborne”: A 4^r “To the Author,” poem,
- beg. _Englands Vlysses_, signed “Diag. Vvh.,” i. e. Degory Whear: A
- 4^v “Ad Dracum,” English poem, beg. _Weepe not_, signed “Ty. Co.”: A
- 5^r-A 6^v, address “To the Reader” signed “C. F.” Broadgates (Oxford),
- 17 Nov. 1596: A 7^r-A 8^v, quotations ending “Hæc ferè sunt quæ de
- Draco nostro apud exoticos poetas legimus”: B 1^r-G 8^v, the poem.
-
- See preceding article.
-
- Very rare. This issue is almost identical with the first, but the
- whole text appears to be newly set up, with minute differences.
-
-
-5. ¬Morlet¬, Pierre. IANITRIX | siue | _INSTITVTIO AD PER-_|fectam
-linguæ Gallicæ | cognitionem ac-|_quirendam_. | Authore PETRO MORLETO |
-GALLO. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1596: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 92 + [4] : p. 11 beg.
- _Antequam verò_: Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a border:
- (3–7) Epistola dedicatoria to sir Robert Beal, dated Broadgates Hall,
- “15 Mar. 1596”: (9–13) complimentary poems in Latin and Greek: (14)
- “Errata”: 1–92 the treatise.
-
- Very rare: a French grammar, in Latin, by Pierre Morlet (?). The
- dedication states that the author was tutor to sir Robert Beal, having
- been introduced by David Chytræus.
-
-
-6. ¬Perrot¬, sir James. “A Discovery of Discontented Minds wherein their
-several sorts & purposes are described especially such as are gone
-beyond y^e Seas. Dedicated to y^e Earl of Essex by James Perrot &
-printed at Oxford in 4^{to} by Joseph Barnes Printer to the
-University—1596.”
-
- Very rare. The above is from Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5904 (Bagford’s
- Collections), foll. 20 & 171. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 606,
- Herbert’s Ames, p. 1406, both notices derived from Oldys’s ©Catalogue
- of pamphlets in the Harleian Library© (Harleian Miscellany, vol. x.
- (1813), p. 358, where ‘Quarto, in thirty-four pages’ is added).
-
-
-7. ¬Pinner¬, Charles. [Sermon by Charles Pinner at Marlborough, on 1
-Tim. iv. 16.]
-
- (Impr. ?: 1596?): (eights) 16^o: pp. 53 +[3]: p. 11 beg. _through
- knowledge_: Pica English. Contents:—p. 1 title: 3–4, Epistle
- dedicatory to “master Iohn Bailife” of Marlborough, dated from Wotton
- Basset, 20 Oct. 1596: 5–53, the sermon.
-
- Very rare: see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 667. In the Bodleian copy, the
- only one known, the title is lost, so that the date is uncertain. But
- the book was certainly printed at Oxford, the woodcut on p. 5 being
- decisive.
-
-
-8. ¬Rainolds¬, John. JOHANNIS RAINOLDI, | DE ROMANÆ ECCLE-|SIÆ
-IDOLOLATRIA, IN | CVLTV SANCTORVM, RE-|liquiarum, imaginum, aquæ, salis,
-olei, | alarumq¿ue¿ rerum consecratarum, & | sacramenti Eucharistiæ, |
-OPERIS INCHOATI | LIBRI DVO. | _IN QVIBUS CUM ALIA MVLTA_ | _VARIORVM
-PAPISMI PATRONO-_|_rum errata patefiunt: tûm inprimis Bellarmini_, |
-_Gregoriiq¿ue¿ de Valentia, calumniæ in Calvi-_|_num ac ceteros
-Protestantes, argutiæq¿ue¿_ | pro Papistico idolorum cultu |
-discutiuntur & ven-|tilantur. | [_motto_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 18: 1596: eights, sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 646: p. 11 beg. _cisse
- tantùm_, 111 _am secundum_, 501 _bus Gentium_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) “¶ 1” alone: (3) title: (5–12) dedicatory epistle to
- the earl of Essex, in Latin, Queen’s coll. Oxford, 7 July 1596:
- (13–15) “Index tractatuum, librorum, et capitum”: 1–609, the work in
- two books, preceded by an “Epistola ad Anglicorum Seminarioram alumnos
- Romæ & Rhemis” and preface, and followed by an “Admonitio ad
- lectorem”: 609–627, “Index locorum Sacræ Scripturæ”: 628–646, “Index
- rerum præcipuarum.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 15. Hebrew Pica type occurs on p. 497 and
- elsewhere, both pointed and without points: and unpointed Long Primer
- on pp. 169, 451, 603, &c.
-
-
-9. ¬Unton¬, sir Henry. FVNEBRIA | NOBILISSIMI AC | PRÆSTANTISSIMI |
-EQVITIS, | D. HENRICI VNTONI, | _AD GALLOS BIS LEGATI_ | Regij, ibiq¿ue¿
-nuper fato functi, | CHARISSIMÆ MEMORIÆ, | _ac desiderio, à Musis
-Oxoniensi_⸗|_bus Apparata_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1596: sm. 4^o: pp. [68], signn. ¶, A-G^4, H^2: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Virtutis môvere_: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign. ¶ 1^r title: ¶
- 1^v “Liber ad Lectorem,” Latin poem: ¶ 2^r-¶ 2^v, address “Benevolo
- lectori,” signed “Robertus Wright,” Trinity college, Oxford, 13 June
- 1596: ¶ 3^r-H 2^v, poems in memory of Unton, the only two not Latin
- being on sign. A 1^r in Greek and Hebrew: see below.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 648. The first (unpointed) Hebrew type
- used at Oxford appears in the poem alluded to above, a Pica fount.
- Some (probably early) copies omit the preface, the ‘Liber ad Lectorem’
- occurring on sign. ¶ 2^r, the page preceding and following being
- blank.
-
-
- 1597.
-
-1. ¬Agatharchides.¬ AGATHAR-|CHIDIS ET MEM-|NONIS HISTORI-|corum, quæ
-supersunt, | _omnia, è Græco iam recèns in_ | _Latinum traducta_: | per
-| RICH. BRETTVM, Oxonien-|sem, è Collegio Lincoln. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 5: 1597: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 128 + “140” (really 142) +
- [2]: p. 11 beg. ἐπιβουλευθῆναι, 111 ρίευσεν. ἐκεῖθεν, also 11 _bus
- coctum_, 111 _actarum_: Pica Greek and Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “*j”
- only: (3) title: (5–13) Epistola dedicatoria to sir Thomas Egerton,
- dated 20 Aug. 1597: 1–62, Ἐκ τῶν τοῦ Ἀγαθαρχίδου περὶ τῆς ἐρυθρᾶς
- θαλάσσης : 63–128, Ἐκ τῶν τοῦ Μέμνονος: 1–71, “Excerpta quaedam ex
- Agatharchide de rubro mari”: 72–140, “Ex Memnone excerpta quædam” de
- statu Heraclææ Ponticæ.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 611. The excerpts of both authors are
- from Photius’s ©Bibliotheca©.
-
-
-2. ¬Case¬, John. THESAVRVS OECONO-|MIÆ, SEV COMMENTA-|RIVS IN OECONOMICA
-A-|ristotelis; in quo veræ divitiæ fami-|liarum, earumq¿ue¿ leges,
-partes, & | _officia describuntur_: | JOHANNE CASO Authore. | [_device_,
-then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 20: 1597: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + folded sheet + 277 +
- [13]: p. 11 beg. _prætoriam_, 111 _admittantur_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) epistola dedicatoria to lord Buckhurst:
- (9–11) epistola ad lectorem: (12) two complimentary poems: then a
- small folio sheet containing an analysis of the work: 1–245, the work,
- in two books: 246–277, “Appendix Thesauri Oeconomici”: (1) “Peroratio
- operis ad Lectorem”: (2–12), “Index rerum ...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 687: also 1578, 1587. C, 1598. C. In the
- Epistola Case gives some account of his works, printed and manuscript.
- A reference in the Bowman Catalogue (Oxf. 1687) p. (14) to Case’s
- ©Cursus Philosophicus© in 3 volumes (Oxf. 1597) can only refer to a
- set of Case’s books of various years.
-
-
-3. ¬Demosthenes.¬ ΔΗΜΟΣΘΕΝΟΥΣ | ΛΟΓΟΙ ΙΕ. | [_woodcuts_] | Ολυνθιακοὶ.
-γ. | κατὰ Φίλιππον. δ. | Περὶ εἰρήνης. | Περὶ τῶν ἐν Χεῤῥονήσῳ. |
-Επιστολὴ Φιλίππου. | Πρὸς τὴν Φίλιππου ἐπιστολὴν. | Περί συνταξέων. |
-Περὶ συμμοριῶν. | Περὶ Ροδίων ἐλευθερίας. | Υπὲρ Μεγαλοπολιτῶν. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 20: 1597: sm. 4^o: pp. [96]: p. 11 beg. νὴς καὶ πολλῶν: Pica
- Greek. Contents:—p. 1, title, within border: 3–96, the orations &c.
- some with ὑποθέσεις.
-
- See 1593. D.
-
-
-4. ¬King¬, John. LECTVRES | VPON IONAS, | DELIVERED AT | YORKE | In the
-yeare of our Lorde 1594. | By JOHN KINGE. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 19_a_: 1597: (eights) 4^o: pp. [12] + 706, not including two
- unpaged title-leaves, see below, + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Who hath
- instructed_, 111 _their former labours_, 671 _& these (in_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–11) Epistle dedicatorie to the lord
- keeper sir Thomas Egerton: 1–660, the 48 lectures: after 660 “A |
- SERMON PREACHED | AT THE FVNERALLES OF | THE MOST REVEREND | FATHER,
- JOHN, late | Arch-bishoppe of Yorke, _No-_|_vemb. the_ 17. _in the
- yeare of_ | _our Lorde_, 1594.” [_device_: then impr. 7_a_, 1597: then
- a blank page]: 661–683, the sermon, on Ps. cxlvi. 3–4: after 683 a
- blank page (684), then “A | SERMON PREACHED | IN YORKE THE
- SEVEN-|TEENTH DAY OF NO-|VEMBER IN THE YEARE OF | our Lorde 1595.
- being the | _Queenes day_.” | [_device_, then impr. 7_a_, 1597: then a
- blank page]: 685–706, the sermon, on 2 Kings xxiii. 25: 706, “Faultes
- escaped in Printing ...”.
-
- See 1599. K, 1600. K: other edd. were printed at London. For King, see
- Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 294.
-
-
-5. ¬Pinner¬, Charles. A | SERMON, VPON | the wordes of Paul the Apostle
-| vnto Timothie, Epist. 1. Chap. 4. | _vers._ 8. | _PREACHED AT
-LITLE-_|cot, in the Chappel of the Right Ho-|nourable SIR IOHN POMPHAM,
-| Knight, Lord chiefe Iustice, of En-|gland, before his honourable |
-Lordeshippe, and to the as-|semblie there, the 17. of | _Iulie_, 1597. |
-By CHARLES PINNER, Minister of | _the Church of Wotton Basset, in_ |
-_North-Wiltshire_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 19_a_: 1597: (eights) 12^o: pp. 40: p. 11 beg. _haue or doe_:
- Pica English. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–5, epistle dedicatorie to John
- Sims, dated Wotton Basset, 23 July 1597: 7–40, the sermon.
-
- Very rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 667.
-
-
-6. ¬Pinner¬, Charles. “Sermon ... _Honour all Men, love brotherly
-Fellowship, on_ 1 _Pet. 2._ 17. Oxon 1597, in oct.”
-
- So Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 667.
-
-
-7. ¬Williams¬, rev. John. “_De Christi Justitia & in Regno spirituali
-Ecclesiæ Pastorum Officio, Concio ad Clerum, Oxon. in cap._ 10. _Rev.
-vers._ 1. Oxon. 1597. qu[arto].”
-
- So Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 132, copied by Herbert.
-
-
-8. ¬Presse¬, Symon. “‘A sermon preached at Eggington, in the County of
-Darby, concerning the right vse of things indifferent, the 8. Day of
-August, 1596. By Symon Presse Minister there. Feare God, honour the
-Kinge. 1 Pet. 2; 17. Printed at Oxford—, and are to bee solde in Paules
-Church-yard at the signe of the Bible. 1597.’ Dedicated ‘To his loving
-Parishioners Mr. F. Cooke,’ &c. The text, 1 Cor. 8; 10–13. Pages 28,
-including the title. W. H. Sixteens.”
-
- So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1406: see Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 220.
- Impr. 19_a_.
-
-
-9. ¬Symeon¬, Metaphrastes. VITÆ SANC-|TORVM EVAN-|GELIST. IOHAN-|NIS, &
-LVCÆ, à SY-|MEONE METAPHRASTE _olim con-_|_cinnatæ, iam recens_ |
-_traductæ à_ | RICH. BRETTO. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 20: 1597: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 95 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Montem
- Tabor_: Pica Greek and Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “Ai” only: (3) title,
- within border: (5–14) Epistola dedicatoria to judge Thomas Owen
- (Ovvinus), dated Lincoln college, Oxford, 23 Dec 1596: 1–95, “Οἱ βίοι
- τῶν ἁγίων Εὐαγγελιστῶν Ἰωάννου καὶ Λουκᾶ ὑπὸ Συμεὼν τοῦ Μεταφράστου
- πάλαι ἀναταχθέντες” in Greek and Latin.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 611. The editor has practically made the
- Latin translation a commentary by expanding where his author was
- obscure, and the like.
-
-
- 1598.
-
-1. ¬Abbot¬, George, archbp. of Canterbury. QVÆSTIO-|NES SEX, TOTI-|DEM
-PRÆLECTIO-|NIBVS, IN SCHOLA | THEOLOGICA, OXONIÆ, | PRO FORMA, HABITIS,
-| DISCVSSÆ, ET | DISCEPTATÆ. | ANNO. 1597. | IN QVIBVS, E SACRA
-SCRIP-|TVRA, ET PATRIBVS AN-|tiquissimis, quid statuendum | sit,
-definitur: | PER GEORGIVM ABBATEM | tunc Collegij Baliolensis | socium.
-| [_mottos_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 5_b_: 1598: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 214 (“224” the next p. to 24
- being “35”) + [18]: p. 11 beg. _verè est_, 111 _secretâque(**not sure
- of accent)_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A” between woodcuts: (3)
- title: (5–10) Epistola dedicatoria to lord Buckhurst, dated University
- college, Oxford, 16 May 1598: (11) List of contents: 1–21, Præfatio ad
- lectorem: 23-“224,” the six lectures: (1–15) “Index rerum
- præcipuarum.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 562. Reprinted at Frankfurt in 1616, with
- the title ‘Georgii Abbatti ... Explicatio sex illustrium quæstionum
- ...’
-
-
-2. ¬Case¬, John. SVMMA | VETERVM INTER-|PRETVM IN VNIVERSAM |
-DIALECTICAM ARISTOTELIS; | _QVAM VERE FALSOVE RAMVS_ | in Aristotelem
-inuehatur, | ostendens. | _Auctore._ | IOANNE CASE OXONIENSI, | olim
-Collegij D. Ioannis Præcur-|soris socio. | _Omnibus Socraticæ
-Peripateticæq¿ue¿ philosophiæ_ | _studiosis in primis vtilis ac
-necessaria._ | _Recognita & emendata._ | Cum INDICE rerum & verborum
-locupletiss. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1598: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 201 + [7]: p. 11 beg.
- _Respondens. Definitio_: 111 _Oppon. Aliquid_: Brevier Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) as 1592. C: 1–201, the work: (1–6)
- Index.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 686. A reprint of 1592. C, almost
- _literatim_.
-
-
-3. Case, John. “1587. ‘Thesaurus oeconomiae, seu commentarius oeconomica
-Aristotelis. Authore Johanne Caso.’ Again 1598. Quarto.”
-
- So Herbert’s Ames p. 1402: see 1587. C. Error for 1597?
-
-
-4. ¬Ingmethorp¬, Thomas. A | SERMON VPON | PART OF THE SE-|cond chapter
-of the first e-|pistle of S. Iohn: | _Preached by_ THOMAS INGMETHORP. |
-The summe whereof is briefly compri-|sed in this Hexameter: | _Omne
-tulit punctum qui_ πράξιν _miscuit arti_: | He beares the bell awaie, |
-that liues, as he doth saie. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1598: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 45 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _of
- Christ. This_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication
- to “master Thomas Flit” of the city of Worcester, the author’s
- godfather, dated Stainton-in-the-Street, 1 Mar. “1597”: (7–8) “To the
- Reader”: 1–45, the sermon, on 1 John ii. 3–6.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 592.
-
-
-5. ¬Powell¬, Griffith. _ANALYSIS_ | LIB. ARISTOTELIS | DE SOPHISTICIS
-ELEN-|chis, in qua singula capita per | quæstiones & responsiones |
-perspicuè & dilucidè ex-|ponuntur, | _Adhibitis_ | Quibusdam scholiis ex
-optimis quibusq¿ue¿ in-|terpretibus desumptis, in quibus natura | & modi
-Fallaciarum plenè | explicantur, | _Necnon_ | Exemplis, partim
-Sophistarum Paralogismis, partim Hæreticorum Elenchis | illustrantur, |
-_operâ & studio_ G. P. _Oxoniensis confecta & edita_ | _in vsum
-iuniorum_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 5_a_: 1598: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 396 + [4]: p. 11 beg.
- _hostias quas_, 111 _tariam &_: Long Primer Roman and Pica Italic.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) dedication to the earl of Essex, signed
- “Griffinus Powel,” Jesus coll., Oxford, 3 Apr. (1598): (7–8) “Ad
- lectorem Acamedicum”: (8) “Liber ad Lectorem,” a Latin poem: (9–16)
- Prolegomena: 1–396, the Analysis of the two books.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 283: and 1594. P. (_bis_), 1664. P.
-
-
-6. Richard de Bury. Philobiblon: see 1599. R.
-
-
- 1599.
-
-1. ¬Case¬, John. ANCILLA | PHILOSOPHIÆ, SEV | EPITOME IN OCTO LI=|BROS
-PHYSICORUM | ARISTOTELIS, | _Authore_, | Jo. Caso Oxon. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1599: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 73 + [7]: p. 11 beg. _De genere_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to the young John
- Egerton “ab ȩdibus meis Oxon.”, 26 Oct. 1599: 1–4, “Ad lectorem
- benignum”: 5–73, the work: (2–7) Index: (7) “Corrigenda.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 687. Connected with the ©Lapis
- philosophicus©, see below: but issued (apparently) slightly later. In
- the preface Case alludes to his approaching end, and his unpublished
- work on Philosophy.
-
-
-2. ¬Case¬, John. _LAPIS_ | PHILOSOPHICVS SEV | commentarius in 8^o lib:
-| _phys: Aristot: in quo_ | _arcana_ | _Physiologiæ exa_⸗|minantur |
-AVCTORE IO: CASO | _in Medicina Doctore_ | Oxoniensi |
-
- Impr. 11_a_: (1599): (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [32] + 871 [“869,” for
- 109–112 are omitted and 274–279 doubled, in the pagination] + [17]: p.
- 11 beg. _magnum pondus_, 113 _si materia_, 501 _tatur si ergo_: Pica
- Italic and Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, engraved, see below: (3–8)
- dedication to sir Thomas Egerton: (9–17) “Epistola ad lectorem,” 31
- Oct. 1599: (18) “In primæ paginæ decem Imagines Decastichon”: (19–25)
- complimentary verses, in Latin and Greek: (26–32) “Quæstiones & dubia
- quæ in octo libris Physicorum continentur”: 1–30, “Prolegomena”:
- 31-“869,” the work: (1) “Lectori benevolo,” 31 Oct. 1599: (2–15)
- Index: (16) “Lectori ingenuo et philosopho” (errata).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 687. The titlepage is an elaborate
- engraving on metal, the title within 10 squares arranged
-
- 4. 5. 6
- 3 7
- 2 8
- 1. 10. 9,
-
- representing Chaos, Nature, Fortune, the Fates, Time, Phaethon and
- Arctos, Sky, Space, Infinity and Terminus, Effigy of Case. The last
- compartment represents the author in effigy on a tomb with the words
- “Casus in occasum vergit vivitque sepultus.” The whole tone of the
- prefaces is pathetic, Case feeling that he was close to his end, which
- actually came on 23 Jan. 1599/1600. At p. (7) is a reference to the
- new Bodleian: at (p. 11) it is stated that some German friends with
- those at Oxford offered to pay the expense of printing the book rather
- than that it should not be printed at all, and that the author
- carefully revised and pruned it five times before publication. In an
- epilogue to the first book (p. 170), dated 25 June 1597, Case
- apologises to a friend for not giving the _text_ of each book and for
- not printing his discourse on Philosophy in general. See the ©Ancilla
- philosophiae©, above.
-
-
-3. ¬Holland¬, Thomas. ORATIO | SA-|RISBVRIÆ HABITA | _viii. Id. Iun._ |
-CVM REVERENDVS IN CHRIS-|to Pater HENRICVS permissione divinâ |
-Episcopus Sarisburiensis gradum | Docto-|ratus in Theologiâ susciperet,
-ex de-|_creto Convocationis Oxoniensis_. | _Authore_ T. HOLLAND _Theol.
-Doct._ | _& Profess. Regio._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1599: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4, B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _tutis, eruditionis_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–12) the
- Oration.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 111: ©Reg. Univ. Oxon.©, vol. 2 (ed.
- Clark), pt. i, p. 145. The Commission to confer the degree on bp.
- Henry Cotton (of Magdalen) is dated 2 June 1599. The oration gives an
- interesting account of the ceremony of conferment (6 June) and its
- symbolism.
-
-
-4. James, Thomas. (Bagford’s statement that James’s “Catalogue of the
-Oxford and Cambridge Manuscripts” appeared in this year (Brit. Mus. MS.
-Harl. 5901, fol. 65), is due to the title of the Appendix of Richard de
-Bury’s ©Philobiblon©, see below. The Catalogue came out in 1600.)
-
-
-5. ¬Kinge¬, John, bp. of London. ARTICLES MINISTRED | IN THE VISITATION
-OF | THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL | Maister JOHN KING Arch-deacon | _of
-Nottingham, in the yeare of our_ | _Lord God_. 1599. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 4: (1599): sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4, B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- 29. _Whether they_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–10) the
- 43 questions: (11) “The oath of the Church-wardens and side-men.”
-
-
-6. ¬King¬, John. LECTVRES | VPON IONAS, | DELIVERED AT | YORKE | In the
-yeare of our Lorde 1594. | By JOHN KINGE: | _Newlie corrected and
-amended_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 19_a_: 1599: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 706 + [2], not
- counting two extra title-leaves, see below: p. 11 beg. _Who hath
- instructed_, 111 _their former_, 671 _& these in_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—precisely as 1597, K, except LATE not “late,” _No-_|_vem._,
- not _No-_|_vemb._, 1494 (by error) not 1594, and 1599 on both extra
- titles, not 1597: there is no list of Errata. The first and last
- leaves have not been seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 295. A reprint of 1597. K.
-
-
-7. ¬Lomazzo¬, Giovanni Paolo (Lomatius). [_engraved title_:—] A | TRACTE
-CONTAI=|NING THE ARTES | of curious Paintinge Caruinge & | Buildinge |
-written first in Italian by Jo: | Paul Lomatius painter of Milan | AND
-ENGLISHED BY | R. H. student in Physik | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 21, as colophon: 1598: (sixes) la. 8^o: pp. [24] + 119 + [1] +
- 218 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _hardly bee able_, 111 _wise a master_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) engraved title, see below: (3–4) dedication to
- sir Thomas Bodley, signed “Richard Haydocke,” New coll., Oxford, 24
- Aug. 1598: (5–12) (the Translator) to the ingenuous Reader: (13–14)
- “Iohn Case D. of Physicke to his friende _R. H._ of New Colledge”:
- (15) “The titles of the bookes,” five in all: (17–23) “A table of the
- Chapters ...”: 1–7, “The preface to the worke” by Lomazzo: 9–11, “The
- division of the worke”: 13–119, and 1–218, the work: (1) Device and
- colophon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 678. Lomazzo’s ©Trattato dell’ arte de la
- pittura© was published at Milan in 1584, and Haydocke’s Preface gives
- an account of its rarity in England. Only five out of the seven books
- of the original are here published. In the dedication the translator
- alludes to Bodley’s design of “erecting and restoring of this worthie
- Panbiblion or Temple of all the Muses,” the Bodleian.
-
- The title is an elaborate engraving on metal, the words on an oval in
- the centre: at top “IO: PAOLO LOMAZZO:” surrounding his bust: on
- either side Juno and Apollo (?): on either side the oval, the arms of
- the University and of New College: below, in the centre a bust of the
- translator surmounted by his arms, between figures derived from
- classical mythology. In the book are thirteen full-page engravings
- marked A-I, K-N, and a profusion of woodcut ornaments. On the last
- page but one occurs the large device of the University arms, within a
- border: then the colophon: then a woodcut of the arms of New College
- between two Ws (William of Wykeham). By some confusion this book is
- dated 1605 by Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 66).
-
-
-8. ¬Richard¬ de Bury, bp. of Durham, _d._ 1345. PHILOBIBLON | RICHARDI |
-DUNELMENSIS | _sive_ | DE AMORE LIBRORVM, ET INSTI-|_TVTIONE
-BIBLIOTHECÆ_, | _tractatus pulcherrimus_. | Ex collatione cum varijs
-manuscriptis edi-|_tio jam secunda_; | cui | _Accessit appendix de
-manuscriptis Oxoniensibus_. | Omnia hæc, | _Opera & studio T. I. Novi
-Coll. in alma Academia_ | _Oxoniensi Socij_. [_motto_, preceded by “B.
-P. N.,” then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1599: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 62 + [10]: p. 11 beg. _tiqui pro_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) Epistola dedicatoria to sir
- Thomas Bodley, “ex Musæo meo in Collegio Novo. Iulij. 6. 1599,” signed
- “Thomas James”: (7) “Vita ex Balæo”: 1–4, “Præfatio auctoris ad
- lectorem”: 5, “Capitula libri sequentis”: 7–62, the work in 20
- chapters: (3–10) “Appendix de manuscriptis Oxoniensibus.”
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 466. This is the first English
- edition of the first book on the love of books. The _editio princeps_
- is that of 1473 printed at Cologne: the next Spires, 1483 and Paris
- 1500. An account of these editions and of the known MSS. of the
- ©Philobiblon© will be found in E. C. Thomas’s edition (Lond., 1888).
- The mysterious “_B. P. N._” on the titlepage (followed by “Non quæro
- quod mihi vtile est, sed quod multis”) is explained by him as perhaps
- “Bibliothecae Praefectus Novae” or “Nostrae” or rather “Bono Publico
- Natus:” it has been suggested that they may stand for “Beati Pauli
- Norma,” alluding to 1 Cor. x. 33. The Editor explains that it was
- intended that the work should be followed by an Appendix containing a
- catalogue of all MSS. at Oxford, a purpose which seriously delayed the
- issue of the book. In fact the whole of the text of the ©Philobiblon©
- was printed off in 1598, as is proved by a single copy still preserved
- in the Bodleian dated in that year but containing only the titlepage,
- (identical in type with the published one, except in one figure of the
- date) and pp. 1 to 62 + [2 blank]. As it is, the Appendix only
- contains an alphabetical list, without references, of the authors of
- which manuscripts were preserved at Oxford: the intended catalogue
- appears in the ©Ecloga Oxonio-Cantabrigiensis©, Lond., 1600. The
- preface alludes to the founding of the Bodleian, but dr. James had not
- yet been appointed Librarian. There is no sufficient ground for
- supposing with mr. Thomas (_ut supra_, p. lv) and mr. Macray (©Annals
- of the Bodleian©, 2nd ed., p. 25) that the single advance copy of 1598
- implies an issue or edition of that year.
-
-
-9. ¬Roche¬, Robert. EVSTATHIA | _or the_ | CONSTANCIE OF SVSANNA |
-CONTAINING THE PRESER-|vation of the Godly, subversion of the wic-|ked,
-precepts for the aged, instructi-|_ons for youth, pleasure_ | _with
-profitte_. | Penned by R. R. G. [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 19_a_: 1599: (eights) 12^o: pp. [128], signn. A-H^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Then clims_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A
- 2^v, dedication to “Mistris M.B. wife to ... D.B. Esquier,” signed
- Robert Roche: A 3^r-A 4^r “To the Reader,” a poem: A 4^v-A 5^v,
- “Coricæus to the Author,” a poem signed “C. A. R.”: A 5^v-B 1^v, “An
- induction to the story”: B 2^r-H 7^r, the poem: H 7^r, “Faultes
- escaped.”
-
- The Bodleian copy, which belonged to Robert Burton, is perhaps unique.
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 682, where extracts are given from this
- poem, which is chiefly in a peculiar 7-line stanza, ABABBCC. G. on the
- titlepage is no doubt _Gentleman_.
-
-
-10. Ubaldini, Petruccio. (The edition of “La Vita di Carlo Magno
-Imperadore. Di nuevo corretta” by P. Ubaldini, doubtfully ascribed in
-the Catalogue of the Printed Books in the British Museum to the Oxford
-Press, was certainly not printed there.)
-
-
- 1600.
-
-1. ¬Butler¬, Charles. “‘Rhetoricæ libri duo, quorum Prior de Tropis &
-Figuris, Posterior de Voce & Gestu, Præcipiti [_sic_] in vsum scholarum
-accuratiûs editi. Oxoniæ, Excudebat—1600. ... Viro virtutis & honoris
-nomine nobilissimo, Thomæ Egertono, Equiti, Domino Custodi magni sigilli
-Angliæ, Carolus Butler Magdalenensis, S. D.—Basingstochiæ, 5 Jdus
-Martii. 1600.’ ... Some commendatory verses; Lat. & Gr. ... Ad
-lectorem.’ I3, in eights, besides the prefixes. W. H. Sixteens.”
-
- So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1409. For the author, see Wood’s ©Ath.
- Oxon.©, iii. 209, Bloxam’s ©Magd. Reg.©, i. 20. See 1618. B, 1629. B.
-
-
-2. ¬Holland¬, Robert. “‘Darmerth, neu Arlwy Gweddi, a ddychymygwyd er
-mawr dderchafiad Duwioldeb, ac i chwanegu Gwybodaeth ac Awydd yr
-annysgedig ewyllysgar i iawn wasanaethu’r gwir Dduw. Gan Robert Holland,
-gweinidog gair Duw, a Pherson Llan Ddeferowg, yn sir Gaerfyrddin’
-[Rhydychain, 4plyg.”]
-
- So in W. Rowland’s ©Cambrian Bibliography©, ed. by D. S. Evans,
- (Llanidloes, 1869) p. 72. It is ascribed also to Oxford in M.
- Williams’s ©Cofrestr© (Lond. 1717): but the evidence is at present not
- sufficient to establish a connexion with Barnes’s press: nor is the
- present place of any copy known to the editor of Rowlands.
-
-
-3. Holland, Thomas. Panegyris: see 1601. H.
-
-
-4. ¬King¬, John. LECTVRES | VPON IONAS | DELIVERED AT | YORKE | In the
-yeare of our Lorde 1594. | By JOHN KINGE: | _Newly corrected and
-amended_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 19_a_: 1600: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 706 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _Who hath instructed_, 111 _their former_, 671 _& these in_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—exactly as 1599. K, except (in 2nd title) “Lord” not
- “Lorde,” 1594 not 1494, (in 3rd title) NOVEM-|BER not NO-|VEMBER,
- _daie_ not _day_: and dates on titles 1600 not 1599. The first and
- last leaves have not been seen.
-
- A reprint of 1599. K.
-
-
-5. ¬Perrot¬, sir James. [_woodcut._] THE | FIRST PART | OF THE
-CONSIDE-|RATION OF HV-|mane Condition: | _WHERIN IS CONTAINED_ | _the
-Morall Consideration of a mans selfe:_ | _as what, who, and what manner_
-| _of man he is_. | Written by I. P. Esquier. | [_motto_: then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 19: 1600: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 60: p. 11 beg. _of the earth_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–6) dedication to lord Buckhurst,
- dated Haroldston 16 Nov. 1600, signed “I. P.”: (7–8) “To the
- indifferent and friendly Reader,” signed “Iames Perrott”: 1–60, the
- work, in three sections.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 605. The second part was to be the
- Political consideration of things under us, the third the Natural
- Consideration of things about us, the last the Metaphysical
- Consideration of things above us: but they were never published.
-
-
-5. ¬Roberts¬, Hugh. THE | DAY OF HEARING: | _Or_, | SIX LECTVRES VPON
-THE | latter part of the thirde Chapter of the Epi-|stle to the
-Hebrewes: of the time and | meanes that God hath appointed for | _men to
-come to the knowledge of his_ | _truth, that they may be sa-_|_ved from
-his wrath_. | The summary pointes of every one of which Lectures are set
-| downe immediatly after the Epistle dedicatory. | Herevnto is adioyned
-a Sermon against | _fleshly lusts, & against certaine mischie-_|_vous
-May-games which are the_ | _fruit thereof_. | By H. R. Master of Artes,
-and now | _Minister of the word_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 19_a_: 1600: (eights) 16^o: pp. [12] + 116 + [32]: p. 11 beg.
- _which he wrought_, 111 _now for the_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–10) dedication to sir Thomas Egerton, signed “Hugh Roberts”:
- (11–12) “The Contents or briefe summe of the Lectures ...”: 1–116, the
- six lectures on Heb. iii. 7–11, 12–13, 14, 15, 16–17, 18–19: (1) title
- of sermon “A | GODLY AND | NECESSARY SERMON | against fleshly lustes;
- and against cer-|taine mischievous May-games, which | are the fruite
- thereof. Preached | _vpon the first Sabbath day in Maie_, | _in the
- yeere_. 1598. | By H. R. Master of Artes, and now | Minister of the
- word. | [_Motto_, then _woodcuts_].” Impr. 19_a_, 1600: (3–5) “To the
- Reader”: (7–32) the sermon, on 1 Pet. ii. 11.
-
- In the preface to the sermon it is hinted that the publication of the
- sermon was prevented when it was first delivered “now more then a
- yeere and a halfe agone.” Wood (©Ath. Oxon.© i. 703), describes this
- book as “_Lond._ 1600, _quarto_,” wrongly.
-
-
-6. ¬Terry¬, John. [_woodcut._] | THE | TRIAL OF TRVTH: | _Containing_ |
-A PLAINE AND SHORT DISCOVE-|ry of the chiefest pointes of the Doctrine
-of the | great Antichrist, and of his adherentes the | false Teachers
-and Heretikes of these | last times. | [_mottos_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 19: 1600: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 160: p. 11 beg. _a faithfull
- brother_, 111 _are remitted_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–7) Epistle dedicatorie to bp. Henry Cotton, signed “Iohn Terry”:
- (9–22) “To the Christian Reader.” also signed: (23–24) “The principall
- vses of this Treatise”: 1–160, the work (first part.)
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 410. For the second and third parts, see
- 1602. T, (which contains on the last page “Faultes escaped in printing
- the first part”), 1625 T.
-
-
-7. ¬Ursinus¬, Zacharias. _A_ | COLLECTION OF CERTAINE | LEARNED
-DISCOVRSES, | _WRITTEN_ | BY THAT FAMOVS MAN OF MEMORY | ZACHARY VRSINE;
-Doctor and Pro-|_fessor of Divinitie in the noble and flou-_|rishing
-Schoole of NEVSTAD. | _For explication of divers difficult points_, |
-laide downe by that Author in his | CATECHISME. | Lately put in Print in
-Latin by the last | labour of D. DAVID PARRY: and | _now newlie
-translated into English_ | _by_ I. H. _for the benefit and_ | _behoofe
-of our Christian_ | _country-men_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 19: 1600: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + “341” (really 327, for
- 180–191 and 236–237 are omitted in the pagination) + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _vnto it certaine_, 111 _ble that it is_: Pica Roman. Contents: | p.
- (1) title: (3–5) “To the Reader”: (7) “A table of the several
- discourses”: 1–341, the nine discourses (1 is Parry’s prefaces to the
- 3rd and 4th parts of Ursinus’s Catechism in the first edition see
- 1587. U); 5, 6 are translated by Parry; 3 is a passage out of Vigilius
- about the Incarnation; 9 a funeral oration on Ursinus (who died “6
- Mar. 1583”) by Francis Junius: (1) “Faultes escaped.”
-
- Rare. The editor apologizes in the preface for this “three weekes
- worke,” due to the importunity of the printer, after the editor had
- given over the task when only begun.
-
-
- 1601.
-
-1. ¬Fitz-Geoffrey¬, Charles. CAROLI | FITZGEOFRIDI | AFFANIAE: | sive |
-EPIGRAMMATVM | _Libri tres_: | Ejusdem | CENOTAPHIA. | [_motto_, then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1601: (eights) 12^o: pp. [200], signn. A-M^8 N^4: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _Vel si quid_, M 1^r _Si non immemor_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r-A 2^v poetical Latin dedication to
- Edw. Michelborne: A 3^r, Michelborne’s reply in Latin verse: A 3^v,
- poetical Latin dedication to William Raleigh barrister: A 4^r-M 1^v
- the Affaniae in 3 books: M 2^r [_woodcuts_] | _CENOTAPHIA._ | A |
- CAROLO FITZGEOFRIDO | _Posita & sacrata_ | D. M. & piæ Memoriæ |
- nonnullorum, | _Quos nunc emeritæ permensos tempora vitæ_ | _Secreti
- sinus orbis habet mundusq¿ue¿ piorum_. | [_woodcuts_]: then impr. 11,
- 1061 [_sic_]: M 3^r-N 4^v, the epitaphs.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 607. The epigrams and epitaphs are
- of much interest, and some are translated and printed in Dr. Grosart’s
- ©Poems of Charles Fitzgeoffrey©, 1881.
-
-
-2. ¬Holland¬, Thomas. Πανηγυρὶς | _D. Elizabethæ, Dei Gratiâ Angliæ,
-Franciæ, & Hiberniæ Reginæ_. | A | SERMON PREACHED AT PAVLS | in London
-the 17. of November Ann. Dom. 1599. the | one and fortieth yeare of her
-Maiesties raigne, and aug-|mented in those places wherein, for the
-shortnes of the | time, it could not there be then delivered. |
-_VVherevnto is adioyned an Apologeticall discourse_, | _whereby all such
-sclanderous Accusations are fully_ | _and faithfully confuted, wherewith
-the Honour of_ | _this Realme hath beene vncharitably traduced by_ |
-_some of our adversaries in forraine nations, and at_ | _home, for
-observing the_ 17. _of November yeerely in_ | _the forme of an Holy-day,
-and for the ioifull exerci-_|_ses, and Courtly triumphes on that day in
-the honour_ | _of her Maiestie exhibited._ | By THOMAS HOLLAND, Doctor
-of Divinity, | & her Highnes Professor thereof in her Vni-|versity of
-Oxford. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 19: 1601: sm. 4^o: pp. [166], signn. _a_-_c_, A-R^4, S^2, and
- one folded leaf, see below: sign. B 1^r beg. _Moses, who_, O 1^r
- _shall be safe_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. _a_ 1^r title: _a_ 1^v
- Latin poem on the Queen’s arms: then a folded leaf, see below: _a_
- 2^r-_c_ 2^v “To al faithful Christians ...”: _c_ 3^r-_c_ 3^v
- dedication to Richard Bancroft, bp. of London, dated “Oxoniæ, è
- Collegio Exon.” 1 Oct. 1599: _c_ 4^r “Faultes escaped, and certaine
- observations”: A 1^r-H 1^r, the sermon, on Matt. xii. 42: H 1^r-S 2^v,
- the Apology.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 111, and 1602. H. At sign. L 3^r begins a
- long dissertation on St. Hugh of Lincoln, and at sign. N 3^r the
- author claims for the University of Oxford the first celebration of
- Nov. 17 as the Queen’s Day, in 1569? The Stonor Press and Edm.
- Campian’s ©Decem Rationes© are alluded to in sign. B 4. The folding
- leaf contains a woodcut of the royal arms between two pillars
- connected by a scroll bearing the words VIVAT·RE· On the base of the
- columns are “I” “D” (the engraver’s initials?). The woodcut, which is
- of a rough character, is 5–7/16 in. × 6–15/16 in. A curious usage has
- been pointed out to me: on sign. D 4^v, E 2^v, P 4^v, Q 1^r and
- perhaps elsewhere Hebrew words are transliterated, but in _b_ 2^r, O
- 3^v, O 4^v, P 1^r unpointed Hebrew type is used. In the Laing Sale ii.
- 3709 (15 Apr. 1880) there is mention of a 1600 edition of this book.
-
-
-3. ¬Ursinus¬, Zacharias. [_woodcuts._] | THE SVMME | OF CHRISTIAN |
-RELIGION: | DELIVERED BY ZACHARIAS VRSINVS IN HIS | Lectures vpon the
-Catechisme, authorised by the noble | _Prince_ FREDERICKE _throughout
-his dominions_. | Wherein are debated and resolved the Questions of
-what-|_soever pointes of moment, which haue beene or are_ |
-_controversed in Divinitie_. | Translated into English first by D.
-Henrie Parry, and late-|ly conferred with the last and best Latine
-Edition of | D. DAVID PAREVS _Professor of Divinity_ | _in Heidelberge_.
-| [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 19: 1601: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 1139 + [13]: p. 11 beg.
- _authors, we_, 111 4. _VVhat are_, 1111 _ever of the elect_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) “To the Christian Readers Henry
- Parry ...”: (7–8) “To the same Christian Readers Richard Crosse ...”:
- 1–1139, the catechism: (1–10) “A Table ...”, a short analysis of the
- book: (10) “Faults escaped”: pp. (11–12) have not been seen.
-
- See 1587. U. Richard Crosse edited this edition with some slight
- additions.
-
-
- 1602.
-
-1. [¬Bailey¬, dr. Walter.] [_woodcuts._] | A | BRIEFE | TREATISE
-TOV=|ching the preservation of | _the eie sight, consisting partly_ | in
-good order of diet, and partly | in vse of medicines. | _The sixte
-Edition._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [6] + 25 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _rected
- by the_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) a preface: 1–17,
- 19–25, the treatise.
-
- Rare. For author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 586: the first edition
- with the author’s name is that of 1616. An edition of 1586 (London) is
- in the British Museum, but the other four preceding the present one
- appear to be unknown. See 1616. B, 1654. B, 1673. B: other editions
- were issued, not at Oxford.
-
-
-2. ¬Budden¬, dr. John. [_woodcut._] | GVLIELMI | PATTENI, CVI |
-VVAYNFLETI AGNOMEN | FVIT, WINTONIENSIS ECCLE-|_SIÆ PRÆSULIS QVONDAM_ |
-pientissimi, Summi Angliæ Cancellarij, | Collegijq¿ue¿ Beatæ Mariæ
-Magdalenæ | apud Oxonienses fundato⸗|_ris celeberrimi, vi_⸗|_ta
-obitusq¿ue¿_. | [_motto_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1602: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 84: p. 11 beg. _centis pænè_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) Epistola
- nuncupatoria to dr. Nicholas Bond president of Magdalen college,
- Oxford, signed “Johannes Buddenus”: (7–11) complimentary verses, in
- Latin, except one Italian sonnet by Alberico Gentile: 1–84, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 282. Budden was philosophy reader at
- Magdalen (afterwards principal of New Inn hall and Broadgates hall),
- and this biography was entrusted to him by the college. The running
- title is “Waynfleti παλιγγενεσία.” Several original documents are
- printed in the work: which was reprinted in [Bates’s] ©Vitæ selectorum
- aliquot virorum©, Lond. 1681, p. 49. Rhetoric is more prominent than
- historical treatment.
-
-
-3. ¬Chrysostom¬, st. THEORREMΩN: | _or_, | THE ANCIENT AND MOST |
-comfortable Goldenmouth’d Father, | S^t. CHRYSOSTOME Arch-bishop of |
-Constantinople, treating on severall places | of holy scripture:
-selected, and tran-|slated faithfully according to | the Greeke Copies:
-| _by_ | JOHN WILLOVGHBIE. | [3 _mottos_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [24] + 287 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _saultes of humane_, 111 _belōgs much time_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–15) Epistle dedicatorie to a kinsman of the
- author lately deceased: (16–21) “To the Christian Reader,” dated from
- “Brodegats hall,” Oxford, 2 Sept. 1602: (22–23) “Τοῖς περὶ τῶν λόγων
- τουτωνί Ελληνο-Αγγλοικῶν ἐυγνωμώνως ἔχουσιν,” a Greek preface: (24)
- “The names of the [seven] Tractes contained in this Booke,” and a
- quotation: 1–287, the treatises.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 28. Wood did not know Willoughby as an
- author, and Bliss could find no trace of his academical career. But a
- John Willoughby certainly matriculated at Exeter College in 1585 (B.A.
- 1589, M.A. 1593). The treatises are on the Pharisee and the Publican
- (Luke xviii), on Ps. xlix. 16, on Ps. xxxix. 6, on the Sick of the
- Palsy (John v), on 2 Cor. xii. 9, on the Shepherd and Sheep, &c. (John
- xx) and “A Tracte of _Vertue_ and _Vice_.” Unpointed English and Long
- Primer Hebrew is used on pp. 1, 26, 67, 107.
-
-
-4. ¬Higins¬, John. [_woodcuts_] | AN | ANSVVERE TO | MASTER WILLIAM |
-PERKINS, CONCER-|ning Christs Descen-|_sion into Hell_: | _By_ | JOHN
-HIGINS. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [4] + 52: p. 11 beg. _to it they_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) preface “To the Christian
- Reader,” Winsam, 22 June 1602: 1–51, the treatise: 52, “Faultes
- escaped in the printing ... Finis.”
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 734, and following art.
-
-
-5. Higins, John. AN | ANSWERE | TO MASTER WILLI-|am Perkins, concerning
-| _Christs Descension in-_|to hell. | By IOHN HIGINS. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [4] + 51 + [1]: p 11 beg. _it they
- must_: Small Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) preface “To the
- Christian Reader,” Winsam, 22 June 1602: 1–51, the treatise.
-
- Rare. See preceding art. Like the Powel below this book was certainly
- not printed at Oxford, and the imprint is fictitious, the type and
- woodcuts being unknown at Oxford. These falsifications can hardly be
- unconnected with the fact that John Barnes, the son of Joseph Barnes,
- in this year set up business for himself in London. The text is a
- reprint of no. 4 above.
-
-
-6. ¬Howson¬, dr. John. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT S^t. | MARIES IN OXFORD,
-| THE 17. DAY OF NO-|vember, 1602. in defence of | _the Festivities of
-the Church_ | of _England, and namely_ | _that of her Maiesties_ |
-_Coronation_. | By _IOHN HOVVSON DOCTOR OF_ | _Divinitie, one of her
-Highnes Chaplaines, and_ | _Vicechancellour of the Vniversitie_ | _of
-Oxforde_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 23: 1602: sm. 4^o: pp. [36], signn. ( )^2 A-D^4: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _ship or honor_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r title:
- ( ) 2^r-2^v, dedication to lord Buckhurst, dated from Christ Church,
- Oxford, 29 Nov. 1602: A 1^r-D 3^v, the sermon, on Ps. cxviii. 24.
-
- See 1603. H, and Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 518. On a kindred subject
- with Holland’s speech printed in 1601: the priority of the University
- in celebrating the Queen’s day is again mentioned. Reprinted in
- Somers’ ©Tracts©.
-
-
-7. ¬Howson¬, dr. John. [_woodcuts_] | VXORE | DIMISSA PROPTER |
-fornicationem aliam non | _licet superinducere_. | TERTIA THESIS |
-IOANNIS HOVSONI | Inceptoris in Sacra Theolo-|gia, proposita & disputata
-in | _Vesperijs Oxonij_. | 1602. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1602: (eights) 16^o: [2] + 61 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _dij, &
- quæ_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–61, the essay.
-
- See 1606. H, and Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 60, 518, iii. 18, where a
- bibliography is given of the controversy excited by Dr. Howson’s
- Thesis. The actual day of disputation was 10 July 1602. There are two
- issues of this book, one in which the title is a separate leaf,
- independent of the four sections (A-D^8) which follow, D 8 being
- blank: the other where the title is A 1, D 8 being the last leaf of
- the _text_.
-
-
-8. †¬Oxford¬, Trinity College. Decretum de Gratiis Collegio rependendis.
-| [the text of the decree.]
-
- No imprint, but probably printed at Oxford: (1602?): (one) fol.: pp.
- [2]: l. 11 beg. I. _Imprimis_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title
- and text of the decree.
-
- A Latin decree passed by the President and Fellows of Trinity college
- on 12 Dec. 1602, compelling all who have been or are on the foundation
- of the college to show their gratitude by a proportionate gift of
- money, and enjoining on all future scholars an oath that they will
- fulfil this decree. Signed by the President and Fellows. There is
- another issue similar in form but apparently printed in London, which
- can readily be distinguished by having a headline of woodcuts, and 43
- (instead of 52) lines of print.
-
-
-9. *†¬Oxford¬, University. [Orders for the Market of the City of Oxford,
-issued by the Chancellor of the University: beg. “Thomas Baron of
-Buckurst,” ends “transgressor of this commaundement. God save the
-Queene.”]
-
- No impr.: [not later than 1602]: (ones) fol.: pp. [4]: English Roman.
- Contents:—pp. (1, 3) the orders (probably 30 in number).
-
- The only copy known was rescued from a binding in Brasenose College
- Library at Oxford, where it now is. The titles of Lord Buckhurst are
- given, and show that the earliest possible date is 15 May 1598 when he
- became Lord High Treasurer: the latest being 24 March 1602/3, when the
- Queen died. No doubt the sheets were fastened together forming one
- long notice. The Brasenose copy has lost a few lines at the end of the
- first column (67 lines left), the second is complete (62 lines).
-
-
-10. ¬Powel¬, Gabriel. _PRODROMVS._ | A LOGICALL | RESOLVTION OF THE | I.
-Chap. of the Epistle of | _the Apostle PAVLE_ | _vnto the Romanes_. |
-TOGITHER WITH SVCH | severall Jnstructions, Notes, Ob-|_servations, and
-Vses, as naturally_ | _arise out of every particular_ | _Verse. By_ |
-_Gabriel Powel._ | [_motto_, then _asterisks_.]
-
- Impr. 22: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 267 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
- _sumption is_, 111 _profit al, wisdom_: English Roman. Contents:—p.
- (3) title: (5–12) Epistle dedicatorie to John Whitgift archbp. of
- Canterbury and William Morgan bp. of St. Asaph, dated from St. Mary
- hall, Oxford, 5 July 1602: (13–15) “To the Christian Reader,” dated
- similarly: 1–267, the work: (1) “Faults escaped in the Printing.”
-
- See 1615. P: Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 25. The dedications are due to
- his patrons’ favour to his father David as well as to himself.
-
-
-11. Powel, Gabriel. _Theologicall and Scholasticall_ | Positions,
-concerning | Vsurie. | Set forth, by _Definitions_ and _Partitions_, |
-framed according to the rules of | a naturall Method. | [_asterisks_,
-then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 23: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 71 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _and
- quantitie_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A”: (3) title: (5–13)
- Epistle dedicatorie to Ralph Hockenhul and Hugh Hurlston, dated from
- St. Mary hall, Oxford, 1 Apr. 1602: (14) “The Contents of this
- Treatise”: 1–71, the treatise.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 25. In spite of the imprint this book,
- like the Higins (No. 5) above, was not printed at Oxford, the type but
- especially the woodcuts (with one exception) being entirely unknown at
- Oxford. It was printed no doubt in London, and the imprint falsified,
- perhaps in order to escape the necessity of registration at the office
- of the Stationers’ Company.
-
-
-12. Rawlinson, John. See under 1612. R.
-
-
-13. ¬Sanderson¬, dr. John. INSTITVTI-|ONVM DIALEC-|TICARVM LI-|_bri
-Quatuor_, | _A_ | IOANNE SANDERSONO, | Lancastrensi, Anglo, Liberalium |
-artium Magistro, & sacræ Theologiæ | _Doctore, Metropolitanæ
-Ec-_|_clesiæ Cameracensis Ca-_|_nonico, conscripti_. | _Editio tertia._
-| [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1602: 8^o: pp. [4] + 228 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _Vox singularis_,
- 111 _victus, habitus_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) “Auctoris Præfatio ad iuventutem bonarum artium studiosam”:
- 1–228, the work: (pp. (3–4) not seen.)
-
- Rare. This John Sanderson of Lancashire, doctor of Theology, canon of
- Cambrai, seems to have escaped the notice of biographers. The better
- known bp. Robert Sanderson also wrote on Logic, see 1615. S. The
- preface throws no light on the life of the author. For the 4th ed.,
- see 1609. S. The first edition was printed by Plantin at Antwerp in
- 1589, the dedication to cardinal Allen being dated from Antwerp 1 Jan.
- “1589,” but neither in the dedication nor in the congratulatory poems
- which follow in this first edition is there any biographical matter.
-
-
-14. ¬Smith¬, bp. Miles. [_woodcuts_] | A | LEARNED AND | GODLY SERMON, |
-preached at Worcester, | _at an Assise_: | _By_ | THE REVEREND | and
-learned, MILES | SMITH, _Doctor of_ | _Diuinitie_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 23: 1602: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 64: p. 11 beg. _him, and
- so_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–13) Epistle dedicatorie
- to Gervase Babington, bp. of Worcester, dated from C. C. C., Oxford,
- Nov. 12. 1602, signed “Robert Burhil” who issued the sermon: (15) “The
- chiefe points of matter ... in the sermon ...”: 1–63, the sermon, on
- Jer. ix. 23–24.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 360. The preface states that the
- sermon was issued without the knowledge of the author, he being too
- modest to publish his works.
-
-
-15. ¬Terry¬, John. [_woodcut_] | THE SECOND PART | _OF_ | THE TRIAL OF
-TRVTH: | WHEREIN IS SET DOWNE THE | proper fountaine or foundation of
-all good | _works, & the fowre principal motiues which the spi_⸗|_rit of
-God so often vseth in the sacred scriptures to perswade_ | therevnto: |
-togither with the contrariety of the doctrine of | the Church of Rome to
-the same: wherein also are ope-|ned not only the causes of all true
-piety and godli-|ness, but also of all heresie and Idolatry, which is |
-and hath beene among Gentiles and Iewes, | and vs likewise that are
-called | Christians. | By JOHN TERRY. | [two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 23: 1602: sm. 4^o: pp. [38] + 125 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _venemous
- drops_, 111 _mande the carefull_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–14) Epistle dedicatorie to dr. George Rives, Warden, and all other
- students of New College, Oxford: (15–37) “To the Christian Reader”:
- (37) a short prayer: 1–125, the work: (1) “Faultes escaped” in parts
- one and two.
-
- See 1600. T, Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 410.
-
-
- 1603.
-
-1. ¬Brett¬, Richard. ICONVM SA-|CRARVM DECAS, IN | QVA E SVBIECTIS TYPIS
-| compluscula sanæ doctrinæ | _capita eruuntur_. | Autore _R. B._ Sacræ
-Theol. Baccalaureo. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 72: p. 11 beg. _divini vultus_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Latin dedication to the
- King, signed “Richardus Brett,” 12 Aug. 1603: 1–72, the work, in ten
- essays.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 611. The preface explains ‘Icones
- inscripsi prȩsens opusculum, quia sub typis varia fidei & morum
- adumbrat documenta. Nam ... est aliquando sub cute literæ, suavis
- quædam & interior medulla.”
-
-
-2. Burhill, Robert. Invitatorius panegyricus: see under _Oxford_ (no. 9,
-below).
-
-
-3. ¬Carleton¬, George. HEROICI CHARACTERES. | AD | ILLVSTRISSI-|MVM
-EQVITEM, | _Henricum Nevillum_. | AUTORE, | _Georgio Carletono_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 48 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Numine
- tanta_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) Latin poetical
- dedication to sir Henry Nevill: 1–48, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 423, 425. The pieces are “Ad ...
- Elizabetham ... Carmen Panegyricum,” “Ad ... Iacobum ... Carmen
- Panegyricum,” “Devoraxeis,” on the earl of Essex, “P. Sidnæi funus,”
- all Latin hexameter poems.
-
-
-4. ¬Davies¬, John, of Hereford. _MICROCOSMOS._ | THE DISCOVERY | OF THE
-LITTLE | World, with the government | thereof. | [_motto_] | By IOHN
-DAVIES. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 23: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 254 + [30]: p. 11 beg. _The Day_,
- 111 _And^e Providence_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
- a border: (3) poetical dedication to king James: (4) Do. to the queen:
- (5–8) short poems by Davies: (8–16) complimentary verses to the author
- or book: 1–28, “A Preface ...” to the king: (29–38) “Cambria to the
- ... Prince of Wales,” both poems: 39–232, the work: 233–254, “An
- extasie,” a poem: (1–20) short poems by Davies, including two to
- Magdalen college, p. (17): (20–29) complimentary verses to the author
- or book.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 262, and 1605. D. The poem describes
- the whole state of man, his condition, qualities and surroundings, in
- a discursive manner which allows a short history of England to come in
- (at p. 131). The stanzas are 9-line, rhyming ABABBCBCC. The author was
- a professional calligrapher in Oxford, not a member of the University.
- Davies’s ©Works© were edited by dr. Grosart in 1878. An ed. of 1611 is
- perhaps only due to a misprint in a 17th cent. bookseller’s catalogue.
-
-
-5. †¬Godwin¬, Francis, bp. of Hereford. [_woodcut_] | TO THE PARSON,
-VICAR | or Cur ate, of | and to everie of them. | [letterpress of
-the articles.]
-
- No imprint: (1603): (two) sm. 4^o: pp. 4: p. 3 beg. _or M. Doctor
- Trevor_: Pica English. Contents:—p. 1, head title, as above: 1–4, the
- orders: signed at end “Matherne. Sept. 30. 1603. _Fr. Landaven._,”
- i.e. F. Godwin, then bp. of Llandaff.
-
- Very rare. Orders of the bishop of Llandaff for the reformation of
- abuses in his diocese. The woodcuts are sufficient to prove by their
- particular imperfections that this is a product of the Oxford press.
-
-
-6. ¬Howson¬, dr. John. A | SERMON | [&c. precisely as 1602. H, except
-that a line “The second Impression.” is added after “of Oxforde” before
-the woodcuts.]
-
- Impr. 23: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 30 + [2]: sign. B 1^r beg. _ship or
- honor_, p. 11 _& hyems erat_: English Roman. Contents:—(exactly as
- 1602. H.)
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 518. This is a verbatim but not literatim
- reprint of 1602. H, except as noted above.
-
-
-7. ¬Oxford¬, University. ACADEMIÆ OXONIENSIS | _PIETAS_ | ERGA |
-SERENISSI-|MVM ET POTEN-|TISSIMVM IACOBVM AN-|_GLIÆ SCOTFÆ FRANCIÆ_ | _&
-Hiberniæ Regem, fidei defenso_⸗|_rem, Beatissimæ Elisabethæ nu-_|_per
-Reginæ legitimè & au-_|_spicatissimè succedentem_. | ⁂ ⁂ | ⁂ |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 13_b_: 1603: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 207 + 1: p. 11 beg.
- _Virginis atque_: 111 _Votum pro_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) dedication to the King in Latin, by the university: 1–207, the
- poems: (1) “Votum Typographi ad ... Regem,” a poem.
-
- More than 470 Latin poems, with a few in Greek, Italian, and French.
- On p. 17 there is a complaint of the lack of Hebrew type. There is an
- earlier and less common issue without the “Votum typographi,” the page
- being left blank.
-
-
-8. ¬Oxford¬, University. THE | ANSVVERE | OF THE VICECHAN-|CELOVR, THE
-DOCTORS, | both the Proctors, and other the | Heads of Houses in the
-Vniversi-|_tie of Oxford_: | (_Agreeable, vndoubtedly, to the ioint and
-Vniforme_ | _opinion, of all the Deanes and Chapters, and all o-_|_ther
-the learned and obedient Cleargy_, | _in the Church of England._) | To
-the humble Petition of the Ministers of the | Church of England,
-desiring Reformation of cer-|taine Ceremonies and Abuses of the Church.
-| [two _mottos_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 32, signn. ¶, ¶¶, A-D^4: sign. ¶¶
- 1^r beg. _you hartely_, p. 11 beg. _Concerning the_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–13) “Epistle dedicatorie” to the archbp. of
- Canterbury and the Chancellors of the Universities of Oxford and
- Cambridge, beg. “Many and excellent”: 1–5, “The humble petition of the
- Ministers ...”: 6–32, “The Answer ...”.
-
- Three other issues are known:—(_a_), title identical except that the
- imprint is no. 25: after p. (13) comes (14–16) a letter from the
- University of Cambridge to that of Oxford in Latin, 7 Oct. 1603,
- introduced by a few sentences “to the reader”: the rest identical:
- (_b_) with title identical till the 9th line which runs:—“_opinion, of
- all the Deanes and Chapters, and all other_ | _the learned & obedient
- Cleargy, in the Church of Eng:_ | And confirmed by the expresse
- consent of the | Vniversitie of Cambridge.) | To the humble Petition”
- [&c. as before]: with the same imprint as (_a_), but in small roman
- type. Four new leaves follow the title, *2^r-*4^r containing a
- dedication to the king, and ¶ 1^r the arms of the University with
- woodcuts above and below. Then follows “the Præface,” the title only
- being re-set, and the headline being no longer “The Epistle |
- dedicatorie” but “The Præface | to the LL^s”, while on ¶¶ 4^v a
- passage from Gregory Nazianzen is inserted: all the rest is identical
- with the other issues: *(_c_) identical with (_b_) throughout except
- that the imprint is no. 2 and is without date. Of these four editions
- or issues, the first is very rare, being perhaps stopped in the course
- of issue: _a_ is common, _b_ less so, _c_ rare.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 3 (where a doubtful 1641 edition is
- referred to): 1604. O.
-
-
-9. ¬Oxford¬, University. OXONIENSIS ACADEMIÆ | Funebre Officium | _JN_ |
-MEMORIAM | HONORATISSIMAM | SERENISSIMÆ ET BEATIS=|SIMÆ ELISABETHÆ,
-NVPER | _Angliæ, Franciæ, & Hiberniæ_ | _Reginæ_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 13_b_: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 182 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _Lugentem_, 111 _Sævit, &_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- poetical Latin dedication to the king: 1–182, the poems.
-
- Chiefly Latin poems in memory of queen Elizabeth: a few Greek occur,
- one Hebrew (p. 5, cf. 97, 171), one French (p. 64), one Italian (p.
- 171). The longest poem is one by Robert Burhill entitled “Invitatorius
- Panegyricus ... de ... Reginæ posteriore ad Oxoniam adventu,” which
- Wood mentions (©Ath. Oxon.© iii. 18) as a separate publication.
-
-
-10. ¬Storre¬, William. THE | MANNER OF | THE CRVELL OVT-|RAGIOVS MVRTHER
-OF | WILLIAM STORRE _Mast. of Art, Mi_⸗|nister, and Preacher at Market
-Raisin in | the County of Lincolne: | COMMITTED | _By Francis Cartwright
-one of his parishioners_, | _the_ 30. _day of August Anno._ 1602. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [12?], signn. A^4 B^2 (?): sign. A 3^r
- beg. _thirsted for_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–11?) the
- work.
-
- Extremely rare. The only known copy, in the Bodleian, has sign. A 4
- imperfect, and has lost all after that leaf. The pamphlet was
- reprinted with slight changes at London in 1613 with the title “Three
- bloodie Murders ...” of which this is the first. “The Life,
- confession, and heartie repentance of Francis Cartwright, gentleman;
- for his bloudie sinne in killing of one Master Storr, Master of Arts
- ... written with his owne hand” was published at London in 1621.
- Storre was a Fellow of Corpus Christi College at Oxford.
-
-
-11. ¬Thornborough¬, bp. John. [_woodcut._] | ARTICLES | TO BE MINISTRED
-| AND TO BE ENQVIRED | OF, AND ANSWERED IN | the first generall
-visitation of | _the reverend father in God, John_, | _by Gods
-permission, Bishop_ | _of Bristoll_. | ⁂ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2_c_: 1603: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 18: p. 11 beg. _or keep_: Pica
- English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “The Tenor of the oath ministred
- to the Church-wardens, and sworne men”: 1–18, the articles, 37 + 41 in
- number.
-
-
-12. ¬Willoughby¬, John. “©A Treatise for the Preparation of the Lord’s
-Supper.© Oxon. 1603, ded. to K. James I. at which time the author was
-living in Oxon.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 744: very rare: a copy is mentioned in “A
- catalogue of choice English books ... which will be sold by Auction, 6
- Aug. 1688” (Lond. 1688, 4^o) Appendix p. 7.
-
-
- 1604.
-
-1. ¬Abbot¬, archbp. George. THE | REASONS | VVHICH DOCTOVR HILL | HATH
-BROVGHT, FOR THE | vpholding of Papistry, which is false⸗|_lie termed
-the Catholike Religion:_ | _Vnmasked, and shewed to be very weake, and
-vpon exa_⸗|_mination most insufficient for that purpose_: | By GEORGE
-ABBOT Doctor of Divinity & Deane | of the Cathedrall _Church in
-VVinchester_. | The first Part. | [two _mottos_: then _woodcuts_] |
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + “438” (really 436 for
- 384–5 are omitted in the pagination) + [8]: p. 11 beg. _is both_, 111
- _G. Abbot_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) large device of the
- University arms between woodcuts: (3) title: (5–7) Epistle dedicatorie
- to lord Buckhurst, dated from University college Oxford, 4 Jan.
- “1604”: 1–438, the work: (1–6) “To the Christian Reader.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 562. The book is in answer to dr. Thomas
- Hill’s “Quartron of reasons of Catholike Religion,” Antw. 1600: but
- contains only ten out of sixteen answers which the author had
- prepared.
-
-
-2. ¬Bridges¬, John, bp. of Oxford. ARTICLES TO | BE ENQVIRED OF WITHIN
-THE | Dioces of Oxford, giuen by the Reuerende | _Father in God_ IOHN
-_by Gods permission now_ | Bishop of Oxford in his Visitation begun |
-_the second day of October_. 1604. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1604: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4-B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _your Parish_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-B
- 2^r, the 55 articles: B 2^r “the oath of the Church-wardens and
- Sidemen.”
-
-
-3. ¬Corderoy¬, Jeremy. A SHORT DIA-|LOGVE, WHEREIN | is proved, that no
-man | can be saved without good | vvorkes. Edit. 2. With some Additions
-| [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [22] + 2 + 110 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _vvhich no doubt_, 101 _workes he may_: Pica Roman. Contents: p. (1)
- title: (3–6) Epistle dedicatorie to sir Robert Vernon, signed “Ieremy
- Corderoy”: (7–21) “To the Christian Reader,” also signed: 1–2, 1–110,
- the work, the half title being “A short dialogue between a Gallant, a
- Scholler of Oxforde, and a Church-Papist ...”.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 47. The first edition may be the one
- of _Lond._ 1604 recorded by Watt in the ©Bibliotheca Britannica©.
-
-
-4. ¬Hubbocke¬, William. AN ORATI-|ON GRATULATORY TO | the High and
-Mighty IAMES of _England_, | _Scotland, France and Ireland, King,
-Defendor of the_ | faith, &c. On the twelft day of February last
-pre-|_sented, when his Maiesty entered the Tower of_ | London to
-performe the residue of the solemni-|_ties of his Coronation thorough
-the citie of London_ | differred by reason of the plague: and
-publi-|_shed by his Highnesse speciall allowance_. | _VVherein both the
-description of the Tower of_ | _London and the vnion of the kingdomes
-is_ | _compendiously touched_: | By | WILLIAM HVBBOCKE. |[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg. _I
- wil giue_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 1^v, Latin
- dedication to the king: A 2^r-A 4^r, the speech, in Latin: B 1^r-B
- 4^v, the same in English.
-
- Extremely rare: the only copy at present known is in the Bodleian, but
- there was a copy among the Harleian Pamphlets. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©
- i. 753. The speech was really delivered on _March_ 12, not February,
- 1603/4, Hubbocke being Chaplain at the Tower. The speech describes the
- Tower as mint, armoury, jewel-house, &c. It is reprinted in Nichols’s
- ©Progresses of king James I©.
-
-
-5. ¬Oxford.¬ THE | ANSVVERE | OF THE VICECHAN-|CELOVR ... [&c. exactly
-as 1603, _Oxford_ Answer, variation _b_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4^o: pp. [46], signn. A-E^4 F^2 ( )^1: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _But these_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) dedication
- to the king: (7–15) “The Præface”: (16–17) Letter from Cambridge, 7
- Oct. 1603, introduced by a short note: (18) quotation from Gregory
- Nazianzen: (19–22) “The humble petition of the Ministers ...”: (23–44)
- “The Answere ... to the Petition ...”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 3, and 1603. O. This is a reprint of
- variation _b_.
-
-
-6. ¬Panke¬, John. A | SHORT ADMONI-|tion by way of Dialogue, to all |
-those who hitherto vpon pretence of | of their vnworthines haue
-dangerously, | _in respect of their salvation, with held them-_|selues
-from comming to the Lordes Table: | _Exhorting them without any longer
-delay_ | _to present themselues herevnto._ | _VVherein is shewed that
-there is an vn_⸗|worthy receiving of baptisme, an vnworthy | _hearing of
-the worde, and an vnworthy pre-_|senting our selues to prayer aswell as
-an vn·|worthy receiving of the supper, which | yet these vnworthies
-worthi-|ly thinke not of. | _By_ IOHN PANKE. | [_motto_, then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: (eights) 12^o: pp. [72], signn. A-D^8 E^4: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _adding to_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A
- 3^v, epistle dedicatorie to lady Katherine Wroughton, dated from Broad
- Hinton, 25 Mar. “1604”: A 4^r-A 6^v, “To the Christian and Godly
- Reader”: A 7^r-E 4^v, the dialogue, between “Romannus the scholler”
- and “Tuberius the gentleman.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 274.
-
-
-7. [¬Parkes¬, Richard.] A | BRIEFE | AN-|SVVERE VNTO CER-|TAINE
-OBIECTIONS AND | Reasons against the descension of Christ | _into hell,
-lately sent in writing vnto a Gen-_|_tleman in the Countrey_. |
-[_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 58 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _tweene
- Death_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) “To the Christian
- Reader”: 1–58, the work: (1) “A note for the Readers Instruction,”
- bibliographical, on the meaning of certain references to books.
-
- See 1613. A. This controversy about the Descent into Hell began with
- the manuscript (?) objections referred to in the title: then came this
- book (which is anonymous, but confessed by the author in his
- ©Apologie©, see below), followed by (1) [Andrew Willett’s]
- ©Limbomastix, that is a Canuise of Limbus Patrum© (published without
- the author’s knowledge), with a reply to the ©Brief answere© (Lond.
- 1604); then (2) by an interminable rejoinder by Richard Parkes (©An
- Apologie©, Lond. 1607, of which the first part is a revised issue of
- the ©Brief Answer©,) answered by Willett’s ©Loidoromastix: that is a
- scourge for a rayler© (Cambr. 1607). The ©Brief Answer© holds the
- orthodox opinion of the “local descension of Christ’s soul to Hell.”
-
-
-8. ¬Powel¬, Gabriel. _A_ | CONSIDERATION OF | the Papists Reasons of
-State and Reli-|gion, for toleration of Poperie | in England, |
-_INTIMATED IN THEIR_ | _Supplication vnto the Kings Maie-_|_stie, & the
-States of the Pre-_|_sent Parliament_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 128: p. 11 beg. _Priest: or_, 111
- _and was the_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “To the
- Christian Reader,” signed “Oxford, from S^t. Marie Hall. 13. of
- Aprill. 1604. ... Gabriel Powel”: 1–125, the work: 126–128, “The
- Auctors Teares and humble Petition vnto Almightie God.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 25.
-
-
-9. ¬Sanford¬, John. GODS ARROWE | _Of the_ | _PESTILENCE_. | _By_ | JOHN
-SANFORD Master of Artes, and Chapleine of Magdalen | _Colledge in
-Oxford_. | [_motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1604: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _that
- verse of_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Epistle
- dedicatorie to the University of Oxford, dated from Magdalen college
- 13 Mar. 1603/4: 1–55, the discourse, on Ps. xxxviii. 2.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 472. Intended as a sermon, but the author
- found himself disabled in speech, and could not deliver it.
-
-
-10. ¬Sanford¬, J[ohn]. [_woodcut._] | Le | _Guichet François_. | SIVE |
-_JANICVLA ET BREVIS INTRO-_|_ductio ad Linguam Gallicam_. | [three
-_mottos_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1604: sm. 4^o: pp. [40 + inserted leaf], signn. A-E^4, and
- one leaf after D 1: sign. B 1^r beg. _ta aliaq;_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A 3^v, Latin dedication to dr.
- Bond president of Magdalen college Oxford, signed “I. Sanfordus”: A
- 4^r-B 1^v “Ad Gallicæ Linguæ Studiosum Lectorem”: B 2^r-E 4^r, the
- work.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 472. This is a French grammar and
- syntax written in Latin. After sign. D 1 is a folio folded leaf,
- printed on one side only, a “Tabula coniugationum.” See 1605. S.
-
-
- 1605.
-
-1. ¬Davies¬, John, of Hereford. _MICROCOSMOS._ | THE DISCOVERY | OF THE
-LITTLE | World, with the governe-|ment thereof. | [_motto_] | By Iohn
-Davies. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 27: 1605: &c. as 1603. D. Contents:—exactly as 1603. D.
-
- Very rare. See 1603. D, of which this is a reissue, with no alteration
- whatever except a new titlepage.
-
-
-2. ¬Hutten¬, Leonard. AN | ANSVVERE TO A CER-|TAINE TREATISE OF THE |
-CROSSE IN BAPTISME. | _Intituled_ | A Short Treatise of the Crosse in
-Baptisme, con-|tracted into this Syllogisme. | [_the syllogism follows
-in six lines_] | VVherein not only the weaknesse of the Syllogisme
-it|selfe, but also of the grounds and proofes there-|of, are plainely
-discovered. | _By L. H. Doct. of Divinitie._ | [two _mottos_, then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 139 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _tions
- were_, 111 _swaded to set_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–7) Epistle dedicatory to the archbp. of Canterbury, signed “Leon.
- Hutten”: 1–139, the answer.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 533. The book to which this is a reply is
- [William Bradshaw’s] ©Short treatise of the crosse in Baptisme©, _n.
- p._ 1604, in which the unlawfulness of the use of the cross was
- insisted on.
-
-
-3. ¬Hutton¬, Thomas. REASONS FOR REFVSAL | OF SVBSCRIPTION TO THE |
-booke of Common praier, vnder the | hands of certaine Ministers of
-Devon, and | Cornwall word for word as they were ex-|hibited by them to
-the Right Reverend | Father in God WILLIAM CO-|TON Doctor of Divinitie |
-_L. Bishop of Exceter_. | _VVITH AN ANSVVERE AT SE-_|verall times
-returned them in publike conference | _and in diverse sermons vpon
-occasion prea-_|ched in the Cathedrall Church of _Exceter_, | by THOMAS
-HVTTON, Bachi-|ler of Divinitie & fellow of | S^t. Iohns Coll. in Oxon.
-| AND NOW PVBLISHED AT | _the very earnest intreatie of some especiall_
-| friends for a farther contentment of o-|ther the Kings Maiesties good
-| and loyall subiects. | [_motto_ then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. 200: p. 11 beg. _are, wherein_, 111
- _times haue thought_: English Roman. Contents:—p. 1 title: 3–6,
- Epistle dedicatorie to the bp. of Exeter: 7–10, “To my fellow brethren
- the ministers of Devon and Cornwall ...”: 10–17, “To the Christian
- Reader”: 18–34, the Reasons: 35–200, the Answer to the Reasons.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 646. A “Second and last part of Reasons
- for Refusall ...” was published in London in 1606, and “The Remoouall
- of certaine imputations laid vpon the Ministers of Deuon: and Cornwall
- by one M. T. H. ...,” printed abroad in 1606: and other books on the
- controversy later.
-
-
-4. ¬James¬, Thomas. CATALOGVS LIBRORVM | BIBLIOTHECÆ PVB-|LICÆ QVAM VIR
-ORNATIS-|simus THOMAS BODLEIVS Eques | Auratus in Academia Oxoniensi
-nuper in-|stituit; continet autem Libros Alphabeti-|cè dispositos
-secundum quatuor | Facultates: | CVM | _QUADRVPLICI ELENCHO_ |
-Expositorum S. Scripturæ, Aristotelis, Iuris | _vtriusq¿ue¿ & Principum
-Medicinæ, ad vsum_ | Almæ Academiæ Oxoniensis. | _Auctore_ | THOMA JAMES
-| Ibidem Bibliothecario. | [_woodcuts_]
-
- Impr. 18: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + “655” (really 651) + [67]: p. 11
- beg. _A._ 11. 1. _Chron._, 111 _P._ 1. 1. _Philon._, p. 501 _V_ ¶
- _Hug. de_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “Observanda in
- hoc catalogo”: (3–4) Epistola dedicatoria to Henry Frederick prince of
- Wales: (5–8) “Præfatio ad Benevolum Lectorem,” dated “E Bibliotheca
- publica Oxoniæ Iunij 27. Anno. 1605.”: 1–162, catalogue of “Libri
- Theologici”: 163–179, “Catalogus Expositorum S. Scripturæ iuxta
- ordinem Voluminum vtriusque Testamenti dispositus”: 180, “Ad
- Lectorem”: 181–218, “Libri Medici”: 219–274, “Libri Iuris”: 275–415,
- “Libri Artium”: 417–425, “Interpretes librorum Aristotelis”: 427–640,
- “Appendix” to each of the four faculties: 641–646, “Appendix ad
- Expositores S Scripturæ”: 646–648, “Appendix ad Interpretes Lib.
- Arist.”: 648–651, “Interpretes Juris Civilis”: 651–652, “Interpretes
- Juris Canonici”: 652–653, “In omnia vel pleraque Scripta Hippocrat.”:
- 653–655, “Scriptores in Cl. Galenum”: 655, “Scriptores in
- Dioscoridem”: (2–67) “Index Auctorum in hoc volumine”: (68) “Nomina
- Hebraica quæ corruptè imprimuntur: & quia defuerunt characteres
- Hebraici, Latinè hîc omnia exprimimus”: (68) “Errata in Latinis
- nominibus.”
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii 466. and 1620. J. The catalogue
- includes also the MSS. then in the Library. In the dedication the
- “Bibliotheca Bodleiana” is stated to be not yet four years old, having
- been formally opened on 8 Nov. 1602. The preface gives an interesting
- account of the early history of the Library. In the pagination a leaf
- is omitted after p. 426, but “457” follows “450”: the total number of
- pages is no doubt 726 (signn. ¶ A-Y^4 Z^2, Aa-Zz, Aaa-Zzz, Aaaa-Xxxx^4
- ( )^1), so that Upcott (©English Topography©, iii. p. 1122, Lond.
- 1818) is wrong. Other editions of the complete catalogue of Bodleian
- printed books were issued at Oxford in 1620, 1674, 1738 and 1843, and
- one of the MSS. in 1697.
-
-
-5. ¬King¬, John, bp. of London. ARTICLES MINISTRED | IN THE VISITATION
-OF | THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVL MAI-|ster IOHN KING, Doctor of divinitie,
-Arch-|deacon of Nottingham, in the yeare of | _our Lord God_. 1605. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [8 + ?]: signn. A^4 + ?: sign. A 4^r
- beg. _Visiting of_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-?, the articles.
-
- Very rare. The only recorded copy, in the Bodleian, contains only
- sign. A. For the issuer see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 294.
-
-
-6. ¬Kingsmill¬, Thomas. CLASSICVM | POENITENTIALE, | THOMA KINGESMILLO,
-auctore, | _olim Socio Coll. Magdalenensis & non ita_ | _pridem Hebraicæ
-Linguæ in alma Aca-_|_demia Oxon: professore regio_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 26: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [56] + 130 + [2] + 65 + [3]: p. 11 be.
- _resipiscentiam_, 111 _mitto cætera_, 2nd p. 11 beg. _suluerunt, vos_:
- English and (2nd part) Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–47)
- dedication to the king: (49–56) “Ad Lectorem”: 1–130, the treatise:
- (1) a title:—“[_woodcut_] | TRACTATVS | DE SCANDALO | EODEM AVCTORE. |
- [_device._]” Impr. 11, 1605: 1–65, the second treatise.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 758. These two treatises on the moral state
- of England are printed without list of contents, index or even
- division into paragraphs. No one but the author and compositor can
- have ever read them, and the former had been insane, though according
- to Wood he recovered his powers.
-
-
-7. ¬Oxford¬, Christ Church. MVSA HOSPITALIS | ECCLESIÆ CHRISTI | OXON. |
-_Jn adventum Fælicissimum Sereniss._ IACOBI | _Regis_, ANNæ _Reginæ_, &
-HENRICI _Prin-_|_cipis ad eandem Ecclesiam._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 18: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [48], signn. A-F^4: English Roman.
- Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-F 4^r, the poems.
-
- Christ Church poems to commemorate the visit of the King, Queen, and
- Prince Henry to Oxford and Christ Church, 27–30 Aug. 1605. All but one
- (Greek) are in Latin.
-
-
-8. ¬Oxford¬, New College. ENCOMION | RODOLPHI VVARCOP-|PI ORNATISSIMI,
-QVEM | habuit Anglia, Armigeri, qui commu-|ni totius patriæ luctu
-extinctus est | _Die Iovis Kalend. Aug._ 1605. | [_motto_: then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 18: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [32], signn. A-E^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Magne Deus_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A
- 2^v, dedication to Will. lord Knollys de Grays, unsigned: A 3^r-E 3^v,
- poems to the memory of Warcop, the first signed “W. Kingesmillus,” the
- editor of the volume, “Oxonij e Coll. Novo die 25. Octob.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© i. 754, ©Fasti Oxon.© i. 366. The poems, which
- are all except one (Greek) in Latin, are by New College men and edited
- by William Kingsmill of New College, a nephew of Warcop, who was
- himself at Ch. Ch. The device on the titlepage bears the arms of New
- College, between W. W. (William of Wykeham).
-
-
-9. ¬Sanford¬, John. _A_ | BRIEFE EX-|TRACT OF THE FOR-|MER LATIN
-GRAMMER, | DONE INTO ENGLISH, FOR | the easier instruction of | _the
-Learner_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg. _L
- in the middest_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A
- 3^v, dedication to William Grey son of Arthur lord Grey of Wilton,
- signed “John Sanford”: A 4^r-B 4^v, the extracts.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 472. The word “Latin” on the title
- seems to be a mistake for “French,” see 1604. S, to which this is a
- sort of appendix.
-
-
-10. ¬Sanford¬, John. _A_ | GRAMMER | OR INTRODVCTION | TO THE ITALIAN |
-_TONGVE_. | §§§ | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25: 1605: sm. 4^o: pp [8] + 44 + [4?]: p. 11 beg. _as i
- Soldati_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) motto from Dante:
- (3–6) dedication to Magdalen college, Oxford, signed “Joannes
- Sanford”: (7) “To the reader”: (8) poem “Sur l’Autheur” in French, by
- Jean More: 1–44, the grammar: perhaps two blank leaves follow.
-
- Very rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©> ii. 472. The grammar includes a
- short syntax.
-
-
-11. *¬Thornborough¬, John, bp. of Bristol. THE IOIE-|FVLL AND BLESSED
-REV-|niting the two mighty & famous King⸗|domes, England & Scotland into
-their an-|_cient name of great Brittaine_. | By JOHN BRISTOLL. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: [1605?]: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 80: p. 11 beg. _Therefore the
- wise_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) dedication to king
- James: 1–80, the treatise.
-
- The preface alludes to “my two bookes,” the other being “A discourse
- plainely proving the euident vtilitie and vrgent necessitie of the ...
- Vnion of ... England and Scotland ...” (Lond., 1604, sm. 4^o), which
- latter was the subject of a remonstrance of the House of Commons to
- the House of Lords, 26 May 1604, ending in an apology on the part of
- the author. There is nothing but Wood’s express statement (©Ath.
- Oxon.© iii. 5) to settle whether this book was published at the close
- of 1604 or in 1605: so that statement has been accepted. Otherwise it
- would seem that the two books were not long separated in point of
- time. Both were reprinted at London in 1641.
-
-
-12. ¬Wakeman¬, Robert. THE | CHRISTIAN | PRACTISE. | _A_ | Sermon
-preached on the Act-Sun-|_day in S^t. Maries Church in_ | _Oxford. Iul._
-8. 1604. | By ROB. WAKEMAN Bachelor | of Divinity and fellow of Balioll
-| Colledge in Oxford. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: 1605: (eights) 16^o: pp. 92 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _ple but
- serued_: English Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 2, “Points handled in
- this Sermon”: 3–92, the sermon, on Acts ii. 46.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 471, and 1612. W.
-
-
-13. ¬Wakeman¬, Robert. SALOMONS EXALTATION. | _A_ | SERMON PREA-|CHED
-BEFORE THE | KINGS Maiestie at None-|_Such, April._ 30. 1605. | By ROB.
-WAKEMAN Bachelor | of Divinity and fellow of Balioll | Colledge in
-Oxford. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: 1605: (eights) 16^o: pp. [2] + 68 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _halt
- goe_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–68, the sermon, on 2
- Chron. ix. 8.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 471.
-
-
- 1606.
-
-1. [¬Burhill¬, Robert.] IN CONTRO-|VERSIAM INTER IO-|HANNEM HOWSONVM | &
-_Thomam Pyum_ S. T. Doctores de | _novis post divortium ob
-adulteri-_|_um nuptijs_. | TRACTATVS MODESTVS ET | Christianus in sex
-commentationes, & | _Elenchum monitorium distinctus_. | _VBI ET AD
-EXCVSAM D. PYI AD_ | D. Howsonum Epistolam, quâ libri Howsoni-|_ani
-refutationem molitur, & ad ejusdem_ | _alteram manuscriptam Epistolam
-e-_|_iusdem argumenti, quâ contra_ Al-|bericum Gentilem
-_iurispruden-_|_tiæ apud Oxonienses professorem_ | _regium disputat,
-diligenter_ | _respondetur_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1606: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 206 + [20]: p. 11 beg. _non
- licuisse_, 111 _polluatur? Ita_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (2) “Auctoris protestatio de calumniâ”: (3) “Admonitiones ad
- Lectorem”: (4) 17 lines of errata, not found in all copies, &
- sometimes pasted on: (5–6) Latin poem to Rich. Bancroft archbp. of
- Canterbury: (7–11) “Dispositio totius operis”: 1–176, the work in six
- parts: 177–206, the Elenchus: (1) “Ad Lectorem,” a preface to what
- follows: (2–10) “To Master Doctor Pye,” a letter in English from dr.
- “John Rainolds,” dated 27 Feb. [1603/4?]: (13) “Ad Lectorem,”
- introductory: (15–20) Latin letter from Albericus Gentilis to dr.
- Howson, dated from London, 12 Aug. 1603.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© iii. 18, also ii. 15 and 60. Thomas Pye’s work
- against Howson’s Thesis is entitled “Epistola ad ... D. Johannem
- Housonum, quâ Dogma ejus ... refutatur ...” Lond. 1603. The signatures
- show that this work (which is strictly anonymous) is part of the art.
- ©Howson© below, and was indeed printed before it, and written before
- there was any intention of reprinting the ©Thesis©.
-
-
-2. ¬Howson¬, dr. John. VXORE DI-|MISSA PROPTER FOR-|nicationem aliam non
-licet | _superinducere_. | TERTIA THESIS | IOANNIS HOWSONI IN-|ceptoris
-in Sacra Theologia, propo-|sita & disputata in Vesperijs | _Oxonij_.
-1602. | _ACCESSIT EIVSDEM THESEOS_ | _defensio contra reprehensiones T.
-Pyi_ | _S. T. Doctoris._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 28: 1606: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 36 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _tis impetum_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “Ad Lectorem,” a note that
- the pages of the 1602 edition are noted in the margin, because the
- “Defensio” refers to them: 1–36, the thesis.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 518, and 1602. H, of which this is a
- verbatim reprint. The entry above under _Burhill_ is really part of
- this work, but treated separately for convenience.
-
-
-3. ¬King¬, John. THE | FOVRTH | SERMON PREACHED AT | _HAMPTON COVRT ON_
-| _Tuesday the last of Sept._ 1606. | [_line_] | BY | [_line_] | JOHN
-KINGE Doctor of Divinity, and | _Deane of Christ-Church in Oxon_. |
-[_device_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1606: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 49 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _stration of
- the_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: 1–49, the
- sermon, on Cant. viii. 11: 49, “Faults escaped in the printing ...”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 295: and 1607. K.
-
-
-4. ¬Oxford¬, Magdalen college. BEATÆ MAR-|IAE MAGDALENAE | LACHRYMÆ, IN
-OBITVM | NOBILISSIMI IVVENIS GU-|LIELMI GREY, Domini ARTHVRI | GREY
-_Baronis de VVilton, aureæ_ | _Periscelidis Equitis Clarissimi_, |
-_Filij natu minoris_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1606: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 42: p. 11 beg. _Perpetuos_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to lady Joanna Sybil
- Grey, dowager lady Grey, mother of William Grey, signed “Rob. Barnes,”
- dated Magd. coll. Oxford, 11 March (1605/6): 1–42, the poems.
-
- Poems by members of Magdalen college, Oxford, in memory of William
- Grey, who matriculated at Magdalen, 18 May 1604 and died 18 Feb.
- 1605/6. The editor of the volume was a son of the printer of the book
- and a Fellow of Magdalen. The poems are Latin except four Greek, one
- Spanish (?) and one Italian.
-
-
-5. *†¬Oxford¬, University. [Orders for the Market of the City of Oxford,
-issued by the Chancellor of the University: beg. “Thomas Earle of
-Dorset,” ends “transgressor of this commaudement. God saue the King.”]
-
- No impr.: [1606]: (one) obl. fol.: pp. [2]: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) the orders (31 in number).
-
- “Proclaimed July 2^o, 1606. Dr. Abbotts Vice-Chancellor,” according to
- a MS. note on the copy in the Oxford University Archives.
-
-
-6. ¬Rawlinson¬, rev. John. THE | FOVRE SVM-|MONS OF THE | _SHVLAMITE_. |
-A | _Sermon preached at Pauls Crosse vpon_ | _Rogation Sunday, the_ 5.
-_of_ | May. 1605. | By JOHN RAWLINSON, Bache-|lor of Divinitie, and
-fellow of | Saint Iohns Colledge in | Oxford. | [_motto_: then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: 1606: (eights) 16^o: pp. [10] + 82 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _and
- commeth_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–9) “To the
- Reader,” dated from St. John’s College in Oxon, 10 Jan [1605/6]: 1–82
- the sermon, on Cant. vi. 13: [(3–4) have not been seen.]
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 506. The author states that the
- sermon occupied two hours in delivery.
-
-
-7. ¬Trelcatius¬, Lucas. SCHOLASTICA, | ET METHODICA, | Locorum
-Communium, | _S. Theologiæ Institutio_, | Didacticè, & Elencticè in
-Epitome explicata: | IN QVA, | _Veritas Locorum Communium, definitionis
-cu-_|_iusq¿ue¿ Loci, per Causas suas Analysi asseritur:_ | _Contraria
-verò Argumenta, imprimis_ | _Bellarmini, Generalium_ | _Solutionum
-appendice_ | _refutantur_: Auctore, LVCA TRELCATIO, L. F. | _Pastore, &
-Professore_. | [_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1606: (eights?) 12^o?.
-
- Only known at present from a titlepage in the Bagford collections at
- the British Museum, but no doubt other copies exist. Probably a
- reprint of the first edition, Lugd. Bat. 1604, 4^o.
-
-
-8. ¬Wakeman¬, Robert. IONAHS SERMON, | AND | _Ninivehs repentance_. |
-_A_ | SERMON PREACHED AT | Pauls Crosse Jun. 20. 1602. and now | thought
-fit to be published for | our meditations in | these times. | _By_ RO.
-WAKEMAN _Master of Arts_, | _and fellow of Balioll Colledge_ | _in
-Oxford_. | The second Impression. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 25_a_: 1606: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 102 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _to
- send his_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) “To the
- Christian Reader,” dated from “Balioll Colledg in Oxford October. 10.
- 1603.”: (7) “Ionah. 3. 4. 5. The Analysis of the Text.”: 1–102, the
- sermon, on Jonah iii. 4–5.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 471. No copy of the first
- impression, which may have been printed at Oxford in 1603 or 1604, has
- yet been seen. There is no allusion to this being a second edition, in
- the preface.
-
-
- 1607.
-
-1. ¬Bunny¬, Francis. AN | ANSVVERE TO A | POPISH LIBELL IN-|tituled _A
-Petition to the Bishops_, | _Preachers, and Gospellers_, | lately spread
-abroad in | the North partes. | By FRANCIS BVNNY _Prebenda-_|_ry of
-Durham; sometimes fel-_|_low of Magdalen Col-_|_ledge in Oxford_. |
-[_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1607: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 159 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _who
- would_, 111 _receiue some_: English Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) [not
- seen]: (3) title: (5–15) “To all Popish Recusants ...”: 1–159, the
- work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 201. The “Petition” came out in
- “September last” (1606?).
-
-
-2. ¬Cleland¬, James. ΗΡΩ-ΠΑΙΔΕΙΑ, | OR | THE INSTITVTION OF A | YOVNG
-NOBLE MAN, | BY | JAMES CLELAND. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + “271” (really 269, for 249–50 are
- omitted in the pagination) + [3]: p. 11 beg. _the first booke_, 111
- _fained voice_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines:
- (3–4) dedication to prince Charles: (5–8) “To the Noble Reader”: (9)
- “The Subiect and Order of these six Bookes”: (15) some errata, with
- introductory note: (16) dedication of the preface and book 1 to lord
- Hay: 1–10 the preface: 11–271, the work in six books each with a
- dedication, see below.
-
- See 1612 C, which is simply a reissue with new titlepage. The author
- recommends a nobleman to go to no University, but to Prince Henry’s
- Court or Academy at Nonsuch. The 2nd book is dedicated to Thomas
- Mourray, tutor to prince Charles: the 3rd to George earl of Essex, son
- of the marquess of Huntly: the 4th to sir John Harington, son of lord
- Harington: the 5th to mr. Francis Stewart Master of Mourray, and to
- mr. John Stewart son of the duke of Lennox: the 6th to Robert earl of
- Essex. The author was not an Oxford man, nor, apparently, connected
- with the place in any way.
-
-
-3. ¬Cooper¬, Thomas. NONÆ | NOVEMBRIS | _Æternitati Consecratæ_ | JN |
-_Memoriam admirandæ illius liberationis_ Principis, | _&_ Populi
-_Anglicani à Proditione_ | _Sulphurea_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 124: p. 11 beg. _Num laqueus_, 111
- _mus Deum_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to
- the king and parliament: (4–7) “Præfatio ad Lectorem ...,” signed
- “Thomas Cooper”: (8–23) “Præludia ad Nonas,” short poems by Cooper:
- (23) “Errata ...”: 1–124, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 612, ©Fasti© i. 285, but the identity of
- the author appears to be still quite uncertain. The work is a
- rhetorical commentary, almost a sermon, on the Gunpowder Plot of 5
- Nov. 1605: but seems to afford no clue to the connexion of the author
- with Oxford.
-
-
-4. ¬D\[unster]¬, I[ohn]. A | PROTESTATION A-|GAINST POPERY BY | _way of
-a Confession of Christian_ | _Religion collected for the benefit_ | _of
-private friends_. | [two _mottos_: then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1607: eights, 12^o: pp. [2] + 38: p. 11 beg. _of his
- transgression_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–38, the
- treatise, signed on last page “I. D.”, followed by a short poem “To
- the reader” signed “Roger Knight.”
-
- See 1609 D, and for the author Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 142. The poem
- on p. 38 explains that the work was written “some time agoe” “for
- priuate vse.” The Bodleian Catalogue (perhaps following Draudius’s
- ©Bibliotheca Exotica©, Frankf. 1625, p. 293) ascribes this book to
- John Dunster, but Wood did not know the author.
-
-
-5. ¬James¬, dr. Thomas. [_woodcut_] | CONCORDANTI_Æ_ | SANCTORVM |
-PATRVM HOC EST VERA ET | PIA LIBRI CANTICORVM PER | Patres vniversos tam
-Græcos quam Lati-|_nos expositio_. | _Auctore Thoma Iames in Alma
-Academia Oxo-_|_niensi Proto-Bibliothecario &_ | _olim Socio Coll.
-Novi._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 18 + [2]: p. 11 beg. 930.
- _Hieron._; English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) motto: (3)
- “Lectori pio doctoque ...”, dated 30 July 1607: (4) List of
- Commentators on the Song of Solomon: 1–18, the work, a catena of
- references to printed expositions of the Song: 1–2, bibliographical
- list of editions cited.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. One of the Bodleian copies (4^o A.
- 64 Th.) has a MS. list by James of 26 presentation copies, out of 78
- copies “receaued of Mr. Joseph [Barnes?] ... 30 Jul”, and some private
- opinions and suggestions about the book. The preface explains that if
- this instalment was well received, the author intended to proceed to
- similar publications for the rest of the Bible.
-
-
-6. ¬King¬, bp. John. “John King’s Five Sermons preached before the King.
-Oxf. 1607.”
-
- So in “Catalogi variorum ... librorum Richardi Davis ... Pars Tertia”
- (1688), p. 83, cf. “... Pars secunda” (1686), p. 125. Rare. See next
- art.
-
-
-7. ¬King¬, bp. John. THE | FOVRTH | SERMON PREACHED AT | _HAMPTON COVRT
-ON_ | _Tuesday the last of Sept._ 1606. | [_line_] | BY | [_line_] |
-JOHN KINGE Doctor of Divinity, and | _Deane of Christ-Church in Oxon._ |
-[_device_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 49 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _stration of
- the_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: 3–49, the
- sermon, on Cant. viii. 11.
-
- A reprint of 1606 K. This is perhaps part of the preceding article.
-
-
-8. ¬King¬, John. A | SERMON | PREACHED IN OXO^N: | the 5. of November.
-1607. | [_line_] | _BY_ | [_line_] | JOHN KINGE Doctor of Divinity,
-Deane | _of Christ Church, and Vicechancellor_ | of the Vniversity. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 35 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _causes and_:
- English Roman. Contents:—(3) title, within lines: 1–35 the sermon, on
- Ps. xlvi. 7–11.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 295.
-
-
-9. ¬Prideaux¬, John. TABVL_Æ_ | AD GRAM-|MATICA GRÆCA | INTRODVCTORIÆ. |
-IN QVIBVS | _Succinctè compingitur, brevissima, sed tamen ex-_|_pedita,
-singularum partium orationis decli_⸗|_nabilium, Variandi ratio_. |
-_Accessit_ | Vestibuli vice, ad eandem linguam παραίνεσις, in gratiam |
-tyronum, quibus vt convenit explicatiora evol-|vere, ita necesse est hæc
-ipsa | ad vnguem tenere. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [34], signn. A-D^4, ( )^1: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _profero clarâ_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A
- 2^r-A 2^v, dedication to dr. Tho. Holland, signed “Jo. Prideaux”: A
- 3^r-B 3^v “In Isocratis Busiridem de Græcæ linguæ studio, Præfatio”: B
- 4^r-D 4^v “Grammatices Græcæ. Σχεδάρια.”, the work in six sections:
- ( ) 1^r “Conclusio ad Lectorem,” and short epigram.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267 where the date 1608 may be an error
- for 1607: and 1629 P, 1639 P, both of which edd. supply the date of
- the dedication as “1 Jan. 1607 = 1607/8,” but are otherwise apparently
- simply reprints. The dedication declares that the work was due to the
- suggestion of dr. Holland, and done in the last Whitsuntide holidays
- (1606).
-
-
-10. ¬Wake¬, Isaac. REX PLATONICVS: | SIVE, | DE POTEN-|TISSIMI PRINCIPIS
-| IACOBI BRITANNIARVM | Regis, ad illustrissimam Academiam |
-_Oxoniensem, adventu, Aug._ 27. | Anno. 1605. | _NARRATIO_ | _AB ISAACO
-VVAKE, PVBLICO A-_|_cademiæ ejusdem Oratore, tum temporis_ |
-_conscripta, nunc verò in lucem_ | _edita, non sine authoritate_ |
-_Superiorum._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 140 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _cademiæ_,
- 111 _Romanas_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title; (5–8) dedication
- to Henry prince of Wales, dated “Oxoniæ, e Collegio Mertonensi”, 19
- June (1607): 1–140, the work, with the running title “Rex Platonicus,
- Sive Musæ Regnantes”: (1–2) Latin letter from the Chancellor of the
- University to the Vice-Chancellor, about the royal visit, with a
- preface by Wake.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 540. For other edd., which are only
- slightly altered, but add a funeral oration, see next art., and 1615
- W, 1627 W, 1635 W, 1663 W. The visit of the King was from 27 to 30
- Aug. 1605. The author says he wrote the account at the actual time of
- the visit. The oration was also printed at Oxford in 1608, and in
- English in Fuller’s ©Abel Redivivus©.
-
-
-11. ——. REX PLATONICVS: | SIVE, | DE POTENTIS-|SIMI PRINCIPIS IA-|COBI
-BRITANNIARVM | Regis, ad illustrissimam Aca-|demiam Oxoniensem, |
-_adventu, Aug._ 27. | Anno. 1605. | _NARRATJO_ | AB ISAAcO WAKE,
-PVBLI-|co Academiæ ejusdem Oratore, | _tunc temporis conscripta, nunc
-i-_|_terum in lucem edita, multis_ | _in locis auctior &
-emen-_|_datior_. | Editio Secunda. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1607: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 224 + [18]: p. 11 beg.
- _minum memoriam_, 111 _cumano irruunt_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication to prince Henry, dated as 1st
- ed.: 1–224, the work: (1–3) the Chancellor’s letter, with preface: (4)
- device: (5) ORATIO | FVNEBRIS HA-|bita in Templo be-|_atæ Mariæ Oxon._
- | Ab ISAACO WAKE, | PVBLICO ACADE-|miȩ Oratore, _Maij_ 25. _An._ |
- 1607. quum mœsti | _Oxonienses, pijs mani-_|_bus_ IOHANNIS | RAINOLDI
- | _parentarent_. | [_woodcuts_, then Impr. 11, 1607.]: (6–18) the
- oration.
-
- Rare: see preceding art.: for edd. of the Oration, see also preceding
- art.
-
-
- 1608.
-
-1. ¬Chetwind¬, Edward. CONCIO AD | CLERVM PRO GRA-|dû habita Oxoniæ. 9.
-die | _Decembris._ 1607. | Per EDOARDVM CHETWIND è Coll. | _Exoniensi
-sacræ Theologiæ_ | _Bacchalaureum._ | _Matri Academiæ Sacra._ |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1608: (eights) 16^o: pp. [4] + 40 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _vt
- vobis_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Methodus,
- brevisque summa totius concionis”: 1–40, the sermon, on Acts xx. 24:
- (1) “Ad Lectores ... amicos.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 641.
-
-
-2. ¬Cooke¬, James. IVRIDICA TRIVM QV_Æ_STI-|_onum ad Maiestatem
-pertinentium deter-_|_minatio_; | IN QVARVM PRIMA ET VLTIMA | Processus
-Iudicialis contra _H. Garnetum_ institutus, ex Iure Civili & Canonico
-defenditur: | IN SECVNDA SVPREMA ET VNI-|versalis Principum potestas
-explicatur, & ex eisdem | _principijs succinctè asseritur_; | OPPOSITA
-PRAECIPVE EPISTOLAE CVI-|dam Dedicatoriæ Ad clarissimum virum. D. E. C.
-| militem, advocatum fiscalem Generalem à Ca-|tholico, (vt ipse
-subscribit) Theo-|logo conscriptæ; | _Habita Oxoniæ in vesperijs
-Comitiorum Anno Do-_|_mini_ 1608. _à_ JACOBO COOKE _Novi_ | _Collegij
-Socio Inceptore in_ | _Iure Civili_. | [_motto_, in Greek: then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 49 + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _intelligitur?_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3)
- dedication to Tho. Bilson bp. of Winchester: 1–49, the three theses
- and their determination.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 95. The theses were for the degree of
- D.C.L., chosen by the candidate himself.
-
-
-3. ¬Hakewill¬, George. THE | VANITIE OF | the eie. | First beganne for
-the Comfort of a | Gentlewoman bereaved of | her sight, and since vpon |
-occasion inlarged & | published for the | Common | good, | BY | GEORGE
-HAKEWILL _Master_ | _of Arts, and fellow of Exe-_|_ter Coll. in Oxford_.
-[_motto_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1608: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [6] + 161 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _and by
- consequence_, 111 _gers may not_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) “The Contents ...”: pp. 1–161, the work, in 31 chapters.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 255: and next art., 1615 H, 1633 H. The
- treatise contains all that can be said on physical and moral grounds
- against the Eye.
-
-
-4. ——. [exactly as above, except that after “_Oxford_.” is added] “|
-_The second Edition augmented by the_ | _Authour._ |”
-
- Impr. 7: 1608: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [6] + 170 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _and by
- consequence_, 111 _maker; I_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1–6) as 1st ed.:
- 1–170, the work, in 31 chapters.
-
- See preceding art., of which this is a reprint with additions, except
- that the titlepage is not reprinted but only re-set.
-
-
-5. ¬James¬, Thomas. AN | APOLOGIE FOR IOHN | WICKLIFFE, shewing his
-conformitie | with the new Church of England; with an-|swere to such
-slaunderous obiections, | as haue beene lately vrged against him | by
-Father Parsons, the Apolo-|gists, and others. | _COLLECTED CHIEFLY OVT
-OF_ | diuerse works of his in written hand, by Gods e-|speciall
-providence remaining in the Publike | Library at Oxford, of the
-Honorable foun-|dation of S^r. THOMAS BODLEY Knight: | BY | THOMAS JAMES
-keeper of the same. [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 75 + [5]: p. 11 beg. _providence,
- which_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication to sir
- Edw. Cooke, lord chief justice of the Common Pleas, dated “From the
- Library in Oxford _Feb._ 10. 1608”: (8) “Faults escaped in the
- printing ...”: 1–3, “the Preface vnto all true Catholicks, and
- Christian Readers”: 5–75, the Apology: 2–5, “Iohn VVickliffs life
- collected out of diuerse Auctors.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. This is closely connected with the
- Wycliff art., below: and on p. 60 marg. the other is said to be
- “printed with this Apologie”: the form of the signatures also
- indicates connexion. The Bodleian MSS. quoted seem to be MSS. Bodl.
- 288 and 647, perhaps with others.
-
-
-6. ¬King¬, John. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT WHITE-|HALL THE 5. DAY OF
-NO.|vember, ann. 1608. | [_line_] | BY | [_line_] | JOHN KING Doctor of
-Divinity, Deane of | _Christ=Church in Oxon: and Vicechauncel-_|_lor of
-the Vniversity_. | _Published by commandement._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 40 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Seldome shal_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: 1–40, the sermon,
- on Ps. xi. 2–4, within lines.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 295.
-
-
-7. ——. A | SERMON | PREACHED IN S^t. MARIES | at Oxford the 24. of March
-being the | day of his sacred Maiesties inauguration | _and Maundie
-thursday_. | [_line_] | BY | [_line_] | JOHN KINGE Doctor of Divinity,
-Deane | _of Christ Church, and Vicechancellor_ | _of the Vniversitie_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 30: p. 11 beg. _dome, hee_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: 1–30, the sermon, on 1
- Chron. xxix. 26–28, within lines.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 295.
-
-
-8. ¬Panke¬, John. THE FAL OF BABEL. | _By the confusion of tongues,
-directly proving against the_ | Papists of this, and former ages; that a
-view of their wri-|_tings, and bookes being taken, it cannot be
-discerned by any man_ | _living, what they would say, or how be
-vnderstoode, in the_ | _question of the sacrifice of the Masse, the
-Reall pre-_|_sence or transubstantiation; but in explaning_ | _their
-mindes, they fall vpon such termes_, | _as the Protestants vse and
-allow_. | FVRTHER | In the question of the Popes supremacy is shewed,
-how they | abuse an authority of the auncient father S^t. Cyprian, A
-Canon of | the 1. Niceene counsell, And the Ecclesiasticall historie of
-Socra-|tes, and Sozomen. And lastly is set downe a briefe of the
-suc-|cession of Popes in the sea of Rome for these 1600. yeeres |
-_togither; what diversity there is in their accompt, what here-_|_sies,
-schismes, and intrusions there hath bin in that sea_, | _deliuered in
-opposition against their tables, where-_|_with now adaies they are very
-busie; and o-_|_ther things discovered against them_. | _By_ | IOHN
-PANKE. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [34] + 147 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _fence &
- proofe_, 111 _shop of Rome_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- general Epistle dedicatorie to Protestants at Oxford, Cambridge and
- elsewhere, dated “From Tydworth the 1. of Nouember. 1607”: (9–29) “To
- al ... Recusants ...”, dated as before: (31–2) “The names of the
- Popish Writers, out of which this booke hath beene gathered.”: 1–147,
- the work, in the form of a dialogue between “Tuberius the Gent.” and
- “Romannus the Scholler”: (2–3) “The names of the Bishops or Popes of
- Rome for these 1600. yeeres ...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 274. The work has no divisions, index or
- table of contents.
-
-
-9. ¬Price¬, Daniel. THE MARCHANT. | A | SERMON | PREACHED AT PAVLES |
-Crosse on Sunday the 24. of Au-|gust, being the day before Bar-|tholomew
-faire. 1607. | [_line_] | BY | [_line_] | DANIELL PRICE _Master of Arts,
-of Exeter_ | _Colledge in Oxford_. | [_device._] |
-
- Impr. 7: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 38: p. 11 beg. _of many who_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: (3–4) dedication
- “to the honorable Companie of Merchants of the Cittie of London”,
- dated from Exeter Coll., Oxford, 20 Apr. 1608: 1–38, the sermon, on
- Matt. xiii. 45–46: every page of the book is within lines.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 511.
-
-
-10. ——. _Prælium & præmium._ | THE CHRISTIANS WARRE | and rewarde. | A |
-SERMON PREACHED | before the Kings Maiestie at VVhite-|_hall the_ 3. _of
-May._ 1608. | [_line_] | BY | [_line_] | DANIELL PRICE _Master of Arts
-of Exeter_ | _Colledge, and Chapleyn in ordinarie_ | _to the_ PRINCE. |
-[_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 7_b_: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 34 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _guler,
- effectual_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: (3–4)
- dedication to the archbp. of Canterbury, dated from Exeter coll.,
- Oxford, 19 June 1608: 1–34, the sermon on Rev. ii. 26: every page of
- the book has a border of lines.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 511. The dedication implies that the book
- took four days to print (?), and claims to be the first from the
- University Press since the archbishop (Richard Bancroft) became
- Chancellor (23 Apr. 1608).
-
-
-11. ——. RECVSANTS | CONVERSION: | A | SERMON PREACHED AT S^t. | JAMES,
-before the PRINCE on the 25. | _of Februarie._ 1608. | [_line_] | BY |
-[_line_] | DANIELL PRICE _Master of Arts, of Exeter_ | _Colledge in
-Oxford_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 35 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _ctions and_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: 1–2, dedication
- to prince Henry: 3–35, the sermon, on Is. ii. 3, within lines: (2–3)
- [not seen].
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 511.
-
-
-12. ¬Prideaux¬, John. [The ©Tabulae ad Grammatica Græca©, assigned by
-Wood (©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267) to this date, is probably the 1607
-edition, which see.]
-
-
-13. ¬Rainolds¬, John. IOHANNIS RAI-|NOLDI ORATI-|_ones duæ_, | Ex ijs
-quas habuit in Collegio Cor-|poris Christi, quum linguam | Græcam
-profiteretur. | HABITAE, QVVM STVDIA, DE | more per ferias intermissa, |
-repeterentur: | _Prior, quæ duodecima, post vaca-_|_tionem Natalitiam;_
-| _Posterior, decima tertia, post vaca-_|_tionem Paschalem;_ | _Anno._
-1576. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 5: 1608: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 106 + [6]: p. 11 beg. _non
- exhorter_, 101 _& in_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
- “Iohannes Rainoldus Academicis Oxoniensibus ...”, dated “è Colleg.
- Corp. Christ. Februar. 2:” 1–52, the first oration: 53–106, the second
- oration.
-
- The only copy at present met with is one in Worcester College Library
- at Oxford, but there is no special reason why the book should be
- scarce.
-
-
-14. ¬S[ansbury]¬, I[ohn]. [_woodcuts_] | _ILIVM IN ITALIAM._ | OXONIA AD
-| PROTECTIONEM | _Regis sui omnium opti-_|_mi filia, pedisequa_. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1608: (eights) 16^o: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Flos regum_: Long Primer Italic. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 1^v, dedication to the king, signed “I. S.”, i. e. John Sansbury: A
- 2^r-C 7^r, the work, the verso of every leaf being blank.
-
- Rare and valuable. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 58, where some
- extracts are given. Each leaf bears an engraving of the arms of the
- University or a College, and a short Latin poem following. The title
- appears to indicate the struggle of king James and England against
- Italian wiles, the words being from Virg. Aen. i. 72, where the
- context bears a different meaning. The dedication shows that the poems
- were written in 1606. The arms are in some respects peculiar, and were
- probably engraved at Oxford.
-
-
-15. ¬Twyne¬, Brian. ANTIQVI-|TATIS ACADEMIÆ OXO-|NIENSIS APOLOGIA. | _In
-tres libros divisa._ | AVTHORE | BRIANO TWYNO _in facultate Artium
-Ma-_|_gistro, & Collegij Corporis Christi in eâdem_ | _Academia Socio._
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 384 + [72]: p. 11 beg. _perit quod
- nemo_, 111 _xitq;, sed etiàm_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) dedication to Robert Sackvill earl of Dorset, dated from Corpus
- Christi college, Oxford, 3 June 1608: 1–384, the work, in three books:
- (1–10) “Index rerum et verborum ...”: (11–21) “Catalogus authorum ...
- quibus Author ... vsus est”: (21) “Errata ...”: (23–54) “Miscellanea
- quædam de antiquis aulis et studentium collegiis ...”, according to
- parishes: (55–72) “Summorum Oxoniensis Academiæ Magistratuum
- [Chancellors, Vice-Chancellors, Proctors] ... catalogus.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 109 (where there is much about the fate
- of the MS., Twyne’s intentions, &c.) ii. 358. This is the first
- history of Oxford, but to some extent thrown into a controversial
- form, to prove the prior antiquity of Oxford to that of Cambridge. For
- a man of 28 it is, as Wood says, a wonderful performance. Almost all
- Twyne’s Oxford collections are still preserved in the University
- Archives and the Library of Corpus Christi college, Oxford. See 1620
- T.
-
-
-16. ¬Wake¬, Isaac. ORATIO FV-|NEBRIS HABI-|ta in Templo beatæ | _Mariæ
-Oxon._ | Ab ISAACO WAKE | [&c. precisely as in 1607 W.] | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1608: (twelve) 16^o: pp. [24], sign. A^12: sign. A 4^r beg.
- _occasionis ratione_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 2^r title: A
- 3^r-A 9^r, the oration: (A 1 and A 12 not seen).
-
- A reprint of 1607 W (speech in 2nd ed.), which see.
-
-
-17. [Wells, William.] Epistola ad authorem anonymum Libelli ... cui
-titulus Stricturæ Breves in Epistolas D.D. Genevensium & Oxoniensium.
-
- Oxonii, e Theatro Sheldoniano, ... MDCviii, 4^o.
-
- An error for 1708.
-
-
-18. ¬Wycliff¬, John. [_woodcut._] | TVVO SHORT TREA-|TISES, AGAINST THE
-| _Orders of the Begging Friars_, | _compiled by_ | THAT | _FAMOVS
-DOCTOVR OF THE CHVRCH_, | _and Preacher of Gods word_ JOHN WICKLIFFE, |
-_sometime fellow of Merton, and Master of_ | _Ballioll Coll. in Oxford,
-and afterwards_ | Parson of Lutterworth in Lece-|_stershire_. |
-Faithfully Printed according to two ancient | Manuscript Copies, extant,
-the one in | Benet Colledge in Cambridge, the o-|ther remaining in the
-Publike Li-| brarie at Oxford. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1608: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 62 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _thow shalt
- haue_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “Faults escaped in
- the printing ...”: (3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to sir Thomas Flemynge,
- lord chief justice of England: signed “Tho: Iames,” “from the Publike
- Librarie in Oxford. Feb. 10. 1608”: 1–17, “A complaint of Iohn
- VVickliffe, exhibited to the King and Parliament”: 19–62, “A Treatise
- of Iohn VVickliffe against the orders of Friars”: (1–2) “An exposition
- of the hardest words,” a glossary.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 468. This is still the only printed
- edition of these two works of Wyclif, edited by dr. James. The usual
- titles of the treatises are “Four Articles” and “Objections of
- Freres.” This book is usually found with the James volume above, which
- is alluded to in the dedication. Dr. James does not specify the MSS.
- from which these treatises are printed, but MS. C.C.C. (Cambr.) 296
- seems to have both, while MS. Bodley 647 only contains the latter of
- the two.
-
-
- 1609.
-
-1. ¬Butler¬, Charles. THE | _FEMININE MONARCHIE_ | OR | A TREATISE
-CONCERNING BEES, | AND THE DVE ORDERING OF THEM: | _Wherein_ | The
-truth, found out by experience and diligent | observation, discovereth
-the idle and fond | conceipts, which many haue writ-|ten anent this
-subiect. | _By_ | CHAR: BVTLER Magd. | [_device._] |
-
- Impr. 7: 1609: (eights) 12^o: pp. [240], signn. _a_^4 _b_, A-N^8 O^4:
- sign. B 1^r beg. _animum, artem_, L 1^r _In Aquarius_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—sign. _a_ 1^r, title: _a_ 2^r-_a_ 4^r, “The preface to the
- Reader”, dated from Wotton (St. Lawrence) 11 July 1609: _a_ 4^v-_b_
- 1^r, three commendatory poems, by Warner South (Latin) and A. Crosley:
- _b_ 1^v-_b_ 8^v, “The contents of this Booke”: A 1^r-O 4^v, the
- treatise.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 209, and 1633 B, 1634 B, 1682 B (in
- Latin): there are also edd. at Lond. 1623 and (in Latin) 1673. This is
- a remarkable book, from the style and evident practical experience of
- its author. Rude engravings occur on signn. C 7^r, C 7^v and (the
- first music printed at Oxford) F 1^r. The author mentions incidentally
- in the preface that a book on bees by T. H. of London (presumably
- Thomas Hill’s ©Profitable instructions for the ordering of bees©,
- Lond. 1579 and 1593) is really a plagiarism from Georgius Pictorius.
-
-
-2. ¬Du Moulin¬, Pierre (_d._ 1658). HERACLITUS: | OR | MEDITATIONS VPON
-THE | vanity & misery of humane life, first | written in French by that
-excel-|lent Scholler & admirable di-|vine _Peter Du Moulin_ Mi-|nister
-of the sacred | word in the refor-|med Church | of Paris: | _And
-translated into English by_ | R. S. Gentleman. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1609: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [14] + 121 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _time is_, 111 _will say_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) Epistle dedicatorie “to his much honored Father: S. F. S.”:
- (7–13) “The authors epistle dedicatory to the Lady Ann of Rohan,
- Sister to the Duke of Rohan”, signed “Peter du Moulin”: 1–121, the
- work.
-
- See 1634 D. The original edition of Pierre Du Moulin’s Héraclite, ou
- de la Vanité et Misère de la vie humaine was printed in 1609. The
- present translator was probably Robert Stafford of Exeter college, who
- matr. on 15 Mar. 1604/5 at the age of 16, his father being sir Francis
- (?) Stafford, see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 291, and especially Bliss’s
- MS. additions in his own copy of the ©Athenæ© in the Bodleian. The
- coincidence of initials with Richard Smith in the 1634 edition seems
- to be accidental. See next art.
-
-
-3. ——. [Another issue, almost identical in appearance, but entirely
-reprinted: easy tests of the two issues are such as (1) on the titlepage
-of this second issue, if it be the second, the fourth line begins
-immediately under the beginning of the third line, whereas in the first
-issue it begins an _em_ to the right: (2) the O of the imprint is upside
-down in the first issue: (3) in the title of the author’s Epistle the
-second issue has “Anne”, the first “Ann”: (4) p. 41 l. 6 of text, the
-first issue has “Enuy”, the second “Envy”: (5) p. 121 l. 1 of text, the
-first issue ends with “God”, the second with “God is.” But it is
-difficult to say which is a reprint of the other: the second issue is
-more modern in spelling and type, and the woodcut ornaments are possibly
-less worn in the first. In fact it is conceivable that the second issue
-is in reality a few years later.]
-
-
-4. ¬D\[unster¬], I[ohn]. A | CONFESSION OF | CHRISTIAN RELIGION. |
-[four _mottos_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1609: (eights) 12^o: pp. 52 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _and
- punishment_: English Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–48, the treatise:
- on p. 48 “Etiam sic sentio, sic credo. I. D.”.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 42. This is a reprint,
- omitting the poem at the end, of 1607 D. The paging is wild.
-
-
-5. ¬H\[eale¬], W[illiam]. AN | APOLOGIE | FOR VVOMEN. | OR | AN
-OPPOSITION TO M^r. | D^r. G. his assertion. Who held | in the Act at
-Oxforde. | _Anno._ 1608. | _That it was lawfull for husbands to beate_ |
-_their wiues._ | By W. H. of Ex. in Ox. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1609: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 66: p. 11 beg. _lemnize marriage_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication “to the
- honourable and right-vertuous Ladie, the Ladie M. H. ...”: (5) “The
- contents of this Apologie”: (6) the arms of the University: 1–66, the
- work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 89, where Wood states that the author was
- William Heale and the person opposed dr. William Gager, D.C.L. in
- 1589. The question “An liceat marito uxorem verberare” was one of
- those selected for the degree of D.C.L., 11 July 1608, but Gager was
- neither inceptor nor respondent. The lady M. H. seems from the
- dedication to have commanded Heale to undertake the task of replying
- and to have allowed him scant time in which to do it.
-
-
-6. ¬Reuter¬, Adam. EX L. VT | VIM 3. D. IVST: | ET JVRE. | _QVÆSTIONES_
-| Iuris controversi | 12. | _Auctore_ | ADAMO REVTER. Cotbusio L. |
-Siles. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1609: sm. 4^o: pp. [56], signn. A-G^4: sign. B 1^r beg. _pi
- patitur_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to New
- College, dated “Cursim ex Musæo. Oxon.” 1 Jan. “1609”: (5–56) the 12
- quaestiones.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 420. Wood is mistaken in calling Reuter a
- Welshman. He was a Silesian from Cottbus, as he testifies above and in
- the admission register of the Bodleian, 3 Sept. 1608. L probably
- stands for Licentiatus utriusque juris. He was never matriculated.
-
-
-7. ¬Sanderson¬, John. INSTITVTIONVM | DIALECTICARVM | _Libri Quatuor_, |
-_A_ | IOANNE SANDERSONO, | Lancastrensi, Anglo, Liberalium | _artium
-Magistro, et sacræ Theologiæ_ | _Doctore, Metropolitanæ Ec-_|clesiæ
-Cameracensis Ca-|nonico, conscripti. | _Editio quarta._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1609: 8^o: pp. [4] + 91 + [1]: beg. ^h_Propriū est_: Brevier
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Auctoris praefatio. Ad
- iuventutem bonarum artium studiosam”: 5–91, the work.
-
- A reprint of 1602 S, which see.
-
-
- 1610.
-
-1. ¬Benefield¬, Sebastian. DOCTRINÆ CHRISTIANÆ | SEX CAPITA, | _TOTIDEM
-PRÆLECTIONIBVS_ | _in Scholâ Theologicâ Oxoniæ pro formâ_ | _habitis
-discussa, &_ | _disceptata_. | ACCESSIT APPENDIX AD CA-|put secundum, de
-Consiliis Evangelicis, in | quâ ad omnes SS. PATRVM autorita-|tes, ab
-HVMPHREDO LEECHIO | pro iisdem asserendis citatas, | respondetur. |
-AVTORE | SEBASTIANO BENEFIELD. | SS. THEOLOGIÆ D. COLLEGII | Corporis
-Christi Socio. | [_motto_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1610: sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + 208 + [12]: p. 11 beg. _&
- Sacerdotes_, 111 _ci me dedet_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) dedication to bp. George Abbot, dated “Oxon. è Collegio Corporis
- Christi. Junii 7. 1610”: (7) “Catalogus eorum quæ hoc opere
- continentur”: (9–20) præfatio ad Academicos Oxonienses, 10 June 1610:
- 1–208, the work: p. 145 is a titlepage:—“APPENDIX | AD CAPVT |
- SECVNDVM, DE | CONSILIIS EVANGELI-|CIS, in quâ ad omnes S. S. PA-|TRVM
- autoritates, ab HVM-|PHREDO LEECHIO pro | _iisdem asserendis
- cita-_|_tas, respondetur_. | AVTORE | SEBASTIANO BENEFIELD. | SS.
- THEOLOGIÆ D. COLLEGII | Corporis Christi Oxon. Socio. | [2 _mottos_,
- then _woodcuts_, then impr. 7 and date]: (1–4) “Index locorum Sacræ
- Scripturæ ...”: (5–12) “Index rerum”: (12) “Ad lectorem ... Errata
- typographica ...” (corrected in some copies.)
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 488. This work is a reply to a challenge
- from Leech.
-
-
-2. ¬Bunny¬, Edmund. OF DIVORCE | FOR ADVLTERIE, AND | Marrying againe:
-that there is | _no sufficient warrant so to do_. | _VVITH A NOTE IN THE
-END_, | _that_ R. P. _many yeeres since was answered._ | By EDM. BVNNY
-Bachelour of Divinitie. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1610: sm. 4^o: pp. [22] + 171 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _ces,
- which_, 111 _they had not_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–5) Dedication to archbp. Bancroft, dated Oxford, 3 July 1610:
- (6–11) the preface, dated Bolton Percy, 13 Dec. 1595: (12–18) “An
- Advertisement to the Reader,” dated Oxford 4 June 1610: (19–20) “The
- Contents of the Treatice ...”: (21–22) “The Table of Method” an
- inserted quarto leaf folded, printed on the recto only, a logical plan
- of the argument: 1–171, the treatise: (1–3) “Another note for the
- Reader” against R. P. and Radford, dated Oxford, 22 June 1610: (4–9)
- “The Alphabet Table ...,” an index.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 222. The dedication states that the
- treatise was completed many years before (1595?) and that archbp.
- Whitgift had it in his hands and approved it. The advertisement gives
- further details of the occasion and history of the treatise. The note
- alludes to Bunny’s connexion with Robert Parsons’ ©Resolution© or
- ©Directory©, see 1585 P, and J. Radford’s ©Directory©. See 1613 B.
-
-
-3. ¬Dunster¬, John. CÆSARS PENNY, | _OR_ | A SERMON OF | OBEDIENCE,
-PROVING | by the practise of all ages, that all per-|_sons ought to be
-subiect to the_ | _King, as to the Su-_|_periour_. | PREACHED AT S^t
-MARIES | in Oxford at the Assises the 24 | of Iuly 1610. | BY | JOHN
-DVNSTER _Master of Arts and Fel-_|_low of Magdal. Colledge_. | [_motto_,
-then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1610: (eights) 12^o: pp. [6] + 38 + [4]: p. 11 beg.
- _offendere nō_: English Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–6)
- dedication to George Abbot bp. of London: 1–38, the sermon, on 1 Pet.
- ii. 13–14.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 142.
-
-
-4. ¬Holyoke¬, Francis. A | SERMON OF OBEDIENCE | ESPECIALLY VNTO
-AVTHORITIE | Ecclesiasticall wherein the principall controver-|sies of
-our church are handled, and many of | their obiections which are
-refractorie to | the government established, answered | _though briefly
-as time and space could_ | _permit; being preached at a Visita-_|_tion
-of the Right Worsh:_ | _M_^r D. HINTON, | _in Coventree_. | _By_ | FRAN:
-HOLYOKE. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1610: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 32: p. 11 beg. _readeth, receiueth_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) short dedication to sir
- Clement Throckmerton: (3–4) preface to the author signed I. D. H.:
- 1–32, the sermon, on Hebr. xiii. 17: 32, “To the Reader”, an apology
- for the rude style.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 346: and 1613 H. The author is the
- well-known writer of the Latin and English Dictionary. From the
- preface it is clear that the sermon, which is written in an
- uncompromising tone, caused great opposition in Coventry, of which
- town some curious details of the puritanical feeling are given: it is
- now published “not altogether against” the author’s mind. See 1613 H.
-
-
-5. ¬James¬, Thomas. BELLVM GREGORIANVM | SIVE | CORRVPTI-|ONIS ROMANÆ IN
-OPE-|RIBUS D. GREGORII M. JUS-|su Pontificum Rom. recognitis atq¿ue¿ |
-editis, ex Typographia Vaticana, | _Loca insigniora, observata à_ |
-_Theologis ad hoc offici-_|_um deputatis_. [three _stars_: then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1610: sm. 4^o: pp. [8], sign. A^4: p. 7 beg. _Romæ_ 1591:
- Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) dedication to English
- theologians by “Tho. Iames” in Latin: (3–4) preface “benevolo
- lectori”: (5–7) the list of passages: (7–8) conclusion: (8) list of
- MSS. used.
-
- A table of passages corrupted in the Rome edition of 1591 and the Bâle
- ed. of 1564, of the Epistolae, Moralia and Pastoralia of Gregory the
- Great, compared with the readings of MSS. in the Bodleian, New, Oriel,
- Merton, Corpus and St. John’s colleges, and belonging to Richard
- Bancroft, archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Allen, and Rich. Hooker,
- the task being undertaken by 12 theologians.
-
-
-6. ¬Price¬, Daniel. [_line_] | THE | [_line_] | DEFENCE | OF TRVTH
-AGAINST A | _booke falsely called_ | THE TRIVMPH OF TRVTH | sent over
-from Arras A. D. 1609. | BY | HVMFREY LEECH late Minister. | _Which
-booke in all particulars is answered_, | _and the adioining Motiues of
-his_ | _revolt confuted_: | BY | DANIELL PRICE, of Exeter Colledge in |
-Oxford, Chaplaine in ordinary to the most high | and mighty, the
-_Prince_ of _Wales_. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1610: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 379 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _ving to
- vindicate_, 111 _your soule_: English Roman. Contents—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) dedication to the Prince of Wales: 1–379, the work: (1) a
- postscript: then “Errata.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 511. The book is an answer to Leech’s ©A
- triumph of truth. Or declaration of the doctrine concerning
- Evangelicall counsayles; lately delivered in Oxford ...© _n. pl._
- 1609, 8^o: and appears to reprint the whole of the latter work.
-
-
-7. ¬Rainolds¬, John. SVMMA COLLO-|QVII JOHANNIS RAINOLDI | CVM JOHANNE
-HARTO | _De Capite & Fide Ecclesiæ_ | UBI VARIÆ OBITER TRACTANTUR
-QVÆSTI-|ones, de _Sufficientia_, & _orthodoxa expositione Scripturarum_,
-_Ministerio_ | _Ecclesiæ_, _Functione Sacerdotali_, _Sacrificio Missæ_,
-unà cum aliis, | quȩ in religione agitantur controversiis; prȩcipuè |
-verò, & ex instituto, quæstio de _Ecclesiæ regi-_|_mine_, explicata in
-iis quȩ de Christi su-|premâ Monarchiâ, de Petri prȩ-|tensâ, Papȩ
-usurpatâ, Princi-|pis _legitimâ supremitate_ | disputantur. | _A JOHANNE
-RAINOLDO CONSCRIPTA, CONVENIENTER COM-_|pendiis illis quæ uterque
-scripto mandârat: examinata demum, à JOHAN-|NE HARTO, atq¿ue¿ (post
-addita quædam, quædam mutata ut ipsi | commodum videbatur) pro fideli
-narratione eorum, quæ | inter ipsos in Colloquio disserebantur, | habita
-& comprobata. | ANTE QVATVOR ET VIGINTI ANNOS EX AN-|_glico sermone in
-Latinum versa, nunc autem primùm jussu, curáq¿ue¿ Reverendis-_|_simi
-atq¿ue¿ vigilantissimi Præsulis_, RICHARDI BANCROFTI, | _Cantuariensis
-Archi-episcopi_ (_qui non domesticarum modò_, | _quibus præest, sed
-etiam exterarum Ecclesiarum_ | _bono impensè studet_,) _è situ & pulvere
-evo-_|_cata, & in lucem emissa_. | HENRICO PARRAEO, _Gloucestrensi
-Episcopo, interprete_. | [_line._] | [_device._] | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1610: (sixes), la. 8^o or perhaps fol.: pp. [16] + 402 +
- [14]: p. 11 beg. _bras; neque_, 111 _tit, & præ_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7) dedication to Christian iv, king of
- Denmark (brother of the Queen) by Parry: (9–10) “Iohannes Hartus
- candido Lectori,” dated “ex Arce Londinensi, Julii 7”: (11–16)
- “Johannes Rainoldus alumnis anglicorum Seminariorum Romæ & Rhemis”:
- 1–402, the work: (3–11) “Index rerum ...”: (12–14) “Index locorum
- Sacræ Scripturæ”: (14) “Errata typographica: quorum quædam in omnibus,
- quædam in quibusdam exemplaribus tantùm.” Every page is within a
- border of lines.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 15. The original ©Summe of the
- Conference© was published at London in 1584 &c. The conference itself
- was at the Tower of London in about 1583, see Gillow’s ©English
- Catholics© iii (1888?). 155.
-
-
- 1611.
-
-1. ¬Benefield¬, Sebastian. A | SERMON | PREACHED IN S^t MARIES | Church
-in Oxford, March xxiv. MDCX. | at the solemnizing of the happy
-in-|_auguration of our gracious sove-_|_raigne_ KING IAMES. | WHEREIN IS
-PROVED THAT KINGS DOE | hold their kingdomes immediately from God. |
-_By_ | SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD D. of Divinitie | _Fellow of Corpus Christi
-College_. |[_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1611: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 18 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _vp, is
- avowed_: English Roman. Contents.—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to
- John King, bp. of London, dated “from my study in Corpus Christi
- College. Septemb. 9. 1611”: 1–18, the sermon, on Ps. xxi. 6.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 488. The Bp. of London had only been
- consecrated the day before this dedication.
-
-
-2. Davies, John. Microcosmos: see 1603 D.
-
-
-3. ¬Jesuit’s Pater Noster.¬ THE | IESVITES PATER | NOSTER | _Giuen_ | TO
-PHILIP III KING | of SPAINE for his new | _yeares gift this present_ |
-yea e. 1611. | _Together with the Ave Maria._ | Written first in French:
-Engli-|shed by _W. I._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: (four) 16^o or 12^o: pp. [8], sign. A^4: sign. A 3^r beg.
- _There are_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title, within a
- border: A 2^r-A 3^v, “The Jesuits Pater Noster,” beg. “O Mighty
- Phillip King Of men”: A 4^r-A 4^v, “The Ave Maria to the Queene of
- France”, beg. “WHen Iudas with a kisse betraid his Lord.”
-
- The only copy known is in the British Museum. A bitter satire against
- the Jesuits. In each piece the stanzas consist of four English lines
- and a Latin clause of the Pater Noster or Ave Maria (24 and 8
- respectively). This piece was probably not printed at Oxford, two of
- the woodcuts being not otherwise found there.
-
-
-4. ¬Reinolds¬, John. EPIGRAMMATA, | AVCTORE IOAN-|NE REINOLDO IN LL. |
-Baccalaureo. Novi Colle-|gij socio. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1611: (eight) 12^o: pp. [16], sign. A^8: sign. A 4^r beg.
- 21. _Guiderius_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 1^v
- divisions of “Prima Chilias complectens disticha tantùm anthrôpina in
- decem centurias divisa”. (Reges, Episcopi, Barones, Doctores, Equites,
- Graduati, Armigeri, Scholares, Generosi, Generalia): A 2^r “Prima
- centuria reges Britannici & Anglici in Honorem regis Jacobi,” with a
- motto: A 2^v “Elenchum personarum tibi lector exhiberemus, nisi
- libellus ipse esset pro Elencho”: A 2^r-A 8^v the prima Centuria, 111
- Latin distiches: A 8^v “Ad Lectorem,” promising 10 Centuriae.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 148, and 1612 R. This is a first
- instalment of 111 distiches on Kings and Queens of Britain: only the
- second part (Episcopi) seems to have subsequently seen the light, in
- 1612.
-
-
- 1612.
-
-1. ¬Cleland¬, James. The Instruction of | a young Noble-man, | BY |
-IAMES CLELAND. | [_woodcut: the whole title is within a border of
-ornament._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: in every other point identical with 1607 C.
-
- This is a reissue of the sheets of 1607 C, errata and all, with a new
- titlepage sewn in, the old one being torn off. The new titlepage was
- not printed at Oxford, as is shown by the woodcut ornaments and
- general style, but probably by W. Stansby for John Barnes in London.
-
-
-2. ¬Day¬, John, of Oriel college, Oxford. CONCIO AD CLERVM. | Habita in
-Templo _B. Mariæ_ Oxon. | _Iunij_ 25 _Ann. Dom._ 1612. | JOANNES c. 9.
-v. 1. [_error for_ 4] | _Donec_ DIES _est_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 25 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Magistratus
- indicat_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2–3) Latin
- dedication to the heads of Colleges and Halls at Oxford, signed
- “Joannes Dayus,” with a list of the Heads: (4) text of the sermon, 2
- Kings vi. 1–4: 1–25, the sermon: (2–3) Latin letter from Day to dr.
- Thomas Clayton, dated from Oriel coll. Oxford, 11 July (1612).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 412, and 1615 D. The dedication gives a
- complete list of the Heads of Houses, and two official orders of the
- Colleges, in dignity, and in antiquity. The letter gives details of
- possible future publications by Day and personal points about dr.
- Clayton, who advised the printing of this sermon. At p. 21 is a list
- of Founders of Colleges.
-
-
-3. ¬Day¬, John. Concio ad Clerum “In Joh. 9. 4. Oxon. 1612. qu[arto].”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 412, after the notice of the preceding
- art., and no doubt due to confusion with it.
-
-
-4. ¬Day¬, John. DAVIDS DESIRE | TO GO TO CHVRCH: | as it was published
-in two | Sermons in _S_^t _Maries_ | in Oxford. | The _One_ the _fift_
-of _November_ in the After-|noone to the Vniversity 1609. The | _Other_
-on Christmas Day fo llow-|ing to the Parishioners | of that place. |
-_By_ | IOHN DAY Bachelour of Divinity, and one of the _Fellowes_ of |
-_Oriell Colledge_. | [_motto_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 104: p. 11 beg. _Even that_:
- English Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) [not seen]: (3) title: (5)
- dedication to Oriel college and St. Mary’s parish, Oxford: (7–15) “The
- Epistle dedicatorie”: 1–57 the 1st sermon, on Ps. xxvii. 4: 57, an
- Erratum: 59–104, the 2nd sermon, on the same.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 412, and 1615 D. The second sermon is
- stated by the author to have been his first preached as Vicar of St.
- Mary’s, succeeding mr. Wharton. At p. 40 he mentions Tuesday as a
- proverbially fatal day to the Irish.
-
-
-5. ¬Du Moulin¬, Pierre, the elder. THE WATERS OF SILOE. | TO QVENCH |
-THE FIRE OF PVRGATORY | and to drowne the traditions, Lim-|boes, mans
-satisfactions and all Popish | Indulgences, against the rea-|_sons and
-allegations of a Portu-_|_gall Frier of the order of_ | S^t. Frances,
-_suppor-_|_ted by three_ | _treatises_. | The one written by the same
-Franciscan and | entituled _The fierie torrent, &c._ | The other two by
-two Doctors of Sorbon. | The one intituled _The burning furnasse_. The |
-other _The fire of Helie_. | BY | PETER DV MOVLIN Minister of | Gods
-word. | [_motto_] | Faithfully translated out of French by _I. B._ |
-
- Impr. 30: 1612: (eights) 12^o: pp. [34] + 406: p. 11 beg. _assured
- of_, 111 _one part of_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7)
- Epistle dedicatory to “sir Dudley Digs,” signed “I. B.”: (9–32) “The
- Preface to the Reader”: (33–34) “The Contents of this booke”: 1–406,
- the work, entitled “A Confutation of Purgatory.”
-
- The Friar against whom this book was written was Jacques (sign. A 4^r)
- i. e. Jacques Suares, and the two Doctors were P. V. Palma Cayer and
- A. Duval (sign. A 3^v). The first French edition was printed in 1603,
- entitled ©Accroissement des eaux de Siloé ...© The work is one of Du
- Moulin’s less known productions.
-
-
-6. ¬Henry¬, prince, _d._ 1612. [_woodcuts_] | EIDYLLIA | IN OBITVM
-FVLGENTISSIMI | HENRICI | Walliæ Principis duodecimi, Romæq¿ue¿ ruentis
-| Terroris maximi, | _Quo nihil maius meliúsve terris_ | _Fata donavere,
-boniq¿ue¿ Divi_ | _Nec dabunt, quamvis redeant in aurum_ | _Tempora
-priscum_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [36], signn. A-D^4 E^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Amyntas_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r, short
- dedication to the memory of prince Henry, in Latin: A 3^r-E 2^r, the
- poems: E 2^v “Lectori ξυναποθνήσκοντι,” an epilogue.
-
- The writers and editor of these poems on the death of Prince Henry are
- more disguised than usual. The editor was undoubtedly “Jacobus
- Aretius,” i. e. James Martin, of Broadgates hall. There is one poem in
- Chaldee (Hebrew type), one in Syriac, one in Arabic, one in Turkish
- (all three in Roman type) and a few in Greek. There are three Idylls,
- “Amyntas,” “Tityrus,” and “Daphnis,” in Latin hexameter verse,
- presumably by the Editor.
-
-
-7. ——. LVCTVS POSTHVMVS | SIVE | ERGA DEFVN-|CTVM ILLVSTRIS-|SIMVM
-HENRICVM WAL-|LIÆ PRINCIPEM, COL-|legij Beatæ MARIæ MAGDALENæ | apud
-Oxonienses Mecænatem | longè indulgentissimum, | _Magdalenensium
-of-_|ficiosa Pietas. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 62 + [8]: p. 11 beg. _Multâque
- Myrrhæ_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) distich, within a
- border: 1–62, the poems: 1–7, “... Oratio funebris habita apud
- Magdalenenses tempore Prandij exequialis, 7^o Decemb. quo die
- desideratiss. Principi Henrici funeri iusta persoluta fuere,” signed
- “Accep. Frewen.”
-
- Poems, chiefly in Latin (a few in Greek and one Spanish), by members
- of Magdalen College, on the death of Prince Henry (_d._ 6 Nov. 1612),
- who was connected with the College through his tutor John Wilkinson.
-
-
-8. ¬Hooker¬, dr. Richard. [_woodcut._] | THE | ANSVVERE | _OF_ | M^r.
-RICHARD HOOKER TO A | _SVPPLICATION PREFERRED_ | by M^r. WALTER TRAVERS
-to | the H H. Lords of the Pri-|_vie Counsell_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 32 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _ver heard
- that_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–32, the Answer.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 697, and under _Travers_, below: both
- treatises have often been reprinted. This and the following treatises
- by Hooker seem to have been edited by Henry Jackson, see Wood’s ©Ath.
- Oxon.©, iii. 577.
-
-
-9. ——. A | LEARNED | AND COMFORTA-|BLE SERMON OF THE | certaintie and
-perpetuitie of | _faith in the Elect; especially_ | _of the Prophet
-Habak-_|_kuks faith_. | BY | RICHARD HOOKER, SOME-|times fellow of
-Corpus Christi | _College in Oxford_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 17 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _ly enimy is_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title; 1–17, the sermon, on Hab. i. 4.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 697.
-
-
-10. ——. A | LEARNED | DISCOVRSE OF IV-|STIFICATION, WORKES, | and how
-the foundation of faith | _is overthrowne_. | _By_ | RICHARD HOOKER,
-sometimes Fellow | of Corpus Christi College | _in Oxford_. | ⁂ |
-[_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 69 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _should make
- vs_, 61, _men, how many_: English Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–4)
- “To the Christian reader” signed “from Corpus Christi College in
- Oxford” “Henry Iackson”: 1–69, the Sermon (on Hab. i. 4): (2–3) (not
- seen).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 697. This is the first edition, and
- apparently the first of Jackson’s issues of Hooker’s sermons.
-
-
-11. ——. [_woodcut._] | A | LEARNED | SERMON OF | THE NATVRE | _OF
-PRIDE_, | BY | RICHARD HOOKER, SOME-|times fellow of Corpus Christi |
-_College in Oxford_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 17 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _dome as my_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–17, the sermon, on Hab. ii.
- 4.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 697.
-
-
-12. ——. [_woodcut_] | A | REMEDIE | AGAINST SOR-|ROW AND FEARE, |
-delivered in a funerall | _Sermon_, | BY | RICHARD HOOKER, SOME-|times
-fellow of Corpus Christi | _College in Oxford_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 14: p. 11 beg. _full and
- faintharted_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–14, the sermon,
- on John xiv. 27.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 697.
-
-
-13. ¬James¬, dr. Thomas. _The Iesuits Downefall_, | THREATNED | AGAINST
-THEM | BY THE SECVLAR | Priests for their wicked liues, accur-|_sed
-manners, Hereticall doctrine, and more then Matchiavil-_|_lian Policie_.
-| _TOGETHER_ | WITH THE LIFE OF FATHER | PARSONS _AN ENGLISH_ |
-_IESVITE_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 72: p. 11 beg. _by a secular_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–9) Epistle dedicatory to the
- “Iudges and Iustices of Peace for the Countie of Oxon.”, dated “From
- the Publique Library in Oxford, Sept. 16. 1612”, signed “Tho. James”:
- (10–12) “The Propositions”: 1–51, 100 propositions against Jesuits
- stated and commented on: 52–72, the Life of Parsons.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. A story is told at p. 53 of
- Parsons disfurnishing the Balliol College Library of “many ancient
- bookes and rare Manuscripts”, and of his expulsion at a later period
- from the College.
-
-
-14. [¬Mornay¬, Philippe de, seigneur Du Plessis.] [_woodcuts._] | TWO |
-HOMILIES | CONCERNING | the meanes how to re-|_solue the
-controver-_|_sies of this time_. | ⁂⁂ | _Translated out of French._ |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [4] + 138: p. 11 beg. _it be_, 111
- _the one_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “To the
- Reader”: 1–71, homily on Matt. xvii. 5 (_Hunc audite_): 72–138, homily
- on Matt. xix. 8 (_Non sic fuit ab initio_): 138, “Errata.”
-
- Rare. There is another issue of this book in the same year, identical
- in every respect, even to the Errata, except that on the title after
- the asterisks and before the woodcuts come the words “_First written
- in French by_ Ph. | Mornay, _and now translated_ | _into English_”
- instead of the single line of the first issue. The second issue
- appears to be less rare. In each sign. A 1 is almost entirely gone,
- which consisted of the titlepage in some early form before a preface
- was decided on. The preface even in the second issue pretends that the
- author is unknown to the translator: who _may_ be identical with the
- “I. V.” of 1615 M.
-
-
-15. ¬Panke¬, John. _ECLOGARIVS_, | OR BRIEFE SVMME | OF THE TRVTH OF
-THAT | Title of Supreame Governour, given | to his Maiestie in causes
-Spirituall, | and Ecclesiasticall, from the Kings of Israell, | in the
-old Testament; the Christian Em-|perours in the Primitiue Church; |
-confirmed by 40. Epistles of Leo the Bishop of Rome, vnto | the
-Emperours, Theo-|dosius, Martianus, | and Leo. | _Not published before._
-| _BY_ | IOHN PANKE. | [_motto_: then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: (eights) 12^o: pp. [2] + (82 + ?): p. 11 beg. _may take
- an oath_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1-(82-?) the treatise.
-
- Very rare. The running title is “The truth of the oath | of
- Supremacie.” All after p. 82 (sign. F 2) is at present unknown, the
- British Museum copy being imperfect: but probably other copies exist.
-
-
-16. ¬Sclater¬, William, of King’s college, Cambridge. [_woodcut._] | THE
-| CHRISTIANS | STRENGTH. | _BY_ | WILLIAM SCLATER. | BATCHELAR OF
-DIVINITY | _and Minister of the word of God at_ PIT-|MISTER _in
-Somerset_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 17 + [3]: p. 11 beg. ^k_Be warmed_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to William
- Hill of Pitmi[n]ster: 1–17, the sermon, on Phil. iv. 13.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 228.
-
-
-17. ——. [_woodcut._] | THE | MINISTERS | PORTION. | _BY_ | WILLIAM
-SCLATER. | BATCHELAR OF DIVINITY | _and Minister of the Word of God at_
-PIT-|MISTER _in Somerset_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 49 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Christs
- priesthood_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
- to Thomas Southcot of Moones-Ottery in Devon: 1–49, the sermon, on 1
- Cor. ix. 13–14.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 228.
-
-
-18. ——. [_woodcut._] | THE | SICK SOVLS | SALVE. | _BY_ | WILLIAM
-SCLATER. | BATCHELAR OF DIVINITY | _and Minister of the word of God at_
-PIT-|MISTER _in Somerset_. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 36: p. 11 beg. _wish? The_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to John and Anna
- Horner of Melles in Somerset: 1–36, the sermon, on Prov. xviii. 14.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 228.
-
-
-19. ¬Smith¬, capt. John. _A MAP OF VIRGINIA_ | VVIT¿H¿ A DESCRIPTI-|ON
-OF THE COVNTREY, THE | Commodities, People, Govern-|ment and Religion. |
-_VVritten by Captaine_ SMITH, _sometimes Go-_|_vernour of the Countrey._
-| WHEREVNTO IS ANNEXED THE | proceedings of those Colonies, since their
-first | departure from England, with the discourses, | Orations, and
-relations of the Salvages, | and the accidents that befell | them in all
-their Iournies | and discoveries. | _TAKEN FAITHFVLLY AS THEY_ | _were
-written out of the writings of_ | DOCTOR RVSSELL. RICHARD WIEFIN. | THO.
-STVDLEY. WILL. PHETTIPLACE. | ANAS TODKILL. NATHANIEL POVVELL. | IEFFRA
-ABOT RICHARD POTS. | And the relations of divers other diligent
-observers there | _present then, and now many of them in England_. | _By
-VV. S._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + map + 39 + [5] + 110 + [2]: p. 11
- beg. _some neere_, also _Such actions_, 101 _those humors_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication “To the hand” (explained
- by “I found it only dedicated to a Hand, and to that hand I addresse
- it”), signed “T. A.”: (5–7) glossary of Indian words, with a few
- sentences &c.: after p. (8) a map, see below: 1–39, “The description
- of Virginia by captaine Smith”: (2) title, “The proceedings of the
- English colonie” &c. as next art.: (4–5) “To the Reader”, signed “T.
- Abbay”: 1–110, the Proceedings.
-
- Very rare: priced in Quaritch’s Rough List 88, (1888), no. 174 (cf.
- 181), at £125: the map alone at £40. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 650.
- The map of Virginia which follows p. 8 is about 12–15/16 in. high ×
- 16⅜ in. broad, taking the extreme limits of the copperplate (the inner
- bounding line is 12⅜ × 15¾ in.): the title “Virginia” is on a scroll,
- and below the Scale of Leagues is “Discovered and Discribed by Captain
- Iohn Smith | Grauen by William Hole”: at the top left corner (to the
- reader) is a picture of Powhatan in state, and at the top right corner
- a figure of a “Sasquesahanoug” man. This first state of the map ought
- _not_ to have “1607” below the inscription about Powhatan, _nor_
- “1606” below the word “Smith” in the words below the Scale, _nor_
- “Page 41 | Smith” in the lower right corner, _nor_ the latitude and
- longitude marks on any side except the base; all of which additions
- are on the reissue of the map in Smith’s ©General Historie of Virginia
- ...© (Lond. 1624, fol.), and also in the reissue in ©Purchas his
- Pilgrimes©, 4th part, Lond. 1625, except that instead of “Page 41
- Smith” there is in the upper right (?) corner “1690,” a reference to
- the page.
-
- The W. S. of the first part is the rev. William Simmonds, D.D. of
- Magd. Coll. Oxford, for some time a resident in Virginia, see Wood’s
- ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 142, while the publisher of both parts was Thomas
- Abbay. The whole of the first part with trifling changes is reprinted
- in Smith’s ©Generall Historie of Virginia© (London. 1624, fol.) bk. 2,
- p. 21: in ©Purchas his Pilgrimes© (Lond. 1625, fol.) Lib. ix, ch. 3,
- p. 1691: and the second part, slightly abridged, in the same books,
- bk. 3, p. 41, where the glossary and map occur, but the 12th chap. is
- considerably altered: and ch. 4, p. 1705, respectively. The whole is
- carefully reprinted from the 1612 ed. by Edw. Arber in his ©English
- Scholar’s Library. Capt. John Smith ... Works.© (Birmingham, 1884),
- from whose notes the following words are taken:—
-
- [Preface to part 1].
-
- “The first part of this Work is evidently an expanded and revised text
- of that “Mappe of the Bay and Rivers, with an annexed Relation of the
- Countries and Nations that inhabit them” (p. 444), which President
- JOHN SMITH sent home, about November 1608, to the Council in London,
- as the result of his explorations in Chesapeake Bay in the previous
- summer.
-
- That this book of travels &c. should have been printed at the Oxford
- University Press is a most singular fact....
-
- The hand printing presses in England were jealously registered, and
- locked up every night, to prevent surrepti[ti]ous printing; all
- through the lifetime of our Author: and the Company of Stationers of
- London especially watched with a keen jealousy the printing operations
- of the two Universities of Cambridge and Oxford, who each possessed a
- single hand press. See W. HERBERT’S edition of J. AMES’S
- ©Typographical Antiquities©, iii, 1398, Ed. 1790, 4to.
-
- This solitary hand printing press at Oxford, usually produced sermons,
- theological and learned Works, &c.; in the midst of which, this book
- of travels crops up in a startling manner.
-
- Why could not, or would not SMITH get it printed in London? Had the
- revision of its second Part by the Rev. DR. SIMMONDS anything to do
- with the printing at Oxford? These nuts we must leave for others to
- crack.
-
- Of course, being printed at Oxford, this book was not registered at
- Stationer’s Hall, London ...
-
- It is sometimes misnamed the Oxford _tract_; but it is rather a book
- than a tract.
-
- [Preface to part 2].
-
- T. ABBAY states, ... [in his preface] respecting this second Part,
-
- _Neither am I the author, for they are many, whose particular
- discourses are signed by their names. This solid treatise, first was
- compiled by_ Richard Pots, _since passing the hands of many to pervse,
- chancing into my hands, (for that I know them honest men, and can
- partly well witnesse their relations true) I could do no lesse in
- charity to the world then reveale; nor in conscience, but approve._
-
- This Part is therefore the Vindication or Manifesto of the thirty or
- forty Gentlemen and Soldiers, who, under SMITH, saved the Colony ...
-
- This second Part of the ©Map of Virginia©, compiled, and perhaps added
- to, by RICHARD POTS, ... tested and revised by the Rev. WILLIAM
- SIMMONDS, D. D., ... and published by T. ABBAY; is a condensed summary
- of the sayings and writings of the following seven Virginian
- Colonists:
-
- _GENTLEMEN._
-
- _Original Planters_, 1607.
-
- NATHANIEL POWELL (killed in the Massacre, 22 March 1622) ...
- THOMAS STUDLEY, Cape Merchant or Colonial Storekeeper (who died 28
- August 1607) ...
-
-
- ©First Supply©, 1608.
-
- WILLIAM PHETTIPLACE, ...
- Dr. WALTER RUSSELL, ...
- RICHARD WIFFIN, ...
-
-
- ©Second Supply©, 1609.
-
- THOMAS ABBAY ...
-
-
- _SOLDIER._
-
- _Original Planter_, 1607.
-
- ANAS TODKILL ...
-
- In the revision of this text in the ©General History©, Lib. 3, in
- 1624; the testimonies of eight other Gentlemen were incorporated (not
- _invented_ as some would think) ...
-
- It is to be especially noted that, while he would endorse it all,
- Captain SMITH is not named as an author of _any portion_ of this
- Second Part, either in the title in the previous page or in the text
- itself: therefore no allusion to the POCAHONTAS deliverance should be
- expected in it; and there is none.”
-
-
-20. ¬Smith¬, capt. John, of Virginia. THE | PROCEEDINGS OF | THE ENGLISH
-COLONIE IN | Virginia since their first beginning from | England in the
-yeare of our Lord 1606, | _till this present_ 1612, _with all their_ |
-_accidents that befell them in their_ | _Iournies and Discoveries_. |
-Also the Salvages discourses, orations and relations | of the Bordering
-neighbours, and how they be-|came subiect to the English. | _Vnfolding
-even the fundamentall causes from whence haue sprang so many
-mise-_|_ries to the vndertakers, and scandals to the businesse: taken
-faith-_|_fully as they were written out of the writings of Thomas_ |
-_Studley the first provant maister, Anas Todkill, Walter_ | _Russell
-Doctor of Phisicke, Nathaniell Powell_, | _William Phettyplace, Richard
-Wyffin, Tho-_|_mas Abbay, Tho: Hope, Rich. Polts and_ | _the labours of
-divers other dili-_|_gent observers, that were_ | _residents in
-Virginia._ | _And pervsed and confirmed by diverse now resident in_ |
-_England that were actors in this busines._ | By W. S. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: strictly speaking part of the preceding art., which
- see.
-
-
-21. ¬Smyth¬, rev. Richard, of Barnstaple. MVNITION A-|GAINST MANS |
-_MISERY AND_ | _MORTALITY_. | _A_ | TREATICE CONTAI-|ning the most
-effectuall remedies | against the miserable state of | man in this life,
-selected | out of the chiefest | both humane | and divine | authors; |
-_BY_ | RICHARD SMYTH _preacher of_ | _Gods word in Barstaple in_ |
-_Devonshire_. | The second Edition. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [18] + 136 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _ved
- with the_, 111 _ry bosomes_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–10) Epistle dedicatorie to lady Elizabeth Basset, dated from
- Barnstaple, 1 Jan. “1609”: (11–13) “The contents of the severall
- chapters”: (14–17) “The sinners counsell to his soule. A Sonnet of the
- Authors,” 18 quatrains, beg. “Awake ô Soule, and looke abroad”: 1–136,
- the treatise.
-
- Nothing seems to be known of the author, nor can I find mention of the
- 1st edition, presumably issued in 1609 or 1610. See 1634 S.
-
-
-22. ¬Rawlinson¬, rev. John. MERCY TO A BEAST. | _A_ | SERMON | PREACHED
-AT SAINT | MARIES SPITTLE IN | London on Tuseday in | _Easter weeke_.
-1612. | BY | IOHN RAWLINSON DOCTOR | _OF DIVINITI_ϵ. | [_University
-arms._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 52 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _sort, that
- of_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) epistle dedicatorie
- to Thomas lord Ellesmere, chancellor of the University of Oxford:
- 1–52, the sermon, on Prov. xii. 10.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 506 (where 1612 is misprinted 1602). The
- author was chaplain to lord Ellesmere.
-
-
-23. ¬Reinolds¬, John. (Antony Wood asserts, in his ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii.
-149, that the second part of John Reinolds’ Epigrammata (in Episcopos)
-was printed at Oxford in 1612 in 8^o. No copy appears now to be known.)
-
-
-24. ¬Travers¬, Walter. [_woodcut_] | A | SVPPLICATI-|ON MADE TO THE |
-PRIVY COVNSEL | BY | M^r WALTER TRAVERS. | [_University arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 25 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _there were_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–25, the treatise.
-
- This is an appeal made by Travers, who was afternoon preacher at the
- Temple in London when Hooker was Master (about 1585–91), against the
- inhibition from preaching issued against him by the Privy Council.
- Travers was ordained at Antwerp, and had imbibed Genevan doctrine with
- which he opposed Hooker. See Hooker’s ©Answer© above. Both treatises
- have been frequently reprinted, in Hooker’s ©Works©, &c. This issue
- does not seem to have been published by Travers himself, but only in
- order to accompany Hooker’s posthumously printed ©Answer©.
-
-
-25. ¬Twofold treatise.¬ [_woodcut_] | A | TVVO-FOLD | TREATISE, | THE
-ONE | _DECYPHERING THE_ | _worth of_ SPECVLATION, | _and of a retired
-life_. | THE OTHER | CONTAINING A | discoverie of YOUTH | and OLD AGE. |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1612: twelves 16^o: pp. [2] + 45 + [1] + 35 + [1]: pp. 11
- beg. _vnwilling to_, and _^her behalfe_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: 1–45, the first treatise: 1–35, the second treatise.
-
-
-26. ¬Wakeman¬, Robert. THE | CHRISTIAN | PRACTISE. | _A_ | Sermon
-preached on the Act-Sun-|_day in S. Maries Church in_ | _Oxford. Iul. 8.
-1604_. | By ROB. WAKEMAN Bachelor | _of Divinity & fellow of Balliol_ |
-_Colledge in Oxford_. | [_motto._] | The second Impression. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: (eights) 12^o: pp. 92 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _ple, but
- served_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 2, “Points handled in this
- Sermon”: 3–92, the sermon, on Acts ii. 46.
-
- See 1605 W, of which this is a verbatim reprint.
-
-
-27. ¬Wakeman¬, Robert. “Jonah’s Sermon and Ninivehs repentance (_J.
-Barnes_) 1612 ... 16_mo_.”
-
- So in the ©Catalogue of the Second ... portion of the ... library
- formed by ... Philip Bliss©, Lond. (1858), p. 6, corroborated by a MS.
- note in a Bodleian copy (once the editor’s) of Bliss’s Wood’s
- ©Athenæ©, which states that this is a third edition.
-
-
-28. ¬Wyclif¬, John. WICKLIFFES WICKET, | OR | A LEARNED AND | GODLY
-TREATISE OF | _THE SACRAMENT_, | _made by_ | JOHN WICKLIFFE. | _Set
-forth according to an ancient_ | _Printed Copie._ | ⁂ | [_University
-arms._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 18 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _comprehend
- either_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) preface “To the
- Christian Reader” about Wyclif: dated “from Corpus Christi College in
- Oxford, Iuly 6. MDCXII,” signed “Henry Iackson”: 1–18, the sermon, on
- Rom. xv. 30.
-
- For the editor see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 577. The “ancient printed
- copie” was neither of the two issues dated Nuremberg 1546, but the
- undated one (probably 1546) “overseen” by M[iles] C[overdale], though
- Coverdale’s preface is omitted. This was reprinted at Cambr. in 1851,
- and one of the others at Oxford in 1828.
-
-
- 1613.
-
-1. ¬Answer.¬ A | BRIEFE AN-|SWERE VNTO | Certaine Obiections | and
-Reasons against the Descen[/]|tion of Christ into Hell, late[/]|ly sent
-in writing vnto a | Gentleman in the | Countrey. | [_motto_, then
-_woodcut_.] |
-
- Impr. 32: 1613: the rest precisely as 1604 A.
-
- A reissue of the sheets of 1604 A, with a new titlepage not printed at
- Oxford, the woodcut on title being unknown there.
-
-
-2. ¬Basse¬, William. GREAT BRITTAINES | SVNNES-SET, | _BEWAILED WITH A
-SHOW-_|_ER OF TEARES_. | _BY_ | WILLIAM BASSE.
-
- Impr. 7 (not at foot of page, but, with date, close to rest of title):
- 1613: (eight & four) 16^o: pp. [2] + 22: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) short dedication “to his honourable master
- S^r Richard Wenman Knight”: 1–19, the poem in 8-line stanzas, one on
- each page, ending with “finis.”: 21–22, “A morning after mourning,” 2
- more stanzas, ending with “finis.”
-
- Extremely rare. This book has never been found except in fragments,
- and usually in the bindings of books. The Bodleian copy is complete:
- Merton college, Oxford, has nearly a complete one from its bindings:
- the British Museum copy was dr. Bandinel’s (Sale Catal., Aug. 1861,
- no. 44), and contains the first 16 (?) pages. Other fragments are
- known to exist, chiefly in Oxford college library bindings. The poem
- was reproduced in facsimile in 1872 by W. H. Allnutt (100 copies).
-
- It seems on the whole probable that this William Basse, who was a
- retainer in sir R. Wenman’s house (Thame Park), is identical with the
- William Bas who wrote ©Sword and Buckler© (Lond. 1602, 4^o), which is
- a poetical defence of Serving-men against the scorn of their
- superiors. In Stanza 2 of the present poem is a clear reference to
- Bas’s ©Three Pastoral Elegies© (Lond. 1602, 4^o) in the following
- terms:—“Not (like as when some triviall discontents | First taught my
- raw and lucklesse youth to rue | Doe I to Flockes, now vtter my
- laments ...”. On the other hand the author of the ©Sword and Buckler©
- had two sons, whereas here he speaks of his “young Muse.” Other poems
- by “William Basse” (Bas) prepared for the press in 1653 were printed
- by J. P. Collier in 1870; and contributions to the ©Annalia Dubrensia©
- (1636) and Walton’s ©Angler©, as well as an “Epitaph upon Shakespeare”
- are mentioned.
-
- See J. Payne Collier’s ©Bibliographical account© (1865) p. 54, W. C.
- Hazlitt’s ©Handbook© (1867) and ©(Bibliographical) Collections©, 1st
- series (1876). The author is mentioned as living at Moreton near
- Thame, in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iv. 222.
-
- The subject of the first poem is Prince Henry’s death, and of the
- “Morning” the wedding of the princess Elizabeth.
-
-
-3. ¬Benefield¬, Sebastian. [_woodcut._] | _A_ | COMMENTARIE | OR |
-EXPOSITION VPON THE FIRST | Chapter of the Prophecy of AMOS, delivered |
-in xxi. Sermons in the Parish Church of | MEISEY HAMPTON _in the
-Di-_|_ocesse of Gloucester_, | BY | SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD DOCTOR | of
-Divinity and fellow of Corpus Christi | _College in Oxford_. | _HEREVNTO
-IS ADDED A SERMON_ | _vpon_ 1. _Cor._ 9. 19. _wherein is touched the
-law-_|full vse of things indifferent. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 29_a_: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 280 + [8]: p. 11 beg. _the^r
- numbring_, 111 _Which truth_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) dedication to bp. King, dated “from my study in Corpus Christi
- College in Oxford, Iuly 5. 1613”: (5–7) “The Preface to the Christian
- Reader”: 1–264, the 21 “lectures”: 265, a title:—“[_woodcut_] | A |
- SERMON | PREACHED AT WOTTON | VNDER EDGE in the Diocesse of |
- _Gloucester before the Clergy there assem-_|_bled at the Episcopall
- Visitation of_ | THOMAS RAVIS, _late Bishop_ | _of Gloucester_. 1605.
- | BY SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_],” impr. 7_a_,
- 1613: 267–280, the sermon, on 1 Cor. ix. 19, with the head title “The
- Christians Libertie”: 280, Errata, corrected in many copies: (1–7) “A
- Table of such particulars as are contained in this Commentarie,”
- alphabetical.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 488. A Latin translation of the lectures
- (without the sermon) was made by Benefield’s pupil Henry Jackson
- (_ibid._ iii. 578) and published at Oppenheim in 1615, the preface
- being dated 21 May 1614 and addressed to Abraham Scultetus who had
- visited Oxford and made a friendship with Benefield. Benefield printed
- a commentary in 21 sermons on Amos chap. 2 at London in 1620, and in
- 17 sermons on Amos chap. 3 (together with a separate reprint of the
- present commentary) at London in 1629.
-
-
-4. ¬Benefield¬, Sebastian. THE | HAVEN OF THE AFFLICTED. | A | SRRMON |
-PREACHED IN THE | CATHEDRAL CHVRCH | OF GLOVCESTER | _Aug._ 10. 1613. |
-BY | SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD Doctor of Divinity | and fellow of C. C. C. |
-_in Oxford_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 20 + [2] : p. 11 beg. _wife,
- rebellious_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) Epistle
- dedicatorie to bp. Miles Smyth, dated “from my study in Corpus Christi
- College in Oxford, August 27, 1613”: (6) A quotation from Augustine
- with English translation: 1–20, the sermon, on Amos iii. 6.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 488.
-
-
-5. ¬Bible¬, Psalms. [_woodcut._] | A | MEDITATI-|ON ON PART OF | THE
-SEAVENTH | PSALME. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _not Henry_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication “to the
- worshipfull his loving Cousen M^r E. N. and his virtuous wife Mistris
- K. N. ...”, dated “from Cote,” 7 Nov. 1605: 1–31, the meditation, on
- Ps. vii. 9.
-
- Very rare.
-
-
-6. ¬Bunny¬, Edmund. OF | DIVORCE | For Adulterie, and | Marrying againe:
-that there | is no sufficient warrant | so to doe. | With a note in the
-end, that _R. P._ many | yeares since was answered. | By _Edm. Bunny_
-Batchelour of Deuinitie. | [_woodcut._] [The whole title is within a
-border of woodcut ornaments.]
-
- Impr. 32: 1613: &c. precisely as 1610 B.
-
- This is a rare reissue of 1610 B with a new titlepage printed (not at
- Oxford, for the woodcut in the title is unknown there, but) at London,
- perhaps by W. Stansby. The old titlepage was simply cut off, and the
- new one pasted in.
-
-
-7. ¬Burhill¬, Robert. DE POTESTATE | REGIA, ET VSVR-|_patione Papali_, |
-PRO TORTVRA TORTI, | Contra Parallelum ANDREæ EVDæ-| MONIOANNIS Cydonij
-Iesuitæ, | _Responsio_ | ROBERTI BVRHILLI | ANGLI. | [_motto_: then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 291 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _piscopi Romani_, 111 _quod contra vos_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–4) Latin poem to prince Charles: (5) “Summa Tractatuum”:
- (6–8) “Index Responsionum iuxta ordinem apud Adversarium”: 1–280, the
- treatise, in three “tractatus”: 280, “Lectori”, a note: 281–291,
- “Appendix, ubi Auctoris ante biennium edita Responsio, ad Martini
- Becani Refutationem (quam vocat) Torturæ Torti defenditur ...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 18. The bibliography of the controversy
- excited by the fresh oath of Allegiance imposed after the Gunpowder
- Plot is too intricate to be here treated. It was begun by card.
- Bellarmine (“Matthaeus Tortus”) and James I, and followed by bp.
- Andrewes’ ©Tortura Torti©, Andreas Eudaemon-johannes (André
- L’Heureux’s) ©Parallelus Torti ac Tortoris© (Colon. 1611), Martinus
- Becanus’s ©Refutatio Torturae Torti© (Mogunt. 1610), and many others.
- See _Du Moulin_, below.
-
-
-8. ¬Byrd¬, Josias. LOVES PEERELES PARAGON, | OR | _THE ATTRIBVTES, AND
-PROGRESSE_ | OF THE CHVRCH. | A | SERMON | PREACHED IN S^t. MARIES IN |
-Oxford, and at HARFIELD in Middle-|sex. 1613. | BY | JOSIAS BYRD. |
-[Latin _motto_, and _translation_: then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 27 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _The Church
- is_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication to Alice
- “dowager of Derby, wife to the ... Baron of Elsemere”, dated from
- “Oxford, Alsoules. September the 3. 1613”: 1–27, the sermon, on Cant.
- ii. 10: (1) “Faults escaped”, at end “Delay is dangerous | and hast
- erroneous”, all between woodcuts.
-
- The author took his B.A. degree at Cambridge, and incorporated at All
- Souls on 4 May 1609; M.A., 1610.
-
-
-9. ¬Colmore¬, Matthew. _ORATIO FVNEBRIS_ | IN OBITVM | clarissimi viri
-et mvni⸗|FICENTISSIMI COLLEGII COR-|PORIS CHRISTI Oxon. benefactoris |
-GEORGII SANCTPAVL Equitis | Aurati, habita in medijs epulis | Decembris
-9. 1613. | _A_ | MATTHæO COLMORE | Somatochristiano. | [_motto_, then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4 B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _mentis luxuriȩ_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r,
- Latin preface to the reader: A 3^r-B 2^r, the oration.
-
- Rare. Little seems to be known of the subject of this Oration. Sir
- George St. Paul of Snarford never matriculated or took a degree,
- though according to the oration a commoner of Corpus for two years.
- His work at Lincoln and Stamford is described, and his munificence to
- the College and the new Schools at Oxford.
-
-
-10. ¬Du Moulin¬, Pierre. THE | ACCOMPLIS¿H¿MENT | OF THE PROPHECIES; |
-OR THE THIRD BOOKE IN | defense of the Catholicke faith, con-|tained in
-the booke of the high | & mighty KING IAMES . I. | by the grace of God
-King | of Great Brittaine | and Ireland. | _AGAINST THE ALLEGATIONS_ |
-_of_ R. Bellarmine; _and_ F. N. Coëffeteau _&_ | _other Doctors of the
-Romish Church_: | _BY_ | PETER DV MOVLIN Minister of the | _word of God
-in the Church of Paris._ | _Translated out of French by_ I. HEATH,
-_Fellow of_ | _New College in Oxford._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 29_a_: 1613: (eights) 16^o: pp. [18] + 484 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _Innocent in his_, 111 _of this, but this_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–16) “The preface to the Reader”: (17–18) “A table of the
- matters contained in this third booke.”: 1–484, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 169. The title of the complete work is
- “Defense de la foy catholique contenue au livre de ... Iaques I Roy de
- la grād’ Bretagne ... contenue en trois liures. Contre la Response de
- F. N. Coeffeteau ... Par Pierre du Moulin ... 1612.” The 3rd book was
- subsequently printed separately in French also, with the title
- “Accomplissement des propheties ... Par Pierre du Moulin ...”. The
- original work by King James I is “Triplici nodo, triplex cuneus. Or an
- apologie for the oath of allegiance ...” (anon., Lond. 1607, and with
- author’s name Lond. 1609 &c.: in Latin ©Apologia pro iuramento
- fidelitatis©, Lond. 1609, &c.). Coeffeteau’s book was “Responce a
- l’Advertissement ... par le ... Roy de la grande Bretagne ...” (Par.
- 1610). See _Burhill_, above.
-
-
-11. ¬Gamage¬, William. LINSI-WOOLSIE. | OR | TWO CENTVRIES OF |
-_EPIGRAMMES_. | _Written by_ WILLIAM GAMAGE _Batche-_|_lour in the
-Artes_. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 29: 1613: (eights) 12^o: pp. [80], signn. A-E^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Which vpward’s_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 2^r-A 2^v, dedication to Katherine lady Mansell, daughter of lord
- Lisle: A 3^r-A 5^r, complimentary verses to the author: A 5^v, “The
- Author to the Praisers of his booke”, a short poem: A 6^r-E 8^v, the
- 200 epigrams.
-
- Very rare: see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 350. This author escaped
- Wood’s notice altogether, and his claim to be an Oxford man eluded
- even dr. Bliss when he edited Wood in 1815: but he subsequently writes
- in a MS. note, “I have now no doubt but that the author of
- ©Linsi-Woolsie© was of Jesus, matriculated May 18. 1604, a native of
- Glamorgan, pleb. fil., æt. 20: B.A. Dec. 17. 1607.” The verses are
- extremely poor. The only copy at present known is that in the British
- Museum, which was the Heber copy (Heber sale, 1834, pt. 1, p. 141, no.
- 2734.)
-
-
-12. ¬Glanville¬, John. ARTICVLI | CHRISTIANÆ | FIDEI, QVAM EC-|CLESIA
-PROFITETVR | ANGLICANA, | VERSV | (_QVOAD EIVS FIERI POTVIT_) |
-_EXPRESSI FACILLIMO_. | [_device_, then two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 39 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Articulus_
- 13: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to John
- King, bp. of London, signed “Johannes Glanvillus”: (5) “Ad Carmen
- meum”, a poem in Latin: (6) “Ad lectorem benevolum”, a distich: 1–39,
- the 40 Articles, in elegiac verse, the 40th being “De Articulorum
- ratificatione”: (1–2) “De numero & nominibus Articulorum”, a list: (2)
- “Ad lectorem”, a Latin poem.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 343. The verses are a paraphrase, with
- short additional poems of a meditative kind, written during an
- illness.
-
-
-13. Godwin, Thomas. “©Romanæ Historiæ Anthologia. An English Exposition
-of the Roman Antiquities ...© Oxon. 1613 ... &c. qu.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 52, but probably a misprint for 1614,
- which see, though Wood’s apparent error is copied by Watt, Bohn’s
- Lowndes, &c.
-
-
-14. ¬Hinde¬, William. A | _PATH TO PIETIE_, | LEADING TO THE | WAY, THE
-TRVTH, | AND THE LIFE | CHRIST IESVS. | _DRAWNE VPON THE_ | Ground _and
-according to_ | _the_ Rule _of Faith_, | BY | WILLIAM HINDE | Sometimes
-Fellow of Queenes | College in Oxford, and now | Preacher of Gods word |
-at BVNBVRY in | Cheshire. | _Published for the benefit of his owne_ |
-_Flocke and Family._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: (eights) 16^o?: pp. [8] + 56: p. 11 beg. _Q. VVhat
- learne_: Pica Roman & Italic. Contents:—(1) title: (3–7) dedication to
- sir Thomas Lowe, Master, and to the 4 Wardens, of the Haberdashers’
- Company in London, dated Bunbury, 19 July 1613: 1–56, the treatise, in
- question and answer.
-
- Rare. For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 461, where _Banbury_
- is twice a misprint for _Bunbury_.
-
-
-15. ¬Holyoke¬, Francis. A | Sermon of Obedience. | Especially vnto
-Authoritie Ecclesiasticall, | wherein the principall controuersies of
-our | _Church are handled, and many of their_ | Obiections which are
-refractorie to | _the gouernment established, answered_, | though
-briefly as time and | place could permit: | Being preached at a
-Visitation of the right | Worshipfull M.D. _Hinton_, in _Couentry_. |
-_By_ | FRAN: HOLYOKE. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 29: 1613: (rest as 1610 H.)
-
- A reissue of the sheets of 1610 H, with a new titlepage printed in
- London, within a border of woodcuts. The woodcut on the titlepage is
- unknown at Oxford.
-
-
-16. ¬Hooker¬, dr. Richard. (A learned discourse of Iustification, &c., a
-reprint of the title of 1612 H, adding after the word “Oxford ⁂”:—_The
-second edition, corrected, and amended._ |
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 68: p. 11 beg. _should make vs_, 61
- _man should hope_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “To
- the Christian Reader”, signed as before, but dated “from Corpus
- Christi College in Oxford the 6. of Iuly. 1612.”: 1–68, the discourse,
- on Hab. i. 4.
-
- A second edition of 1612 H: the alterations are chiefly literal and
- verbal.
-
-
-17. ¬Kilbie¬, Richard. A | SERMON | PREACHED IN SAINT MA-|RIES CHVRCH IN
-OXFORD | March 26. 1612. at the funerall of | THOMAS HOLLAND, Do·|ctor
-of the Chaire in Divini-|tie, and Rector of Exce-|ter College, | BY |
-RICHARD KILBIE _Doctor of Divinity, Rector_ | _of Lincolne College_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 29_a_: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 20 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _ken away
- even_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–20, the sermon, on 1
- Cor. xv. 55–57.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 287 & 112. There is some little
- biographical matter about dr. Holland.
-
-
-18. ¬Oxford¬, Exeter College. _THRENI EXONIENSIVM_ | IN OBITVM |
-ILLVSTRISSIMI VIRI D. IO=|HANNIS PETREI, BARONIS DE | Writtle, Filij
-honoratissimi viri D. | GVILIELMI PETREI ordinis au-|reȩ Periscelidis
-Equitis clarissimi, | & quatuor Principibus à con-|silijs secretioribus.
-| _Qui Exoniense Collegium octo Socijs, amplis reditibus_, | _plurimis
-privilegijs, auxerunt liberaliter & ornâ-_|_runt, Benefactores,
-Mecænates, & Patroni_ | _munificentissimi._ | Per ejusdem Collegij
-Alumnos & ceteros studiosos. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 48: p. 11 beg. Δεύτερος: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication, partly in Latin verse,
- to lord William Petrie son of lord Petre of Writtle: 1–48, the poems.
-
- Most of the poems are Latin, but 4 Greek, 2 Hebrew, and one French.
- John lord Petre died on 11 Oct. 1613.
-
-
-19. —— Merton College. [_woodcut._] | BODLEIO-|MNEMA. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 84 + [20]: p. 11 beg. _Ad sanam_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) Latin dedication to the
- memory of sir Thomas Bodley, by Merton college: (4) Latin poem by the
- editor: 1–84, the poems, chiefly Latin: (1–18) “Oratio funebris habita
- in Collegio Mertonensi à Johanne Halesio ... anno 1613 Martij 29^o;
- quo die Clarissimo Equiti D. Thomæ Bodleio funus ducebatur.”
-
- This book consists of about 80 poems (four in Greek, the rest in
- Latin) in memory of sir Thomas Bodley by members of Merton college, of
- which society Bodley was a fellow. The editor’s name does not appear.
- Bodley died in London on Jan. 28. 1612/3, but both the dedication of
- this volume and p. 117 of the ©Justa Funebria© (see below) state that
- it was on Jan. 29: see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 126.
-
-
-20. ¬Oxford¬, University. [_woodcut_] | EPITHALAMIA. | SIVE | LVSVS
-PALA-|tini in nvptias celsissi-|mi principis domini fride-|rici comitis
-palatini ad | _RHENVM,¿&¿C.ET SERENISSI-_|MÆ ELISABETHÆ IACOBI |
-_POTENTISSIMI BRI-_|_TANNI_Æ _REGIS_ | _FILI_Æ PRIMO-|_GENIT_Æ |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 31: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [128], signn. ( )^2 A-P^4 Q^2: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _Cur^c Atalanta_, M 1^r Impar nulla: English Roman.
- Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r title: ( ) 2^r “Oxonia Heydelbergæ”, a short
- poem: A 1^r-Q 2^v, the verses.
-
- Poems by Oxford men on the marriage of Frederick v, elector Palatine,
- with the princess Elizabeth of England on 14 Feb. 1612/3. All are
- Latin except five Greek, two Italian and one Hebrew (unpointed, Pica
- and Brevier).
-
-
-21. —— University. IVSTA FVNEBRIA | PTOLEMÆI | OXONIENSIS THO-|MÆ
-BODLEII EQVITIS | AVRATI CELEBRATA | in Academiâ Oxoniensi | _Mensis
-Martij_ 29.| 1613. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 31: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 134 + [14]: p. 11 beg. _Sed
- calcanda_, 111 _Non famam_. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) short Latin
- poems as by the University: 1–134, the poems: (1) a titlepage:—“ORATIO
- FVNEBRIS | HABITA IN | SCHOLA THEOLOGICA AB | ORATORE PVBLICO, IN
- OBI-|TV CLARISSIMI EQVITIS | _THOMÆ BODLEII_. | ⁂⁂ | [_device_]”,
- impr. 11: (3) “Ad lectorem” a preface by the orator (Isaac Wake):
- (5–12) the oration.
-
- About 270 poems, chiefly Latin, but two Hebrew (unpointed, Pica), four
- Greek, two Italian, one English: in memory of sir Thomas Bodley, see
- preceding art. The oration by Wake (see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 540)
- was reprinted in W. Bates’s ©Vitæ selectorum virorum© (1681), p. 416.
- The British Museum printed Catalogue, and the Catalogue of English
- Books in the Museum up to 1640, attribute this speech to Richard
- Corbet, by error.
-
-
-22. ¬Petrucci¬, Lodovico. [_woodcuts_] | RACCOLTA, | D’ ALCVNE RIME, DEL
-CAVA-|liere LODOVICO PETRVCCI, Nobile Toscano, in | più luoghi, e tempi
-composte, & à diversi Pren-|cipi dedicate; con la selua delle sue |
-Persecutioni. | _FARRAGO POEMATVM, EQVITIS LVDO-_|_VICI PETRVCCI,
-Nobilis Tuscani, diversis lo-_|_cis et temporibus conscriptorum, & ad
-diversos_ | _Principes dedicatorum; vnà cum syluâ, sua-_|_rum
-Persecutionum._ | * * * * | * * * | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [130], sign. A-P^4, Q 1–3, one leaf, Q 4:
- sign. H 1^r beg. _Quod signis_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r,
- title: A 1^v, A 2^v, Italian dedication to James i signed “L’infelice
- Lodovico Petrucci Cavaliere”: A 2^r, A 3^r, the same in Latin: A 3^v-Q
- 3^v, the poems in Italian and Latin: (one leaf)^v “I principali errori
- commessi nell’ Italiano di questo libro”, a long list, beginning with
- the titlepage (“Cavalliere”), followed by some Errata in the Latin:
- the references oddly are to _pages_.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 293. This is a singular and uncommon
- book. The author was a soldier of fortune, who was admitted as a
- reader in the Bodleian as from St. Edmund hall on 27 Apr. 1611, but
- did not matriculate till 5 Sept. 1612. The verso of each leaf is in
- general Italian poems, and the recto of the next leaf a Latin version
- of them. On signn. F 2^v and L 3^v-M 2^v are letters and testimonials
- about him: at H 1^v is a poem in Italian and Latin on sir Thomas
- Bodley’s death: at H 2^v begins his ©Selua© or ©Sylva© in two parts,
- and at N 4^v a long and curious account in Italian and Latin verse of
- his stay in England and particularly Oxford and New College, which he
- was forced to leave (in 1614?) by the puritanical party. On M 3^v is
- an oration delivered in Italy, and on Q 2^v is a poem in both
- languages on the death of dr. Rives, which is repeated on Q 3^r. The
- whole book was intended to be produced at the wedding of Frederick
- elector Palatine with the princess Elizabeth (14 Feb. 1612/3), but by
- the printer’s delay was too late.
-
-
-23. ¬Potter¬, bp. Barnabas. _THE BARONETS BVRIALL_, | OR | A FVNERALL |
-SERMON PREACHED | at the solemnitie of that honou-|rable Baronet S^r
-EDVVARD | SEYMOURS buriall. | * * * | BY | BARNABY POTTER | _Bachelor in
-Divinitie, Fellow of Queenes Col-_|_lege in Oxford, and Preacher to the_
-| _Towne of Tottnes in Devon_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 37 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _the
- divell_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication to
- sir Edw. and lady Mary Giles, dated “from your house at Bowdon, Aug.
- 24. 1613.”: 1–37, the sermon, on Deut. xxxiv. 5.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 22. The author seems to have been
- private chaplain to sir E. Giles. He quotes against himself in the
- dedication a thesis disputed at the Act in Oxford 1613 “Doctior
- quisque fuit in scribendo parcissimus.”
-
-
-24. ¬Powell¬, Thomas, of Brasenose college, Oxford. [_woodcut_] | A |
-SERMON | PREACHED IN SAINT MA-|RIES IN OXFORD, | BY THOMAS POWELL. |
-1613. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 17 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _vpon the
- text_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) Latin dedication
- to dr. Thomas Singleton, principal of Brasenose: 1–17, the sermon, on
- Ex. xxviii. 34.
-
-
-25. ¬Price¬, Daniel. DAVID HIS OATH OF | ALLEGEANCE TO | IERVSALEM. |
-THE | SERMON PREACHED ON ACT | SVNDAY LAST IN THE MORNING, | _IN S_^t.
-_MARIES IN OXFORD_. | BY | DANIEL PRICE _Doctor in Divinity_. |
-[_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 40: p. 11 beg. _the blood of Ahab_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to Charles i,
- dated from Exeter college Oxford, July 27 (1613): 1–40, the sermon, on
- Ps. cxxxvii. 5.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 512. Every printed page has lines
- bounding the text, head-line and margin.
-
-
-26. ——. PRINCE HENRY | HIS | FIRST ANNIVERSARY. | [_motto._] | BY |
-DANIEL PRICE _Doctor in Divinity, one of_ | _his Highnesse Chaplaines_.
-| [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 32: p. 11 beg. _himselfe with_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to Will.
- Cotton bp. of Exeter: 1–32, the “meditation.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 512, and 1614 P. The essay, which
- contains some personal matter about prince Henry of historical
- interest, was written for 6 Nov. 1613. The text, head-line and margin
- of each printed page are within bounding lines.
-
-
-27. ——. SPIRITVALL | ODOVRS TO T¿H¿E | MEMORY OF PRINCE | _HENRY_ | IN
-FOVRE OF THE LAST SER-|mons preached in S^t JAMES after his High-|nesse
-death, the last being the Sermon be-|fore the body, the day before | the
-Funerall. | BY | DANIEL PRICE _then Chaplaine in Attendance_. |
-[_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 29: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 52 + [4] + 29 + [5] + 26: p. 11
- beg. (1) _the Manna_, (2) _ces, the furies_, (3) _Lastly to close_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) short dedication to Charles
- i: 1–26, sermon on Ps. xc. 15: 27–52, sermon on 2 Sam. xii. 23, with
- running title to both “Meditations of Consolation in our
- Lamentations”: (1) a title:—“SORROVV | FOR THE SINNES OF | _THE TIME_.
- | _A_ | SERMON PREACHED AT S^t. | JAMES on the third Sunday after |
- _the_ PRINCE _his death_. | BY | DANIEL PRICE _then Chaplaine in
- Attendance_. | [_motto_, then _device_, then _impr._ 29, 1613.]”:
- (3–4) dedication to lady (Robert) Carey: 1–29, the sermon, on Ezek.
- ix. 4: (2) title:—“TEARES | SHED OVER ABNER. | _THE_ | SERMON PREACHED
- ON THE | Sunday before the PRINCE his fu-|nerall in S^t. JAMES
- Chappell | _before the body_. | BY | DANIELL PRICE _then Chaplaine in
- Attendance_. | [_motto_, then _device_, then _impr._ 29, 1613.]”:
- (4–5) dedication to sir David Murray: the sermon, on 2 Sam. iii. 31.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 511. Every printed page is within lines
- bounding the text, head-line and margin. The signatures are
- continuous, ( )^2 A-O^4 P^2. There is very little of historical
- interest in the sermons.
-
-
-28. ¬Rainolds¬, dr. John. D. IOHANNIS | RAINOLDI | OLIM GRÆCÆ LIN-|guæ
-Prælectoris in Col-|legio CORPORIS | CHRISTI apud | _Oxonienses_, |
-_ORATIONES_ 5. _CVM_ | _aliis quibusdam opusculis_. | OMNIA NVNC
-PRI-|_MVM EDITA_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1613: 16^o.
-
- At present this book is only known to me from a titlepage at the end
- of the 1614 edition of Rainolds’s ©Orationes© (which see), and notices
- in Thomas Bowman’s ©Catalogus librorum© (Oxf. 1687) [sign. I1^r:—“146.
- Rainoldi (Joan) Orationes. Oxon. 1613”] and Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901,
- fol. 70 (Bagford). But the book is not likely to be really rare,
- unless the 1614 edition caused its recall or destruction.
-
-
-29. ——. THE | PROPHECIE | OF OBADIAH | OPENED AND APPLYED IN | SVNDRY
-LEARNED AND GRA-|CIOVS SERMONS PREACHED | at ALL-HALLOWES and S^t |
-MARIES in OXFORD, | BY | THAT FAMOVS AND IVDICI-|ous Divine IOHN
-RAINOLDS D. | of Divinity and late President of | Corp. Chr. Coll. |
-Published for the honour and vse of that famous Vni-|versity, and for
-the benefit of the Churches of | Christ abroad in the Country, | BY W.
-H. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 136 + [4] + 20: p. 11 beg. (1)
- _promised to consume_, (2) _hād of the Philistines_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) epistle dedicatory to D. Airay provost
- of Queen’s college, Oxford, dated “Bunbury in Cheshire, July 19.
- 1613”, signed “W. Hinde”: 1–136, the commentary: (1) a title:—“A |
- SERMON | VPON PART OF THE | eighteenth Psalme. | PREACHED TO THE
- PVBLIKE | assembly of Scholers in the Vniversity of | Oxford the last
- day of August, 1586. | BY | JOHN RAINOLDES | _Vpon occasion of their
- meeting to giue thankes to God_ | _for the detection and apprehension
- of Trai-_|_tours, who wickedly conspired against_ | _the_ Queenes
- _Maiestie and_ | the state of the Realme. | [_motto_, then
- _woodcuts_]”, impr. 7_a_, 1613: (3–4) “Iohn Rainolds, to the Reader
- ...”, dated “At Corpus Christi College in Oxford, Octob. 24. 1586.”:
- 1–20, the sermon, on Ps. xviii. 47–51.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 16 & 15, and 1586 R. The commentary has
- special reference to the 1st Epistle of St. Peter, and is in 10
- divisions or sermons. The editor, William Hinde of Queen’s college,
- seems to have long possessed the MS. of the lectures. The sermon is a
- reprint of 1586 R, and an integral part of the whole volume, as the
- signatures show, which for the sermon begin at T 1. Every printed page
- has bounding lines to the text, margin and head-line.
-
-
-30. S[mith], S[amuel]. Aditus ad logicam. In usum eorum qui primò
-Academiam salutant. Autore S. S. Artium Magistro. Imprint:—“Anno Domini
-1613”, (eights) 12^o.
-
- This book is attributed to the Oxford Press by Wood (©Ath. Oxon.©, ii.
- 283), but was not printed there, the woodcuts being unknown in Oxford.
- See 1684 S.
-
-
- 1614.
-
-1. ¬Andrewes¬, John. “Christ his Crosse, or the most comfortable
-Doctrine of Christ Crucified & joyfull Tidings of his Passion, teaching
-us to Love & Embrace his Crosse, as the most Sweete & Celestiall
-Doctrine unto the Soule, and how We should behave ourselves therein
-according to the Word of God. Newly Published by John Andrewes, Minister
-& Preacher of the Word of God at Barricke Basset in the County of
-Wiltes.”
-
- So in manuscript in the Bagford collections (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl.
- 5901, fol. 71): see Wood’s ©Ath Oxon.©, ii. 493, where the book is
- described as quarto in two parts. The existence of a copy does not
- seem to be at present known, nor is one noticed in the ordinary
- bibliographical works.
-
-
-2. ¬Benefield¬, Sebastian. EIGHT SER-|MONS PVBLIKELY | PREACHED IN THE
-V-|NIVERSITY OF OXFORD, | the second at _S_^t _Peters_ in the _East_, |
-the rest at _S_^t _Maries_ Church . Be-|gunne in the yeare 1595. |
-_Decemb. XIII._ | _NOW FIRST PVBLISHED BY SEBAS-_|TIAN BENEFIELD Doctor,
-and Professour of | Divinity for the Lady MARGARET. | [_motto_: then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 153 + [7]: p. 11 beg. _It may be_,
- 111 _what they thinke_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication to lord Ellesmere, Chancellor of the University of Oxford,
- dated “from my Study in Corpus Christi College in Oxford, Iuly 2.
- 1614”: 1–57, three sermons on Luke ix. 23: 58–153, five sermons on
- James iv. 10: (2–6) “The table containing in alphabeticall order the
- particulars of this booke.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 488.
-
-
-3. ¬Dawes¬, Lancelot. “©Two Sermons preached at the Assize holden at
-Carlisle, touching sundry Corruptions of these times.© Oxon. 1614. oct.”
-
- Impr. —: 1614?: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 146 + [2?]: p. 11 beg.
- _turall disposition_, 111 _his brother, and_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–7) dedication to dr. Robinson bp. of Carlisle, signed
- “Lancelot Dawes”: 1–75, a sermon, on Matt. xxvi. 15: 77–146, a sermon,
- on Ps. lxxxii. 6–7: (1–2) (_not seen._)
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 349, where the above title is
- given. The only copy readily traceable is that in the Bodleian which
- has lost the title and following leaf, beginning on ¶ 3, as well as a
- blank leaf there must have been after p. 146 (sign. K 1.) The sermons
- and dedication, but not title, were reprinted in ©Sermons ... by
- Lancelot Dawes ...© (Lond., 1653), pp. 49, 105. At present the date
- (1614) depends on Wood’s accuracy.
-
-
-4. ¬Day¬, John. DAY’S DYALL | OR, | HIS TWELVE HOWRES | THAT IS, |
-TWELVE SEVERALL LECTVRES | BY WAY OF CATECHISME, AS | they were
-delivered by him in the Chappel of | ORIELL COLLEDGE in _Ox-_|_ford_, in
-the yeeres of our Lord | _God_ 1612, and 1613. | [_device_, then two
-_mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 329 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _which our
- Master_, 111 _^y speakes: The_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–7) dedication to Oriel college, Oxford, dated “from my Study in
- that Colledge ... Octob. 17. 1614”, signed “Iohn Day”: (8) “The
- severall arguments with the severall Texts of Scripture, of every
- severall Lecture in this Booke”, with a quotation: 1–329, the twelve
- lectures, with a page occasionally blank: (1–2) “To the Reader”:
- including a few errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 412. The author in the Preface says that
- he was appointed “Catechisme Reader” in Oriel for a year in 1612, when
- these lectures were delivered. In a footnote he alludes to his father
- John Day the printer. The general subjects are those of the Catechism,
- but carried further.
-
-
-5. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. ROMANæ HISTORIæ ANTHOLOGIA. | AN | ENGLISH
-EX-|POSITION OF | THE ROMANE AN-|TIQVITIES, WHEREIN | many Romane and
-English | offices are paralleld and di-|vers obscure phrases |
-_explained_. | _BY_ | THOMAS GODWYN _Master of Arts_. | For the vse of
-ABINGDON _Schoole_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 193 + [19]: p. 11 beg. _ved in the
- treasury_, 111 _cense the people_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) dedication in Latin to dr. Francis James, dated “Abingdoniæ
- decimo calend. Aprilis. Anno 1613.” [i. e. 23 Mar. 1613/4], signed
- “Thomas Godwinus”: (5–6) “Benevolo Lectori”: (7) Latin poems on the
- book by dr. Laurence Humphrey and John Sanford: (8) “A short table
- shewing the argument of every Booke and Section”: 1–193, the work:
- (2–18) “Index rerum et verborum maxime insignium.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 52. This was a popular work, see 1616 G,
- 1620 G, 1623 G, 1625 G, 1628 G, 1631 G, 1633 G, 1638 G, 1642 G, 1655
- G, 1658 G. Other edd. were printed at London in 1661, 1668, 1674,
- 1680, 1685 (14th), 1689 (15th), 1696 (16th). For the supposed 1613
- ed., see 1613 G. Godwin’s ©Synopsis Antiquitatum Hebraicarum© (see
- 1616 G) and Francis Rous’s ©Archæologia Attica© (see 1637 R) may be
- regarded as companion works to the present volume, and are often found
- bound with it. The author apologizes for an English treatise on such a
- subject, and states that one of his main objects was to illustrate
- Cicero.
-
-
-6. ¬Goodwin¬, dr. William. A | SERMON | PREACHED BEFORE | THE KINGS MOST
-| EXCELLENT MAIES-|TIE AT WOODSTOCKE, | AVG. 28. 1614. | _BY_ | WILLIAM
-GOODWIN, _Deane . of Christ’s_ | _Church and Vice-Chancellor of the
-Vni-_|_versity of Oxon._ | Published by Commandement. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 38: p. 11 beg. _à Peccato; delicta_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–38, the sermon, on Jer. i.
- 10.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 297. The sermon is directed against the
- jurisdiction of the Roman Church over temporal sovereigns.
-
-
-7. ¬Hooker¬, dr. Richard. [_woodcut._] | TVVO | SERMONS | VPON PART OF |
-S. JVDES EPISTLE, | _BY_ | RICHARD HOOKER _sometimes Fellow of_ |
-_Corpus Christi College in Oxford_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 56: p. 11 beg. _Iesus with_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication to George
- Summaster, principal of “Broad-Gates Hall in Oxford,” by “Henry
- Iackson,” dated “Oxon. from Corp. Christ. College, this 13. of
- Ianuary, 1613” (1613/4): 1–29, the first sermon: 31–56, the second,
- both on Jude 17–21.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 698, and for the editor iii. 577.
- This and other Sermons of Hooker were reprinted with editions of the
- ©Ecclesiastical Polity©, in 1622, &c.
-
-
-8. ¬Jewell¬, bp. John. ΑΠΟΛΟΓΙΑ ΤΗΣ ΑΓΓΛΩΝ | Εκκλησίας Ελληνιστὶ
-μετα-|φρασθεῖσα. | APOLOGIA ECCLE-|siæ Anglicanæ Græcè versa. |
-_Interprete_ I. S. _Bacc. in Art._ | Πρωτοπείρῳ συγγνώμη. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1614: (twelves) 24^o: pp. [24] + 214 + [2]: p. 11 beg. ὁ
- Ιερώνυμος), 111 θολικῆς πίστεως: Pica Greek. Contents:—p. (3) title:
- (5–13) dedication to dr. William Langton, pres. of Magdalen college,
- Oxford, dated 22 July 1613, signed “Joh. Smith”: (15–20) “Lectori
- φιλέλληνι”: 1–214, the Apologia: (1) “Errata sic corrigenda.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 393, and 1639 J, 1671 J. The original
- edition of this celebrated ©Apologia© was published in 1562, an
- English translation in the same year, and a German in 1589. This is
- the first Greek edition, as 1671 J is the first Welsh one. The
- translator, John Smith of Magdalen, explains that the task was meant
- as a College exercise merely, at first: and apologizes for using such
- words as Ἰουβιλαῖα, Βούλλαι, Ἰνδουλγεντίαι, for νὴ Δία in a Christian
- work, and for having only a month and a half to spare for the work.
-
-
-9. ¬N.¬, S. “©Papistogelastes, or Apologues by which are pleasantly
-discovered the Abuses, Follies, Superstitions, Idolatries, and
-Impieties, of the Synagogue of the Pope, and especially of the Priests
-and Monks thereof©, written first in Ital. by N. S. and thence
-translated into French by S. J. and now out of French into English by R.
-W. ut supr. Oxon, 1614, in tw[elves].”
-
- So in an account of Rowland Willet in Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 362:
- but I find no other reference to a copy.
-
-
-10. ¬Price¬, dr. Daniel. PRINCE HENRY | HIS | SECOND | ANNIVERSARY. |
-[_motto._] | _BY_ | DANIEL PRICE Doctor in Divinity, one of | his
-Highnesse chaplaines. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 33: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 44: p. 11 beg. _wherein they
- might_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to
- king Charles i, dated “Ex. Coll. Novemb. 6. [1614] the fatall day of
- Prince Henries decease”: 1–44, the discourse.
-
- See 1613 P, and for the author Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 511: there is
- some historical matter in the essay. Every printed page has its text,
- margin and headline within bounding lines.
-
-
-11. ¬Price¬, Sampson. A | HEAVENLY | PROCLAMATION TO | FLY ROMISH
-BABYLON. | _A_ | SERMON PREACHED AT OX-|ford in S^t MARIES _Nov. 21.
-1613._ | BY | SAMPSON PRICE _Master of Arts of Exe-_|_ter Colledge and
-Preacher to the Citty_ | _of Oxford_. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 34 + [2]: p 11 beg. _ing,
- drunkennesse_: English Roman. Contents:-p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
- to sir Roger Owen, dated “from my study at Exeter Colledge, Oct. 28.
- 1614.”: 1–34, the sermon, on Rev. xviii. 4.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 489, where it is related that Price
- earned the name of “the Mawle of Heretics” for his violence against
- Roman Catholicism. The preface gives some biographical details of
- Price, incidentally.
-
-
-12. ¬Prideaux¬, dr. John. CASTIGATIO | CVIVSDAM CIR-|CVLATORIS, QVI R.
-P. | ANDREAM EVDÆMON-|IOHANNEM CYDONI-|VM E SOCIETATE IE-|su seipsum
-nuncupat. | _OPPOSITA IPSIVS CA-_|_lumnijs in Epistolam_ ISAACI |
-CASAVBONI _ad Fronto-_|_nem Ducæum_. | Per IOHANNEM PRIDEAUX SS.
-The-|ologiæ Doctorem & Collegij | _Exoniensis Rectorem_. | [_motto_,
-then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1614: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 242: p. 11 beg. _apud
- regiam_, 111 _us, qui opus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- dedication to archbp. Abbot, dated “Oxon. è Collegio Exoniensi 9. Cal.
- Ianuarij”: (9–13) “Ad Lectorem”: (14–15) “Index capitum ...”: 1–242,
- the work, p. 20 being blank.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267. The circumstances of this book will
- be found in Mark Pattison’s ©Isaac Casaubon© (Lond., 1875: a work
- without an index), pp. 332, 347, 353, 410, esp. 438–443. Briefly,
- Casaubon’s “... ad Frontonem Ducæum [Fronto Le Duc] ... Epistola ...
- (Lond. 1611) was a defence of the execution of Henry Garnett in 1606,
- against some Jesuit books; a reply was published at Cologne in 1613 by
- Andreas Eudaemon-Johannes (L’Heureux) “... Epistola ad Amicum Gallum
- ... item Responsio ad Epistolam Isaaci Casauboni”, the Responsio being
- dated 1612 on a separate titlepage. Then Prideaux was selected to
- answer the ©Responsio©, in order to relieve Casaubon of the task: at
- p. 224 he quotes Casaubon’s account of his father’s last days. There
- is no real ground for Pattison’s remark that “few copies of Prideaux’s
- pamphlet survive” (_ut supra_, p. 443).
-
-
-13. ——. EPHESVS BACKSLIDING | CONSIDE-|RED AND APPLY-|ED TO THESE |
-times, in a Sermon preached at | Oxford, in S^t MARIES, the | tenth of
-Iuly, being the Act | _Sunday_. 1614. | BY | IOHN PRIDEAUX, Doctor of
-Divinity, | and Rector of Exceter College. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 37 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _worthie
- comming_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) dedication to
- dr. Bodley, “canon of Exeter, and parson of Shobrooke in Devon,” dated
- “from Exceter College in Oxford, August 5.”, 1614: 1–37, the sermon,
- on Rev. ii. 4.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 265. This sermon was
- reprinted in 1621 (London) and 1636, see 1636 P. The dedication
- mentions dr. Bodley’s favours towards Prideaux, and mr. (sir William?)
- Periam’s to one Orford of Exeter Coll., Oxford.
-
-
-14. ¬R[ainolds]¬, I[ohn]. THE | DISCOVERY | OF THE MAN OF SINNE: |
-WHEREIN IS SET FORTH THE | CHANGES OF GODS CHURCH, | _In her_ {
-_Afflictions by his Raigne_. | { _Consolations by his Raine_. | First
-preached in divers Sermons to the Vniver-|sitie and Cittie of Oxon, by a
-Reverend & Iu-|dicious Divine IR. D. of Divinity and some-|times of
-Queenes College. | _And now published for the farther vse of both, and_
-| _comfort of all that hate Antichrist and loue_ | _the Lord Iesus
-Christ wheresoever:_ | _By W. H._ | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 50: p. 11 beg. _gather that seeing_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to dr. Airay
- provost of Queen’s college, Oxford, dated “Bunbury in Cheshire, Iuly
- 8. 1614” signed “W. Hinde”: (5–6) “Advertisement to the Reader,” dated
- as before, with “William Hinde”: 1–50, one sermon, on 2 Thess. ii. 3.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 16, 462. Dr. John Raynolds was Scholar,
- Fellow, and President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, but at one
- time or another was connected with Queen’s, Merton, New College,
- University, and Oriel (©Register of the Univ. of Oxford©, vol 2, ed.
- A. Clark, pt. 1, p. 4). There is no clear reference to the author
- being dr. Raynolds anywhere in the volume, but the fact is undoubted.
- The “Advertisement,” as a matter of printing, follows the Sermon, but
- was probably intended to be torn off at that place and pasted in where
- it is described above.
-
-
-15. ¬Rainolds¬, dr. John. _V. CL._ | D. IOANNIS | _RAINOLDI_,| OLIM
-GRÆCÆ LIN-|guæ Prælectoris in _Collegio_ | _Corporis Christi_ apud |
-Oxonienses, | _Orationes Duodecim; cum alijs_ | quibusdam opusculis. |
-ADIECTA EST ORATIO | Funebris, in obitu eiusdem habi-|ta à M. ISAACO
-WAKE | Oratore Publico. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1614: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [6] + 77 + [17] + 201 + [111]:
- p. 11 beg. (1) _mi sint Antonii_, (2) _ponant laborioso_, 111
- _speramus . Veruntamen_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
- “Iohannes Rainoldus Academicis Oxoniensibus ...”, the Latin preface
- of 1587. R reprinted, date and all, “è Colleg. Corp. Christ.
- Februar. 2.”: 1–36 (i) “Oratio post vacationem Natalitiam. 1576.”,
- beg. _Epaminondam_: 37–77 (ii) “Oratio post vacationem Paschalem,
- Anno. 1576.”, beg. _Etsi Vestros_: (2) (iii) a titlepage:—“ORATIO
- FV-|NEBRIS HABI-|ta in Templo beatæ | _Mariæ Oxon._ | Ab ISAACO
- WAKE, | PVBLICO ACADE-|miȩ Oratore, _Maij_ 25. _An._ | 1607. quum
- mœsti | _Oxonienses, pijs mani-_|_bus_ IOHANNIS | RAINOLDI |
- _parentarent_. |”, woodcuts, then impr. 11: 4–12, the oration, beg.
- _Quam fragilis_: 1–45 (iv) “Oratio post festum Paschatis. 1574.”,
- beg. _Pythagoram_: 46–66 (v) “Oratio post festum Nat. Chr. 1575.
- ...”, beg. _Cicero cum_: 67–111 (vi) “Oratio post festum Paschatis,
- 1576.”, beg. _Consideranti_: 112–142 (vii) “Oratio post festum
- Michael. 1575.”, beg. _Non modò_: 143–164 (viii) “Oratio post festum
- Michael. 1576.”, beg. _Frequentia_: 165–196 (ix) “D. Iohannes
- Rainoldus Gulielmo Rainoldo fratri suo ...”, a Latin epistle on the
- Church, beg. _Neque meus_, dated “Oxoniæ 4. Non. Septemb.”: 197–199
- (x) “D. Iohannes Rainoldus D. Gulielmo VVhitakero ...”, an epistle
- urging Whitaker to answer Possevinus, dated “Oxon. 14 Kalend.
- Novemb.”, beg. “Facit amor”: 200–201 (xi) the dedication to the
- Queen of Rainolds’s ©De Romanæ Ecclesiæ Idololatria©, dated “Iul.
- vii. MDXCVI,” beg. _Quod olim_: (2) (xii) a titlepage:—“PLVTARCHI |
- CHÆRONENSIS | LIB. II. | 1 _De vtilitate ex hostibus_ | _capienda._
- | 2 _De morbis animi & cor-_|_poris._ | D. IOHANNE RAINOLDO |
- Interprete. |”, woodcuts, then impr. 11: (4–12) Dedication in Latin
- to Queen Elizabeth, dated “Oxon. è Coll. Corp. Christi.”, (13–41,
- 42–50) the two treatises: (52) (xiii) a titlepage:—“MAXIMI TYRII |
- PHILOSOPHI | PLATONICI | Disputationes Tres, | 1 _Vitam activam
- contem-_|_plativâ_, | 2 _Contemplativam activâ_ | _meliorem esse._ |
- 3 _Qui morbi graviores, ani-_|_mi, an corporis._ | D. IOHANNE
- RAINOLDO | Interprete. |,” woodcuts, then impr. 11: (54–60) Latin
- dedication to Thomas Wilson “Regiæ Majestati à libellis
- supplicibus”: (61–78, 79–94, 95–109) the three disputations: (110)
- (xiv) the titlepage noticed in 1613. R.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 16, where he mentions that Henry Jackson
- was editor of all the Orations except the first two which had been
- published before, see 1587 R. The funeral oration was first printed in
- 1607, see 1607 (Wake, 2nd ed.). From a bibliographical point of view
- there is great confusion in this and the two subsequent editions of
- Rainolds’s Orations (_Lond._ 1610, and _Lond._ 1628). For instance
- Wood himself in his remarks about Henry Jackson has confused the
- London edd. (B. C.) with the Oxford one (A).
-
- In A (the present volume) it is impossible to reckon twelve Orations,
- and the book falls into three parts (_a_) pp. [6] + 77 + [17], signn.
- A-D^{12}, sectt. i-iii. above: (_b_) pp. 201 + [1], signn. A-H^{12}, I
- 1–5, sectt. iv-xi.: (_c_) pp. [110], signn. I 6–12, K-N^{12}, sectt.
- xii-xiv. In B (Lond. 1619) _a_ is as before occupying pp. [12] +
- 1–106: then follows “... Rainoldi ... Orationes quinque ...” with a
- separate titlepage and preface by H. Jackson, occupying pp. 107–348
- [the Orations beg. ©Si quis© (1573), ©Redit agricolis© (1574), ©Si
- quantum vel, cum in isto© (1577), _Si quantum ad_ (1573)]: then _b_,
- pp. 349–528: then _c_, the Plutarch and Maximus Tyrius, with separate
- titlepages, occupying pp. 529–624: there is no extra titlepage at end.
- In C (Lond. 1628) the same four sections occupy pp. [6] + 1–92,
- 93–302, 303–460, 461–548, corresponding closely with B in contents.
-
-
-16. ¬St. Paul¬, sir George. “2591. Oxford. Carmina Funebria in Obitum
-Clarissimi Viri Georgii de Sancto Paulo Equitis Aurati C.C.C. Oxon. olim
-Convictoris et _ejusdem Benefactoris munifici_, _Oxoniæ_, Jos.
-Barnesius, 1614” quarto.
-
- So in the ©Bibliotheca Heberiana© (Auction catalogue of Richard
- Heber’s Library), part 6 (Lond. 1835), p. 185: the book sold for 9_s._
- See 1613 C.
-
-
-17. Smith, Samuel. “262. Smith (Sam.) & Brerewoodi Logica—Oxon. 1614.”
-
- So in “Catalogi Librorum Richardi Davis bibliopolæ. Pars secunda”
- (Lond. 1686), p. 77. No Oxford edition of Smith’s ©Aditus ad Logicam©
- is at present known, see 1613. S, 1617. S (reff. there), but as the
- latter is a 3rd edition, there may well have been one printed at
- Oxford in this year, of which no copy has yet found its way into
- bibliography. Of Brerewood’s ©Logica© there is a London 1614 ed.,
- probably alluded to in Davis’s Catalogue above.
-
-
- 1615.
-
-1. ¬Anyan¬, Thomas. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT SAINT | MARIE SPITTLE |
-_April. 10. 1615._ | _BY_ | THOMAS ANYAN Doctour of Divinity, and |
-_President of Corpus Christi College_ | _in Oxon_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2: (1615): sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 42 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _like
- Vessels_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to
- Thomas Egerton lord Ellesmere, chancellor of the University: 1–42, the
- sermon, on Acts x. 34–35.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 359.
-
-
-2. ¬Benefield¬, Sebastian. THE | SINNE | AGAINST THE HOLY | GHOST
-DISCOVERED: | AND OTHER CHRISTI-|an doctrines delivered: | IN | TWELVE
-SERMONS VPON PART | of the tenth Chapter of the Epistle to | the
-Hebrewes. | _By_ | SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD _Doctor of Divinity_ | _and
-Professour for the Lady Margaret_, | _in the Vniversitie of_ OXFORD. |
-[_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 181 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _hold on
- their_, 111 _The writer of_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication to William lord Paget, “From my Study in Corpus Christi
- College in Oxford, March 25. 1615”: 1–181, the 12 sermons, on Heb. x.
- 26–31: (1–3), “The Table containing the particulers of this booke,” an
- alphabetical index.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 488. The dedication states that the
- Sermons were written “many years” before, and existed in several MS.
- copies, and thanks lord Paget for benefactions to the Margaret
- Professor. The Sin is discovered to be a malicious denial of
- Christianity.
-
-
-3. ¬Brasbridge¬, Thomas. “©Questiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis,
-compendiariam totius opusculi Epitomen continentes.© Oxon. 1615, oct.
-Dedicated to Dr. Laur. Humphrey president of Magd. coll. an. 1586.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 526, cf. Wood’s ©Historia et
- Antiquitates Universitatis Oxoniensis© (Oxon. 1674) lib. 2, p. 197.
- See 1592 B.
-
-
-4. Case, John. “292 Casus (Joan.) de Sphæra Civitatis — — Oxon. 1615”
-
- A doubtful entry in Tho. Bowman’s ©Catalogus librorum© (Oxf. 1687)
- sign. H 1^r.
-
-
-5. ¬Day¬, John. CONCIO AD CLERVM | IN SECVNDI, VEL QVARTI, RE-|_GVM,
-CAPITIS SEXTI, VER-_|SVM PRIMVM, SECVNDVM, | _TERTIVM, ET QVARTVM_. |
-Habita in Templo _B. Mariæ_ Oxon. | Iunij 25^o. _Ann. Dom._ 1612. | PER
-IOANNEM DAYVM BACCALAV-|reum in Theologia, et Collegij ORIELEN-|SIS apud
-Oxonienses Socium. | _EDITIO SECVNDA._ [_device_, then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 26 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _dimento
- minimè_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) Latin dedication,
- nearly as 1st ed.: (4) “Thema,” the text: 1–26, the sermon: (1–2)
- letter, as 1st ed.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 412. This is a reprint with a few changes
- of 1612 D.
-
-
-6. ——. DAVID’S DESIRE | TO GOE TO CHVRCH: AS IT | was published in two
-Sermons | in _S_^t MARIES in | OXFORD. | The _One_, the _Fift_ of
-_November_, in the Afternoone | to the Vniversitie, in the Yeare of our
-Lord | God 1609. the _Other_, on _Christmas_ | _Day_ next following, to
-the Pa-|rishioners of that | place. | [_device_, then 2 _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 48: p. 11 beg. _waies but often_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) epistle dedicatory to Oriel
- college and St. Mary’s parish, Oxford, signed “Iohn Day”: 1–25, the
- first sermon: 26, quotation from Camden’s Annales about queen
- Elizabeth: 27–48, the second sermon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 411. This is a reprint of 1612 D, but
- neither is that fact mentioned, nor is the author’s name on the title.
-
-
-7. ——. DAY’S FESTIVALS | _OR,_ | _TWELVE OF HIS SERMONS_: | DELIVERED BY
-HIM AT SEVERAL | times to the PARISHIONERS of S^t MARYES | in OXFORD, on
-the three Chiefe FESTI-|VALS of the Yeere, CHRISTMAS, | EASTER, and
-WHIT-SONTIDE. | _THREE OF VVHICH SERMONS_, | _are touching our_ SAVIOUR;
-ONE, _the_ HO-|LY GHOST; TWO, _the_ TWO SA-|CRAMENTS; _The other_ SIX,
-_such_ | _severall_ DVTIES _as belong to_ | _the severall sorts of all_
-| CHRISTIANS. | [_device_, then two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 7_a_: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 352: p. 11 beg. _the Nations of_,
- 111 _selfe same Steps_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- dedication to Oriel college, Oxford: (8) “The Severall Arguments, with
- Severall Texts ...”, with a note: 1–160, six sermons: 161–188 short
- pieces on the Lord’s Supper, containing a letter to “Ea.” of St.
- Mary’s parish dated “Oriel. Coll. March. 2.”, “Sacred Fragments” (on
- both Sacraments) and prayers: 189–352, the six last sermons.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 411. The dedication alludes to the
- circumstances of preaching “David’s Desire to go to Church,” see 1612
- D, and foreg. art.
-
-
-8. ¬Evans¬, Edward. VERBA DIERVM, | OR, | _THE DAYES REPORT_, | OF GODS
-GLORY. | _As it hath beene delivered some yeeres since, at Foure
-Ser-_|_mons, or Lectures vpon one Text, in the Famous V-_|_niversity of_
-OXFORD; _And since that time_ | _somewhat Augmented; And is now
-com-_|_mended vnto All Times to be Aug-_|_mented and Amended._ | _By_ |
-EDWARD EVANS, Preacher and Minister | _of Gods word_. | [3 _mottos_,
-then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 181 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _tie? And_,
- 111 _to come. By_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3)
- dedication to the honour of God: (4) “Faults of Omission and
- Commission ...” beg. “Pag. 5. for ὁλὴν Read, ὅλην”: 1–181, the four
- sermons, on Ps. xix. 2: (1) 3 mottos.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 168, where a MS. note by Bliss in his own
- copy shows that the author _was_ the Fellow of New College, and that
- Wood was in error in supposing otherwise. See next art.
-
-
-9. ——. VERBA DIERVM, | [&c. precisely as foreg. art.]
-
- Impr. 7: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 181 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _tie? And_,
- 111 _to come. By_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2–3)
- dedication to the honour of God, with words in italic inserted between
- the two parts of the original dedication: (4) “Faults of Omission and
- Commission,” beg. “Pag. 31. lin. 1 For _tations_”: rest as foreg.
- art., except 4 mottos, not 3.
-
- This is a second issue with some of the text reset, with additions and
- alterations, as for instance on p. 144 in which the paginal misprint
- “134” is corrected, and which begins “newes of His Glory,” instead of
- “of Speech more warrantable.”
-
-
-10. ¬Hakewill¬, George. THE | VANITIE OF | _THE EYE_, | First beganne
-[&c. exactly as 1608 H, second edition, except “_third_” for “_second_,”
-“_Author_” for “_Authour_,” and different woodcuts on title.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1615: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 170 + [24]: p. 11 beg. _and
- by consequence_, 111 _maker; I_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
- 5–8, “The Contents ...”: 1–170, the work: (1–18) additional quotations
- and notes for the third edition, preceded by an explanatory paragraph.
-
- See 1608 H. This is a reprint throughout, with the addition of some
- quotes on an extra sheet.
-
-
-11. Haven. “The hauen of the afflicted / _Oxon._ 1615.”.
-
- A doubtful entry in the ©Bibliotheca classica ... authore M. Georgio
- Draudio© (Francof. 1625), 2nd part, p. 269: probably referring to
- Sebastian Benefield’s Sermon, 1613, which see.
-
-
-12. ¬Mornay¬, Philippe de, seigneur Du Plessis. AN | HOMILY VPON | THESE
-WORDS | of Saint Matthew, | Chap. 16, v. 18. | _Tu es Petrus._ | WRITTEN
-FIRST | in French by that Hono-|_rable and learned perso-_|nage,
-Monsieur Du PLES-|SIS MORNAY. | AND TRANSLATED | into English by I. V. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1615: (twelve & six) 16^o: pp. [8] + 28: p. 11 beg. _ceaued
- of God_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7) epistle
- dedicatory to D^r Prideaux rector of Exeter college Oxford “my most
- respected good Master,” signed “I. V”: 1–28, the homily.
-
- The “I. V.” is supposed to be John Verneuil sublibrarian of the
- Bodleian, who was a Frenchman by birth: but he was of Magdalen and so
- not very likely to dedicate his first work to the head of another
- college. The collocation of this work and another translation of
- Mornay (1612 M) in a Bodleian volume suggest the possibility of the
- same person being translator of both.
-
-
-13. Powell, Gabriel. “©Prodromus. A Logical Resolution of the first
-Chapter of the Epist. of St. Paul to the Rom.© Lond. 1600. Ox. 1602.
-oc.... Printed there again in Lat. 1615. oct. ©Theological and
-Scholastical Positions concerning Usury.©—Pr. with ©Prodromus©.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 25, perhaps dubious.
-
-
-14. ¬Prayer¬, book of Common. LIBER | PRECVM | PVBLICARVM | IN VSVM
-ECCLE-|siæ Chathedralis Chri-|_sti Oxon_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1615: (eights) 16^o: pp. [40] + 240 + [16]: p. 11 beg.
- _filiæ Sion_, 111 _12. Nam liberabit_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–40) Matutinæ: preces, Vespertinæ preces, Letania, not in
- full: 1–240, the Psalms, in Latin: (1–6) Special prayers, “Pro officio
- totius Ecclesiæ in Communi,” “Pro Rege,” “Tempore Pestilentiæ,” “Pro
- docilitate,” “Gratiæ. Ante cibum” and “Post cibum”: (7) the versicle
- and response still used at Ch. Ch. after the Anthem, a prayer for the
- King and a commemoration of Henry viii, founder of Ch. Ch., all in
- Latin: (9–16) Psalms 43, 114, 117, 119 (part), 133, 150, in Latin
- rhyming verse, perhaps a separate piece of printing.
-
- See 1639 P, 1660, 1676, 1689, 1726, all which editions differ in the
- details of contents, and the 1639 ed. is entitled “Liber Psalmorum et
- precum ...” It may be noted that the signatures and paging constitute
- the Psalms a separate book, whereas the Stationers’ Company had
- obtained in 1603 a monopoly of printing the Psalms, confirmed in 1615.
-
-
-15. ¬Prideaux¬, dr. John. [_woodcut_] | CHRISTS | COVNSELL FOR EN-|DING
-LAW CASES. | _AS IT HATH BEENE DELIVE-_|red in two Sermons vpon the
-25^{th} | Verse of the 5^{th} of Matthew. | BY | JOHN PRIDEAUX _Doctor
-of Divinity and_ | _Rector_ of Exceter Colledge. | [_motto_, then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 2: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 58: p. 11 beg. _Tremelius notes_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–26, 27–58, the sermons.
-
- See 1636 P.
-
-
-16. [¬Sanderson¬, Robert]. LOGICÆ AR-|_TIS COMPENDIVM_. | _In quo_ |
-Vniversæ artis Synopsis, methodo ac for-|mâ ad Scholarum vsum, quàm
-fieri | potuit, accommodatissi-|mâ breviter pro-|ponitur. | _In privatam
-nonnullorum gratiam_ | _& vtilitatem tantisper edi-_|_tum, dùm ad
-pleniora_ | _maturuerint._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1615: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 230 + [Appendixes, see below]
- 124 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _possunt. Individua_: 111 _tur auferendo_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) “Elenchus capitum”: (7–8)
- “Admonitio ad Lectorem”: 1–230, the Compendium, in three parts.
-
- Very rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 626. See 1618 S (2nd. ed.,
- reprinted in Sanderson’s Works, vol. 6), 1631 S (3rd), 1640 S (4th),
- 1657 (5th), 1664 (6th), (7th), 1672 (8th), 1680 (9th), _no date_
- (10th, according to dr. Jacobson, Sanderson’s editor), and 1707, 1741,
- 1841, 1854 (in Sanderson’s works, Oxf. 1854, vol. 6). Cf. 1602 S. The
- ©Admonitio© declares that the Appendixes are not ready and must be
- omitted. There is no clue to the author in the book. The only copy I
- have seen (in Queen’s College Library, Oxford) has the Appendixes of
- the second edition bound with it, so possibly they were printed in
- time to be issued with some copies.
-
-
-17. ¬Sharpe¬, Lionel, archdeacon of Berkshire. ARTICLES MINISTRED IN |
-the Visitation of the Right Worshipfull | M^r. DOCTOR SHARPE
-Arch-|_deacon of Barkeshire, in the yeare_ | _of our Lord God. 1615._ |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 4: 1615: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4 B^2: sign. B 1^r beg. _at
- morning_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-B 2^r, 51
- articles: B 2^v, “The oath of the Church-wardens.”
-
-
-18. ¬Wake¬, Isaac. REX PLATONICVS: | [&c. exactly as 1607 W, 2nd ed.,
-except “Aug.” for “Aug”, “An.” for “Anno.”, “_NARRATIO_,” “AB ISAACO
-WAKE”, “_e-_|_mendatior_,” and “Tertia” for “Secunda.”]
-
- Impr. 13_c_: 1615: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 224 + [20]: p. 11 beg.
- _minum memoriam_, 111 _cumano irruunt_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—as 1607 W., 2nd ed., except “13 Cal. Jul.” in dedication,
- and in 2nd titlepage “HABI-|ta,” “beatæ | ,” “ACADE-|miæ,” “_piis_,”
- “_parenta-_|rent.”, and the Oration is (6–19), and dated 1615.
-
- This is a reprint verbatim but not literatim. Cf. 1607 W., 2nd ed.
-
-
- 1616.
-
-1. ¬Advice.¬ [_woodcut_] | THE | ADVISE OF | A SONNE, NOVV PRO-|FESSING
-THE RELIGI-|ON ESTABLISHED IN | the present Church of England, | _to his
-deare Mother, yet a Ro-_|man Catholike. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1616: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 38: p. 11 beg. _answere, that_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–38, the work.
-
- A controversial discourse against Roman Catholicism.
-
-
-2. ¬Bailey¬, Walter. _TWO_ | TREATISES | CONCERNING | the Preseruation
-of | EIE[/]SIGHT. | The first written by Do-|ctor BAILY sometimes of
-Ox-|ford: the other collected | _out of those two famous_ | Physicions
-FERNELIVS | and RIOLANVS. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 34: 1616: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 64: p. 11 beg. _yeeld into_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7) “To the Reader,” a preface
- by I[ohn] B[arnes]: 1–24, “A breefe Treatise concerning the
- preseruation of the eye sight”: 25–62, “A Treatise of the principall
- diseases of the eyes, gathered _out of_ Fernelius _and_ Iohn Riolamus
- _Doctors of Phisicke_.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 586 and 1602 B, for the first treatise.
- Johannes Fernelius and Johannes Riolanus the elder, both French
- physicians, died in 1558 and 1609 respectively, but neither wrote a
- special treatise on eyesight. The preface is no doubt by John Barnes
- and alludes to the worth and undeserved obscurity of Bailey’s work.
- The whole book with the possible exception of the titlepage, was
- printed in London, the woodcuts being quite unknown at Oxford. Even
- the arms of the University on the titlepage are re-cut on wood. The
- first treatise is only a reprint, Dr. Bailey having died in 1592, and
- the whole book, preface and all, was reprinted at London in 1626.
-
-
-3. ¬Fuller¬, Nicholas. _MISCELLANEORVM_ | _Theologicorum_, | QVIBVS NON
-| MODO SCRIPTVRÆ DIVINÆ, | SED ET ALIORVM CLASSICO-|rum Auctorum plurima
-monumenta explican-|tur atque illustrantur; | LIBRI TRES, | _Plurimarum
-observationum, in hac Editione, insigni_ | auctario Locupletati: | _His
-insuper accessit, consimilis argumenti_, Liber | item Quartus, _antehac
-nunquam pervulgatus_. | _AVCTORE_ | NICOLAO FULLERO antiquæ & | inclytæ
-Ecclesiæ Cathedralis | SARISBVRIENSIS | _Canonico_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1616: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + “452” (440–443 are omitted in the
- numbers of pages) + [8] + “453”-“645” + [3]: p. 11 beg. _mi, quibus
- ait_, 111 _Astrologum_, 501 _sum est illud_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Epistola dedicatoria to sir Henry
- Wallop, dated “Ex Musæo nostro Aldingtonæ” 25 Jan. 1615 i. e. 1615/6:
- (9–10) “Ad lectorem”: (11–16) list of chapters in books 1–3: 1–452,
- the work, bks. 1–3: (1–5) dedication of bk. 4 to dr. Arthur Lake
- warden of New College, Oxford, dated “Ex Musæo nostro Aldingtonȩ 1
- Feb. 1615” i. e. 1615/6: (6–8) list of chapters in bk. 4: 453–645, the
- work, bk. 4: (1) “Errata ... & prætermissa ...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 327, the biography in which appears to be
- largely founded on the preface to this book. The first edition of bks.
- 1–3 is _Heidelberg_ 1612, the preface dated 1609. There is a reissue
- of the sheets of the present edition (Errata and all) “Londini, apud
- Johannem Billium. Anno 1617,” the titlepage alone being newly printed
- and the old one torn off. The 4th and 5th books were published at
- Leyden in 1622, and all reprinted in the 9th volume of the ©Critici
- Sacri© (Lond. 1660).
-
-
-4. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. ROMANÆ HISTORIÆ ANTHOLOGIA | [&c. exactly as 1614
-G, except “Eng-|lish,” “and | divers,” “For the use of” (not italic):
-and after “Schoole” is added | “Editio Secunda.” |]
-
- Impr. 2: 1616: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 193 + [19]: p. 11 beg. _ved in the
- treasurie_, 111 _cense the people_: Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly as
- 1614 G, except “Calend.” and “Godvvinus.”
-
- See 1614 G., of which this is a verbatim and almost paginatim, but not
- literatim, reprint.
-
-
-5. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. SYNOPSIS | ANTIQVITATVM HE-|braicarum, ad
-explicationem vtri-|usque Testamenti valde | necessaria. | _AD
-FACILIOREM INTELLE-_|_CTVM, PLVRIMA SVNT COL-_|_LATA CVM REBVS HO-_|DIE
-IN VSV. | _Authore_ | THOMA GODWINO | in _Art. Magistro_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1616: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 190 + [10]: p. 11 beg. _illîc
- loci_, 111 _& inter semen_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) dedication to James Montague bp. of Bath & Wells, dated “Oxon.
- pridie Iduum Januarij”: (5–6) “Lectori ...”: (7) a table of divisions:
- 1–190, the work: (1) Comparative table of Hebrew and English Coins:
- (3–9) “Index rerum et verborum maxime insignium.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 52, and 1613 G note. The author was
- chaplain to the bp. of Bath and Wells. The ©Moses et Aaron© of the
- same author (Lond. 1625 and often) covers some of the same ground, but
- is a distinct work and in English.
-
-
-6. [¬Nixon¬, Anthony.] THE | DIGNITIE | OF MAN, | Both | IN THE
-PERFECTIONS | OF HIS SOVLE AND BODIE. | [_line_] | _SHEWING AS WELL THE_
-| faculties in the disposition of the one: as the | Senses and Organs,
-in the composi-|tion of the other. | By _N. A_ | [_line_, then _device_
-with _woodcuts_, then _line_]
-
- Impr. 35: 1616: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 125 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Q. How are_,
- 111 _Q. What is the_: English Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2), [not seen]:
- (3) title: (5–7): dedication to William Redman of Great Shelford,
- signed N. A.: 1–125, the work: (1–3) [not seen.]
-
- Very rare. This book is questions and answers on almost every subject
- concerned with man’s body and mind. Not a line of it was printed at
- Oxford, the woodcuts and type differ from Oxford ones, and even the
- device, which is like the smaller Oxford Arms of the University, is
- from a different block. The British Museum catalogue supplies the
- author’s name.
-
-
-7. ¬Persius.¬ AVLVS PERSIVS FLACCVS | _HIS_ | SATIRES TRANSLA-|_TED INTO
-ENGLISH_, | BY |BARTEN HOLYDAY M^r of Arts, | and Student of
-Christ-Church | _in Oxford_. | [_motto_] | The second Impression. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 2: 1616: (eights) 12^o: pp. [72], signn. A-D^8 E^4: sign. B 4^r
- beg. _Dissolu’d vnto_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title:
- A 2^r-A 5^r, “To the Reader”: A 5^v-B 1^r, Complimentary letter from
- John Ley, and verses by John Wall and others: B 1^v-E 2^r, the
- translation, with a few notes: E 2^v-E 3^r, “An apostrophe of the
- translatour to his Authour _Persius_,” &c.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 523. The first edition seems to be
- unrecorded. There are London editions of 1617, 1635, and 1650: and
- Oxf. 1673. Some edition of this book was entered at Stationers’ Hall
- by John Barnes on 14 Nov. 1616, and another by William Arundel, by
- John Barnes’s consent on 29 Mar. 1617.
-
-
-8. ¬Robinson¬, Hugh. “©Preces.© Written for the use of the children of
-Winchester school in Lat. and Engl. ©Grammaticalia quædam©, in Lat. and
-Engl. ©Antiquæ Historiæ Synopsis©. All which were printed at Oxon. 1616.
-in a large oct.”
-
- So Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 395.
-
-
- 1617.
-
-1. ¬Angelus¬, Christophorus. [_woodcut._] | Πόνησις Χριστοφόρου τοῦ
-Ἀγγέλου, Ἕλληνος τοῦ πολλῶν πλη-|γῶν, καὶ Μαστίγων γευσαμένου ἀδίκως
-παρὰ τῶν | Τουρκῶν διὰ τὴν εἰς Χριστὸν Πίστιν. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A^4 B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- σφόδρα· καὶ ὅτι: Pica Greek. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r,
- dedication to English people in Greek: A 2^r-B 2^r, the work: B 2^v, a
- woodcut, see below.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 633, and the next art. Two very
- rude wood engravings illustrate the text, one on sign. A 4^r depicting
- the tortures inflicted on Angelus by the Turks, the other (sig. B 4^v)
- possibly an emblematic figure representing England.
-
-
-2. ——. [_woodcut_] | CHRISTOPHER ANGELL,—a Grecian, who tasted of many |
-stripes and torments inflicted by the | Turkes for the faith which he |
-had in Christ Iesus. | ⁂⁂ | [_line_] | [_woodcut_] | [_line_.]
-
- Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A B^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _much in debt_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r
- dedication to England: A 2^r-B 3^r, the work: B 4^r, a woodcut, see
- below.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 633, 1618 A, and preceding art., of
- which this is a translation, in good English. The same two engravings
- occur as in the Greek text, on sign. A 4^r and B 4^r.
-
-
-3. ¬Duck¬, Arthur. [_woodcut._] | VITA | HENRICI | CHICHELE |
-ARCHIEPISCOPI | _CANTVARIENSIS_ | SVB REGIBVS HENRIC: V. ET VI. |
-DESCRIPTA AB ARTHVRO DUCK: | _LL. D._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 11: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 108 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _licentur
- etiam_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–180, the Life: (1)
- account of the sources of the Life: (3) “Errata.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 258. The Life was reprinted in [Bates’s]
- ©Vitæ Selectorum ... virorum©, Lond. 1681, p. 1: and an English
- translation was published at London in 1699. This Life of the founder
- of All Souls contains some solid historical matter, with a few
- documents. Some copies want the Errata.
-
-
-4. ¬Hales¬, John. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT S^t MA-|RIES IN OXFORD VPON |
-TVESDAY IN EASTER | _VVEEKE_, 1617. | _CONCERNING THE ABVSES_ | _of
-obscure and difficult places of holy_ | _Scripture, and remedies
-a-_|_gainst them_. | By IOHN HALES, | FELLOW OF ETON COLLEDGE, | and
-_Regius Professour_ of the Greeke | tongue in the Vniversitie | of
-Oxford. | [_line_: then _device_: then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 41 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _monly they_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–41, the sermon, on 2 Pet.
- iii. 16.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 409. This sermon was
- reprinted in Hale’s ©Golden Remains© (Lond. 1659 &c.), with others.
- The text, outer margin and headlines of every page are within bounding
- lines.
-
-
-5. ¬Hutchins¬, Robert. Stationers’ Register, ed. Arber, iii. 654 “7^o
-Augusti 1619. John Barnes. Entred for his copie by order of a Court _A
-short Catechisme_ made by ROBERT HUTCHINS which was the copie of ¬Joseph
-Barnes¬ his ffathers ... vj^d,” assigned to John Wright the same day.
-This Catechism cannot be later than 1617, in which year Joseph Barnes
-ceased printing, nor before 1605 when John Wright began to publish: but
-I find no other notice of the book or author.
-
-
-6. ¬Jackson¬, Thomas. NAZARETH AND BETHLEHEM, | OR, | ISRAEL’S | PORTION
-IN THE SONNE | OF IESSE. | AND, | MANKINDS COMFORT | _FROM THE WEAKER
-SEXE._ | _TVVO SERMONS PREACHED IN_ | _S_^t Maryes Church in Oxford. |
-BY | THOMAS IACKSON, Bachelour of Divinitie, and | Fellow of Corpus
-Christi College | _in Oxford_. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 38: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 75 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _returne to_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to James
- Montague bp. of Winchester, dated “from my study in Corpus Christi
- College ... Septemb. 6. 1617”: 1–37, the first sermon, on Jer. xxxi.
- 21–22: 38–75, the second, on Gal. iv. 4–5.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 668. The text, outer margins and
- headlines are within bounding lines.
-
-
-7. ¬M[orrice?]¬, T[homas?] DIGESTA | SCHOLASTICA, | IN GRATIAM
-PVE-|RORVM EDITA: | IN DVAS DIVISA PAR-|_tes: quarum prior Prosaica_, |
-_posterior Metrica_ | _continet_. | Per T. M. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 37: 1617: (eights) 12^o: pp. [4] + 52 + 127 + [1]: pp. 11 beg.
- _impetu_ and _Ipse Perillæo_, 111 _Vt plus_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) “ad lectorem”: (4) the contents: 1–52, the
- first part: 1–127, the second part.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 272. The book consists of adages and
- extracts suitable for school use.
-
-
-8. ¬Oxford¬, University. IACOBI ARA | [_engraving_] | CEV, IN IACOBI
-MAG-|NÆ BRITANNIÆ FRANCIÆ | ET HIBERNIÆ REGIS SERENIS-|SIMI, &C:
-AVSPICATISSIMVM | REDITVM E SCOTIA IN | ANGLIAM, ACADEMIÆ | _OXONIENSIS
-GRA-_|TVLATORIA. |
-
- Impr. 37: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [80], signn. A-K^4: sign. B 1^r beg. _Vis
- restituta_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 1^v “Iacobi
- patriarchæ cum Iacobo rege ... comparatio,” a poem: A 2^r-K 4^r, the
- poems: K 4^v, “Conclusio,” a poem.
-
- Congratulatory poems by members of the University of Oxford, on the
- occasion of the return of James i from a short visit to Scotland. All
- are in Latin except two Greek and two French: one is acrostic and one
- in the shape of an altar. On the title is a rough wood engraving of an
- altar with fire, bearing the words DEO REDVCI:.
-
-
-9. ¬Smith¬, Samuel. ADITVS | AD | LOGICAM. | In vsum eorum qui pri-|mò
-ACADEMIAM | Salutant. | [_line_] | _Autore_ SAMVELE SMITH | _Artium
-Magistro_. | [_line_] | Editio Tertia. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 13_c_: 1617: (twelves) 16^o: [2] + 204 + [2] + 2 unpaged tables,
- see below: p. 11 beg. _Tertio Ge-_, 111 _ctivam habet_: Long Primer
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–204, the work, in 3 books, with two
- sm. 4^o leaves unpaged inserted at pp. 32–3 and 42–3, printed on one
- side only with logical divisions of Substantia and Qualitas
- respectively: (1) “Lectoribus ...”, a deprecation of criticism.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 283. This is the first
- known Oxford edition: see 1613 S., 1614 S., 1618 S., 1627 S., 1633 S.,
- 1639 S., 1684. There is also a London ed. of 1621.
-
-
-10. ¬Terry¬, John. _THE_ | REASONA-|BLENESSE OF WISE AND | holy truth:
-and the absurditie | _of foolish and wicked_ | _Errour_. | [_two texts_,
-then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 38 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _able so_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to Arthur Lake,
- bp. of Bath and Wells: 1–38, the sermon, on John xvii. 17.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 410.
-
-
-11. ¬W.¬, R., of Hart Hall, Oxford. “©Merry Jests concerning Popes,
-Monkes and ffryers© translated out of Ffrench by R. W. Bachelour of Arts
-of H[arts]. H[all]. in Oxon.”
-
- So in Arber’s ©Transcript of the Stationers’ Register©, as a book of
- Joseph Barnes’s, entered at Stationers’ Hall 26 Feb. 1620/1 by John
- Barnes. It must have been printed between 1585 and 1617 inclusive,
- probably after 1610.
-
-
- 1618.
-
-1. ¬Angelus¬, Christophorus. [_woodcut_] | CHRISTO-|PHER ANGELL, | A
-GRECIAN, WHO TA-|sted of many stripes and tor-|ments inflicted by the |
-_Turkes for the faith_ | _which he had in_ | _Christ Iesus_.| ⁂ |
-[_device_].
-
- Impr. 39: 1618: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _much in debt_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r,
- dedication to England: A 2^r-B 3^r, the work: B 4^r, a woodcut, see
- below.
-
- Very rare: for the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 633. Dr. Bliss
- in his copy of Angelus, now in the Bodleian, suggests that this
- edition was worked off without the Greek when Angelus betook himself
- to travel about the country. It is a reprint almost literatim of 1617
- A. Angelus was in Oxford, according to Dr. Bliss, from Whitsuntide
- 1610 to about Easter 1618, and died 1 Feb. 1638/9. The second woodcut
- is a new and rather more elaborate one than in the 1617 issue, but not
- more intelligible, and is enclosed in an oval frame: the first (on
- sign. A 4^r) is unchanged.
-
-
-2.*† ——. [Letters testimonial to the good behaviour of Christopher
-Angell, (1) & (3) from the University of Oxford, 10 May 1610 and 20 Mar.
-1617 (1617/8), and (2) from the bp. of Salisbury 15 Aug. 1616, all in
-English.
-
- Probably printed at Oxford in 1618: (one) la. 8^o: pp. [2]: p. 1 beg.
- “[woodcuts] _The bearer hereof, Christopher Angell_”: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) the testimonials.
-
- Very rare.
-
-
-3. ¬Butler¬, Charles. “©Rhetoricæ Libri duo, ‘quorum prior de Tropis &
-Figuris, posterior de Voce & Gestu præcipit©, &c.’ Oxon. 1618, the 4th
-edit. ... qu.”
-
- So Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 210: see Supplement 1598 B: and 1600 B.
-
-
-4. ¬Farrear¬, Robert. “‘_A brief Direction to the French Tongue_, &c.’
-Oxon 1618. oct. in the title of which book he wrote himself M.A.”
-
- So Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 278.
-
-
-5. ¬Panke¬, John. _COLLECTANEA._ | OVT OF | S^t GREGORY | THE GREAT, |
-AND | _S_^t _BERNARD THE_ | _Devout, against the Papists who ad-_|_here
-to the doctrine of the present_ | _Church of Rome, in the most_ |
-_fundamentall points_ | _betweene them_ | _and vs_. | [_motto_, then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 39: 1618: (eights) 12^o: pp. [22] + 113 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _which
- by Sathans_, 111 _quod accepistis_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–21) Epistle dedicatorie to George Churchowse, mayor of “New
- Sarum” and the corporation, dated “from the Close at Sarum this 24
- _Iunij. 1618_,” signed “John Panke.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 274. This tract was reprinted at
- Salisbury in 1835, in 8vo, with the title “Romanism condemned by the
- Church of Rome, or Popery convicted ... By the Rev. John Panke ...,”
- with the spelling modernized.
-
-
-6. ¬Sanderson¬, Robert. LOGICÆ | . ARTIS COMPEN-|_DIVM_. | SECVNDA HAC
-EDI-|tione recognitum, duplici | _Appendice auctum, & pub-_|_lici iuris
-factum_ | à ROB. SANDERSON Col-|legij Lincolniensis in al-|_mâ Oxoniensi
-Socio_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 40: 1618: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 232 + 124 + [4]: pp. 11 beg.
- _possunt. Individua_ and _sed ij ferè_: 111 _tur auferendo_ and
- _margine peculiari_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- “Elenchus capitum”: 1–232, the work, in three parts: 1–87, the first
- Appendix, De usu Logicæ: 89–124, the second Appendix, Miscella: (1)
- Errata typographica.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 626, and 1615 S.
-
-
-7. ¬Smith¬, Samuel. ADITVS AD | LOGICAM. | In vsum eorum qui pri=|mo
-ACADEMIAM | Salutant. | [_line_] | _Autore_ SAMVELE SMITH | _Artium
-Magistro_. | [_line_] | Edito quarta à multis mendis | quæ per incuriam
-Typo-|graphi irrepserunt, | repurgata. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 41: 1618: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [2] + 205 + [1] + 2 unpaged
- tables, see below: p. 11 beg. _Tertiò Ge-_, 111 _ctivam habet_: Long
- Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–205, the work, with two sm.
- 4^o leaves, as in the 3rd ed.: (1) “Lectoribus...”.
-
- See 1617 S of which this is a slightly corrected reprint.
-
-
- 1619.
-
-1. ¬Bedé¬, Jean. _THE_ | MASSE DIS-|PLAYED. | VVRITTEN IN FRENCH | by
-M^r JOHN BEDE, advocate to | _the Parliament of_ Paris, _and_ | _now
-translated into_ | _English_.| [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 39: 1619: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 112: p. 11 beg. _signifieth to_,
- 111 _bin no small_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–16) “The
- Preface to the Reader”, signed “E. C.”: 1–112, the work.
-
- This is a translation of “La Messe en François, exposée par M. Iean
- Bedé Angevin ...”, Geneva, 1610, 8^o. The translator may be Edward
- Chaloner, as suggested in the Bliss Sale Catalogue, for whom see
- Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 377.
-
-
-2. ¬Bernard¬, Richard. _THE_ | FABVLOVS | FOVNDATION OF | THE POPEDOME:
-| _OR_ | A FAMILIAR CONFERENCE BE-|tween two friends to the truth
-PHILALETHES, | and ORTHOLOGVS, shewing that it can-|not be proued, _That
-Peter was_ | _ever at Rome_. | _VVHEREVNTO IS ADDED A_ |
-_CHRONOGRAPHICALL DESCRIP-_|_tion of_ Pauls _peregrination with_ Peters
-_travells_, | _and the reasons why he could not be at_ | _Rome, that so
-the truth in one_ | _view may be more fully and ea-_|_sily be seene of
-e-_|_very one_. | [two _mottos_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 43: 1619: sm. 4^o: pp. [10] + 68 + 1 unpaged sheet, see below +
- [2]: p. 11 beg. _Christs Vicar_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
- (5–6) dedication to drs. Goodwin, Prideaux and Benefield, dated
- “Batcombe April 1. 1619,” signed “Richard Bernard”: (7–8) “To the
- Reader”, same date signed
-
- “R.
- B. B”:
-
- (9–10) “A summarie of the reasons, prouing Peter neuer to haue beene
- at Rome”: 1–68, the work: after p. 68 a large folded folio printed
- sheet, printed on one side only, “A short chronographicall description
- ...”, signed
-
- R.
- B. B,
-
- and with impr. 43. Pp. (1–2) (7–8) are an addition, wanting in some
- copies.
-
-
-3. ¬Crakanthorp¬, Richard. _INTRODVCTIO_ | IN | METAPHYSICAM. |
-_AVTHORE_ | RI. CRAKANTHORP | olim Collegij Reginæ | Oxon. Socio. |
-[_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 40: 1619: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 96: p. 11 beg. _di modum_:
- Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title, within a border: (5–8) “Ad
- studiosos Academiæ Oxoniensis alumnos,” dated “Oxon. è Collegio
- Reginæ. Decemb. 7. 1619”, signed “Guiliel. Richardson”: (9–12)
- “Lectori benevolo,” signed “R. C[rakanthorp]”: (13–16) “Index capitum
- et rerum ...”: 1–96, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 362. The author seems to have allowed
- Richardson to take the book through the press, but to have revised and
- prepared it himself.
-
-
-4. ¬Flavel¬, John. TRACTA-|TVS DE DE-|MONSTRATIONE | METHODICVS & |
-POLEMICVS, quatuor | libris absolutus: | _antehæc in usum Iuventutis_ |
-in Collegio WADHAMI | apud Oxonienses privatis | prælectionibus
-traditus, | à | IOANNE FLAVEL | Art. Mag. & ejusdem | Collegii Socio. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 42: 1619: (eights) 12^o: pp. [12] + 1 unpaged sheet + 144 +
- [12]: p. 11 beg. _Tractatus de_, 111 _rantiæ suæ_: Long Primer
- English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to bp. Arthur Lake,
- dated “Oxonij è Coll. Wad. Kal. Martij. 1618 [1 Mar. 1618/9]”, signed
- “Alexander Huish”: (5–6) “Lectori ...” by Huish: (7–10) “Index capitum
- ...”: after p. (12) is a folded obl. sm. 4^o sheet containing a
- conspectus of the work, printed on one side only: 1 “Prooemium”:
- 2–144, the work, in 4 bks.: (1–12) “Index rerum et verborum.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 207, and 1624 F, 1651 F. Flavel died in
- Nov. 1617, a Huish a co-collegian issued this volume from notes of
- Flavel’s pupils, preparing and editing them as he thought best.
-
-
-5. ¬Howson¬, bp. John. ARTICLES | TO BE ENQVIRED | OF VVITHIN THE
-DIO-|ces of Oxford, in the first Visitation | of the Right Reverend
-Father | in God, _Iohn_ Bishop | of _Oxford_. | _HELD_ | In the yeare of
-our Lord God 1619. in the seuen-|teenth yeare of the Raigne of our most
-gratious Sove-|raigne Lord, _Iames_, by the grace of God, King | of
-Great _Brittaine_, _France_, and _Ireland_, Defender of the | Faith: &c.
-and of _Scotland_ | the three & fiftieth. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 44: 1619: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Parents dwell_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 1^v,
- “The ... Oath ministred to the Churchwardens ...”, and “The Charge of
- the Churchwardens ...”: A 2^r-B 3^r, the articles: B 3^v, a further
- charge.
-
-
-6. ¬Mandevill¬, Robert. TIMOTHIES | TASKE: | _OR_ | _A CHRISTIAN
-SEA-CARD_, | _guiding through the coastes of a peaceable con-_|_science
-to a peace constant, and a_ | _Crowne immortall_. | Wherein I. Pastors
-are put in minde of their | double dutie, and how to discharge it. 1.
-Personall, | as watchful men. 2. Pastorall, as faithful watch-|men. II.
-True doctrine is advanced. III. Tradi-|tions discountenanced, & their
-rancour discovered. | _In two Synodoll assemblies at_ Carliell, _out of
-two seuerall, but_ | _sutable Scriptures. This of_ 1 Timoth. 4. 16.
-_and_ | _that of Actes_ 20. 28. | Since concorporate, and couched with
-augmentation | vnder their prime Head: | BY | ROBERT MANDEVILL,
-_sometimes of Queenes Colledge_ | _in Oxford, and Preacher of Gods word
-at_ | _Abbey-holme in Cumberland_. | [_text_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 45: 1619: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 64: p. 11 beg. _but Nusquam_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to the University,
- signed “Rob. Magnadevilla”: (5–7) dedicatory Epistle to dr. William
- Goodwin, dated “In Coll: Regin: ... 8 Idus Julij ... MDCXIX,” signed
- “Tho: Vicars”: (8) two laudatory Latin poems: 1–64, the discourse, on
- 1 Tim. iv. 16, ending with a chronogram.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 251. Vicars published the book, the
- author having died in 1618.
-
-
-7. ¬Oxford¬, University. _Academiæ Oxoniensis_ | FVNEBRIA | SACRA. |
-ÆTERNÆ MEMORIÆ SERENISSIMÆ REGINÆ | ANNÆ | _POTENTISSIMI MONARCHÆ_ |
-IACOBI Magnæ Britanniæ, Fran-|ciæ, & Hiberniæ Regis &c.
-De-|sideratissimæ Sponsæ, | DICATA. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 42: 1619: sm. 4^o: pp. [144], signn. A-S^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Quæ solita_, R 1^r _Et obruemus_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A
- 1^r title: A 2^r, dedicatory Latin poem to King James i: A 2^v-S 1^v,
- the poems: S 2^r-S 3^r, “Ad ... regem ... conclusio”, a poem.
-
- Poems on the death of queen Anne of Denmark, 1 Mar. 1618/9: all in
- Latin except 8 Greek and 3 Hebrew: there are also chronograms,
- anagrams and an acrostic.
-
-
-8. Rainolds, John. “The sum of a conference” &c. Oxon. 1619, fol. So in
-Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 193, 1619 being an error for 1610.
-
-9. ¬Rawlinson¬, John. VIVAT REX. | _A_ | SERMON PREACHED | AT PAULS
-CROSSE ON THE | day of his Maiesties happie inau-|guration, _March_
-24^o. | _1614._ | _And now newly published, by occasion of His_ | _late_
-(_no lesse happy_) _recovery._ | By | JOHN RAWLINSON D^r of Divinity,
-and | one of his Maiesties Chaplaines | in Ordinary. | [_line, motto,
-line, woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 39: 1619: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 40 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _But let him_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication to the King: (6)
- University arms: 1–40, the sermon, on 1 Sam. x. 24.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 506. Page 1 shows that the ordinary
- length of a Paul’s Cross sermon was two hours.
-
-
- 1620.
-
-1. ¬Day¬, John. DAY’S DESCANT | _ON_ | DAVIDS PSALMES: | _OR_ | A
-_Commentary_ vpon the _Psalter_, as it is vsually | read throughout the
-Yeere, at _Mor-_|_ning_, and _Euening_ Prayer. | And First, | Of the
-First _Eight Psalmes_, appointed to be read, | the _First_ Day of the
-_Moneth_. | [_device_, then 3 _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 39: 1620: sm. 4^o: pp. [40] + 222: p. 11 beg. _not in these_,
- 111 II _Destroy thou_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
- Epistle dedicatory to archbp. Abbot, signed “John Day”: (9–40) “To the
- reader”: 1–220, the work, on Ps. 1–8: 221–222, “To the reader”, on the
- author’s orthography, with Errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 412. The introduction contains some
- autobiographical matter, and treats of “Our Lady’s Psalter.”
-
-
-2. ¬Du Moulin¬, Pierre. A | SERMON | PREACHED | BEFORE THE KINGS |
-MAIESTY at _Greenwich_ the | 15. of Iune. 1615. | _BY_ | Master PETER du
-MOVLIN, one of the Preachers | of Gods Word in the Church of Paris, and
-| newly translated out of French into | English, by I. V. | _According
-to the Copy printed at_ Charenton | _by_ Paris. 1620. | [_device_].
-
- Impr. 46: 1620: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 35 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _to certaine
- fishes_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to the
- Curators of the Bodleian, signed “Iohannes Vernulius, Bodleianæ
- Bibliothecæ hypobibliothecarius” the translator: 1–35, the sermon, on
- Rom. i. 16.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 221. The text, margin and headline of
- each page are within bounding lines.
-
-
-3. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. ROMANÆ HISTORIÆ | _ANTHOLOGIA_. | AN | ENGLISH
-EXPO-|SITION OF THE RO-|MANE ANTIQVITIES, | WHEREIN MANY RO-|MANE AND
-ENGLISH | Offices are parallel’d, and | divers obscure Phrases |
-Explained. | BY | THOMAS GODWIN _Master of Arts_. | For the vse of
-ABINGDON Schoole. | Editio Tertia. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 48: 1620: 12^o?
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 51: see 1614 G. Only
- known at present from references in 17th cent. catalogues and from a
- titlepage in the Bagford Collections at the British Museum (463. h. 3,
- no. 546), but it is not likely to be really rare.
-
-
-4. ¬Goffe¬, Thomas. ORATIO | FVNEBRIS | HABITA IN ECCLESIA | Cathedrali
-Christi Oxon | in Obitum viri omni ævo dig-|_nissimi_ | GVLIELMI |
-GOODVVIN _istius_ | _Ecclesiæ Decani, S._ | Theol. Doctoris. | A THO.
-GOFFE _Artium Ma-_|_gistro ex Æde Christi_. | [_device_].
-
- Impr. 40: 1620: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4 B^2: beg. _fecit
- operationes_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r “Ad
- Lectorem”: A 3^r-B 2^v the oration.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 463. Goodwin died 11 June 1620. A second
- edition of this year is simply a reissue of the sheets with an
- identical titlepage adding only “Editio Secunda,” in a separate line
- after “Æde Christi.”
-
-
-5. ¬James¬, Thomas. CATALOGUS | VNIVERSALIS LIBRO-|RVM IN BIBLIOTHECA |
-BODLEIANA omnium Librorum, | Linguarum & Scientiarum genere |
-refertissimâ, sic compositus; | Vt | _Non solum Publicis per Europam
-Vniversam Bibliothe-_|_cis, sed etiam Privatis Musæis, aliisq_¿ue¿ _ad
-Catalogum_ | _Librorum conficiendum vsui esse possit_. | Accessit
-Appendix Librorum, qui vel ex munificentiâ aliorum, | vel ex censibus
-Bibliothecæ recens allati sunt, | Auctore THOMA IAMES S. Th. | Doctore,
-ac nuper Proto-|Bibliothecario | _Oxoniensi_. | _Operis vsum ac
-vtilitatem, Præfatio_ | _ad Lectorem indicabit._ | [_device_].
-
- Impr. 42, adding “Impensis Bodleianis”: 1620: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp.
- [16] + 539 + [1] + 36: p. 11 beg. _Albertus Dux_, 111 _Somnium magni_:
- Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to the
- King, prince Charles, &c.: (5–14), “Prooemium ...,” dated 30 June
- 1620: 1–539, the catalogue in alphabetical order: 1–36, “Appendix ad
- catalogum priorem.”
-
- This is a new edition of 1605 J, arranged in one alphabetical order of
- authors’ names. The _Proeomium_ contains much information about the
- Library. The MSS. and printed books are treated alike in this
- catalogue, each with its pressmark. Dr. James had resigned the office
- of Librarian in May 1620 from illness. The Hebrew MSS. are not all
- entered in the Catalogue, and “propter typorum defectum” are described
- in Latin, not Hebrew type. A second edition of the Appendix was issued
- in 1635. The expense of printing the volume was £112 10_s._, (Reg.
- Convoc. N. 23, fol. 93, quoted by Macray ©Annals of the Bodleian©, 2nd
- ed. p. 58 _n._)
-
-
-6. ¬Twyne¬, Brian. ANTIQVI-|TATIS ACADEMIÆ OXO-|NIENSIS APOLOGIA. | _In
-tres Libros divisa._ | AVTHORE | BRIANO TWYNO _in facultate Artium
-Ma-_|_gistro & Collegij Corporis Christi in eâdem_ | _Academia Socio_. |
-Vltima Editio. | [_device_].
-
- Impr. 47: 1620: the rest as 1608 T.
-
- This is a simple reissue of the sheets of the 1608 edition, with a new
- titlepage, but is extremely rare.
-
-
- 1621.
-
-1. ¬Broad¬, Thomas. THREE | QVESTIONS | ANSVVERED. | I. QVESTION. |
-_What should our meaning be, when after the reading of_ | _the fourth
-Commandement, we pray; Lord incline our_ | _hearts to keepe this law?_ |
-II. QVESTION. | _How shall the fourth Commandement, being deliuered in_
-| _such forme of words, binde vs to sanctifie any day, but onely_ | _the
-seauenth, the day wherein God rested, & which the Iewes_ | _sanctified?_
-| III. QVESTION. | _How shall it appeare to be the Law of Nature to
-sancti-_|_fie one day in every weeke?_ | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 39: 1621: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 38 + [2]: p. 11 (“10”) beg. _which
- is the_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “To the Reader”,
- signed “Th. Broad”: 1–26, the work: 27–33 “A DIALOGVE | BETVVEENE A
- IEVV and a CHRISTI-|AN of the Common | Opinion.” 33–38, “_A note
- touching the Lords Day_”: (1) “Errata.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 594. A treatise against too strict
- observance of Sunday, answered by George Abbot, M.P. for Guildford, in
- his ©Vindiciæ Sabbathi©, Lond. 1641.
-
-
-2. [¬Burton¬, Robert.] _THE_ | ANATOMY OF | MELANCHOLY⸴ | _VVHAT IT IS_.
-| VVITH ALL THE KINDES, | CAVSES, SYMPTOMES, PROG-|_NOSTICKES, AND
-SEVE-_|_RALL CVRES OF IT_. | IN THREE MAINE PARTITIONS | with their
-seuerall SECTIONS, MEM-|BERS, and SVBSEC-|TIONS. | _PHILOSOPHICALLY,
-MEDICI-_|_NALLY, HISTORICALLY, OPE-_|_NED AND CVT VP._ | BY | DEMOCRITVS
-_Iunior_. | With a Satyricall PREFACE, conducing to | _the following
-Discourse_. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 48: 1621: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 72 + [8] + 783 + [9]: pp.
- 11 beg. _sed and busied_ and _Lethargye_, 111 _Mutavere viros_, 611
- _^u Mille habet_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication
- to lord Berkeley: 1–72, “Democritus Iunior to the Reader”: (1–8) “The
- Synopsis of the first partition”: 1–783, the work: (1) 3 mottos: (2–7)
- “The Conclusion of the Author to the Reader”, signed “Robert Burton.
- From my Studie in _Christchurch Oxon._ Decemb. 5. 1620”: (8) “Errata.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 653. For subsequent Oxford editions see
- 1624 B, 1628 B, 1632 B, 1638 B, 1651. Other editions are Lond. 1660
- (7th), 1676 (8th), 1800 (9th), (10th), 1806 (11th), 1845, 188-,
- as well as epitomes. This celebrated work is replete with erudition,
- humour, and acuteness. The recondite sources of the numberless
- quotations are perhaps only to be found in the Bodleian, to which
- Burton bequeathed his printed books, of which a catalogue is among the
- Bodleian MSS. This first edition, which is anonymous except for one
- signature on p. (7) of the Conclusion, is accounted rare, but copies
- not infrequently appear for sale. Each successive edition during the
- author’s lifetime (he died in Jan. 1639/40) shows alterations.
-
-
-3. ¬Denison¬, John. DE | CONFESSIONIS | AVRICVLARIS | VANITATE,
-AD-|VERSVS CARDINALIS | BELLARMINI | _Sophismata_, | ET DE | _SIGILLI
-CONFESSIONIS IMPIE-_|_tate, contra Scholasticorum, & Neoterico-_|_rum
-quorundam dogmata_ | _Disputatio_. | _AVTHORE_ | IOANNE DENISONO
-Oxoniensi | Sacræ Theologiæ Doctore. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 39: 1621: sm. 4^o: pp. [10] + 126: p. 11 beg. _catione, tum_,
- 111 _Cap. 2. Argumenta_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
- dedicatory epistle to the king: (7–8) “Ad Lectorem”: (9–10) “Elenchus
- Capitum ...”: 1–126, the work, in two parts: 126 “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 439.
-
-
-4. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. MICROCOSMVS, | OR | A LITTLE DE-|SCRIPTION OF | THE
-GREAT WORLD. | A Treatise Historicall, Geographicall, | Politicall,
-Theologicall. | [_line_] | By P. H. | [_line_, then _motto_, then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 39: 1621: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 417 (“317”) + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _pearance of diuers_, 111 _of Florence_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–5) Epistle dedicatory to prince Charles, signed “Pet.
- Heylyn”: (7–11) “The Preface”: (12–13) “To my brother the Author” an
- English poem by Edw. Heylyn: (14–15) “The Table” of contents, in
- alphabetical order: (16) “A computation of the forraine Coynes herein
- mentioned with ours”: 1–417, (1–2) the work: (3) “Errata.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 557, where 1622 is a misprint for 1621
- and 1624 for 1625. For other Oxford editions of this well-known and
- popular manual of Geography see 1625 H, 1627 H, 1629 H, 1631 H, 1633
- H, 1636 H, 1639 H: there are also London editions (entitled
- ©Cosmographie©) of 1652, 1657, 1664?, 1666, 1670, 1674?, 1677, 1682,
- 1703.
-
-
-5. ¬Savile¬, sir Henry. [two _lines_] | PRAELE-|CTIONES TRES-|DECIM IN
-PRIN-|CIPIVM ELEMENTO_|RVM EVCLIDIS, | _OXONII HABITÆ_.| M.DC.XX. |
-[_device_, see below.]
-
- Impr. 40: 1621: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 260: p. 11 beg. _ma. Quid_, 111
- _trag; à centro_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
- “Errata ...”: (3) “Henricus Savilius lectori”: 1–260, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 314. This was Savile’s last publication,
- for he died 19 Feb 1621/2. There are many woodcuts of figures of
- propositions. Most copies have a device on the titlepage, but a
- presentation copy from the author to the Bodleian and the copy in the
- Savile Library omit it. The absence of a dedication is unusual.
-
-
-6. ¬Thornborough¬, bp. John. ΛΙΘΟΘΕΩΡΙΚΟΣ, | _SIVE_, | _NIHIL, ALIQVID,
-OMNIA_, | ANTIQVORVM | SAPIENTVM VI-|vis coloribus depicta,
-Philo-|_sophico=theologicè_, | In gratiam eorum qui Artem auriferam
-Physico-chymicè & piè profitentur. | _AVTHORE_ | IOHANNE THORNBVRGH,
-EPISCOPO | _VVIGORNIENSI_. | [2 _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 40: 1621: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + plate + 152: p. 11 beg. _tur
- potiùs_, 111 _lestium corporum_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–6) dedication to the duke of Lennox: (7–11) “Ad Lectorem
- benevolum”: (12) “Παραρυάδες sic restituantur ...”: folded quarto
- leaf, see below: 1–152, the work in three divisions.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 5. The Episcopal Alchemist endeavours to
- find the Philosopher’s stone through Sulphurous Magnesia (Nil), water
- (Aliquid) and gold (Omnia). Vitriol is regarded as of vital
- importance. Much Theology is introduced. The woodcut plate represents
- the concord and discord of the four elements in various relations, in
- a circular table.
-
-
- 1622.
-
-1. ¬Abbot¬, George. [_woodcut_] | THE COPPIE | OF A LETTER SENT | from
-my Lords Grace of Can-|terburie shewing the graue and | _weighty reasons
-which induced_ | _the Kings Maiestie to pre-_|_scribe those former_ |
-_directions for_ | _Preachers_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 45: 1622: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], sign. A, *^4: sign. A 3^r beg.
- _damentall grounds_, * 3^r _or of the Vniversalitie_: English Roman.
- Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-3^v, the letter, to the bp. of
- Oxford: dated “from Croydon Sept. 4th _1622_”: A 4 [not seen, probably
- blank]: * 1^r-4^r, “To the minister, churchwardens and parishioners of
- in the Diocesse of Oxon.”, 31 Aug. 1622, as under _Howson_,
- John, below.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 564. The latter part of this piece seems
- to have been issued separately, see ¬Howson¬, John, below.
-
-
-2. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathanael. PHILOSOPHIA | LIBERA, | _TRIPLICI
-EXERCITA-_|_tionum Decade proposita_. | _IN QVA_, | ADVERSVS HVIVS
-TEM-|poris Philosophos, dogmata | quædam noua discu-|tiuntur. | AVTHORE
-| NATHANAELE CARPNETARIO, | _Exoniensis Collegij, in florentissimâ_ |
-_Academiâ Oxoniensi, Socio_. | EDITIO SECVNDA, VNA | Decade auctior, &
-emendatior. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 42_a_: 1622: (eights) 16^o: pp. [24] + 395 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
- _tute ab alio_, 111 _ali: At nullam_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
- title: (5–14) dedication to James Hamilton duke of Hamilton (_d._
- 1649): (15–21) “Ad florentissimam Oxoniensis Academiæ Iuventutem
- Præfatio”: (22–23) “Elenchus Exercitationum ...”: 1–395, the work: (2)
- “Errata Typographica.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 421, where _Lond._ is a misprint for
- _Oxon._ The first edition was issued at Frankfort in 1621 “authore N.
- C. Cosmopolitano,” with different prefatory matter, only two Decads,
- and variations in text and arrangement. See 1636 C, 1637 C, 1675. Some
- woodcuts of diagrams occur in the text.
-
-
-3. ¬Clinton¬, Elizabeth, countess of Lincoln. [_woodcuts_] | THE |
-COVNTESSE | OF LINCOLNES | NVRSERIE· | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 39: 1622: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 21 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _own natural_:
- Great Primer English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication to lady
- Briget countesse of Lincolne, signed “Elizabeth Lincolne”: (7–8) “To
- the ... Reader,” signed “T. L.”, i. e. Thomas Lodge: 1–21, the work:
- (2–3) not seen.
-
- Rare. The object of this small treatise, “the first worke of” the
- authoress “that ever came in Print,” is to persuade mothers to nurse
- their own children. The author appears to dedicate it to her
- daughter-in-law, not mother-in-law as Bliss states (Wood’s ©Ath.
- Oxon.©, ii. 384 _n._). The authorship has been ascribed to Thomas
- Lodge (Wood, as above), but there is every internal mark that he only
- wrote the address to the Reader, and possibly revised the whole.
-
-
-4. ¬Gardiner¬, Richard. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT | S^t MARIES IN
-OX-|FORD ON ACT SVN-|_DAY LAST IN THE AF-_|TER-NOONE 1622. | BY |
-RICHARD GARDINER Student | _of Christ-Church_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 49: 1622: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 30 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _and crabbed_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–8) dedication to Richard
- earl of Dorset: 1–30, the sermon, on Gen. xlv. 8.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 921.
-
-
-5. Heylyn, Peter. Microcosmus: see 1621 H.
-
-
-6. *†¬Howson¬, John, bp. of Oxford. [_woodcut_.] | TO THE MINISTER |
-CHVRCHWARDENS | and parishioners of | _in the Diocesse of Oxon._ |
-[text begins on same page.]
-
- No impr. or date, but 1622: sm. 4^o: pp. [8], sign. *^4: sign. * 2^r
- beg. _By this you see_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. * 1^r, heading
- as above: * 1^r-4^{*r}, the directions.
-
- These are Directions to preachers in the Diocese of Oxford, to
- restrict their choice of subjects and treatment of them within the
- bounds of the XXXIX Articles. The Directions are dated 31 Aug. 1622,
- and quote mandates from the King (4 Aug. 1622) and the archbp. of
- Canterbury (12 Aug. 1622). It is perhaps doubtful whether this is
- genuinely a separate book from _Abbot’s_ Letter, above.
-
-
-7. ¬Oxford¬, University. DECRETVM | VNIVERSITATIS | OXONIENSIS DAMNANS |
-PROPOSITIONES NEOTERI-|CORVM INFRA-SCRIPTAS, | SIVE _IESVITARVM_, | SIVE
-| _PVRITANORVM_, SIVE | aliorum cuiuscunq¿ue¿ gene-|_ris Scriptorum_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 40: 1622: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4 B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Vniversitas_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 2^r title: A
- 3^r-B 2^r, the propositions.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 3 and ©Hist. and Antiqq. of the University
- of Oxford©, sub anno 1622. The propositions condemned were those
- delivered by William Knight of Broadgates Hall in a University sermon
- on Apr. 15, 1622, founded on principles of David Pareus, to the effect
- that subjects may take up arms against their sovereign. The
- propositions and censures were considered in a Convocation 25 June
- 1622. The form of oath to be taken by all future graduates is
- appended, and a note that Pareus’s book was burnt on 6 June 1622.
-
-
-8. ¬Oxford¬, University. [_woodcut_.] | VLTIMA LINEA | SAVILII | SIVE IN
-OBITVM CLARISSI-|mi Domini HENRICI SAVILII E-|quitis Aurati,
-Mathematicorum facilè Principis, nuperri-|mè Collegij MERTONENSIS
-Custodis Vigi-|_lantissimi_, ETONENSIS _iuxta Windsore Præ-_|_positi
-dignissimi, &_ BENEFACTORIS | _de Vniversitate Oxoniensi_ | _optimè
-meriti_. | _Iusta Academica._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 40: sm. 4^o: pp. [58] signn. ( ), *^4, **^1, A-F^4: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Heroum vulgus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. ( ) 2^r title: ( )
- 3^r “Munificentia Savilii in celeberrimam Vniversitatem Oxoniensem”:
- ( ) 4^r, dedication to the Earl of Pembroke by the “Genius Scholarum”:
- ( ) 4^v, see below: * 1^r-** 1^v “Oratio funebris habita in scholâ
- Theologiæ Oxon. in obitum celeberrimi viri, Henrici Savilii, Equitis
- Aurati. A Tho. Goffe ... publico Academiæ Oratore tunc temporis
- deputato”: ( ) 4^v, A 1^r-F 3^v, the poems.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 315, 463. The poems are nearly all in
- Latin, but 5 are Greek, 2 Hebrew, one French, and one English: there
- is one chronogram. The “Oratio funebris” is clearly an added piece.
-
-
-9. ¬Rawlinson¬, John. “©The Bridegroom and Bride©: On Cant. 4. 8. Ib.
-[i. e. Oxon.] 1622, &c. qu.”
-
- So in Wood’s list of Rawlinson’s sermons (©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 506). It
- was preached in 1662 and re-printed at Oxford in 1625, but Wood’s
- statement is explicit, and there may have been a separate issue in
- 1622, though I have not met with a copy or other reference to it.
-
-
-10. ¬Spark.¬ A | SPARKE | OF CHRISTS | BEAVTY. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 44_a_: 1622: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 39 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _wrought
- our_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1–2) [not seen]: (3) title: (4–7)
- “To the Reader ...”: 1–39, the work, a discourse on Is. ix. 6.
-
- Very rare.
-
-
- 1623.
-
-1. ¬Cotta¬, John. COTTA | CONTRA | ANTONIVM: | _OR_ | AN ANT-ANTONY: |
-_OR_ | AN ANT-APOLOGY, | manifesting Doctor _Antony_ his Apo-|logie for
-_Aurum potabile_, in true and e-|quall ballance of right Reason, to | be
-false and counterfait. | _By_ IOHN COTTA Doctor in Physicke. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 48: 1623: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 108: p. 11 beg. _may be one_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) Advertisement to the reader about
- the prefaces: (3–7) Epistle dedicatory to the resident Doctors in
- Physic in the University of Oxford: (8) “Errata ...”: (9–12) “To the
- Reader”: 1–108, the work.
-
- This is a reply by a Cambridge man to Francis Anthony’s supposed
- discovery of a medicine called Aurum Potabile, in his ©Apologia
- veritatis illucescentis, pro auro potabili©, Lond. 1616. For the
- controversy see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 416. This work was sent to
- press at Oxford in 1616, but recalled before printing.
-
-
-2. ¬France.¬ ARTICLES | AGREED ON | IN THE | NATIONALL SYNODE | of the
-Reformed Churches of | FRANCE, | Held at _Charenton_ neere _Paris_, in
-the Moneth | _of September_, 1623. | Which the same ordaineth to be
-inuiolably kept | in all the CHVRCHES and VNIVERSI-|TIES of that REALME.
-| [_device._]
-
- Impr. 39: 1623: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 34: p. 11 beg. _Who teach, That_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–34, the Articles in 4 chapters.
-
- See 1624, F.
-
-
-3. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. ROMANAE | HISTORIAE | ANTHOLOGIA | RECOGNITA ET |
-AVCTA. | _AN_ | ENGLISH EXPOSITION OF | THE ROMANE ANTIQVITIES, |
-wherein many Romane and English | offices are paralleld, and divers |
-obscure Phrases | _explained_. | _For the vse of_ ABINGDON _Schoole_. |
-[_line_] | Revised and enlarged by the Author | [_line_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 47: 1623: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 277 + [17]: p. 11 beg. _a
- malefactor_, 111 _ther, sometimes_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–4) dedication to dr. John Young dean of Winchester, dated
- “Abindoniæ 14. Calend. Decemb. ... 1622,” signed “Tho. Godwyn”: (5)
- “Benevolo lectori” : (7) “A short Table ...” of contents: 1–277, the
- work: (2–24) “Index Rerum et Verborum ...”
-
- See 1614 G.
-
-
-4. *†¬Oxford¬, Merton College. Merton Colledge Case. | [the text
-follows.]
-
- No place or date, but probably printed at Oxford in about 1623: folio:
- pp. [4], sign. ( )^2: sign. ( ) 2^r beg. 3 _What Baron Althams_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—pp. (2–3) the Case.
-
- Merton College let the manor of Maldon to the Queen in 21 Eliz.
- (1578–79), for 5000 years. The lease was disputed by the College in
- 1621 (“about two yeares since”), and again in this Case, which sets
- out the reasons for annulling the same.
-
-
-5. ¬Oxford¬, University. CAROLVS | REDVX. | [_device_ with AC. on one
-side and OX. on the other.]
-
- Impr. 42: 1623: sm. 4^o: pp. [92], signn. ( )^2 ¶^4 ¶¶^2 A-I^4 K^2:
- sign. B 1^r beg. _Pierides nuper_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r
- title; 2^r-2^v, dedications to king James and prince Charles, Latin
- poems by the vice-chancellor: ¶ 1^r-¶¶ 2^v “ΠΑΝΑΚΑΔΗΜΙΚΟΣ. sive,
- gratulatio pro Carolo reduce, Oxoniensium nomine recitata, à Iohanne
- King publico Acad. Oratore”: A 1^r-K 1^r, the poems: K 2^r “Epilogus
- typographorum ad Principem,” two short Latin poems.
-
- Poems by members of the University of Oxford to congratulate prince
- Charles on his return from Madrid to England 5 Oct. 1623. Most are in
- Latin, but 4 in Greek and 2 in Hebrew: there are also 4 chronograms, 1
- acrostich and 1 anagram. For King’s speech see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©,
- ii. 632.
-
-
-6. Panke, John. See 1613 P.
-
-
- 1624.
-
-1. A, J. The younger brother his apologie: see 1634 A.
-
-
-2. †A[yton, sir] R[obert]. [_woodcut_] | IN | OBITVM | THOMÆ RHÆDI, |
-_VIRI VNDEQVAQVE_ | _MERITISSIMI_, | ET | _SERENISSIMO REGI_ | _AB_ |
-_EPISTOLIS LATINIS_ | EPICEDIVM. | [_device._]
-
- No imprint: 1624: sm. 4^o: pp. [8]: ( ) 3^r beg. _Consilium extorsit_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—( ) 1^r, title: 2^r-4^r, the Latin poem,
- at end “_Faciebat R.A._”
-
- A Latin hexameter poem on the death of sir Thomas Reid, of whom I do
- not readily find any account. No part of this was printed in Oxford,
- the woodcuts and type being unknown there: even the small device of
- the Arms of the University on the titlepage (which has caused this
- work to be ascribed to the Oxford Press) differs from the genuine one.
- No doubt the book was printed in London.
-
-
-3. [¬Burton¬, Robert]. _THE_ | ANATOMY OF | MELANCHOLY: | _VVHAT IT IS_.
-| WITH ALL THE KINDES, CAV-|SES, SYMPTOMES, PROGNOSTICKS, | AND SEVERALL
-CVRES OF IT. | _IN THREE MAINE PARTITIONS_, | with their seuerall
-SECTIONS, MEM-|BERS, AND SVBSECTIONS. | _PHILOSOPHICALLY,
-MEDICI-_|_NALLY, HISTORICALLY_ | _opened and cut vp_, | BY | DEMOCRITVS
-_Iunior_. | With a Satyricall PREFACE, conducing to | the following
-Discourse. | _The second Edition, corrected and aug-_|_mented by the
-Author._ | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 48: 1624: (fours) folio: pp. [4] + 64 + [4] + “1”-“188” + [4] +
- “189”-“332” + [2] + “333”-“557” + [7]: pp. 11 beg. _make sport_, and
- _uing borne in_, 401 _Da mihi basia_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3) dedication to George lord Berkeley: 1–64, “Democritus
- Iunior to the Reader”: 64, Errata: (1–4) “The Synopsis of the first
- partition”: 1–188, the first part: (1–4) “The Synopsis of the second
- partition”: 189–332, the second part: (1–2) “Analysis of the third
- partition”: 333–557, the third part: (1–7) “the table.”
-
- See “Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 653, and 1621 B. The author’s name does
- not seem to occur anywhere in the book.
-
-
-4. ¬C[arleton]¬, G[eorge], bishop of Chichester. ΑΣΤΡΟΛΟΓΟΜΑΝΙΑ: | The
-Madnesse of ASTROLOGERS. | OR | An Examination of Sir | Christopher
-Heydons | Booke, | _JNTITULED_ | A DEFENCE OF | Iudiciarie Astrologie. |
-_Written neere vpon twenty yeares ago, by_ G. C. _And_ | by permission
-of the Author set forth for the Vse of | _such as might happily be
-misled by the_ | _Knights booke_. | Published by T. V. B. of D. |
-[_motto._]
-
- Impr. 51: 1624: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 123 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _neither can
- they_, 111 _them: which_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A”: (3)
- title: (5–15) Epistle dedicatory to Thomas Carleton, signed “Tho:
- Vicars”: (17) “In Authorem & eius opera. Προσφώνησις”, a Latin poem:
- (19–22) “Ἀνακεφαλαίωσις: or Recapitulation of the Chiefe Passages in
- this Treatise”, a list of Contents: (23) quotation from Ennius: 1–123,
- the work: 123, a chronogram, 1624.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 424. The book was entered at Stationers’
- Hall to Will. Turner, 18 July 1623. The author, whose initials only
- occur in the book, was at this time bishop of Chichester: the editor
- Vicars had married the bishop’s daughter. Sir Chr. Heydon’s book was
- published in 1603 at Cambridge, and a second book by him on Astrology
- published in 1650 was followed by a reprint of the present work in
- 1651.
-
-
-5. ¬Flavel¬, John. TRACTA-|TVS DE DE-|MONSTRATI-|ONE METHO-|DICVS &
-PO-|LEMICVS, _quatuor_ | _libris absolutus:_ | _Antehæc in usum
-Iuventutis_ | _in Collegio_ WADHAMI | _apud Oxonienses privatis_ |
-_prælectionibus traditus_, | à | IOHANNE FLAVEL | Art. Mag. & ejusdem |
-Colleg;j Socio. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 42: 1624: 16^o.
-
- For the author and book see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 207, and 1619 F.
- Only known at present from a titlepage in the Bagford collections at
- the British Museum (463. h. 3), but it is not likely to be rare.
-
-
-6. ¬France.¬ ARTICLES | [&c. precisely as 1623 F adding after REALME.:—]
-_Wherein, their iudgement touching the principall Contro-_|_versies now
-on foote betwixt the Remonstrantes_ | _and Contra-remonstrantes, is
-briefly declared._ | [then _woodcuts_, not device].
-
- Impr. 39, &c. exactly as 1623 F.
-
- This is a reissue of the sheets of 1623 F with part of the titlepage
- altered. There is another issue of this reissue, *undated, with impr.
- 49_a_, but no other change from the present edition of any kind.
-
-
-7. ¬Hayes¬, William. THE | PARAGON | OF PERSIA; | _OR_ | THE LAVVYERS |
-_LOOKING-GLASSE_. | Opened in a sermon at S. MARIES | in Oxford, at the
-Assises, the | 7 day of Iuly, 1624. | _By_ WILLIAM HAYES, _Master of
-Arts of_ Magdalen Hall. | [two _mottos_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 45: 1624: 16^o.
-
- Only known at present from a titlepage in the Bagford collections in
- the British Museum (463. h. 3), but it is not likely to be rare.
-
-
-8. Heylyn, Peter. Microcosmus: the reference in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©,
-iii. 557 to an edition of this year, is probably an error for 1625.
-
-
-9. ¬Oxford¬, University. CAMDENI | INSIGNIA· |
-
- Impr. 42: 1624: sm. 4^o: pp. [76], signn. ( )^2 ¶, ¶¶^4, ¶¶¶^2 A-F^4
- G^2: sign. B 1^r beg. _In Camdenum_: Pica Roman. Contents:—( ) 1^r
- title: 1^v “Donum Camdenianum”, his benefaction to the University: ( )
- 2^r-2^v, A 1^r-G 2^v, the poems: ¶ 1^r-4^v “Oratio in memoriam ...
- Gulielmi Camdeni ... prolata per Zoucheum Townley ex Æde Christi,
- Oratorem publicum tunc temporis deputatum”: ¶¶ 1^r-¶¶¶ 1^v,
- “Parentatio historica: sive Commemoratio vitæ et mortis V. C. Gulielmi
- Camdeni Clarentii, facta Oxoniæ in Scholâ Historicâ per Degoreum Whear
- Historiarum Prælectorem, ab eodem Camdeno ibidem constitutum”, 2 Dec.
- 1623: ¶¶¶ 1^v-2^v “Nuncius chronogrammaticus”, 3 Latin poems on Camden
- by Whear, introducing chronograms: A 1^r-G 2^v, see above.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 348, ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 398. Poems by
- members of the University of Oxford on the death of William Camden,
- which took place on 9 Nov. 1623. Most are in Latin, but there are 10
- Greek, with 5 anagrams, and 2 chronograms. Whear’s Oration contains
- many biographical details about Camden.
-
-
-10. ——. SCHOLA | MORALIS | PHILOSOPHIAE | _OXON._ | In funere WHITI
-pullata. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 40: 1624: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 6 + [8]: p. 3 beg. _VVhite dato_:
- Pica & Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “Annua Whiti
- munificentia”, his bequests to the University, &c.: 1–6 poems: (1–8)
- “Oratio funebris habita Oxoniae, Aprilis 22^o, A^o 1624, in laudem
- Doctoris White ... per Guil. Price ...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 352. Dr. Thomas White, founder of a
- Professorship of Moral Philosophy, died 1 Mar. 1623/4. The poems are
- all in Latin, except two in Greek.
-
-
-11. *†¬P[rideaux]¬, I[ohn]. ALLOQVIVM SERE-|NISSIMO REGI IACOBO |
-WOODSTOCHIÆ HABITVM | 24. _Augusti. Anno_ 1624. | [the text follows.]
-
- [Oxford, 1624?] sm. 4^o: pp. [8], sign. A^4: sign. A 2^r beg. _turbat
- quid dicam_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 1^r-A
- 4^r, the speech, signed “I. P. V. Ox.” i. e. J. Prideaux,
- Vicecancellarius Oxon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267. The speech describes, among other
- things, the recent architectural and public works in Oxford: and is
- reprinted in Prideaux’s Perez-Vzzah (1625 P).
-
-
-12. ¬Randol¬, John. A | SERMON | PREACHT AT | S^t MARIES IN | OXFORD,
-the 5. of August: | 1624. Concerning the | _Kingdomes Peace_. | BY |
-IOHN RANDOL B: in D: of | _Brasen-nose_ Colledge. | [two _mottos_: then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 50: 1624: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 33 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _especially
- if_: Pica Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to lord
- “Davers” (i.e. Danvers): 1–33, the sermon, on Mark iii. 24: (2) “To
- the most criticall Reader” (altered by the use of smaller type to “To
- other most criticall Readers”), an apology for Errata, giving two
- examples.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 415.
-
-
- 1625.
-
-1. ¬Bedingfield¬, Robert. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT | PAVLS CROSSE | THE
-24. OF OCTO_|BER. 1624. | BY | ROBERT BEDINGFIELD Master | of Arts, and
-Student of | _Christ-Church_ in | Oxford. | [device: the whole title is
-within lines.]
-
- Impr. 52: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 43 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _ent
- euidence_: English Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to
- Sir Thomas Richardson, the author’s uncle, dated “From my study in
- Christ-Church in Oxford. Nouemb. 24.” 1624: 1–43 the sermon, on Rom.
- vi. 23: 43, “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 457. The title and each page are within
- bounding lines. The author gives as one of his reasons for printing
- the sermon, that it was very wet when he delivered it, so that his
- auditors were few.
-
-
-2. ¬Butler¬, Charles. ΣΥΓΓΕ´ΝΕΙΑ. | DE PROPINQVITATE | Matrimonium
-impediente, | REGVLA. | _Quæ vna omnes quæstionis huius_ |
-_difficultates facilè_ | _expediat._ | [line] | Authore CAROLO BVTLER,
-Magd. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 60: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 71 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _linea recta_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Ad Lectorem”: 1–71
- the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 210.
-
-
-3. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathanael. GEOGRAPHY | DELINEATED | FORTH IN TWO |
-BOOKES. | _CONTAINING THE SPHÆRICALL_ | _AND TOPICALL PARTS_ |
-_THEREOF._ | By NATHANAEL CARPENTER | Fellow of _Exceter Colledge_ | in
-Oxford. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 61: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [18] + 274 + [18] + 286 + [4] + 4 folded
- leaves, see below: pp. 11 beg. _Earth &_ W_ater_, 111 _VVorld may be_,
- also 11 _teration next_, 111 _monstrated in_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—(3) title: (5–7) dedication to the earl of Pembroke: (9–15)
- “... contents of each chapter of the first booke ...”: (17–18) “To my
- Booke”, a poem: 1–274 the first book: (5) a titlepage:—“GEOGRAPHY |
- THE SECOND | BOOKE. | _CONTAINING THE GENERALL_ | _Topicall part
- thereof._ | By ... [&c. exactly as first title, imprint and all, but
- different motto]: (7–9) dedication to the earl of Montgomery: (11–18)
- “A table of the ... contents of the second booke ...”: 1–286, the
- second book: (1) Apology for erratas and an omitted diagram: (2)
- “Errors ...”. There should be four diagrams on folded leaves, after
- pp. (8) “The Analysis of the first Booke”: 252 “A Table ...”: (18)
- “The Analysis of the seconde Booke”: 228 “A Table of the Climates
- ...”. The omitted diagram would have followed p. 62 of the second
- part.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 422, and 1635 C. The treatise is of the
- theory and principles of Geography, not of details like Heylyn’s
- ©Microcosmus©. The author maintains that the earth is the centre of
- the universe, the sun and planets revolving round it! There are many
- woodcut diagrams in the text.
-
-
-4. ¬G.¬, T. AN | ANSWER | TO | VVITHERS | MOTTO. | _Without a
-Frontispice._ | WHEREIN, | Nec HABEO, Nec CAREO, Nec CVRO, | are neither
-approued, nor confuted: | but modestly controuled, | or qualified. |
-[_mottos_, a quaestio and responsio] | [two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 50: 1625: (eights) 12^o: pp. [96], signn. A-F^8: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _whom Princes_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A 2^r,
- “The Booke to the Reader”: A 2^v, “Virgilius de litera _Pythagorea_”:
- A 3^r-A 4^v “To Master _Wither_ himselfe”, signed “_T. G. Esquire_”: A
- 5^r-A 6^v “To the Reader”, signed as before: A 7^r-B 2^r, “The
- Introduction”, in verse: B 3^r-F 6^v, The Answer, in three parts: F
- 7–8 [not seen].
-
- Very scarce. George Wither’s ©Withers Motto, Nec habeo, nec Careo, nec
- Curo©, was published in 1621 and consists of reflexions on human
- affairs: this book is a poetical satire on those reflexions, and on
- the character of Wither. The author is unknown.
-
-
-5. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. ROMANAE | HISTORIAE AN-|THOLOGIA RECOG-|NITA ET
-AVCTA. | _AN_ | ENGLISH EXPOSI-|TION OF THE ROMANE | Antiquities,
-wherein many Romane | and English Offices are paralleld, | _and divers
-obscure Phrases_ | explained. | For the vse of ABINGDON Schoole. |
-[_line_] | _Reuised and enlarged by the Author._ | [_line_: then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 276 + [28]: p. 11 beg. _malefactor,
- but_, 111 _ther, sometimes_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: 5–6,
- dedication to dr. John Young, dated “Abindoniae 14. Calend. Decemb.
- ... 1622 ... Tho: Godwyn”: (7) “Benevolo lectori”: (8) “A short Table
- ... of every Booke and Section”: 1–276, the work: (1–26) “Index rerum
- et verborum ...”.
-
- See 1614 G. This edition was printed in London, though published in
- Oxford: it was not entered at Stationer’s Hall in 1624 or 1625.
-
-
-6. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ. | A | LITTLE DESCRIP-|TION OF THE |
-GREAT WORLD. | _Augmented and reuised._ | [_line_] | By PETER HEYLYN. |
-[_line_: then _motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 55: 1625: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 812 + [2] + one leaf, see
- below: p. 11 beg. 1. _First then_, 711 _Captain obseruing_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2–3) dedication to King Charles: (5–6)
- “To the Reader”: (7–8) “To my brother the Author”, a poem by Edw.
- Heylyn: (9–11) “A Table of the principall countries, ...”: (12–16) “A
- Table of the principall things”: (16) “A computation of ... forraine
- coynes ...”: 1–812, (1) the work: (2) a correction of p. 148 and
- “Errata”. Before p. 7 should come a narrow folded leaf, probably about
- 10 in. high by 5 in. wide, with “The Table of Climes”, printed on one
- side only.
-
- See 1621 H: Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 557 (“1624”).
-
-
-7. ¬James¬, Richard. ANTI-POSSEVINVS, | _SIVE_ | CONCIO | HABITA AD |
-Clerum in Academiâ Ox-|_oniensi Ann. Domini_ | 1625. | [_line_] |
-_Authore_ | RICHARDO IAMESIO Socio | _C. C. C. Vectensi_. | [_line_,
-then _motto_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 60: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 25 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _præsertim
- cùm_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5) “Ad librum suum”, a
- Latin poem: 1–25 the Sermon, on 2 Tim. iv. 13.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 629. A singular sermon, more learned than
- theological. The title seems to be explained by pp. 20–21, where
- Antonio Possevino (_d._ 1611) is cited as planning a purgatio
- bibliothecarum in the interests of the Roman Catholic Church: to this
- James opposes his plea for freedom of research.
-
-
-8. ¬James¬, Thomas. AN | EXPLANATION | _OR_ | ENLARGING OF | the ten
-Articles in the Supplication of | Doctor IAMES, lately exhibi-|ted to
-the Clergy of | _England_. | _OR_ | A manifest proofe that they are both
-reas-|onable and faisible within the time mentioned. | [_motto_, then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 58: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 36 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Dowists doe
- make_: Pica Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: 1–36, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. This is a reprint of the text of the
- ©Humble ... Request© below (except the last paragraph beginning “For
- the raising of the charges,” which James probably saw to be
- unpractical), with the addition of comments, written in senile style
- but obviously by dr. James, and of great interest both for the
- biography of the author and the principles of criticism as applied to
- editing a text from MSS. These 26 “Theses or Rules concerning the Art
- Criticke” are, at p. 23, followed by examples. Dr. James paid two
- Dutchmen for transcription abroad at the rate of 20_s._ per quire,
- each quire taking them a week, and the hundred quires per year
- sufficing to keep two presses at work (p. 17). At p. 26 he explains
- that a critical remark by bp. Bilson first set him about compiling the
- ©Ecloga Oxonio-Cantabrigiensis© (Lond. 1600).
-
-
-9. *†¬James¬, dr. Thomas. [woodcuts] | THE | HVMBLE | AND EARNEST |
-REQVEST OF THOMAS | IAMES, D^r OF DIVINI-|TY, AND SVBDEANE | of the
-Cathedrall Church | of _Welles_, to the _Church_ | _of England_; for,
-and | in the behalfe of | Bookes touching Re-|ligion. | [the text of the
-work follows.]
-
- No imprint or date, but Oxford, 1625 (perhaps 1624) (eight) 16^o: pp.
- 15 + [1]: Great Primer English. Contents:—p. 1 title as above: 1–15,
- the request, signed “T. I. S. T. P. B. P. N.” (i. e. Thomas James,
- Sanctae Theologiae Professor: for B. P. N. see note to 1599 R.: but
- the occurrence of the letters here without any text or motto favours
- the interpretation “Bono Publico Natus”): (1) a form of approbation of
- the scheme, signed by 17 leading men in Oxford.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. This (and still more the
- ©Explanation© above, which see) is an interesting plea for the
- application of criticism to aid in restoring the texts of Fathers and
- Schoolmen which had been corrupted by Roman Catholic theologians. The
- date cannot be precisely ascertained: the titles of the approvers only
- confine it to 1624, 1625, or 1626: the ©Explanation© alludes to it as
- “lately” issued: so that it is difficult to say whether 1624 or 1625
- is the year of issue.
-
-
-10. ——. A MANVDV-|CTION, OR INTRO-|DVCTION VNTO | DIVINITIE: |
-_CONTAINING_ | A Confutation of Papists by Pa-|pists, throughout the
-important Articles | _of our Religion; their testimonies taken_ | either
-out of the _Indices Expurgatorii_, | or out of the _Fathers_, and
-ancient | _Records_; | But especially the Manuscripts. | [_line_] | _By_
-THO. IAMES, _Doctor of Diuinitie, late_ | Fellow of _New Colledge_ in
-_Oxford_, and Sub-Deane | of the Cathedrall Church of Welles. | [_line_,
-then _note_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 62: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 136 + [8]: p. 11 beg. _The first
- Corollary_, 111 _onely titular_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) dedication to the bp. of Lincoln, dated “Lond. 26 April, 1625”:
- (7) “The points that are briefly handled in this Booke”: (8) “Errata”:
- 1–136, (1), the work: (2–3) “A Table of the Manuscript bookes vrged in
- this Booke”: (4–8) “An Alphabeticall note of the Printed Bookes ...
- here cited”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. The whole of this book was printed
- in London, not Oxford.
-
-
-11. ¬King¬, Henry, and John King. TWO | SERMONS. | VPON THE ACT |
-SVNDAY, BEING | the 10^{th} of Iuly. | 1625. | Deliuered at S^t MARIES |
-in Oxford. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 56: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 33 + [3] + 43 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _doe not your_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) a
- half-title “David’s Enlargement. The morning sermon on the Act Sunday:
- Preached by Henry King ...”: 1–33, the sermon, on Ps. xxxii. 5, (2) a
- half-title “David’s Strait. The after-noones sermon ... Deliuered by
- Iohn King ...”: 1–43, the sermon, on 2 Sam. xxiv. 14.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 632, iii. 840 respectively. Every page,
- including the title, is included within bounding lines.
-
-
-12. ¬King¬, dr. John. CENOTAPHIVM | IACOBI. | _Sive_ | _LAVDATIO
-FVNEBRIS_ | _PIÆ ET FOELICI MEMORIÆ_ | _SERENISSIMI POTENTISSIMIQVE_ |
-IACOBI | Magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ, _&_ Hiberniæ | _Monarchæ dedicata, &
-pub-_|_licè recitata_ | à IOHANNE KING Academiæ | Oxoniensis Oratore. |
-[chronogrammatical _motto_: then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4^o; pp. [40], signn. A-E^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _lire, quæ alioquin_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A 2^r,
- title: A 3^r-E 3^r, the oration.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 632. At sign. D 2^r begins a list of the
- late king’s literary works.
-
-
-13. ¬Leslie¬, Henry. A | SERMON | PREACHED | BEFORE HIS | MAIESTY at
-_Windsore_, | the 19. of _Iuly._ 1625. | By HENRIE LESLIE, one of his |
-MAIESTIES Chaplaines | in Ordinary | [_line_, then 2 _mottos_ with
-_line_ between, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 56: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 34: p. 11 beg. _in the Parable_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to James earl
- of Carlisle: (5) “A Table of the Contents”: (6) “... Errours in the
- Print”: 1–34, the sermon, on Heb. iii. 8.
-
-
-14. ¬Nettles¬, Stephen. AN | ANSWER TO | THE IEVVISH | PART OF M^r
-SELDEN’S | HISTORY OF TITHES. | By STEPHEN NETTLES, | B. of Divinity |
-[_line_: then motto in Hebrew and English: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 58_a_: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 189 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _giue
- him_, 111 _diuiding these_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–5) dedication to dr. John Prideaux, dated “Lexden, May 4. 1625”:
- (7–11) “The Præface”: 1–189, the work: (2) “... faults ...” due to
- absence of author and difficulty of the written copy.
-
- See Woods ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 416. Selden’s ©History of Tithes© was
- published in 1618. This treatise is a vindication of a public sermon
- on the subject which gave some offence. Hebrew Pica (unpointed) type
- is freely used in the book, for the first time. The title and every
- page are within bounding lines.
-
-
-15. ¬Oxford¬, University. EPITHALAMIA | OXONIENSIA. | IN
-AVSPICATISSIMVM, | POTENTISSIMI MONARCHÆ | CAROLI, | _MAGNÆ BRITANNIÆ_,
-| _FRANCIÆ, ET HIBERNIÆ_ | _Regis &c. cum_ HENRETTA MARIA, | _æternæ
-memoriæ_ HENRICI | _Magni Gallorum Regis_ | _Filia, Connubium_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [100], signn. ¶, A-L^4 M^2: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _Virtutis qui_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. ¶ 1^r title: ¶
- 2^r-4^v 5 special Latin poems: A 1^r-M 1^v, the poems: M 2^r “Ad
- Lectorem”, a final poem.
-
- The marriage of king Charles with Henrietta Maria was on 1 May 1625 at
- Paris and on 14 June at Canterbury. The poems are Latin, except 1
- Hebrew and 7 Greek: not one is French. There are five anagrams and two
- chronograms.
-
-
-16. ——. OXONIENSIS | ACADEMIAE | PARENTALIA. | _SACRATISSIMÆ MEMORIÆ_ |
-potentissimi Monarchæ IACOBI, Magnæ | BRITANNIAE, FRANCIAE & | HIBERNIAE
-Regis, Fidei Orthodoxæ | defensoris celeberrimi, &c. Dicata. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [96], signn. ¶^4, ¶¶^2 A-K^4 L^2: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _Sacrificûm_: English (except sign. G which is Great primer)
- Roman. Contents:—sign. ¶ 2^r title, ¶ 3^r, poetical Latin dedication
- to king Charles: ¶ 3^v-L 1^v, the poems: L 2^r “Conclusio ad
- Lectorem”, a Latin poem.
-
- Latin poems by members of the University on the death of king James i,
- which took place on 27 Mar. 1625: all in Latin except 3 Hebrew and 2
- Greek: there are 5 chronograms, an anagram, and one poem printed in a
- peculiar shape.
-
-
-17. ¬Pemble¬, William. Vindiciae fidei, or a treatise of iustification
-by faith, wherein that point is fully cleared, and vindicated from the
-cauils of its aduersaries. Deliuered in certaine Lectures at Magdalen
-Hall in Oxford, By William Pemble ... and now published since his death
-for the publique benefit.
-
- Impr. 59: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 239 + [3].
-
- Very rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 331. The above title and
- details are from notes of a copy belonging to lord Robartes, seen by
- me 18 Nov. 1881.
-
-
-18. ¬Prideaux¬, dr. John. Lectiones novem de totidem religionis
-capitibus ...
-
- A private copy was seen by me in 1881.
-
-
-19. ——. PEREZ-VZZAH: | _OR_ | The Breach of VZZAH: | As it was deliuered
-in a Sermon before His | MAIESTY at _Woodstocke_, August | the 24.
-_Anno_ 1624. | BY | IOHN PRIDEAUX, _Rector of Exceter Colledge_, | _His_
-MAIESTIE’S _Professor in Divinity_, | _and at that time Vice-Chancellor
-of_ | _the Vniversity of_ Oxford. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 50: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 23 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _so often_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to James earl
- of Arran, dated “Oxford, Exceter Colledge, Octob. 22. 1624.”: 1–23,
- the sermon, on 2 Sam. vi. 6–7: (2–7) “Alloquium serenissimo regi
- Jacobo Woodstochiæ habitum 24 Augusti. Anno 1624.”, signed “I. P. V.
- _Oxon._”: (8–9) not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267, 1636 P, (_alloquium_) 1624 P.
-
-
-20. ——. A | SERMON | PREACHED ON | THE FIFTH OF OC-|TOBER 1624: AT THE |
-CONSECRATION OF | S^t IAMES CHAPPEL | IN _Exceter Colledge_. | BY | IOHN
-PRIDEAUX, _Rector of_ Exceter Col-|ledge, _His_ MAIESTIES _Professor in_
-| _Diuinity, and at that time Vice-_|_Chancellour of the Vniuer-_|_sity
-of_ Oxford. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.].
-
- Impr. 50: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [36], signn. ¶, A-C^4 D^2: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _uell whether_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 2^r, title: A
- 3^r-4^v, Epistle dedicatory to dr. Geo. Hakewill, dated “Exceter
- Colledge. Novemb. 15”. (1624): A 1^r-D 1^v, the sermon, on Luke xix.
- 46: D 2, not seen.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267. The Chapel of Exeter here
- concerned (which is not now standing) was built entirely at dr.
- Hakewill’s expense, at a cost of about £1200. The preface to the
- sermon mentions many Exeter men of the time and, incidentally, that
- dr. Hakewill was a kinsman of sir Thomas Bodley. The sermon was
- reprinted at Oxford in 1636.
-
-
-21. ¬Rawlinson¬, John. QVADRIGA | SALVTIS. | FOVRE | QUADRA-GESIMAL, |
-OR LENT-SERMONS, PREACHED | at _WHITEHALL_: | BY | IO. RAWLINSON Doctor
-of Diuinity, | Principal of _Edmund-Hall_ in _Oxford_, | and one of his
-MAIESTIES | Chaplaines in Ordinary. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 57: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 26 + [4] + 29 + [3] + 29 + [3] + 28
- + [2]: pp. 11 beg. _after, if at: Adonibezek, it: So, in like_, and
- _she wilbee_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication
- to Charles i, as Prince Charles: (7) half-title “The Dove-like Soule
- ... Feb. 19. 1618. By I. R. ...”: 1–26, the sermon, on Ps. lv. 6: (3)
- half-title “Lex Talionis. ... March 17. 1620. By I. R. ...”: 1–29, the
- sermon, on Judges i. 7: (2) half-title “The Surprising of Heaven....
- March 29. 1621. By I. R. ...”: 1–29, the sermon, on Matt. xi. 12: (2)
- half-title “The Bridegrome, and his Bride. ... March 19. 1622 ... By
- I. R. ...”: 1–28, the sermon, on Song of Solomon iv. 8: (1) “Faults
- escaped in some of the printed Copies ...” beginning with “_Ser._ 1.
- P. 10. _Of the soule, as wings do the nakednes._ (omitted) lin. 1”.
- (in the copy seen these are corrected).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 506, and 1622 R. The title and every page
- have bounding lines.
-
-
-22. ¬Taylor¬, John, the Water-poet. THE | FEAREFVLL | SVMMER_:_ | _OR_ |
-LONDONS | CALAMITY, | the countries courtesy, | and both their misery. |
-[_line_] | By IOHN TAYLOR | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 58: 1625: eights” 12^o: pp. [32], signn. AB^8: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Although my pangs_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r,
- dedication to sir John Millissent, in verse: A 2^v “To the Printer”,
- signed “Io. Taylor. Or. Coll.”: A 3^v “The Præface”: A 4^r-B 2^r, the
- poem: B 3^r-B 6^v “Against Swearing”, in prose and verse: B 7^r-7^v
- “My fare-well to the famous Vniuersity of Oxford”, in prose.
-
- Rare. A poem on the plague at London in the summer of 1625. There are
- allusions to the author’s stay in Oxford for some weeks and the small
- mortality there.
-
-
-23. ¬Terry¬, John. THEOLOGICALL | LOGICKE: | _OR_ | THE THIRD PART OF
-THE | TRYALL OF TRVTH: | Wherein is declared the excellency and æquity
-of the | Christian Faith, and that it is not withstood and resi-|sted;
-but assisted and fortified by all the forces of right | reason, and by
-all the aide that artificiall Logicke can | yeeld. | _Against the
-heathenish Atheist, and the Romish Catholick_, | _whereof the one taketh
-exception against the Faith of_ | _Christ in generall; and the other
-against the doctrine_ | _thereof, as it is professed in the Reformed
-Churches, as_ | _being in their opinions absurd, and contrary to the
-eui-_|_dent and vndeniable grounds of reason._ | _BY_ | IOHN TERRY
-Minister of the Word of | God at _Stocton_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 50: 1625: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 229 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _O Lord,
- and_, 111 _party to whom_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) 2
- mottos: 1–4, dedication to the bp. of Bath and Wells: 5–11 “To the
- Christian Reader”: 12–23 “The Quæstions that are handled in ... this
- Treatise”: 25–229, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 410, and 1600 T, 1602 T.
-
-
-24. ¬Wall¬, dr. John. THE | VVATERING | OF APOLLOS. | Deliuered in a
-Sermon at | S^t MARIES in _Oxford_ | the 8. of August | 1624. | _By_
-IOHN WALL _Do-_|_ctor in Divinity of_ | Christ-Church. | [_motto_, then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 59: 1625: (eights) 16^o: pp. [64], signn. A-D^8: sign. B 2^r
- beg. _and art mightie_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A
- 2^r, dedication to the bp. of Lincoln: A 3^r-A 6^v the Epistle
- dedicatory to the same: A 7^r-D 6^v, the sermon, on Acts xviii. 28.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 736. The author was chaplain to the
- bishop of Lincoln. Hebrew pointed type seems to be used for the first
- time at Oxford in this sermon, at sign. C 6^v.
-
-
-25. ¬Whear¬, Degory. DE | RATIONE | ET METHODO | Legendi Historias |
-_Dissertatio_. | Authore DEGOREO WHEAR | Pri. Hist. Præl. Pub.
-CAM-|DENIANO apud | _Oxonienses_. | _Huic præmittitur eiusdem Authoris_
-| _Oratio Auspicalis habita, vbi Ca-_|_thedram Historicam primum
-ad-_|_scendit._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 53: 1625: (fours) 12^o: pp. [8] + 24 + [8] + 79 + [1]: pp. 11
- beg. _horremus, domi_ and _quam immensum_: English Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–7) dedication to the earl of Pembroke, dated “Scrib.
- Oxoniæ 8 Kal. vii^{bris}, 1625”: 1–24 “Oratio auspicalis habita in
- Scholis publicis cùm primùm L. Annæi Flori interpretationem
- aggrederer”: (1–3) “Rerum per dissertationis totius partes tractatarum
- indigitamenta”, a conspectus: 1–79, (1), the work, in 3 parts.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 217. The first edition was published in
- London in 1623, with a similar title, giving 12 July 1623 as the date
- of the Dissertation: the preface is dated 29 Sept. 1623 and the
- dedication is to William Camden, then alive, but the Oratio is not
- prefixed. For other edd. see 1637 W, 1662.
-
-
- 1626.
-
-1. Attonitus, Richardus, pseudonym. VERITAS ODIOSA. | FRAGMENTA VARIA |
-COLLOQVII | MACHIAVELLI ET MERCVRII. | 1626. | Ex Schedis M. S. Richardi
-Attoniti Eboracensis Pro-|to-Cancellarij nuper Classis | Anglicanæ. |
-[_two lines._]
-
- Impr. 67: [1626?]: sm. 4^o: pp. 30 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Chrestienté_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. 1 title: 3–30, the work: (1–2) not seen.
-
- Very rare. This is a curious production of a Dutch press, and appears
- to be a vigorous defence of Barneveldt (_d._ 1619) and the Arminians
- against Maurice prince of Orange and the Gomarists. Latin, French,
- Dutch and Italian are used, and the whole piece abounds with lacunae.
- “Walter Map” in the imprint is of course the well-known archdeacon of
- Oxford in the 12th cent., whose satires are still appreciated.
-
-
-2. ¬Barnes¬, Robert. A | SERMON | PREACHED AT | HENLY AT THE
-VISI-|tation on the 27. of Aprill, | 1626. | _VPON THOSE WORDS OF_ |
-_the_ 9. _Psalme, Vers._ 16. | _The Lord is knowne to execute
-judgement._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 63: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 30 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _of Yorke_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to
- sir Richard Blunt, signed “Rob. Barnes”, “from my study at Greys this
- 4th of May, 1626”: 1–30, the sermon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 339. The author was the son of Joseph
- Barnes the printer, and a Fellow of Magdalen College: the dedication
- contains some biographical matter, and the sermon some Henley affairs,
- such as ploughing on Easter Tuesday, which the preacher laments.
-
-
-3. ¬Bayley¬, Thomas. THOMÆ BAYLÆI | MANINGFORDIENSIS | _Ecclesiæ
-Pastoris_. | DE | MERITO MORTIS CHRISTI, | ET MODO CONVERSIONIS. |
-DIATRIBÆ DVÆ. | _PROVT AB IPSO IN SCHOLA_ | _THEOLOGICA APVD
-OXONIEN-_|_ses publicê ad disputandum_ | _propositæ fuerunt Maij._ 8. |
-_An. Dom._ 1621. | _Nec non Concio ejusdem ad_ | _Clerum._ | APVD |
-_Eosdem habita in templo_ B_eatæ_ Mariæ, | _Iulij_ 5. _An. D._ 1622. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 65: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 63 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _per se
- quidem_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–8) Epistola
- dedicatoria to sir Thomas Coventry: (9–11) “Praefatio ad lectorem
- christianum”: (12) the two quaestiones debated in the Diatribae, with
- answers in Latin verse: 1–25 the two diatribae; 27–63, the concio, on
- Jud. 11.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 633. The preface explains that the
- discourses were printed in order to confute a charge of Arminianism.
-
-
-4. ¬Cameron¬, John. AN | EXAMINATION | OF THOSE PLAVSI-|ble Appearances
-which seeme | most to commend the Romish | Church, and to preiudice |
-the Reformed. | _DISCOVERING THEM_ | _to be but meere shifts, purposely
-in-_|_vented, to hinder an exact triall of do-_|_ctrine by the
-Scriptures._ | _BY_ | M^r IOHN CAMERON. | _Englished out of French._ |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 59: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 173 + [3]: P. 11 beg. _superiours.
- These_, 111. _Chap. xxvii_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) “To the Reader,” unsigned, but by William Pinke the translator,
- see below: (5–8) “A Table of the Chapters”: 1–173 The Examination, in
- 41 chapters and a Conclusion: (2) “Faults escaped in some copies,” 6¼
- lines of Errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 476, where Bliss adds a note from White
- Kennett’s copy of the 1^{st} ed. of the Athenæ (at i. 463) “William
- Pinke. He translated and published An Examination ... 1626. 4^{to}.
- Ded. to the Master Wardens and Assistants of the Skinners Company. by
- W. P. [William Pinke] acknowledging his Engagements to the whole
- Company, and reverencing the Memory of that worthy Knight Sir James
- Lancaster.” Neither the British Museum copy nor the two Bodleian
- copies contain the above dedication, the signatures of the preliminary
- matter being, on each leaf:—(blank), *2, **, (blank), forming one
- gathering of 4 leaves of a natural kind, though the double asterisk is
- odd. The original French bore the title “Traicté auquel sont examinez
- les preiugez de ceux de l’Eglise Romaine. Contre la Religion Reformee”
- (La Rochelle, 1617.) Cameron was a Scotchman, minister at Bordeaux and
- Professor of Theology at Saumur. The address to the reader apologises
- for using the word _prejudice_ as a translation of the French
- _Preiugé_, which means a preconceit either good or bad: and says “I
- have not construed but translated.”
-
-
-5. ¬H[akewell]¬, G[eorge]. A | COMPARISON | BETVVEENE THE | DAYES OF
-PURIM | and that of the _Powder treason_ | for the better Continuance of
-| the memory of it, and the | stirring vp of mens affe-|ctions to a more
-Zea-|lous observati-|on there of. | [_line_]| _Written by G. H._ D. D.|
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 58: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. 36: p. 11 beg. _more diuelish_: Great
- Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within arched border: 2, the
- text, Deut. xxxii. 26–28: 3–36, the sermon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 255.
-
-
-6. ¬Prideaux¬, John. CONCIO | HABITA OXONIÆ | ad Artium _Baccalaureos_
-in | Die Cinerum Feb. 22^o. | 1626. | _PER_ | IOHANNEM PRIDEAVX S. S.
-Th. | _Professorem Regium, &_ P. T. _ejusdem_ | _Academiæ
-Vicecancellarium_. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 60 (with “Excubebant”): 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. viii + 40: p. 11 beg.
- _latet ad_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7) Latin
- dedication to Robert lord Dormer, dated “Exon: Coll: ex Musæo meo d.
- 8. Martij ... 1626” i.e. 1625/6: 1–44 (“40”), the sermon, on 1 Sam.
- xiv. 26.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 273. The “P. T.” of the title seems to
- be _Pro Tempore_: the use of 1626 for 1625 or 1625/6 is noticeable.
-
-
-7. ——. LECTIONES | DECEM. | DE TOTIDEM RELIGIONIS | Capitibus præcipuè
-hoc tempore con-|_troversis prout publicè habebantur_ | _Oxoniæ in
-Vesperijs_. | PER | IOHANNEM PRIDEAVX Exoniensis Collegij | Rectorem, &
-S. Th. Professorem Regium. | _Editio secunda, priori emaculatior, &
-auctior._ | [two _mottos_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 60: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. [14] + 366: p. 11 beg. _& ult._, 111
- _mitia celebramus_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- Latin dedication to Charles prince of Wales: (9–11) “Ad Lectorem”:
- (12–14) “Rerum Capita ... Quæstiones ...”, 10 of each: 1–366, the 10
- lectiones delivered in successive Comitia 1616–1625.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267. I have not seen even any notice of
- the first edition. These Lectiones are quite distinct from the
- Orationes below. See 1627 P.
-
-
-8. ——. ORATIONES | NOVEM INAVGV-|RALES, DE TOTIDEM | THEOLOGIÆ APICIBVS,
-| scitu non indignis, prout in promo-|tione Doctorum, Oxoniæ | publicè
-proponebantur. | in Comitijs. | _Accedit ad Arti_u_m Baccalaureos, de_
-Mosis | _Institutione Concio, pro more habita_ | _in die Cinerum, An._
-1616. | PER | IOHANNEM PRIDEAVX, | Exoniensis Collegij Recto-|rem, & SS.
-Th. Professo-|rem Regium. | [two _mottos_, one in Hebrew: then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 64: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 196 + 28: pp. 11 beg. _lia est
- terebrans_, and _de vita Mosis_, 111 _randum. Verum_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) Latin dedication to the earl of
- Pembroke: (9–10) “Ad lectorem”: (11) “Rerum Capita”: 1–196, the nine
- orations, delivered at successive Comitia 1616–22, 1624–5: 1–28, the
- Concio, on Acts vii. 22.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267. The names of the doctors are given
- for each year.
-
-
-9. ¬Reuter¬, Adam. DE | CONSILIO | TRACTATVS | _QVEM_ | NOBILISSIMO
-SVFFOLCIÆ | _Comiti consecrat_ | ADAM REVTER | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 53: 1626: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 220 [“221”, 129 being omitted] +
- [2]: p. 11 beg. _sapientis principis_, 111 _Quo jure?_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) Latin dedication to the duke of Suffolk:
- 1-“221” the treatise.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 421.
-
-
-10. ¬Wall¬, John. IACOBS | LADDER, | _OR_ | _Christian advancement_. |
-Deliuered in a Sermon at | _Newparke_ in Glocester-|shire, the seat of
-the right | Honourable the Lord | _Berkley_, this late heauy |
-visitation. | _By_ IOHN WALL D_octour_ in | _Divinity of Christ-Church_
-| _in Oxford_. | [_motto_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 66: 1626: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _not
- mount as_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5) dedication
- to lady Eliz. Berkley: (7–13) Epistle dedicatory to the same: 1–55,
- the sermon, on 1 Pet. v. 6.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 734.
-
-
-11. ¬Wower¬, Jan. “Joan. Wouveri ... pietas erga _B_enefactores—Oxon.
-1626.”
-
- So in the sale catalogue of the ©Bibliotheca Gulstoniana© (bp. William
- Gulston’s books), Lond. 1688, 4^o, p. 35, no. 290. But see 1628 W.
-
-
- 1627.
-
-1. ¬Felix¬, Marcus Minucius. M. MINVCII | FELICIS | OCTAVIVS. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 74: 1627: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [6] + 129 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _bere,
- quàm in_, 111 _dicimus; non_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–5) “Typographus lectori”: (6) quotation from Lactantius about
- Minucius Felix: 1–129, the work: (2) “Errata”.
-
- See 1631 F, 1636 F, 1662, 1678. The printer says that he has cleared
- this edition from the errors of Froben’s. I have seen a copy in which
- the type of pages 12 and 13 has changed places. The work is an apology
- for Christianity.
-
-
-2. ¬Fell¬, dr. Samuel. _PRIMITIÆ_, | SIVE | ORATIO | H^ABI^{TA} OXON^IAE
-| IN SCHOLA THEOLOGICA | _NONO NOVEMBRIS_. | ET | _CONCIO LATINA AD_ |
-_BACCALAVREOS DIE_ | _CINERVM_. | Per SAMVELEM FELL Præbendarium
-Ecclesiæ | Christi, & Publicum Professorem in Theo-|logiâ, pro Dominâ
-MARGARETA | _Comitissâ Richmondiæ_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 53: 1627: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 17 + [1] + 18 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _quantulùm theologicæ_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–17,
- the oration: (1) half title to the Concio: 1–18, the sermon on Col.
- ii. 8.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 243. The (inaugural) oration contains
- some details about Fell’s predecessor in the professorship, dr. Seb.
- Benefield: the two pieces would seem to have been delivered in 1626
- and 1626/7.
-
-
-3. ¬H[akewill]¬, G[eorge]. AN | APOLOGIE | OF THE POWER AND | PROVIDENCE
-OF GOD | IN THE GOVERNMENT | OF THE WORLD. | _OR_ | AN EXAMINATION | AND
-CENSVRE OF THE | COMMON ERROUR TOVCHING | NATVRES PERPETVALL AND |
-VNIVERSALL DECAY, DIVI-|DED INTO FOVRE BOOKES: | _WHEREOF_ | _The first
-treates of this pretended decay in generall, together with some
-prepa-_|_ratiues thereunto._ | _The second of the pretended decay of the
-Heauens and Elements, together with_ | _that of the Elementary bodies,
-man only excepted._ | _The third of the pretended decay of mankinde in
-regard of age and duration, of_ | _strength and stature, of arts and
-wits._ | _The fourth of this pretended decay in matter of manners,
-together with a large_ | _proofe of the future consummation of the World
-from the testimony of the_ | _Gentiles, and the vses which we are to
-draw from the consideration thereof._ | By _G. H._ D. D. | [_motto_,
-then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 58: 1627: (fours) fol.: pp. [36] + 473 + [5]: p. 11 beg. _Yet
- Phillip_, 111 _rable to their_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–7) dedication to the University of Oxford, signed “G. H.”: (9–19)
- “the Preface”: (20) “Errata”: (21–34) “The Contents ...”: (35) “of the
- value of the Roman sesterce ...”: (36) quotation from Boethius, with
- English translation: 1–473, the work: (2–5) “A Revise,” corrections of
- a few passages, &c.
-
- The author was George Hakewill. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 256,
- where “Lond.” is a mistake for “Oxford”: for other edd. see 1630 H,
- 1635 H.
-
-
-4. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ. | _A_ | LITTLE DE-|SCRIPTION OF | THE
-GREAT WORLD. | The third Edition. Revised. | [_line_] | By PETER HEYLYN.
-| [_line_, then _motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 71: 1627: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + folded leaf + 807 + [5]:
- p. 11 beg. 1. _First then_, 501 _Scotland is by_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within an arched border; (3–4) dedication to
- prince Charles: (5–6) “To the Reader” from the second ed.: (7–8) “To
- my brother the Author”, a poem by Edw. Heylyn: (9–12) “A Table of the
- principall Countries ...”: (13–14) “A table of the antient ... nations
- ...”: (15–19) “A table of the most principall things ...”: (19) “...
- Forraine coynes ...”: 1–807, (1–2), the work: (3) “Errata”. Before p.
- 7 should come a folded leaf, as in the 2nd ed. (1625).
-
- See 1621 H, Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 557. In the copy seen on p. (2)
- at the end of the book, in the original printing of the English lines
- beginning “But whither goeth”, l. 6 (beg. “Into safe”) is before l. 4,
- making nonsense: and a corrected reprint of the whole 12 lines is
- pasted over the faulty original.
-
-
-5. ¬Holyoke¬, Francis. DICTIONARIVM ETYMO-|LOGICVM LATINVM,
-ANTIQVIS-|simum & novissimum nunc demum infinitis | penè laboribus &
-continuis vigilijs com-|positum & absolutum à FRANCISCO | de Sacra
-Quercu. | That is, | _A Dictionarie declaring the originall and
-derivations of all words vsed_ | in any Latine Authors, with the reason
-of their derivations and appella-|tions; neuer any in this kinde extant
-before: the quantities of syllables, as | also the differences of those
-words, whose affinitie in signification | or otherwise, might cause a
-promiscuous and improper | vse: the pure and improper words gathered |
-into one Dictionarie, and distingui-|shed by this marke: †. | Wherevnto
-besides the hard and most vsefull words in Divinitie, Philosophie, |
-Physicke, and Logicke, are added many thousand other words out of |
-approved authours old and new, with their Greeke in more exactnesse then
-| ever was in _Calepine_, _Morelius_, or any other: and also the coines,
-| measures, weights, and Greeke Rootes, none of which | are extant in
-any Edition formerly | published. | _Herevnto is also annexed the proper
-names adorned with their Etymologies, illustrated_, | and explained,
-with Histories, Proverbes, Mythologies, &c. together with the
-Chronologie of | the persons, and the beginning of noted Citties, and
-plantation of sundry Coun-|tries, the Geography, and the names both
-ancient and new | of the most remarkable places, | _LASTLY RIDERS
-DICTIONARIE I THE ENGLISH_ | before the latine compiled by RIDER, is
-augmented | with many hundreds of words, both out of the Law, | and out
-of the Latine, French, and other languages, | such as were and are with
-vs in common vse, | but never printed vntill now to the | perfecting of
-that worke. | Also the Romane | Calender. | _By the great industrie and
-paines of_ | FRANCIS HOLYOKE. |
-
- Impr. 68: 1627: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [1736], signn. ( )^2, A-Z,
- Aa-Zz, Aaa-Zzz, Aaaa-Eeee^8, Ffff-Llll^4, Mmmm^2, ( )^4, A-Z, Aa-Ff^8,
- Gg-Ii^4: signn. Bb 1^r beg. _Plin. l._ 4. 45, Bbb 1^r _Præcĭpuè,
- adu._, B 1^r _A crafts mans_, Bb 1^r _Taken or drawne out_: Long
- Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r title within lines, 2^r “Ad
- Lectorem” signed “T. S. C. R.”: 2^r-2^v, seven Latin poems on the
- book, one by Robert Burton: A 1^r-Sss 1^r, the Latin-English lexicon:
- Sss 1^v, Holyoke’s Latin dedication to Clement Throckmorton “20 [!]
- Cal. Mart. 1611”: Sss 2^r-Ffff 4^v, “Dictionarium etymologicum
- propriorum nominum”: Gggg 1^r-Mmmm 1^r, “Radices Græcæ linguæ ...
- collectæ & compositæ. Opera & studio T. W.”, a short Greek-Latin
- lexicon: ( ) 1^r a title within lines:—“_RIDERS_ | DICTIONARIE |
- CORRECTED AND | AVGMENTED WITH THE | ADDITION OF MANY HVN-|DRED WORDS
- NOT EXTANT | IN ANY FORMER EDITION. | HEREVNTO ARE ANNEXED | RIDERS
- CALENDER, AND CER-|TAINE TABLES EXPLAINING | _the names, weights and
- valuations of_ | auncient and modern coynes, as | _also a table of the
- Hebrew, Greeke_ | _& Latine measures reduced to our_ | _English
- standard & assise_. | _WHEREVNTO IS JOINED A_ d_ICTIO-_|NARY
- ETYMOLOGICALL, DERIVING | _each word from his proper fountaine, the
- first_ | that ever was extant in that kind, with | many worthy
- castigations and addi-|_tions, as will appeare in the title and
- epistle before it_. | [_line_] | _BY_ | FRANCIS HOLIOKE | [_line_]”,
- then impr. 58: ( ) 2^r-2^v, dedication to lady Dudley by Holyoke: ( )
- 3^r, Latin dedication to sir F. Walsingham, dated, “Oxoniæ, Calend.
- Octob.” by John Rider: ( ) 3^v “To the Reader” dated “From Oxon. the
- xxx of September” by Rider: ( ) 4^r-4^v, poems &c. by Rider, John Case
- (30 Sept. 1589) &c.: A-Ee 8^v, “Bibliotheca Rideri scholastica”, an
- English-Latin lexicon: Ff1^r-Hh 3^r “Certaine generall heads of Birds,
- Colours, &c.”, English-Latin: Hh 3^v-4^r, a short English-Latin
- geographical dictionary: Hh 4^r-Ii 4^v, “Johannis Rideri Calendarium
- Romanum ...”, followed by lists of weights, measures, &c. and foreign
- coins, the last, signed “W. T. P.”
-
- Rare, see 1589 R. Of bp. Rider’s double lexicon the first part at
- least (English-Latin) was published at Oxford in 1589. In 1606 Francis
- Holyoke supplied a Latin-English part (based on Rider’s Index) and
- published both at London. Subsequent edd. of the two parts together
- are Lond. 1617, Lond. 1626 (ed. N. Gray), the present one Oxf. 1627,
- Lond. 1633 (called the 4th), Lond. 1640 (called the 5th), Lond. 1649,
- Lond. 1659, (acc. to Bohn’s Lowndes, s.v. Rider, where however since
- 1637 is an error for 1627, this 1659 may be one for 1649), and, edited
- by Thomas Holyoke son of Francis, Lond. 1677.
-
-
-6. ¬James¬, dr. Thomas. _INDEX_ | GENERALIS | LIBRORVM PROHI-|BITORVM à
-PONTIFI-|ciis, unà cum Editionibus | _expurgatis vel expur-_|gandis
-juxta seriem Li-|terarum & tripli-|cem classem. | _In usum Bibliothecæ
-Bodleia-_|_anæ, & Curatoribus eiusdem_ | specialiter designatus | PER |
-THO. IAMES S. Theol. | D. Coll. B. Mariæ Winton | in Oxon. Vulgò Novi
-dicti | quondam Socium. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 69: 1627: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [144], signn. *, A-L^{12}: sign. B
- 1^r beg. _In Biblia_: Pica Roman. Contents:—* 1^r, “[*]”: 2^r, title:
- 3^r, Latin dedication to the Curators of the Bodleian, followed
- (4^r-6^v) by an Epistola dedicatoria to them: 7^r-10^v, Ad Lectorem:
- 11^r, Errata: A1-K5^v, the work: K6^r-L10^v, “Tabula”, an index of
- authors: L11^r “Cautio”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 467. The intention of the book is the
- reverse of the aim of the ©Indices Expurgatorii©, namely to give a
- select list of recommended books. Those which were in the Bodleian are
- marked with a star.
-
-
-7. ¬Pasor¬, Matthias. ORATIO | _PRO_ | LINGVÆ ARABICÆ |
-_PROFES_S_IONE, PVBLICE_ | ad Academicos habita in | schola Theologica
-_Vni-_|_versitatis Oxoniensis_ | xxv. Octob. | 1626. | à | MATTHIA
-PASORE, _Artium Magi-_|_stro & non ita pridem Mathematum
-Pro-_|_fessore in Vniversitate_ Haidelbergensi. | [two _mottos_, one
-Hebrew.]
-
- Impr. 60: 1627: (eights) 16^o: pp. [34], signn. A-B^8C^2: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _mentariorum Rabbinnicorum_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A
- 1^r, title: A 1^v, “decretum Concilii Viennensis”, see below, then
- device: 2^r-2^v, dedication to the University of Oxford, in Latin,
- dated 5 Dec. 1626: A 3^r-C 2^v, the oration.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 445. The oration is of considerable
- interest for the history of Oriental studies at Oxford. It claims to
- be the first on the subject at Oxford, quotes the decree of the
- Council of Vienne 1311–12 that there ought to be instruction in
- Hebrew, Arabic and Chaldee at Oxford, and urges the fitness of the
- study in Oxford. Pasor was lecturer on Arabic only from 1626 to 1629.
- Some Arabic MSS. in the Bodleian are mentioned on sign. B7^r and B7^v.
-
-
-8. ¬Prideaux¬, dr. John. In the ©Catalogus ... librorum ... Richardi
-Davis bibliopolæ, pars quarta© (Lond. 1692, 4^o) p. 10, no. 183 is
-“Joan. Prideaux Lectiones novem, Oxon. 1627.” See 1626 P.
-
-
-9. ¬Richardson¬, Gabriel. [_woodcut_] | OF | THE STATE | OF EVROPE. |
-_XIIII. Bookes._ | CONTAINING THE HISTO-|RIE, AND RELATION OF THE |
-_MANY PROVINCES_ | HEREOF. | _Continued out of approved Authours._ | BY
-| GABRIEL RICHARDSON BATCHELOVR | in Divinitie, and FELLOW of
-BRASEN-|NOSE _College in Oxford_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 70: 1627: (fours) fol.: pp. [4] + 18 + 67 + 37 + [1] + 14 + 13 +
- [1] + 50 + 23 + [1] + 11 + [1] + 74 + 26 + [2] + 11 + [1] + 68 + 29 +
- [1] + 64 + [2]: pp. 11 [bk. 1] beg. _Di ocesse with_, (bk. 6)
- _Arcobriga_, (bk. 10) _Berry. Bounded_, (bk. 11) _Vindomana_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title; (3–4) dedication to the bp. of Lincoln:
- 1– ... 64, the treatise in 14 books separately paged.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 38. The first four books contain Great
- Britain. The signatures begin again with the 10th and with the 11th
- book, but every book is separately paged. The matter is a mixture of
- history and geography.
-
-
-10. ¬Smith¬, Samuel. Wood (©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 283) mentions an edition of
-the Aditus ad Logicam of this year: see 1617 S.
-
-
-11. ¬Vicars¬, Thomas. PVSILLVS GREX. | ¿E¿Λ¿E¿ΓΧΟΣ. | REFVTATIO |
-CVIVSDAM LIBELLI DE AM-|PLITVDINE REGNI COELESTIS | _SVB EMENTITO CAELII
-SECVNDI_ | CVRIONIS NOMINE IN LV-|_CEM EMISSI_. | _Qua docetur ex
-Scripturis beatorum numerum ma_j_orem_ | _non esse numero damnatorum,
-sed potius minorem._ | _Ad excutiendum securitatis veternum nostris
-hominibus_ | _potissimùm conscripta._ | _Authore_ THOMA _de_ VICARIIS
-_S. T. Bac. Pastore_ | _Cockfieldiensi in agro quondam Australium
-Saxonum._ | [two _mottos_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 72: 1627: sm. 4^o: pp. 32: p. 11 beg. _argumentaque_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 2, “Ad Lectores Candidos”: 3–6, Latin
- letters between “Thom. Vicarsius” (“Gallager”, = of Cockfield) and
- John Goldsmith (“Gallinager” = of Henfield), and William Cox, canon of
- Chichester, one dated 7 Jan. 1622 or 1623: 7–32, the discourse, on
- Luke xii. 32.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 443. The original treatise of Coelius
- Secundus Curio (an Italian, _d._ 1569) entitled “... De amplitudine
- beati regni Dei dialogi sive libri duo” was first published in 1554,
- and his contention that the number of the saved is greater than that
- of the lost is here refuted.
-
-
-12. ¬Wake¬, Isaac. REX PLATONICVS_:_ | [&c. exactly as 1615 W, except
-that the colon in the first line is italic, not Roman, and “Quarta” for
-“Tertia”.]
-
- Impr. 73: 1627: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 238 + [18]: p. 11 beg.
- _mentum demississimo_, 111 _neri, vt quum_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication to prince Henry, as in 1st
- ed.; 1–236, the work: 237–238, (1), the Chancellor’s letter with
- preface: (3) title “ORATIO | FVNEBRIS | habita in Tem-|_plo beatæ
- Ma-_|_riæ Oxon._ | Ab ISAACO WAKE, | _PVBLICO ACA-_|_demiæ Oratore,
- Maij_ | 25. An. 1607. quum | _mæsti Oxonienses_, | _pijs manibus_
- IO-|HANNIS RAI-|NOLDI _paren-_|_tarent_. |” [woodcuts, then impr. 73]:
- (5–17) the oration.
-
- See 1607 W. This fourth edition is a verbatim but not literatim
- reprint of the 3^{rd} ed. (1615).
-
-
-13. ¬Wall¬, dr. John. CHRIST IN | PROGRESSE. | DELIVERED IN A SER-|mon
-at _Shelford_ i_n Nottingham-_|_shire_, the seate of the right
-Honou-|rable the Lord STANHOPE. | _By_ IOHN WALL _Doctour in
-Divini-_|_ty of Christ-Church in Oxford_. | [_motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 58: 1627: eights 12^o: pp. [16] + 50 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _where
- the Lord_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1–2) not seen: (3) title:
- (5) dedication to sir Henry Stanhope, son of lord Stanhope: (7–13)
- “The Epistle dedicatory”: (15–16) not seen: 1–50, the sermon, on
- Matth. xxi. 9.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 735.
-
-
- 1628.
-
-1. [¬Airay¬, Christopher]. FASCICVLVS | PRÆCEPTORVM | _LOGICORVM IN_ |
-_gratiam juventutis_ A-|CADEMICÆ _compositus_ | _& nunc primùm typis_ |
-_donatus_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 72: 1628: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 224: p. 11 beg. _eo: vt, si_,
- 111 I. _Necessaria, cui_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
- (5–6) “Typographus benevolo Lectori ...”: (7) “Sphalmata ...”, errata:
- (8) “_Arbor Porphyriana_”: 1–224, the work comprising an “Introductio
- generalis ...” and six books.
-
- The first edition of Airay’s Logic, see 1633 A, 1660. The preface
- explains that the author’s name is omitted from modesty, and that
- several MSS. of the first three books have been compared and something
- added, as well as three more books.
-
-
-2. Bodleian Library. The entry in the “Catalogi ... librorum ...
-Richardi Davis ... pars quarta,” Lond. 1692, p. 29:—“108. Catalogus
-Librorum in Bibliotheca Bodleiana—Oxon. 1628” must be an error for 1620.
-
-
-3. ¬Brerewood¬, Edward TRACTATVS | QVIDAM | LOGICI | DE |
-_PRÆDICABILIBUS_, | ET | _PRÆDICAMENTIS_. | _Ab eruditissimo Viro_
-EDVARDO BREREWOOD | Artium Magistro, è Collegio _Ænei-Nasi_, olim
-conscripti: | nunc verò ab erroribus (qui frequenti transcriptione
-irrepserant) vindicati, ad pristinum nitorem, na-|tivamq; puritatem
-diligentissimâ manuscripto-|rum collatione restituti, & in lucem editi,
-| _Per_ T. S. _Art. Mag. & Collegij Ænei-Nasi Socium_. | [_line_, then
-_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 72 _b_: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [32] + single leaf + 472: p. 11 beg.
- _genus & species_, 401 _tes sit sanus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–8) epistola dedicatoria to sir Rich. Brook of Norton, signed
- “Thomas Sixesmith”, “Oxonij, è Musæo meo, in Collegio Ænea-Nasensi,
- 13. Calend. Octob. 1628”: (9–12) “Erudito Lectori ...”: (13–31) “Index
- sectionum quæstionumque ...”: a folded sm. folio leaf “Pag. 1” bearing
- an “Analysis” of logic, printed on one side only, perhaps not by
- Brerewood: 1–472, the ten treatises (pp. 63–64 are another folded
- leaf, printed in style similar to the former one, but “Sect. 17”).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 140. Brerewood died in 1613.
-
-
-4. ¬Burton¬, Robert. [Engraved title:—] THE | ANATOMY OF | MELANCHOLY. |
-_What it is, with all the kinds causes_, | _symptomes, prognostickes, &
-seuerall cures of it._ | In three Partitions, with their severall |
-Sections, members & subsections, | Philosophically, Medicinally, |
-Historically, opened & cut up. | BY | _Democritus Junior_. | _With a
-Satyricall Preface, conducing_ | _to the following Discourse._ | _The
-thirde Edition, corrected and_ | _augmented by the Author._ | [_motto_:
-see below.]
-
- Impr. 70: 1628: (fours) folio: pp. [8?] + 77 + [11] + 646 (after 208
- are two unnumbered leaves, and after 374 one) + [12]: p. 11 beg. _atq;
- auidè_, 501 _so they must_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) engraved
- title: [(3–6) not seen, two leaves of verses?] (7) dedication to
- George lord Berkeley: 1–77 “Democritus Iunior to the reader”: (2)
- “Lectori malè feriato”: (4–7) “the Synopsis of the first partition”:
- (8–9) “Democritus Iunior ad librum suum”, elegiacs: (10–11) “The
- Authors Abstract of Melancholy, διαλογικῶς”, verses: 1–208, the first
- partition: (1–4) “The Synopsis of the second partition”: 209–374, the
- second partition: (1–2) “Analysis of the third partition”: 375–646,
- the third partition: (1–8) “The Table”, an index: (9) “Errata sic
- corrigas”: (11) Impr. 75, between woodcuts.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 653, and 1621 B. The author’s name does
- not occur in the book. The engraved title is divided into 12 parts,
- arranged in horizontal rows of three, but the rows are not of equal
- height: no. 1 (left top corner) is “Zelotipia,” birds with river and
- trees: 2. “Democritus Abderites” by his garden, under a tree: 3.
- Solitudo,” deer &c. in a glade: 4. (second row) “Inamorato” a
- love-sick youth with suitable surroundings: 5. title, as above: 6.
- “Hypocondriacus” a king, sitting: 7. “Superstitiosus,” a monk on his
- knees, telling his beads: 8. “Democritus Junior,” half length, with
- arms, book, sphere and ladder (?): 9. “Maniacus,” chained: 10.
- “Borago,” the plant: 11. Imprint, with “C: le ... Blon. fe:” the
- engraver: 12. “Helleborus,” the plant. This title is found in later
- editions, but in a comparatively worn state.
-
-
-5. ¬Cameron¬, John. A | TRACT OF THE | SOVERAIGNE IVDGE | OF
-CONTROVERSIES | IN MATTERS OF | RELIGION. | [_line_] | By IOHN CAMERON
-Minister of the | Word of God, and Divinity Professour | in the Academie
-of _Montauban_. | [_line_] | _Translated into English by_ IOHN |
-Vernevil. _M.A._ | [_motto_, and translation.]
-
- Impr. 80: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. 48: p. 11 beg. _constrayned first of
- all_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–4, dedication to sir Thomas
- Leigh, dated “from the publique Library in Oxford this 30 of Aug.
- 1628”: 5–6, “To the Reader”: 7–48, the treatise.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 222. The author states that when he
- first came into England he “belonged unto” Sir Tho. Leigh and his
- grandfather of the same names. The “sovereign judge” of the treatise
- is declared to be “God speaking in the Scriptures.”
-
-
-6. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathaniel. ©Achitophel: or, the Picture of a wicked
-Politician©, in 3 parts. Dubl. 1627, oct. Ox. 1628, qu.
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 422, where Wood relates that the Lond.
- 1629 ed. (and presumably all subsequent editions) is expurgated of
- passages supposed to reflect on Arminianism. See 1640 C. The British
- Museum, Bodleian, Advocates’ Library at Edinburgh and the Library of
- Trinity College, Dublin, do not seem to possess a copy of either of
- the two first editions.
-
-
-7. ¬C[asa]¬, J[=Giovanni della]. ETHICA | IVVENILIS | _J. C._| GALATEVS
-| Seu | De Morum Honestate & E-|legantia; Liber ex Italico | Latinus; |
-[_line_] | Ejusdem _J. W._ de Umbra | Variæ. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 87: 1628: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [4] + 129 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _mo
- nobis bene_, 111 _prehendere, vel_: Pica Roman. Contents.—pp. (1–2),
- not seen: (3) title, within a double line: (4) second title “Ethica
- Iuvenilis, seu Manuductorium ad laudabilem morum Concinnitatem ...”,
- and preface signed “G. W.”: 1–129, the treatise: (2–3) not seen.
-
- See 1630 C. The author was Giovanni della Casa, and the translator
- Nathan Chytraeus, whose initials occur on p. 1: but the copy seen had
- no trace of “J. W. de Umbra variæ,” though the binding was original.
- There are many editions of the Italian and Latin forms of this
- treatise (see 1630 C and 1665), and some of an English translation.
- Pp. 1–128 of this edition were reissued as part of the 1665 edition.
-
-
-8. ¬D[ickinson]¬, W[illiam]. _MILKE_ | FOR BABES. | _THE_ | ENGLISH
-CATECHISME, | SET DOWNE IN THE | Common-Prayer Booke, breifly ex-|planed
-for the private vse of the | _Younger and more vnlearned sort of_ | _his
-Parishioners of_ Apleton, _in_ | the County of Berks. | ⁂⁂ | By W. D. |
-[two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 85: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 39 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _sible
- resemblance_: Pica English and Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, (2) four
- “Errata”: 3–8 “To his parishioners ...” of Appleton, a dedication and
- preface: 1–39 the work.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 389.
-
-
-9. ¬Doughty¬, John. _A DISCOVRSE_ | CONCERNING | THE ABSTRUSENESSE | of
-Divine Mysteries, together | _with our knowledge of them_ | MAY 1. 1627.
-| ANOTHER | _TOVCHING CHVRCH-_|Schismes but the Vnanimity | of Orthodox
-Professours | FEB. 17. 1628. | [_line_] | By _I. D._ M^r of Arts and
-Fellow of | _Merton Colledge in Oxford_. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 84: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 26 + 26: pp. 11 beg. _for mans
- delight_, and _by discountenance_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within a line: (3–4) dedication to Dr. Brent, warden of Merton,
- signed “Iohn Doughty”: 1–26 the first sermon, on Rom. xii. 16: 1–26
- the second, on Rom. xvi. 17.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 977. The signatures run through the
- whole volume. All the pages of text are within a bounding line doubled
- at the top and outer side.
-
-
-10. ¬Field¬, dr. Richard. OF | THE CHVRCH, | FIVE BOOKES. | BY | RICHARD
-FIELD DOCTOR | OF DIVINITY | AND SOME=|TIMES DEANE OF | _GLOCESTER_. |
-[_line_] | _THE SECOND EDITION VERY MVCH AVG=_|_mented, in the thirde
-booke, and the Appendix to the same._ | [_line_, then _device_, then
-_line_.]
-
- Impr. 68_a_: 1628: (sixes) fol.: pp. [16] + 906 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _tation of daungerous_, 701 _wrongs of the Court_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) Epistle dedicatory to the duke of
- Buckingham, signed “Nathaniel Field”, the author’s son. (5–7) Epistle
- dedicatory to the archbp. of Canterbury, by Rich. Field: (9–15) “what
- things are handled in the bookes following”: (15) “Errata”: 1–28, the
- work, bk 1: 29–46, bk 2: 47–182, bk 3: 183–342, “an Appendix ...”:
- 343–402, bk 4: 403, a title to book 5, and its appendix, with impr.
- 68: 403–746, bk 5: 747–906, the appendix: (1–2) not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 184, 1635 F. The first ed. (two different
- issues) was Lond. 1606 (5th book, Lond. 1610). The author died in
- 1616. Three edd. or parts of edd. have been issued even in the 19th
- century. The signatures run completely through the book.
-
-
-11. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. _ROMANÆ_ | HISTORIAE | ANTHOLOGIA | RECOGNITA ET |
-AVCTA. | _AN_ | ENGLISH EXPOSITION | OF THE ROMAN ANTI-|quities, wherein
-many Roman | & English offices are paralleld | _and divers obscure
-phrases_ | _explained_ | _For the vse of_ ABINGDON _Schoole_. | [_line_]
-| Newly revised and inlarged by the | _Author_. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 70: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 277 + [23]: p. 11 beg. _malefactor,
- but_, 201 _Cap. 8. De rupe_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within an arched border: (3–4) dedication to dr. Young, 14 Cal. Dec.
- 1622: (5) “Benevolo lectori ...”: (7) “A short table ...” of contents:
- 1–277 the work: (1–23) “Index rerum et verborum”.
-
- See 1614 G.
-
-
-12. ¬Gumbleden¬, John. _GODS_ | GREAT MERCY | TO MANKINDE IN | _JESVS
-CHRIST_. | _A_ | SERMON PREACHED AT | Pauls Crosse, March 18: being |
-_Palme Sunday_. 1626. | By IOHN GVMBLEDEN M^r of Artes. | [two _mottos_,
-then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 81: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 34 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _off) he
- comes_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “To the Reader”,
- dated “From my Study at Longworth in Berkshiere. Octob. 14. 1627”:
- 1–34, the sermon, on Is. liii. 6.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 436.
-
-
-13. ¬Howson¬, John, bp. of Oxford. ARTICLES | ECCLESIASTICALL | to be
-enquired of by the Church-wardens & | Sidesmen within the Dioces of
-Oxon: set forth | _by the authority of the Right Reverend Father_ | _in
-God_ IOHN by the Divine providence | _of God Lord Bishop of_ Oxon_:
-Anno_ | 1628. _Being the third yeare_ | _from his Lordships_ |
-_Visitation._ | [_woodcut._] |
-
- Impr. 82: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4 B^2: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _spected to conceale_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r title: A
- 1^v “The Oath”: A 2^r-B 2^r “Articles concerning the Clergie”, &c.
-
-
-14. ¬Parre¬, bp. Richard. CONCIO AD | CLERVM HABI=|TA OXONIÆ IN |
-_Comitijs Iul._ 12. 1625. | _PER_ | RICH_:_ PARRE. S.S. | _Theol. Bac.
-Coll. Aenei_⸗|_nasi Socium_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 72_a_: 1628: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 46 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _demùm sunt hæc_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- epistola dedicatoria to Thomas earl of Southampton: (8) “Errata”:
- 1–46, the sermon on Rev. iii. 4.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 345. The dedication states that Parre
- was chaplain to his patron the earl of Southampton.
-
-
-15. ¬Parre¬, bp. Richard. THE | END OF THE | PERFECT MAN. | A | _SERMON
-PREACHED AT_ | _the Buriall of the right Honourable Sir_ | ROBERT
-SPENCER Knight | Baron SPENCER of _Wormeleighton_, | _Novemb._ 6. 1627.
-in _Braynton_ | _Church in Nor-_|_thamptonshire_, | _BY_ | RICHARD PARRE
-Bachelour in | Divinity, and late Fellow of Brasen-nose Col-|ledge in
-Oxford, now Rector of | _Ladbrook_ in Warwickshire. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 68: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 29 + [7]: p. 11 beg. _hortation. As
- long_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) epistle dedicator to
- William lord Spencer of Wormleighton: (7–8) “The Preface”: 1–29, the
- sermon on Ps. xxxvii. 37: (2–6) seven poems, in English, Greek (one)
- and Latin (one) on lord Spencer’s death, no doubt by Parre.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 345.
-
-
-16. ¬Pemble¬, William. _FIVE_ | GODLY, AND PRO-|fitable Sermons
-concerning | 1 _The slaverie of sinne._ | 2 The mischiefe of ignorance.
-| 3 The roote of Apostasie. | 4 The benefit of Gods service. | 5 The
-Christians loue. | _Preached in his life time in sundry places._ | By
-that late faithfull Minister of | _Christ_ M^r WILLIAM | PEMBLE _of
-Mag-_|_dalen Hall in the Vni-_|_versity of Oxford_. |
-
- Impr. 84: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 24 + 72 + “31”-“38” + [4?]: pp. 11
- beg. _and cast themselues_, and _tence 2. Thess_: pp. 33 beg. _as
- those Children_, and _his happyness_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within arched border: (3–4) “To the Reader”, signed by the
- editor “Iohn Tombes”: 1–24 the first sermon, on John viii. 34: 1–25,
- the second, on Hos. iv. 6: 27–43, the third, on Heb. iii. 12–13:
- 44–66, the fourth on Ex. xxxiv. 23–24: 67–71, “31”-“38”, 1, the fifth,
- on Cant. ii. 16: (3–4) not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 331 (where “Lond.” is an error for
- “Oxf.”) and 1629 P. Pemble died in 1623. The editor was a pupil of
- Pemble (Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 1062), and succeeded him in his
- lectureship at Magdalen hall. There is something curious about the
- printing of this volume: the pagination is peculiar, and sign. K 1^r
- (p. “31”) has the running title of sermon 4 instead of 5: also the
- catchword on p. “38” is _have_ instead of _having_, and the next page
- differs in style of printing. The second edition shows each sermon
- with a separate pagination, but appears otherwise to be a verbatim
- reprint. The signatures of this first ed. begin again with the second
- sermon, and the first at least of the last two leaves bears no
- signature, though beginning a new sheet.
-
-
-17. ¬Rudyerd¬, sir Benjamin. _BENIAMIN RVDIERD_ | HIS SPEECH IN BEHALFE
-| OF THE CLERGIE, AND OF | _Parishes_ miserably destitute of
-In-|struction, through want of | _Maintenance_. | CONFIRMED BY THE |
-Testimonies of Bishop IEWEL, | Master PERKINS, and Sir | HENRY SPELMAN.
-| [_line, motto, line._]
-
- Impr. 76: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 14 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _taine vnto
- him_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–14, the speech.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 456. This tract is generally found
- without any title page (signn. A—B^4 only): the London booksellers
- seem to have printed one for their own purposes, not deeming the title
- as it heads p. 1 (“Sir Beniamin Ruddierd’s speach in behalfe of the
- Cleargy.”) sufficient. Some early copies have the number of the first
- page central over the author’s name, enclosed in brackets; but it was
- doubtless soon moved to the upper right hand corner, because in its
- original place it seemed to indicate a first _part_ of the tract
- rather than simply the first page. This speech was reprinted at London
- in 1641.
-
-
-18. ¬Sparke¬, William. THE | MYSTERY | OF | GODLINESSE: | A | GENERALL
-DISCOVRSE | OF THE REASON THAT IS | IN CHRISTIAN RELIGION. | [_line_] |
-By WILLIAM SPARKE Divinity Rea⸗|der at _Magd: Coll:_ in _Oxford_ and
-Par⸗|son of _Blechly_ in _Buckingham-shire_. | [_line_, then 2
-_mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 77: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 78 + [2] + 78 + [2]: pp. 11 beg.
- _All the glory_, and _children, yee cannot_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication to George duke of Buckingham:
- (7–12) “The Preface to the Reader”: (13–15) “The Contents”: 1–78
- “Booke I”, in 3 chapters: 1–78 “Booke II”, in 3 chapters: 78, imprint
- 78.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 495. The second book, which is distinct
- in pagination, signatures and colophon, seems to have been printed
- separately and even issued by itself.
-
-
-19. ¬Tozer¬, Henry. DIRECTIONS | _FOR_ | A GODLY LIFE: | Especially for
-Communi-|cating at the Lord’s Table. | _Intended first for private vse;_
-| _now publish’d for the good of_ | _those who desire the safty of_ |
-_their owne soules, and_ | _shall bee pleased to_ | _make vse thereof._
-| BY | H. TOZER M^r of Arts, and | Fellow of _Exceter_ Col-|ledge in
-_Oxford_. | [_motto_: then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 68: 1628: (twelves) 16^o: pp. 198 + [6]: p. 11 beg. _this I
- now_, 101 _Redeemer liueth_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–11,
- Epistle dedicatory to Lorenzo Cary son of viscount Falkland: 13–198,
- the directions: (1–3) “The Contents of each Chapter”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 274, and 1640 T. There were also Oxford
- edd. in 1671 (8th), 1680 (10th), but all editions seem to be uncommon.
-
-
-20. ¬Vossius¬, Gerardus Johannes. GERARDI IOH. VOSSII | _V. CL._ |
-THESES THEOLOGICÆ | ET | HISTORICÆ, | _De varijs doctrinæ Christianæ
-Capitibus_; | Quas, aliquot abhinc annis, dispu-|tandas proposuit in |
-ACADEMIA LEIDENSI. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 83: 1628: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 680: p. 11 beg. _illius de
- chao_, 501 _Nec meliorem_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: [pp.
- 3–4 are perhaps always torn out, as blank]: (5) Errata: (6–7)
- “Syllabus & Ordo Disputationum”: 1–680, the forty deputations, each
- divided into theses.
-
- See 1631 V. These Disputations were printed at Leiden in 1615, and the
- Hague in 1658. In the title the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 6th and 9th, as well as
- the first line of the Imprint “Bellositi Dobunorum,” are in red ink.
- There are large paper copies of this work.
-
-
-21. ¬Wall¬, John. _THE_ | LION IN THE | LAMBE. | OR STRENGTH IN
-| _WEAKENES_. | DELIVERED IN A SER-|mon at _Shelford_ in
-_Nottingham-_|_shire_, the seate of the right Ho-|nourable the Lord |
-STANHOPE. | By IOHN WALL _Doctour in Divini-_|_ty of Christ-Church in_
-Oxford. | [_motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 86: 1628: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _was
- sinne wrought_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5, 7–15)
- dedication and epistle dedicatory to lady Katharine Stanhope: 1–55,
- the sermon, on Rev. vii. 10.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 735.
-
-
-22. ¬Whear¬, Degory. DEGOREI | WHEARI | _PRAEL. HIST._ | CAMDENIANI. |
-_PIETAS erga BE-_|_NEFACTORES_ | continens, | _Parentationem Historicam_
-| _Manibus Camdeni oblatam._ | __{D}edicationem Imaginis Camde-_|_nianæ
-in Scholâ Historica._ | _Necnon_ | _Epistolarum Eucharisticarum
-fascicu-_|_lum._ | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 72 _a_: 1628: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 48 + 133 + [3]: pp. 11
- beg. _tutes tam charè_, and _incolumem. dabam_, 111 _Prædocto Guil.
- Smitho_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) two mottos: (3–7)
- dedication to the University of Oxford: 1–19, “Parentatio historica .
- sive Commemoratio vitæ et mortis V.C. Gulielmi Camdeni Clarentii,
- facta Oxoniæ in Scholâ Historicâ statim à funere, Ann. 1623”, a
- speech: 20–22, “Nuncius Chronogrammaticus, de obitu ... Camdeni ...”,
- a poem with chronograms: 23–48, “Dedicatio imaginis Camdenianæ in
- Schola Historica, 12 Novemb. 1626,” a speech, with more chronograms:
- 1, a half title “Epistolarum eucharisticharum fasciculus”: 2, a motto:
- 3–5 dedication to dr. Benj. Rudierd, dated “Oxoniæ 6 Idus Apr. 1628”,
- in Latin: 6–93, 56 letters from dr. Whear to friends, 1601–26; in
- Latin: 95, a title “[_woodcuts_] | DEGOREI | WHEARI | PRAELEC. |
- HISTOR. | _CAMDEN._ | _CHARISTERIA_ | [_woodcuts_]” | impr. 69: 96,
- motto: 97–103, dedication to John Pym, dated “Oxon. . a.d. 5 Kal. Mai.
- 1628”: 104–133, the Charisteria, letters by Whear to accompany
- presentation copies of his _Methodus historica_ (1625 W): 134 “Errata
- sic corrigenda ...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 219. The title of this work appears to
- explain an extraordinary entry in the ©Bibliotheca Gulstoniana© (1688)
- p. 35 “Joan. Wouveri pietas erga Benefactores, Oxon. 1626”!
-
-
-23. ¬White¬, Antony. TRVTH | AND ERROR | DISCOVERED | IN TWO SER-|MONS
-IN S^t MA-|ries in _Oxford_. | [_line_] | _By_ ANTONY WHITE _Master of
-Arts_ | _of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford._ | [_line_, then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 79: 1628: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 59 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _in the
- superstitious_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- dedication to sir Henry Neville: 1–30, the first sermon, on Prov.
- xxiii. 23, “Truth purchast”: 31–59, the second, on James i. 16, “Error
- abandon’d”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 347. Every printed page is within
- bounding lines, on the top and outer side double.
-
-
- 1629.
-
-1. ¬Ames¬, William. BELLARMINVS | ENERVATVS, | à | GVILIELMO AMESIO |
-_S. S. Theologiæ Doctore in_ | Academia Franekerana. | _In quatuor Tomos
-divisus:_ | _Ab Auctore recognitus, & multis_ | _in locis auctus._ |
-Editio tertia. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 88: 1629: 12^o: pp. [24] + 283 + [5] + 288 + 299 + [5] + 230:
- pp. 11 beg. _Canonem retulerunt_, and _Argumenta Bellarmini_, and
- _Bona opera_, and _nullam. Protest._: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–5) dedication to the Belgian states: (6) “Ad Lectorem”:
- (7–12) “Index Controversiarum quæ hoc opere tractantur”: (13–23)
- “Index locorum Scripturæ ...”: 1–283, tome 1: (2) a title “Bellarminus
- enervatus, sive disputationes antibellarminianæ, in Illustri Frisiorum
- Academia, quæ est Franekeræ, publicè habitæ; a Guilielmo Amesio
- Theologiæ Doctore. Tomus secundus. Ab Auctore recognitus & auctus”,
- with impr. 72 _a_: (4–5) dedication to Ernest Casimir count of Nassau,
- 20 Nov. 1625, in Latin: 1–288, tome 2: 1, title, exactly as in vol. 2,
- with _tertius_ for _secundus_: 3–4, dedication to senators of
- Friesland, 4 Kal. Apr. 1626: 5–299, tome 3: (2) title, exactly as in
- vol. 2 with _quartus_ for _secundus_: (4–5) dedication to four
- curators of the University of Franeker, 3 Kal. Oct. 1626: 1–230, tome
- 4.
-
- This is a long controversial treatise against Bellarmine on the
- Calvinist side, and covers nearly the whole ground of theology. There
- are editions issued at Amsterdam in 1625–6, 1628 and 1638, and at
- London in 1632–33.
-
-
-2. ¬Burges¬, Cornelius. BAPTISMALL | _REGENERATION_ | of Elect Infants,
-| Professed by the Church of | _England, according to the Scriptures_, |
-_the Primitiue Church, the pre-_|_sent Reformed Churches, and_ | _many
-particular Di-_|_vines apart_. | By COR: BVRGES, D^r of Divinity, and |
-one of his Maiesties Chaplaines | in Ordinary. | [two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 91: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 347 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _world with
- such_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within arched
- border: (3–8) Epistle dedicatory to Francis earl of Bedford: (9–13)
- “To the Readers”: (14–15) “A Table of the severall Chapters ...”: (16)
- “The principall Authors quoted ...”. 1–347, the work: 347 “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 684. The address “to the Reader” states
- that the book is “the summe of sundry Lectures deliuered in mine owne
- Charge” St. Magnus, London, and that some had accused him of altering
- what he had preached before publishing it.
-
-
-3. ¬Burton¬, Samuel, archdeacon of Gloucester. _ARTICLES_ | TO BE
-ENQVIRED OF | in the Generall Visitation of the | _Archdeacon_ of the
-Diocesse of | GLOCESTER, | HOLDEN IN THE YEARE OF OVR | Lord God, 1629.
-In the fift yeare of the Reigne | of our most gracious Soueraigne Lord,
-| CHARLES, by the grace of | God, King of great Brit-|taine, France, and
-| _Ireland, Defender of_ | _the Faith, &c._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 93: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _Articles concerning Schoolmasters_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A
- 1^r, title: A 1^v “The Tenor of the Oath to be ministred to the
- Churchwardens and Sworne-men”, with a text: A 2^r-B 4^r, the Articles:
- B 4^r, note about Recusants and Communicants.
-
-
-4. ¬Butler¬, Charles. ORATORIÆ | LIBRI DVO. | QVORVM | _Alter ejus
-Definitionem_, | _Alter Partitionem_ | EXPLICAT: | _IN VSVM SCHOLARVM_ |
-_recèns editi_. | [_line_] | Authore CAROLO BVTLERO, Magd. | [_line_,
-then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 98: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [132], signn. ( )^2 A-Q^4: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _clarant: vt cum_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r,
- title: 2^r “Lectori Benevolo ...”, dated “Wotton. 8. _Cal. Iul._
- 1629”, signed “C. B. M.”: A 1^r-Q 4^v, the work: Q 4^v, “Monitio ad
- Lectorem”, errata and corrigenda.
-
- See 1633 B. For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 209–10. The
- reference there to a ©Rhetoricæ Libri duo© of this year is probably an
- error for ©Oratoriæ Libri duo©. At sign. A4^2 is a description of the
- various type in use, giving a series of Nonpareil, Breuier, (Long)
- Primier, Pique, English, Great Primier, Double Pique, Canon, with
- specimens of each.
-
-
-5. ¬Catechism.¬ Catechesis | RELIGIONIS | CHRISTIANÆ | QVÆ TRADITVR | in
-Ecclesijs & Scholis Ele⸗|ctoralis Palatinatus. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 72: 1629: (twelves) 24^o: pp. [6] + 63 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _est,
- Vnctus_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) woodcuts and a
- text: (3–6) edict of Frederick Elector of the Rhine about the
- Catechism, 19 Jan. 1563/4, in Latin: 1–49, the catechism: 50–63
- “Precationes aliquot privatæ & publicæ”.
-
- An edition of the Heidelberg catechism.
-
-
-6. ¬Chaloner¬, dr. Edward. SIX | SERMONS | NOW FIRST | PVBLISHED, |
-_Preached by that learned and_ | _worthy Divine_ Edward | Chaloner
-_lately deceas’d_, D^r in | Divinity, sometimes Cha-|plaine in Ordinary
-to our | Soveraigne K. _Iames_, | and to his MAIESTY | that now is; and
-late | Principall of _Al-_|_ban Hall_ in | _Oxford_. | [_line_] |
-_Printed according to the Author’s_ | _coppies, written with his owne
-hand._ | [_line_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 94: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 150 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _arrow
- drawne_, 111 _and selfe-conceited_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within arched border: (3–5) Epistle dedicatory to the Earl of
- Pembroke, signed “Ab. Sherman”: (7–8) “The Titles and severall Texts
- ...”: 1–150, the six sermons, on Tit. i. 13, Matt xx. 6, Rom. i. 21,
- Acts xxi. 14, Luke viii. 21, Gal. ii. 5: (1) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 378. This is a second set of six sermons:
- one set having been issued by Chaloner himself (who died in 1625) at
- London in 1623, when a Fellow of All Souls.
-
-
-7. ¬Corbet¬, Richard, bp. of Oxford. ARTICLES | TO BE ENQVIRED | OF
-WITHIN THE DIOCES | Of _Oxford_, in the first Visitation of | the Right
-Reverend Father in GOD, | _Richard_, Lord Bishop of | _Oxford_. | _HELD_
-| In the yeare of our Lord God 1629. in the fift yeare | of the Raigne
-of our most gratious Soveraigne Lord, | _Charles_, by the grace of God
-King of Great | _Brittaine_, _France_, and _Ireland_, | Defendor of the
-Faith &c: | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 85 _a_: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _3. Whether any hath_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A
- 1^v-A 2^r, Directions, Oath &c.: A 2^v-B 4^r, the Articles: B 4^v,
- note about Recusants and Communicants.
-
-
-8. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ. | _A_ | LITTLE DE=|SCRIPTION OF | THE
-GREAT WORLD. | The fourth Edition. Revised. | [_line_] | _By_ PETER
-HEYLYN. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 100: 1629: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + 807 + folded leaf
- between pp. 6 and 7 + [5]: p. 11 beg. _1. First then there_, 711 _The
- chiefe riuers_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within an arched
- border: (3–4) dedication to prince Charles: (5–6) “To the Reader”:
- (7–8) “To my brother the Author”: a poem signed “Edw. Heylyn”: (9–12)
- “A table of the principall Countries, Provinces and Seas ...”: (13–14)
- “A table of the antient Tribes and Nations ...”: (15–19) “A table of
- the most principall things ...”: (20) “A computation of the forraine
- coynes herein mentioned ...”: 1–807, (1–2) the work: between pp. 6 and
- 7 is a tall narrow strip, about 14 × 5 in., bearing on one side “The
- table of climes.”
-
- A note in the All Souls copy shows that the book was on sale on 18
- Aug. 1629.
-
-
-9. ¬Oxford¬, University. [_woodcuts_] | STATVTA. | [and] CAROLVS R. |
-_Ordo sive series electionis Procuratorum_ ... | ... | ... _quotannis
-faciendæ._ | [and] STATVTA.
-
- Impr. 96: 1629: (one) obl. folio: pp. [2]: Pica Italic. Contents:—p.
- (1) in centre a title “Carolus R. ...” as above, below a metal
- engraving showing the cycle of Proctors: on left and right two strips
- of printed Statutes concerning Proctors, each headed “Statuta” and
- pasted to the central cycle: the imprint is at the lower right hand
- corner.
-
- The central part of this broadsheet is entirely occupied with a steel
- or copper engraving representing ingeniously the Colleges which elect
- Proctors from 1629 to 1720: in the centre are some general notes. This
- Caroline cycle is repeated after 23 years, commencing with 1629. The
- two strips of “Statuta” occur also separately, printed on a single
- sheet in two columns.
-
-
-10. ¬Pemble¬, William. _DE_ | SENSIBVS | INTERNIS. | TRACTATVS |
-GVLIELMI PEMBELI, | Aulæ Magdalensis in Aca-|demia Oxoniensi nuper |
-_alumni dignissimi_. | [_line_] | _Editio Posthuma._ | [_line_] |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 101: 1629: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [4] + 74 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _te,
- quâ sensus_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Lectori
- ...”: 1–74 the work: (1–2) not seen.
-
- Probably edited by Richard Capel who issued two of Pemble’s treatises
- often bound up with this one (©De formarum (et Animæ) origine©, Lond.
- 1629, and ©De (creatione et) providentia Dei©, Lond. 1631).
-
-
-11. ——. _FIVE_ | GODLY, AND PRO-|fi^{table} Sermons concerni^{ng}. | 1
-_The slaverie of sinne._ | 2 _The mischeife of ignorance._ | 3 _The
-roote of Apostasie._ | 4 _The benefit of Gods service._ | _The
-Christians loue._ | _Preached in his life time in sundry places._ | By
-that late faithfull Minister of Christ | M^r WILLIAM PEMBLE | _of
-Magdalen Hall in the_ | _Vniversitie of_ | _Oxford_. | The second
-Edition. |
-
- Impr. 97_a_: 1629: (fours) 8^o: [4] + 24 + 25 + [1] + 17 + [1] + 22 +
- 15 + [3]: pp. 11 beg. _and cast_ and _tence 2. Thess._ and _ready to_
- and _Votaries vse_ and _in praier_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title
- within an arched border: (3–4) “To the Reader”, signed by the editor
- “Iohn Tombes”: 1–24 (&c. as above, the unnumbered pages being blank,
- and the title of each part appearing only in the headline: the
- signatures run through the entire work) the Sermons, on John viii. 34,
- Hos. iv. 6, Heb. iii. 12, 23, Ex. xxxiv. 23–4, Song of Sol. ii. 16.
-
- See 1628 P.
-
-
-12. ——. VINDICIÆ | _FIDEI_, | OR | A TREATISE | of Iustification by
-Faith, | _wherein the truth of that point_ | _is fully cleared, and
-vindicated_ | _from the cauills of it’s_ | _Adversaries_ | Deliuered at
-Magdalen Hall | in Oxford; by WILLIAM | PEMBLE, M^r of Arts. | The
-second Edition. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 97: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 248: p. 11 beg. _plainely. He_, 111
- _some time failes_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
- arched border: (3–6) dedication to Magdalen hall, Oxford, dated “From
- Tewkeisbury this 9 of Iuly 1629”, signed “Iohn Geree”: (7–8) “To the
- Christian Reader,” signed “Rich. Capel”: 1–248, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 330, and 1625 P. The dedication contains
- some account of the author by the editor. The preface is by the
- author’s tutor, to whom Pemble left these lectures, and gives the
- anecdote which Wood relates of Pemble’s death bed.
-
-
-13. ¬Prideaux¬, dr. John. _TABVLÆ_ | AD | GRAMMATICA | Græca
-Introductoriæ. | IN QVIBVS | _Succinctè compingitur, brevissima, sed
-tamen ex-_|_pedita, singularum partium orationis decli-_|_nabilium,
-Variandi ratio_. | ACCESSIT | Vestibuli vice, ad eandem linguam
-παραίνεσις in gratiam | tyronum, quibus vt convenit explicatiora
-evol-|vere, ita necesse est hæc ipsa | ad vnguem tenere. | [_motto_,
-then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 92: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [34], signn. A-D^4 E^1: sign. B 1^r beg.
- _profero clarâ_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-A
- 2^v, dedication to dr. Tho. Holland, dated “Exon. Colleg. Ian. 1. 1607
- ... Io. Prideaux”: A 3^r-B 3^v “... Præfatio”: B 4^r-D 4^v, the
- tables: E 1^r, “Conclusio ad Lectorem”, and short Latin poem.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267; and 1607 P, of which this is a
- reprint.
-
-
-14. ——. TYROCINIVM | AD SYLLOGISMVM | Legitimum contexendum, & |
-_captiosum dissuendum, ex-_|_peditissimum_. | IN QVO | _Ad formam
-expensa Syllogisticam perstringuntur_ | _punctìm Sophismata, nec minus
-solidè, quàm_ | _vulgò fit, ratione materiæ_; | Excerptis ex optimis
-Authoribus exemplis Græcolatinis, | vt majori cum voluptate & fructu, ex
-vtriusq; lin-|guæ candidatis & legantur, & | intelligantur. | [_motto_,
-then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 92: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [18], signn. A^2, ( )^1, B^4, C^2: sign.
- B 1^r beg. _Sectio prima de_: Pica and Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title: A 2^r-( )^r, dedication to Christianus
- son of Hermannus Julius a Dane, and Gregorius and Erricus sons of
- Petrus Julius, signed “Johannes Prideaux”, “e Musȩo Oxonii ... pridiè
- Solstitium Brumale Exod 22. 21. _ADVenaM_, non _ContrIstabIs_.” =
- 1607: ( )^r 2 Latin poems: B 1^r-C 2^v, the treatise.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 267. This piece though apparently
- separate is really an integral part of the preceding piece, sign. E of
- the latter (two leaves) forming the last leaf of that piece and the
- 3rd leaf of this! The dedication tells an anecdote of the last moments
- of Offenius the tutor of the three dedicatees.
-
-
-15. ¬Rainolds¬, dr. John. _THE OVERTHROW_ | OF STAGE-PLAYES, | By the
-way of controversie betwixt | _D. Gager_ and _D. Rainoldes_, wherein all
-the | reasons that can be made for them are notably refu-|_ted; the
-obiections answered, and the case so cleared_ | _and resolved, as that
-the iudgement of any man_, | _that is not froward and perverse, may_ |
-_easilie bee satisfied_. | WHEREIN IS MANIFESTLY PRO-|ved, that it is
-not onely vnlawfull to be an Actor, | _but a beholder of those
-vanities_. | _WHEREVNTO ARE ADDED ALSO_ | and annexed in the end
-certaine Latine Letters betwixt | the said _Maister Rainoldes_, and
-_Doct, Gentiles_, | Reader of the Civill Law in _Oxford_, con-|cerning
-the same matter. | _The second Edition._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 89: 1629: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 190 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _ture
- witnesseth it_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) “The Printer
- to the Reader”, from the first ed.: 1–27, Rainolds’ Answer to Gager,
- 10 July 1592: 29–164, Rainolds’ second answer, 30 May 1593: 164
- (misprinted “264”)-190, four letters between Rainolds and Albericus
- Gentilis, 1593, in Latin.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 15 and 88 for this controversy. The first
- ed. of this work was issued in 1599, and included the letters: but the
- printer is not at present known. There are mentions of the connexion
- of the University of Oxford with play acting on pp. 143, 149.
-
-
-16. ¬Salvianus¬, st. SANCTI | SALVIANI | MASSILIENSIS | PRESBYTERI | _DE
-GVBERNATIONE_ | _Dei, et de iusto præsentiq;_ | ejus judicio ad S.
-SALO-|NIVM EPISCOPVM, | libri VIII. | _Eiusdem Epistolarum_ l_ib._ I. |
-TIMOTHEI NOMINE | _ad Ecclesiam Catholic. lib._ IV. | Cum duplici indice
-| [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 90: 1629: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [16] + 512: p. 11 beg. _consulari,
- illis_, 401 _tamen quæ emant_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
- title: (5–6) account of Salvianus, from Trithemius: (7–13) “Index
- rerum et verborum ...”: (14–15) “Index locorum Scripturæ ...”: 1–297,
- Salvianus de gubernatione Dei: 298–324, ejusdem Epistolae: 325–488,
- ejusdem ad Ecclesiam Catholicam: 489–512 “Annotationes aliquot in
- Salvian(um) ... Autore Ioanne Alexandro Brassicano”.
-
- See 1633 S.
-
-
-17. ¬T.¬, B. A | PRESERVATIVE, | TO KEEPE A PRO-|TESTANT FROM |
-BECOMMING | _a Papist_. | _Herein these two sayings following_ | _are
-expounded._ | Thou art Peter, and vpon this rocke (or stone) | I will
-build my Church; _Mat. 16._ 18. | But I haue prayed for thee that thy
-faith faile | not; _Luk. 2_2. 3_2_. | _Herevnto is adioyned an
-admonition to_ | English _Papists, that deny the_ | _Popes Supremacy in_
-| _part or in whole._ | _By T. B._ | [_motto._] |
-
- Impr. 78: 1629: (eighths) 12^o: pp. [8] + 53 + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _something doubtfull_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
- dedication to sir Thomas Roe, signed “_T. B._”, dated 12 Mar. 1627/8:
- (7–8) “To the Reader”, signed “_T. B._”: 1–53, the exposition.
-
- The dedication states the author’s obligations to sir T. Roe, and
- especially to sir William Killygrew.
-
-
-18. ¬Truman¬, Richard. _A_ | CHRISTIAN | _Memorandum_, | OR |
-_Advertisement wherein is_ | handled the Doctrine | of Reproofe. | WHAT
-IT IS, HOW WE MVST RE-|proue, How necessary it is: With Exhortations |
-and Arguments moving vs to the right | performance of that duty, and |
-Reproofe for neglecting | _Reproofe_. | By RICHARD TRVMAN _M_^r _of Arts
-and_ | _Minister of Gods word at_ Dallington | _neere_ Northampton. |
-[_motto._]
-
- Impr. 99: 1629: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 125 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _the
- Prophet_, 111 _iect malice_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–10) Epistle dedicatory to William lord Spencer: (11–15) “To the
- Reader”: 1–125, the work.
-
-
-19. ¬Z[ouche]¬, Richard. ELEMENTA | Iurisprudentiæ, | _DEFINITIONIBVS_,
-| REGVLIS, ET SENTEN-|tijs Selectioribus Iuris Ci-|vilis Illustrata. |
-[_line_] | Autore _R. Z._ P. R. Oxon. | [_line_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 95: 1629: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 277 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _runt,
- personæ_, 111 _ministratione offerunt_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1–2)
- not seen: (3) title, “cum Privilegio”: (5) dedication to lord
- Pembroke, signed “R. Z.”: (7–9) “Iuventuti Magnæ Britanniæ Iuris
- Studiosæ”, an epistle dedicatory, dated “ex Aulâ Alban: pridie Cal:
- Iun. 1629,” but not signed: (11–16) a list of parts and sections:
- 1–277, the work, in 7 parts: 277, note by the author of a possible
- future volume completing this one.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 511, and 1636 Z. There are editions of
- Leyden, 1652 and (acc. to Wood) Amst. 1681. The “P. R.” on the title
- of this and the 1636 edition is _Professor Regius_.
-
-
- 1630.
-
-1. ¬Aleman¬, Mateo. THE ROGVE: | OR, | THE LIFE | OF GVZMAN | DE
-_ALFARACHE_. | WRITTEN IN SPANISH | by MATHEO ALEMAN, | _Seruant to his
-Catholike Majestie_, | _and borne in SEVILL_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 102: 1630: sixes (la. 8^o): pp. [36] + 267 + [17] + 357 + [3]:
- pp. 11 begg. _out reason_, and (_in punishment_, 111 _Chapter ii_ and
- _great deale of_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within two
- bounding lines: (3–6) dedication to sir John Strangwayes, in Spanish,
- signed “Don Diego Puede-Ser; de Santa Maria Magdalena”, i. e. James
- May-be or Mabbe, Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, the translator:
- (7–8) dedication by “Matheo Aleman” to “Don Francisco de Roias
- marquesse de Poza” in English: (9–13) three prefaces: (14–20)
- laudatory pieces on the book, chiefly in poetry, including one poem by
- Ben Johnson: (21–24) “A table of the Chapters and matter ...”: (25–36)
- three lists of indexes: 1–267, the first book: (2) a titlepage “THE
- ROGVE: | [_line_] | OR, | THE SECOND | PART OF THE LIFE | OF _GVZMAN_
- DE | _ALFARACHE_. | WRITTEN IN SPANISH | by MATHEO ALEMAN | _Seruant
- to his Catholike Majestie, and_ | _borne in_ SEVILL. | [_woodcuts_]”
- with impr. 103: (4–7) the author’s Preface to part 2, in English:
- (8–15) laudatory pieces, chiefly in verse: (16–17) “The Contents of
- the Second Part”: 1–357, the second part: (2–3) not seen.
-
- For the translator see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 53. This is a
- reprint, even to many of the misprints, of the London ed. of 1622
- (also “1623”) printed for Edw. Blount, who assigned his edition to R.
- Allot, for whom the Oxford edition was printed, on 1 Dec. 1628. The
- only omission is the two lists of errata in the London issue. The
- demand for this entertaining book was such that a third corrected
- edition was published by Allot in 1634. The translator was secretary
- to sir John Digby when Ambassador in Spain, and the first edition of
- the original Spanish is dated 1599 (1st part) and 1602 or 1603 (2nd
- part). Each page (and margin) is enclosed within lines.
-
-
-2. ¬B.¬, E. _THE_ | CVRSE OF SACRILEDGE. | PREACHED IN A PRIVATE
-PA-|rish Church, the Sunday before | Michaelmas last. | _TO WHICH ARE
-ANNEXED_ | _some certain Quære’s, which are pertinent_ | _to the
-vnmasking of our homebred_ | _Church-Robbers._ | [_motto_, then “D. E.
-B.”, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 85_b_: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. (8) + 38 + [6]: p. 11 beg. _the
- learned, That_: English Roman. Contents:—(1–2) not seen: (3) title:
- (5–7) Preface signed “E. B.”, p. 5 marked ¶ 2: 1–38, the sermon on
- Mal. iii. 9: (1) “A Post-script” signed “D. E. B.”: (3–5) “A catalogue
- of ... Quæres ... submitted by the Author ...”.
-
- A sermon on tithes, in defence of the system.
-
-
-3. ¬Bayly¬, rev. John. TWO | SERMONS | THE ANGELL | _GVARDIAN_. | THE
-LIGHT | _ENLIGHTNING_. | PREACHED | BY IOHN BAYLY ONE OF | HIS MAIESTIES
-CHAP-|LAINES, _GVARDIAN_ | of Chrrists Hospitall in | _Ruthyn_, and
-sometimes | Fellow of _Exeter_ | _Coll. Oxon._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 85: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 17 + [3] + 14 + [2]: pp. 11 begg.
- _graunt that_, and _other; the_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–4) dedication to his father Lewes Bayly bp. of Bangor, dated
- “_From my Chamber in Exon Coll. Novemb._ 6 ... 1630”: 1–17, the first
- sermon, on Ps. xxxiv. 7: (2) a titlepage “THE LIGHT | _ENLIGHTNING_. |
- A | SERMON | PREACHED |” [&c., precisely as first title, except
- “Christs”], with device and impr. 85: 1, dedication to John Prideaux
- rector of Exeter college: 3–14, the second sermon, on John i. 9.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 499 (where _Lond._ is an error for
- _Oxf._). The second sermon is independent, in paging and title (not
- signatures), of the rest of the book. The author says these are his
- first printed works.
-
-
-4. ¬Brerewood¬, Edward. A | LEARNED | TREATISE | _OF THE_ | SABAOTH, |
-WRITTEN | By M^r EDWARD BREREWOOD, | Professor in _Gresham Colledge_, |
-LONDON· | TO M^r NICOLAS BYFIELD, | _Preacher in Chester_. | With M^r
-BYFIELDS answere and | M^r BREREWOODS | _REPLY_. |
-
- Impr. 108: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 101 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _by Moses_,
- 65 _heare, or see_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1), title: (3) 3
- texts: (4) “Faults” of the press: 1–55, the work, dated at end “May
- 16. 1611. At Gresham house in London”: 57, a title “Mr. | BYFIELDS |
- ANSVVERE, | WITH M^r | BREREVVOODS | REPLY. | [device, then impr.
- 108]: 59–60, “The Preface to M^r. Brerewoods reply”, signed “M^r.
- Brermwoods”!: 61–101, the Answer and Reply, in parallel columns, as
- far as possible.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 140, 325, and 1631 B, 1632 B. The author
- died in Nov. 1613. Richard Byfield, brother of Nicholas, who received
- Brerewood’s treatise “a little before November” 1640, wrote a special
- confutation of it (Lond. 1631), and the controversy became general.
-
-
-5. ¬Casa¬, Giovanni della. IO. CASÆ V. CL. | GALATEVS | SEV DE MORVM |
-HONESTATE, ET ELE-|GANTIA; LIBER EX | Italico Latinus, | _Interprete_ |
-NATHANE CHYTRÆO, | cum ejusdem Notis, nuper additis. | _EIUSDEM CASÆ
-LIBEL-_|_lus de officijs inter potentiores_, | _& tenuiores amicos._ |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 73_a_: 1630: (eights) 12^o: pp. [18] + 213 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _negotij dedit_, 111 _liq; philosopho?_): Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (2) “Lectori ... Chytræus”: (3–5) dedication to Nicolaüs Casa
- by Chytraeus, “Rostochio Idib. Septemb. ... 1577”: (6–9) “Prooemium”
- to Nic. Casius by “Joannes Caselius”, “Rostochio iv Non. Maias ...
- 1578”: (9–13) a recommendation of the book, dated “Rostochij Idibus
- ... sextilis ... 1578”: (14–18) “De tribus virtutibus cognatis ...”
- signed “Ioannes Caselius”: 1–103, the Galateus: 104–141, “Ioannis Casæ
- de Officiis inter potentiores et tenuiores amicos Liber”: 142–213,
- “Nathanis Chytræi Notæ in Galateum ...” with a Prooemium to “Caspar
- von der Wenge”.
-
- See 1628 C. Even in 1892 an edition of Peterson’s English translation
- of the ©Galateo© (1576) was privately printed.
-
-
-6. ¬Hakewill¬, George. AN | APOLOGIE | OR | DECLARATION | OF THE POWER
-AND | PROVIDENCE OF GOD IN THE | GOVERNMENT OF THE WORLD. | CONSISTING
-IN | AN EXAMINATION AND | CENSVRE OF THE COMMON | ERROVR TOVCHING
-NATVRES PER=|PETVALL AND VNIVERSALL DECAY, | DIVIDED INTO FOVRE BOOKES.
-| _WHEREOF_ | _The first treates_ [&c. as 1627 H, dividing lines at
-_there-_|_vnto._ | _that of the_ | _excepted._ | _strength and_ |
-_wits._ | _proofe of the_ | _vse which_ | _thereof._ |: also “Heavens,”
-“onely”] | [_line_] | By GEORGE HAKEWILL Doctor of | Divinity and
-Archdeacon of _Surrey_. | [_line_] | _The second Edition revised, and in
-sundry passages augmented by the Authour;_ | _with advertisements and
-tables newly annexed in the end of the booke_, | _an Index whereof is
-presented in the next page._ | [_motto._] [There is also a London title,
-see below.]
-
- Impr. 68: 1630: (sixes) la. 8^o: pp. [40] + 523 + [69]: p. 11 beg.
- _you to Lucians_, 501 _some bodies which_: English Roman.
- Contents:—(2) “The argument of the Front[ispiece] and of the worke”,
- printed in London: (3) engraved title, see below: (5) title: (6) “An
- index of the advertisements and tables newly annexed ...”: (7–11)
- dedication to the University of Oxford: (13–23) “The Preface”: (25–38)
- “The Contents ...”: (39) quotation from Boethius, with translation:
- 1–523, the work in 4 books: (2–42) “Advertisements to the learned
- reader occasioned by this second impression”: (43) “... the value of
- the Roman Sesterce”: (44–45) bp. Godwin’s calculations of large
- numbers of sesterces: (46–60) “An alphabeticall table ...” (60–63) “A
- table of the authours quoted ...”: (64–67) “A table of the texts of
- scripture quoted ...”: (69) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 256 and 1627 H. The chief additions in
- this new edition are to be found in the “Advertisements”, the fifth of
- which contains some complimentary letters about the first edition by
- archbp. Ussher and others. The engraved title measures 10–3/16 × 6⅛
- in. and bears a London imprint, “London. Printed for Robert Allott, at
- the | Beare in Paules Churchyard. 1630”, and six allegorical scenes
- surrounding a short title, beneath which are the arms and crest of the
- author. “T. Cecill sculp”, probably in London.
-
-
-7. ¬Hommius¬, Festus. LXX. | DISPVTATIO-|NES THEOLOGICÆ; | adversus |
-PONTIFICIOS: | Quibus omnes inter Evangelicos & | Pontificios
-Controversiæ continentur, & | excutiuntur: In gratiam SS. Theologiæ
-Stu-|diosorum in Academiâ LEYDENSI pri-|_vatim institutæ, in_ |
-_Collegio Anti=Bellarminiano_, | PRÆSIDE | FESTO HOMMIO, | Eccl. Lugdun.
-Pastore. | _Editio secunda; ad_j_ectionibus in_ | _margine locupletior._
-| [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 104: 1630: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 428 + [4]: p. 11 beg.
- _Mosen quidem_, 111 _stitutus est_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–8) the author’s dedication to Princes Maurice of Orange
- and Louis of Nassau, dated Leiden, 24 Aug. 1614: (9–10) “Lectori
- Benevolo ...”: (11–12) two complimentary poems: (13–16) “Index
- Disputationum”: 1–428, the work: (1–4) “Leges Collegii hujus
- Anti-Bellarminiani”, with the names of the students. All in Latin:
- every printed page and margin are within bounding lines.
-
- The first edition was issued at Leiden in 1614: see 1639 H.
-
-
-8. ¬Oxford¬, University. [_woodcut_] | BRITANNIAE | NATALIS. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 73_a_: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 78: p. 11 beg. _Crescito
- pacifici_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to King
- Charles by the University of Oxford: (4), 1–78, the poems.
-
- 148 poems (4 Greek, 3 French, the rest Latin) addressed to the King by
- members of the University of Oxford on the birth of Charles ii on 29
- May 1630: a chronogram is on p. 43.
-
-
-9. ¬Pemble¬, William. A BRIEFE IN-|TRODVCTION | TO GEOGRAPHY |
-CONTAINING A | DESCRIPTION OF THE GROVNDS, AND GENERALL | PART THEREOF,
-VERY NE-|_cessary for young students in_ | _that science_. | WRITTEN BY
-THAT LEARNED | _man_, M^r WILLIAM PEMBLE, _Master_ | _of Arts, of
-Magdalen Hall in Oxford_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 84_a_: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 64 + [2]: p. 12 beg. _The third
- rule_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) “To the Reader” by the
- editor: 1–64 the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 331. Pemble died in 1623: but the
- treatise was reissued in 1669 (according to Cole in Bliss’s Wood’s
- ©Ath. Oxon.©) and in 1685, both times at Oxford, as well as in the
- collected editions of Pemble’s works (3rd ed. 1635 &c.) at London.
- There are several woodcut diagrams, but the whole book is occupied
- solely with what the author calls the general part of Geography, that
- is to say with the “nature, qualities, measure, with other general
- properties of the earth”, and not with a description of separate
- countries.
-
-
-10. ——. “©A Sum of moral Philosophy.© Oxon. 1630 qu[arto].”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 331, where 1630 may be an error for
- 1632.
-
-
-11. ¬Pinke¬, William. [two _lines_] | THE TRYALL OF | OVR SINCERE LOVE |
-TO CHRIST: | [_line_] | _By_ W. PINKE, _late Fellow of Mag-_|_dalen
-Colledge in_ OXFORD. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 106: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 30 + [2] + 28: pp. 11 begg.
- _custome or_, and _God, and while_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title (every page has a double headline): 1–30, a Sermon, on Eph. vi.
- 24: 1–28 a second sermon on the same text.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 475, where the 1631 edition with four
- sermons is confused with this in which there seem to be only two. The
- 3rd ed. (Oxf. 1636) and 5th (Oxf. 1659) contain also four. Probably
- William Lyford, whose preface dated 7 July 1630 is prefixed to all
- other editions, edited this tentative issue also. The pagination and
- signatures are separate for the two sermons. Pinke died in 1629.
-
-
-12. ¬Piscator¬, Johannes. APHORISMI | DOCTRINÆ | CHRISTIANÆ | maximam
-partem ex In-|stitutione Calvini | _excerpti_. | _SIVE_ | LOCI COMMVNES
-THEOLO-|gici, brevibus sententijs expositi. | _Per JOHAN: PISCATOREM·_ |
-EDITIO VNDECIMA. | _Superioribus tum limatior, tum_ | _locupletior._ |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 105: 1630: (twelves) 24^o: pp. [10] + 203 + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _veteris testamenti_, 111 _tarit a in filio_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “Ad Lectorem”, a preface to a new edition
- signed “Philip: Ludovicus Piscator”, the author’s son, 1 May 1629:
- (3–9) the author’s preface to Beza: 1–203, the treatise: (1–2) “Index
- [28] locorum communium”.
-
- Piscator (Fischer?) died in 1626, and the first edition of the
- ©Aphorismi© appears to have been issued in 1592. This edition is often
- found bound with the Catechismus Oxf. 1629.
-
-
-13. ¬Thornborough¬, bp. John. THE | LAST WILL AND | TESTAMENT OF IESVS |
-Christ, touching the blessed Sacrament | _of his body, and bloud,
-Signed, Sealed and_ | _Delivered_ to the vse of all faithfull
-Christi-|ans in the presence of many Witnesses, and | _proved in the
-Prerogatiue of the Church of_ | Christ, by Reverend Bishops, Learned
-Doctors, | _and Ancient Fathers of the same Church_. | Exemplified,
-copied out, and explaned by the | _Reverend Father in God_, IOHN
-THORNBURGH, | _Bishop of Worcester_. | [_motto_: then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 68: 1630: (fours) 8^o: pp. [6] + 118 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _are to
- be_, 111 _would not haue_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–5) dedication to (William) earl of Pembroke: 1–118, the work, a
- treatise on the Lord’s Supper: (1–4) not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 5: the dedication gives some
- biographical details of the author.
-
-
-14. ¬Widdowes¬, Giles. THE | SCHISMATICAL | _PVRITAN_. | _A_ | SERMON
-PREACHED AT WIT-|NEY concerning the lawfulnesse of Church-|_Authority,
-for ordaining, and comman-_|_ding of Rites, and Ceremonies, to_ |
-_beautifie the Church_. | By GILES WIDDOWES Rector of S^t | Martins
-Church in Oxford. | [_motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 107: 1630: sm. 4^o: pp. [48], signn. A-F^4: sign. B1^r beg. _wee
- Confesse_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r title: A2^r-A2^v,
- dedication to Katharine duchess of Buckingham: A3^r-C3^v “To the
- Puritan”: C4^r-F3^v, the sermon, on 1 Cor. xiv. 40.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 179, and 1631 P & W (2nd ed. of this
- Sermon), and also an answer to Prynne. The long preface contains an
- account of Puritans, in their ten subdivisions of Perfectists,
- Sermonists, Separatists, Anabaptists, Brownists, Loves-familists,
- Precisians, Sabbatarians, Anti-disciplinarians, Predestinatists.
-
-
- 1631.
-
-1. ¬Acontius¬, Jacobus. STRATAGEMATVM | SATANÆ | _Libri Octo_ | _Quos_ |
-_IACOBUS ACONTIUS_ | _Vir Summi iudicij nec mino_|_ris pietatis, annis
-abhinc penè_{:}_ | _primum edidit & Sereniss®æ®«:»_ | _Reginæ
-ELIZABETHÆ_ | _inscripsit_ | _Editio iterata & emendata_ | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 87: 1631: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 426 + [32]: p. 11 beg. _tur
- cupiditate_, 301 _nominis vir_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- engraved: (3) dedication to qu. Elizabeth by the author, in Latin:
- (5–16) “... Præfatio”: 1–426, the work in 8 books: (1–26) “Iacobus
- Acontius Iohanni Wolfio Tigurino ...” a letter on the method of
- preparing books, dated “Londini xii Kal. Decembr. MD.LXII”: (27–32)
- “Index rerum præcipuarum ...”.
-
- The first edition was published at Bâle in 1565 and there are English
- translations (1648, &c.): the sheets of this Oxford edition were
- reissued at Oxford in 1650 with a printed titlepage. The engraved
- title (4–5/16 × 2–13/16 in.) contains the title in the centre, and on
- each side figures of “Veritas” with a book, and “Charitas” with a
- bird: above is a figure “Religionis” (_sic_). Below are six figures of
- Sins and in their midst Satan rising from hell. The imprint is also
- engraved on the plate. From Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901 fol. 73^v it
- would seem that Bagford saw some _printed_ title stating that Turner
- was the printer: the engraved title only is in the copies seen.
-
-
-2. ¬Bible¬, Old Testament, Psalms. THE | PSALMES | of | KING | DAVID |
-TRANSLATED | by | KING IAMES | _Cum Privilegio Regiæ_ | _Maiestatis_. |
-
- Impr. (as colophon) 68: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [4] + 319 + [5]: p. 11
- beg. _But whil’st_, 111 _19 My God_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (2) engraved plate of the royal Arms, supporters &c., and a
- proclamation of Charles i allowing the printing of the work, “Will:
- Marshall. sculpsit.”: (3) engraved title, see below: 1–319, the work:
- (1) arms of the University and colophon imprint.
-
- The titlepage shows the Book of Psalms sent down from heaven and
- received by David and James i. It is on one plate with the royal arms
- and proclamation, and is printed from metal.
-
-
-3. ¬Bolton¬, Robert. HELPES | TO | HVMILIATION. | [_line_] | _By R. B._
-| [_line, motto, line, woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 115: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp. [12] + 164 + [4]: p. 11 beg.
- _Some measure_, 111 _of nature_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
- title: (5–12) “To the Reader”, by the editor, giving the author’s full
- name: 1–164, the work, a discourse on Acts ii. 37: (1) Michael
- Sparke’s business mark.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 515. The preface states that this
- publication is by leave of the author though not undertaken by him, so
- it preceded his death on 17 Dec. 1631. Every page has double bounding
- lines at top and outer side margin. Spark must have sent his engraved
- business mark, chiefly a monogram of the letters of his names, to
- Oxford to be printed: see below, F.
-
-
-4. ¬Brerewood¬, Edward. A | LEARNED TREATISE | _OF THE_ | SABBATH, |
-[&c. exactly as 1630 B, except no comma after “Brerewood” and “Byfield”,
-and “Reply.” After “Reply.”:—] _The second Edition diligently
-corrected._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 108: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 101 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _by Moses_,
- 65 beg. _heare, or see_: English Roman. Contents:—exactly as 1680 B,
- except p. (4) is blank, and “At Gresham ... London” is omitted, as
- well as “M^r. Brermwoods”.
-
- See 1630 B, of which this is a corrected reprint: the editor in the
- interval discovered the difference between _Sabaoth_ and _Sabbath_,
- and uses the latter only, in the first edition using the former only!
-
-
-5. ——. TRACTATVS | QUIDAM LOGICI | DE | PRÆDICABILIBVS, | ET |
-PRÆDICAMENTIS | _Ab eruditissime Viro_ EDVARDO | BREREWOOD, Artium
-Magistro, è Col-|legio _Ænei-Nasi_, olim conscripti: nunc verò | ab
-erroribus (qui frequenti transcriptione | irrepserant) vindicati, ad
-pristinum nitorem, nati-|vamque puritatem diligentissimâ
-manuscripto-|rum collatione restituti, & in lucem editi: | _Per_ T. S.
-_Art. Mag. & Collegij_ Ænei-Nasi _Socium_. | _Editio altera_, | In quâ
-accessêrunt duo ejusdem Authoris insignes | _Tractatus_; prior de
-_Meteoris_, posterior de | _Oculo_: limâ, luceque donati: | _Per eundem_
-T. S. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 109: 1631: (eights) 12^o: pp. [32] + folded sheet + 431 + [3] +
- [next article, which see]: p. 11 beg. _Sol. Prædicabilia_, 401, _1
- Respectu communis_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–8)
- Epistola dedicatoria to lord Rich. Brooke of Norton, signed by the
- editor “Oxonij, e Musæo meo, in Collegio Ænea-Nasensi, 13 Calend. Oct.
- 1628 ... Thomas Sixesmith”: (9–13) “Erudito lectori ...” signed “T.
- S.”: (14–31) “Index sectionum quæstionumque ...”: 1–431, the work, pp.
- 58–59 being a folded leaf: (1–3) blank: for the rest see the next art.
-
- See 1628 B, of which this is a reprint, with the two additional
- treatises. The next article is strictly part of the present work, but
- the signatures, pagination &c. being quite distinct (the only sign of
- its secondary character is the omission of the name of the _place_ in
- the imprint), it is here for convenience’ sake treated separately: it
- is also more common to find it separate than to meet with the entire
- work.
-
-
-6. —† ——. TRACTATVS DVO | _Quorum primus est_ | DE METEORIS. |
-_Secundus_ | DE OCVLO. | Quos scripsit olim eximius ille Philosophus |
-EDVARDVS BRIERVVOODVS: | _Restituit tandem, ab erroribus mendisq;
-Vin_⸗|_dicavit, & publici iuris fecit._ | T. S. | Art. Mag. & Colleg.
-_Ænea-Nasensis_ | Socius. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 109: 1631: (eights) 12^o: pp. [4] + 104 + [4] + 39 (p. 39
- misprinted 63) + [1]: pp. 11 begg. _Sect. 11. In qua, Obliquæ,
- quibus_: Long Primer and (2nd part) Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3) dedication by Thomas Sixesmith the editor to Brasenose
- college, Oxford: 1–83 De Meteoris, in 2 books _De Meteorologicus_ and
- _De Cometis_: 84–104 “De Mari”: (1) “A”: (2–3) woodcut diagrams of the
- eye: (4) “Index ...” to the following treatise: 1–63, De Oculo.
-
- See preceding article, of which this is a part. Some woodcuts occur in
- the text.
-
-
-7. ¬Burgersdicius¬, Franco. IDEA | _PHILOSOPHIÆ_ | TVM | NATVRALIS, |
-TVM | MOR^ALIS, | _SIVE_ | Epitome compendiosa vtrivsq; ex | Aristotele
-excerpta & Me-|thodicè disposita; | _A_ | M. FRANC: BVRGERSDICIO | in
-Academia Lugduno-Batavâ, _Lo-_|_gices & Ethices Professore ordinario._ |
-_Editio tertia prioribus emendatior._ |
-
- Impr. 105_a_: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp. [6] + 103 + [1] + (next
- article): p. 11 beg. _2 Natura est_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–4) “Philosophiæ studiosis”, signed “Franco Burgersdicius”:
- (5–6) “Tituli et ordo disputationum ...” Ideae Naturalis: 1–103, the
- Idea Philosophiae Naturalis: (1) blank: for the rest see next article.
-
- The first edition of the Natural Philosophy was in 1622, and of the
- Moral in 1623, both at Leiden: both were again issued at the same
- place in 1626 and the Moral Philosophy again in 1629. The 4th ed. was
- in 1637 (Oxford), the next 1641 (Oxford), and others followed, but not
- at Oxford. The next art. is strictly part of this book, but is in form
- quite independent. Burgersdijck died in Feb. 1635 or 1636.
-
-
-8. — ——. IDEA | PHILOSOPHIÆ | MORALIS, | EX | ARISTOTELE maxima parte |
-excerpta, & methodice | _disposita_. | _A_ | M. FRANCONE BVRGERSDICIO,
-in | Academiâ Lugduno Batavâ, | _Logices & Ethices Pro-_|_fessore
-Ordinario_. | Editio tertia. | _Plurimùm emendata & magnâ accessione_ |
-_Locupletata._ | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 105: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp. [4] + 342: p. 11 beg. _natur;
- altera_, 211 _dorem quærunt_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) “Index Capitum & titulorum ...”: 1–342 the work.
-
- See preceding article.
-
-
-9. ¬Davenant¬, Edward. ARTICLES | MINISTRED IN | THE FIRST VISITA-|TION
-OF THE RIGHT | Worshipfull M^r Doctor _Dave-_|_nant_ Archdeacon of Barke
-shire | in the yeare of our Lord | God 1631. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 82: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 16: p. 11 beg. _the Church, and_:
- Pica English. Contents:—(1) title: (2) “The Oath of the
- Church-wardens”: (3–4) “The Charge of the Church-wardens ...”: 1–15,
- the 70 articles of enquiry.
-
-
-10. ¬F.¬, A. _The Saints Legacies_: | OR, | A COLLECTION | of certaine
-PROMISES | out of the word of God. | _Collected for private vse, but
-pub-_|_lished for the comfort of Gods people._ | BY _A. F._ | [_line_,
-then _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 116: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp. [24] + 203 + [21]: p. 11 beg.
- _thee with many_, 111 _steps shall not_: Great Primer Roman.
- Contents:—(1) title: (3–6) “The Author to the Printer”, dated 4 Aug.
- 1630: (7–18) “To the Reader”: (19–23) “Rules to be observed in reading
- the Promises”: 1–203, the 105 Legacies: (2–4) a short conclusion:
- (6–17) “A table ...” or index; (18) Michael Sparke’s business mark.
-
- The author complains of a pirated and imperfect edition, probably
- under another title, issued by Robert Swayne “now deceased” (printer
- at London, 1621–29). In C. S. Palmer’s Catalogue of Books, pt. 10
- (June 1878), no. 256, this book is attributed to Anthony Farindon, for
- whom see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 457. Every page is within double
- lines at top and outside margin. The original title was probably
- “Promises”, for the compositor of one side of the first sheet of the
- text placed that as part of the headline, while the compositor of the
- other side and of the rest of the work has, as the author suggests,
- the new title “Saints Legacies” or “Legacies”.
-
-
-11. ¬Felix¬, Marcus Minucius. M. MINVCII | FELICIS | OCTAVIVS. |
-[_line_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 110: 1631: (twelves) 24mo: pp. [8] + 129 + [7]: p. 11 beg.
- _bere; quàm_, 111 _dicimus; non_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(3) title:
- (5–7) “Typographus lectori”: (8) passage from Lactantius: 1–129, the
- work.
-
- See 1627 F, of which this is a reprint.
-
-
-12. ¬Florus¬, Lucius Annaeus. L. IVLII FLORI | rerum à | ROMANIS |
-GESTARVM | LIBRI IV. | A IOHANNE STADIO _emendati_. | _Editio nova
-singulis Neotericis purgatior &_ | _emendatior._ | _SEORSVM EXCVSVS_ |
-IN EOS COMMENTARIVS | IOAN. STADII, Historiæ & Ma-|theseos Lovanij
-Professoris primi: in | quo obscura in lucem proferuntur, omissa
-sup-|plentur, inversa restituuntur, breviter denique, | quicquid in
-Romana Historia dignum est | observatione annotatur; vnà cum va-|riarum
-lectionum & castiga-|tionum rationibus. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 117: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp. 137 + [1] + 319 + [35]: pp. 11
- beg. _immortalium docuit_ and _rum pleb._, 301 _non potuit (petebat_:
- Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–5, 2 complimentary Latin
- pieces: 7–137, the text of Florus: 1, a title:—“I. STADII | IN L.
- IVLII FLORI | HISTORIA-|RVM LIBROS IV | COMMENTARII. | _Editio nova
- singulis Neotericis_ | _purgatior & emendatior._ | [_device_, then
- impr. 69]: 3–16, “Ioannis Stadii ... Præfatio”: 17–319, the
- commentary: (2–4) “Index capitum ...”: (6–23) “Index nominum ...”:
- (24–31) “Index posterior rerum ...”: (31) two errata.
-
- The first edition of Stadius’s commentary was in 1567 at Antwerp:
- other Oxford ones were issued in 1638, 1661 and 1669.
-
-
-13. ¬Gardyner¬, Richard. CONCIO | _AD_ | CLERVM | HABITA | IN TEMPLO
-BEATÆ | MARIæ _Oxon: Feb._ 1¿4¿. | PER | RICHARDVM GARDYNER Sa: | Theol:
-Doct: & Eccles. Cath: | Christi Canonicum. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 118: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 24: p. 11 beg. _mit, & vadosa_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—(1–2) not seen: (3) title: (5–8)
- dedication to Laud, bp. of London, chancellor of the University: 1–24,
- the sermon, on 1 Tim. iv. 16.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 922: the dedication is of some
- autobiographical interest. One of the Bodleian copies of this sermon
- bears an autograph note of the author which shows that this book was
- issued not later than 16 March 1630/1.
-
-
-14. ¬Godwin¬, Thomas. _ROMANÆ_ | HISTORIAE | ANTHOLOGIA | [&c. exactly
-as 1628 G, and within a similar border.]
-
- Impr. 75_a_: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 277 + [23]: [&c. exactly as 1628
- G.]
-
- See 1614 G: this is almost an exact reprint of the 1628 edition, with
- different imprint and date.
-
-
-15. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ | A | LITTLE | DE-|SCRIPTION OF | THE
-GREAT WORLD. | The fifth Edition. | [_line_] | _By_ PETER HEYLYN. |
-[_line, motto, device._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1631: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + 807 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
- _1. First then there_, 701 _dales, or Vindelici_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within arched border: (3–4) dedication to
- “Prince Charles” as in 1621: (5–6) “To the Reader”: (7–8) Poem “To my
- brother the Author” by Edw. Heylyn: (9–12) “A Table of the principal
- Countries ...”: (13–14) “A Table of the ancient Tribes ...”: (15–19)
- “A Table of the most principall things ...”: (20) “A computation of
- ... forraine coyne ...”: 1–807, (1–2) the work: (4–5) not seen.
-
- See 1621 H.
-
-
-16. ¬Oxford¬, University. AD | magnificvm | Et Spectatissimum Virum
-Domi-|num IOHANNEM CIRENBERGIVM | PROCONSVLEM CIVITATIS | _GEDANENSIS_.
-| Ob acceptum Synodalium Epistolarum | _Concilij Basileensis_ Αυτόγραφον
-_sigillo eiusdem in_ | _plumbum impresso obsignatum, quod nobilissimus_
-| _Dominus_ THOMAS ROE _Eques Auratus_, | _Serenissimi Magnæ Britanniæ
-Regis Legatus_ | _ab eo sibi priùs officiosè oblatum, Oxoniensi
-Bib-_|_liothecæ transmisit ac dono dedit_. | _CARMEN_ | HONORARIVM. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 73_a_: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 17 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Nec
- calamus_: English Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–5) Latin preface to
- Johannes Cirenbergius by J. Rous: 1–17, complimentary poems.
-
- Eight Latin poems by members of the University of Oxford to thank the
- proximate and immediate donors of MS. Roe 20, presented by Johann
- Cirenberg of Dantzig (Gedanum) to sir Thomas Roe on 28 Mar. 1630, and
- by him to the University as an addition to the Roe MSS. in Aug. 1630.
-
-
-17. ¬Page¬, William. A | TREATISE | OR | IVSTIFICATION | OF BOWING AT |
-THE NAME OF | _IESVS_. | By way of Answere to an Appendix | _against
-it_. | TOGETHER WITH AN EXAMI-|nation of such considerable reasons as
-are | made by M^r _Prinne_ in a reply to | M^r _Widdowes_ concerning |
-_the same argument_. | [_line_] | _By_ WILLIAM PAGE _Bac. of Divinity_ |
-_and Fellow of_ All-Soules _Colledge_ | _in_ Oxford. | [_line_, then 2
-_mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 85_a_: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 206: p. 11 beg. _since the
- omission_, 101 _lookes forward_: English Roman. Contents:—(1) title:
- (3–15) dedication to the University of Oxford: (16) Errata: 1–126, the
- treatise or “Answere”: 129, a title:—“A | FVRTHER | IVSTIFICATION | OF
- BOWING AT | THE NAME OF | _IESUS_. | OR | AN EXAMINATION | OF SVCH
- CONSIDERA-|BLE REASONS AS ARE | made by Mr. _Prinne_ [&c., exactly as
- in the main title, imprint and all, except that the two mottos are
- different]”: 130–132 (misprinted 140–142) “To the Reader”: 133–206,
- the further answer.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 654, where Wood quotes two letters about
- this book, one against it from the Archbishop of Canterbury’s
- Secretary, one for it by Laud, which show that the book was in course
- of printing in May-June 1631, but not yet published on June 22. The
- error of pagination on pp. 130–32 (“140–42”) was due to the prefatory
- matter of the second part being supposed by the compositor to follow
- the 3rd leaf of what is now sheet S, instead of the 3rd leaf of sheet
- Q.
-
-
-18. ¬Pareus¬, David. ¤DAVIDIS PAREI¤ | _Theologi Archipalatini_. | IN |
-¤S. MATTHÆI¤ | ¤EVANGELIVM¤ | ¤COMMENTARIVS¤ | Quo præter accuratam
-textus Sacri Analysin, & Harmoniæ Evangelicæ collatio-|nem Orthodoxa
-Fidei Christianæ capita à depravationibus IOHANNIS | MALDONATI Iesuitæ,
-& aliorum, Perspicue & solide vindicantur. | ¤Cui subiungitur . in duas
-S. _Petri_ Epistolas¤: | _Nec non_ | ¤IN¤
-
- { ¤IOEL¤,
- { ¤AMOS¤,
- { ¤HAGGAI¤:
-
-_Commentarius, tum eruditione tum perspicuitate celeberrimus._ |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 113: 1631: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 800 + 120: pp. 11 begg.
- _voluit, Christi_ and _eo: vnde patet_, 701 _catorum nostrorum_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) “Ad Lectorem” by the editor:
- (4–12), 1–800, Pareus on St. Matthew: 1–48, on St. Peter: 49–78, on
- Joel: 79–91, on Haggai: 92–120, on Amos.
-
- In 1622 the year of Pareus’s death several of his treatises were
- publicly burnt at Oxford, as opposed to the King’s authority,
- including his commentary on the Romans. Underlined words in the title
- are printed in red. The last 120 pages seem to have been printed in
- London, not Oxford.
-
-
-19. ¬Parsons¬, Bartholomew. DORCAS: | OR, | A PERFECT | PATTERNE OF A |
-TRUE DISCIPLE. | A Sermon Preached by | _Bartholomew Parsons_ B. of
-Di-|vinity and Rector of _Ludger-_|_shall_ in the County of _Wilts_. |
-[_line_, then 2 _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 68: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 36: p. 11 beg. _ing out of_; Great
- Primer Roman. Contents:—(1) title, within arched border: (3–7)
- dedication to sir Francis Pile, dated “From my house at Collingborne
- April 1. 1631”: 1–36, the sermon, on Acts ix. 36.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 26. The title and outer margin of each
- page are within double lines.
-
-
-20. ¬Pinke¬, William. _THE_ | TRYALL | of a Christians syncere | _loue
-vnto Christ_: | [_line_] | By M^r WILLIAM PINKE, Master | of Arts late
-Fellow of Mag.|_dalen Colledge in_ | OXFORD. | [_line, motto,
-woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 84_a_: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 29 + [3] + 30 + [2] + 28 + [2] +
- 25 + [1]: pp. 11 beg. _choisest mercies_, and _custome or_, and _God,
- and while_, and _yet doth not_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within arched border; (3–8) dedication to lord George Digby, dated
- “Shirburn. Iul. 7. 1630”, signed by the editor, William Lyford: 1–29,
- sermon on Luke xiv. 26: 1–30, sermon on Eph. vi. 24, beg. _Not to
- mispend_: 1–28, sermon on Eph. vi. 24, beg. _I will not discourage_:
- (1–2) “To the Reader” signed “W. Lyford”: 1–25, pieces of a sermon on
- 1 Cor. xvi. 22.
-
- See 1630 P, of which the 2nd and 3rd sermons here are reissues of the
- sheets; the preface to the fourth explains that it is fragmentary.
- Every page has a double headline, but the four sermons are separate in
- pagination and signatures. Pinke was one of lord Digby’s “Readers”
- when the latter was at Magdalen.
-
-
-21. ¬Powel¬, Griffith. “Powel (G.) De Demonstratione . Oxon. 1631”:
-“Analysis Aristot. lib. de Demonstratione a G. Powell . Oxon. 1631.”
-
- So in ©Catalogus librorum Richardi Davis©, 1686, p. 94, no. 92: and in
- ©Catalogus librorum ... in ædibus Thomæ Bowman©, 1686/7, sign. D1^v,
- no. 15. The book is no doubt a reprint of 1594 P.
-
-
-22. ¬Preston¬, John. THREE | SERMONS | VPON THE SA=|CRAMENT OF | THE
-LORDS | _SVPPER_. | _By the late Faithfull_ | _and VVorthy Minister_ |
-_of Iesus Christ_ | IOHN PRESTON, | D^r in Divinity, Chaplaine in |
-Ordinary to his MAIESTY, Master of _Emanuel_ Colledge | in Cambridge,
-and some-|times Preacher of | Lincolnes Inne. |
-
- Impr. 120: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 91 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _onely to
- be_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within arched border: 1–91,
- the sermons, on 1 John v. 14.
-
- For the author, see Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 333.
-
-
-23. ¬Primerose¬, James. _ACADEMIA_ | MONSPELIENSIS | A _IACOBO
-PRI-_|_MIROSIO Monspe-_|_liensi_ & _Oxoniensi_ | Doctore descripta. |
-EIVSDEM LAVRVS | _MONSPELIACA_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 111: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 38 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _tuenda,
- venam_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title within arched border:
- (3–8), 1–2, dedication to dr. Thomas Clayton regius professor of
- Medicine at Oxford: 3–38 the work: (1–2) not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 450. The work contains the Quaestiones
- and Theses by which Primerose obtained his doctor’s degree in medicine
- at Montpellier 2 May 1617, beginning on 21 Jan. 1616/7: also the first
- medical quaestio defended after his degree, on 21 Dec. 1617. The
- “Laurus” must refer to the dedication in which an interesting account
- of the University of Montpellier is given. The occasion of publishing
- this medical work so long after the time at which it was written, was
- no doubt the incorporation of dr. Primerose at Oxford in March 1628/9.
- In the Bliss sale (1858) a copy of this book was sold “with duplicate
- title-page containing a variation” which I have not seen.
-
-
-24. ¬Sanderson¬, Robert. LOGICÆ | ARTIS COM-|PENDIVM. | TERTIA HAC
-EDITI-|one recognitum, duplici | _Appendice auctum, & pub-_|_lici iuris
-factum._ | à ROB. SANDERSON Collegij | Lincolniensis in almâ |
-_Oxoniensi Socio_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 96: 1631: (eights) 16mo: pp. [8] + 239 + [1] + 124 + [4]: pp. 11
- beg. _possint esse_, and _sed ij ferè_, pp. 111 _mutatis terminis_,
- and _margine peculiari_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
- “Elenchus capitum ...”: (7) “Ad Lectorem”: (8) “Errata ...”: 1–239 the
- work: 1–124, two appendixes, one “De usu Logicæ”, one “Miscella”:
- (1–4) not seen.
-
- See 1615 S. There is a woodcut diagram at p. 149.
-
-
-25. ¬Scheiblerus¬, Christophorus. PHILOSOPHIA COMPENDIOSA | SEV |
-PHILOSOPHIA | _Exhibens_ | LOGICÆ, METAPHYSICÆ, | PHYSICÆ,
-GEOMETRIÆ, | ASTRONOMIÆ, OPTICÆ, | ETHICÆ, POLITICÆ, | ET
-OECONOMICÆ | COMPENDIVM METHODICVM, | _Cui_ | _Addita est etiam_
-HEIZONIS BVSCHERI | _Arithmetica, in vsum Pedagogij Gisseni_. | AVTORE |
-CHRISTOPHORO SCHEIBLERO, Logicæ ac | Metaphysicæ Professore. | _Editio
-quinta recognita, & multis mendis liberata._ | [_woodcuts._] |
-
- Impr. 121: 1631: 16mo.
-
- At present I only know this book from a titlepage in the Bagford
- collections at the British Museum (463. h. 4, no. 981): but it is not
- likely to be really uncommon.
-
-
-26. ¬Strada¬, Firmianus. FAMIANI | ¤STRADƤ | ¤ROMANI¤ | E SOCIETA-|TE
-IESV. | ¤_PROLVSIONES_¤ | _ACADEMICÆ_. | ¤Iuxta exemplar AVTHORIS
-recognitæ¤, | _atque suis_ Indicibus _illustratæ_. | [_device._] [the
-name of place and date are in red ink, as are also the words underlined
-in the above title.]
-
- Impr. 72 _c_: 1631: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 331 + [29]: p. 11 beg.
- _bus, tam opportuna_, 301 _Volo tnqu am_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication to Alexander card. Ursino:
- 1–331, the Prolusiones, in 3 books: (2–27) “Index rerum et verborum
- ...”: (28–29) “Index Prolusionum ...”.
-
- The first edition was in 1617. The subjects are oratorical, poetical
- and historical.
-
-
-27. ¬Vincentius¬, Lirinensis. ¤PEREGRINI¤, | _ID EST, VT VVLGO_ |
-_PERHIBETVR_, | ¤VINCE_N_TII LI=|RINENSIS, _AD_¤-|VERSUS PROPHA-|_NAS
-H¿Æ¿RESES_, | ¤Commonitoria duo¤. | _Editio repurgata, cæteris pu_|_rior
-& emendatior._ | _Huic adijcitur_ ¤AVGVSTINI¤ | _liber_ de Hæresibus. |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 112: 1631: (twelves) 24mo: pp. [12] + 274 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _nat. Quid si_: 201 _tibus quamlibet_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- “A”: (5) title: (7–11) “Lectori ...”, a preface: 1–150, Vincentius’s
- work: 151–269, Augustinus’s work: 270–274, “Appendix trium hæresium”,
- i. e. of Papists, Mohammedans, Anabaptists: (1) “Errata ...”.
-
- Underlined words in the title above are printed in red, and also
- “Oxoniæ”, and “1631.” in the imprint.
-
-
-28. ¬Vossius¬, Gerardus Johannes. GERARDI IOANNIS VOSSI | RHETORICES |
-CONTRACTÆ, | _SIVE_ | PARTITIONVM | ORATORIARUM· | Libri V· | _Ex
-decreto Illustr. ac Pot._ HOLLANDIÆ, _&_ | WEST-FRISIÆ DD. ORDINVM _in_
-| _vsum Scholarum e_j_usdem Pro-_|_vinciæ excusi_. | Editio altera
-castigatior. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 114: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp. [16] + 559 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _vel
- probatur_, 401 _Hoc est, somnum_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–10) dedication to Beniaminus Auberius Maurerius Fontidangaeus,
- dated “Lugduni Bat. ∞ IↃ C XXI. XII Kal. vii.^{bris}”: (11–15) “Series
- Capitum”: (16) Complimentary Latin poem by Daniel Heinsius: 1–559, the
- work.
-
- The first edition was presumably in 1621, but the ordinary
- bibliographies do not give the date, except one which gives 1606.
- Other Oxford editions were issued in 1655 and 1672, and several others
- in London and abroad.
-
-
-29. ——. GERARDI IOH. VOSSII. | _V. CL._ | THESES THEOLOGICÆ | ET |
-HISTORICÆ, | _De varijs doctrinæ Christianæ Capitibus_; | Quas, aliquot
-abhinc annis, dispu-|tandas proposuit in | ACADEMIA LEIDENSI. | _Editio
-Iterata & Emendata._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 87 _a_: 1631: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 680: p. 11 beg.
- _illius de chao_, 501 _Nec meliorem_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, (3–4) “Typographus Lectori ...”: (5–6) “Syllabus & Ordo
- Disputationum”: (8) a Latin 6-line complimentary poem signed
- “Philalethes”: 1–680, the forty dissertations.
-
- See 1628 V: the printer confesses that this is an unauthorized reprint
- of the original edition, in consequence of the daily complaint of the
- rarity of the book: and says “Nactus itaque tandem amicorum ope
- istarum Thesium fasciculum (integrum vti spero,) ... sumpsi mihi
- fiduciam eum iterùm typis meis exprimendi”. There is nothing in this
- to indicate that this is a reissue of the sheets of 1628 V, without
- even correction of the misprints: on the contrary the list of errata
- given in 1628 is omitted. The first eight pages only are printing of
- 1631. This edition appears to be quite rare, but perhaps only
- accidentally so, because copies have not found their way into public
- libraries; or possibly Vossius may have succeeded in stopping a
- pirated issue.
-
-
-30. *¬W[alkington]¬, T[homas]. THE | OPTICK ... GLASSE | OF HV...MORS |
-OR | The touchstone of a golden | _temperature, or the Philosophers_ |
-_stone to make a golden temper_. | Wherein the foure complections |
-_Sanguine, Cholericke, Phligmaticke, Mel_|_ancholicke are succinctly
-painted forth_ | _and their externall intimates laid open_ | _to the
-purblindeye of ignorance itselfe_, | _by which euery one may iudge_, |
-_of what complection he is, and_ | _answerably learn what is_ | _most
-sutable to his_ | _nature_. | _by_ T. W. _Master_ | _of Artes_ |
-[_motto._]
-
- Impr. 122: (eights) 12^o: pp. [26] + 168 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _damagement
- both_, 111 _temperatures, this_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (2)
- engraving, see below: (3) engraved title, see below: (5–13), Epistle
- dedicatory to sir Justinian Lewin, dated “from my study in Saint
- _Iohns_ (Camb.) x Calend March. T. W.”: 15–25 “To the Reader”, signed
- “T. W.”: (25–26) “The Titles and Contents of the severall Chapters
- ...”: 1–162, the work: 163–167, “The Close”, a poem: 168, “Catastrophe
- Lectori”, an English poem.
-
- For the author, see Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 350. The proof of
- authorship is not clear, but the fact seems generally accepted, and
- Walkington was certainly a Fellow of St. John’s College, Cambridge.
- The book has also been attributed to Tho. Wilbie and T. Wombwell,
- according to Bohn’s Lowndes. This is a reprint of the 1607 London
- edition, re-printed at London in 1639 and 1663. Hitherto this Oxford
- edition has been generally regarded as the first, and the British
- Museum catalogue assigns it doubtfully to 1605. But it cannot be
- earlier than 1627 from the woodcuts used, and in that year first
- William Turner printed books by himself. And it cannot be later than 2
- Aug. 1638 when Michael Sparke assigned this book to John Dawson with
- one of 1631 and one not earlier than 1631. Again, a comparison of 20
- imprints of Michael Sparke between 1627 and 1638 raises a presumption
- that he did not use the expression “are to be sold by Michael Sparke
- at (or, dwelling at) the Blue Bible in Green Arbour” (nor was he
- connected with Oxford printers) until 1632, and he uses no local
- description of the kind at all in his imprints till 1629. On the whole
- 1631 is a probable year for the issue of this book, and 1631–33 more
- likely than any earlier or later date.
-
- The engraved title on steel (size of plate 5½ × 3½ in.) does not occur
- in the 1607 ed. and was doubtless made for this occasion: it was
- altered in the imprint and then used again in 1639 and 1663. On either
- side of the title is a graduate in cap and gown representing
- “CAMBRIDGE” and “OXFORD”: together they hold upright what seems
- intended for an optic glass or touchstone, but presents the exact
- appearance of a half-closed umbrella. Facing the title and part of the
- plate is another engraving (plate 5½ × 3½ in., as the title) which a
- reference to pag. 77 l. 2 shows to represent the Temperaments or
- complexions, with concentric rings: at top are two small wholly
- fanciful engravings of “Oxford” and “Cambridge”, each 5/16 × 1–11/16
- in.
-
-
-31. ¬Widdowes¬, Giles. THE | LAWLESSE | KNEELESSE | SCHISMATICALL |
-_PVRITAN_. | OR | A CONFVTATION | OF THE AVTHOR | OF AN _APPENDIX_, |
-concerning bowing at the | name of _Iesus_. | WRITTEN | by GILES
-WIDDOWES Rector of S^t | MARTINS Church in Oxford, | and late fellow of
-| _Oriell Colledge_. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 107: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 90 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _must bow,
- now_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–4) dedication to Endymion
- Porter: 1–11, “To the true Protestant Reader”: 13–90, the treatise, in
- defence of bowing at the name of Jesus: 91, “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 179, and 1630 W. This is a reply to
- Prynne’s attack on the latter work.
-
-
-32. ——. THE | SCHISMATICAL | _PVRITAN_. | [&c., exactly as 1630 W,
-except _Ceremoines_ for _Ceremonies_, and after “Oxford”] | _The second
-edition, Augmented._ |
-
- Impr. 137: 1631: sm. 4^o: pp. [48], signn. A-F^4: sign. B1^2 beg. _wee
- confesse_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A1: title: A2^r-A2^v,
- dedication, as in 1st ed.: A3^r-C4^r “To the Puritan”: D1^r-F4^v, the
- sermon, on 1 Cor. xiv. 40.
-
- See 1630 W: the augmentation appears to be only in the Preface.
-
-
- 1632.
-
-1. ¬Bancroft¬, John, bp. of Oxford. ARTICLES TO | BE ENQVIRED OF |
-WITHIN THE DIOCES | Of _O_x_ford_, in the first Visitati-|on of the
-Right Reverend Fa-|ther in GOD, _Iohn_ Lord | Bishop of _Oxford_. | HELD
-| In the yeare of our Lord God 1632. in the eighth | yeare of the Raigne
-of our most gracious Soveraigne | Lord, _Charles_, by the grace of God
-King of | Great _Brittaine_, _France_, and _Ireland_ | Defender of the
-Faith &c. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 93: 1632: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B1^r beg. 15
- _Whether_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. _A_1^r, title: _A_2^r-2^v,
- Oath and Charge of the Churchwardens, &c.: A3^r “Directions for making
- bills of Presentments for the Dioces ...”: A3^v-B3^r, the Articles:
- B3^r-3^v, directions.
-
-
-2. ¬Brerewood¬, Edward. A | SECOND TREATISE | _Of The_ | SABBATH, | _OR_
-| AN EXPLICATION OF | the Fourth _Commandement_. | _Written_, | By M^r
-EDWARD BREREWOOD | professor in _Gresham Colledge_ | in LONDON. |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 124: 1632: sm. 4^o: pp. 50 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _cation; so_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–40, the treatise: 41–50
- “Quæstio” about servants’ Sunday work, in English.
-
- See 1630 B, Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 141.
-
-
-3. ¬Burton¬, Robert. THE | ANATOMY OF | MELANCHOLY | [&c., exactly as
-1628 B, being from the same plate with “thirde” altered to “fourth.”]
-
- Impr. 70: 1632: (fours) folio: pp. [10] + 78 + [6] + 722 (after 218
- are two unnumbered leaves) + [10]: p. 11 beg. _Iudgement_, 601
- _graphers, would_: English Roman. Contents:—(2) “The Argument of the
- Frontispeice”: (3) engraved title, inserted: (5) dedication to lord
- Berkeley: (7–10) “Democritus Iunior ad Librum suum”, English verse:
- 1–78, “Democritus Iunior to the Reader”: (1) “Lectori malè feriato”:
- (2) a Latin poem: (3–6) “The Synopsis of the first partition”: 1–218,
- the first partition: (1–4) “The Synopsis of the second partition”:
- 219–407, the second partition: 408–10, “Analysis of the third
- partition”: 411–722, the third partition: (1–9) “The Table”: (9)
- “Errata ...”: (10) Impr. 75, between woodcuts.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 653 and 1621 B. Ten of the divisions of
- the titlepage have now small numbers attached to them, arranged
- thus:—2, 1, 3 (top row): 4, title, 5: 6, 10, 7: 8, imprint, 9 (lowest
- row). This plate is described in the ©Catalogue of Prints in the
- British Museum©. _Div._ 1. _Satires_, vol. 1 (Lond. 1870), p. 79.
-
-
-4. ¬Clement¬, st., of Rome. “Clementis ad Corinthios Epistola prior, Gr.
-et Lat. cum Notis P. Junii. 4_to_. _J. Lichfield_, 1632.”
-
- So in the ©Catalogue of the second ... portion© of dr Philip Bliss’s
- library, sold in Aug. 1858, p. 13, no. 150: but it is probably an
- error for 1633, although possibly some copies may have borne this
- date.
-
-
-5. ¬Daye¬, Lionel. CONCIO | AD | CLERVM | HABITA | OXONII DIE | Martis
-post Comitia | _An: Dom:_ 1609. | AVTHORE LIONELLO DAYE | tunc temporis
-Collegij | _Bailiolensis Socio_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 73_a_: 1632: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 33 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _quium
- oris_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Amicis meis
- Oxoniensibus”, dated “Ex ædibus meis Whichfordiensibus. Ian. 23.
- 1631”: 1–33, the sermon, on Luke xxii. 31, in Latin.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 326. The author says he now prints his
- old sermon, because it had been a great consolation to him, he having
- just lost his eldest son, a B.A. of Christ Church, by illness.
-
-
-6. ¬Downinge¬, Calybute. A | DISCOVRSE | OF THE | STATE
-ECCLESIA-|STICALL OF THIS | _Kingdome, in relation to the Civill_. |
-_Considered vnder three_ CONCLuSIONS. | With a DIGRESSION discussing |
-_some ordinary Exceptions against_ | Ecclesiasticall Officers. | [line]
-| _By_ C. D. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1632: [the rest _absolutely_ as 1633 D.: for that issue the
- title of this edition was torn off, and a new one substituted.]
-
-
-7. ¬Ovid.¬ OVID’S | METAMORPHOSIS | ENGLISHED, | MYTHOLOGIZ’D, | _And_ |
-Represented in Figures. | An Essay to the Translation | of VIRGIL’S
-ÆNEIS. | _By G. S._ |
-
- Impr. 82_a_: 1632: (fours) folio: pp. [20?] + 549 + 1, not counting 16
- engravings: p. 11 beg. _Who o’re so_, 401 (_^a For Ioue_: English
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “The minde of the frontispeece
- ...”: (3) an engraved titlepage, see description below: (5) dedication
- to prince Charles, signed “George Sandys”: (6–9) two panegyrics:
- (10–12) “to the Reader”: (13–16) “The Life of Ovid”: (17–19) “Ovid
- defended”: (20) Latin poem: 1–531, the work, with notes: 532, “To the
- Reader”: 533–49, the first Aeneid of Virgil in English verse: (1)
- “Errata”. Each of the 15 bks. and the Life are preceded by a full-page
- engraving.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 100. The first and second editions were
- issued at London in 1626 and 1628: this is the third, and others
- followed but were not published at Oxford. The first five books had
- been issued by Sandys at least twice (2nd ed., Lond. 1621). The large
- engraved titlepage (9⅝ × 5⅛ in.) is similar to the title of the 1626
- London folio edition in general design, but different in detail. In
- the 1632 engraving the title (nearly as on the printed leaf, as far as
- “G. S.”, with date only and no imprint) is on a sheet held by and
- between two figures of Amor and Sapientia, and on the lower edge of
- the sheet is “_Francisco Clein Inv: Salamon Sauery sculp:_”. Other
- emblematic figures and some Latin sentences fill the page. The British
- Museum copy has the engraved title, but the copy presented by the
- translator in 1636 to the Bodleian has not. The book is singular in
- having no small woodcut ornaments.
-
-
-8. ¬Pemble¬, William. A | SVMME OF | MORALL | PHILOSOPHY | SVCCINCTLY |
-GATHERED, ELE-|gantly Composed, | and Methodically | _handled_, | BY |
-THAT LEARNED SCHOLLER | AND WORTHY DIVINE | _WILLIAM PEMBLE_ M^r of |
-Arts and late Commoner | of _Mag. Hall_. | [two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 84_a_: 1632: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + “82” (“56” occurs twice in the
- pagination) + [1]: p. 11 beg. _selues, that_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3) “To the Reader”: (4) a logical division of Disciplines:
- 1-“82”, the work: (1) “Index”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 331, and 1630 P. The book is an analysis,
- rather than a readable treatise.
-
-
-9. ¬Sennertus¬, Daniel. DANIELIS | SENNERTI | Vratislaviensis |
-_EPITOME_ | NATURALIS | SCIENTIÆ | [_device_] | EDITIO TERTIA. | Auctior
-& Correctior. |
-
- Impr. 123: 1632: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 632 + [22]: p. 11 beg.
- _Actiones voluntati_, 611 _suam sedem_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–9) Epistola dedicatoria to Severinus Schattenus à
- Schattenhall, dated “Calend. April.... 1618”: (11–13) “Lectori candido
- ...”: (15–16) “Index librorum et capitum”: 1–632, the work, in 8
- books: (1–2) “Conclusio”: (3–20) index.
-
- The first edition was presumably issued in 1618, the second at
- Wittenberg in 1624: other Oxford editions came out in 1653 and 1664.
-
-
- 1633.
-
-1. ¬A[iray]¬, C[hristopher]. FASCICULUS | _PRAECEPTORVM_ | LOGICORUM: |
-IN | _Gratiam_ j_uventutis_ | Academicæ _compo-_|_situs & typis
-donatus_. | _Editio altera limatior_ | _operâ secundâ_ | C. A. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 69: 1633: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 224: p. 11 beg. _nec genere_
- 111, _1. Necessaria, cui_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—(3) title,
- within an arched border: (5–6) “Typographus Benevolo Lectori ...”: (7)
- “Sphalmata ...”, errata: (8) “_Arbor Porphyriana_”: 1–224, the work.
-
- This is a reprint of 1628 A, and appears to be rare, for Wood believed
- the 1660 edition to be the second.
-
-
-2. *¬Articles.¬ ARTICLES | Given by | and delivered to the
-Church=wardens | to be considered and answered in his visitation |
-holden in the yeare of our Lord God | WHEREVNTO THE SAID |
-Church-wardens and sidemen are | vpon their oathes to answere | truly
-and particularly. | [_device._]. |
-
- Impr. 68_b_: n. d.: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B1^r beg.
- _Lords Prayer_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title: A2^r,
- instructions and Oath: A3^r-B4^r, the articles.
-
- This is a general undated form of Articles of Visitation apparently
- for a Bishop’s or Archdeacon’s use. The occurrence of a particular
- woodcut shows that this is the earliest year to which the printing can
- be assigned.
-
-
-3. ¬Bacon¬, sir Francis, Lord Verulam. THE TWO | BOOKES OF | S^r FRANCIS
-BACON, | _OF_ | THE PROFICIENCE | and Advancement of Learning, | DIVINE
-and HVMANE. | [_line._] | _To the_ KING. | [_line_, then _woodcut_.] |
-
- Impr. 138: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 335 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _he
- spoiled_, 201 _tage in the race_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: 1–335, the work.
-
- This is the 3rd edition, the previous ones being Lond. 1605, Lond.
- 1629 (from which latter the present edition is an almost lineatim
- reprint); no separate one in English was subsequently issued till this
- century: see 1640 B.
-
-
-4. ¬Bartholinus¬, Caspar. _CASP. BARTHOLINI_ | ENCHIRIDION | ETHICVM: |
-SEU | _EPITOME_ | PHILOSOPHIÆ | MORALIS. | _Præcepta breviter & dilucidè
-me-_|_thodóque novâ & facili expli-_|_cata exhibens_ | Pro angustâ
-tyronum me-|moriâ | [_woodcut._] |
-
- Impr. 137: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [72], signn. A-C^{12}: sign. B1^r
- beg. _tudinis; ut_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title:
- A1^v, dedication to prince Hulderic: A2^r-C10^v, the work:
- C11^r-C11^v, “Index capitum ...”.
-
- This was reprinted at Oxford in 1665 with Casa’s Galateus.
-
-
-5. ——. _CASPARI BARTHOLINI_ | _Philosophi & Medici_ | ANATOMICÆ |
-INSTITVTIONES | CORPORIS HVMANI | Vtriusque sexùs | HISTORIAM &
-DECLARATIO-|nem exhibentes, | Cum plurimis novis observationibus | &
-opinionibus, | Nec non | _Illustriorum, quæ in_ ANTHROPO-|LOGIA
-_occurrunt controver-_|_siarum decisionibus_. | Cum indice Capitum &
-Rerum locupletissimo. | [_woodcut._] |
-
- Impr. 69: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [24] + 417 + [51]: p. 11 beg.
- _nisi in_, 301 _ramos intercostales_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (2) contents of the work: (3–7) dedication to Oligerus
- Rosaecranzius, dated 18 Dec. 1610, in Latin: (8–17) “Ad Benevolum
- Lectorem meum ...”, dated as above: (18–24) “Index capitum ...”:
- 1–417, the work consisting of a Proœmium, 4 libri and 4 libelli:
- (1–44) the index: (45–47) “Admonitio Autoris ad Lectorem qui benignus”
- about a charge of plagiarism, dated “Hafniæ”, 1 Sept. 1622.
-
- The first edition was issued in 1611: this new one appears to be
- reprinted from the edition Goslariæ et Rostochii 1632.
-
-
-6. Browne, Thomas. [The British Museum Catalogue by an error states that
-there is a copy of Browne’s ©Copie of a Sermon© dated 1633: see 1634 B.]
-
-
-7. ¬Burton¬, William. “©Laudatio funebris in Obitum Viri excellentiss.
-D. Thomæ Alleni.© Lond. 1632. Ox. 1633. qu.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 439: the London edition of
- 1632 is known, but at present not the Oxford issue.
-
-
-Butler, Charles. The reference to a 1633 edition of the ©Feminine
-Monarchie©, made in 1609 B, is an error.
-
-
-8. ¬Butler¬, Charles. ORATORIÆ | LIBRI DVO: | QVORVM | _Alter ejus
-Definitionem_, | _Alter Partitionem_ | EXPLICAT: | IN USUM SCHOLARUM |
-_recèns editi_. | [_line_] | Authore CAROLO BVTLERO, _Magd._ | [_line_,
-then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 69: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [136], signn. A, A-Q^4: sign. B1^r beg.
- _clarant; vt cùm_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—A1^r, title:
- A2^r-A2^v, dedication to Thomas lord Coventry, dated “Wotton, 5. _Idus
- Martii_, Ann. Dom. 1633....”: A3^r, two complimentary Latin poems to
- the author by I. H. and S. W.: A3^v-4^v, “Lectori Benevolo ...” as in
- 1629: A1^r-Q4^v, the work: Q4^v, “Monitio ...”, errata and corrigenda.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 210, 1629 B. This is a reprint of the
- 1629 edition, but the new dedication states that Butler’s Rhetoric
- (see 1600 B) was used in the chief schools of the kingdom.
-
-
-9. ——. THE | ENGLISH | GRAMMAR, | OR | The Institution of Letters,
-Syl-|lables, and Words, in the En-|glish tongue. | _Whereunto is
-annexed_ | An Index of Words Like and Unlike. | [_line_] | _By_ | CHARLS
-BUTLER Magd. _Master of Arts_. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 125: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 63 + [29]: p. 11 beg. _larg‘
- sarg‘_: Pica Roman and English. Contents:—p. (1) title within double
- lines: (3–8) “To the Reader”, signed “Wotton Sept. 11. An. D. 1633. C.
- B. M.”: (8) “Ad Authorem” a Latin poem by S. W.: 1–63, the grammar:
- (2–29) the index: (29) “The Printer to the Reader”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 210 (where this edition is not
- mentioned), and 1634 B. This book, as well as the same author’s
- ©Feminine Monarchie or history of Bees© (see 1634 B), are printed in a
- peculiar phonetic manner. The system is of considerable interest for
- the history of phonetic reforms of spelling and of English
- pronunciation, but made no way in practical use. The preface asserts
- the superiority of English in generality, by which he means wide
- geographical extent of usage, but laments the uncertain correspondence
- of sound and spelling, and the labour of learning the language, these
- two defects being due both to the want of alphabetical characters for
- certain sounds, and to historical changes of pronunciation, to which
- some persons adapt the old spelling and some do not. The author
- supplies the characters wanted, and counsels strictly phonetic
- spelling with certain exceptions where letters not strictly sounded
- indicate idiom or derivation. Generally an aspirated letter is
- represented by a line drawn through the letter (đ, w̶, ǥ, but ʇ), and
- mute vowels by a substituted comma (as strang‘, tru‘, nam‘ly) when not
- omitted (as qestion). Also conjoined double e and double o are used,
- but the exceptions to the phonetic spelling would be, among others, a
- serious objection to this system of compromise. In 1585 W. Bullokar
- published an edition of Æsop’s Fables in English, in a somewhat
- similar style of orthography.
-
-
-10. ¬Clemens¬, Romanus. ¤ΚΛΗΜΕΝΤΟΣ¤ | ΠΡΟΣ ΚΟΡΙΝΘΙΟΥΣ | ΕΠΙΣΤΟΛΗ ΠΡΩΤΗ.
-| ¤CLEMENTIS¤ | AD CORINTHIOS | EPISTOLA PRIOR. | Ex laceris reliquijs
-vetustissimi exemplaris Biblio-|thecæ Regiæ eruit, lacunas explevit,
-Latinè ver-|tit, & notis brevioribus illustravit. | [_line_] |
-¤PATRICIVS IVNIVS¤ _Pet. F. Scotobritannus_, | _Sere^{mo} Britanniarum
-Fr. & Hib. Regi_ | ¤CAROLO¤ _à Bibliothecis_. | [_line_, then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 73: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 76 + [48]: p. 11 beg. τῶν ἁπάντων:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–8) dedication to the king:
- (9–19) “Veterum testimonia de Clemente ...”: (21–23) “Benevolo
- Lectori”, dated “Oxonij pridie Cal: Nov. 1632”: 1–76, the Epistle:
- (1–40) Latin notes: (41–47) “Fragmentum Epistolæ secundæ ex eodem
- MS.”: (48) “παροράματα”, errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 308. Patrick Young was Library
- Keeper to the King’s Library at St. James’s Palace (now the Old Royal
- Library at the British Museum), and edited this book from the
- Alexandrine MS. of the Greek Bible. Red ink is used in the words
- underlined above, and for “Oxonii,” and “Academiæ” in the imprint, and
- for all words in the text which are supplied by the editor, who calls
- it “Novum et inusitatum imprimendi genus”. Some copies are on large
- paper, and some have an inserted leaf containing “Summa Privilegii”,
- reserving rights of translation, reproduction and sale for ten years.
- This leaf is found before or after the dedication.
-
-
-11. ¬Combachius¬, Johannes. _IOH. COMBACHII_, | METAPHY-|SICORVM, |
-LIBRI DVO | _VNIVERSAM PRIMÆ_ | _Philosophiæ doctrinam theoremati-_|_bus
-brevissimis comprehendentes, &_ | _Commentariis necessariis
-illustrantes: stu-_|_diosis ejus disciplinæ per quam_ | _utiles &
-fructuosi_. | EDITIO TERTIA | Prioribus editionibus auctior & |
-castigatior. | _Additus est cuilibet libro in fine Index_ | _rerum &
-verborum locuples._ | [two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 69: 1633: 16mo.
-
- At present only known from a titlepage in the Bagford Collections at
- the British Museum (463. h. 4, no. 1110), but it is not likely to be
- really rare. The 2nd edition seems to have been issued abroad in 1620,
- and a “3rd” in 1630, of which this is probably a reprint.
-
-
-12. ¬Cyprianus¬, S. S. CYPRIANVS | _DE_ | BONO PATIENTIÆ | COL LATVS CVM
-| _MS. OXONIENSIBVS,_ | _EDITVS_ | A IEREM. STEPHANO, | SS. Theol. Bac.
-cum | _spicilegio notarum_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 129_a_: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [16] + 87 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
- _daret & divina_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within line,
- double at top and bottom: (3–9) dedication to William Noye attorney
- general: (11–16) “... Argumentum libri ...”: 1–57, the work: 59–87,
- “Annotationes in libellum S. Cypriani ...”, with collations of four
- MSS.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 671. In 1632 Stephens had
- issued a similar edition of Cyprian De unitate ecclesiae.
-
-
-13. ¬Downe¬, rev. John. _CERTAINE_ | TREATISES | OF | THE LATE REVEREND
-| and Learned Divine, M^r _Iohn_ | _Downe_, Rector of the Church of
-_Instow_ | in _Devonshire_, Bachelour of Divi-|nity, and sometimes
-Fellow of _Ema-_|_nuell_ Colledge in _Cambridge_. | _Published at the
-instance of his friends._ | [_line_, then _motto_, then _line_, then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 126: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 57 + [1] + 185 + [3] + 34 + [2] +
- 26 + [2] + 34 + [2] + 24 + [2] + 26 + [2] + 51 + [3] + 125 + [3] + 68:
- incipits, see below in Contents: English Roman. Contents:—(1) title,
- within arched border: (3) dedication by the publisher (dr. G.
- Hakewill) to the bp. and clergy of the diocese of Exeter: (4) “The
- Contents of these treatises”, a list of titles: (5) a title “The
- funerall sermon on behalfe of the author of these ensuing workes,
- preached by George Hakewill ...” with impr. 128: 1–54, the sermon, on
- Dan. xii. 3: 55–57, letter from bp. Joseph Hall, dated “Exon Palace
- Mar. 22. 1631”, to Hakewill about the book: p. 11 beg. _Some there_:
- (1) a title “... Two treatises 1 Concerning the force and efficacy of
- reading—2 Christs prayer for his Church”, with impr. 128: 1–51, 1st
- treatise, on Acts xv. 21: 53–185, 2nd treatise, on John xvii. 1 &c.:
- p. 11 beg. _ever bee a_, 101 _are communicated_: (2) a title “A godlie
- discourse of Selfe-deniall”, with impr. 128: 1–34, the sermon, on Luke
- ix. 23: p. 11 beg. _The Counsell_: (1) a title “An apologie of the
- iustice of God”, with impr. 128: 1–26, the sermon, on Gen. xviii. 25:
- p. 11 beg. _divine actions_: (1) a title “An amulet or preservative
- against the contempt of the ministry”, with impr. 128; 1–34, the
- sermon, on Tit. ii. 15: p. 11 beg. _Ghost were_: (1) a title “The
- dove-like serpent”, with impr. 128: 1–24, the sermon, on Matt. x. 16:
- p. 11 beg. _The deafe eare_: (1) a title “Subiection To the higher
- powers”, with impr. 128: 1–26 (“27”), the sermon on Rom. xiii. 5: p.
- 11 beg. _Simply considered_: (1) a title “A defence of the
- lavvfulnesse of lots in gaming against the Arguments of N. N.”, with
- impr. 128: 1–51, the work: p. 11 beg. “shall haue these”: (2) a title
- “The Reall Presence of Transubstantiation vnknowne to the Ancient
- Fathers”, with impr. 128: p. 11 beg. _grace of God_: (2) “A defence of
- the former Answer against the Reply of N. N.”, with impr. 128: 1–68,
- the work: 68, a note to be added to the first sermon: p. 11 beg.
- _stantiation? Nothing_.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 286, Dict. of Nat. Biogr., and 1635 D
- (for Hakewill see ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 255). Downe was a nephew of bp.
- Jewel: educated at Emmanuel college Cambridge, and incorporated at
- Oxford in 1600. He died in about 1631. The signatures run through the
- entire work, with one break.
-
-
-14. ¬Downinge¬, Calybute. A | DISCOVRSE | OF THE | STATE
-ECCLESIA-|STICALL OF THIS | Kingdome, in relation to the Civill. |
-_Considered vnder three_ CONCLuSIONS. | With a DIGRESSION, discussing |
-_some ordinary Exceptions against_ | Ecclesiasticall Officers. |
-[_line_] | _BY_ C. D. | [_line_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 119: 1633: sm. 4^o; pp. [4] + 98 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _distinguished by_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3) dedication to
- William earl of Salisbury, signed “Calybute Downinge”: (4) “Errata”:
- 1–98, the work, in three parts: the digression is on pp. 30–42: (1–2)
- not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 107 and 1632 D, 1634 D. Wood throws
- doubt on this really being by Downinge. Downinge was chaplain to the
- earl of Salisbury.
-
-
-15. Erasmus, Desiderius. The Oxford 1663 edition of the ©Moriae
-Encomium© bears on its first titlepage the erroneous date 1633.
-
-
-16. ¬Evans¬, William. A | TRANSLATION | of the Booke of | NATURE, | into
-the Vse of | GRACE. | PERFORMED AND PRINCIPALLY | intended for the
-benefit of those who | plead ignorance, or that they are not
-Book-|_learned, or that they want teachers and_ | _so thinke to excuse
-themselues_ | _in their sinnes_. | [_line._] | By WILLIAM EVANS, M^r of
-Arts of | S^t _Mary Hall in Oxford_. | [_line_, then two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 127; 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 95 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _consumed
- away_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to Thomas
- 2nd lord Coventry: (5–8) “To the Reader”: 1–95, the work: (1)
- “Errata”: (2–7) 76 “... heads of certaine doctrines ...” by way of
- index.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, i. 479. The dedication states that this is
- the author’s first (and, as it seems, last) publication.
-
-
-17. ¬Gerhardus¬, Johannes. IOH: GERHARDI | MEDITATIONES | _SACRÆ_. |
-EDITIO POSTREMA, | _prioribus emendatior_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 129: 1633: twelves (16^o): pp. [2] + 238 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _tis
- ex templo_, 201 _hoc interpretare_: Long Primer English. Contents:—p.
- (1) title, within lines: 1–238 (“235”), the Meditations: (2–3)
- “Index”, a list of the 51 meditations.
-
- The first edition was apparently in 1606 with 50 Meditations, and
- editions were issued in Latin in 1621, 1627, 1629, Lond. 1672, and
- later, and English translations in 1629 (by R. Winterton, printed at
- Cambridge), and later, even in 1840 (at Oxford).
-
-
-18. ¬Godwyn¬, Thomas. ROMANÆ | HISTORIAE | ANTHOLOGIA | RECOGNITA ET |
-AVCTA. | AN | ENGLISH EXPOSITION | OF THE ROMAN ANTI-|quities, wherein
-many Roman and | English offices are paralleld | _and divers obscure
-phra-_|_ses explained._ | _For the vse of_ ABINGDON _Schoole._ |
-[_line_] | Newly revised and inlarged by the | _Author_ | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 141: 1633: (fours) sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 277 + [23]: p. 11 beg.
- _malefactor, but_, 111 _gainst another_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within an arched border: (3–4) Latin dedication to dr. John
- Young, signed “Tho. Godwyn”, dated “Abindoniæ 14 Calend. Decemb. ...
- 1622”: (5) “Benevolo Lectori ...”: (7) “A short table shewing the
- Argument of every Booke and Section”: 1–277, the work, in four books:
- (1–23) “Index rerum et verborum ...”.
-
- See 1614 G.
-
-
-19. †¬Grave¬, Jean de. [_line_] | THE | PATH_WAY TO | THE GATE OF |
-_TONGVES_: | BEING, | THE FIRST INSTRV-|CTION FOR LITTLE | CHILDREN. |
-With | A short manner to conjugue | the French Verbes. | _Ordered and
-made Latine, French and_ | _English by_ IEAN de GRAuE, | _Professour of
-the French Tongue_ | _in the City of_ | LONDON. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 136: 1633: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B1^r beg. _discas
- oportet_: Long Primer Roman and English. Contents:—sign. A1^r title,
- within line: A2^r-A2^v. introduction in Latin, English and French:
- A3^r-C6^v, the work.
-
- Very rare. The book consists of the names of the numbers, the Church
- Catechism, and the conjugation of French verbs, all in parallel Latin,
- English and French columns: and serves as an introduction to the
- English editions by John Anchoran (1631, 1633, 1637, 1639 or 1640,
- &c.) of J. A. Comenius’s celebrated ©Janua linguarum©. See 1634 S. The
- book is interesting as showing a connexion between William Turner the
- Oxford printer (1624–40) and the London printer of the same name
- (1623–35). The Stationers’ Register (ed. Arber, iv. 334) records the
- transfer of all the London Turner’s rights in this book and the
- ©Clavis ad portam© (which was certainly printed by the Oxford Turner
- in 1634, see 1634 S) to Michael Sparke on 17 Mar. 1634/5. Neither of
- these books was registered at Stationers’ Hall, and so probably this
- book as well as the ©Clavis© was printed at Oxford, though the
- imprint, type and woodcuts are not by themselves decisive. Probably
- the two Turners are in fact identical, and the Oxford printing
- establishment, though founded a year later than the other (but as a
- bookseller’s business not later than 1616/7), was the chief one. It is
- curious that under these circumstances Turner was allowed to be a
- member of the Stationers’ Company, which was particularly jealous of
- provincial presses.
-
-
-20. ¬Gregorius¬, monk. A | LETTER, | RELATING THE | Martyrdome of
-KETAB¿A¿N, Mother | of TEIMVRASES Prince of the | _GEORGIANS, & withall_
-| A notable Imposture of the Iesuites | vpon that occasion_:_ | _SENT_ |
-From GREGORIVS Monke and | Priest, Agent for the Patriarke of | ANTIOCH
-_vnto the most_ | _holy and learned_ Abbot | SOPHRONIVS. | [_line_] |
-_Written first in Greeke, and now_ | _done in English_ | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 82: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 23 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Iberia: and_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) “To the Reader”,
- about the Georgians, probably by the translator: 1–23, the letter,
- dated “Trapezunt May 16. _Ann._ 1626”.
-
- A rare tract. See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 479. The
- incident related belongs to the year 1614, when the King of Persia put
- Ketaban to death for refusing to forsake Christianity. Some Jesuits
- are said to have dressed up a carcase as Ketaban’s, to have carried it
- to her son, and to have enjoyed much honour by the miracles which it
- wrought. Ultimately the real body arrived and the Jesuits were
- banished. The translator was Thomas Crosfield of Queen’s College,
- Oxford: and the Letter was published in Greek and Latin (at London?)
- in 1632.
-
-
-21. ¬Hakewill¬, George. THE | VANITIE | OF | THE EYE. | First begun for
-the Com-|fort of a Gentlewoman berea-|ved of her sight, and since | upon
-occasion inlarged | and published for the | Common good. | BY | GEORGE
-HAKEVVILL Ma-|ster of Arts, and Fellow of Exe-|ter Coll. in Oxford. |
-[_line_] | _The second Edition._ | [_line_, then _motto_.] |
-
- Impr. 142: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [6] + 173 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _ripping up_, 111 _as much of_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within double bounding lines: (3–6) “The Contents of the severall
- Chapters ...”: 1–173, the work in 31 chapters.
-
- See 1608 H. This is really the 4th ed., not the 2nd.
-
-
-22. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ | (&c., precisely as 1631 H, except
-“sixth” for “fifth”.)
-
- Impr. 140: 1633: (eights) sm. 4^o; pp. [20] + 808 (the last misprinted
- 807) + [4]: p. 11 beg. _1 First then there_, 701 _dales, or
- Vindelici_: Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly as 1631 H, except “Forraine
- Coynes”, and the necessary change of reference (only) to the last five
- pages.
-
- See 1621 H: this edition is apparently an almost lineatim reprint of
- the 5th edition.
-
-
-23. ¬Holyday¬, Barten. PHILOSOPHIÆ | POLITO-|BARBARÆ | SPECIMEN, | IN
-Quo | _De_ ANIMA & _e_j_us_ | HABITIBuS INTEL-|LECTuALIBuS, |
-_Quæstiones aliquot_, | LIBRIS DVOBVS, | Illustrantur à | [_line_] |
-BARTENIO HOLYDAY | [_line._] |
-
- Impr. 69: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 189 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _piniones
- diversas_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within arched
- border: (3–8) “Præfatio”: (9–11) “Series rerum ...”, a list of
- contents: 1–189, two books and an oration: (1) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 522. These are exercises and speeches
- composed by Holyday in about 1617–21, when prælector of Rhetoric and
- Philosophy at Christ Church, Oxford, and concern the De Anima, Ethics
- and Rhetoric of Aristotle. What is considered to be the barbarous
- element in the Philosophy, is not clear.
-
-
-24. ¬James¬, dr. Richard. CONCIO | HABITA AD | _CLERVM_ | _OXONIENSEM_ |
-_de Ecclesia_. | AVTHORE _RICHARDO_ | _IAMESIO Vectensi_, Baccalaureo |
-Sacræ Th. Socio _CCC._ | [_line, motto, line, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 130: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [36], signn. A-D^4 E^2: sign. B1^r beg.
- _cum omnes_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title: A2^r-2^v,
- dedication to sir Kenelm Digby: A3^r-E1^v, the sermon, on Matth. xvi.
- 18.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 630. Some copies of this book have the
- remains of a torn titlepage, apparently a cancel leaf following the
- ordinary title.
-
-
-25. ¬More¬, sir Thomas. EPISTOLA | THOMÆ MORI AD | _ACADEMIAM_ | _OXON._
-| Adjecta sunt quædam Poemata | in mortem | CLARISSIMI VIRI | ROBERTI
-COTTONI | _&_ | THOMÆ ALLENI. | [_line_, then _motto_, then _line_.] |
-
- Impr. 113_a_: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 18 + [10]: p. 11 beg. _ei
- periti_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
- to sir Kenelm Digby, signed “Rich. Iamesius”, the editor: 1–17, the
- Letter, dated “Abingdoniæ ... 4^o Kal. Aprilis”: 18, “Nota magistri
- Briani Twyne” about the occasion of the letter: (1–7) three Latin
- poems and a Latin note by James on Cotton and Allen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, i. 85, ii. 630. This is a rather uncommon
- book, containing a persuasive to the study of Greek, written in 1518,
- probably at the king’s instigation. The opponents of the New Learning
- called themselves Trojans in opposition to the Grecians. The letter is
- reprinted by Hearne in his edition of Roper’s Life of More (Oxf. 1716,
- 8^o). Sir Robert Cotton died in 1631, and Thomas Allen of Gloucester
- hall in Oxford in 1632.
-
-
-26. ¬Oxford¬, University. [two _lines_] | _Musarum Oxoniensium_ | PRO |
-REGE SVO | _SOTERIA_. | [_Anagram_, &c., then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 131: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [72], signn. §, §§^4, §§§^2, A, “BC”,
- D-G^4, H^2: sign. BC1^r beg. _Nec morbos_: English Roman.
- Contents:—sign. §1^r, title: §2^r-H2^r, the poems: H2^v, device and
- impr. 132.
-
- The occasion of these verses seems to have been an illness of the King
- late in 1632. Most of the poems are Latin, but four are English and
- one Greek. One of the printers (W. Turner) contributes some Latin
- verses. An anagram occurs in the title, and a chronogram (1632) on
- E1^v. There are curious variations in issues, and marks (see the
- register of signatures) of the difficulty of obtaining and marshalling
- in order these collections of separate poems. The early issues of
- sheet A on A3^r print “R. NEVVLIN _S. T. B._”, the later and common
- ones insert _C. C. C._ after the name, as also in A1^v, A3^r (twice):
- so “_Nov. C._” is inserted on A4^v, cf. A2^v. An interesting copy is
- in the British Museum, being the one specially printed for the King’s
- personal acceptance. The differences are that the book is on larger
- paper (the size even as bound and cut down being 7⅞ × 6 in.), and the
- title entirely reprinted. Every line of the title is in larger type
- and spread out laterally, except the anagram itself and imprint: also
- ll. 1 and 4 are roman, not italic, and ll. 3, 4, 6, 7 are printed _in
- gold_. In l. 6 the two Vs are lower case Us, and in l. 7 Rex appears
- as REX. So too the device is altered, and it is amusing to see that
- the imprint, for fear of royal vengeance, is altered from the English
- “W. T.” (William Turner) to the Latin “G. T.”! This fact shows also
- that the _last_ and not the first copy was struck off for the King,
- sheet A agreeing with this in being the later issue (see above).
-
-
-27. ——. SOLIS | BRITANNICI | _PERIGÆUM_. | SIVE | ITINERANTIS | CAROLI |
-AVSPICATISSIMA | _PERIODVS_. | [two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 53: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [100], signn. § A-C, DE, F-M^4 N^2: sign.
- B1^r beg. Εἴς ἄλοχον: English Roman. Contents:—sign. §1^r title:
- §2^r-N2^r, the poems.
-
- Poems by members of the University congratulating the King on his
- return from Scotland in Aug. 1633. The perigee of the sun or a planet
- is when it is nearest to the earth. Most of the poems are Latin, but
- six are Greek, sixteen at the end English, and one French. Three
- chronograms occur. One English poem is by John Lichfield the printer.
- There are some signs of an arrangement of the poems, those by great
- persons coming first, and the English last. Some copies of a later
- issue have an extra sheet after I (ii, four leaves) inserted, with
- more poems, which necessitated a rearrangement of sheet K.
-
-
-28. ——. VITIS | CAROLINÆ | GEMMA ALTERA | _SIVE_ | AVSPICATISSIMA |
-DVCIS EBORACENSIS | GENETHLIACA | _Decantata ad_ | _VADA ISIDIS_ | [two
-_lines_.]
-
- Impr. 53: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [88], signn. A-L^4, see below: sign. B1^r
- beg. _Te pariter_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title:
- A2^r-L3^v, the poems.
-
- These poems celebrate the birth of James ii on 15 Oct. 1633, and are
- as usual chiefly in Latin, but six in Greek, eighteen in English (an
- innovation) and one in French. There is a second issue, perhaps
- commoner than the first described above, with the following changes.
- In sheet H, sign. H1^v l. 9 has _Conjugis alvus_, not _uxorius alvus_:
- H3^r begins with a _Greek_ poem, the rest of sheet H is re-arranged
- and a new sheet h of four leaves is inserted. Also in sheet L a new
- poem by W. Dutton is inserted. The sheets not specified above are
- identical in the two issues.
-
-
-29. ¬Parsons¬, Bartholomew. BOAZ | _AND_ | RUTH | BLESSED_:_ | _OR_ | A
-SACRED CON-|TRACT HONOV-|red with a Solemne | _Benediction_. | BY |
-BARTHOLOMEW PARSONS B. of Divinity | and Rector of _Ludgershall_ in the
-| County of _Wiltes._ | [two _mottos_.]
-
- Impr. 134: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 40: p. 11 beg. _ever are blessed_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) Epistle Dedicatorie to
- Peregrine Thistlethwaite and Dorothy his wife: 1–40, the sermon, on
- Ruth iv. 11.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 26. This sermon was to have
- been delivered at the wedding of Mr. Thistlethwaite, but some accident
- interposed, and it is here in an enlarged form.
-
-
-30. ¬Pavonius¬, Franciscus. SUMMA | ETHICAE: | _SIVE_, | INTRODVCTIO |
-IN ARISTOTELIS, | ET THEOLOGORVM | DOCTRINAM | Moralem. | _CVM QVATVOR
-INDICIBVS_, | _Vno Propositionum in libri initio;_ | _alio Aristotelico,
-tertio Tho-_|_mistico, quarto Rerum_, | in fine. | Auctore FRANCISCO
-PAVONIO | Catacensi Theologo Societatis JESU. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 139: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [12] + 381 + [51]: p. 11 beg.
- _maximè_, 301 _justum debitum_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title within double lines: (3–4) dedication to Mutius Vitellescus,
- dated 29 Sept. 1617: (5–12) “Index propositionum”: 1–381, the work:
- (1–2) “Epilogus”: (4–51) The four indexes.
-
- The author was an Italian Jesuit, who died in 1637. The first edition
- of this work seems to have been issued at Lyons in 1620.
-
-
-31. ¬Pemble¬, William. ‘©Enchiridion Oratorium.© Ox. 1633 “qu.” &c.’
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 331. There seems to be some
- mistake, since no such treatise was printed among Pemble’s Collected
- Works: possibly Butler’s work on Oratory above has been confused by
- Wood: but Watt mentions the work under _Pembelo_ as well as _Pemble_,
- as if he had been independent of Wood.
-
-
-32. ¬Potter¬, Christopher. WANT OF | CHARITIE, | Iustly charged, | ON
-ALL SVCH _ROMA-_|_nists_, as dare (without truth or | modesty affirme,
-that _Prote-_|_stancie destroyeth Salvation_. | In Answer to a late
-Po-|pish Pamphlet intituled | _Charity Mistaken &c._ | _By_ CHRISTOPHER
-POTTER D.D. | Chaplaine to his Ma^{ty} in Ordina-|rie, and Provost of
-_Queenes_ | _Colledge_ in Oxford. |
-
- Impr. 133: 1633: (eights) 12^o: pp. [24] + 128 + 120: pp. 11 beg.
- _forbids to_ and _struct her children_: English Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title, within double lines: (3–6) “The Epistle Dedicatory”: (7–8)
- to the reader: (9–24) analysis of _Charity mistaken_ and the answer,
- as a list of contents: 1–128, 1–120, “Answer to Charity mistaken”, the
- work.
-
- The work against which this was directed was written by a Jesuit named
- Matthias Wilson, who also employed the names of Nicholas Smith and, as
- in this case, Edward Knott, and was published in 1630. By Oct. 1634
- this first edition was nearly sold out, and the author submitted a
- copy to archbp. Laud for his approval or correction, with a view to a
- second edition. Laud suggested the alteration of a few passages, and
- this was made part of the accusations against him at his trial (see
- Prynne’s ©Canterburies Doom©, Lond. 1646, p. 251). The second edition
- thus altered was printed at London in 1634.
-
-
-33. ¬Reusner¬, Nicolas. NICOLAI REVSNERI LEORINI | IC. Comitis Palat.
-Cæs. | SYMBOLORVM | IMPERATORIORuM | Classis Prima. | _QVA SYMBOLA
-CONTINENTVR_ | _Impp. ac Cæsarum Romanorum Italico-_|_rum, à C. Iulio
-Cæsare, usque ad_ | _Constantinum Magnum._ | OPVS PHILOLOGICVM ET |
-Politicum, veréque Regium ac Impera-|torium: omnibus omnium ordinum, &
-cum | primis civilis sapientiæ studiosis lectu | futurum utile; ac
-jucundum. | _QVINTA EDITIO._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 137: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [12] + 173 + [37] + 209 + [39] +
- 198 + [34]: pp. 11 beg. _Quod exemplo_ and _honestam rem_ and _Nam &
- secundum_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) preface to
- Maximilian grand duke of Austria, dated 1 Oct. 1587: (9–11) poems on
- the work: 1–173 the Classis Prima: (1–23) indexes: (24) a
- title:—NICOLAI REuSNERI LEORINI | _Silesii_, | SYMBOLORVM |
- IMPERATORIORuM | Classis Secunda. | _QVA CONTINENTVR SYMBOLA_ | _Impp.
- Cæsarúmque Romanorum-Græco-_|_rum, à Fl. Constantino Magno, usque_ |
- _ad Carolum Magnum, pri-_|_mum Cæsarem Germanicum._ | OPuS AuREuM ET
- VERE | Politicum, ac Regium. | [_device_, then impr. 137]: (26–33)
- preface to Ernest grand duke of Austria, dated 7 Oct. 1587: (33–36)
- poems on the work: 1–209, the Classis secunda: (1–24) indexes: (26) a
- title:—NICOLAI REuSNERI LEORINI | IC. Comitis Palat. Cæs. | SYMBOLORVM
- | IMPERATORIORuM | Classis Tertia. | _QVA SYMBOLA CONTINENTVR_ |
- _Impp. Cæsarúmque Romanorum-Ger-_|_manicorum: à Carolo Magno,
- pri-_|_mo Cæs. Germanico, usque ad_ | _Ferdinandum II. Cæs._ |
- _Austriacum_ | OPuS JuCuNDISSIMÆ | Et utilissimæ lectionis. |
- [_device_: then impr. 137]: (28–32) preface to Matthias grand duke of
- Austria, dated 15 Oct. 1587: (33–39) poems on the work: 1–224 (224
- misprinted 198), the Classis Tertia: (1–28) indexes: (29–34) not seen.
-
- See 1638 R. This is a curious example of three parts of a volume being
- entirely independent of each other, there being no general titlepage,
- but yet being indissolubly welded together by the signatures, so that
- no part could be issued separately. The first edition seems to have
- been issued in 1587, the 4th at London in 1619. The plan of the work
- is to assign a motto to every emperor, and then to discuss the motto
- and character of the person together: so that in effect the book is
- largely a discussion of proverbs of the nature of Erasmus’s ©Adagia©.
-
-
-34. ¬Salvianus¬, S. SANCTI | SALVIANI | MASSILIENSIS | _PRESBYTERI_, |
-DE | GVBERNATIONE | Dei, & de justo præsentiq; | ejus judicio ad _S.
-Salonium_ | Episcopum, _Lib._ VIII. | _Eiusdem Epistolarum Lib. I._ |
-TIMOTHEI NOMINE AD | _Ecclesiam Catholic._ Lib. IV. | Cum duplici
-indice. |
-
- Impr. 129 _b_: 1633: 12mo: pp. [16] + 512: p. 11 beg. _consulari_, 401
- _tamen quæ_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title within line, double at
- top and bottom: (5–6) Extract from Joh. Trithemius: (7–13) “Index
- rerum et verborum ...”: (14–15) “Index locorum Scripturæ ...”: 1–297,
- De gubernatione Dei: 298–324, Epistolæ: 325–488, Ad ecclesiam
- catholicam: 489–512, “Annotationes aliquot ... autore Ioanne Alexandro
- Brassicano”.
-
- See 1629 S, of which this is an almost exact reprint in larger type.
-
-
-35. ¬Sclater¬, William. [_line_] | Vtriusque Epistolæ | AD CORINTHIOS |
-EXPLICATIO | _ANALYTICA_. | VNÀ | CVM SCHOLIIS: | Authore _Gul.
-Sclatero_ SS. Theol. Doctore, | Nunc tandem à Filio suo _Coll. Regalis_
-| in _Academia Cantabr._ Socio | in lucem edita. | [_line, motto, line,
-motto, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 69: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 260: p. 11 beg. _testimonio_, 201
- _operam nostram_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a
- line: (2–7) Epistola dedicatoria to dr. Edw. Kellett and mr. George
- Goade, signed “Gulielmus Sclater”: (9–10) “Lectori ...”: (11)
- “Sphalmata ...”: 1–2, title repeated, see below: 3–154, the
- explanation of 1 Cor.: 155–260, do. of 2 Cor.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 228, but this author is not to be
- confused, as Wood points out, with William Slatyer the writer of
- ©Palæ-Albion©. The dedication gives some autobiographical notes about
- the editor, whose tutor at Cambridge was mr. Goade. Strictly, it
- appears that there should be two titles as above (to be distinguished
- by the first title having _ANALYTICA._ and ἂρτιος, the second
- _ANALYTICA_; and ἄρτιος): the second was printed as pp. 1–2, when no
- dedication or preface was intended; and when the usual prefatory
- matter with the first title was printed, no doubt the second would be
- generally removed by the binder.
-
-
-36. ¬Sermonetta¬, cardinal, i.e. Enrico Gaetani. INSTRVCTIONS | FOR
-YOVNG | GENTLEMEN; | OR | The instructions of | _Cardinall Sermonetta_,
-to | his Cousen PETRO | CAETANO, | AT | _HIS FIRST GOING_ | into
-Flanders to the Duke | of _Parma_, to serue | PHILIP, King | _of
-Spaine_. |
-
- Impr. 135: 1633: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 122 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _Keepe letters_, 101 _dissimulatiõ_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title, within a line double except at bottom: (3–7) “The Printer
- to the Reader”, with postscript: 1–122, the work: (1) “Errata”.
-
- The sheets of this were reissued with a new titlepage at Oxford in
- 1644, and republished with other treatises in 1772, and perhaps
- oftener. The head-line throughout is “Instructions for young
- Noblemen”: every page has double lines on the upper and outer margins.
-
-
-37. ¬Smith¬, Samuel. Aditus ad Logicam.
-
- Wood in his ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss (ii. 283) mentions an edition of
- this year, which would be the 7th: see 1617 S.
-
-
-38. ¬T[ipping]¬, W[illiam]. A | DISCOVRSE | _OF_ | ETERNITIE | Collected
-and Composed for | _the Common good_, | [_line_] | By W. T. | [_line_,
-then _device_.] |
-
- Impr. 134: 1633: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 71 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _and
- everlasting_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7) “To the
- Christian Reader”, signed “VV. T.”: (8) “The Contents ...”: 1–71, the
- work, in two books: 71, a prayer, and errata “in some copies”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 244. There was another (anonymous)
- edition Lond. 1646: the author was known after this book was issued as
- “Eternity Tipping”.
-
-
-39. ¬Tozer¬, Henry. A | CHRISTIAN | AMENDMENT | Delivered in a Sermon on
-New-|yeares day 1631. in S^t _Martines_ | Church in _Oxford_, and | _now
-published_: | [_line_] | By H. TOZER M^r of Arts and Fellow of |
-_Exceter_ Colledge in _Oxford_. | [_line_, two _mottos_, _woodcuts_.] |
-
- Impr. 85 _a_: 1633: (eights) 12^o: pp. [12] + 80 + [4]: p. 11 beg.
- _And these_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–11)
- Epistle dedicatory to sir Walter Pye, kt.: 1–80, the sermon, on 2 Cor.
- v. 17.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 274. Sir Walter Pye jun. had been
- Tozer’s pupil when at Exeter college.
-
-
- 1634.
-
-1. ¬A[llen?]¬, J[ohn]. THE | YOVNGER | BROTHER HIS | APOLOGIE, | _OR_ |
-_A FATHERS FREE POWER_ | disputed, for the disposition of his Lands, |
-or other his Fortunes to his Sonne, Sonnes, | _or any one of them: as
-right Reason, the_ | _Lawes of God and Nature, the Civill_, | _Canon,
-and Municipall Laws_ | _of this Kingdome doe_ | _command_. | [_motto_,
-then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 126: 1634 [on title, 1624!]: sm. 4to: pp. [10] + 56 + [2]: p. 11
- beg. _verse, with all_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
- The Epistle to the Reader, signed “J. A.”: (8–10) “The principall
- contents”: 1–56, the work: (1) “Mantissa”, a quotation from Salvianus,
- about anonymity: (2) a colophon, consisting of a motto, large device
- of the Arms of the University, and impr. 73 _b_.
-
- This is a rare book, arguing against exclusive privileges of
- primogeniture, and for the right and in some cases duty of parents to
- disinherit the eldest son. Other editions were issued at Oxford in
- 1641 and 1671, but I do not find information about John Allen, nor the
- ground for ascribing the book to one of that name. On the page
- preceding the colophon is this figure:—
-
- * I * M *
- * F *
- * A * M *
-
- There is an account of the book in Oldys’s ©British Librarian© (1737),
- p. 210.
-
-
-2. ¬Barclay¬, John. EVPHORMIONIS | LVSININI, | _Sive_, | IOANNIS |
-BARCLAII | _Partes quinq;_. | Satyricon bipartitum. L. 1 & 2. | Apologia
-pro se. L. 3 | Icon Animo_{r}um. L. 4. | Veritatis Lachrymæ. L. 5. |
-_Cum Clavi præfixa._ | [_line._] | _Accessit_ | Conspiratio Anglicana. |
-[_line_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 143: 1634: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [10] + 782 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _tibus allatus_, 501 _Illis autem_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–5) dedication by “Euphormio” to James i: (6–10) “Clavis,
- nomina ignota ... exponens”: 1–156, part 1, as above: 157–310, part 2,
- dedicated to lord Salisbury: 311–357, part 3, dedicated to Charles
- Emmanuel I duke of Savoy, dated London, 1 Sept. 1610: 358–553, part 4,
- dedicated to Louis xiii: 554–767, part 5, “Alitophili Veritatis
- Lachrymæ, sive Euphormionis Lusinini Continuatio”, dedicated to Henry
- of Bourbon the Dauphin: 769–782, “Series patefacti divinitus
- parricidii, ... in ... Regem regnumque Britanniæ cogitati ... Nonis
- ixbribus MDCV. Illo ipso Novembri scripta, nunc demum edita,” the
- head-line is “Conspiratio Anglicana”.
-
- For John Barclay (_d._ 1621) see the Dict. of National Biography, and
- for the bibliography of this work Jules Dukas’s book. Part 1 was first
- issued in 1603, part 2 in 1607, part 3 in 1611, part 4 in 1614, part 5
- in 1625. The author is satirical on Jesuits and Puritans alike, as
- well as on individuals.
-
-
-3. ——. IOANNIS | BARCLAII | ARGENIS. | _Editio Novissima._ | CVM CLAVE,
-HOC | est: nominum propriorum eluci-|tione hactenus nondum | edita. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 144: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [30] + 705 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _sæva
- consilia_, 601 _sedente, regiam_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title: (3–8) Epistola dedicatoria to Louis xiii, dated Rome 1 July
- 1621: (9) a sentence: (10–29) “Discursus de autore Scripti, & judicium
- de nominibus Argenidæis”, head line “Discursus in Argenidem”: 1–676,
- the work in five books: 677–705, “Discursus ... [headline “Clavis”] in
- Argenidem ...”: (1–2) “Tabula nominum fictorum ...”: (3–9) “Index
- ...”.
-
- See last item. The Argenis, which like the Satyricon is a political
- satire, was written and first published in 1621. The first discursus
- must have been rather out of date in this edition, for it suggests
- that the satire was written by William Barclay, father of the author.
- Argenis is a female character in the book, apparently representing the
- hope of the house of Valois.
-
-
-4. ¬Blaxton¬, John. THE | ENGLISH | VSVRER; | _OR_ | VSVRY CONDEMNED, |
-_BY_ | The most learned and famous Di-|uines of the Church of _England_,
-and Dedi-|cated to all his Maiesties Subiects, for | the stay of further
-increase | of the same. | [_line_] | Collected | By IOHN BLAXTON,
-Preacher of | God’s Word at _Osmington_, in _Dorcet-shire_. | [_line_,
-then _motto_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 148: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + 84: p. 11 beg. _Chap._ 3. _The
- Testimony_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (2) “The Illustration” a poem on
- the frontispiece: (3) “The English Vsurer”, the frontispiece, a
- picture with title and motto: (7) title: (9–12) “To the Reader”: (13)
- “A Table of the Contents”: (14) a list of authorities: (15–17)
- complimentary English poems by Josua Sylvester, Francis Quarles and
- (in Latin) John Garbrand of Oxford: (18–19) “To the Vsurer”: 1–82, the
- work: 83–84, poem by George Withers.
-
- This book was printed in London by John Norton jun. (1633–39) for
- Francis Bowman in Oxford, and does not appear to have been entered in
- the Stationers’ Hall Register. The frontispiece contains a woodcut
- representing a Usurer seated at his table, a small fiend behind his
- head, and on a label “I say I will haue all | both Vse & principall.”
- On the reader’s right are two pigs, one alive, one dead, with suitable
- labels. The size of the woodcut is 4–5/16 × 5¼ in. See next entry.
-
-
-5. ——. THE | ENGLISH | _USURER_. | OR, | USURY CONDEMNED, | _BY_ | The
-most Learned, and famous | Divines of the Church of _England_, and |
-Dedicated to all his _Ma_j_esties_ Subiects, | for the stay of further
-increase | _of the same_. | [_line_] | Collected | By IOHN BLAXTON,
-Preacher of | Gods Word at _Osmington_, in _Dorcetshire_. | [_line_] |
-_The second Impression, Corrected by the Authour_ | [_line_, then the
-same motto as before, but no line following.]
-
- Impr. 148: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 80: p. 11 beg. _vaine, if it_;
- Pica Roman. Contents (see above):—p. (2) frontispiece: (3) “The
- Illustration”: (5) title: (7–10) “To the Reader”: (11) Table: (12)
- authorities: (13–14) three poems, as above: (15–16) “To the usurer”:
- 1–78, the work: 79–80, Withers’ poem.
-
- See last entry.
-
-
-6. ¬Browne¬, Thomas. [_woodcut_] | THE | COPIE OF THE | Sermon preached
-before the | _Vniversitie at S. Maries in_ | OXFORD, | _on Tuesday the_
-| XXIV. of Decem. 1633. | [_line_] | By THO. BROWNE, _One of the_
-Students _of Christ-Church_. | [_line_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 146: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. 53 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _Edward the Sixt_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–53, the sermon, on Ps.
- cxxx. 4: 53, impr. 85 _d_.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 1003. The Bidding Prayer, in
- an informal style, is intercalated at pp. 9–14, between the
- introductory part and the body of the sermon. See 1633 B: the British
- Museum “1633” copy is absolutely identical with the above issue except
- that instead of Impr. 146 with the date in Roman numerals, it has
- Impr. 82 _b_ and “Anno 1634”, the woodcut having been slightly shifted
- downwards in this issue.
-
-
-7. ¬Butler¬, Charles. THE | ENGLISH | GRAMMAR, | OR | The Institution of
-Letters, Syl[/]|lables, and Wꝏrds in the En=|glish tung. | _Wher’unto is
-annexed_ | An Index of wꝏrds Lik‘ and Unlik‘ | [_line_] | _By_ | CHARLS
-BuTLER, Magd. _Master of Arts_. | [_motto_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 125: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 63 + [29]: p. 11 beg. _larg‘,
- sarg‘_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–4)
- dedication to prince Charles: (5–11) “To the Reader”, dated “Wotton
- Sept. 1. An. D. 1633. C. B. M.”: (12) “Ad Authorem” a Latin poem by S.
- W.: 1–63, the grammar: (2–29) the Index: (29) The Printer to the
- Reader.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 210, and 1633 B. The body of
- the work is a reissue of the sheets of the 1633 edition, but the title
- is reset, and the prefatory matter enlarged.
-
-
-8. ——. THE | _Feminin‘ Monarchi‘_, | OR | THE HISTORI | OF B[EE]‘S |
-SHEWING | _Their admirable Natur‘, and Propertis;_ | _Their Generation
-and Colonis;_ | _Their Government, Loyalti, Art, Industri;_ | _Enimi‘s,
-VVars, Magnanimiti, &c._ | TOGETHER | With the right Ordering of them
-from tim‘ to tim‘: | and the sw[ee]t Profit arising ther‘of. | [_line_]
-| _Written out of Experienc‘_ | By | CHARLS BUTLER, _Magd._ | [_line_,
-then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 126: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 182: p. 11 beg. _her, animamque_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) engraving of a hive, with
- verses: (3–4) dedication to the queen: (5–8) The preface, dated
- “Wotton. Mai 11. 1623”: (8) The Printer to the leader, referring to
- Butler’s English Grammar for the phonetic spelling used: (9–11)
- commendatory verses by George Wither (Latin and English), and others:
- (12–16) The contents of the book: 1–182, the work in 10 chapters.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 209, and 1609 B, of which
- this is an enlarged edition: the preface is that of the 1623 edition.
- The peculiar spelling and type are part of Butler’s system as
- elaborated in his English Grammar (see 1633 B). There are a few
- woodcuts, and music at pp. 78–81.
-
-
-9. ¬Cosin¬, Richard. ¤ECCLESIÆ ANGLICANAE¤ | POLITEIA IN TABVLAS
-DIGESTA. | ¤AVTHORE _RICHARDO COSIN_ LEGVM¤ | Doctore, olim Decano
-«C»uriæ de ARCVBVS, & | ¤_Cancellario, seu Vicario Generali
-Reverendiss._¤ | Patris IOANNIS Archiepiscopi | ¤_CANTVARIENSIS_¤. |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 73: 1634: (twos) obl. 8^o: pp. [64], signn. ( )^2, ( )^2, A-O^2:
- sign. B1^r beg. _TAB. I. B_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. ( )1^r,
- title: ( )2^r-2^v, Epistola dedicatoria to king James by “Tho.
- Crompton”: ( )1^r “Ad Lectorum Monitorium”: ( )1^r-1^v “Capita
- tabularum”: ( )2, not seen: A1^r-O2^r, the tabulae.
-
- For the editor (_d._ 1608) see Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i.
- 249. The author, a lawyer educated at Cambridge, died in 1597. The
- first edition, of which this is a reprint slightly different in
- arrangement, was published at London in 1604, fol.: the 3rd at the
- Hague in 1661: the 4th at Oxford in 1684, fol. These tables exhibit
- the whole status and administration of the Church of England in a
- synoptic form. The words underlined in the above title are in red ink,
- as well as _Oxoniæ_, and _anno salutis M.DC.XXIV._ in the imprint. The
- book is peculiar in form. The 1604 and 1684 editions may be called
- ordinary folios in shape: this one is made up of folio sheets (each
- containing two folio leaves) folded once and bound oblong, the
- intention being that the binder should cut through the line of folding
- at foot and bind the book as if of quarto size, each oblong leaf thus
- bound being again awkwardly folded once so as to lie within an
- ordinary quarto binding. In the present edition the original 16 tables
- are arranged to form 28, and are printed on one side of the leaf only.
-
-
-10. ¬Downinge¬, Calybute. A | DISCOVRSE | OF THE | STATE
-ECCLESIA-|STICALL OF THIS | _Kingdome in relation to the Civill._ |
-_Considered under three_ CONCLuSIONS. | With a DIGRE_SS_ION discussing |
-_some ordinary Exceptions concer-_|ning Ecclesiasticall Officers. | _By_
-C. D. | _The second Edition, revised and enlarged._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 147: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 112: p. 11 beg. _into factions_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3)
- dedication to lord Salisbury, signed “Calybute Downinge”: 1–112, the
- work, the digression occupying pp. 31–44: 112, “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 107, and 1633 D.
-
-
-11. ¬Du Moulin¬, Pierre, _d._ 1658.
-
- See _Smith_, Richard, below.
-
-
-12. ¬Fitz-Geffry¬, Charles. THE BLESSED | BIRTH-DAY | CELEBRATED | _IN_
-| Some Pious Meditations, on the | ANGELS ANTHEM. | _Luke_ 2. 14. | ALSO
-HOLY RAPTVRES | In contemplating of the most obserue-|able Adjuncts
-about our Saviours | NATIVITIE. | [_line_] | By CHARLES FITZ-GEFFRY. |
-[_line_, then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 84 _b_: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _For such
- a_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4), 35–6, Complimentary
- poems by Henry Beesley: 1–34, the Blessed Birthday: 37–55, the
- Raptures.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 607, and 1636 F.
- Grosart’s edition of Fitz-Geffrey’s poems reprints the 2nd edition
- (1636) with the passages different from it which occur in this 1st
- edition, and mentions a faulty 3rd edition of 1654.
-
-
-13. ¬Lucian.¬ CERTAINE SELECT | DIALOGVES | OF | LVCIAN: | _TOGETHER
-WJTH_ | _HIS TRVE HISTORIE_, | _Translated from the Greeke into English_
-| [_line_] | By M^r FRANCIS HICKS. | [_line_] | Whereunto is added the
-life of LuCIAN | gathered out of his owne Writings, with briefe | Notes
-and Illustrations upon each Dia-|logue and Booke, by _T. H._ M^r of Arts
-of | _Christ-Church_ in _Oxford_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 196 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Menippus.
- Thus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–4)
- dedication to dr. Brian Duppa signed “Th. Hickes”: (5–6) “To the
- honest and judicious reader” by ‘T. H.’: (7) Lucian’s epigram on his
- own book, with English translation by ‘T. H.’: (9–15) Life of Lucian:
- 1–196, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 491, 584. Francis Hickes died
- in 1630/1, and the Dialogues are edited by his son. They are Lucian’s
- Περὶ τοῦ Ἐνυπνίου ἤτοι βίος Λουκιανοῦ, Ἰκαρομένιππος, Μένιππος,
- Ὄνειρος, Κατάπλους, Χάρων, Ἀληθὴς Ἱστορία, Τίμων, Συμπόσιον.
-
-
-14. ¬Mason¬, Francis. THE | AVTHORITY | OF THE CHVRCH | in making Canons
-and | Constitutions concerning | _things indifferent_. | AND | THE
-OBEDIENCE | THERETO REQVIRED; | with particular application | to the
-present estate of the | _Church of England_. | By FRAN. MASON Batchelor
-of Diuinity, | and sometime fellow of _Merton_ | Colledge in _Oxford_. |
-The second edition Revised. | [_motto_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 85 _c_: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 72 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _remooued:
- for_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) Epistle dedicatory to
- Richard archbp. of Canterbury, from the first edition: 1–72, the work,
- on 1 Cor. xiv. 40.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 306. The first edition was
- issued at London in 1607, being then enlarged from a sermon at Norwich
- delivered in 1605. The present edition was reprinted in 1705.
-
-
-15. Mercurius Davidicus. “Mercurius Davidicus, or a patterne of Loyall
-Devotion” bears the date of 1634, but is clearly of 1643.
-
-
-16. ¬Oxford¬, University. [_device_] | A PROCLAMATION, | ¶ For the well
-ordering of the Market in the Cittie of OXFORD, and for the | redresse
-of Abuses, in Weights and Measures, within the Precincts | of the
-VNIVERSITIE of _OXFORD_. |
-
- Impr. (as colophon) 85_e_: 1634: la. 4^o: pp. [6]: p. (3) beg. _Said
- Victualls for_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—pp. (1, 3, 5), the
- proclamation.
-
- Rare. This is a proclamation by the Chancellor of the University
- (archbp. Laud), see O. Ogle’s History of the Oxford Market in the
- Oxford Historical Society’s ©Collectanea©, vol. 2. The three leaves
- are separate, and printed on one side only.
-
-
-17. ——. CORPVS | STATUTORUM | VNIVERSITATIS | OXON. | SIVE | PANDECTES
-CONSTITVTIONVM | ACADEMICARVM, E LIBRIS PVBLICIS | ET REGESTIS
-VNIVERSITATIS | CONSARCINATVS. | [two _lines_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 60_a_: 1634: fol: pp. [264], signn. ( ), §, ¶, ¶¶, ¶¶¶, A-Z,
- Aa-Kk, a-z, aa-ee^2: sign. B1^r beg. § 4. _De officio_, b1^r _eisdem
- terminis_: Double (Small) Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. ( )2^r, title:
- §1^r-2^r “Præfatio ad Lectorem”: §2^v “Admonitio ad Lectorem de veteri
- Calendario omisso”: §2^v, “Errata ...”: ¶1^r-¶¶¶2^v, “Elenchus
- Titulorum ...”: A1^r-p1^v, the Corpus, in 21 Tituli: p2^r-aa2^v,
- “Appendix Statutorum ...”: bb1^r-ee2^v, “Statuta Aularia”.
-
- This is the early form of the Laudian Statutes. Its history may be
- read in Wood’s History of the University or in Griffith’s and
- Shadwell’s edition of the later (1636) form, published in 1888.
- Briefly, certain Delegates, especially dr. Zouch and Bryan Twyne (who
- wrote the preface), completed their work, and the University sent up
- the Corpus to the Chancellor, archbp. Laud. in Aug. 1633. He altered
- it and had it printed, and in July 1634 declared that the Corpus thus
- printed (the present work) should be the statutes under which the
- University should be governed for a year, Mich. 1634–Mich. 1635.
- Finally in June 1636 the full and authentic code was formally
- approved, and additions from it were entered in the copies of the 1634
- edition, the code not being printed as a whole or precisely until
- 1888. In 1768 a new edition was printed with certain changes and
- additions, and the 1768 edition is still in progress, the successive
- statutes being still connected by paging with that issue.
-
- A large part of the edition is on parchment, being presented in that
- form to the King, the chancellor of the University, each College, the
- Halls, and the Proctors. Blank spaces are left in many places for
- additions. Large paper copies are also found. For Synopsises of the
- statutes, see 1635 O, 1638 O.
-
-
-18. ¬Pinke¬, William. THE | TRYALL | of a Christians syncere | _loue
-vnto Christ_. | [_line_] | By M^r WILLIAM PINKE, Master | of Arts late
-Fellow of Mag-|_dalen Colledge in_ | OXFORD. | [_line_, then _motto_] |
-The second Edition. | [_woodcuts._] |
-
- Impr. 97_a_: 1634: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [16] + 51 + [1] + 60 + 56 + 66
- [“2” misprinted “46”!]: pp. 11 beg. _whosoever he_, and _separated
- from_, and _head and eares_, and _those reasons I_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–11) Epistle dedicatory to lord George
- Digby, signed “William Lyford”, the editor, “Shirburn. Iul. 7. 1630.”:
- (12–16) “To the Reader”: 1–51, The discourse part 1, on 1 Cor. xvi.
- 22: (1), 1–60, part 2 on Eph. vi. 24 (beg. “Not to mispend”): 1–56,
- part 3 on the same text (beg. “I will not discourage”): 1–66, part 4,
- on Luke xiv. 26.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 475, and 1630
- P, where a reference to this, the 2nd ed., is accidentally omitted.
- This issue has four sermons and a slightly altered title.
-
-
-19. ¬Puteanus¬, Erycius. ERYCI | PuTEANI | COMVS, | SIVE | PHAGESIPOSIA
-| CIMMERIA. | SOMNIVM. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 121_a_: 1634: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [14] + 190: p. 11 beg.
- _accepto signo_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
- lines: (3–9) Præfatio, to Christophorus Ettenius: (11–14) Latin poem
- by Daniel Heinsius on the book: 1–185, the work: 186–190, Latin elegy
- by Nic. Burgundus addressed to Puteanus.
-
- A satire on the gluttony and other luxurious vices of the age, in the
- guise of a dream of what takes place among the utopian Cimmerii. The
- first edition was issued at Louvain in 1611: this may be the second in
- Latin. Puteanus died in 1646, having lived during most of his life at
- Louvain.
-
-
-20. ——. ERYCI PuTEANI | HISTORIÆ | INSVBRICÆ | libri VI. | Qui
-IRRuPTIONES BARBA-|RORuM in ITALIAM continent: | _Rerum ab Origine
-gentis ad O-_|_thonem M._ EPITOME. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 69: 1634: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [28] + 192 + [32]: p 11 beg.
- _dinis venirent_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
- lines: (3) dedication to Philip prince of Orange: (4–19) preface to
- the same, dated “Lovanii, in Arce, viii Kal. Septem. M.DC.XIV”:
- (20–23) “Animaduersio”, including some errata: (24–27) complimentary
- pieces: (28) a quotation: 1–143, the work, consisting of a
- “Præfatiuncula” and 6 books: 144, explanation introducing the
- following piece: 145–150, “Irruptio Cimbrorum in Italiam, descripta a
- Floro lib. iii.”: 151, note introducing the following piece: 152–170,
- “Additiuncula ex And. Alciati De formula R. Imperii libello”: 171–2,
- dedication of the Chronology to Floritius: 173–192, “Chronologia
- Insubrica”: (1–31) “Index rerum”.
-
- This work describes the irruptions of the Barbarians into Italy till
- the year 973: the Insubrians lived in the district round Milan. The
- history seems to have been first issued in 1614, but Puteanus was
- Professor at Milan only from 1601 to 1606.
-
-
-21. ¬Ridley¬, sir Thomas. A | ¤VIEW OF¤ | THE | CIVILE AND |
-¤ECCLESIASTI¤-|CALL LAW: | ¤And wherein the Practice of them¤ | _is
-streitned, and may be releeved_ | within this Land. | ¤_VVritten by_ S^r
-THOMAS Ridley Knight¤, | and Doctor of the Civile Law. | ¤_The second
-Edition, by_ I. G. _M^r of Arts_.¤ | [_device._] |
-
- Impr. 68_c_: 1634: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 277 + [27]: p. 11 beg. _also
- mad persons_, 201 _wrought by_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within double lines: (3–6) “To the Reader”, signed “I. G.”: (7–10)
- Epistle dedicatory to King James, signed by the author: (11–12) “To
- the Reader” by the author: 1–277, the work: (2–25) “an index of the
- principall Matters and Words ...”: (25) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 205, for the editor and book. The first
- edition was issued at London in 1607: the present one was edited by
- dr. John Gregory, who has added many notes and the index, the author
- having died in 1628/9 or 1629/30. The title in the copies seen (one on
- large paper given by the author) has been sewn or pasted in
- separately, an original titlepage having been torn out. Perhaps this
- was in order to secure proper printing in red ink, for the words
- underlined in the title above are in red ink, as are also in the
- imprint the words _Oxford, University: 1634._, and _Cum Privilegio_.
- The next editions were issued at Oxford in 1662 and 1675 or 1676. This
- is the first Oxford book in which I have noticed Anglo-Saxon type
- (Pica, pp. 184, 193, in the notes).
-
-
-22. ¬Saltonstall¬, Wye. CLAVIS | AD PORTAM, | OR | A KEY FITTED | to
-open the Gate of | Tongues. | WHEREIN YOV MAY | readily finde the Latine
-and French for | any English word necessary for | all young Schollers. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1634: (eights) 12^o: pp. [96], signn. A-F^8: sign B2^r beg.
- _annals_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A3^r, title: A4^r-5^r,
- dedication to the schoolmasters of Great Britain, signed “Wye
- Saltonstall”: A6^r-6^v, “Discipulis ... de usu huius Clavis ...
- præfatiuncula”: A7^r-8^v, five Latin and one English poem about the
- work, by Saltonstall: B1^r-F7^v, the work.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 676. This is an
- alphabetical index of English words and phrases occurring in the 1058
- sections found in Comenius’s ©Gate of Tongues©, as edited for the
- second time in Latin, English and French, by John Anchoran in 1633
- (London). Earlier editions of Comenius’s celebrated work were
- published at Leutschau in 1631 (first edition), then at Leipzig (2nd
- edition) in 1632 (both as ©Janua linguarum©), and (as ©Porta linguarum
- trilinguis©) Anchoran’s editions, Lond. 1631, and 1632: the 3rd and
- 4th London Anchoran editions 1637 and 1639 or 1640 reprint
- Saltonstall’s index, but it is noticeable that Saltonstall’s five
- short Latin introductory poems contain at least 18 false quantities,
- and that he was a commoner of Queen’s college without ever
- matriculating or taking his degree. See 1633 G.
-
-
-23. ¬Smiglecius¬, Martinus. LOGICA | MARTINI | SMIGLECII SO-|CIETATIS
-IESV, | S. THEOLOGIÆ | Doctoris, | _SELECTIS DISPUTATIONI-_|_bus &
-quæstionibus illustrata_, | Et in duos Tomos distributa: | _In qua_ |
-QVICQVID IN ARISTOTELICO | ORGANO VEL COGNITV NECESSARI-|um, vel
-obscuritate perplexum, tam clarè & per-|spicuè, quam solidè ac nervosè |
-pertractatur. | _Cum Indice Rerum copioso._ | _AD_ | Perillustrem ac
-Magnificum Dominum, | D^m THOMAM ZAMOYSCIVM, &c. |
-
- Impr. 145: 1634: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 761 + [35]: p. 11 beg.
- _Dico igitur_, 501 _lis, posterior_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title: (3–6) epistle dedicatory to Thomas Zamoyscius, dated
- “Calissii [Kalisch] ... 15 Augusti 1616”: (6) an imprimatur dated 24
- June 1616: (7–16) “Index disputationum et quæstionum ...”: 1–761, the
- work in two parts (the second part has a bastard title, with no
- imprint, but date only): (2–35) “Index rerum præcipuarum ...”.
-
- Reissued at Oxford in 1658. The first edition appeared in two volumes
- at Ingolstadt in 1618, the year of the death of the author, who was a
- Pole by birth. The subject is treated in scholastic style by
- _quaestiones_.
-
-
-24. ¬Smith¬, rev. Richard, of Barnstaple. MVNITION | AGAINST | MANS
-MISERIE | AND | MORTALITIE. | A Treatise containing the | most
-effectuall remedies a-|gainst the miserable state of | man in this life,
-selected | out of the chiefest both | Humane and Divine | Authors. |
-_BY_ | RICHARD SMITH _Prea-_|_cher of Gods Word in_ Bar-|staple _in_
-Devonshire. | [_line_] | _The third Edition._ | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 142: 1634: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [20] + 194 + [14] + 93 + [3]: pp.
- 11 beg. _kind^e. A third_, and _unto fresh Rivers_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–14) Epistle dedicatory
- to lady Elizabeth Basset, dated “Barstable ... 1609. Januarie 1 ...”,
- signed “Ricard Smyth”: (15–16) “The Contents ...”: (17–20) “The
- sinners counsell to his Soule”, a poem: 1–194, the work: (3) a title,
- within double lines:—“HERACLITVS: | OR | MEDITATIONS | _Vpon the
- vanitie and mi_⸗|_serie of humane life_; | First written in French by
- | that excellent Scholler and | admirable divine _Peter Du_ | _Moulin_
- Minister of the sa-|cred Word in the reformed | Church of Paris_:_ |
- _And translated into English_ | _by_ R. S. _Gentleman_ | [two
- _lines_]”, impr. 142: (5–8) Epistle dedicatory by the translator to
- his father “S. F. S.”: (9–14) “The author’s Epistle dedicatory to the
- Lady Anne of Rohan, ...”, signed “Peter Du Moulin”: 1–93, the work.
-
- For the first work see 1612 S, of which this is a simple reprint.
- Twenty-seven Richard Smiths took their degree at Oxford between 1550
- and 1609, and the author of this book has not yet been identified
- among them.
-
- The second work, which is necessarily linked to the first by the
- signatures, though not covered by the titlepage, is a reprint of 1609
- D. No doubt the reprinter of these works thought the two R. S.s
- identical, but they are in all probability not, the translator of
- Molinaeus being Robert Stafford.
-
-
-25. ¬Tozer¬, Henry. CHRISTVS: | SIVE | _DICTA & FACTA_ | CHRISTI: |
-Prout à quatuor Evangelistis | sparsim recitantur. | Collecta & Ordine
-disposita | ab | HENRICO TOZER, _A. M. &_ | Exoniensis _Collegij in
-Academiâ_ | Oxoniensi _Socio_.| [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 72_a_: 1634: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 67 + [5]: p. 11 beg. _1.
- Excommunicationem_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
- lines: (3–7) Epistola dedicatoria to Charles and Philip sons of the
- earl of Pembroke: 1–67, the work: (1) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 274. The matter is arranged
- in a kind of logical order and disposed in divisions and subdivisions.
- Both the dedicatees matriculated at Exeter College in 1632.
-
-
-26. ¬Zouche¬, Richard. DESCRIPTIO | IVRIS ET IVDICII | FEVDALIS,
-SE-|cundum Consuetudi-|nes _Mediolani_ & | _Normanniæ_. | _PRO_ |
-INTRODVCTIONE | AD STVDIUM | _IVRISPRVDENTI_Æ | _Anglicanæ_. | [_line_]
-| Autore R. Z. I. C. P. R. | _OXONIÆ._ | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 95_a_: 1634: eights 16^o: pp. [8] + 79 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _bes
- vel habebis_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to
- archbp. Laud: (5–6) “Iuventuti academicæ Iurisprudentiæ studiosæ”,
- “Dat. ex Aulâ Alban. Pridie Cal. Iunij 1634.”: (7–8) list of divisions
- of the work: 1–79, the work: (1) note of a natural continuation of the
- book, in Latin.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 511: the author was principal of St.
- Alban hall and, as the title indicates, Juris Civilis Professor
- Regius. Wood’s reference to a 1636 8^o edition of this book may be due
- to a confusion between it and the ©Elementa Jurisprudentiae© by the
- same author.
-
-
- 1635.
-
-1. ¬Bancroft¬, John, bp. of Oxford. ARTICLES | TO | BE ENQVIRED | OF
-WITHIN THE | Dioces of OXFORD, in the | second _Visitation_ of the Right
-Re-|verend Father in God Iohn | Lord Bishop of OXFORD. | HELD | In the
-yeare of our LORD GOD 1635. in the | eleauenth yeare of the Raigne of
-our most gra-|cious Soveraigne Lord, CHARLES, by the grace | of GOD King
-of great _Brittaine_, _France_, and | _Ireland_, Defender of the Faith
-&c., | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 152: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B1^r beg. 15
- _Whether hath_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title: A2^r, the
- oath: A2^v, the charge: A3^r, directions: A3^v-B3^r, the articles, in
- three divisions: B3^v, directions about Recusants, &c.
-
-
-2. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathanael. GEOGRAPHIE | DELINEATED FORTH | IN TWO |
-BOOKES. | CONTAINING | The Sphericall and Topicall parts thereof, | By
-NATHANAEL CARPENTER, Fellow of | Exceter Colledge in Oxford. | [_line_]
-| THE SECOND EDITION CORRECTED. | [_line_, then _motto_, then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 149: 1635: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 272 + [16] + 286 + [2] +
- 4 folded leaves, see below: pp. 11 beg. _Eearth & Water_, and
- _teration next_, 111 2. _The position_, and _monstrated in_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication, as in 1625: (6–13)
- “... Contents of each Chapter of the first Booke ...”: (15–16) “To my
- Booke”, a poem: 1–272, the first book: (1–2) not seen: (3) a
- title:—GEOGRAPHIE | THE SECOND | BOOKE. | CONTAINING | the generall
- Topicall | part thereof, | By NATHANAEL CARPENTER, Fellow of | Exceter
- Colledge in Oxford. | [_line_, then _motto_, then woodcut, and Impr.
- 149]”: (5–7) dedication, as in 1625: (9–16) “A table of the ...
- Contents of the second Booke ...”: 1–286, the second book: (1–2) not
- seen. There should be four tables as in the 1625 edition, and there
- are numerous woodcut diagrams in the text.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 422, and 1625 C. The signatures
- of the two parts are in a certain sense independent, but indicate
- essential connexion.
-
-
-3. ¬Chaucer¬, Geoffrey. AMORVM | TROILI | _ET_ | CRESEIDÆ | Libri duo
-priores | _Anglico-Latini_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 95 _a_: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [28] + 105 + [8] + 160 [“159”] + [1]:
- p. 11 beg. 13. _Great rumor_, and 15. _With that they_: English Roman
- italic and Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title, within arched border:
- (3–6) dedication to Patricius Junius (Patrick Young) the King’s
- librarian, by sir Francis Kinaston: (7–8) not seen, probably blank:
- (9–12) “Candido Lectori Franciscus Kinaston ...”, dated “Ex Aulâ Albâ
- Regiâ [Whitehall] xiii Calendarum Decembris, ... CIↃ D cxxxiiii”:
- (13–28) complimentary Latin and English poems: 2–105, the first book,
- Latin on the verso of each leaf, English on the recto: (2–7)
- dedication to John Rouse, Bodley’s librarian, by Kinaston: 1–159 (“21”
- repeated after “24”), the second book.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 38. The Latin translation is in a
- singular rhythmical rhyming metre, essentially decasyllabic iambics,
- but with an extra unaccented syllable at end, and with certain
- licences in revolving a long syllable into two short. The rhymes are
- _ababbcc_. The first two lines for example are “Dolorem Troili
- duplicem narrare | Qui Priami Regis Trojæ fuit gnatus.” This appears
- to be by far the earliest translation of any part of Chaucer into
- another language. Part of a commentary on the piece by sir F. Kinaston
- was printed in 1796. The English part is in black-letter, the Latin in
- italic Roman. One of the complimentary poems is in would-be Chaucerian
- style. The collation of this book is difficult: but probably it is
- this:—signn. A, †, *^4, **^2, ( )^1, B-Z, Aa-Nn^4: †1-**^2 is matter
- foisted in, which prevented the true fourth leaf of sign. A from
- forming, as it should, the first leaf of the Latin translation (pp.
- 1–2 of the 1st book). Accordingly one of two plans was adopted: either
- the 4th leaf of sign. A was torn off, and a new 4th leaf inserted
- where the translation begins (which seems to have been usually done,
- and which gives the collation above, assuming the existence at one
- time of an A4): or the torn-off fourth leaf was itself awkwardly
- pasted on to sign. 2**.
-
-
-4. ¬Downe¬, John. _A_ | TREATISE | OF THE TRVE | NATVRE AND |
-_DEFINITION_ | _of justifying faith_; | TOGETHER WITH A DEFENCE | of the
-same, against the Answere of | _N. Baxter_. | By IOHN DOWNE B. in
-Divinity, and some-|time _Fellow of_ EMANVEL _C. in Cambridge_. |
-[_motto_, with translation.]
-
- Impr. 126: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 404: p. 11 beg. _the Prince of_,
- 301 _that it was_: English Roman. Contents:—(p. 1) title: (3–16) “To
- the Reader”: 1–15, the treatise on justifying faith: 17–189, “A
- defence of the former treatise ... against the answer of N. B.”: 191,
- a title:—[two _lines_] | OF | THE FAITH | OF | INFANTS, | AND HOW THEY
- ARE | Iustified and Saued. | [_line_] | _By the late Reuerend and
- Learned Diuine_ | _Master_ Iohn Downe, _Bachelour of_ | _Diuinity, and
- sometimes Fellow_ | _of Emanuell Colledge_ | _in Cambridge._ |
- [_woodcut_, then impr. 126]: 193–210, the treatise: 211, a
- title:—[_line_] | 211 | [_line_] | NOT CONSENT | OF FATHERS | BVT |
- SCRIPTVRE | THE GROVND OF FAITH. | [_line_] | _Written by the occasion
- of a conference had_ | _with_ M. Bayly, _by the late Reuerend_ | _and
- Learned Diuine, Master_ Iohn | Downe, _Bachelour of Diuinity_, | _and
- sometimes Fellow of_ | _Emanuell Colledge_ | _in Cambridge._ |
- [_woodcut_, then impr. 126.]: 213–272, the treatise: 263–290, “Of
- sitting and kneeling at the Communion”: 291–296, “How S. Paul and S.
- Iames are to bee reconciled in the matter of Iustification”: 297–309,
- “... of the Creed ...”: 310–315, “A short Catechisme”: 316–320,
- “Peccatum formaliter & propriè non esse infinitum, exercitatio
- aduersus N.”: 321–325, “Of choice of meats and Abstinence”: 326–355,
- “An answer unto certaine reasons for Separation”: 356–365, “Of vowes
- and specially that of virginity”: 366–369, “A letter” of consolation:
- 371–376, “The blessed Virgin Mary is truly Deipara, the Mother of
- God”: 377–404, religious poems and translations in verse, including a
- translation of Muretus’s Institution for Children.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 287, where London is probably
- an error for Oxford: and 1633 D. This is a new set of treatises by
- Downe. The introduction to the first piece gives an amusing account of
- the controversy with Baxter.
-
-
-5. ¬Downeham¬, George. THE | ¤CHRISTIANS¤ | FREEDOME, | Wherein is fully
-expressed the | Doctrine of ¤CHRISTIAN | LIBERTIE¤. | _By the R^{t.}
-Reuerend Father in God_, | ¤GEORGE DOWNEHAM¤, | _Doctor of Diuinity and_
-| _L^d. B^p. of Derry_. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 154: 1635: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 156 + [4] + 80, and one
- folded leaf: pp. 11 begg. _of righteousnesse_, and _In the new_, 101
- _euen by_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines:
- (3–7) “To the ... Reader ...”: 1–156, the work, in 26 sections: 1–23,
- 7 additional sections: 25–76, “The necessity of handling the question
- concerning Christian Libertie”: 76–80, “A Prayer”.
-
- For the author see Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 255: see 1636
- D. The words underlined in the above title are in red ink, as well as
- “Oxford,” and “William Webb.” in the imprint. A folded leaf should
- follow the introductory matter containing “The Table” of the 26
- sections. The signatures show that pp. 1–24, 25–76 in the second part
- are genuine additions, but genuinely part of the book.
-
-
-6. ——. THE ¤CHRISTIAN¤S FREEDOME | [&c., precisely as the preceding
-article, except that “THE SECOND EDITION” is added as a new line after
-“_Derry_.”]
-
- Impr. &c., precisely as the preceding article.
-
- A simple reissue of the sheets of the first edition, room for the
- additional words on the title being found by slightly depressing the
- woodcuts. Perhaps the folded “table” was not issued with the second
- edition. Some copies have the date 1636.
-
-
-7. ¬Fawkner¬, Antony. THE | WIDDOWES | PETITION, | Delivered in a Sermon
-before the | Iudges at the Assises held at _Northampton_, | Iuly 25.
-1633. by ANTONY | FAWKNER, Parson of _Saltry_ | _All-Saints, alias
-Moygne_ | in Huntingtonshire. | [_motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 150: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 28 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _demand_,
- Πρυτανεῖα: English Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–5) Epistle
- dedicatory to sir Lewis Watson, dated “Saltry All-Saints ... Iuly 30.
- 1633”: 1–28, the Sermon, on Luke xviii. 3.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 611. Sir L. Watson was the
- author’s patron.
-
-
-8. ¬Field¬, dr. Richard. OF THE | CHURCH, | FIVE BOOKES. | [_line_] | BY
-| RICHARD FIELD, DOCTOR OF | DIVINITY, AND SOMETIMES | _Deane of_
-GLOCESTER. | [_line_] | _THE THIRD EDITION._ | [_line_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 68: 1635: (sixes) folio: pp. [16] + 906 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _tation of dangerous_, 701 _wrongs of the Court_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—_precisely_ as 1628 F, omitting the Errata on p. (15).
-
- See 1628 F, of which this appears to be a verbatim reprint.
-
-
-9. ¬Hakewill¬, George. AN | APOLOGIE [&c., precisely as 1630 H, except
-in l. 11 of this 3rd edition, PER-, not PER=, in l. 12 PETUALL AND
-UNIVERSALL, in l. 13 SIX, not FOVRE: in l. 1 of the italic type,
-_preparatives_, and the line ends with _thereunto_: in l. 7
-_testimonie_, _use_, and the line ends at _which we_. After l. 8
-(_consideration thereof_) follows:—] _The fifth and sixth are spent in
-answering Objections made since the second impression._ | [_line_] | By
-GEORGE HAKEWILL Doctour of | Divinitie and Archdeacon of _Surrey_. |
-[_line_] | _The third Edition revised, and in sundry passages and whole
-Sections augmented by_ | _the Authour; besides the addition of two
-entire bookes not formerly published._ | [_motto._] [There is also a
-London title, see below.]
-
- Impr. 68: 1635: (sixes) la. 8^o: pp. [52] + 606 + [10] + 378 + [42]:
- pp. 11 beg. _dan, and Scaliger_ and _dence doth worke_, 501 _of
- right_: English Roman. Contents:—(1–11), as 1630 H, except that p. (6)
- is blank: (13–22) “the preface”: (23) “An Advertisement to the Reader
- occasioned by this third impression”: (24–30) testimonies to the book
- and author: (31–45) “The contents ...”: (46–49) about sesterces: (50)
- extract from Boethius, with translation: (51) “An index of the tables
- added ...”: 1–606, the work, bks. 1–4: (3–6) controversial letters of
- bp. G(odfrey) G(oodman) and dr. Hakewill: (7–8) two encouragements to
- the author: 1–378, the works, bks. 5–6: (1–24) index to bks. 1–4:
- (25–30) index to bks. 5–6: (31–35) authors quoted: (36–42) texts
- quoted: (42) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 256, and 1627 H. The engraved
- title is identical with that of 1630 H, with the date altered. Books
- 5–6 appear in this edition for the first time, the former being
- chiefly directed against bp. Goodman’s ©Fall of man© (Lond. 1616) as
- reasserted at greater length in about 1630 by the author, whose
- arguments are printed in the course of this book.
-
-
-10. ¬Laurence¬, Thomas. TWO | SERMONS· | THE FIRST | PREACHED AT S^t
-_MARIES_ | in OXFORD Iuly 13. 1634. | being Act-Sunday. | THE SECOND, |
-IN THE CATHEDRALL | CHVRCH OF _SARVM_, AT THE | Visitation of the most
-Reverend | Father in God WILLIAM | Arch-Bishop of _Canterbury_, | _May_
-23. 1634. | [_line_] | By THOMAS LAVRENCE D^r of Divinity, | and late
-Fellow of _Allsoules_ Colledge, | and Chaplaine to his MAIESTY | _in_
-ORDINARY. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 82: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 40 + 34 + [2]: pp. 11 begg.
- _condition of_, and _hast given them_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
- title, within double lines: 1–34, the first sermon, on Ex. xx. 21:
- 1–40, the second sermon on 1 Cor. i. 12.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 438. The signatures would
- suggest that the Sermon on 1 Cor. i. 12 was the Act-Sermon, but all
- copies seem to be bound as above, and the prefixing of the Act Sermon
- may have been an after-thought. There is nothing in the sermons
- themselves to settle the point!
-
-
-11. ¬Legh¬, Edward. ¤SELECTED¤ | _AND_ | ¤CHOICE¤ | OBSERVATIONS |
-concerning the | TWELVE FIRST | ¤CÆSARS¤ | EMPEROVRS of | _¤ROME¤_. |
-[_line_] | ¤By EDWARD LEGH¤ Master | of Arts of _Magdalen Hall_ | in
-OXFORD. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 154: 1635: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [24] + 209 + [7]: p. 11 beg.
- _shew, as_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (9) title: (11–24) author’s
- Epistle dedicatory to his father Henry: 1–208, the observations: 209,
- “An aduertisement to the Reader”, not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 927, where other editions are
- mentioned, some with extended range of subject. The words underlined
- in the above title are printed in red, as well as “Oxford” and
- “William Webb.” in the imprint. The signatures of the prefatory matter
- are peculiar: as four blank leaves precede the title, these were
- neglected and the leaf following the title bears *2 instead of *6, no
- others having any printed signature.
-
-
-12. ¬Montague¬, bp. Richard. ¤APPARATVS¤ | AD ORIGINES |
-¤ECCLESIASTICAS¤· | COLLECTORE | [_line_] | ¤R. MONTACVTIO¤. | [_line_,
-then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 151: 1635: (fours) la. 8^o: pp. [30] + 393 + [11]: p. 11 beg.
- _sponsum est_, 301 _vetus Anna_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within border and double lines: (3) dedication to the memory of James
- i: (5–29) “Præfatio”: 1–393, the work, in 11 Apparatuses: (1)
- “Errata”, a long list: (2–11) “Index”.
-
- The author, a Cambridge man, though at this time bp. of Chichester
- (1628–38), signs the dedication as “R. M. humillimus Ecclesiæ
- Cicestrensis Minister”. This work discusses pre-Christian antiquities,
- as preparations (apparatus) to the Life of Christ which is the subject
- of the same author’s ©Origines Ecclesiasticæ© (tom. i, 2 parts, Lond.
- 1636, 1640). The underlined words in the above title are printed in
- red, as well as “Oxoniæ,” in the imprint. A copy was presented by the
- author to Henry Spelman on 4 Sept. 1635.
-
-
-13. *†¬Oxford¬, University. ... ENCYCLOPÆDIA
-
- { Seu ORBIS LITERA⸗ RVM provt in florentissimâ iam et omnium
- planè celeberrimâ
- [_device_]
- { ACADEMIA OXONI⸗ ENSI singulis Terminis publicè in
- Scholis auditoribus proponuntur
-
- No imprint, but Oxford (?), 1635 (?): (one) la. 4^o. Contents:—p. (1)
- the Encyclopædia.
-
- This is a fine sheet, engraved by “T. Cecill” on metal, 16–3/16 ×
- 16–1/16 in. In the upper part there is a dedication of “hæc
- Encyclopædia et Synopsis Statutorum” to archbp. Laud. A large series
- of concentric circular spaces fill the centre, each divided into a
- left hand and right hand half:—counting from the centre (a sun), (1)
- days of the week, (2) hours of the day, (3) subjects, (4) explanation
- of the next circle, (5) List of proper audience and books for each
- lecture: (6) explanation of the next circle, (7) lists of fines for
- absent professors and absent audience: in the four corners are notes,
- one of which supplies another title for the sheet, namely “Cyclus
- Prælectorum ... ex Corpore Statutorum depromptus et delineatus ...”.
- Some copies (issued in 1638, see below) have a small printed label
- “Iovis” pasted over “Martis”, or else the plate itself altered to
- “Iovis”, in the note that Easter Term ends on the _Tuesday_ before
- Pentecost, and a longer slip pasted at the foot containing a note
- about the teaching of Arabic and Medicine.
-
- The chart is usually found folded and pasted in the 1638 edition of
- the abridged Statutes: but a copy in the University Archives is pasted
- _between_ the two columns of the 1635 ©Synopsis Statutorum©, which in
- combination with the dedication quoted above suggests that it was
- first issued in 1635, a natural year for it, when the interest in the
- new Code of Statutes was fresh. There is nothing to suggest that it
- was printed away from Oxford. The device in the title is a well-made
- representation of the University arms with the motto “Sapientiæ et
- felicitatis”.
-
- Thomas Crossfield of Queen’s certainly edited the 1638 ©Statuta
- selecta©, and may have issued the ©Synopsis© (which is in his style),
- and possibly therefore the ©Encyclopædia©. At any rate he took the
- plate of the ©Encyclopædia© and used it in 1638. It is in his own copy
- of the ©Statuta selecta© that the altered plate is found (see above);
- and the note about Arabic and Medicine is there in his own handwriting
- preceded by a ☛, just as in the printed slip.
-
-
-14. ——. _SYNOPSIS SEV EPITOME STATVTORVM_, | _Eorum præsertim, quæ
-Iuventuti Academ._ Oxon: _maximè_ | _expedit pro Doctrinâ & Moribus
-habere cognita._ |
-
- Impr. 153: 1635: (one) folio: pp [2]: 2nd col. beg. _Tempus ad
- Gradus_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) the Synopsis, in two
- columns.
-
- These are extracts from the newly printed Corpus Statutorum, for the
- use of junior members of the University, but the fuller edition in
- book form first issued in 1638 (which see,) was taken as the model for
- all succeeding issues. The title heads the first column, and the
- colophon ends the 2nd. See the preceding article, for possible
- authorship.
-
-
-Persius. The statement by Wood (©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 523) that
-there is a 1635 _Oxford_ edition of Barten Holyday’s translation of
-Persius, which deceived Brüggemann, is erroneous: the edition referred
-to was printed at London.
-
-
-15. ¬Rives¬, John, archdeacon of Berks. ARTICLES | MINISTRED IN | THE
-FIRST VISITA-|tion of the right worshipfull M^r | IOHN RIVES Batchelour
-of Law | Arch-deacon of the Arch-dea-|conry of _Berks_, in the yeare |
-of our Lord God | 1635. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 152 _a_: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 18 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _Parishioners in_: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) the oath:
- (4) the charge: 1–18, the 77 articles: 18, a direction: (1–2) not
- seen.
-
-
-16. ¬Rouse¬, John. APPENDIX | AD | CATALOGVM | LIBRORVM IN | BIBLIOTHECA
-| BODLEIANA, | QVI PRODIIT | Anno Domini 1620. | [_line_] | EDITIO
-SECVNDA | [_line_] | Recognita, & Authoribus plus minus CIↃCIↃCIↃ
-locupletata. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 73: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 208: p. 11 beg. _App. Appianus
- Alexand._: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
- “Bibliothecarius lectori”: 1–208, the work.
-
- See 1620 J. This is Rouse’s new edition of the little Appendix to the
- 1620 edition of the Catalogue. The MSS. are still mixed with the
- printed books. The preface shows that Verneuil’s book, see below in
- this year, could be regarded as a part of this work, though formally
- distinct. Rouse’s name does not occur, but is necessarily inferred
- from the preface.
-
-
-17. [¬Verneuil¬, John]. CATALOGVS | INTERPRETVM | S. SCRIPTVRÆ, | IVXTA
-NVMERORVM ORDINEM, | QVO EXTANT IN | BIBLIOTHECA | BODLEIANA_:_ | OLIM A
-D. IAMESIO | _Jn vsum Theologorum concinnatus, nunc verò_ | _alterâ ferè
-parte auctior redditus_. | Accessit elenchus Authorum, tam recentium
-quam Antiquorum, qui | in quatuor libros Sententiarum & _Th. Aquinatis_
-Summas, Item | in Euangelia Dominicalia totius anni, & de Casibus |
-conscientiæ; nec non in Orationem Domi-|nicam, Symbolum Apostolorum, | &
-Decalogum scripserunt. | _Editio correcta, diu multùmq; desiderata._ |
-[_device._] |
-
- Impr. 73: 1635: sm. 4^o: pp. 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Rab. Maurus_: Long
- Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 3, title: 4, a preface: 5–55, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 222. This is an anonymous and
- much enlarged edition of pp. 163–179 of James’s Bodleian Catalogue
- (Oxf. 1605): made by John Verneuil sublibrarian. The preface mentions
- a pirated edition of this book, made without the knowledge of the
- authorities of the Library, but no copy seems to be known. See
- _Rouse_, above in this year.
-
-
-18. ¬Wake¬, Isaac. REX | _PLATONICVS:_ | SIVE, | DE POTENTISSIMI |
-PRINCIPIS | IACOBI | BRITANNIARVM REGIS, | ad Illustrissimam Academiam |
-Oxoniensem, aduentu, | Aug. 27. Anno | M.DC.V. | _NARRATIO_ | _Ab_
-ISAACO WAKE _Publico_ | _Academiæ ejusdem Oratore, tunc_ | _temporis
-conscripta, nunc ite-_|_rum in lucem edita, mul-_|_tis in locis auctior
-&_ | _emendatior._ | EDITIO QVINTA. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 151: 1635: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 239 + [17]: p. 11 beg.
- _tur. Ipsoque_, 201 _sed istæ_: Long Primer Roman. Contents—p. (1)
- title: (3–7) dedication as in 1st edition: 1–236, the work: 237–239,
- the Chancellor’s letter with preface: (2) title:—ORATIO | FVNEBRIS |
- HABITA IN | Templo Beatæ | M_ariæ Oxon._ | Ab ISAACO WAKE, | Publico
- Academiæ Ora[/]|_tore; Maij_ 25. _An._ 1607. | quum mœsti Oxonienses,
- | piis manibus IOHANNIS | RAINOLDI _parentarent_. | [_woodcut_, then
- Impr. 151.]: (4–16) the oration.
-
- See 1607 W. This appears to be a reprint of the 4th edition.
-
-
- 1636.
-
-1. ¬Articles.¬ ARTICVLI | DE QVIBVS CONVENIT INTER | ARCHIEPISCOPOS, |
-ET | EPISCOPOS VTRIVSQVE PROVINCIÆ, ET | Clerum vniversum in Synodo,
-Londini. An. | 1562. secundum computationem Ecclesiæ | Anglicanæ, ad
-tollendam opinionum dissentio-|_nem, & consensum in vera Reli-_|_gione
-firmandum._ | _Æditi authoritate serenissimæ_ REGINÆ. | ITEM | Liber
-quorundam Canonum | DISCIPLINÆ ECCLESIÆ | ANGLICANÆ. ANNO 1571. | 3. De
-Episcopis. | 5. De Decanis Ecclesiarum. | 8. De Archi-diaconis. | 9. De
-Cancellariis. &c. | 14 De Ædituis Ecclesiarum. | 19. De Concionatoribus.
-| 20. De Residentia. | 21. De Pluralitatibus. | 21. De Ludimagistris. |
-22. De Patronis. &c. [the last five lines are printed in a parallel line
-with the first five, a line separating the two columns] | [_woodcuts_
-between two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 151: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. 24 + 23 + [1]: pp. 11 begg. _De
- prædestinatione_, and _gendis sacris_: English Roman. Contents:—p. 1,
- title: 3–24, the Articles: 24, “Confirmatio Articulorum”: 1,
- half-title: 2, list of Canons: 3–23, the Canons: (1) “¶ Forma
- sententiæ excommunicationis.”
-
-
-2. ¬Barclay¬, John. IOANNIS | BARCLAII | POEMATVM | LIBRI DVO. |
-[_line_] | _Editio postrema aucta._ | [_line_, then _device_.]
-
- Impr. 153: 1636: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [14] + 100 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _Fregit, & Auroræ_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
- double lines: (3–6) dedication to prince (afterwards king) Charles,
- from the 1615 ed.: (7–12) a Latin poem in Charles’s honour, _beg._
- “Fama per attonitas”: 1–33, the poems, bk. 1: 34, “Ad benevolum
- Lectorem”: 35, a title:—“IOANNIS | BARCLAII | POEMATVM | LIBER II. |
- [_two lines_, then _woodcut_, then _two lines_]”, with impr. 87_a_:
- 37–66, the poems, bk. 2: 67–97 “Tumulus ... Gustavi Adolphi ...” a
- poem, by C. B.: 98–100, five short Latin poems, signed at end “H. G.”
-
- This appears to be a reprint of the 1615 (London) edition, with the
- addition of the poem on pp. 64–100. The signatures indicate that pp.
- 67-end are an addition to the original book, but a catchword on p. 66
- shows that the two parts are not independent. Only these two
- (separate) editions of Barclay’s Poems were published: the author died
- in 1621.
-
-
-3. ¬Bushell¬, Thomas. THE | SEVERALL | SPEECHES AND | Songs, at the
-presentment of | M^r BVSHELLS ROCK | TO THE | QVEENES | Most Excellent
-Majesty. | _Aug._ 23. 1636. | HER HIGHNESSE | being Gratiously Pleased
-to | Honour the said ROCK, not | only with HER | ROYALL _Presence_; |
-BVT | COMMANDED THE SAME | to be called after her owne | _Princely name_
-| HENRETTA. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 152: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. [12], signn. A^4, B^2: sign. B1^2 beg.
- _And returne_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title, within double
- lines and woodcuts: A2^r-B2^r, the speeches and songs.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 1010, where will be
- found an interesting account of Bushell’s discovery of a peculiar rock
- at Enstone near Oxford, and of the ceremonies with which it was
- presented to the Queen. The speeches and songs, presented by a hermit,
- the author himself, Echo, &c., were set to music by Simon Ive (see
- sign. B2^r).
-
-
-4. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathanael. PHILOSOPHIA | LIBERA, | [&c., exactly as 1622
-C, omitting a comma in ll. 5, 7, and with “nova”, “Carpentario”,
-“Collegii”, and “| Editio tertia, correctior |”]
-
- Impr. 159: 1636: [&c., precisely as 1622 C, except that the first leaf
- and the last two leaves have not been seen, p. 111 beg. _substantiali.
- At nullam_, and the title is within a line.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 421, and 1622 C, of which this
- is an almost exact reprint. Some copies bear the date 1637.
-
-
-Downeham, George. See 1635 D.
-
-
-5. ¬Felix¬, Marcus Minucius. M. MINVCII | FELICIS | OCTAVIVS. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 69: 1636: (twelves) 24^o: pp. [8] + 129 + [7]: p. 11 beg. _bere,
- quàm_, 111 _dicimus, non_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title within
- two bounding lines, [&c. precisely as 1631 F.]
-
- See 1627 F: this seems to be a reprint of 1631 F.
-
-
-6. ——. MINVCIVS | FELIX | His dialogne called | _OCTAVIVS_. | Containing
-a defence | of Christian | _religion_. | Translated by | RICHARD IAMES |
-of C.C.C. OXON. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 155: 1636: twelves 24^o: pp. [8] + 165 + [19]: p. 11 beg. _to
- heare both_, 111 _reputed Gods_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–6) epistle dedicatory to lady Cotton: (7–8) “To the Reader”: 1–165,
- the work: (2–12) three religious poems, “A Good Friday thought”, “A
- Christmasse Caroll” (_beg._ “Since now the jolly season’s by”), “A
- Hymn on Christs ascension”.
-
- Scarce. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 630.
-
-
-7. ¬Fitz-Geffry¬, Charles. THE BLESSED | BIRTH-DAY, | CELEBRATED IN |
-some religious meditations | on the Angels Anthem. | LUC. 2. 14. | ALSO
-HOLY | TRANSPORTATIONS | in contemplating some of the | most obserueable
-adiuncts about | _our Saviours Nativity_. |
-
- Extracted for the most { Sacred Scriptures, }
- part out of the { Ancient Fathers, } And some moderne
- { Christian Poets. }
-
-Approved Authors. | [_line_] | By CHARLES FITZ-GEFFRY. | [_line_] | The
-second Edition with Additions. |
-
- Impr. 156: 1636: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 80: p. 11 beg. _If he in
- time_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, (3–5) “To the Devote
- Author ...” a poem signed “Hen. Beesely _A.M. A.A._”: (7)
- Complimentary poem to the author by Steph. Haxby of Cambridge: 1–47,
- the Blessed Birthday, a poem: 48 “Votum Authoris ad Iesum ...”: 49–80,
- the Transportations, 16 poems.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 607. This is a reprint of the
- first edition, see 1634 F, with some additions and the omission of the
- poem before the second part. It is this second issue which Dr. Grosart
- reprinted in 1881 in Fitz-Geffrey’s ©Poems©.
-
-
-8. ¬Florus¬, Lucius Annaeus. THE | ROMAN | Histories of LUCI=|US IULIUS
-FLORUS | _from the foundation_ | _of_ ROME, _till Cæsar_ | AUGUSTUS,
-_for aboue_ | DCC. _yeares, & from then_⸗|_ce to_ TRAIAN _near_ CC. |
-_yeares, divided by_ Flor’ | _into_ IV _ages._ | _Translated into_ |
-ENGLISH |
-
- Impr. 161: 1636: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [26] + 336: p. 11 beg. _wore,
- being_, 301 _more luckie_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1–2) not seen: (3)
- engraved title, inserted: (5–10) Epistle dedicatory to George marquis
- of Buckingham, signed “Philanactophil”: (11–19), “To the Reader”:
- (20–24) “The preface of Lucius Florus”: (25–26) not seen: 1–336, the
- Histories: 336 “The end of the foure Bookes of the Roman Histories ...
- translated into English by E.M.B. Soli Deo gloria”.
-
- The translator of this work, which first appeared in English at London
- in 1618, was Edmund (Maria) Bolton. The present edition was printed in
- London but published at Oxford, and the title is the engraved one of
- 1618, by Simon Pass, displaying in the upper centre a Roman, in the
- lower centre the title, an eagle at top, and symbols and letterpress
- about, and altered in the imprint only. The collation assumes that a
- sheet of ten leaves could not be printed and that a blank leaf is
- needed before and after the prefatory matter: the title is on an
- inserted leaf. This edition was issued after the translator’s death,
- and seems not to be entered in the London Stationers Company’s
- Registers.
-
-
-9. ¬Grotius¬, Hugo. DEFENSIO | ¤FIDEI CATHOLICƤ | DE | SATISFACTIONE |
-¤CHRISTI,¤ | _Adversus_ | ¤FAVSTVM SOCINVM¤ | Senensem: | _Scripta ab_ |
-¤HVGONE GROTIO¤. | [_line_] | ¤_Cum_ Gerardi Iohannis Vossii¤ | _ad
-judicium_ Hermanni RA-|venspergeri _de hoc_ | LIBRO. | RESPONSIONE. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 153: 1636: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [12] + 256 + [40] + 136: pp. 11
- begg _Cruciatus_, and _hæc nostra_, 111 _Cap. vi_, and _tur. Paulus_:
- Pica and (2nd part) Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–10)
- “Veritatis evangelicæ studiosis ...”, dated “_Lug. Batav._ in Collegio
- Theolog. Ill. DD. Ord. _Holl_ & _Westf._ 8. _Kal. Sept._ An. Chri. CIↃ
- IↃ cxviı. Ger. Ioannides Vossius, _Coll. Regens_”: (11–12) “Lectori”
- by the unnamed editor: 1–219, the Defensio: 220–256 Testimonia
- veterum: (1–16) an index in order of contents: (17) a bastard title to
- the second part, with impr. 87 _a_, and date: (19–35) “Præfatio”,
- signed “Ger. Ioannides Vossiun ...”: (37–40) “Lectori” by the editor:
- 1–136, the Responsio.
-
- The two previous editions of Grotius’s work were issued at Leyden in
- 1617, while Vossius’s ©Responsio© was published at the same place in
- 1618. Words underlined in the above title are in red ink, as are also
- “Oxoniæ,” and “MDCXXXVI” in the imprint. N is omitted in the series of
- signatures.
-
-
-10. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟΚΟΣΜΟΣ_:_ | A | LITTLE | DESCRIPTION | OF THE
-GREAT | WORLD. | _The seventh Edition._ | [_line_] | By PETER HEYLYN. |
-[_line, motto, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 158: 1636: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + 808 + [4]: p. 11 beg.
- 1. _First then_, 701 _dates, or Vindelici_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—(precisely as 1633 H, except that the title is within
- double lines, instead of an arched border, and that every leaf has
- been seen.)
-
- See 1621 H. This is a reprint, almost line for line, of 1633 H. The
- copy seen had a folded table of climes as in the 1625 edition, after
- p. 228.
-
-
-11. [¬Lily¬, William]. A | Short Introduction | OF | GRAMMAR | GENERALLY
-| TO BE USED_:_ | _Compiled and set forth for the bring-_|ing up of all
-those that intend to at-|taine to the knowledge of the | _Latine
-tongue_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 68 _d_: 1636: (eights) 12^o: pp. [74] + 130 + [36]: p. 11 beg.
- _comprehenderunt_, 111 _Sic Ovid_: Long Primer Roman and English.
- Contents:—p. (1), title: (2) royal arms, with “C.R.”: (3–8) “¶ To the
- Reader, &c.”: (9) about letters: (10) two prayers: (11–70) a Latin
- grammar in English: (71–2) Latin poem by Will. Lily: (73) a title
- within a line and border:—“Brevissima | institutio, | _Seu_ | Ratio
- Grammatices | cognoscendæ, ad omni-|um puerorum utilita-|tem
- præscripta: _Quam solam Regia Majestas_ | _in omnibus Scholis
- do-_|_cendam præcipit_. | [_line, woodcut, line_]”, with impr. 72 _c_:
- (74) arms of the University, &c.: 1–130, a Latin grammar, syntax and
- prosody, in Latin: (1–30) “Omnium nominum ... ac verborum
- interpretatio ...”: (31–3) four Latin poems, including graces: (34)
- woodcut picture of the tree of knowledge, and students gathering the
- fruit.
-
- This is the first Latin grammar printed at Oxford since 1518, and is
- issued “Cum Privilegio.” The grammar itself was already, in its Latin
- form, more than a hundred years old, and many editions of it had been
- printed. Other Oxford editions were issued at least in 1651, 1672–3,
- 1675, 1679, 1687, 1692, 1699, 1709, 1714, 1733. For William Lily see
- Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 32. The signatures connect the two
- parts of the book.
-
- The importance of this issue is considerable. In consequence of
- disputes between John Lichfield and Turner, archbp. Laud’s attention
- had been called to the state of printing at Oxford, and the absence of
- any such printing privileges as were possessed by Cambridge. A charter
- of privileges was accordingly obtained, dated 12 Nov. 1632, confirmed
- and amplified by another dated 13 March 1632/3. These allowed the
- University to print Bibles, Prayerbooks, Grammars, Almanacs, &c.,
- which had till then been the monopolies of the London Stationers’
- Company and the University Press at Cambridge. No Bibles or
- Prayerbooks were issued at Oxford till 1675, but this Grammar and
- three Almanacs (see 1637 B, C, and W.) raised the standard of revolt
- against monopoly. On 20 March 1636/7 the Stationers’ Company agreed to
- pay the University £200 a year, if it would agree not to issue the
- classes of books in question, and no further difficulties arose till
- after the Restoration.
-
-
-12. ¬Longinus¬, Dionysius. ΔΙΟΝΥΣΙΟΥ | ΛΟΓΓΙΝΟΥ | ΡΗΤΟΡΟΣ ΠΕΡΙ | ὕψους
-λόγου βιβλίον | DIONYSII LONGINI | Rhetoris | _Præstantissimi_ | Liber |
-_De grandiloquentia sive_ | _sublimi dicendi genere_ | Latine redditus |
-ὑποθέσεσι συνοπτικαῖς | _et ad oram notationibus_ | _aliquot
-illustratus_ | [_line_] | _Edendum curavit et notarum_ | _insuper
-auctarium adjunxit. G._ L. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 112_a_: 1636: (eights) 12^o: pp. [42] + 176 + [2] + 117 + [1]
- and one folded plate: pp. 11 beg. ἐκ τοῦ φοβεροῦ, and _qui Geometriæ_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) engraved title, see below: (5–10)
- “Iuventuti Academicæ”, signed “Gerardus Langbaine”, the editor:
- (11–24) complimentary Latin pieces by Gabriel de Petra, the author of
- the Latin translation and notes, 1610, and others: (24–42) three Latin
- prefatory pieces, about Longinus: a folded oblong 16mo sheet bearing a
- Diagramma or synopsis of the subject: 1, extract from Suidas about
- Longinus: 2–161, the treatise in Greek and (on the verso of each leaf)
- Latin, with marginal notes: 162–176, (1–2) Συνόψεις, further notes:
- 1–117, (1) “Notarum auctarium” with a critical preface, and (on p. 20)
- an engraving: ending with a Latin poem on the death of Thomas
- “Wethereld” (Wetherell) of Queen’s college Oxford.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 446, and 1638 L. The first
- part of this volume to the end of the Συνόψεις except Langbaine’s
- preface, is a reprint of the 1612 (Geneva) edition by Gabriel de
- Petra: the notes are Langbaine’s first published work. The engraved
- title by William Marshall is from a metal plate, displaying Hermes, an
- eagle, Phaethon, &c., round the title: and is an inserted leaf.
- Signatures O and P are run into one. The date on the title appears to
- be that of the engraving, but as it was altered in the 2nd edition,
- though the plate is practically identical, it may be taken as the date
- of the book also.
-
-
-13. ¬Masque.¬ THE | KING | _AND_ | QVEENES | Entertainement at |
-_RICHMOND_. | AFTER | THEIR DEPARTVRE | from OXFORD: In a Masque, |
-presented by the most Illustrious | PRINCE, | _PRINCE_ | CHARLES | Sept.
-12. 1636. | [_motto_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 152: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. 31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Tom. Vellow_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within a border of woodcuts
- between lines: 3, dedication to the queen: 5–30, the masque.
-
- Rare. The introduction explains that the Masque was almost impromptu
- as concerns the speaking, the dances in which Prince Charles took a
- share being the important part. They were composed by Simon Hopper and
- the music by Charles Coleman. Most of the written part is in the
- Wiltshire dialect “because most of the interlocutors were _Wilshire_
- men.”
-
-
-14. ¬Oxford¬ University. CORONAE | CAROLINÆ | QVADRATVRA. | SIVE |
-PERPETRANDI | _IMPERII_ | CAROLINI | EX QVARTO PIGNORE | _FELICITER
-SVSCEPTO_ | _Captatum Augurium_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 151 _a_: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. [92], signn. a, aa^4, aaa^2, aaaa,
- a-d^4, e^2, A-C^4, D^2, and a folded leaf: sign. b1^r beg. _Diva
- paris_, B1^r _From the wombs_: English Roman. Contents:—sign. a1^r,
- title: a2^r-e2^v, Latin poems: A1^r-D1^v, English poems to the queen:
- D2^r “The Printers vote”, an English poem by Leonard Lichfield.
-
- Poems by members of the University of Oxford on the birth of Princess
- Elizabeth, 28 Dec. 1635: in number about 142, of which 31 are English,
- 8 Greek, 2 Hebrew and 1 French. The number of English, and their
- separation from the rest is a mark of change. Most copies want the
- folded sheet (about 11 × 6 in.), which contains an engraved picture of
- a crown on a board supported at the four corners by a prince, two
- princesses and an infant in a cradle, all upon a large pedestal.
- Beneath are six Latin verses, beginning “Quam stabilis Quadrata,” and
- then “Ita augustissimo Domino suo vovet humillima ancilla Acad. Oxon.”
- Curiously the engraving cannot possibly be correct, since the place of
- prince James is taken by a female figure! Perhaps for this reason the
- plate was soon suppressed: it is certainly now very rarely found.
-
-
-15. ——. FLOS | BRITANNICVS | VERIS NOVISSIMI | FILIOLA | CAROLO & MARJÆ
-| NATA | XVII MARTII Anno. | M.DC.XXXVI. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 151_b_: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. [100], see below: p. (11) beg. _Non
- habeo_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a border of
- woodcuts: (3–100) the poems.
-
- These are poems by members of the University of Oxford to celebrate
- the birth of the princess Anne, born 17 Mar. 1636/7 (died Dec. 1640).
- About two-thirds of the verses are to the king, chiefly in Latin (nine
- in Greek, one in Hebrew), the rest to the queen in English (two in
- French): there is one chronogram. The make-up of ordinary copies of
- the volume is extraordinary: there are no pages or signatures, but if
- A-O represent the sections the collation would be as follows, the
- figures in brackets indicating the mark affixed to the first page of
- some sections in the place where the pagination would naturally have
- been printed:—A^1, B^4, C^4 (1), D^4 (2), E^4 (3), F^4 (4), G^4 (6),
- H^4 (66: on 2nd leaf, 8). I^4 (5), K^1, L^4 (2), M^4, N^4 (1), O^4
- (3)! The last page contains a poem by the printer, Leonard Lichfield.
- I have seen a copy in which a leaf following the title bore a printed
- Latin poem beginning “Quæ Te Mascula” referring to an emblem in
- diamond form displaying three lilies and two small and one large lion;
- which emblem occurs in a pen-and-ink drawing in the above copy on an
- inserted leaf preceding the title.
-
-
-16. ¬Parsons¬, Bartholomew. A | SERMON | PREACHED | AT | THE FVNERALL OF
-| S^r FRANCIS PILE Baronet, at | _Collingborne Kingstone_ in the |
-County of _Wiltes_, on the 8. day of | _December_. 1635. | BY |
-BARTHOLOMEW PARSONS | _B.D._ and _Vicar_ there. | [two _mottos_, then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 154: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 39 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _there is a_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication to sir Francis
- Pile, “From Ludgershall. Dec. 17. 1635”: 1–39, the sermon, on Is.
- lvii. 1–2.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 26. The dedication to the son
- shows that Parsons had known the father for 20 years.
-
-
-17. ¬Pinke¬, William. THE TRIALL OF | A | CHRISTIANS | SINCERE .LOVE |
-_VNTO CHRIST_. | By M^r WILLIAM PINKE, | M^r of Arts late Fellow of |
-Magdalen Colledge | in OXFORD. | [_motto_, then _line_] | THE THIRD
-EDITION. | [_line_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 160: 1636: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [16] + 54 + 127 + [1] + 62 + [4]:
- pp. 11 beg. _lat._ 3. 13, and _shrewd grudgings_, and _vnto you what_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (14) title: 3–11 Epistle dedicatory to lord
- Digby, dated “Shirburn. Iul. 7. 1630”, by the editor William Lyford:
- (12–16) “To the reader” by W. Lyford: 1–54, sermon on 1 Cor. xvi. 22:
- 1–66, 67–127, two sermons on Eph. vi. 24: (1), 1–62, (1), sermon on
- Luke xiv. 26.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 475, and 1630 P.
-
-
-18. ¬Prideaux¬, John. “©Twenty Sermons.© Oxon 1636 qu.” [Bodl. 4to. P.
-50. Th.]
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 268. There may have been a
- collected edition with some such title issued in 1636: but probably
- Wood refers to a collection without a general title, as contained in
- 40^o P. 50 Th. (a reference added however to Wood’s ©Athenæ© by dr.
- Bliss). For a real titlepage to the collection of twenty sermons and
- for details of the separate sermons, all of which are dated 1636, see
- 1637 P.
-
-
-19. ¬Wouwerus¬, Joannes. IOANNIS WOuWERI | DIES ÆSTIVA, | SIVE | DE
-VMBRA | PÆGNION. | Unà cum | LANI DOuSÆ F. _in ean-_|_dem Declamatione_.
-| [_line_] | _Editio postrema castigatior_, | _& adjectionibus in fine_
-| _locupletior._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 153_a_: 1636: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [24] + 156 + [24]: p. 11 beg.
- _interpositionem_, 111 _riosos interemit_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title, within double lines: (3–12) dedication to Hieronymus
- Voeglerus, dated “Ex arce Gottorpiana V. Kal. Augusti CIↃ IↃ CX. T.
- Ioan. VVouwerus”: (13–23) “... Prolegomena”: 24 “Errata”: 1–124, the
- work in 28 chapters: 124–154, Dousa’s Declamatio: 154–156, Dousa’s “In
- eandem rem Carmen”: (1–4) “Index auctorum”: (5–22) “Rerum memorabilium
- Index.”
-
- This appears to be a reprint of the first (1610) edition omitting the
- Elenchus Capitum and adding Dousa’s Essay. The work is a fanciful
- treatment of the subject of shadow.
-
-
-20. ¬Zouche¬, Richard. ELEMENTA | IVRISPRVDENTIÆ | DEFINITIONIBVS, |
-Regulis, & sententiis selectioribus | _Iuris Civilis illustrata._ |
-_Quibus accessit_ | DESCRIPTIO | IVRIS & IVDICII | TEMPORALIS | Secundum
-Consuetudines | _Feudales & Normannicas_. | _Nec non_ | DESCRIPTIO |
-IVRIS & IVDICII | ECCLESIASTICI | SECVNDVM CANONES | & Constitutiones
-Anglicanas. | [_line_] | Autore R.Z. P.R. _Oxoniæ_. |[_line._]
-
- Impr. 157: 1636: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 145 + [7] + 51 + [7] + 60 + [2]:
- pp. 11 beg. _pars secunda, pars secunda_, and _riæ ex fructibus_: Pica
- Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines separated by
- woodcuts: (3–4) dedication to archbp. Laud, signed “Ric. Zouchæus”:
- (5–7) “Iuventuti iurisprudentiæ studiosæ”, dated “ex Aulâ Alban.
- Pridie Calend. Aug. 1636”: (9–12) list of parts and sections of the
- book: 1–145 the work: (2) a title, within lines:—“DESCRIPTIO | IVRIS &
- IVDICII | TEMPORALIS | SECVNDVM CON-|SVETUDINES FEV-|_DALES ET_ |
- _Normannicas_”. | [_line_, _device_, _line_, and impr. 157]: (4–6)
- list of parts &c.: 1–51, the work: (2) a title, within
- lines:—DESCRIPTIO | _JVRIS_ & _JVDICII_ | ECCLESIASTICI | SECVNDVM
- CANONES | _& CONSTITUTIONES_ | _Anglicanas_. [_line_, _device_,
- _line_, and impr. 157]: (4–7) list of parts, &c.: 1–60, the work: (1)
- note of parts still wanting to the complete treatise, and “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 511. This is a reissue and
- enlargement of 1629 Z and 1634 Z, carrying the scheme further: it was
- completed in 1640 and 1650, and several parts have been reprinted. The
- signatures weld the three parts of the present volume into one.
-
-
-⁂ The Almanacs by Booker and Wyberd, which bear 1637 on the titlepage,
-and are treated under that year, may have been issued late in 1636.
-
-
- 1637.
-
-1. ¬Barlow¬, bp. Thomas. _PIETAS IN PATREM_, | OR | A FEW TEARES VPON |
-THE LAMENTED DEATH OF | HIS MOST DEARE, AND LOVING | Father RICHARD
-BARLOW, late of | _Langill_ in _VVestmooreland_, who dyed | _December_
-29 Ann. 1636. | [_line_] | _By_ THOMAS BARLOW _Master of Arts_, |
-_Fellow of_ Queenes Coll. _in_ Oxon: _and_ | _eldest sonne of his
-deceased father_. | [_line, motto, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 16 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _To the sad_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) Τοῦ Παλλαδᾶ εἰς Θάνατον, a
- four-line Greek epigram, beg. Σῶμα πάθος ψυχῆς: 1–16, English poems,
- five by T. Barlow, seven by relations and friends.
-
- Rare. Barlow’s second poem describes his dream of his father’s death
- at the very time of its occurrence, though he did not know of the
- illness. The impression was strong enough to wake him.
-
-
-2. ¬Bense¬, Petrus. ANALOGO-DIAPHORA, | SEu | Concordantia Discrepans, |
-& Discrepantia Concordans | trium Linguarum, | _Gallicæ, Italicæ, &
-Hispanicæ_. | Unde innotescat, quantum quæque à _Romanæ_ lin-|guæ, unde
-ortum duxere, idiomate deflexerit; | earum quoque ratio & natura
-dilucidè & suc-|cinctè delineantur. | [_line_] | Operâ & studio | PETRI
-BENSE _Parisini_ apud | OXON: _has linguas profitentis_. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 98: 1637: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 72: p. 11 beg.
- _quibuscumque_: Pica Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) not seen: (3) title:
- (5–8) dedication to the University of Oxford: 1–72, the work.
-
-See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 624. This is not a formal
-grammar, but rather a discussion of the resemblances and differences of
-the languages treated in points of grammar and syntax.
-
-
-3. ¬Booker¬, John. ¤ALMANACK¤: | _Sivè_ | ¤Prognosticon Astrologicum¤, |
-& Diarium Meteorologicum, | _Vel_ | Spec¤ulum Anni¤ | _M. DC. XXXVII._ |
-[_line_] | ¤_Being the first after leap yeare_¤. | [_line_] | Calculated
-for the Meridian of the | ¤Honourable Citie of London.¤ | [_line_] |
-¤_Autore_ Johanne Bookero _Astroph._¤ | [_line, motto, line._]
-
- Impr. 171: 1637: (eights) 16^o: pp. (48), signn. A-C^8: sign. B1^r
- beg. _Saturne doth_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r title,
- within border: A1^v-A4^r, preliminary notes: A4^v-B8^r, the Almanac:
- B8^v-C8^v, astrological notes and prognostications, with a chronogram.
-
- John Booker was a prolific Almanac maker: his ©Almanac and
- Prognostication© was issued from 1631 to 1649: his ©Celestial
- Observations© from 1651 to 1662, and the ©Telescopium© from 1659 to
- 1676, but the dates may be capable of extension, and as Booker died in
- 1667, the ©Telescopium© must have been carried on by a successor under
- his name. Only this one issue was printed at Oxford, since the
- Stationers’ Company bought out the University’s right of printing this
- and certain other kinds of book in March 1636/7, see 1636 L, and
- _Booker_, _Wyberd_ below. The underlined words in the title are
- printed in red, as well as much of the woodcut border (which bears the
- signs of the zodiac, the royal arms, and an open book), the words
- “Oxford,” “to the famous Universitie. 1637.” in the imprint, and many
- words in the text. The same astrological woodcut occurs as in the
- Wyberd, but in a more injured state, showing that Wyberd had
- precedence in point of date. Booker’s Almanac for 1636 was printed at
- Cambridge.
-
-
-4. ¬Brerewood¬, Edward. TRACTATVS | QVIDAM LOGICI | DE |
-_PRÆDICABILIBVS_, | ET | PRÆDICAMENTIS | _Ab eruditissimo_ EDVARDO
-BREREWOOD, | Artium Magistro, è Collegio _Ænei-Nasi_, olim | conscripti:
-nunc verò ab erroribus (qui frequenti | transcriptione irrepserant)
-vindicati, ad pristinum nito-|rem, nativámque puritatem diligentissimâ
-manu-|scriptorum collatione restituti, & in lucem editi: | _Per_ T. S.
-_Art. Mag. & Collegij_ Ænei-Nasi _Socium . Editio tertia_, | In quâ
-accesserunt duo ejusdem Authoris insignes | _Tractatus_; prior de
-_Meteoris_, posterior de | _Oculo:_ limâ, lucéque donati: | _Per eundem_
-T. S. | [_line, motto, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 162: 1637: (eights) 12^o: pp. [32] + folded sheet + 431 + [5] +
- 105 + [3] + 26: pp. 11 begg. _Sol. Prædicabilia_, and _Sect._ 11. _In
- qua_ and 2. _In quo devehuntur_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—[exactly
- as 1631 B to p. 431, except “ê” for “e”, “Cal.” for “Calend.”: then:—]
- p. (2) a title:—“TRACTATVS DVO, | _Quorum primus est_ | DE METEORIS. |
- _Secundus_, DE OCVLO. | Quos scripsit olim eximius ille philosophus |
- EDVARDuS BREREWOODuS: | _Restituit tandem, ab erroribus mendisque_ |
- _vindicavit, & publici juris fecit_ | T.S. | Art. Mag. & Colleg.
- _Ænea=Nasensis_ | Socius | [_woodcut_] |” with impr. 109, but no name
- of place: (4) dedication as 1631 B: 1–83, De Meteoris: 84–105, De
- Mari: (1–2) woodcut diagrams of the eye: (3) Index: 1–26, De Oculo.
-
- See 1628 B, 1631 B (of which this is a reprint), Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©,
- ed. Bliss, ii. 140. The signatures connect the two divisions of this
- work.
-
-
-5. ¬Burgersdicius¬, Francon. IDEA | PHILOSOPHIÆ | TuM | MORALIS, | TuM |
-NATURALIS: | SIVE | EPITOME COMPENDIOSA | utriusque ex _Aristotele_
-excerpta, | _& methodicè disposita_: | _A_ | M. FRANC. BuRGERSDICIO in |
-Academia _Lugduno-Batavâ_, Logices & | Ethices Professore ordinario. |
-_Editio quarta prioribus castigatior._ | [_line._] |
-
- Impr. 121: 1637: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [4] + 332 + [6] + 101 + [1]: pp.
- 11 beg. _strictiore quâdam_ and 2. _Natura est_, 211 _rem quærunt_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Index Capitum & titulorum
- ...” to the Idea Phil. Mor.: 1–332, the Idea Philosophiae Moralis: (1)
- title:—“FRANCONIS BuRGERSDICI | IDEA | PHILOSOPHIÆ | NATVRALIS: | SIVE
- | Methodus definitionum & con[/]|troversiarum Physicarum. | _Editio
- postrema._” [_woodcut_, then Impr. 121]: (3–4) “Philosophiæ
- Studiosis”, signed “Franco Burgersdicius”: (5–6) “Tituli et Ordo
- disputationum”: 1–101, the Idea Philosophiae Naturalis.
-
- See 1631 B, of which this is almost a reprint, the order of the two
- parts being reversed.
-
-
-6. ¬Buridanus¬, Johannes. IOHANNIS | BVRIDANI | PHILOSOPHI | TRECENTIS
-RETRO | annis celeberrimi | QVÆSTIONES IN | DECEM LIBROS | _ETHICORVM_ |
-ARISTOTELIS | AD NICOMACHVM. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 168: 1637: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 889 + [1]: p. 13 beg.
- _ad ea quæ_, 701 _alii prodesse_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within double lines: (3–11) “Index quæstionum”: (12)
- “Typographus ad Lectores” and “Errata”: 1–889, the work in four books:
- 889, impr. 151.
-
- This is perhaps the last separate edition of this work. Buridan, who
- lived in the fourteenth century, was a disciple of the English
- philosopher Occam.
-
-
-7. ¬Bythner¬, Victorinus. ¤TABVLA DIRECTORIA.¤ | IN QVA | ¤TOTVM ΤΟ
-ΤΕΧΝΙΚΟΝ LINGVƤ | Sanctæ, ad amussim delineatur. | QuAM | ... [2 lines]
-| ¤D. HENRICO WOTTON¤ | ... [2 lines] | _inscribit Author_ | ¤VICTORINUS
-BYTHNER. _P._¤ |
-
- Impr. 98_a_: 1637: la. 4^o, see below: pp. [6], see below: col. 1 beg.
- 1 _Verba vel Nomina_: English Roman. Contents, see below.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 675. These are three rare
- sheets printed on the recto only and intended to be pasted together,
- the two lower about 14 in. high by 18½ in. wide, the upper one about 7
- × 18½ in. The two lower ones contain in five columns a Hebrew grammar
- in nine divisions, the upper one “Chaldaismi & Syriacismi,” between
- which is the title, and below them the preface “Lectori benevolo.” The
- colophon is at the end of the last column. The underlined words in the
- above title are in red, as well as a few other words, including a
- chronogram.
-
-
-8. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathanael. PHILOSOPHIA | LIBERA, | [&c.]: see 1636 C.
-
-
-Clement of Rome. References to a supposed edition of Clemens Romanus in
-1637, a reprint of the edition of 1633, are due to a confusion: the 1633
-edition alone exists.
-
-
-9. ¬Comenius¬, Johannes Amos (Komensky). CONATVVM | COMENIANORVM |
-PRAELVDIA | EX BIBLIOTHECA _S. H._ | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 72: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [6] + 52 + [6]: p. 11 beg. _Tertiò,
- portento_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Ad lectorem”,
- signed “Samuel Hartlibius”: (5) title:—“PORTA SAPIENTIAE | RESERATA_:_
- | SIVE | PANSOPHIÆ CHRISTIANÆ | SEMINARIVM. | Hoc est, | Nova,
- compendiosa, & solida omnes Sci-|entias & Artes, & quicquid manifesti
- vel occulti | est, quod ingenio humano penetrare, solertiæ imitari, |
- linguae eloqui datur, breviùs, veriùs, meliùs, quàm | hactenus,
- addiscendi Methodus. | [_line_] | _Auctore_ | Reverendo Clarissimóque
- Viro | Domino _Iohanne Amoso Comenio_. | [_line_, 2 _mottos_,
- _woodcut._]”, with impr. 72_d_: (6) a motto: 1–52, the work: (1–6)
- “Præcipua Capita Didacticæ Magnæ, à Domino Comenio elaboratæ ...”
-
- This is a kind of prospectus of the encyclopædic work on education
- which Comenius was at the time contemplating, and although issued by
- Hartlib without the permission of the author, partly in order to
- gather the opinions of scholars on the scheme, it was not displeasing
- to Comenius, especially since some of his critics suggested a
- _Collegium Pansophicum_ to work out the details. This we learn from an
- appendix by Comenius to the reprint of this Oxford edition in vol. i.
- of his ©Opera didactica omnia© (Amst. 1657), vol i. col. 403, cf. 454.
-
-
-10. ¬Cowper¬, Thomas. ¤COWPER¤ 1637. | AN | ¤ALMANACK¤ | for the yeare
-of our | ¤Lord 1637¤. | [_line_] | ¤Being the first after leap-yeare.¤ |
-[_line_] | ¤Together with some astrologicall rules¤ | for the prediction
-of weather for each | day in the yeare: with the principall High-wayes
-in _England_ and | _Wales_. | [_line_] | ¤Referred to the famous
-Universitie and¤ | ¤Citie of Oxford;¤ but may indiffe-|rently serve for
-any other place within | this Kingdome. | [_line_] | ¤_By_ THOMAS
-COWPER.¤ | [_line, motto, line._]
-
- Impr. 68_d_: 12^o: Pica Roman: title within a border of lines and
- woodcuts.
-
- Very rare. Only known from a titlepage in Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5937,
- no. 140. See note under _Booker_ above. The underlined words in the
- title above are printed in red ink, as well as “Oxford,” and “the
- famous Universitie. 1637” in the imprint, and some words in the
- “Vulgar Notes” on the back of the title.
-
-
-11. ¬Deliciae deliciarum.¬ DELITIÆ | DELITIARVM | SIVE | EPIGRAMMATVM |
-optimis quibusq; hujus & no-|vissimi seculi poetis in amplissimâ | illâ
-Bibliothecâ | BODLEIANA, | Et penè omninò alibi extantibus | ἀνθολογία,
-in unam corollam connexa | [_line_] | Operâ AB. WRIGHT Art. Bac. | _& S.
-Ioan. Bapt. Coll. Socii_. | [_line_, then _motto_.]
-
- Impr. 166: 1637: 12^o: [16] + 247 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Tale tamen_, 201
- _De Virgilio_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–8)
- dedication to dr. Will. Haywood, the editor’s tutor: (9–11) “Lectori”:
- (13–15) “Catalogus Auctorum”: 1–247, the epigrams: 247, Errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iv. 276. Wright took his M.A.
- degree on April 22, 1637. Unfortunately there is no indication of the
- source of each epigram, and almost all the authors are continental
- poets.
-
-
-12. ¬Fitz-Geffry¬, Charles. COMPASSION | TOWARDS CAPTIVES, | CHIEFLY |
-Toward our Brethren and Country-men | who are in miserable bondage | in
-BARBARIE. | _Vrged and pressed in three Sermons_ | On HEB. 13. 3. |
-[_line_] | Preached in PLYMOVTH, in _October_ 1636. | _By_ CHARLES
-FITZ-GEFFRY. | [_line_] | _Whereunto are anexed_ | An Epistle of S^t
-CYPRIAN concerning the Redemption | of the Bretheren from the bondage of
-_Barbarians_; | AND | _A passage concerning the benefits of Compassion,
-extracted_ | out of S^t AMBROSE _his second booke of_ Offices, Cap. 28.
-| [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 160 _a_: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 50 + [10]: p. 11 beg.
- _heaven, but_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication to
- John Cause mayor of Plymouth, &c.: (7–12) “To the compassionate, that
- is, to the truly Christian Reader”: 1–19, 21–35, 37–50, the three
- sermons: (1–4) the Cyprian: (5–7) the Ambrose.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 607.
-
-
-13. ¬Ironside¬, dr. Gilbert. SEVEN | QVESTIONS | OF THE | SABBATH |
-BRIEFLY DISPVTED, | after the m®a®nner of the | SCHOOLES. | Wherein such
-cases, and scruples, as are | _incident to this subject, are cleared,
-and resolved_, | [_line_] | By GILBERT IRONSIDE B.D. | [_line_, two
-_mottos_, _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 156 _a_: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 297 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _may
- see_, 201 _speaks, were_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within a line: (3–12) Epistle dedicatory to archbp. Laud: (13–18) “To
- the Reader”: (19–23) “The severall Chapters with their Contents”:
- 1–297, the work, in 31 chapters: (2) Note and “Errata.”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 939. The note before the
- Errata shows that the author saw no proofs of his book for “the
- Authors coppy being not so legible as we could have wished, we were
- forc’d to transcribe it in his absence, and by this means these
- grosser escapes hapned.”
-
-
-14. ¬Jackson¬, Thomas. DIVERSE | SERMONS, | WITH A SHORT | TREATISE |
-BEFITTING THESE | _PRESENT TIMES_, | Now first published | BY | Thomas
-Iackson, D^r _in Divinity_, | _Chaplaine in ordinary_ to his Majestie, |
-and President of _Corpus Christi Col-_|_ledge_ in Oxford. | [_note_,
-then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 152: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 51 + [3] + 70 + [2] + 96 (but
- 29–34 are numbered 1–6) + [2]: pp. 11 begg. _as no souldier_, and
- _whatsoever afflictions_, and _of his owne_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (3) title, within double lines: (5–6) dedication to
- prince Charles: (7–8) “Errata”, with sub-titles: 1–25, 27–51, 2
- sermons on 2 Chron. vi. 39–40: (2) a title:—“THREE | SERMONS |
- PREACHED | BEFORE THE | KING, | Vpon IER. 26. 19 | ... [4 lines, then
- device and impr. 152]”: 1–70, the sermons: (1) a title:—“A | TREATISE
- | CONCERNING | THE SIGNES OF | THE TIME, OR GODS | FOREWARNINGS. |
- CONTAINING | The summe of some few Sermons delive-|red partly before
- the Kings Majesty partly | in the Towne of _New-Castle_ | upon _Tine_.
- | [_woodcut_, then impr. 152]”: 1–70, three discourses: 71, a
- title:—“A | SERMON | OR | POSTILL | PREACHED IN _NEWE[/]_ | _CASTLE_
- VPON _TINE_ | The second _S_unday in | _Advent_ 1630. | [woodcut, then
- impr. 152]”: 73–93, the sermon, on Luke xxi. 25: 94–96, “A briefe
- Appendix ...”
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 668. The signatures connect
- all the parts of this volume together. Every printed page is
- surrounded by double lines on the upper and outer margin, and a single
- line elsewhere.
-
-
-15. ¬Parsons¬, Bartholomew. HONOS | & ONVS Levitarum. | OR, | Tithes
-vindicated to the | Presbyters of the Gospel: | In a Sermon preached at
-an Archidiaco[/]|nall Visitation at _Marlebrough_, in the Diocese | of
-_Sarum_, on the 10. of October. 1636. | [_line_] | By _B. P._ | [_line,_
-3 _mottos, line, device, line_].
-
- Impr. 169: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _deny, but
- he_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) Epistle dedicatory to
- Sir William Doddington “from the Rectory of _Ludgershall_, in the
- county of _Wiltes_, June 7, 1637.”: 1–31, the sermon, on Deut. xxxiii.
- 11.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 26. In the copy seen the
- title is an inserted leaf, the first leaf having been torn out:
- perhaps this is accounted for by the title given by Wood “History of
- Tithes: or Tithes vindicated ...”, and the running head line, which is
- still “The history of Tithes.” Early copies may have this older title.
-
-
-16. ——. “Sermon on Ephes. 6. 12, 13. Oxon. 1637. qu.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 26: but I have not met with
- a copy.
-
-
-17. ¬Prideaux¬, John. CERTAINE | SERMONS | PREACHED | By IOHN PRIDEAVX,
-Rector of | _Exeter Colledge, his_ MAIESTIE’S _Pro-_|_fessor in Divinity
-in_ OXFORD, _and_ | Chaplaine _in Ordinary_. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 152: 1637: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [632], see below, signn.
- ( )^1A-X^8, Y^1, Z, Aa-Rr^8, Ss^2: pp. 11 begg. as below: English
- Roman. Contents:—sign. ( ) 1^r, title: ¬i.¬ p. 1, a title, within
- double lines, as are all the succeeding titles:—“CHRISTS | COVNSELL
- FOR | ENDING LAVV | _CASES_. | AS IT HATH BEENE DELI-|VERED IN TWO
- SERMONS | vpon the fiue and twentieth verse of | _the fifth of
- Matthew_. | By IOHN PRIDEAVX, Doctor of | Divinity, _Regius
- Professor_, and Rector | of _Exeter Colledge_. | [_motto_, _woodcut_,
- and impr. 152 _b_, dated 1636]”: 3–4, dedication to Edmund Prideaux
- and his wife, dated “From Exeter Colledge in Oxford. October 12.”:
- 5–31, 33–65, the sermons: then a blank page: p. 11 beg. _Fall not_:
- ¬ii.¬ (pp. [6] + 39 + [1], p. 11 beg. _it is reserued_) p. (1) a title
- “Ephesus backsliding: considered and applied to these times ...”, with
- impr. 152 _b_, 1636, an Act sermon at St. Mary’s, July 10, on Rev. ii.
- 4: (3–6) dedication to dr. Laurence Bodley, Aug. 5: 1–39, the sermon:
- ¬iii.¬ (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. _in this point_) p. (1) a title
- “A Christians free-will offering ...”, with impr. 152_b_, 1636, a
- Christmas sermon at Christ Church, on Ps. cx. 3: 1–27, the sermon:
- ¬iv.¬ (pp. [2] + 31 + [1], p. 11 beg. _with Pilate_) p. (1) a title
- “The first fruits of the Resurrection ...” with impr. 152_b_, 1636, an
- Easter sermon at St. Peter’s in the East, Oxford, on 1 Cor. xv. 20:
- 1–31, the sermon: ¬v.¬ (pp. [2] + 26, p. 11 beg. _abiects came_) p.
- (1) a title “Gowries Conspiracie ...” with impr. 152_b_, a sermon at
- St. Mary’s, Aug. 5: 1–26, the sermon, of some slight value for the
- history of the Gowrie plot, A. D. 1600: ¬vi.¬ (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p.
- 11 beg. _Saint Augustine_), p. (1) a title “Higgaion & Selah: for the
- discovery of the powder-plot ...” with impr. 152_b_, 1636, a sermon at
- St. Mary’s on Nov. 5, on Ps. ix. 16: 1–27, the sermon: ¬vii.¬ (pp. [2]
- + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. _murmured_) p. (1) a title “Hezekiah’s
- sicknesse and recovery ...,” with impr. 152_b_, 1636, a sermon before
- the King at Woodstock, on 2 Chron. xxxii. 24: 1–27, the sermon:
- ¬viii.¬ (pp. [4]+ 24 + [8], p. 11 beg. _springs, Schismatickes_) p.
- (1) a title “Perez-Vzzah, or The Breach of Vzzah ...,” with impr.
- 152_b_, 1636, a sermon before the King at Woodstock, 24 Aug. 1624, on
- 2 Sam. vi. 6–7: (3–4) dedication to James earl of Arran, dated 22 Oct.
- 1624: 1–24 (1), the sermon: (3–8) “Alloquium serenissimo regi Iacobo
- Woodstochiæ habitum 24. Augusti. Anno 1624”: ¬ix.¬ (pp. [8] + 29 +
- [1], p. 11 beg. _acknowledge_) p. (1) a title “A sermon preached on
- the fift of October 1624. at the consecration of S^t Iames Chappell in
- Exceter Colledge ...”, with impr. 152_b_, 1636: (3–7) epistle
- dedicatory to dr. George Hakewill, dated Nov. 15: 1–29, the sermon on
- Luke xix. 46: ¬x.¬ (pp. 28, p. 11 beg. _which Iesus_) 1–28, a sermon
- on John vi. 14, without title, see below, but head line “The great
- Prophet’s Advent”: ¬xi.¬ (pp. [2] + 29+ [1], p. 11 beg. _Elenches_) p.
- (1) a title “Reverence to Rulers. A sermon preached at the Court ...”,
- with impr. 152_b_, 1636: 1–29, the sermon, on Acts xxiii. 5: ¬xii.¬
- (pp. [2] + 22, p. 11 beg. _third a comfort_) p. (1) a title “The
- draught of the brooke. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr.
- 152_b_, 1636: 1–22, the sermon, on Ps. cx. 7: ¬xiii.¬ (pp. [2] + 32,
- p. 11 beg. _a bit is_) p. (1) a title “Davids rejoycing for Christs
- Resurrection ...”, an Easter sermon at St. Peter’s in the East, on Ps.
- xvi. 10–11, with impr. 152_b_, 1636: 1–32, the sermon: ¬xiv.¬ (pp. [2]
- + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. _ther. There_) p. (1) a title “The Christians
- Expectation. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152_b_,
- 1636: 1–27, the sermon, on 2 Pet. iii. 13: ¬xv.¬ (pp. [2] + 26, p. 11
- beg. _beyond wisdome_), p. (1) a title “Wisedomes Iustification. A
- sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152_b_, 1636: 1–26, the
- sermon, on Luke vii. 35: ¬xvi.¬ (pp. [2] + 24, p. 11 beg. _Gods
- appoyntment_) p. (1) a title “Heresies progresse. A sermon preached
- before the Court ...”, with impr. 152_b_, 1636: 1–24, the sermon, on 1
- Cor. xi. 19: ¬xvii.¬ (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. _the world_) p.
- (1), a title “A Plot for preferment. A sermon preached at the Court
- ...”, with impr. 152_b_, 1636: 1–27, the sermon, on 1 Pet. v. 6:
- ¬xviii.¬ (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. _den lost_) p. (1) a title
- “The patronage of Angels. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with
- impr. 152_b_, 1636: 1–27, the sermon, on Matth. xviii. 10: ¬xix.¬ (pp.
- [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. _Iohns conclusion_) p. (1) a title
- “Idolatrous Feasting. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr.
- 152_b_, 1636: 1–27, the sermon, on 1 Cor. x. 7.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 265 for the author, and 1636
- P. This is a collection of twenty sermons by dr. Prideaux from 1614,
- several preached before the king or court, and several preached at
- Oxford: those delivered at the consecration of Exeter College Chapel
- and about Gowrie’s conspiracy being of considerable interest. All,
- except the second (which is grouped with the first) and the eleventh,
- have separate titlepages, and are often cited as separate editions,
- but the signatures run throughout the volume. Sign. Y consists of one
- leaf only, the other three having been obviously intended for a
- one-leaf title and two-leaf dedication of the sermon following (no. x
- in the above divisions, really the eleventh sermon), but apparently
- they were accidentally omitted. Some were already printed, those
- before printed at Oxford being nos. i (see 1615 P), ii (see 1614 P),
- and ix (see 1625 P): and nos. i-vii at least, were printed separately
- at London in 1621. Collections of these sermons are often found
- without the general title and in a confused order.
-
-
-18. ¬Rous¬, Francis. _ARCHÆOLOGJÆ_ | ATTICÆ | LIBRI TRES. | THREE BOOKES
-OF THE | ATTICK Antiquities. | CONTAINING | The description of the
-Citties glory, govern-|ment, division of the People, and Townes with-|in
-the _Athenian_ Territories, their Religi-|on, Superstition, Sacrifices,
-account of | their Yeare, as also a full relation | of their
-Iudicatories. | [_line_] | By FRANCIS ROuS Scholler of _Merton_ |
-Colledge in _Oxon_. | [_line_: then _motto_ from Aristides, in Greek and
-English.]
-
- Impr. 160_a_: 1637: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 149 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _in
- height_, 101 _which standing_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title
- within a line: (3–6) Epistle dedicatory to Sir Nathaniel Brent, warden
- of Merton College, Oxford, dated “From my study in Merton College,
- Iun. 9. 1637”: (7) “To the Reader”: (8) “Errata & inserenda”: 1–149,
- the work in 3 bks.: (2–3) not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 104. This book, which passed
- through several editions at Oxford (1649, 1654, 1651, 1662, 1670, and
- 1675) and London (2nd ed. 1645, 9th ed. 1685), became a companion
- volume for school use to Godwin’s ©Roman Antiquities© (see 1614 G) and
- ©Moses and Aaron© (Lond. 1625, &c.).
-
-
-19. ¬Scheibler¬, Christophorus. CHRISTOPHORI | SCHEIBLERI, | ANTEHAC IN
-ACADE-|MIA GISSENA PROFESSORIS, ET | PÆDAGOGIARCHÆ, NUNC | TREMONIÆ | in
-Ecclesia Superinten-|dentis, & in Gymnasio RECTORIS | METAPHYSICA, |
-DUOBUS LIBRIS | _Vniversum hujus scientiæ Systema comprehendens:_ | OPUS
-TUM OMNIUM FACUL-|tatum: tum inprimis Philosophiæ & Theolo-|giæ
-Studiosis utile & necessarium. | PRÆMISSA EST SUMMARIA METHO-|dus, sive
-dispositio totius Scientiæ. | Et accessit Proœmium de usu Philosophiæ in
-Theolo-|gia, & prætensa ejus ad Theologiam contrarietate. | _Additi sunt
-singulis Libris_ INDICES _duo_: alter _Capitum generalium_ | _Titulorum,
-& Articulorum in initio_: alter _rerum in fine_. | Quibus omnibus
-accessit Exercitationum auctarium, de selectis aliquibus Meta®-®|physicæ
-Capitibus. Per _T. B. Art. Mag._ & _Coll Reg._ OXON Socium. | [_line_] |
-EDITIO ULTIMA. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 167: 1637: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 21 + [3] + 472 + [48] +
- 456 + [34] + 186 + [2]: pp. 11 begg. _absolutè_, and _Pererius_, and
- _voco. Æquivocum_, and _linquatur_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) title within double lines: (3–6) Epistola dedicatoria to Ludwig,
- landgrave of Hesse, by Scheibler, dated Dec. 1616: (7–11) “Lectori
- Philo-Metaphysico ...”, signed “Thomas Barlow ...”, the editor:
- (12–13) “Summaria Methodus ...”: (14–24) “Index ad Librum primum ...”,
- in order of the chapters: 1–21 “Prooenium”: (2) a titlepage to book
- one: 1–472, bk. 1: (1–30) “Index rerum alphabeticus”: (31) a titlepage
- to book two: (33–36) Epistola dedicatoria to Philip, landgrave of
- Hesse, by Scheibler, dated March “1617”: (37–48) “Index ...”, in order
- of the chapters: 1–456, book two: (1–26) “Index rerum alphabeticus
- ...”: (27) a titlepage “Exercitationes aliquot metaphysicæ, de Deo ...
- per Thomam Barlow ...” with impr. 69: (29–31) “Lectori”: (33–34)
- “Exercitationum ... Syllabus”: 1–186, six exercises: (1) errata.
-
- Scheibler’s ©Metaphysica© was first issued in 1617, and reissued at
- Oxford in 1665, as well as often elsewhere. Bp. Barlow edited it, and
- added the Exercitationes de Deo (see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss,
- iv. 336), which were reissued in 1658. The edition of 1638 is simply a
- reissue of the sheets of the 1637 edition, with different imprint and
- date on the first titlepage, and “Meta®-®” on the first titlepage
- altered to “Meta-.” Some woodcut diagrams occur in the Exercitationes:
- in which also the sections change from eights to fours.
-
-
-20. ——. “157. Scheibleri (Chr.) Liber Commentariorum Topicorum—Oxon.
-1637.”
-
- So in “Catalogi ... librorum Richardi Davis bibliopolæ pars secunda”
- (1686), p. 75 among octavos. Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 9501, fol
- 76^v) also describes a copy: and it is probably not really rare, but
- has escaped the nets of the larger libraries.
-
-
-21. ¬Stinton¬, George. A | SERMON | PREACHED IN | THE CATHEDRALL |
-Church of _Worcester_ vp-|on Sunday Morning, | _Novemb._ 27. 1636. | IN
-| The time of PESTILENCE in o-|ther places of this Land, and now | in
-the time of the Visita-|tion of that _Citie_, with that | greivous
-Sicknesse; and | by reason of it. | By GEO. STINTON, | [_motto_, then
-_line_.]
-
- Impr. 170: 1637: (eights) 16^o: pp. 35 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _this
- consideration_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within a border of
- woodcuts: 3, dedication to Worcester: 4, the text, 1 Kings viii.
- 37–39: 1–35, the sermon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 406.
-
-
-22. ¬Thesaurus¬, Emmanuel. REVERENDI PATRIS | EMANVELIS THESAVRI | E
-SOCIETATE IESV, | CÆSARES; | Et ejusdem varia carmina_:_ | _Quibus
-accesserunt_ | Nobilissimorum ORIENTIS | & OCCIDENTIS | Pontificum
-elogia, & | _varia opera Poëtica_. | Editio secunda emendatior, cum
-auctariolo. | [_woodcuts_, then _line_.]
-
- Impr. 163: 1637: [4] + 151 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Caligula. Nascitur_: 101
- *_Illius Panis_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
- double lines: (3) Latin poem by George Herbert on Francis Bacon lord
- Verulam: (4) Latin epitaph on Gustavus Adolphus by Dan. Heinsius, with
- a chronogram: 1–38, the Cæsares: 39–151, “Ejusdem Carmina.”
-
- The first edition of this work by Emanuele Tesauro (_b._ 1581) was
- published in 1619 at Milan, and a third at the same place in 1643.
- Backer mentions doubts whether the author of this work is identical
- with the Jesuit who bore the same names. The book contains Latin
- epigrams on the Cæsars, and miscellaneous poems. The occurrence of
- Herbert’s poem in the volume is singular. I have seen a copy in which
- the first line of the title contained “R. P.” only, which probably
- indicates an early issue.
-
-
-23. ¬V[erneuil]¬, I[ohn]. A | Nomenclator | of such Tracts and | Sermons
-as have beene | printed or translated into | English upon any place | of
-holy Scripture | [_woodcuts_, then _line_] | _Operâ, studio & impensis_
-| I. V. | [_line, woodcut, line._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1637: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [156], signn. A-F^{12} G^6: sign.
- B1^r beg. _Ruth. Cap._ 4: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r,
- title: A2^r-3^v “To the courteous and judicoius Reader,” unsigned:
- A4^r-G5^r, the work; G^6, not seen.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 222. The second edition of
- this work was issued, doubled in size, in 1642. The author was
- under-librarian at the Bodleian, and had compiled this list for
- private use: nearly all the books referred to in the work have their
- Bodleian references affixed, the arrangement being in the order of the
- books of the Bible, the Apocrypha being excluded. The fact that some
- of the books were not in the library “stirred up some well-wishers ...
- who deprived themselves to furnish this Place with some bookes that
- were wanting” (_Preface of_ 2_nd edition_), among whom was Robert
- Burton.
-
-
-24. ¬Whear¬, Degory. RELECTIONES | HYEMALES, | DE RATIONE | & Methodo
-legendi | _utrasq_; _Historias_, | CIVILES ET | ECCLESIASTICAS. | Quibus
-Historici probatissimi, non solùm | ordine quo sunt legendi catenatim
-recensentur, | sed doctorum etiam virorum de singulis judicia |
-subnectuntur. | _Nec non_ | Vndè sig ulorum in Historia vel brevitas |
-dilatari, vel defectus suppleri, vel perplexitas | expediri; vel
-mutilationes deniq; temporum | injuriâ factæ resarciri possint,
-indicatur | [_line_] | à D. W. prælect. CAMDENIANO. | [_line_].
-
- Impr. 164: 1637: (eights) 12^o: pp. [32] + 285 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
- _dignos pronunciaret_, 201 _tiam minus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within a line: (3–10) dedication to the Vice-chancellor and
- Heads of Houses in the University of Oxford, dated “Ab aula
- Glocestrensi Kal. Iul. 1637”, and signed “Degoreus Whear”: (11–32)
- “Relectionum Conspectus”: 1–20 “Antelogium,” delivered 17 Oct. 1635:
- 21–285, the work, in three parts (45 + 5 + 7 sections).
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 217 and 1625 W. This is
- really the 3rd edition. Some copies have impr. 165, instead of 164,
- omitting Forest’s name.
-
-
-25. ¬Wyberd¬, John. ¤SYNOPSIS¤ | Anni Christi 1637. | _Sivè_ | ¤_Diarium
-Astronomicum, & Prog=_¤|_nosticon Astrologicum, & Me_-|_teorologicum, ad
-annum primum_ | _ab Intercalari._ 1637. | ¤Contriving, besides the
-generall state of¤ | the yeare, the daily disposition and inclination |
-of the aire, according to the severall positions | and configurations of
-the celestiall bodies. Also | the times of Conjunctions, greater and
-lesse; | and Aspects Lunar and mutuall. | ¤Faithfully supputated
-according to Art, for the use¤ | of those that are residing towards the
-end of the | 8 climate of the world; situate in the North-tem-|perate
-Zone: The Pole Artique surmounting the | Horizon 51 degrees 34 minutes.
-| [_line_] | ¤_Per_ JOANNEM WYBERDuM¤, | Philophysicum, Astronomophilon.
-| [_line, motto, line._]
-
- Impr. 68 _d_: 1637: (eights) 16^o: pp. [48], signn. A-C^8: sign. B1^r
- beg. _The Moone hath_: Long Primer Roman and English. Contents:—sign.
- A1^r, title, within a line and a border of woodcuts: A2^r-4^r
- prefatory notes, chronological and astrological: A4^v-B8^r, the
- Calendar: B8^v-C8^r, “A Prognostication” for each month.
-
- Rare. This appears to be the first and last Almanac issued by Wyberd.
- See the note under _Booker_, above in this year. Besides the words
- underlined in the above title, the words “Oxford,” and “famous
- Universitie. 1637.” in the imprint, are printed in red: as well as
- other words in the text of the book. There is an astrological woodcut
- of a man on sign. A4^r.
-
-
- 1638.
-
-1. ¬Achilles¬ Tatius. The Loves | OF | CLITOPHON | AND | LEVCIPPE. | A
-most elegant History, written in | Greeke by ACHILLES TATIuS: | And now
-Englished. | [_line, motto, line, woodcut, line._]
-
- Impr. 172: 1638: (eights) 12^o: pp. [24] + 255 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _affaires, distraction_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
- verses “On the Frontispiece.”: (3) an engraved title, see below: (5–6)
- “The Translator to the Reader”: (7–24) complimentary verses by friends
- of the translator, whose initials and Christian name are incidentally
- mentioned: 1–255, the book.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 301. The translator of the Τὰ
- κατὰ Λευκίππην καὶ Κλειτοφῶντα was Anthony Hodges, of New College.
- Wood refers to an impression of this book in 1638 without the
- commendatory verses: this would be no doubt an early issue. The
- engraved title is a fine one by W. Marshall, in which the words of the
- ordinary title, with impr. 173, are on a shell held by two mermaids;
- behind is a storm-tossed ship with the two lovers on board and Cupid
- in the stern, with the city of “Alexandria” in the background. This
- title was probably intended to be printed on the second leaf of the
- first section: but as it is, the frontispiece is on an inserted leaf,
- and the true second leaf is torn out. This book seems to be still the
- only English translation of the romance, except that in Bohn’s
- library.
-
-
-2. ¬Bancroft¬, John, bp. of Oxford. ARTICLES | TO BE | ENQVIRED OF |
-WITHIN THE DIOCES OF | OXFORD, in the trienniall _Visi-_|_tation_ of the
-Right Reverend Fa-|ther in God Iohn Lord Bi-|shop of OXFORD. | HELD | In
-the yeare of our LORD GOD 1638. in the | fourteenth yeare of the Reigne
-of our most | gracious Soveraign Lord, CHARLES | by the grace of GOD
-King of | great, _Brittaine_ _France_, & | _Ireland_, Defender of | the
-Faith &c. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 152: 1638: sm 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B1^r beg.
- _buried any_: Pica English. Contents:—p. sign. A1^r, title: A2^r-A3^r,
- Oath, Charge and Directions: A3^v-B3^r, the Articles in two divisions:
- B3^v, directions: B4, not seen.
-
-
-3. ¬Burton¬, Robert. THE | Anatomy of | melancholy | [&c., exactly as
-1628 B, being from the same plate with “fift” instead of “thirde,” and
-different date.]
-
- Impr. 70: 1638: (fours) folio: pp. [14] + 78 + [2] + 723 (after 218
- are two unnumbered leaves) + [9]: pp. 11 beg. _judgement_ and _®i®n
- Germany_, 601 _sate up late_: English Roman. Contents:—exactly as in
- the 1632 edition, except that the “Synopsis of the first partition”
- precedes the poem “ad librum suum”, the “analysis of the third
- partition” occupies pp. 399–401, and the partition extends to p. 723:
- while there is no colophon, there being no p. (10) at end.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 653 and 1621 B. There is a
- note before the _Errata_ in which the author says that the book was
- begun to be printed not long before at Edinburgh “sed à typographis
- nostris illicò suppressa, Londini mox illorum cum venia protelata,
- Oxoniæ demum perfecta.” Accordingly signn. A-X x are not Oxford
- printing, but presumably from Edinburgh type: at p. 347 begins Oxford
- printing, the prefatory matter being also Oxford work. It would appear
- that some Edinburgh printers began a reprint, that the Oxford printers
- interfered and suppressed it, that with their consent the part printed
- in Scotland was not destroyed but _protelata_, prolonged, given a
- further lease of life, at London, and finally brought to Oxford and
- completed. The woodcuts and details of printing point to the division
- being before p. 347. The signatures of the first sheet are _nil_, § 2,
- §, § 2, § 3, _nil_ (!), not counting the engraved title which should
- occur between the first and second leaf.
-
-
-4. ¬Bythner¬, Victorinus. [_line_] | לְשׁוֹן לִמּוּרִים | [_line_] |
-LINGuA ERuDITORuM. | _Hoc est_, | NOVA ET METHODICA | INSTITVTIO |
-Linguæ Sanctæ, | [_line_] | _Usui eorum_ | Quibus _Fontes Israëlis_
-plenè | intelligere, & ex illis limpidissimas | aquas haurire, curæ
-cordique est, | accommodata: | ⁂ | [_line_] | _Studio & Operâ_ |
-VICTORINI BYTHNER. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 183: 1638: (fours) 12^o: pp. [8] + 224 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
- _discerpi_, 201 _locum ubi_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (2) “Approbatio” by the Oxford Professor of Hebrew, and Imprimatur by
- the Vice-Chancellor: (3–4) Latin dedication to the dean and canons of
- Christ Church: (5) two Greek poems on the book by Edw. Wirley, rector
- of St. Ebbe’s, Oxford: (7) “Sceleton ...” of the book, a plan of
- contents: (8) “Admonitio ad Lectorem”: 1–224, the work in 11 chapters
- (120 rules), with an “Appendix de Aramæismo ...”: (1) “Nomina authorum
- ... ex quibus hæc Institutio est concinnata.”
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 675. This is the first
- edition, the second being published at Cambridge in 1645 (the author
- having moved thither when the Civil War broke out) and afterwards
- several times, separately or with the ©Lyra Prophetica©, in London.
- This is an advance on 1631 B.
-
-
-5. ¬C[aussin]¬, N[icolas]. _THE_ | uNFORTuNATE | POLITIQUE, | First
-written in French | By C. N. | _Englished by_ | G. P. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 185: 1638: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 218 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _rule,
- by_, 201 _selfe so_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a
- border of woodcut ornaments: (3–7) “To the courteous and ingenious
- reader”: 1–218, the work, bearing as a second title “The Life of
- Herod.”
-
- This is a translation of the 4th book of the well-known ©Cour Sainte©
- of Nicolas Caussin the Jesuit (_d._ 1651), entitled “De l’Impieté des
- Cours” or “Le Politique malheureux”, omitting the first few words: and
- is in fact a biography of Herod the Great, with reflections on his
- conduct. The translator gives no clue to his own name, but mentions
- the author as “the judicious and eloquent Causinus.” The ©Cour Sainte©
- (first issued in 1624) was translated as a whole into English in 1631
- and into Italian, German, Spanish, and other languages, but this 4th
- part seems never to have been issued separately in French (in Italian
- 1634, &c.): and this Oxford volume though not rare has escaped even
- the eye of Backer and his editor Sommervogel (1891), probably because
- concealed under initials. Some copies have 1639 on the titlepage.
-
-
-6. ¬Chillingworth¬, William. THE | RELIGION OF | PROTESTANTS | A SAFE
-VVAY | TO SALVATION. | OR | AN ANSVVER TO A | BOOKE ENTITLED | MERCY AND
-TRVTH, | Or, Charity maintain’d by | Catholiques, which pre-|tends to
-prove the | Contrary. | [_line_] | By WILLIAM CHILLINGWORTH Master | _of
-Arts of the University of_ OXFORD. | [_line, motto, woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 180 or 181: 1638: (fours) la. 8^o: pp. [32] + 413 + [3]: p. 11
- beg. _vinced that they_, 411 _which remain_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–7) epistle dedicatory
- to the king: (8) imprimaturs by the Vicechancellor and the two
- Theological Professors at Oxford, one dated 14 Oct. 1637: (9–31) “The
- Preface to the author of Charity maintained [M. Wilson] with an answer
- to his pamphlet entituled a Direction to N. N.”: 1–413, the book,
- which incorporates most of the text of the book answered: (1) Errata.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 91. This book (which Wood
- erroneously states was issued in 1636, and which was republished in
- 1664, 1674, 1684, 1687, 1704, 1719, 1727, 1742, 1752, 1820, 1838,
- 1845, 1846), was the effect and cause of considerable controversy,
- Chillingworth having recently reverted from Roman Catholicism to
- Protestantism, and the form of the book being that of an answer to
- part 1 of M. Wilson’s ©Mercy and truth or Charity maintayn’d© (1634),
- itself an answer to Potter’s ©Want of Charity© (see 1633 P). The
- controversy is well described in the Dict. of National Biography.
- There was a suspicion that Wilson obtained advance copies of the
- sheets of this book as it went through the press, see Laud’s History
- of the Chancellorship under the year, where are also given the
- archbishop’s views about the advisability of Chillingworth answering
- the second part also of Wilson’s book. The present volume is headed
- “Part i.” throughout. The issue of this volume with an imprint showing
- that it was published in London is said to have some slight changes,
- but they are not easily to be found, and in general the two issues
- appear to be identical. The description of the Errata and their cause
- shows that it was the custom, at least at Oxford, for authors to
- revise their proofs—which has been recently denied.
-
-
-7. ¬C[roke]¬, dr. Ch[arles]. A SAD | MEMORIALL | OF | HENRY CURWEN |
-ESQuIRE, THE MOST | WORTHY AND ONELY | CHILD OF S^r PATRICIuS | CuRWEN
-Baronet of _War-_|_kington_ in _Cum_|_berland_, | WHO WITH INFI-|NITE
-SORROW OF | all that knew him depar-|ted this life _August:_ 21. | being
-Sunday: | 1636. | IN THE FOURTEENTH | yeare of his age; and lyes
-in|terred in the Church of | _Amersham_ in _Buc-_|_kinghamshire_. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 119: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 32: p. 11 beg. _leeve that_: Great
- Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within arched border: (3–4)
- dedication to sir Patricius and lady Curwen, signed “Ch. C.”: (5) “The
- Author to the Reader”: (7–8) not seen: 1–23, the sermon, on Job xiv.
- 2: 24–32, description of the funeral and copies of the verses upon the
- hearse.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 424. Sir Patricius
- Curwen’s son had been sent for tuition to the Rector of Amersham, dr.
- Croke, in whose house he died. The monument still exists at Amersham,
- and is described in Lipscomb’s ©Buckinghamshire©, iii. 169: the burial
- was on 23 Aug. 1636. The preface explains that “these papers have lien
- two years in Cumberland in a Manuscript, which privacie not satisfying
- the great affection of Noble Parents towards their deceased Son, they
- are now come to ... view”. The ten copies of verses are in Latin and
- English, the most considerable being “a Dialogue” in verse by Paul
- Solomeaux a Frenchman.
-
-
-8. ¬Florus¬, Lucius Julius. L. JULII FLORI | rerum à | ¤ROMANIS¤ |
-¤GESTARVM¤ | LIBRI IV, | ¤A JOHANNE STADIO _emendati_.¤ | _Editio nova
-singulis Neotericis purgatior_ | _& emendatior._ | _SEORSUM EXCUSUS_ |
-¤IN EOS COMMENTARIuS¤ | ¤JOHAN: STADII, Historiæ & Ma-¤|theseos Lovanii
-Professoris primi, | elaboratissimus: | ¤Cui accesserunt Chronologicæ
-Doctiss:¤ | CLAuD: SALMASII excerptiones. | Unà cum variis lectionibus
-ex notis _Gruteri_, | _Salmasii_, _Vineti_, & editionibus, colle-|ctis;
-& cum hâc nostrâ collatis: | ¤_Sub calce prodit_ L. Ampelii _Liber
-Memorialis ex_¤ | _Clariss: Salmasii bibliotheca petitus_. | Cum Indice
-Rerum & Verborum | uberrimo. | [two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 121: 1638: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [4] + 137 + [1] + 319 + [123] +
- 31 + [1]: pp. 11 begg. _immortalium, rum pleb., quem Carthaginienses_:
- Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Typographus
- Lectori”: 1, a title precisely as 1631 F, except that all V’s are now
- U’s, I’s consonantal are J’s, and ij’s are ii’s, and in ll. 7–8
- “_purgatior_ | _& emendatior_”, with impr. 72 _a_: 3–137, (1), 1–319,
- (1–35) are also precisely as in 1631 F, the titlepage on p. 2
- differing slightly in minute points: (36–67) the Excerptiones, with
- Epilogus: (68–115) “Ad Florum variarum lectionum libellus”: (116–123),
- 1–31 “Lucius Ampelius ex bibliotheca Cl. Salmasii”, with preface.
-
- This is a reprint of 1631 F, with additions shown on the titlepage.
- The underlined words are in red, as well as “Oxoniæ,” in the imprint.
-
-
-9. ¬Gardyner¬, dr. Richard. A | SERMON | PREACH’D IN | THE CATHEDRALL |
-CHVRCH OF CHRIST | _IN OXFORD_, | On CHRISTMAS Day_:_ | Wherein is
-defended the Catholique | Doctrine that Christ is True | God Truely
-Incarnate. | _AGAINST THE OLDE DE-_|_cay’d Heresies newely Reviu’d in_ |
-_these later Dayes._ | [_line_] | BY | RICHARD GARDYNER, D.D. And |
-_Canon_ of the same _Church_. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 175: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _pable to
- save_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title, within a line:
- (5–8) dedication to dr. Duppa dean of Ch. Ch.: 1–31, the sermon, on
- John i. 14.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 921.
-
-
-10. ——. _A SERMON_ | PREACH’D | ON EASTER-DAY | AT OXFORD, IN SAINT |
-PETERS CHVRCH IN THE | EAST, the Accustomed place for the | REHEARSALL
-SERMON on | THAT DAY: | Wherein is prov’d the SONNE’S | Equality with
-the FATHER, the | _Deity of the Holy GHOST_, | AND | The Resurrection of
-the same Numericall Body, | _Against the old, and Recent Oppugners of_ |
-_these_ Sacred Verities. | [_line_] | BY | RICHARD GARDYNER, D.D. and
-Canon of | the Cathedrall Church of Christ in OXFORD. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 174: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _the vertue_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line: (3–7)
- Epistle dedicatory to dr. Richard Baylie: 1–31, the sermon, on Rom.
- viii. 11.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 921.
-
-
-11. ¬Godwyn¬, Thomas. ROMANÆ | HISTORIAE | ANTHOLOGIA | [&c., exactly as
-1633 G, except in line 9 “&” for “and,” “use,” and “inlarged by | _the
-Author_.”]
-
- Impr. 182: 1638: sm. 4^o: [collation, contents &c. precisely as 1633
- G, except signature of dedication “Tho:” not “Tho.”]
-
- See 1614 G. This appears to be an absolute reprint of the 1633
- edition.
-
-
-12. ¬Jackson¬, dr. Thomas. A | TREATISE | OF THE CONSECRATION | OF THE
-SONNE OF | God to his everlasting | PRIESTHOOD. | _AND_ | THE
-ACCOMPLISHMENT | of it by his glorious Resurrection | _and Ascension_. |
-BEING THE NINTH BOOK | of Commentaries upon the | Apostles CREED. |
-CONTINVED BY | THOMAS IACKSON Doctor in | Divinity, Chaplaine in
-ordinary to | his MAIESTY, and President of | C. C. C. in OXFORD. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 180_a_: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 352 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _the
- wages_, 301 _10.36. This_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within double lines: (3–7) Epistle dedicatory to the King: (9–11) “To
- the Christian Reader”: (13–22) “A table of the principall Arguments
- ...”, a list of contents: (23) “Errata”: 1–352, (1–3), the treatise,
- in 43 chapters.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii. 667. Ten books of Jackson’s Commentary on
- the Creed were published in 1613–1654, this being the 9th and the last
- issued in the author’s lifetime, he dying in 1640. This part was
- published (according to Wood) in 1628 and 1633 in London, and now in
- Oxford. Every page is within lines.
-
-
-13. ¬Longinus¬, Dionysius. ΔΙΟΝΥΣΙΟΥ | ΛΟΓΓΙΝΟΥ | [&c., from the same
-plate as 1636 L, except that a new line is added at end “Cum Indice”,
-the imprint and date are altered, and at the foot outside the bounding
-line is “_editio Postrema_.”]
-
- Impr. 87 _a_: 1638: [&c. precisely as 1636 L, except that the page
- following 117 bears in addition “Errata ...”, and a new “Index rerum
- et verborum” is appended on 14 pages (the last of which adds
- “Imprimatur. _Ric. Baylie Vice-canc. Oxon._”), and 4 blank pages
- follow: so that the collation is pp. [42] + 176 + [2] + 117 + [19] and
- one folded plate.]
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 446. This is a reissue of the
- sheets of 1636 L with the changes noted above. Some copies omit the
- preface by Langbaine and with it the blank sheet before the inserted
- (engraved) title. Conversely there are copies of this edition with the
- 1636 title and no ornament at the back of the folded plate.
-
-
-14. ¬Matthew¬, archbp. Tobias. PIISSIMI | ET | EMINENTISSIMI | VIRI, D.
-TOBIÆ | MATTHÆI _Archiepis-_|_copi_ olim _Eboracensis_ | CONCIO
-APO-|logetica adversus | Campianum. | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 176: 1638: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [10] + 86: p. 11 beg. _ducens
- qui_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line doubled at the
- sides: (3) “Campiani Calumnia ... quam D. Tobias Matthæus hac suâ
- Concione depellit”: (4–9) Testimonia about the sermon and author:
- 1–86, the sermon, on Deut. xxxii. 7.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 871, but the incident which
- was the occasion of the sermon is related on col. 870. Matthew died on
- 29 Mar. 1628, and this sermon was intended to disprove Campian’s
- statement that Matthew practically confessed that if one read and
- believed the fathers he would become a Papist. The sermon was
- originally delivered at Oxford on 9 Oct. 1581, but this is certainly
- the first printed edition.
-
-
-15. ¬Oxford¬, Christ Church. DEATH REPEAL’D | BY A | THANKFVLL MEMORIALL
-| Sent from CHRIST-CHuRCH | in OXFORD, | _CELEBRATING_ | THE NOBLE
-DESERTS OF | the Right Honourable, | PAVLE, | Late Lord VIS-COuNT |
-BAYNING | of SuDBuRY. | Who changed his Earthly Honours | _Iune the_ 11.
-1638. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 174: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 50 (“42”) + [2]: p. 11 beg. _We
- may believe_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
- lines: (3–4) dedication to lady Penelope widow of viscount Bayning:
- 1-“42”, the poems.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 468. These poems on lord
- Bayning’s death at Bentley hall in Essex are all by Christ Church men,
- 19 in English, 11 in Latin. William Cartwright, Robert Burton, John
- Fell, Martin Llewellin and Jasper Mayne are among the writers. Lord
- Bayning took his degree from Christ Church in 1633, but was only 24
- years old at his death, when the title became extinct.
-
-
-16. ¬Oxford¬, University. _Musarum Oxoniensium_ | CHARISTERIA | PRO |
-SERENISSIMA | _REGINA_ | MARIA, | RECENS | E NIXVS LABORIOSI |
-discrimine receptâ. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 151 _b_: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [88], signn. A-D, DD, E, a-b, bb,
- c-d^4: sign. B1^r beg. _Qui primos_: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
- A1^r title, within double lines: A2^r-d4^v, poems.
-
- These are verses to congratulate the Queen on her safe delivery and
- condole with her for the loss of the infant princess, who seems to
- have lived only a few hours. The reference is apparently to the birth
- of the princess Catherine (_b._ and _d._ 29 Jan. 1638/9), but the
- ordinary pedigrees and histories seem not to notice this event. The
- poems are in Latin and English, except three Greek and two French. The
- printer (Lichfield) contributes a poem at the end. The signatures show
- the hasty method of printing.
-
-
-17. ——. ¤STATVTA¤ | _Selecta è Corpore_ | _Statutorum_ | ¤VNIVERSITATIS¤
-| OXON, | _¤Vt in promptu & ad ma¤-_|num sint, quæ magis ad usum, |
-(_præcipuè Iuniorum_) | facere videntur: | [_line_, then _woodcut_, then
-_line_.]
-
- Impr. 179: 1638: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 213 + [15], and two folding
- plates: p. 11 beg. _libros de Cœlo_, 201 _non priùs_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—p. (3) title, within a border: (5–7) “Admonitio ad lectorem
- de veteri Calendario omisso”, with a table of “Non Dis.” days: (8)
- Explanation of symbols used: 1–197, the statutes: 198–205, “Statuta
- Bibliothecæ Bodleianæ ... 1620”: 207–213, “Επινομις: seu explanatio
- Iuramenti ...”: (2–3), not seen: (4–12) “Elenchus Materiarum”: (14)
- “Errata ...”.
-
- This is the first edition of the selected Statutes, the beginning of a
- long series, and was compiled by Thomas Crossfield of Queen’s College.
- Other editions were issued in 1661, and with the title “Parecbolæ” in
- 1671, 1674, 1682, 1693, 1705, 1710, 1721, 1729, 1740, 1756, 1771,
- 1784, 1794, 1808, 1815, 1820, 1828, 1830, 1835, 1838, 1840, 1841,
- 1842, 1843, 1845, 1846, and no doubt in some other years, especially
- after 1830: the book was in fact reprinted whenever the stock in hand
- was exhausted. Wharton’s ©Second Volume of the Remains of ... William
- Laud ...©, under the date, proves that it was issued in Jan. 1637/8. A
- small folded sheet “Indiculus Statutorum”, a plan of them arranged by
- subjects and bearing the signature A2, should follow the titlepage,
- and in some copies the large ©Encyclopædia©, described in 1635 O, is
- inserted to face p. 16 or 20: but the book can hardly be pronounced
- imperfect, if this plate is wanting. The signatures of the prefatory
- matter are peculiar: the first two leaves (blank, and title) form a
- section of themselves, and also the next two, not counting the folded
- leaf, and this even in large paper copies. So too sign. Q^6 is divided
- into two sets of two and four leaves respectively! The 4th leaf of P^4
- is presumably blank and perhaps always torn off. The underlined words
- in the above title are printed in red, as well as “Excusa cum
- Licentiâ,” and “pro Guil: Webb,” in the imprint.
-
-
-18. ¬Ranchinus¬, Gulielmus. A | REVIEW | OF THE | COVNCELL | OF | TRENT.
-| VVherein are contained the severall | nullities of it: With the many
-grievan[/]|ces and prejudices done by it to Christian | Kings and
-Princes: | As also to all Catholique Churches in the | World; and more
-particularly to the | GALLICANE Church. | [two _lines_] | First writ in
-_French_ by a learned _Roman_-Catholique. | Now | _Translated into_
-English _by_ G. L. | [two _lines_ before, between and after a _motto_
-and _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 177: 1638: (fours) la. 8^o: pp. [28] + 388: p. 11 beg. _sider
- these_, 301 _to determine_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title, within
- double line: (3–4) dedication to dr. Christopher Potter, by Gerard
- Langbaine the translator, dated “Queenes Colledge in Oxford April 12.
- 1638”: (5–10) “To the Reader” by the translator: (11–12) “An
- Advertisement to the Reader...” by the anonymous author: (13–26) “A
- summary of the Chapters”: (27) “Faults escaped”: 1–388, the work, in
- seven books.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 448. The author’s name occurs
- in Langbaine’s Preface. Ranchin’s ©Revision du Concil de Trente© was
- published anonymously in 1600.
-
-
-19. ¬Randolph¬, Thomas. POEMS | WITH THE | MVSES | LOOKING[/]GLASSE_:_ |
-_AND_ | AMYNTAS· | [_line_] | By THOMAS RANDOLPH Master of Arts, | and
-late Fellow of _Trinity_ Colledge in | _Cambridge_. | [_line_, then
-_device_.]
-
- Impr. 174: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [24] + 128 + [2] + 93 + [7] + 114: pp.
- 11 beg. _Went forth, shall see_ and _For to be_: English Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line double at the sides: (3–24)
- poems on the author and book: 1–128, the poems: (1) a
- title:—“[_woodcut_] | THE MVSES | LOOKING[/]GLASSE. | [_line_] | By T.
- R. | [_line_, then _woodcut_]”, with impr. 184: 1–93, the play, in
- five acts: (2) a title:—“[two _lines_] | AMYNTAS | OR THE | IMPOSSIBLE
- DOVVRY. | A PASTORALL ACTED | before the KING & QuEENE | at
- _White-Hall_. | [_line_] | Written by THOMAS RANDOLPH. | [_line,
- motto, woodcut_]”, with impr. 184: (4) “Drammatis Personæ”: (6–7),
- 1–114, the play in five acts.
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 565, and the
- ©Retrospective Review© vi. 61. The volume was posthumous (the author
- having died in March 1634/5) and was edited by his brother Robert
- Randolph of Christ Church, Oxford. There are twelve sets of
- complimentary verses, in Latin and English, by the editor, Owen
- Feltham, and others. Editions of the poems and plays were published in
- 1640 (Oxford), 1643 (London), 1652 (London), 1664 (London) and 1668
- (Oxford): both the last call themselves the 5th edition. The
- signatures run through the entire work.
-
-
-20. ¬Reusner¬, Nicolas. NICOLAI REuSNERI LEORINI | IC. Comitis Palat.
-Cæs. | SYMBOLORVM | IMPERATORIORuM | Classis Prima. | [&c., exactly as
-1633 R, except “Impp:”, “_Julio_”, “OPuS PHILOLOGICuM,” “utile,” and
-“_SEXTA_” for “_QUINTA_”].
-
- Impr. 137: 1638: [&c. exactly as 1633 R, contents and all, except that
- the 3rd part contains 224 numbered pages, the last _not_ being
- misprinted “198” as it is in the 5th edition: also the 3rd p. 11
- begins “_Nam & secundùm_”: the second and third titles differ slightly
- in small details. The number of unnumbered pages at the end of the 3rd
- part are 36, and the “34” in the collation of 1633 R is an error for
- 36: the four last leaves in each edition are blank.]
-
- This is simply a verbatim reprint of 1633 R.
-
-
-21. ¬Scheiblerus¬, Christophorus. ... | METAPHYSICA | [precisely as 1637
-S, except as there noted].
-
- Impr. 178: 1638 [&c. exactly as 1637 S, except as there noted].
-
- This is a reissue of 1637 S.
-
-
-22. ¬Smiglecius¬, Martinus. LOGICA | MARTINI | SMIGLECII | SOCIETATIS
-IESV | S: THEOLOGIÆ | DOCTORIS, | SELECTIS DISPVTATIO[/]|nibus &
-quæstionibus illustrata, | ET IN DUOS TOMOS DISTRIBUTA: | In qua |
-Quicquid in _Aristotelico_ organo vel | cognitu necessarium, vel
-obscuritate perple-|xum, tam clarè & perspicuè, quàm so-|lidè ac nervosè
-pertractatur. | [_line_] | _Cum_ INDICE _Rerum copioso_. | [_line_] | AD
-Perillustrem ac Magnificum Dominum, | D^m THOMAM ZAMOYSCIuM, &c. |
-
- Impr. 162_a_: 1638: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 435 + [3] +
- “435”-“761” + [35]: p. 11 beg. _Dico igitur_, 701 _Non tamen_: Long
- Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–6)
- Epistola dedicatoria to Thomas Zamoyscius, dated “Calissii in Collegio
- Carnecoviano Societatis Jesu, 15. Augusti 1616”: (6) “Approbatio R. P.
- Provincialis,” 24 June 1616: (7–11) “Index disputationum et quæstionum
- prima parte Contentarum”, a list: (12–16) “Index ... partis secundæ”:
- 1–435, “Pars prima logicæ ...”, disputations 1–11: (2) a bastard
- title:—“Logicæ ... pars altera ...”: 435–761, the second part, dispp.
- 12–18: (2–35) “Index rerum præcipuarum ...”.
-
- See 1634 S: this is a verbatim reprint of that edition.
-
-
-23. ¬Taylor¬, bp. Jeremy. A | SERMON | PREACHED IN | SAINT MARIES |
-Church in OXFORD. | Vpon the Anniversary of the | GuNPOWDER-TREASON. |
-[_line_] | By IEREMY TAYLOR, Fellow of | _Allsoules Colledge in_ OXFORD.
-| [_line, motto, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 180: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [10] + 64: p. 11 beg. _third time_:
- English Roman. Contents: p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–10)
- dedication to archbp. Laud: 1–64, the sermon, on Luke ix. 54.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 787. This sermon, which seems
- to have been delivered on Nov. 5, 1638, dashed the hopes which the
- Roman Catholics seem to have entertained of the conversion of Taylor
- to their faith. Wood asserts (_ut supra_, 782) that “several things
- were put in[to the sermon] against the Papists by the then
- vice-chanc.”, dr. Accepted Frewen. The sheets of this work were
- reissued as part of Taylor’s ©Treatises© (Lond. 1648).
-
-
-24. *¬Thornburgh¬, Edward, archdeacon of Worcester. ARTICLES TO BE
-ENQVIRED | OF AND ANSWERED | unto by the Church-wardens and | Sworne-men
-within the _Arch-Dea-_|conrie of _Worcester_ in the Visitation | of the
-Right worshipfull _Edward_ | _Thornburgh_ D^r of Divini-|ty Arch-Deacon
-of | _Worcester_. | _Anno Domini_ | [_line, woodcut, line._]
-
- Impr. 152: no date: sm. 4^o: pp. [16], signn. A-B^4: sign. B1^r beg.
- 16. _Hath your_: Pica English. Contents:—sign. A1^r, a form of summons
- to appear: A2^r, the title: A2^v-3^r, Directions and Oath: A4^r-B4^v,
- the 86 articles.
-
- This is not dated, but the copy seen bore a summons to
- Stratford-on-Avon officials, filled up with the date 11 Apr. 1638. It
- could not be earlier than 1635 from the woodcut ornaments used and the
- printer, and is probably of the year 1638.
-
-
-25. ¬Valdés¬, Juan de. THE HUNDRED AND TEN | CONSIDERATIONS | of
-_S_I_GNIOR_ | IOHN VALDESSO_:_ | TREATING OF THOSE | things which are
-most profitable, most | necessary, and most perfect in our | Christian
-Profession. | WRITTEN IN SPANISH, | Brought out of Italy by _Vergerius_,
-and | first set forth in Italian at _Basil_ by | _Cælius Secundus
-Curio_, | ANNO 1550. | Afterward translated into French, and Printed |
-at _Lions_ 1563. and again at Paris 1565. | And now translated out of
-the Italian | Copy into English, with notes. | Whereunto is added an
-Epistle of the Authors, | or a Preface to his Divine Commentary | _upon
-the Romans_. | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 180: 1638: sm. 4^o: pp. [32] + 311 + [13]: p. 11 beg. _Consid.
- V_, 301 _the Heavens_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a
- line: (3–4) “The Publisher to the Reader”: (5–13) “Brief notes
- relating to the dubious and offensive places ...”: (14–19) the preface
- of Curio (Basil, 1 May 1550): (20–28) “A Table of the ...
- Considerations”: (30) A “censure” of the book, or imprimatur, by
- Thomas Jackson president of Corpus Christi College, Oxford: (31–2) “A
- copy of a letter written by Mr. George Herbert to his friend the
- Translator of this Book” dated “Bemmorton Sept. 29”, 1637: 1–311, the
- Considerations: (1–11) the Epistle: (12) “Errata”.
-
- This translation of Juan de Valdés’ work from the Italian is by
- Nicholas Ferrar of Little Gidding (_d._ 4 Dec. 1637), and it is
- interesting to find that there is a copy of this book in Little
- Gidding binding (Quaritch’s General Catalogue of Books, vol. i.
- (1887), no. 5929: £4). There was an edition issued at Cambridge in
- 1646.
-
-
- 1639.
-
-Bacon, sir Francis. Of the advancement and proficience of learning: see
-1640 B.
-
-
-1. ¬Balzac¬, Jean Louis Guez de. _A_ | COLLECTION | OF SOME MODERN |
-EPISTLES | _OF MONSIEVR_ | DE BALZAC. | CAREFVLLY | TRANSLATED OuT | _OF
-FRENCH_. | [_line_] | _Being the Fourth and last Volume._ | [_line,
-motto, woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 184: 1639: (eights) 12^o: pp. [48] + 249 + [9]: p. 11 beg. _Let.
- III_, 201 _there is no_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) engraved
- title, see below: (3) title, within double lines: (5–11) “To the
- Reader”, signed “F. B.”, the printer F. Bowman: (13–15) “An
- advertisement of Mons. the King”: (17–47) letters, a poem &c., see
- below: 1–249, the letters: (2–5) “A table of the letters”.
-
- The first three parts of Balzac’s Letters were printed at London in
- 1634 (part 1, translated by William Tyrwhitt) and 1638 (parts 2 and 3,
- translated by sir Richard Baker). The present volume is a venture by
- the printer, who has prefixed some letters, papers, and a Latin poem
- all connected with the quarrel between Balzac and the Jesuit
- Franciscus Garassus, in which Louis xiii intervened as a conciliator.
- There is an engraved title by W. Marshall, in which kings and
- theologians do honour to Balzac, the title being “A new collection of
- Epistles of Mons: de Balzac, being the fourth and last volume. Newly
- translated”, with impr. 192. The range of Balzac’s letters is from
- 1631 to 1637.
-
-
-2. ¬Bird¬, John. GROuNDS OF | GRAMMER | PENNED AND | _PVBLISHED_. |
-[_line_] | By | IOHN BIRD Schoolemaster | _in the Citty of Glocester_. |
-[_line_, Greek _motto_, _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 180: 1639: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 184: p. 11 beg. _being the_,
- 101 _Adjectivall_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
- double lines: (3–5) dedication to archbp. Laud: (6–8) “To the Reader”:
- 1–184, the work.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 411; but nothing seems to be
- known of the author at present. The book is a Latin grammar in
- English, for the use of which latter language the author excuses
- himself. The sheets of this work, omitting the prefatory matter and
- with a different style of title and imprint, were reissued at Oxford
- in 1641. The author divides grammar into Rudiment (grammar proper,
- divided into Elementary and Accidentary) and Regiment (syntax).
-
-
-3. [¬Cartwright¬, William]. THE | ROYALL | SLAVE. | _A_ |
-Tragi[/]Comedy. | Presented to the King and Queene | by the Students of
-_Christ-Church_ | in Oxford. _August_ 30. 1636. | Presented since to
-both their Ma[/]|jesties at _Hampton[/]Court_ by the | Kings Servants. |
-[two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 189: 1639: sm. 4^o: pp. [68], signn. A-H^4 I^2: sign. C1^r beg.
- _The grand contrivance_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A1^r, title:
- A2^r, “The Prologue to the King and Queene”: A2^v-3^r, “The Prologue
- to the Vniversity”: A3^v, “The Prologue to their Majesties at
- Hampton-Court”: A4^r, “The Persons of the Play”: B1^r-H4^v, the play:
- I1^r-2^r, three epilogues corresponding to the prologues.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 69, and 1640 C. Cartwright’s
- poems and plays were published together in 1651, the author having
- died in 1643. The scene of this play is laid at Sardis. An account of
- the performance at Christ Church, at which the scenic arrangements
- seem to have been very elaborate, will be found in Wood’s ©Annals©
- under the year 1636.
-
-
-4. ¬C[aussin]¬, N[icolas]. The unfortunate politique: see 1638 C.
-
-
-5. ¬Dugres¬, Gabriel. DIALOGI | GALLICO-ANGLICO-LATINI. | PER |
-GABRIELEM DVGRES | LINGuAM GALLICAM IN | _JLLVSTRISSIMA ET_ |
-FAMOSISSIMA, OXONIENSI | ACADEMIA Edocentem. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 186: (eights) 12^o: pp. [8] + 195 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _Commençons_, 101 _P. Il fera_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
- title, within a line: (5–7) French dedication to Charles prince of
- Wales: 1–195, the 22 dialogues in French, English (central in the
- page) and Latin.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 184. Dugres or Du Gres had
- already issued a French grammar at Cambridge in 1636, and new editions
- of his Dialogues, with rules of pronunciation and tables of verbs,
- were published at Oxford in 1652 and 1660.
-
-
-6. ¬Foxle¬, George. THE | GROANES | OF THE | SPIRIT, | OR | THE TRIALL |
-of the Truth of | PRAYER. | [_motto, line, motto, line._]
-
- Impr. 187 or 188: 1639: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [16] + 228 + [6]: p. 11
- beg. _mired, but_, 101 _the sight_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within border of woodcuts: (3–9) Epistle dedicatory “to the
- noble and much honoured Company of Hierusalem’s Artillery”, signed
- “George Foxle”: (10–14) “To the Reader”, also signed: (15) “The
- contents ...”: 1–228, the treatise.
-
- A (George?) Foxley is mentioned in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iv.
- 137, as preaching in London in Jan. 1648/9. Copies of this treatise
- differ in the imprint, showing that it was published both at Leicester
- and Bristol. Each page is within lines, doubled at the top and outer
- side.
-
-
-7. ¬Fromondus¬, Libertus. LIBERTI FROMONDI | S. TH. L. | _Collegii
-Falconis in Academia_ | _Lovaniensi Philosophiæ Profes-_|_soris
-Primarii_ | METEOROLOGICORVM | LIBRI SEX. | [_device._]
-
- Impr. 190: 1639: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 505 + [23]: p. 11 beg.
- _nubem è Zona_, 401 _Multa generosa_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) “A”: (3) title: (5–10) dedication to Maximilian de Rassenghem,
- Lovanii, 1 Jan. 1627: (11–15) “Ad Lectorem”: 1–505, the work, in 6
- books: (2–8) “Index capitum et articulorum” in the order of the book:
- (10–22) “Index rerum memorabilium”, alphabetical.
-
- This is a reprint of the 1627 or 1631 Antwerp edition, being itself
- the third. The scope of the work may be gathered from the definition
- of “Meteora” as being phenomena produced by vapour (rain, &c.), or by
- exhalation (fiery, as lightning and falling stars: or non-fiery, as
- winds), or by both (clouds). Fromondus lived from 1587 to 1654,
- chiefly at Louvain.
-
-
-8. ¬Gardyner¬, dr. Richard. A | SERMON | CONCERNING | THE | EPIPHANY, |
-PREACHED AT THE | Cathedrall Church of Christ | in _Oxford_. | By
-RICHARD GARDYNER, D.D. | and _Canon_ of the same | _Church_. |
-[_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 193: 1639: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _What right_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2), not seen: p. (3) title,
- within a border of woodcuts: (5–8) dedication to bp. John Bancroft:
- 1–31, the sermon, on Matth. ii. 2.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 921. The dedication mentions
- that the bishop had built the old palace at Cuddesdon, reformed the
- altars throughout his diocese, and suitably inscribed the Cathedral
- communion plate. Sign. A4^2 is paged 28 by error.
-
-
-9. ¬Greaves¬, Thomas (Gravius). _DE LINGVÆ_ | ARABICÆ | VTILITATE | ET
-PRÆSTANTIA | _Oratio_ OXONII _habita_ | Iul. 19. 1637. | A | THOMA
-GREAVES Coll. Corp. | _Christi Socio_. | Cum | Arabicam Lecturam à
-Reverendissimo | _Patre ac Domino GVLIELMO_ | Archiepiscopo Cantuariensi
-& Academiæ | CANCELLARIO _Oxonij institutam_ | loco absentis Professoris
-auspicaretur. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 151: 1639: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 21 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _brarint.
- Innumera_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line:
- (3) “Lectori ...”: 1–21, the speech.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 1061. The speech mentions
- Laud’s benefactions to the Bodleian. The absent professor was dr.
- Edward Pococke. Some copies have imprint 176.
-
-
-10. ¬Grotius¬, Hugo. De veritate religionis Christianæ.
-
- Both in the 3^{rd} and 4^{th} part of Richard Davis’s auction sale
- catalogue (3^{rd} part (1688), p. 12, no. 550: 4^{th} part (1692), p.
- 18, no. 323) an Oxford edition of 1639 is mentioned; as well as in
- Ersch and Gruber’s Encyclopædia: but the edition itself is not in the
- greater libraries and ordinary bibliographies. The first edition was
- in Dutch in 1722, the Latin editions before 1639 were all published at
- Leyden in 1624, 1627, 1629, 1633 and 1637. There are Oxford editions
- of 1660 and 1662, as well as later.
-
-
-11. ¬Heylyn¬, Peter. ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ | A | LITTLE DE[/]|SCRIPTION OF | THE
-GREAT WORLD. | [_line_] | _By_ PETER HEYLYN. | [_line, motto, device._]
-
- Imp. 119: 1639: (eights) sm. 4^o: pp. [20] + 808 + [4]: p. 11 beg. _1.
- First then_, 701 _dals, or Vindelici_: Pica Roman. Contents:—[as 1631
- H, with a few minute differences of spelling or use of capitals, and a
- slight change of reference (only) to the last five pages.]
-
- For the author and book see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 557:
- see also 1621 H. Some copies of this work have “1939” on the
- titlepage. There should be a folded leaf after p. 228 as in former
- editions.
-
-
-12. ¬Hommius¬, Festus. LXX. | dispvtatio[/]|nes theologicæ; | [&c.,
-precisely as 1630 H, with “_tertia_” for “_secunda_”, and the j in
-_adjectionibus_ rightly italic.]
-
- Impr. 72 _a_: 1639: [&c. exactly as 1630 H.]
-
- This is a verbatim reprint of the 1630 edition.
-
-
-13. ¬Hungerford¬, sir Anthony. _THE_ | ADVISE OF | A SONNE
-PRO[/]|FESSING THE RELI[/]|GION ESTABLISHED | in the present Church of
-Eng-|_land to his deare Mother a_ | Roman Catholike. | VVHEREVNTO IS
-ADDED | THE MEMORIAL OF A FATHER | to his deare children, containing an
-| acknowledgement of God his great mercy, in | bringing him to the
-_Profession_ of the true | _Religion, at this present established_ | _in
-the Church of England_. | [_line_] | BY | ANTH. HVNGERFORD of
-Blackbourton | in _Com. Oxon._ _KNIGHT_. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 182: 1639: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 62: p. 11 beg. _answer, that he_:
- English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within a border of woodcuts:
- 1–38, the Advice: 39–40, a preface to the following piece, dated “From
- my house at Blackbourton this 7th of Aprill 1627”: 41–62, the
- Memorial.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 411, where Wood says that the
- first part was written in about 1607, and that the writer died in June
- 1627: that Laud refused to license it for printing in 1635, because it
- was so strongly worded against Roman Catholicism, and that after this
- failure the son, sir Edward Hungerford, “got it to be printed at
- Oxon”, with the Memorial.
-
-
-14. ¬Jewell¬, bp. John. APOLOGIA | ECCLESIÆ | ANGLICANÆ. | [_line_] |
-Auctore JOANNE JuELLO, | olim Episcopo Sarisburiensi. | [_line_] | Cum
-Versione Græca _J. S._ Bacc. in Art. | Coll. Mag. quondam Socii. |
-[_motto_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 153: 1639: (eights) 16^o: pp. [12] + 331 + [1]: p. 11 beg. τῳ
- ἐξαιτεῖσθαι, 301 Θεῖος λόγος: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- (3–4) Epistola P. Martyris, to Jewel: (5–11) the translator’s
- dedication to dr. William Langton, president of Magdalen, signed “Joh.
- Smith”: (1) a poor Greek epigram on this edition, signed “H. H.”:
- 2–331, the work, Latin on the verso of each leaf, Greek on the recto.
-
- See 1614 J: the first English and Latin editions were in 1562. It is
- odd that in the ©Catalogus ... librorum Richardi Davis ... pars
- tertia© (1688) on p. 13 the date of this book is twice misprinted
- 1637.
-
-
-15. ¬Kempis¬, Thomas a. THE | IMITATION | OF CHRIST, | _Divided into
-four Books_. | Written in Latin by | THOMAS à KEMPIS, | And the
-Translations of it | _Corrected & amended_ | by W. P. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 156 _b_: 1639: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [60] + 381 + [15]: p. 11 beg
- _26. In their life_, 301 _not to be discussed_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–8) Epistle dedicatory
- to Walter Curle, bp. of Winchester, signed “William Page”: (9–60) “To
- the Christian reader” signed “W. P.”: 1–381, the Imitation, in 4
- books: (2–11) “A Table of the chapters...”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 655. This is the first Oxford
- edition of the ©Imitation© and the only edition of dr. Page’s
- revision. The reviser, who was the bp. of Winchester’s chaplain, has
- removed such passages as would offend a Protestant. The preface is
- largely an exhortation to unity among the churches.
-
-
-16. [¬Mayne¬, Jasper]. THE | CITYE MATCH. | _A_ | COMOEDYE· | PRESENTED
-TO THE | KING and QVEENE | _AT WHITE-HALL_. | ACTED SINCE | AT
-BLACK[/]FRIERS BY HIS | MAIESTIES _Servants_. | [_motto_, then 2
-_lines_.]
-
- Impr. 180: 1639: (twos) la. 8^o: pp. [6] + 64 + [2]: p. 11 beg. _Scena
- II_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines:
- (3) “To the reader”: (4–5) two prologues: (6) “The Persons of the
- Play” &c.: 1–64, the play: (1–2) two epilogues.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 972. There are subsequent
- editions of the play in 1658 (Oxford) and 1659 (Oxford). The preface
- is depreciatory of the work, stating that it was at first written “out
- of obedience,” and that it was only published in self-defence to avoid
- a threatened unauthorized issue in London.
-
-
-17. ¬Prayer¬, book of Common. LIBER | PSALMORUM | ET PRECVM | in usum
-Ecclesiæ | _Cath. Christi_ | OXON. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 151: 1639: (twelves) 16^o: pp. 295 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Cesset
- quæso_, 201 _Ac tradidit_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—1, title,
- within double lines: 3–283, the Psalter: 285–295, special prayers, as
- in 1615 P.
-
- See 1615 P. It is noticeable that the University no longer prints the
- book of Common Prayer as a whole, but only the Psalter as found in
- that book, separately.
-
-
-18. ¬Prideaux¬, John. TABVLÆ | AD | GRAMMATICA | GRÆCA INTRODUCTORIÆ. |
-IN QVIBVS | Succinctè compingitur, brevissima, sed | _tamen expedita,
-singularum partium orationis_ | _declinabilium, Variandi ratio_. |
-ACCESSIT | Vestibuli vice, ad eandem linguam παραίνεσις in | gratiam
-tyronum, quibus ut convenit explica-|tiora evolvere, ita necesse est hæc
-ipsa | _ad unguem tenere_. | [_motto_] | EDITIO TERTIA. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 191: 1639: sm. 4^o: pp. [68], signn. A-F^4, G^2, H-I^4: sign.
- B1^r beg. _profero clarâ_, F2^r _15. Asserit A_: Pica Roman.
- Contents:—sign. A1^r, title: A2^r-A2^v, dedication to dr. Tho.
- Holland, dated “Exon. Colleg. Ian. 1. 1607”, and signed “Io.
- Prideaux”: A3^r-B3^v, preface as in the 1607 edition: B4^r-E1^r, the
- work, “Conclusio”, &c., as before: E2^r, a title:—“TYROCINIVM | AD
- SYLLOGISMVM | Legitimum contexendum, & | _captiosum dissuendum,
- e_x-|_peditissimum_. | IN QVO | _Ad formam e_x_pensa Syllogisticam
- perstrin-_|_guntur punctìm Sophismata, nec minus solidè_, | _quàm
- vulgò fit, ratione materiæ_; | Excerptis ex optimis Authoribus
- exemplis Græco-latinis, | ut majori cum voluptate & fructu, ex
- utriusq; lin-|guæ candidatis & legantur, & | intelligantur. |
- [_motto_, then _woodcut_]” with impr. 157: E3^r-E4^r, the dedication,
- as in the 1629 edition: E4^r, two Latin poems: F1^r-G2^v, the
- treatise: H1^r, a title:—“HEPTADES | LOGICAE· | _SIVE_ | MONITA AD
- AMPLIORES | Tractatus Introductoria. | [_motto_, then _device_]”, with
- impr. 191 _a_: H2^r-I4^v, the treatise.
-
- See 1607 P, 1629 P, and Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 267. The
- ©Heptades© (seven divisions of Logic) seem to be here printed for the
- first time.
-
-
-19. ¬Smith¬, Samuel. ADITVS | AD | LOGICAM· | IN VSVM EORVM | qui primò
-ACADEMI-|AM Salutant. | [_line_] | _Autore_ SAMuELE SMITH, | _Artium
-Magistro_. | [_line_] | _Editio quinta._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 109 _a_: 1639: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [14] + 204 + [2] + 2 folded
- leaves: p. 11 beg. _Proximum est_, 111 _non autem_: Long Primer Roman.
- Contents:—p. (5) title: (7–11) “De nupera Londinensi editione ad
- Lectorem Προτρεπτικός.”: 1–204, the work in 3 books: (1) “Lectoribus
- ...”: before pp. 33 and 43 should be folded tables of Substantia and
- Qualitas.
-
- See 1617 S. The undated preface complains of a pirated London edition,
- which may be that of 1621.
-
-
-20. ¬Tozer¬, rev. Henry. CHRISTIAN | _WISDOME_, | OR | THE EXCELLENCY |
-FAME AND RIGHT | MEANES OF | TRVE | WISDOME. | As it was briefly
-delivered in | a Sermon in S^t MARIES | Church in OXFORD, | _Novemb:_
-11. 1638. | [_line_] | By H. TOZER B.D. Fellow | of Exeter Colledge. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 152: 1639: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 107 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _The
- se-_|_cond Ge_ | : Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within
- double lines: 3–8, Epistle dedicatory to Robert (Kerr) earl of Ancrum:
- 1–107, the sermon, on 1 Kings x. 24.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 274.
-
-
-21. ¬Wescombe¬, Martin. FABuLÆ | PONTIFICIÆ | EVANGELICÆ | Veritatis
-radiis | _dissipatæ_. | [_line_] | _Autore_ | MARTINO WESCOMBE | Artium
-Magistro in | _Academia celeberrima_ | _Oxoniensi_. | [_line_, then
-_woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 157: 1639: (eights) 16^o: pp. [34] + 85 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _it,
- nec alicui_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title, within double
- lines: (5–23) dedication to archbp. Laud: (25–33) “Ad candidum
- lectorem præfatio”: 1–85, the work, in five parts.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 675: the author, according to
- the dedication, was a Franciscan at Toulouse, converted to
- Protestantism by Stephanus de Cursol, settled at Exeter and patronized
- by bp. Hall. In 1637/8 he became a member of Exeter College, and in
- 1639 incorporated at Cambridge: after which he is lost sight of,
- except that he is said to have been reconverted to Roman Catholicism,
- and to have gone abroad. The five “fabulæ” are “De universali
- Episcopo,” “de infallibilitate papæ,” “de Purgatorio,” “de
- Transubstantiatione eucharistica,” and “de invocatione Sanctorum.”
- Wescombe is a Somerset and Devon name.
-
-
- 1640.
-
-1. ¬Bacon¬, sir Francis, Viscount St. Alban’s. OF THE | ADVANCEMENT AND
-| PROFICIENCE OF LEARNING | or the | _PARTITIONS OF SCIENCES_ | I̅X̅
-Bookes | _Written in Latin by the Most Eminent_ | _Illustrious & Famous
-LORD_ | _FRANCIS BACON_ | _Baron̄ of Verulam Vicont S^t Alban_ |
-_Counsilour of Estate and Lord_ | _Chancellor of England._ | [_line_] |
-Interpreted | _by_ GILBERT WATS. |
-
- Impr. 194: 1640: (fours) la. 8^o: pp. [36] + 60 + [14] + 479 (“477”) +
- [21]: pp. 11 beg. _Nature, but_, and _on between_, 401 _hard and
- severe_: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) engraved title, see
- below: (3–4) dedication to the king and the two universities, in
- Latin, by Wats: (5–8) dedication to prince Charles, signed “Gilbert
- Wats”: (9–16) preface to the reader, by Wats: (17–22) “Testimonies
- consecrate to ... S^r Francis Bacon ...”: (23–24) Latin poem on the
- _Instauratio Magna_ by George Herbert: (25–33) “Manes Verulamiani sive
- in obitum incomparabilis Francisci de Verulamio, &c. epicedia,” 6
- Latin poems, one by Thomas Randolph, &c.: (35–36) address by Bacon to
- each university, in parallel columns: 1–39, the author’s preface:
- (41–42) “The generall argument of the IX. books”: (43–60) “The
- argument of the chapters ...”: (1–11) the general design of the
- _Instauratio Magna_: (13) a table of “the Emanation of sciences ...”:
- 1-“477”, the work in 9 books: (2–5) “A new world of sciences, or the
- Deficients”, headings: (6–8) “The Index of Sacred Scriptures ...”:
- (10–11) “The index of humane authors”: (12) “Errata”, marginal
- corrections only: (13) “Lectori Academico ...”, introducing what
- follows: (14–18) “Catalogus historiarum particularum . secundùm
- capita”: (19) Typographus Lectori” about what follows: (20) a Latin
- letter from the author to Trinity college Cambridge, _beg._ “Res
- omnes”: (21) impr. 195, as a colophon.
-
- See 1633 B. This is part 1 of the ©Instauratio Magna©, and is an
- expansion of the two books of the ©Advancement of Learning© first
- printed in 1605, which were enlarged in Latin to nine books, and
- published in 1623 (and 1635) by W. Rawley: here they are translated by
- G. Wats. Some copies have 1639 in the colophon. At pp. 266–69 are some
- woodcut facsimiles of cipher-alphabets, &c. The engraved titlepage by
- W. Marshall (9⅝ × 5¾ in.) bears the title on a sheet suspended between
- two obelisks representing Oxford and Cambridge: above it are two
- globes and “INSTAVR.MAG.P.I.”: below, a ship in full sail and the
- imprint: the whole is fully described in the British Museum ©Catalogue
- of Prints and Drawings©, Div. 1, vol. 1 (1870), p. 116 (no. 153).
- Three out of the four British Museum copies have a portrait of Bacon,
- but the translator’s own copy in the Bodleian has not. The collation,
- being elaborate, is here appended:—( )^1, ¶^4, ¶¶^2, ¶¶¶^1, A^2B-C^4:
- aa-gg^4 hh^2: †^4, ††^2, †^1: A-Z, Aa-Zz, Aaa-Qqq^4 Rrr^2: pp. 351–2
- are repeated in the numeration.
-
-
-2. ¬Brerewood¬, Edward. TRACTATVS | ETHICI: | _SIVE_ | COMMENTARII | IN
-ALIQVOT ARI[/]|STOTELIS LIBROS | ad NICHOMACHuM, | _De Moribus_: | A
-Celeberrimo Philosopho | EDVARDO BREREWOOD | Art. Mag. è Colleg.
-Ænea-|nasensi, olim conscripti: | Iam primùm ex authoris ipsius
-Autogra-|pho, summâ fide, nec minori curâ casti-|gati, & publici juris
-facti: | Per T. S. S. S. Theolog. Bacchalaureum, & | Colleg.
-Ænea-nasens. apud _Oxon_ Socium. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 200: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [16] + 245 + [3]: p. 11 beg. _De modo
- Doctrinæ_, 201 _tasia aliquando_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title within double lines: (3–11) Epistola dedicatoria to James lord
- Strange, dated “Oxonii è Musæo meo in Collegio Ænea-nasensi, Nono Cal.
- Januarii 1639.”, and signed “Thomas Sixesmith”: (13–16) “Index
- tractatuum, capitum, et quæstionum ...”: 1–245, the four treatises, on
- the first four books of the Ethics.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 141. The original MS.
- (finished 27 Oct. 1586) is now part of MS. (Queen’s coll. Oxford no.
- 218). The method of this commentary or rather analysis is scholastic
- and formal. The editor says that he rescued the original MS. from a
- “rurale musæum,” when it was “pulvere situque squalidum, & tantum non
- sepultum.” The author died in 1613. It is curious that in Moss’s
- ©Manual of classical bibliography© (Lond., 1825, vol. i, p. 157) this
- book is called “Westerman, Commentaria in Ethica Aristotelis. Oxon.
- 4to. 1640,” with a reference to Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii.
- 141. The explanation is that _Westerman_ heads the column in Wood’s
- work, because the account of William Westerman follows Brerewood on
- that column: but the ascription deceived even so acute a bibliographer
- as the late professor Chandler in his List of editions of the
- Nicomachean Ethics (Oxf. 1878).
-
-
-3. ¬Buridanus¬, Johannes. IOHANNIS | BVRIDANI | PHILOSOPHI | TRECENTIS
-RETRO | annis celeberrimi | QUÆSTIONES IN OCTO | LIBROS POLITICORVM |
-_ARISTOTELIS_. | uNA | CVM INDICE QUÆSTIONVM | Dubiorúm-que eisdem
-annexorum | locupletissimo. | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 69: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 431 + [16]: p. 11 beg. _quia unus
- homo_, 401 _crimini vitæ_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within double lines: two epigrams, one by, and one to, Guillermus
- Baterel, the original editor: 1–431, the work: (1–15) index.
-
- Baterel’s annotated edition of Buridanus on the Politics was printed
- at least twice in the sixteenth century (1506 and 1526).
-
-
-4. ¬Carpenter¬, Nathaniel. _ACHITOPHEL_, | OR | The Picture of a Wicked
-| POLITITIAN. | _Divided into three Parts._ | A TREATISE | Presented
-heretofore in three | Sermons to the Vniversity | of OXFORD and | _now
-Published_. | By NATH. CARPENTER | B. D. & Fellow of _Excet. Coll._ | in
-OXFORD. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 193 _a_: 1640: (twelves) 24^o: pp. [8] + 177 + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _common equity_, 101 _next place_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within a line: (3–8) dedication to archbp. Ussher: 1–60, 61–125,
- 127–177, the three sermons, on 2 Sam. xvii. 23.
-
- For an account of the earlier editions, see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ii.
- 422, and 1628 C. The present edition closely resembles the London ones
- of 1633 and 1638. Probably the “N. H.” who edited the next article
- below, edited this also, Carpenter having died in 1628. The work is
- evidently intended to be read with a view to the political
- circumstances of the time, under the disguise of dealing with “a
- sacred tragedy” from Old Testament history.
-
-
-5. ——. CHORAZIN | AND | BETHSAIDA’S | VVoe, or warning[/]|Peece. | A
-judicious and learned Sermon | On MATH. 11. V. 21. | Preached at S^t
-_Maries_ in _Oxford_, by | that renowned and famous Divine, M^r |
-_Nathanael Carpenter_, Bachellor in | Divinity, sometime Fellow of |
-_Exeter_ Colledge; late Chap-|laine to my Lords Grace | of _Ardmagh_ in
-| _Ireland_. |
-
- Impr. 193 _b_: 1640: (twelves) 24^o: pp. [8] + 95 + [1]: p. 11 beg.
- _were the Secretaries_: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–8) Epistle
- dedicatory to dr. Thomas Winniffe, dean of St. Paul’s, by “N.H.” the
- editor: 1–95, the sermon.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, ii. 422. This is a reprint of the
- Lond. 1633 edition. The preface gives some valuable biographical notes
- about Carpenter, who died in 1628, and was the editor’s tutor and
- “neere Affine” at Exeter college. It states with reference to the
- present book that “had not a kinsman’s (Io. Ca.) friendly hand given
- it safe conduct over the Surges of the Ocean, in all likelyhood it had
- perished on the Netherland shores.”
-
-
-6. [¬Cartwright¬, William]. THE | ROYALL | SLAVE. | [&c., exactly as
-1639 C, except that the hyphen in l. 7 is horizontal, that “_The second
-Edition_” is inserted between the two _lines_, and that after them is a
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 189: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [64], signn. A-H^4: sign. C1^r beg.
- _Atos. I hope_: Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly as in 1639 C, except
- that the play only extends to H3^r, the three epilogues occupying
- H3^v-H4^r.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 69, and 1639 C, of which this
- is a reprint.
-
-
-7. [¬Clain¬, Johann Theodor]. HISTORIA BRITANNICA | _Hoc est_, | DE
-REBUS GESTIS | BRITANNIÆ | SEu | ANGLIÆ. | COMMENTARIOLI | TRES: | Nunc
-denuò excusi. | _QVIBVS ACCESSERVNT_ | _præter generalem Angliæ
-descripti-_|_onem: Marginalia & Index_ | _rerum copiosus._ |
-[_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 197: 1640: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [12] + 220 + [44]: p. 11 beg.
- _fuisset. Brutus_, 201 _quam cogitatione_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
- (1) “A” between woodcuts: (5) title, within a line: (7–12) “Lectori
- ...”, signed “M.H.”: 1–7 “Angliæ descriptio generalis, ex Geographico
- Opusculo Johan. Büssenmecheri”: 9–61, 62–81, 82–220, the
- commentarioli: (1–44) “Index rerum et nominum memorabilium.”
-
- This is an anonymous history of Britain from the earliest times. The
- editor, M(atthew) H(unt), does not mention the fact, that an undated
- edition was printed at London by Henry Bynneman (who published from
- 1566 to 1587), with the title “De rebus gestis Britanniæ commentarioli
- tres. Ad Ornatissimum Virum M. Henricum Broncarem Armigerum E.S.”,
- from which it has been conjectured that the author’s initials were
- “E.S.” The first words of the text are “Britannia est Insula natura
- triquetra.” The name of Clain is given in the British Museum catalogue
- as the author of an Amberg edition of 1603, and in Thomas Thorpe’s
- Catalogue of books (1851) p. 51 an edition printed at Hamburg in 1598
- is mentioned under the same name, but I can find no account of the
- author, who probably lived at Amberg. Some have ascribed the book to
- John Clapham, who published an English ©History of England© till the
- coming of the Saxons, in 1602 and 1606.
-
-
-8. ¬Ferrand¬, Jacques. ¤ΕΡΩΤΟΜΑΝΙΑ¤ | _OR_ | A TREATISE | Discoursing of
-the Essence, | Causes, Symptomes, Prog-|nosticks, and Cure of | ¤LOVE,¤
-| _OR_ | _EROTIQVE_ | ¤_MELANCHOLY_¤ | [_line_] | _Written by_ | ¤IAMES
-FERRAND¤ | D^r _of Physick_. | [_line_].
-
- Impr. 160 _b_: 1640: (eights) 16^o: pp. [40] + 363 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
- _Poetesse was_, 301 _purpose, and_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
- title, within a border between lines: (3–7) “The Author to the
- Reader”: (9–34) 8 English poems to the author and book by Oxford men,
- one by Martin Llewellin: (35–39) “A table of the chapters”: (39)
- “Errata”: 1–363, the work, in 39 chapters.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 350, where the translator
- from the French into English is stated to be Edmund Chilmead. The
- original French edition was published at Toulouse in 1612, under the
- title _Traité de l’essence et guérison de l’amour_, and at Paris in
- 1623 as _De la maladie d’amour, ou melancholie erotique_. If Robert
- Burton was acquainted with the first edition of this book, as he well
- may have been, there can be little doubt that he has taken or imitated
- the general method and treatment of the subject, in his _Anatomy of
- Melancholy_: but the French author is surpassed on his own ground. The
- research is greater and the felicities of language more numerous and
- striking in Burton, while the plan is also further and distinctively
- elaborated. There is no mention of Burton’s book in the poems prefixed
- to this translation. The words underlined in the above title are
- printed in red, as well as “Oxford,” and “sold by Edward Forrest .
- 1640.” in the imprint.
-
-
-9. ¬Fletcher¬, John. RVLE A WIFE | And have a Wife. | a comœdy | ACTED
-BY HIS | _Majesties Servants_. | [_line_] | Written by | JOHN FLETCHER |
-_Gent._ | [_line_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 180: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 67 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _Only for
- present use_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) “Prologue”:
- 1–67, the play; (1) “Epilogue.”
-
- This was Fletcher’s unaided composition, before the close of 1624,
- when it was twice performed at court. The underplot is said to be
- based on one of Cervantes’ “Novelas Exemplares.” See the ©Dict. of
- Nat. Biogr.© under Fletcher, p. 307, col. 1. The present is the first
- edition, and the only quarto one.
-
-
-10. ——. The Tragœdy of | ROLLO | DuKE of Normandy. | ACTED BY HIS |
-_Majesties Servants_. | [_line_] | Written by | JOHN FLETCHER | _Gent._
-| [_line_, then _woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 180: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 73 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _But for
- you_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “The Names of the
- Actors”: 1–73, the play.
-
- The authorship of this play is doubtful. The first edition (Lond.
- 1639) was entitled “The Bloody Brother. A Tragedy. By _B. J. F._” i.
- e. Ben Johnson and Fletcher?, and it was entered in the Stationers’
- Register on 4 Oct. 1639 as by “J. B.” Massinger is also supposed to
- have had some share in it. See the ©Dict. of Nat. Biogr.© under
- Fletcher, p. 308, col. 2.
-
-
-11. ¬H[arding]¬, S[amuel], of Exeter college, Oxford. SICILY | AND |
-NAPLES, | OR, THE | FATALL VNION· | A Tragœdy. | _By_ | S. H. _A. B. è
-C. Ex:_ [_line_, _motto_, two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 119: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [12] + 96: p. 11 beg. _Cass. If the
- varlets_: Pica Roman. Contents—p. (1) title: (2) “Dramatis Personæ”:
- (3) “To the Reader”, signed “P.P.”, the editor: (4–11) seven
- complimentary poems to the author, alluding to Shakespeare’s, Ben
- Johnson’s and Randolph’s deaths: (12) Errata: 1–96, the play, with
- epilogue.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 31. The author died before
- 1650, not, as Foster’s ©Alumni Oxonienses© asserts, as late as 1699.
- The editor, who is known to be Philip Papillon of Exeter college,
- declares that the play is here printed without the author’s knowledge
- and against his modesty. The lines relating to Shakespeare, which have
- perhaps only been reprinted in Pickering and Chatto’s Catalogue of
- books, nos. 70–72 (June 1893), p. 15, are:—
-
- “But sad Melpomene ...
- Hyes to pale Shakespeares urne, and from his tombe
- Takes up the bayes, and hither she is come.”
-
-
-12. ¬Jeanes¬, Henry, of Hart hall, Oxford. A TREATISE | Concerning | A
-CHRISTIANS | CAREFULL AB-|stinence from all ap-|pearance of Evill: |
-Gathered | FOR THE MOST | part out of the Schoole-|men, and Casuists: |
-_Wherein_ | _The Questions and Cases of_ | _Conscience belonging unto
-the_ | _difficult matter of Scandall_ | _are briefly resolved:_ | By
-HENRY JEANES, | M^r of Arts, lately of _Hart-_|_Hall_ in OXON, and
-Rector of | ^{he} Church of _Beere-Cro-_|_combe_ in _Somerset-shire_. |
-[_line._]
-
- Impr. 94_a_: 1640: 12^o: pp. [4] + 151 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _onely from_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3–4)
- dedication to Philip earl of Pembroke: 1–145, the discourse on “1
- Thess. [v] 22”: 147–151, “The Postscript to the Reader”: (1) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 591. This book appears to be rare, and
- was reprinted at Oxford in 1660.
-
-
-13. ¬Oxford¬, University. HORTI | CAROLINI | _ROSA ALTERA_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 151: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [108], signn. ( )^2, *, **, A-E^4 F^2,
- _a_-_c_^4, _cc_^2, _d_-_e_^4: sign. B1^r beg. _Iam meritò_, b1^r
- _Prethee forbeare_: English Roman & Italic. Contents:—( )1^r, title,
- within double lines: ( )2^r, poem dedicatory to the king, signed
- “Acad. Oxon.”, in Latin: *1^r-F2^v, Latin poems: _a_1^r-_e_4^r,
- English poems: _e_4^v “The Printer to their Maiesties”, an English
- poem, signed “Leonard Lichfield.”
-
- These are verses to celebrate the birth of prince Henry, 8 July 1640
- (_d._ 1660). Most are in Latin and English, but three in Greek, two in
- French, one in Hebrew. The signatures as usual show the difficulty of
- getting the poems sent in in time and arranged in proper order.
-
-
-14. ¬Puteanus¬, Erycius. ERYCI PuTEANI | AMOENITATVM | HuMANARuM |
-DIATRIBÆ DuÆ. | _PRIOR_ | DE LACONISMO: | Ad Illustriss: & Excellentiss:
-| _Ducem Arschotanum_. | _ALTERA_, | THYRSI | PHILOTESII, | _SIVE_ |
-Amor Laconissans: | Ad V. Nobilem & Prudentem, | Maxim. Plouvierium. |
-_Utraque elegantiis & acumini-_|_bus referta_. | [two _lines_.]
-
- Impr. 198: 1640: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [8] + 200 + [8]: p. 11 beg.
- _factus ita_, 101 _Laconismum_: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within a line: (3–7) “Lectori benevolo ...”, signed “J. W” (estall):
- 1–116, 117 (misprinted 711)-195, the two diatribae: 196–200 “Sententiæ
- aliquot aculeatæ, è Seneca”.
-
- These are reprints of Diatribae 7 and 8 out of the entire set of
- twelve which form the ©Amœnitates©. The Thyrsi are short essays on
- _aculei_, which are pointed sentences on friendship and love. The
- editor (and printer) mentions the ©Suada Attica© as “nuper excusa”:
- see below.
-
-
-15. ——. ERYCI PuTEANI | svada attica, | _SIVE_ | ORATIONVM | SELECTARVM
-| SYNTAGMA. | _Item_ PALÆSTRA _Bonæ Mentis_, | _prorsus innovata_. |
-[_device._]
-
- Impr. 205: 1640: (eights) 16^o: pp. [16] + 534 + [2 + ?]: p. 11 beg.
- _ego didicerim_, 501 _munerúmque_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
- 3–10, dedication “Tribus ordinibus Brabantiæ”, dated “Lovanii, in
- Arce, Kalendis Martiis M.DC.XV”: 11–12, two quotations: 13 “Syllabus
- Orationum”: (14) “Character harum orationum”: (15) a quotation: 1–419,
- the 22 orations: 419–421, two passages from Aulus Gellius: 421
- “Typographo lectori”: 422–424, “ErycI Puteani paucula de morte”: 425,
- a bastard title to the Palæstra: 427–429, “Ad lectorem”, dated
- “Lovanii”, XI. Kalend. Octobr. M.DC.XI.”: 430–512, the Palæstra, 20
- exercitationes &c.: 513–534, “Syllabus exercitationum” and short
- pieces, ending with “... Puteanus Lectori ...”: (1–2) blank, the rest
- (if any) not seen.
-
- There is no bibliography of the numerous works of Erycius Puteanus,
- but the ©Suada Attica© was first published at Louvain in 1615, and the
- ©Palæstra© in 1611. They contain orations and exercises delivered at
- Milan and Louvain. The _Palæstra Bonæ Mentis_ is properly a hall at
- Louvain, where some of these were delivered, and in another sense a
- literary club which met there for debate, recitations and the like.
- See preceding article.
-
-
-16. ¬Randolph¬, Thomas. POEMS, | With the MuSES | LOOKING-GLASSE, |
-_AND_ | AMYNTAS· | [_line_] | By THO. RANDOLPH M.A. and late | Fellow of
-_Trinity_ Col. in | _Cambridge_. | [_line._] | The second Edition
-Enlarged. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 174: 1640: (eights) 16^o: pp. [28] + 134 + [2] + 87 + [7] + 101
- + [1]: pp. 11 beg. _Africk he loaths, High as the men_, and _For
- Mopsus_: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) an engraved title, see
- below: (3) title, as above, within double lines: (5–26) twelve poems
- on the author and book: 1–134, the poems: (1) title of the Muses
- Looking-glass, almost as in 1638 R, with impr. 174: 1–87, (1), the
- play: (2) title of Amyntas, nearly as in 1638 R, but “By T.R.”, with
- impr. 174: (4) “Dramatis Personæ”: (6–7), 1–101, the play.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 565, and 1638 R. The
- “enlargement” in this edition is not evident. The engraved title bears
- a bust of Randolph on a pedestal, with Philosophia and Poesis doing
- him honour, and a celestial sphere and Pegasus above. On the pedestal
- are the words “Poems by Tho : Randolph. The 2^d Edition much
- Enlarged.”, and below is impr. 196. Each of the three parts is
- separately paged, but the two plays are linked by the signatures,
- while the title alone connects the plays with the poems. The Cambridge
- 1640 edition of “The Jealous Lovers”, a comedy by Randolph, is not
- infrequently found bound with this volume, but has no necessary
- connexion with it.
-
-
-17. ¬R[ogers]¬, H[ugh]. ΓΑΜΗΛΙΑ | On the happy marriage of the most |
-_accomplished paire_, | H. R. _Esq._ | And the vertuous _A. B._ |
-[_device._] |
-
- Impr. 202: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [2] + 43 + [1]: p. 11 beg. _What beauty
- on_: Great Primer Italic and Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
- double bounding lines except at foot (single line): 1–43, 19 poems, of
- which four are in Latin.
-
- Very rare. The only copy I have seen of this privately printed book is
- in the British Museum. The marriage (in 1640) was between Anne
- daughter of sir Edward Baynton, of Bromham (_d._ 1657), and Hugh
- Rogers esq. of Cannington. The poems are clearly by friends and
- relations of both parties, but are signed only with initials. A copy
- of the book was in the Heber sale (pt. viii, p. 49).
-
-
-18. ¬Saints’ Legacies.¬ THE | SAINTS | LEGACIES, | OR | A COLLECTION OF
-| CERTAINE PROMISES | OVT OF THE WORD | OF GOD. | Collected for private
-use, but | published for the comfort of | Gods people. | _Whereunto is
-now added the Saints_ | _Support in times of trouble._ | THE 6. EDITION.
-|
-
- Impr. 203: 1640: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [36] + 157 + [5] + 31 + [23]: pp.
- 11 begg. _Though your_, and _soule, that_: English Roman.
- Contents:—pp. (1–4) not seen: (5) title, with border within lines:
- (7–24) dedication to all true Believers, by the editor: (25–32) “To
- the Reader”: (33–35) “Rules to be observed in reading of promises”:
- 1–157, the 105 legacies: (1–2) “A postscript sent from the Authour”:
- (4) a title within a line:—“AN | EPITOME OF | PROMISES | FOR THE |
- _SAINTS SUPPORT_ | IN TIME OF | TROVBLE. | [_line_] | _The sixth
- Edition._ | [_line, motto, line_]”. with impr. 204: 1–31, 31 promises:
- (1–4) texts: (6–9) “A Postscript, to all true Beleevers”: (10–18,
- 20–22) “Five Tables ...” or indexes.
-
- This is a rare and curious book: rare, inasmuch as no ordinary library
- catalogue or bibliography contains any mention of any edition or copy
- of it; and curious, as having its two parts—which are indissolubly
- joined by the signatures and sections—printed by the same printer for
- two different London publishers, R. Royston and S. Enderby. We must
- suppose these two to have ventured proportionate parts in the book.
-
-
-19. ¬Sanderson¬, Robert. LOGICÆ | _ARTIS_ | COMPENDIVM. | Editio Quarta.
-| [_line_] | Authore ROB. SANDERSON, | Coll. _Lincolniensis_ in almâ |
-_Oxoniensi, quondam_ | _Socio_. | [_line_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 201: 1640: (eights) 16^o: pp. [8] + 239 + [1] + ...: p. 11 beg.
- _possint esse_, 201 _Cap. 21._: Pica Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) not
- seen: (3) title, within a line: (5–8) “Elenchus capitum”: 1–239 the
- work, in three books: (the two Appendixes contain over 120 pages.)
-
- Rare. See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 626, and 1615 S. The
- only copy I have seen, in Queen’s College (Oxford) Library, is
- interleaved, and wants the two appendixes, which probably occupied the
- same number of pages as in the 1631 edition.
-
-
-20. [¬Snelling¬, Thomas]. THIBALDVS | SIVE | _VINDICTÆ_ | _INGENIVM_. |
-TRAGOEDIA. | [_line, motto, line, woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 157: 1640: (eights) 16^o: pp. [24] + 80: p. 11 beg. _Pro morte_:
- Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, with border between lines: (3–4)
- “Lectori”: (5–16) six complimentary Latin poems by St. John’s College
- men: (17) “Dramatis Personæ”: (119–21) “Argumentum”: (23) “Errata
- ...”: 1–80, the play.
-
- For the author, see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 275. The
- sheets of this work were reissued in 1650 at London, with a new title
- ©Pharamus, sive Libido vindex, Hispanica tragædia©, but neither Wood
- nor his editors have been aware of this earlier edition. Both were
- anonymous, and the direct evidence for the authorship (which need not
- be doubted) is difficult to find. Bp. Barlow wrote the author’s name
- on the title of his copy of ©Pharamus©. The poems imply that the play
- had been written some years before 1640: the author matriculated at St
- John’s College, Oxford, in June 1634.
-
-
-21. ¬Tipping¬, William. “©A Return of Thankfulness for the unexpected
-Recovery out of a dangerous Sickness.© Oxon. 1640. Oct.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 244.
-
-
-22. ¬Tozer¬, Henry. DIRECTIONS | _FOR_ | A GODLY LIFE: | ESPECIALLY FOR
-| Communicating at the | Lords Table. | _INTENDED FIRST FOR_ | _private
-use; now published for the_ | _good of those who desire the safty_ | _of
-their owne soules, and_ | _shall be pleased to make_ | _use thereof._ |
-By H. TOZER Mr of Arts, and | Fellow of _Exceter_ Col-|ledge in
-_Oxford_. | _The fifth Edition._ | [_motto._]
-
- Impr. 199: (twelves) 16^o: pp. [10] + 195 + [11]: p. 11 beg.
- _Minister. 2_, 101 _was due_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
- within line and border: (3–9) Epistle dedicatory, as in 1628 T: 1–195,
- the directions: (2–4) “The contents of each Chapter”.
-
- For the author and book, but not this edition, see Wood’s ©Ath.
- Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 274 (and 1628 T). Each page is within a line,
- doubled at upper and outer margins.
-
-
-23. ——. “_Sermon on Joh._ 18. 3. Ox. 1640.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 274.
-
-
-24. ¬Twittee¬, Thomas. AD | CLERVM | PRO | FORMA CONCIO | HABITA IN
-TEMPLO | BEATÆ MARIÆ _OXON_: | MARTIJ 13. 1634. | [_line_] | PER THO_:_
-TWITTEE SANCTÆ | Theologiæ _Bac. è Coll. Oriell._ | [_line, motto._] |
-
- Impr. 157: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [4] + 24: p. 11 beg. _men hî verè_:
- Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within double lines: (3)
- dedication to dr. John Tolson provost of Oriel: 1–24, the sermon, on 1
- Pet. iii. 8.
-
- See Wood’s ©Fasti Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 469. The dedication is of the
- modern kind, not an epistle dedicatory, and the printing is unusual,
- the first words of a paragraph being generally projections to the
- left, instead of indented.
-
-
-25. ¬Z[ouche]¬, R[ichard]. DESCRIPTIO | JuRIS & JuDICII | MILITARIS |
-_AD QVAM LEGES QUÆ_ | Rem Militarem, & Ordinem | _Personarum_. | NEC NON
-| JuRIS & JuDICII | MARITIMI | AD QuAM QuÆ NAVI-|_GATIONEM ET_ |
-Negotiationem Maritimam | _respiciunt, referuntur_. | [_line_] | Autore
-R. Z. P. R. _Oxoniæ_. | [_line._]
-
- Impr. 157: 1640: sm. 4^o: pp. [8] + 36 + [4] + 40 + [4]: pp. 11 beg.
- _meris sunt_, and _quæsitum est_: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title,
- within double lines: (5–6) “Ad Lectorem”, unsigned, but “Datum ex Aula
- Alb. Prid. Calend. April. 1640”: (7–8) heads of chapters in division
- 1: 1–36, the military division, in two parts: (1) a title, within
- double lines: “DESCRIPTIO | JuRIS & JuDICII | MARITIMI | [&c., exactly
- as the main title, to its end, with woodcut and impr. 157: (3–4) heads
- of chapters in division 2: 1–40, “De jure maritimo & de jure nautico”
- in two parts: (1) “Errata”.
-
- See Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 511. The signatures establish
- a connexion between the two divisions.
-
-
-26. ——. “_Descr. Juris & Judicii sacri; ad quam Leges, quæ ad Religionem
-& piam Causam respiciunt, referuntur._ Oxon. 1640. qu.”
-
- So in Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, iii. 511, where it is stated
- that the De Jure Sacro, Militari and Maritimo, were issued together.
- In the Leyden reprint of 1652 the De jure sacro is rather shorter than
- the other two. It does not seem to have found its way into the Oxford
- or London libraries which have published their catalogues.
-
-
-
-
- Periodical.
-
-
-The ©Quaestiones in Vesperiis© and ©Quaestiones in Comitiis© (see Andrew
-Clark’s ©Register of the University of Oxford©, vol. ii. pt. i. [1887],
-p. 169) were often printed.
-
- 1602. The earliest I have seen are the theological “Quæstiones
- (Christo propitio) in Vesperijs discutiendæ, _Iul._ 10. 1602,”
- followed by some belonging to the Comitia, and some Law _quaestiones_
- belonging to both, and by a specimen of dr. John King’s treatment of
- his three _quaestiones_, in Latin verse: the whole forming a small
- sheet of 16 pages, with the last five blank.
-
- 1605. The ©Quaestiones ... in Comitiis ... coram ... Rege ... Aug....
- 1605© were printed in folio sheet form, as was invariably the case in
- later years, occupying in this year four pages. Whether this issue was
- exceptional or not, is not clear.
-
- 1608. In this year at latest begins the series of ordinary folio
- sheets of _quaestiones_: of which examples have been seen for the
- years 1608, 1614, 1618, 1619, 1622, 1627, 1628, 1629, 1632, 1634,
- 1635, 1639, 1640, and intermittently until at least 1693.
-
-
-
-
- SUPPLEMENT.
- ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER.
-
-
- “1468”–86/7.
-
-Pp. 1–4. See pp. 237–62. (App. A).
-
-
- 1483.
-
-P. 3. For the ¬Augustine¬ see p. 259.
-
-
-P. 3. _For_ 3. *¬Logic¬ _read_ 3. *†¬Logic¬.
-
-
-P. 3. _For_ 4. *¬Lyndewoode¬ _read_ 4. *†¬Lyndewoode¬.
-
-
- 1485.
-
-P. 4. ¬Alexander¬, l. 3.
-
- _For_ c^2-c^3 _read_ c2, c3.
-
-
- 1486.
-
-P. 4. ¬Mirk¬, last line.
-
- The first two leaves are in the Lambeth copy.
-
-
- 1517–19.
-
-Pp. 5–7. See pp. 263–65. (App. B).
-
-
- 1518.
-
-P. 7. ¬Whittington¬, l. 3.
-
- _For_ protouatis _read_ prothouatis. Eleven copies are now known.
-
-
-Pp. 8–9. ¬Pliny and Lystrius.¬
-
- Something can be added to the account. The two original books in
- dispute are in the John Rylands (Spencer) Library at Manchester, and
- the _locus classicus_ for their history is naturally in Dibdin’s
- ©Bibliotheca Spenceriana© (1814), ii. 271, iii. 411: where will be
- found a reproduction (in type) of the two titles and colophons. Of the
- Pliny Dibdin states that one George Smith passed it on to Van Damme,
- from whom Askew bought it for fifteen guineas. With respect to the
- Lystrius, it appears that the “Mr. Dent” who purchased it at the Askew
- sale was an agent or pseudonym of Mr. Alchorne. The volume bears a
- manuscript note pretending to be from “i. Korsellis” at Haarlem in
- 1471, stating that the book came to him from his brother Frederick.
-
-
- About 1513.
-
-P. 11. _Add_:—
-
-
-¬Syrretus¬, Antonius. [Antonii Syrreti Formalitates de mente magistri
-Johannis Duns?] | Scoti ordinis fratrum minor¿um¿ doctoris
-sub⸗|tilissimi cum nouis additionibus et con⸗|cordantijs magistri
-Mauritij de por⸗|tu hybernie in margine decora⸗|te et nouiter impresse:
-| [two Latin verses, then a woodcut of the Trinity with “Henricus
-Iacobi” and printer’s mark at foot, then two more Latin verses] |
-¶Uenu¿m¿dantur in vniuersitate Oxonien¿si¿. Sub | intersignio
-sanctissime Trinitatis ab Hen⸗|rico Jacobi bibliopole Londonien¿sis¿. |
-
- This interesting title is found on a fragment of two leaves discovered
- by Mr. R. G. C. Procter in New College Library at Oxford, in Aug.
- 1891, and now marked “Auct. V. 16,” fol. 3. The verso of the title is
- occupied with a woodcut of the arms of Henry VIII, with supporters,
- two angels with scroll, &c. The second leaf is marked A 2, and
- contains a dedication and certain definitions, all part of the
- Additiones Mauritii. The book was no doubt printed in London, but sold
- in Oxford by Henricus Jacobi, who died in the latter city towards the
- end of 1514, intestate, see p. 273. From an interesting account of
- Jacobi in ©Bibliographica©, pt. I (1894), by Mr. E. G. Duff, it
- appears that Jacobi, after publishing in London from 1505 to 1512,
- came to Oxford in 1512 or 1513 (see pp. 95, 112 of the account).
-
- This entry and that of 1506 should strictly be in a list by
- themselves, being neither “lost” nor “fictitious.”
-
-
- 1585.
-
-P. 14. ¬Bilson¬, Thomas. _Add at end_:—
-
- A curious account of an abortive effort on the part of Edmund
- Bollifant and three partners to produce a reprint of this book, will
- be found in Arber’s ©Transcript of the Stationers’ Registers© II
- (1875), p. 793.
-
-
-P. 17. ¬Parsons¬, Robert, (2nd entry, no. 6). _Add at end_:—
-
- An explanation of this reprint will be found in Arber’s ©Transcript of
- the Stationers’ Registers© II (1875), p. 793 (a petition from N.
- Newton, E. Bollifant, and others, in the winter of 1585/6), from which
- it appears that John Wight, printer, of London, who had entered a copy
- of his edition of the book at Stationers’ Hall on 28 Aug. 1584, sent
- his son to Oxford to buy up the whole of Barnes’s reprint: which was
- done. But Barnes promptly printed “two ympressions more,” of which the
- present volume is no doubt one. Possibly the preceding art. is the
- other re-impression, and Wight effectually suppressed the whole first
- edition.
-
-
- 1586.
-
-P. 17. _Insert_:—
-
-¬Brasbridge¬, Thomas, of Magdalen college, Oxford. QVÆESTI-|ONES IN
-OF-|FICIA M. T. | CICERONIS: | Compendiariam totius | _Opusculi
-Epitomen_ | continentes. | [_woodcuts._]
-
- Impr. 5: 1586: (eights) 12^o: pp. [68], signn. A-D^8 E^2: sign. B 1^r
- beg. _rum alterum_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. A 1^r, title within a
- border, A 2^r-2^v, dedication to Laurence Humphrey, signed “Thomas
- Brasbrigius,” “Banburiæ, Idibus Nouembris, 1586”: A 3^r-E 2 (printed E
- 3)^v, the questions and answers: E 2^v, two Latin lines signed “I. P.
- Iohannensis.”
-
- Very rare. For the author, see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.©, ed. Bliss, i. 526.
- The preface contains some autobiographical details. There appear to be
- at least three editions of this work, 1586, 1592 (q. v.) and 1615 (q.
- v.), all printed at Oxford.
-
-
- 1589.
-
-P. 28. ¬Skelton¬, John.
-
- Lord Spencer’s copy is of course now in the John Rylands Library at
- Manchester.
-
-
- 1591.
-
-P. 31. ¬Tacitus.¬ _Add at end_:—
-
- On 25 May 1591 a patent was issued to Richard Wright of Oxford and his
- assigns to print Tacitus’s ©History© in English, during his lifetime
- (Patent Rolls, 33 Eliz. pt. 17, mentioned in Arber’s ©Transcript of
- the Stationers’ Registers© II (1875), p. 16). The metal engraving of a
- Roman Camp reappears in R. Grenewey’s translation of the ©Annals© of
- Tacitus (Lond. 1598, 1604, 1622).
-
-
- 1592.
-
-P. 32. ¬Barlaamus¬, last line but one.
-
- _For_ author _read_ editor. Another presentation copy has been seen,
- also without device.
-
-
-P. 32. ¬Brasbridge.¬
-
- See 1586 in this Supplement.
-
-
-P. 33. ¬Elizabeth.¬
-
- There is a perfect copy of this rare pamphlet in the great
- Gloucestershire collections at Chestal, Dursley, in the possession of
- the Phelps family, kindly pointed out to me by F. A. Hyett, Esq. The
- title is:—SPEECHES | DELIVERED TO | HER MAIESTIE THIS | LAST
- PROGRESSE, AT THE | Right Honorable the Lady RVSSELS, at | Bissam, the
- Right Honorable the Lorde | CHANDOS at Sudley, at the Right |
- Honorable the Lord NORRIS, at | Ricorte. | [_device._] On the verso of
- the title is a preface “To the Reader” signed by “I. B.” the printer.
-
-
-P. 33. ¬Gager¬ (no. 7).
-
- The author of the ©Bellum Grammaticale© was Andreas Guarna.
-
-
-P. 34. ¬Gager¬ (no. 8). l. 4 (not l. 3).
-
-_For_ 1591 _read_ 1592.
-
-
- 1593.
-
-P. 35. After no. 4 _add_:—
-
-¬Oxford¬, New College. Ex donatione Magistri Fran-|cisci Bettes LL. D:
-Socij huius Col-|_legij_. _Anno Domini. 1593._
-
- This is a book label, found in Spiegelius’s ©Lexicon Juris Civilis©,
- 1549 (Oo. xii. 5), and perhaps in other volumes in New College Library
- at Oxford. The words are within a border of woodcuts, the outside
- measurement of the printed border being 1–15/16 × 3–3/16 in.
-
-
- 1594.
-
-P. 36. ¬Beacon.¬
-
- P. 1 bears “¶j”, and is therefore not wholly blank.
-
-
-P. 37. ¬Powel¬ (no. 5). _Add at end_:—
-
- See 1631 P.
-
-
- 1597.
-
-P. 42. ¬Agatharchides.¬
-
- Professor Bywater has pointed out that the extracts from Agatharchides
- and Memnon are from an earlier printed edition of them, and not
- directly from Photius’s ©Bibliotheca©, which was first printed in
- 1601. Had the matter been taken from a MS. of Photius, the editor
- would no doubt have claimed the honour, whereas he claims credit only
- for the new translation into Latin.
-
-
-P. 42. _After_ ¬Agatharchides¬ _add_:—
-
-¬Brett¬, Richard, of Lincoln College. Theses M^{ri} BRET respondentis in
-Comitiis. | Oxon. 1597. | [text follows, as below.]
-
- A single sheet, 8½ in. high by 6 broad, printed on both sides,
- containing three theses. The first is _Politia Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ cum
- iure divino non pugnat_, followed by short Latin, Greek, and Hebrew
- poems. The second is followed by Latin, “Caldaica,” and “Syrica”
- poems, the last being written in MS. The third is followed by Latin,
- Arabic, and Æthiopic poems, the last two being filled in in MS. The
- Hebrew is in Pica type. For Brett, see Wood’s ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 611: he
- took the degree of Bachelor of Divinity on 6 June, 1597.
-
-
-P. 43. _After_ ¬King¬ _add_:—
-
-¬Oxford¬, University. “Qvaestiones sex, totidem praelectionibvs, in
-schola Theologica, Oxoniae, pro Forma, Habitis, Discvssae, Et
-Disceptatae Anno 1597.”
-
- So in the Catalogue of W. H. Holyoak, 75 Humberstone Gate, Leicester,
- “March 1888,” no. 10: the copy was sold on Jan. 3, 1890 to the rev.
- Shaw Urmstone of Manchester.
-
-
- 1598.
-
-P. 44. _After_ ¬Butler¬ _add_:—
-
-¬Butler¬, Charles. RHETORICÆ | LIBRI DVO. | QVORVM | _Prior de Tropis &
-Figuris_, | _Posterior de Voce & Gestu_ | PRAECIPIT. | IN VSVM
-SCHOLA-|rum accuratiùs editi. | ⁂⁂ | ⁂ | [_motto_, then _woodcuts_.]
-
- Impr. 11: 1598: (eights) 16^o: pp. [112], signn. ¶^4 A-F^8 G^4: sign.
- B 1^r beg. _sus, vivus_: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. ¶1^v, title:
- ¶2^r-3^r Epistola dedicatoria to lord Thomas Egerton, dated “Oxon. 16.
- Calend. Decemb. [16 Nov.], 1598”: ¶3^v-4^v, “Ad Lectorem”: A 1^r-G
- 3^r, the work: G 4 I have not seen.
-
- Very rare: the only copy at present known is in Corpus Christi Library
- at Oxford. Even Wood (©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 210) had not seen this first
- edition, since he implies that the date is 1600. See 1600 B, 1618 B,
- 1629 B.
-
-
- 1598 and 1599.
-
-Pp. 44, 46.
-
- The article ¬Lomazzo¬ has been inserted under 1599 instead of 1598,
- the proper year.
-
-
- 1599.
-
-P. 47. ¬Richard.¬
-
- With respect to the letters “B. P. N.”, see also 1625 J.
-
-
- 1603.
-
-P. 55. ¬Davies.¬ _Add at end_:—
-
- Ingleby, in his ©Shakespeare’s Centurie of Prayse© (2nd ed., 1879),
- points out a Shakespearean allusion on p. 215 of this work.
-
-
- 1606.
-
-P. 65. ¬Oxford¬, l. 1.
-
- _For_ .4 _read_ 4.
-
-
- 1608.
-
-P. 71. ¬Panke.¬ _Add at end_:—
-
- See 1613 P, in this Supplement.
-
-
- 1610.
-
-P. 78. ¬Rainolds¬, top line of page.
-
- _For_ ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 15 _read_ ©Ath. Oxon.© ii. 15 and 193.
-
-
- 1612.
-
-Pp. 82, 85.
-
- The articles ¬Rawlinson¬ and ¬Reinolds¬ are out of their place at the
- latter reference, and should be on p. 82.
-
-
-P. 85. ¬Smyth¬, Richard. _Add at end_:—
-
- The third edition was issued in 1634; see 1634 S.
-
-
- 1613.
-
-P. 86. ¬Answer.¬
-
- This is of course by Richard Parkes, as is noted in the first edition
- (p. 59; 1604, no. 7). “1604 A” is twice an error for “1604 P.”
-
-
-P. 89. ¬Colmore¬, l. 3.
-
- _For_ SAACTPAVL _read_ SANCTPAVL.
-
-
-P. 92. ¬Oxford¬, Univ. (Justa Funebria), l. 6.
-
- The type is English Roman.
-
-
-P. 92. Ibid. l. 11.
-
- _For_ preceding art. _read_ art. no. 19.
-
-
-P. 92. _After_ ¬Oxford¬, no. 21, _insert_:—
-
-¬Panke¬, John. THE FALL OF BABEL. | By the confusion of Tongues,
-directly proouing against the | Papistes of this, and former ages; that
-a view of their writings | and Bookes, being taken, it cannot be
-discerned by any | man liuing, what they would say, or how be
-vnder-|stood, in the question of the sacrifice of the Masse, | the Reall
-presence or Transubstantiation; | but in explaning their mindes, they
-fall | vpon such tearmes, as the Prote-|stants vse and allow. | FVRTHER.
-| In the question of the Popes Supremacie is shewed, how they | _abuse
-an authoritie of the auncient Father S. Cyprian, a Canon of_ | the 1.
-Niceene counsell, and the Ecclesiasticall historie of Socrates, and
-Sozomen: And lastly is set downe a briefe of the succession | of Popes
-in the sea of Rome, for these 1600. yeares togea-|ther: what diuersitie
-there is in their accompt, what | heresies, schismes, and intrusions
-there hath been in | that sea, deliuered in opposition against their |
-Tables, wherewith now adayes they are | very busie, and other thinges
-dis-|couered against them. | _By_ IOHN PANKE. | [_motto_, then
-_woodcut_.]
-
- Impr. 29 _a_: 1613: sm. 4^o: the rest as 1608 P.
-
- The titlepage was not printed at Oxford, the woodcut being unknown
- there: the rest is a reissue of the sheets of 1608 P. This edition has
- been erroneously dated 1623 in the British Museum ©Catalogue of books
- ... to the year 1640©.
-
-
-P. 95. ¬Smith¬, l. 5.
-
- _For_ 1684. S. _read_ 1617 S.
-
-
- 1614.
-
-P. 95. ¬Benefield.¬
-
- The date of the imprint should be 1614, not 1613.
-
-
-Pp. 97, 100. ¬N.¬, S. (no. 9).
-
- This article should be headed ¬S.¬, N., and should follow no. 15 on p.
- 100.
-
-
-P. 99. ¬Rainolds¬, l. 8.
-
- _For_ Pica English _read_ Pica Roman.
-
-
- 1615.
-
-P. 101. ¬Brasbridge.¬ _Add at end_:—
-
- See 1586 in this Supplement.
-
-
- 1618.
-
-P. 110. ¬Sanderson¬, last line.
-
- _For_ ii. 626 _read_ iii. 626.
-
-
- 1619.
-
-P. 111. ¬Flavel¬, l. 9.
-
- _For_ Long Primer English _read_ Long Primer Roman.
-
-
- 1620.
-
-P. 114. ¬James¬, l. 16.
-
- _For_ Proeomium _read_ Prooemium.
-
-
- 1621.
-
-P. 115. ¬Burton.¬
-
- An edition of the ©Anatomy of Melancholy© has been issued in 1893, in
- which the editor claims to have verified most of Burton’s quotations.
- See also 1640 F (Ferrand).
-
-
- 1622.
-
-P. 116. ¬Carpenter¬, last line of page.
-
-_For_ CARPNETARIO _read_ CARPENTARIO.
-
-
-P. 118. ¬Oxford.¬
-
- The date of the book (1622) has been accidentally omitted.
-
-
-P. 118. ¬Rawlinson¬, l. 4.
-
- _For_ 1662 _read_ 1621/2.
-
-
- 1623.
-
-P. 119. ¬Panke.¬
-
- The words “See 1613 P” are a reference to 1613 in this Supplement.
-
-
- 1625.
-
-P. 123. ¬Carpenter¬, l. 7.
-
- _For_ W_ater_ _read_ _Water_.
-
-
-P. 126. ¬Pemble.¬
-
- A reference to the 2nd edition, 1629, should have been inserted.
-
-
- 1628.
-
-P. 138. ¬Casa.¬ The J. W. (de Umbra) is no doubt J. Wouverus.
-
-
- 1629.
-
-P. 144. ¬Butler¬, ll. 5–7.
-
- _For the sentence_ The reference ... ©Oratoriæ Libri duo©, _read_ The
- reference to a ©Rhetorica© of this year is to a London edition of the
- ©Rhetorica© and ©Oratoria© together.
-
-
- 1630.
-
-P. 150. ¬Hakewill¬, l. 2.
-
- _For_ PER=|PETVALL _read_ PER=|PETUALL.
-
-
-P. 150. Ibid. l. 22.
-
- For ©Ath. Oxon.©, 256 read ©Ath. Oxon.©, iii. 256.
-
-
-P. 151. ¬Pemble¬, l. 6.
-
- _For_ Impr. 84 _b_ _read_ Impr. 84 _a_.
-
-
-P. 151. ¬Pinke.¬ _Add at end_:—
-
- See 1634 P (2nd ed.)
-
-
-P. 151. _Insert_:—
-
-¬Stanley¬, Henry. [_device_] | APPENDIX | AD LIBROS OMNES TAM | VETERIS
-QVAM NOVI TESTAMENTI. | HENRICUS [_device_] STANLEY | OXONIÆ. |
-M.DC.XXX. |
-
- Impr. as above: 1630: folio: pp. [2 + “529”-“540”]: pp. 529–40 begg.
- _Appendix_: Pica (?) Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 529–40, tables,
- see below.
-
- This set of seven leaves is apparently an experiment to be used for
- indexing sermons or comments under the verse of the Bible to which
- they refer. They are blank tables in the form “Versus 1 [2, 3, &c. to
- 18] _Vid._ L. P. L. ” six times and then “_Vid._ P. L. ”
- Eighteen verses are on each page, and references to L(iber) P(agina)
- L(inea) were intended to be filled in. No Latin Bible of folio size of
- 1629, ‘30 or ‘31 seems to exist, so probably this was intended to be
- bound up with some earlier edition. The only copy known is in the
- British Museum in MS. Harl. 5932, fol. 45 (Bagford’s collections), and
- no doubt the intended publication was abandoned.
-
-
- 1631.
-
-P. 153. ¬Bible¬, top line.
-
- The date of imprint (1631) has been accidentally omitted.
-
-
-P. 155. ¬F.¬, A. (Saints Legacies). _Add at end_:—
-
- See 1640 S.
-
-
-P. 155. ¬Felix¬, l. 1.
-
- _For_ Felıx _read_ Felix.
-
-
-P. 155. Ibid. ll. 4–5.
-
- bere; quam _should be italic_.
-
-
-P. 158. ¬Powel.¬ A copy of the work has now been seen, as follows:—
-
-¬Powel¬, Griffin. ANALYSIS | ANALYTICO-|RVM POSTERIORVM | SIVE LIBRORVM
-ARISTO-|telis de Demonstratione, | in qua singula capita per |
-quæstiones & responsi-|nes perspicuè ex-|ponuntur: | _adhibitis_ |
-QVIBVSDAM SCHOLIIS, | ex optimis quibusq; interpreti-|bus desumptis,
-opera & studio _G._ | POWEL _Oxoniensis confecta_ | _& edita in vsum
-iuniorum_. | _Editio secunda._ | [_woodcut._]
-
- Impr. 143 _a_: 1631: (eights) 12^o: pp. [16] + 241 + [3]: p. 11 beg.
- _Analysis cap._ 2, 201 _strationis Medium_: Pica Roman. Contents:—pp.
- (1–2) not seen: (3) title: (5–7) dedication to the earl of Essex,
- dated “Ex Collegio Iesu oxoniæ Tertio Calend: Martij ... Griffinus
- Powel”: (8–14) “Ad Lectorem Academicum”, and “Prolegomena”: (15–16)
- not seen: 1–241, the Analysis: (2–3) not seen.
-
- See in body of text (1631 P).
-
-
- 1632.
-
-P. 161. ¬Widdowes¬, no. 32, l. 4.
-
- _For_ Impr. 137 _read_ Impr. 107.
-
-
- 1633.
-
-P. 168. ¬Gerhardus¬, l. 5.
-
- _For_ Long Primer English _read_ Long Primer Roman.
-
-
-P. 172. ¬Reusner¬, l. 9 (only).
-
- In the collation _for_ 198 _read_ 224, with the last page misprinted
- 198: and _for_ 34 _read_ 36, making the necessary correction in the
- List of Contents.
-
-
- 1634.
-
-P. 175. ¬Allen¬, 2nd line of page.
-
- It is the Bodleian Catalogue which ascribes the book to John Allen.
-
-
-P. 175. ¬Barclay¬, no. 3.
-
- The date of the imprint (1634) has been accidentally omitted.
-
-
- 1635.
-
-P. 183. ¬Chaucer¬, l. 6.
-
- _In_ English Roman Italic _the word_ Roman _is superfluous_.
-
-
-P. 183. Ibid, last line.
-
- _For_ sign. 2** _read_ sign. **2.
-
-
- 1636.
-
-P. 189. ¬Carpenter.¬
-
- At the end of the technical description a ] should be added.
-
-
-P. 194. ¬Prideaux¬, l. 5.
-
- _For_ 40^o P. 50 Th. _read_ 4^o P. 50 Th.
-
-
- 1637.
-
-P. 197. ¬Cowper.¬
-
- The date of the imprint (1637) is accidentally omitted.
-
-
-P. 200. ¬Prideaux¬, halfway down.
-
- _After_ Christ’s Resurrection ...” _add_ with impr. 152 _b_.
-
-
- 1638.
-
-P. 204. ¬Burton¬, l. 5 from end.
-
- Perhaps _protelata_ is rather “continued,” although there is no sign
- of London printing.
-
-
-P. 209. ¬Oxford¬—Statuta. _Add_:—
-
- A copy of the Statuta Selecta has been seen in which opposite p. 20,
- instead of the ©Encyclopædia© is found an undated folio folded
- broadside entitled:—SPECULUM | ACADEMICUM: | Quadratura Circuli, |
- Sive | _Cyclus Prælectorum_ in Schema redactus.... This table gives a
- note of the day of the week, hour, professor, audience and fines, and
- bears at the foot “Pag. 20.”, showing that it was intended for (at
- least some part of) this edition of the Statuta. In the last line
- copies vary between “Vesp.” (as it should be) and “vesp.”
-
-
- 1639.
-
-P. 212. ¬Dugres.¬
-
- The date of the imprint (1639) is accidentally omitted.
-
-
-P. 214. ¬Grotius¬, 3rd line from end.
-
- _For_ 1722 _read_ 1622.
-
-
- 1640.
-
-P. 223. ¬Saints Legacies.¬ _Add at end_:—
-
- The first edition of this book is described in 1631 F, so the note of
- its rarity must be modified.
-
- In Arber’s ©Transcript of the Stationers’ Registers© there is a record
- that this book under the title “A Collection of Certaine Promisis out
- of the Word of God” was entered by Robert Swayne on 21 June 1629, and
- that Swayne’s widow (?) Martha transferred her rights in “the Promises
- or Saintes legacy” to Richard Royston on 6 Feb. 1631/2.
-
-
-P. 223. ¬Tozer.¬
-
- The date of the imprint (1640) is accidentally omitted.
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF UNDATED BOOKS
- (WITH A REFERENCE TO THE YEAR UNDER WHICH THEY ARE CATALOGUED).
-
-
- Alexander: see 1485.
-
- Angelus, Christophorus: see 1618.
-
- Articles: see 1633.
-
- Augustine: see 1483.
-
- Cicero: see 1480.
-
- France—Articles: see 1624.
-
- Godwin, F., bp. of Llandaff: see 1603.
-
- Hampole: see 1483.
-
- Howson, John, bp. of Oxford: see 1622.
-
- Hutchins, Robert: see 1617.
-
- James, Thomas: Humble Request: see 1625.
-
- Jesuits Pater Noster: see 1611.
-
- Laet, Jaspar: see 1518.
-
- Latin Grammar: see 1481, 1483.
-
- Logic: see 1483.
-
- Lyndewoode, Will.: see 1483.
-
- Oxford, Merton College: see 1623.
-
- —— University: Encyclopædia: see 1635.
-
- —— —— Orders for the Market: see 1602, 1606.
-
- Philosophy: de Philosophia: see 1586.
-
- Shepery, John: see 1586.
-
- Terence: see 1483.
-
- Thornborough, John, bp. of Bristol: see 1605.
-
- Thornburgh, Edw.: see 1639.
-
- W., R.: Merry jests: see 1617.
-
- W(alkington), T(homas): see 1631.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX A.
- The Fifteenth Century Press.
-
- (Supplementary to, and corrective of, pp. 1–4.)
-
-
-The Oxford Press of the fifteenth century is a peculiarly interesting
-one. At present fifteen works are known to belong to it, ranging in date
-from “1468” (1478?) to 1486 (1486/7?). Not only is its origin quite
-independent, so far as is known, of Caxton’s printing, not only are new
-products of the press still from time to time discovered, but the battle
-which has been waged about the date of its establishment has made the
-“1468” book a veritable typographical battleground, and in Henry
-Bradshaw’s opinion a touchstone of intellectual acumen.
-
-In the first place some details of the various books will be given: then
-an account of the type and presswork: and lastly a description of each
-book supplementary to, and corrective of, that contained on pp. 1–4.
-
-
- DETAILS OF THE EARLY OXFORD PRESS.
-
- ┌───────────┬───────────────┬───────────┬─────┬─────────────┐
- │NO. DATE. │ PLACE NAMED. │ PRINTER │TYPE │SHORT TITLE. │
- │ │ │ NAMED. │USED.│ │
- ├───────────┼───────────────┼───────────┼─────┼─────────────┤
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────┼───────────────┼───────────┼─────┼─────────────┤
- │ 1 “1468,”│ Oxonia │ —— │ 1 │ ¬Jerome¬ │
- │ Dec. 17│ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 1479 │Oxonia (or -ae,│ —— │ 1 │ ¬Aretinus¬ │
- │ │ plural) │ │ │ │
- │ 3 1479/80│ Oxonia │ —— │ 1 │ ¬Ægidius¬ │
- │ (?), │ │ │ │ │
- │ Mar. │ │ │ │ │
- │ 14. │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────┼───────────────┼───────────┼─────┼─────────────┤
- │ 4 [1480?]│ —— │ —— │ 2 │ ¬Cicero¬ │
- │ 5 [1481?]│ —— │ —— │ 2 │ ¬Latin │
- │ │ │ │ │ Grammar¬ │
- │ 6 1481, │ Alma │Theodoricus│2, 3 │ ¬Ales¬ │
- │ Oct. 11│ universitas │ Rood de │ │ │
- │ │ Oxon̄. │ Colonia │ │ │
- │ 7 1482, │ —— │ —— │2, 3 │¬Latteburius¬│
- │ July 31│ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────┼───────────────┼───────────┼─────┼─────────────┤
- │ 8 [1483?]│ —— │ —— │4, 5,│ ¬Anwykyll¬, │
- │ │ │ │ 6 │ with │
- │ │ │ │ │ ¬Vulgaria¬ │
- │ │ │ │ │ (two │
- │ │ │ │ │ editions) │
- │ 9 [1483?]│ —— │ —— │4, 5,│ ¬Augustine¬ │
- │ │ │ │ 6 │ │
- │ 10 [1483?]│ —— │ —— │4, 6 │ ¬Hampole¬ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 11 [1483?]│ —— │ —— │4, 6 │ ¬Logic¬ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 12 [1483?]│ —— │ —— │3, 4,│¬Lyndewoode¬ │
- │ │ │ │5, 6 │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 13 1485 │ Alma │Teodoricus │3, 5 │ ¬Phalaris¬ │
- │ │ universitas │ Rood de │ │ │
- │ │ Oxoniae │ Colonia, │ │ │
- │ │ │and Thomas │ │ │
- │ │ │ Hunte │ │ │
- │ │ │ Anglicus │ │ │
- │ 14 [1485?]│ —— │ —— │4, 5,│ ¬Textus │
- │ │ │ │ 7 │ Alexandri¬ │
- │ 15 1486/7 │ —— │ —— │5, 7 │ ¬Festial¬ │
- │ [?] │ │ │ │ │
- └───────────┴───────────────┴───────────┴─────┴─────────────┘
- ┌────┬─────────────┬────────────────────────────────────┐
- │NO. │SHORT TITLE. │ PAPER AND MAKE-UP. │
- │ │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼────────┬────────┬───────────┬──────┤
- │ │ │Size by │Size by │ Size by │Copies│
- │ │ │folding.│make-up.│appearance.│ on │
- │ │ │ │ │ │vellum│
- │ │ │ │ │ │known.│
- ├────┼─────────────┼────────┼────────┼───────────┼──────┤
- │ 1 │ ¬Jerome¬ │ double │ eights │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 │ ¬Aretinus¬ │ double │ eights │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 3 │ ¬Ægidius¬ │ double │ eights │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼────────┼────────┼───────────┼──────┤
- │ 4 │ ¬Cicero¬ │ double │ sixes │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ 5 │ ¬Latin │ double │ ? │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ Grammar¬ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 │ ¬Ales¬ │ single │ eights │ folio │ + │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 7 │¬Latteburius¬│ single │ eights │ folio │ + │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼────────┼────────┼───────────┼──────┤
- │ 8 │ ¬Anwykyll¬, │ double │ eights │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ with │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ ¬Vulgaria¬ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ (two │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ editions) │ │ │ │ │
- │ 9 │ ¬Augustine¬ │ double │ eight │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 10 │ ¬Hampole¬ │ double │ sixes │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 11 │ ¬Logic¬ │ double │ sixes │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 12 │¬Lyndewoode¬ │ single │eights &│ folio │ + │
- │ │ │ │ sixes │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 13 │ ¬Phalaris¬ │ double │ eights │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 14 │ ¬Textus │ ? │ ? │ sm. 4^o │ ⨀ │
- │ │ Alexandri¬ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 15 │ ¬Festial¬ │ single │eights &│ folio │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ sixes │ │ │
- └────┴─────────────┴────────┴────────┴───────────┴──────┘
- ┌────┬─────────────┬───────────────────────────────┐
- │NO. │SHORT TITLE. │ COMPOSITION. │
- │ │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼───────────┬─────────┬─────────┤
- │ │ │Signatures.│ No. of │ Size of │
- │ │ │ │pages.[6]│ printed │
- │ │ │ │ │page.[7] │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼───────────┼─────────┼─────────┤
- │ 1 │ ¬Jerome¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 84 │ 4¾ × 2¾ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 │ ¬Aretinus¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 348 │ 4¾ × 2¾ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 3 │ ¬Ægidius¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 48 │ 4¾ × 2¾ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼───────────┼─────────┼─────────┤
- │ 4 │ ¬Cicero¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 60 │ 5⅛ × 3½ │
- │ 5 │ ¬Latin │ a, b, &c. │ — │5–5/16 × │
- │ │ Grammar¬ │ │ │ 3–7/16 │
- │ 6 │ ¬Ales¬ │a, b, &c.; │ 480 │ 7½ × 4¾ │
- │ │ │ A, B, &c. │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 7 │¬Latteburius¬│a, b, &c.; │ 584 │ 7⅞ × 4⅞ │
- │ │ │ A, B, &c. │ │ │
- ├────┼─────────────┼───────────┼─────────┼─────────┤
- │ 8 │ ¬Anwykyll¬, │ a, b, &c. │ 244 │ 4⅝ – │
- │ │ with │ │ │5–3/16 × │
- │ │ ¬Vulgaria¬ │ │ │ 3½ – │
- │ │ (two │ │ │ 4–3/16 │
- │ │ editions) │ │ │ │
- │ 9 │ ¬Augustine¬ │ a │ 16 │ 4½ × │
- │ │ │ │ │ 2–15/16 │
- │ 10 │ ¬Hampole¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 128 │5–7/16 × │
- │ │ │ │ │ 3⅜ │
- │ 11 │ ¬Logic¬ │A, B, &c.; │ 328 │ 5⅜ × 3⅜ │
- │ │ │ A a, B b, │ │ │
- │ │ │ &c. │ │ │
- │ 12 │¬Lyndewoode¬ │a, b, &c.; │ 732 │10½ × 6¼ │
- │ │ │A, B, &c.; │ │ – ⅜ │
- │ │ │aa, bb, &c.│ │ │
- │ 13 │ ¬Phalaris¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 136 │ 4⅞ × 2⅞ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 14 │ ¬Textus │ a, b, &c. │ — │5–5/16 × │
- │ │ Alexandri¬ │ │ │ 3–3/16 │
- │ 15 │ ¬Festial¬ │ a, b, &c. │ 348 │7–9/16 × │
- │ │ │ │ │ 4–11/16 │
- └────┴─────────────┴───────────┴─────────┴─────────┘
-
- ┌─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │NO. SHORT TITLE. │ COMPOSITION (¡continued¡). │
- ├─────────────────┼───────┬───────┬──────────┬────────┬──────────┤
- │ │Columns│ Lines │ Printing │ Page │Headlines.│
- │ │ in a │ in a │begins on │even at │ │
- │ │ page. │column.│signature.│ side. │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├─────────────────┼───────┼───────┼──────────┼────────┼──────────┤
- │ 1 ¬Jerome¬ │ 1 │ 25 │ a 1 │usually │ ⨀ │
- │ 2 ¬Aretinus¬ │ 1 │ 25 │ a 2 │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 3 ¬Ægidius¬ │ 1 │ 25 │ a 2 │ + │ ⨀ │
- ├─────────────────┼───────┼───────┼──────────┼────────┼──────────┤
- │ 4 ¬Cicero¬ │ 1 │ 19 │ a 2? │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 5 ¬Latin │ 1 │ 27 │ ? │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ Grammar¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 ¬Ales¬ │ 2 │ 38 │ a 2 │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 7 ¬Latteburius¬│ 2 │ 40 │ a 2 │ + │ + │
- ├─────────────────┼───────┼───────┼──────────┼────────┼──────────┤
- │ 8 ¬Anwykyll¬, │ 1 │ 22? │ ? │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ with │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Vulgaria¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ (two │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ editions) │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 9 ¬Augustine¬ │ 1 │ 26–7 │ a 2 │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 10 ¬Hampole¬ │ 1 │ 31 │ a 2 │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 11 ¬Logic¬ │ 1 │ 31 │ a 2 │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 12 ¬Lyndewoode¬ │ 2 │ 46 or │ a 2 (a │ + │ + │
- │ │ │ 60 │ 1^v) │ │ │
- │ 13 ¬Phalaris¬ │ 1 │ 21 │ a 1^v │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 14 ¬Textus │ 1 │ — │ ? │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ Alexandri¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 15 ¬Festial¬ │ 2 │ 33 │ a 1^v │ + │ ⨀ │
- └─────────────────┴───────┴───────┴──────────┴────────┴──────────┘
- ┌─────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │NO. SHORT TITLE. │ COMPOSITION (¡continued¡). │
- ├─────────────────┼─────────┬──────────┬─────┬──────────┬────────────┤
- │ │Marginal │Paragraphs│Space│Directors.│Punctuation.│
- │ │printing.│set back. │left │ │ . : , ? () │
- │ │ │ │ for │ │ │
- │ │ │ │caps.│ │ │
- ├─────────────────┼─────────┼──────────┼─────┼──────────┼────────────┤
- │ 1 ¬Jerome¬ │ ⨀ │ + │ + │ once │ + + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ 2 ¬Aretinus¬ │ ⨀ │ + │ + │ once, in │ + + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ one copy │ │
- │ 3 ¬Ægidius¬ │ ⨀ │ + │ + │ ⨀ │ + + ⨀ + ⨀ │
- ├─────────────────┼─────────┼──────────┼─────┼──────────┼────────────┤
- │ 4 ¬Cicero¬ │ ⨀ │ ⨀? │ ? │ ? │+ + (/) + + │
- │ 5 ¬Latin │ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ? ? │
- │ Grammar¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 ¬Ales¬ │ ⨀ │ + │ + │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ 7 ¬Latteburius¬│ + │ + │ + │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- ├─────────────────┼─────────┼──────────┼─────┼──────────┼────────────┤
- │ 8 ¬Anwykyll¬, │ ⨀ │ + │ + │ once │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ with │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Vulgaria¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ (two │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ editions) │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 9 ¬Augustine¬ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │ + + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ 10 ¬Hampole¬ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ 11 ¬Logic¬ │ ⨀ │ + │ + │ + │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ 12 ¬Lyndewoode¬ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 13 ¬Phalaris¬ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ 14 ¬Textus │ ⨀ │ ? │ ? │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- │ Alexandri¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 15 ¬Festial¬ │ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ │
- └─────────────────┴─────────┴──────────┴─────┴──────────┴────────────┘
- ┌─────────────────┬───────────────────╥─────────────────────────┐
- │NO. SHORT TITLE. │ PRINTING. ║ ILLUSTRATIONS. │
- ├─────────────────┼─────┬───────┬─────╫────────┬────────┬───────┤
- │ │Pages│Spaced.│ Red ║Borders.│Woodcuts│Woodcut│
- │ │at a │ │ ink ║ │in text.│ caps. │
- │ │time.│ │used.║ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- ├─────────────────┼─────┼───────┼─────╫────────┼────────┼───────┤
- │ 1 ¬Jerome¬ │ 1 │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 2 ¬Aretinus¬ │ 2 │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ 3 ¬Ægidius¬ │ 2 │ ⨀ │ + ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- ├─────────────────┼─────┼───────┼─────╫────────┼────────┼───────┤
- │ 4 ¬Cicero¬ │ 2? │ + │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 5 ¬Latin │ ? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ Grammar¬ │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ 6 ¬Ales¬ │ 2 │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ + │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 7 ¬Latteburius¬│ 2 │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ + │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- ├─────────────────┼─────┼───────┼─────╫────────┼────────┼───────┤
- │ 8 ¬Anwykyll¬, │ 2? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ with │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ ¬Vulgaria¬ │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ (two │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ editions) │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ 9 ¬Augustine¬ │ ? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 10 ¬Hampole¬ │ 4? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 11 ¬Logic¬ │ 4? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ + │ ⨀ │
- │ 12 ¬Lyndewoode¬ │ ? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ 13 ¬Phalaris¬ │ 2 │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 14 ¬Textus │ ? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ Alexandri¬ │ │ │ ║ │ │ │
- │ 15 ¬Festial¬ │ ? │ ⨀ │ ⨀ ║ ⨀ │ + │ + │
- └─────────────────┴─────┴───────┴─────╨────────┴────────┴───────┘
-
-
- OWNERS OF COPIES.
-
- ┌───────────────┬───────┬─────────┬──────────┬────────┐
- │No. │British│Bodleian.│Cambridge │ John │
- │ │Museum.│ │University│Rylands │
- │ │ │ │ Library. │Library.│
- ├───────────────┼───────┼─────────┼──────────┼────────┤
- │ 1 Jerome │ 1 │ 1[8] │ 1 │ 1 │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Aretinus │ 1 │ 1[8] │ ⨀ │ 1 │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 3 Ægidius │ ⨀ │ 1 │ ⨀ │ 1 │
- │ 4 Cicero │ ⨀ │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 5 Latin │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ Grammar │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 Ales │ 1[8] │ 1[8] │ 2[8] │ 1 │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 7 Latteburius│ 1[8] │ 1[8] │ 2 │ 1 │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 8 Anwykyll, │ ½ │ 1½ │ ½[8] │ ½ │
- │ with │ │ │ │ │
- │ Vulgaria │ │ │ │ │
- │ 9 Hampole │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ 2 │ 1 │
- │ 10 Logic │ ⨀ │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀ │
- │ 11 Lyndewoode │ 3 │ 1[8] │ 2 │ 1 │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 12 Augustine │ 1 │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ 13 Phalaris │ ⨀ │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀ │ 1 │
- │ 14 Textus │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │
- │ Alexandri│ │ │ │ │
- │ 15 Festial │ ⨀[8] │ 1½ │ ⨀ │ 1 │
- ├───────────────┼───────┼─────────┼──────────┼────────┤
- │ Totals │ 8½ │ 9 │ 9½ │ 9½ │
- │ Different │ 6½ │ 8 │ 5½ │ 9½ │
- │ books │ │ │ │ │
- └───────────────┴───────┴─────────┴──────────┴────────┘
- ┌───────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬──────────────┬───────┐
- │No. │ Oxford │Cambridge│ Other owners │ Total │
- │ │Colleges,│Colleges.│ of copies. │ of │
- │ │ &c. │ │ │copies.│
- ├───────────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────────┼───────┤
- │ 1 Jerome │ 3 │ ⨀ │Huth Library, │ 12 │
- │ │ │ │ Earl of │ │
- │ │ │ │ Pembroke, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Sir H. │ │
- │ │ │ │ Dryden, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Paris, │ │
- │ │ │ │ America. │ │
- │ 2 Aretinus │ ⨀[A] │ ⨀ │Norwich │ 7 │
- │ │ │ │ Cathedral, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Earl of │ │
- │ │ │ │ Pembroke, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Chetham │ │
- │ │ │ │ Library, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Lord │ │
- │ │ │ │ Ashburnham. │ │
- │ 3 Ægidius │ 1 │ ⨀ │ │ 3 │
- │ 4 Cicero │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀ │ │ ⨀ │
- │ 5 Latin │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ │ ⨀ │
- │ Grammar │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 Ales │ 8[8] │ ⨀[8] │Durham and │ 16 │
- │ │ │ │ Lincoln │ │
- │ │ │ │ Cathedrals, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Dulwich │ │
- │ │ │ │ College. │ │
- │ 7 Latteburius│ 3[8] │ 2[8] │Lambeth, │ 15 │
- │ │ │ │ Westminster,│ │
- │ │ │ │ Stonyhurst, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Brussels, T.│ │
- │ │ │ │ E. Cooke, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Esq. │ │
- │ 8 Anwykyll, │ ⨀ │ ⨀[8] │ │ (3) │
- │ with │ │ │ │ │
- │ Vulgaria │ │ │ │ │
- │ 9 Hampole │ ⨀ │ ⨀[8] │ │ 3 │
- │ 10 Logic │ 2 │ ⨀[8] │ │ 2 │
- │ 11 Lyndewoode │ 3 │ 4 │Edinburgh │ 20 │
- │ │ │ │ (Advocates’ │ │
- │ │ │ │ Library), │ │
- │ │ │ │ Durham │ │
- │ │ │ │ Cathedral, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Glasgow, │ │
- │ │ │ │ Paris, E. G.│ │
- │ │ │ │ Duff, Esq., │ │
- │ │ │ │ Lord │ │
- │ │ │ │ Crawford. │ │
- │ 12 Augustine │ ⨀ │ ⨀ │ │ 1 │
- │ 13 Phalaris │ 2[8] │ ⨀[8] │ │ 3 │
- │ 14 Textus │ ⨀ │ ⨀[8] │ │ ⨀ │
- │ Alexandri│ │ │ │ │
- │ 15 Festial │ ⨀[8] │ ⨀ │Lambeth. │ 3½ │
- ├───────────────┼─────────┼─────────┼──────────────┼───────┤
- │ Totals │ 22 │ 6 │ 24 │ 88½ │
- │ Different │ │ │ │ │
- │ books │ │ │ │ │
- └───────────────┴─────────┴─────────┴──────────────┴───────┘
-
-The finest set is undoubtedly possessed by the John Rylands Library at
-Manchester.
-
-
- THE TYPE AND PRESS-WORK.
-
-Seven kinds of type were used, the use of which can be seen on p. 238.
-Facsimiles of all of them are given in plates II-V.
-
-These obviously divide the books into three groups. In the first group
-of three (“1468”–1479/80) only type no. 1 is used. In the second group
-of four (1480–82, Theodoric Rood) only types 2–3 are found. In the last
-group consisting of eight (1483–1486/7, T. Rood and Thomas Hunte) only
-types 4–7 are used, except that the peculiar black initial type (no. 3)
-is occasionally still used.
-
-The press was of course a wooden hand-screw one, which was at first
-employed to print one page at a time (Jerome), but after the first book
-two pages and perhaps later four were struck off together. The earliest
-printing press of which we have an engraving is as late as 1499/500 (see
-an article in ©Bibliographica©, 1894, no. 2), but there was great
-conservatism in detail, and from the early engravings and such
-researches as those which Blades, De Vinne, Talbot Reed, and others have
-made, we know many of the details of working in the earliest days.
-
-
- _Type_ 1. “1468”—1479/80.
-
-Character:—Cologne black.
-
-Body:—English, nearly (10 lines = 1–15/16 in. In modern English 10 lines
-= 1⅞ in.).
-
-Used in the Jerome, Aretinus and Aegidius, with no other.
-
-The “upper case” (to use a modern expression) consisted of at least 16
-divisions, G, J, K, L, T, U, W, X, Y, Z not being used, and P seldom in
-the Jerome, H being there used for both H and P. This misuse is not
-found in the other two books. On the other hand there are two forms of
-C, E, N, and Q, both probably mixed in the same division. Q is in the
-Jerome almost always [reversed Q] (a peculiarity found in some
-ornamental MSS., from the convenience of extending the tail into the
-margin), in the Aretinus and Aegidius always Q: the letter is however
-identical in all three books, but being on a square body it is in the
-Jerome turned one quarter round.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The “lower case” consisted of at least 121 divisions. Of the simple
-unmodified letters k and z are wanting, and except in the Jerome j (but
-ij is found in all, colligated). There are two forms of p, r, and three
-of s, the two p’s and r’s being used indiscriminately, but the two s’s
-(final) and the ſ (initial and medial) having their proper use. Of
-colligated or modified letters there are at least eighty-three, and of
-other symbols eleven (for -et, &, con-, -us [two], id est, full stop,
-colon, ?). Of these 121 about 95 are common to all three. The signs of
-progress are as follows:—
-
-In the Jerome, contrasted with the other two, Q is except in two places
-[reversed Q], H is generally used as P, and I have not elsewhere noticed
-ḃ, or j used by itself. On the other hand in the two others, and not in
-the Jerome, are found an extra short t in which the perpendicular stroke
-hardly appears at all above the horizontal line, and eleven new forms,
-including fe, ff, and pp in colligation. The Q and P are rightly used,
-always.
-
-So too in the Jerome and Aretinus compared with the Aegidius we find
-that q is printed too high up, being in fact an inverted b, or, more
-accurately, an inverted broken h occasionally used for b. In the Jerome
-this is almost always the case, in the Aretinus as often as not, in the
-Aegidius hardly ever. It may be accidental that B and H and three minor
-modified letters are not found in the short Aegidius, that w (in wlt =
-vult) is only found in the Jerome, [·|·] (= id est) only in the
-Aretinus: but the occurrence of ؟ (= ?) and of printing in red ink
-_only_ in the Aegidius, is not insignificant.
-
-The relative order of the three may therefore be assumed to be as above
-indicated.
-
-
- _Origin of the type._
-
-It may be taken as certain that as Caxton’s type is based on Bruges
-models, so the first Oxford type is ultimately derived from Cologne.
-Ulric Zel began printing there at least as early as 1466, and the
-general resemblance to his letters is clear. The likeness is still
-nearer when we follow Zel’s influence on Arnold ther Hoernen (Cologne,
-from 1470), Richard Paffroet of Cologne (Deventer, from 1477), and
-especially a little-known Cologne printer named Gerard ten Raem de
-Bercka, whose only dated book is of 1478. John of Westphalia (Alost and
-Louvain, from 1473) and Jacobus de Breda, a successor of Paffroet at
-Deventer, also supply similarities. In the case of Gerard we actually
-find, besides a close general similarity, the same misuse of H as P.
-Unfortunately no works printed by him, except the dated ©Modus
-Confitendi© and an undated ©Aesopus©, are at present known, so that it
-must not be assumed that 1478 is his earliest or only date.
-
-It is at present also unsafe to assume that Theodoricus Rood of Cologne
-who printed at Oxford in 1481–85 was the first Oxford printer, or ever
-used type no. 1.
-
-
- _Type_ 2 (1480?-1482).
-
-Character:—Narrow Dutch Black.
-
-Body:—English, nearly (10 lines = just less than 2 in.).
-
-Used in the Cicero (1480?: by itself), Latin Grammar (1481?: by itself),
-Ales (1481: chiefly, but with no. 3), and Latteburius (1482: chiefly,
-but with no. 3).
-
-The “upper case” consisted of 22 letters (J, K, U, W omitted).
-
- * * * * *
-
-The “lower case” consisted of at least 131 divisions. Of the simple
-letters j only occurs in colligation with i (as ij), and there are two
-forms of r, s (s, ſ) and y. There are about 93 colligated or modified
-letters.
-
-Unfortunately it is very difficult to institute a close comparison of
-the use of letters, so as to establish a proper order of the books, in
-consequence of the fragmentary state of the Milo and the Latin Grammar.
-The Milo can be clearly separated from the rest: the type is _spaced_,
-so that 10 lines = between 2–9/16 and 2¾ in., and ( ), ؟ (= ?), | (=
-comma) are found in it alone. In fact, but for the closest resemblance
-of actual type, the Milo would have to be regarded as printed elsewhere:
-and it cannot yet be said to be quite certainly printed at Oxford. The
-Ales and Latteburius are hardly to be distinguished in the use of type,
-but I have observed w only in the Latteburius and Grammar.
-
-The origin of the type is probably to be looked for near Cologne, from
-whence came Theodoricus Rood, the avowed printer of the Ales, and where
-a Theodoricus, who may probably be identified with Rood, printed in
-1485–6 in a type smaller than, but similar to, the present one. The
-narrow stilted look of the letters and the semicircular sweep in front
-of the A are noticeable features. Henry Bradshaw detected a similarity
-between this type and that of Arnold ther Hoernen at Cologne.
-
-
- _Type_ 3 (1481–1485).
-
-Character:—Heading and initial Black, a large special type.
-
-Body:—2-line English, nearly (10 lines = 4 in. -, 10 lines of 2-line
-English = 3¾ in. +).
-
-Used only in the Ales (1481) and Latteburius (1482) (for the beginnings
-of chapters), in the Lyndewoode (1483?: head lines) and the Phalaris
-(1485: one line).
-
-The type is too sparsely used to enable us to describe the extent of the
-fount: but F, G, J, j, K, k, v, W, w, X, Y, Z, z are not found: I and g
-have two forms each; s, ſ are found; V is only used for the number five;
-and nine modified or conjoined letters occur. The peculiarity of the
-letters is a slipped or detached upper corner in B, L, N, which is found
-in 1506 in Quentell’s printing at Cologne, and may be compared with a
-smaller form used by Jean Veldener at Culenburg in 1484.
-
-
- _Type_ 4 (1483?-1485?).
-
-Character:—Small Dutch Black.
-
-Body:—Pica, nearly (10 lines = 1–11/16 + in., 10 lines in Pica = 1–11/16
-– in.).
-
-This is the small type of the Anwykyll and Lyndewoode (both 1483?), the
-ordinary type of the Hampole, Logic, and Augustine (all 1483?), and the
-small type of the Lyndewoode (1483?), and is used in the Textus
-Alexandri (1485?). It is in many details similar to type 2, but may be
-readily distinguished by the o being broad and round in type 4, instead
-of narrow and oval as in type 2. There are two forms of S in type 4, and
-only one in type 2. The capitals are identical with those of type 6.
-
-The fount consisted of 25 capitals (J, V, W wanting, but two forms of D,
-S), 27 small letters (z wanting, but r, s double) and at least 95
-modified or conjoined letters, in all not less than 147 types. Seven of
-the last class appear to be peculiar to the Logic, which may therefore
-be the latest of the group.
-
-
- _Type_ 5 (1483–1486/7).
-
-Character:—Small Caxtonian Black.
-
-Body:—Great Primer, nearly (10 lines = 2–5/16 in., 10 lines of Great
-Primer = 2⅜ in.).
-
-This is the larger type of the Anwykyll, the largest but one (ordinary
-large) of the Lyndewoode, the largest of the Augustine (all 1483?), the
-ordinary one of the Phalaris (1485), is used in the Textus Alexandri
-(1485?), and is the small type of the Festial (1486). The capitals are
-identical with those of type 7.
-
-There are 19 capitals (J, K, V, W, X, Y, Z wanting) and 28 small letters
-(j, z wanting, but d, g, r, s double), and at least 44 modified or
-conjoined letters, five of which seem to be peculiar to the Festial, as
-is also the use of k. In all there were not less than 91 types.
-
-
- _Type_ 6 (1483?).
-
-Character:—Large Dutch Black, a Church type going with no. 4.
-
-Body:—Pica, nearly (as no. 4).
-
-This is the larger type of the Hampole, the larger type (two half lines
-only) of the Logic, the larger type imbedded in the small type of the
-Lyndewoode, the intermediate type (one line) in the Augustine, and
-occurs in the Anwykyll (all 1483?). The capitals are identical with
-those of type 4.
-
-There are 22 capitals (J, K, V, W, Z wanting, but S double), 24 small
-letters (j, k, w, z wanting, but r, s double), and at least 16 modified
-or conjoined letters, in all not less than 62 types. Eight of the
-modified letters appear to be peculiar to the Hampole.
-
-
- _Type_ 7 (1485?–1486/7).
-
-Character:—Large Caxtonian Black, a Church type going with no. 5.
-
-Body:—Great Primer, nearly (as no. 5).
-
-This is used in the Textus Alexandri (1485?) and is the large type of
-the Festial (1486/7). The capitals are identical with those of type 5.
-
-To judge from the Festial, there are 18 capitals (J, K, R, V, W, X, Y, Z
-not being used), 24 small letters (k, w, y, z not found, but r, s
-double), and at least 9 modified letters, 51 in all.
-
-
- WATERMARKS.
-
-At present the study of watermarks has not reached a stage at which they
-are able to contribute scientific proofs of high importance, nor will
-any proof be ever deducible from them except the earliest possible
-occurrence of an undated issue, although probabilities of concurrent
-printing may be arrived at. Only some plain facts, therefore, will be
-stated with respect to their occurrence in the early Oxford books.
-
-If we take the first group (the Jerome, Aretinus and Aegidius), we find
-no less than 26, out of a total of 50. The Rufinus has seven (two shared
-with the others, one shared with the Aretinus only, one shared with the
-Latteburius, and three peculiar to itself). The Aretinus has 22, most of
-which are found in the later groups, but eight are peculiar to itself.
-The Aegidius has two only, common to the group.
-
-In the second group (Cicero, Ales, Latteburius, Latin Grammar) there
-appear to be 28, of which four are common to all the groups, one is
-shared only with group one, seven only with group three, and sixteen are
-peculiar.
-
-In the third group 38 occur, four of which are common to all the groups,
-nine are shared with the first alone, seven with the second alone, and
-eighteen are peculiar.
-
-
- SEPARATE BOOKS.
-
-
- 1. ¬Jerome¬ (“1468,” see p. 1).
-
-The treatise of Tyrannius Rufinus on the Apostles’ Creed, here ascribed
-to St. Jerome, was undoubtedly the first product of the Oxford press. It
-bears the date of 17 December, 1468, as the day on which the printing
-was finished. The colophon is clearly printed and bears no mark of
-haste, nor does it show the smallest trace of alteration in any of the
-copies seen by the present writer. Saturday is a reasonable day on which
-to conclude a work. A facsimile of the colophon is given in plate II.
-
-Unfortunately for the peace of the bibliographer two spectres have
-haunted this book, one of which “pulveris exigui jactu” has been laid,
-but the other is not yet gone, although there is a prospect of ultimate
-eviction.
-
-
- I. THE CORSELLIS FORGERY.
-
-In 1664 Richard Atkyns, a Gloucestershire gentleman of some position,
-and educated at Balliol, issued a book, the title of which sets forth
-with unusual clearness the object of the volume:—“The Original and
-Growth of Printing: Collected Out of History, and the _Records_ of this
-Kingdome. Wherein is also Demonstrated, That Printing appertaineth to
-the _Prerogative Royal_; and is a Flower of the _Crown_ of _England_. By
-Richard Atkyns, _Esq_:” (London, printed by John Streater, for the
-Author, MDCLXIV: quarto: pp. [12] + 24). Atkyns’s object was to
-recommend himself to Charles II’s attention by proving that printing was
-a royal privilege: and for this it was very desirable that there should
-be evidence of the introduction of the art into England under royal
-protection. The testimony of Stowe—corroborated by Howell—that “William
-Caxton of London, Mercer,” introduced it in 1471, was unsuitable.
-Atkyns, however, came upon a copy of the “1468” Oxford book, and “the
-same most worthy Person who trusted me with the aforesaid Book, did also
-present me with the Copy of a Record and Manuscript in _Lambeth_-House,
-heretofore in his Custody, belonging to the See (and not to any
-particular Arch-Bishop of _Canterbury_); the substance whereof was this
-(though I hope, for publique satisfaction, the Record it self, in its
-due time, will appear).” Then ensues the following story:—
-
- _Thomas Bourchier_, Arch-Biſhop of _Canterbury_, moved the then King
- (_Hen._ the 6th) to uſe all poſſible means for procuring a
- Printing-Mold (for ſo ’twas there called) to be brought into this
- Kingdom; the King (a good Man, and much given to Works of this Nature)
- readily hearkned to the Motion; and taking private Advice, how to
- effect His Deſign, concluded it could not be brought about without
- great Secrecy, and a conſiderable Sum of Money given to ſuch Perſon or
- Perſons, as would draw off ſome of the Workmen from _Harlein_ in
- _Holland_, where _John Cuthenberg_ had newly invented it, and was
- himſelf perſonally at Work: ’Twas reſolv’d, that leſs then one
- Thouſand Marks would not produce the deſir’d Effect: Towards which
- Sum, the ſaid Arch-Biſhop preſented the King with Three Hundred Marks.
- The Money being now prepared, the Management of the Deſign was
- committed to Mr. _Robert Turnour_, who then was of the Roabs to the
- King, and a Perſon moſt in Favour with Him, of any of his Condition:
- Mr. _Turnour_ took to his Aſſiſtance Mr. _Caxton_, a Citizen of good
- Abilities, who Trading much into _Holland_, might be a Creditable
- Pretence, as well for his going, as ſtay in the _Low Countries_: Mr.
- _Turnour_ was in Diſguiſe (his Beard and Hair ſhaven quite off) but
- Mr. _Caxton_ appeared known and publique. They having received the
- ſaid Sum of One Thouſand Marks, went firſt to _Amſterdam_, then to
- _Leyden_, not daring to enter _Harlein_ it ſelf; for the Town was very
- jealous, having impriſoned and apprehended divers Perſons, who came
- from other Parts for the ſame purpoſe: They ſtaid till they had ſpent
- the whole One Thouſand Marks in Gifts and Expences: So as the King was
- fain to ſend Five Hundred Marks more, Mr. _Turnour_ having written to
- the King, that he had almoſt done his Work; a Bargain (as he ſaid)
- being ſtruck betwixt him and two _Hollanders_, for bringing off one of
- the Work men, who ſhould ſufficiently diſcover and teach this New Art:
- At laſt, with much ado, they got off one of the Under-Workmen, whoſe
- Name was _Frederick Corſells_ (or rather _Corſellis_), who late one
- Night ſtole from his Fellows in Diſguiſe, into a Veſſel prepared
- before for that purpoſe; and ſo the Wind (favouring the Deſign)
- brought him ſafe to _London_.
-
- ’Twas not thought ſo prudent, to ſet him on Work at _London_, (but by
- the Arch-Biſhops meanes, who had been Vice-Chancellor, and afterwards
- Chancellor of the Univerſity of _Oxon_) _Corſellis_ was carryed with a
- Guard to _Oxon_; which Guard conſtantly watch’d, to prevent
- _Corſellis_ from any poſſible Escape, till he had made good his
- Promiſe, in teaching how to Print: So that at _Oxford_ Printing was
- firſt ſet up in _England_, which was before there was any
- Printing-Press, or Printer, in _France_, _Spain_, _Italy_, or
- _Germany_, (except the City of _Mentz_) which claimes Seniority, as to
- Printing, even of _Harlein_ it ſelf, calling her City, _Urbem
- Maguntinam Artis Tipographicæ Inventricem primam_, though ’tis known
- to be otherwiſe, that City gaining that Art by the Brother of one of
- the Workmen of _Harlein_, who had learnt it at Home of his Brother,
- and after ſet up for himſelf at _Mentz_.
-
- This Preſs at _Oxon_ was at leaſt ten years before there was any
- Printing in _Europe_ (except at _Harlein_, and _Mentz_) where alſo it
- was but new born. This Preſs at _Oxford_, was afterwards found
- inconvenient, to be the ſole Printing-place of _England_, as being too
- far from _London_, and the Sea: Whereupon the King ſet up a Preſs at
- St. _Albans_, and another in the Abby of _Weſtminster_, where they
- Printed ſeveral Bookes of Divinity and Phyſick, (for the King, for
- Reaſons beſt known to himſelf and Council) permitted then no Law-Books
- to be Printed; nor did any Printer exerciſe that ART, but onely ſuch
- as were the Kings ſworn Servants; the King himſelf having the Price
- and Emolument for Printing Books.
-
- Printing thus brought into _England_, was moſt Graciouſly received by
- the King, and moſt cordially entertained by the Church, the Printers
- having the Honour to be ſworn the King’s Servants, and the Favour to
- Lodge in the very Boſome of the Church; as in _Weſtminſter_, St.
- _Albans_, _Oxon_, &c.
-
-As no one believes in this story it is not worth while to do more than
-to point out that no corroboration of it has ever been found, (much less
-the original record discovered), that Henry VI was deposed 4 March
-1460/1, and that the type shows no resemblance to that of Haarlem. Nor
-does the rest of the book concern us. The tale, however, in the absence
-of contradiction, obtained some vogue, so that we find for instance in
-Layer Marney church in Essex some such inscription as the following
-“Præ-missus, non amissus, Nicolas Corsellis Armiger Dominus hujus
-manerii hic requiescit, hâc vitâ ad meliorem commigratus Anno D 1674 Die
-Octobris 19^o.
-
- Artem typographi miratam Belgicus Anglis
- Corsellis docuit, Regis prece munere victus.
- Hic fuit extremis mercator cognitus Indis:
- Incola jam cælis, virtus sua famaque vivent.
-
-Johannes Corsellis ejus Executor & Consanguineus hoc monumentum posuit.”
-The Corsellis family came from Flanders in the 17th century. There is no
-question that this clumsy forgery of Atkyns has had its effect in
-befogging the subject to which it relates, and has predisposed critics
-to suspect the date of the first Oxford book.
-
-
- II. THE DISPUTED DATE, “1468.”
-
-The first who threw doubt on the recorded date of the Jerome was Conyers
-Middleton in his ©Dissertation on the origin of Printing© published in
-1735, and since then the opinion that 1468 is an error for 1478 (an X
-having dropped out of “MCCCCLXXVIII”) has steadily gained ground with
-the advance of critical methods, until authorities like Bradshaw and
-Blades and Duff have come to regard the question as settled. The only
-two separate and formal defences of the date (not counting incidental
-passages in books) are a MS. in the Guildhall Library in London, in a
-volume of Stukeley’s ©Palæographia Britannica© marked B. 2. 1, perhaps
-written in about 1770, and S. W. Singer’s ©Some Account of the book
-printed at Oxford in MCCCCLXVIII© (London, 1812, 50 copies for private
-distribution), a work which the author subsequently called in as far as
-he was able. In the former the arguments are of a general character,
-such as that if, as Middleton asserted, the King had not leisure to
-attend to such matters during Civil War, the archbishop _had_, and that
-Caxton’s silence counts for nothing in the general obscurity which
-surrounds the earliest printing presses. The Corsellis story is
-accepted. Singer is more scientific, as befits the later date, and
-adduces several of the technical arguments which may still be used.
-
-It is now time to state the present aspect of the dispute, and to
-ascertain how far the date “1468” is not only dubious but untenable. The
-arguments against the date may be stated in presumed order of their
-cogency, with the remarks on the other side which they severally
-suggest.
-
-
- 1. _The presence of Signatures._
-
-The Jerome presents to our eyes the ordinary signatures to which we are
-accustomed in fifteenth-century books, that is to say the marks a j, a
-ij, a iij, a iiij on the recto of each of the four leaves which form the
-first half of the sections of eight leaves (sixteen pages) of which the
-book is generally composed. These are placed just below the last letters
-of the printed page, close under them. Now the earliest known book with
-a date in which signatures elsewhere occur in this developed form is an
-©Expositio Decalogi©, by Johannes Nider, printed at Cologne by Koelhoff
-in 1472, the next being a Cologne book by F. de Platea in 1474. The
-argument is that it is extremely unlikely that an isolated printer in a
-provincial town in England should make such a discovery and advance, and
-that the next similar book should be a German one four years later[9].
-
-What may be called the common ground of the discussion on this point is
-well explained in Blades’s ©Books in Chains© (Lond. 1892), pp. 85–122,
-in a paper on Signatures. He shows that the idea of signatures in
-manuscripts is as old as books themselves, but that in manuscripts the
-marks, being in writing and intended for the binder’s eye alone, were
-naturally, as a rule, at the foot or corner of the page, and often cut
-off in the process of binding. When printing came in, the obvious
-difficulty was to print marks so far from the rest of the printed page
-as to be cut off in binding. This difficulty was met in two ways: either
-the signatures were _written in_ at the extreme foot (from 1462?), or
-the signatures were stamped on by hand with single types (from 1473?).
-Some printers, however, did manage by care to print signatures far from
-the text (1474 on?). Ultimately in a single case in 1472 and with
-increasing frequency from 1474 printers found that the essential
-ugliness of printed signatures close to the page was counterbalanced by
-the utility and convenience of the change, and our modern system was
-begun.
-
-Now, it must be constantly remembered that the entire weight of disproof
-lies with those who dispute the printed date. This is why it is simply
-amusing to read Blades’s sage words on the subject of this 1472 book
-with normal printed signatures. He is pledged to renounce the Oxford
-date, but he finds it awkward that there _is_ an isolated book of 1472
-in precisely the same category—with the same want of precedent, the same
-absence of imitators, the same forlorn appearance. Observe how he deals
-with it (p. 116 of the book above cited):—“This is a puzzling book, for
-it is at least two years earlier than any other book so signed. In this
-city, too. [i. e. Lübeck[10]] many works were issued with MS. signatures
-with a later date than this. It is dangerous to assert that a book is
-wrongly dated because you cannot make it fit into a bibliographical
-theory; but I feel inclined, from the general aspect of the book, to
-date it as 1482, rather than 1472.” And yet a very high authority on
-typography assures me that the book is _undoubtedly_ of 1472! What then
-prevents the tentative and isolated experiment of Cologne from having a
-similar tentative and isolated forerunner, even at Oxford? We may
-remember too that in the infancy of printing it was common to detect
-errors as the book went through the press, and often the printer himself
-corrected an error with his pen, as in the colophon of the Aegidius (see
-p. 1). Or a reader would do the same. But it is believed that in no copy
-of the Jerome is there any attempt to correct or even throw suspicion on
-the date. There is the date, plain and detailed, and it is allowable to
-wait for scientific proof before it is abandoned. _A priori_
-considerations have force, but they are liable to sudden overthrow.
-
-Clearly the consideration of signatures alone cannot avail to disprove
-the date of the Jerome. But much more remains.
-
-
- 2. _Signs of progress._
-
-It is said that, if we consider the interval between 1468 and 1479, we
-shall reasonably expect definite signs of progress. On the contrary, the
-first three Oxford books are printed with the same type, with similar
-signatures, with the same sized page and the same number of lines in a
-column. “In fact,” says Blades in the ©Antiquary©, vol. iii, no. 13,
-Jan. 1881, in an article on ©The First Printing Press at Oxford©, “if a
-leaf of one was extracted and inserted in another it would,
-typographically, excite no remark.” _Natura nihil facit per saltum_, and
-we are accustomed to apply the idea of evolution and development to
-every art and trade. It is asserted also that there is no other case of
-the cessation of a press for over ten years. But cessation of printing
-for such a time is not unknown. No book was produced at Bamberg between
-1462 and 1480, or at Caen between 1480 and 1500, or at Brussels between
-1484 and 1500, or at Haarlem for some years after 1486, or at Saragossa
-after 1475 till 1485? Moreover the only early printing known at
-Tavistock is two books in 1525 and 1534. The _same type_ and _identical
-woodcuts_ are found in the two, with an interval of nine years. And
-where there is cessation, it is obvious that we may be content with
-fewer signs of advance when work is resumed at the same press with the
-same type, than if the activity had been continuous, or if the
-instruments were changed.
-
-But this question of progress is a plain issue. Are there no signs of
-advance in the two later books compared with the earlier one?
-
-The first book often has an unevenness at the right-hand edge of a
-column (in 28 pages out of 84). In the other two it is always perfectly
-even[11]. Again, the Jerome starts printing on sign. a 1, whereas the
-other two start with a blank leaf, the printing beginning on a 2. Again,
-in the Jerome there is a peculiar misuse of the capitals H and Q (see p.
-241), not found in the following books. And lastly, to omit smaller
-matters, there is the decided and important fact that whereas in the
-Jerome each page was printed separately, in the Aegidius and Aretinus
-two pages were printed at a time.
-
-
- 3. _The Type._
-
-Of the palmary arguments against the date, one still remains. The first
-Oxford type presents a remarkable similarity to that used by Gerard ten
-Raem de Bercka (see p. 242), and his only dated book at present known is
-of 1478. There is certainly a real connexion between the two founts, but
-we know so extremely little of this printer that it is at present unsafe
-to base any conclusion on his work. The typographical genealogy of the
-early printers of the Netherlands and Germany has not yet been fully
-drawn out, and of the 1478 ©Modus Confitendi© (Hain 11455), which is
-here in question, only two copies _with the date_ are known, one in the
-John Rylands (Spencer) library at Manchester and one on the continent.
-On this point we shall doubtless know more in time, but at present we
-are bound to suspend our judgment.
-
-
- 4. _Mistakes of date common._
-
-There are two subsidiary considerations left. One is that mistakes of
-date in colophons are not uncommon. An edition of Aeneas Sylvius’s
-©Epistolae© (Cologne, printed by Koelhoff) is dated MCCCCLXVIII, which
-is stated to be an error for 1478, and an ©Opusculum de componendis
-versibus© by Mataratius, printed at Venice, is also believed to be
-erroneously dated 1468 for 1478. Caxton’s edition of Gower’s ©Confessio
-Amantis© is dated 1493 instead of 1483. I have noticed the following
-additional errors affecting dates before 1501:—720 for 1720, 1061 for
-1601, 1099 for 1499, 1334 for 1734, 1400 for 1490 or 1500, 1444 for
-1494, 1461 for 1471, 1461 for 1641, 1462 for 1472, 1472 for 1482.
-
-There is no doubt therefore that a mistake of date in an early book has
-many parallels, and so far the improbability of it happening in other
-books is diminished. At the same time one would expect the first
-printers in a place of learning to be careful enough, even if an initial
-blunder of this magnitude were committed, to correct it in some copies
-before issue. It is of course conceivable that the date was deliberately
-falsified, to avoid expected unpleasant consequences of being found
-_flagrante delicto_, but this hypothesis may be left to be dealt with
-when some one maintains it.
-
-
- 5. _Books bound with the Jerome._
-
-There remains a consideration of some weight. Until this century it was
-common to bind together several books (not merely pamphlets) in one
-volume. What books have been found in the same binding with the “1468”
-volume? Four copies of the Jerome are, or are known to have been, bound
-with several other treatises (see p. 252). One is bound with (and
-before) the Aretinus of 1479, and it is interesting that though a few
-leaves of modern paper now separate them there is an offset of the first
-page of the Aretinus on the last page of the Jerome, showing that the
-Aretinus was bound with the Jerome before the former was entirely dry.
-No conclusion however about the date of the Jerome can be drawn from
-this and whatever presumption of synchronism might be raised is removed
-by the fact that the well defined stains at the end of the Jerome and
-beginning of the Aretinus do _not_ run from the one to the other. A
-second copy was bound with seven others, only two of which are dated,
-1478 and (the Oxford Aegidius) 1479: one of the undated is about 1485
-(Perottus). A third copy was bound with four preceding treatises, of
-which the only dated one was the first, the Oxford Aegidius of 1479. A
-fourth has five pieces with it, the first two of which are of about
-1480, the Jerome is third, the fourth is of 1485, the fifth is undated,
-and the last is of 1486 or 1487.
-
-Clearly we are on very unsafe ground when we base any conclusion on
-these companion treatises, and our hesitation is not lessened when we
-notice that the only copy of the ©Vulgaria Terentii© (Oxf., not later
-than 1483) which is bound with other treatises, occurs after books dated
-1488 and 1486, the rest being without a date.
-
-
- 6. _First printing in Europe._
-
-The following list of places and dates will show how far it is likely,
-if we turn from facts to probabilities, that Oxford should have started
-printing in 1468. Only the first two towns of each country are given,
-with the exception of England: and the claim of Oxford is purposely
-ignored.
-
- 1. Germany (Mainz, not after 1454: Strassburg, before 1460: Cologne
- began not later than 1466).
-
- 2. Italy (Subiaco, 1465: Rome, 1467).
-
- 3. Switzerland (Basel, not after 1468: Beromünster, 1470).
-
- 4. France (Paris, 1470: Lyon, not after 1473).
-
- 5. Netherlands (Utrecht, about 1471–3: Alost, 1473).
-
- 6. Austro-Hungary (Buda-Pesth, 1473: Trient, 1475).
-
- 7. Spain (Valencia, 1474: Saragossa, 1475).
-
- 8. England (Westminster, 1477: Oxford, 1478: St. Alban’s, 1480
- [1479?]: London, 1480).
-
- 9. Denmark (Odensee, 1482: Schleswig, 1486).
-
- 10. Sweden (Stockholm, 1483: Wadsten, 1495).
-
- 11. Portugal (Lisbon, 1489: Leiria, 1492).
-
- 12. Montenegro (Cettinje, 1494).
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is hoped that the above summary statement of the arguments for and
-against the date of the Jerome will serve to make the present position
-of the question clear. What general conclusion can be arrived at before
-further facts are discovered? Caxton, who began to print in England in
-1477, nowhere claims to have introduced printing into England. Is it
-still conceivable that Oxford preceded Westminster by nine years? The
-answer is that it is still conceivable, but not probable. The ground has
-been slowly and surely giving way beneath the defenders of the Oxford
-date, in proportion to the advance of our knowledge of early printing,
-and all that can be said is that it has not yet entirely slipped away.
-All the new contributions to the argument and all the chief
-bibliographers are against it, while no fresh defending forces are in
-sight. But it is still allowable to assert that the destructive
-arguments, even if we admit their cumulative cogency, do not at the
-present time amount to proof.
-
-In the venerable building at the north-east corner of St. Mary’s Church
-at Oxford—the old House of Congregation, which, though once the cradle
-of the University,
-
- Nunc situs informis premit et deserta vetustas—
-
-there is still a single tenant, feebly holding his ground and refusing
-to be evicted. He wears the form of King Alfred and bears a legend
-beneath, telling us boldly that he founded the University[12]. The
-clamour of disputation never reaches that silent room, the changes of
-centuries have disregarded it, and it remains the one place where a
-belief which cast a lustre of royalty over early Oxford, and to this day
-gives primacy to one of the oldest colleges, is still maintained without
-contradiction. The figure neither utters nor listens to argument: it
-asserts and chooses to assert. But the spirit of the age is at the door:
-St. Mary’s is swathed in scaffolding: the sounds of trowel and saw
-penetrate through the dim glass and the cobwebs and all things become
-new. It is probable that the opening years of the twentieth century will
-see the age-worn bust of Alfred and the copy of the Oxford Jerome in the
-University archives consigned to a common flame as Impostors in an age
-of light.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. British Museum. Perfect. Given by the Earl of Oxford on 10 Mar.
- 1729/30 to James West, at whose sale in 1773 it probably passed to
- M. C. Tutet: then in the King’s Library, which passed in 1829 to
- the British Museum, where it bore the mark 8. D. 5; now 167. b.
- 26.
-
- 2. Bodleian. Wanting e 10, a blank leaf. One page (b 7^r) is printed
- askew, in this copy only. Owned in 1582 by William Wright: then
- Bp. Juxon’s, who gave it on 31 July 1657 to Bp. Barlow, among
- whose books it passed to the Bodleian in 1693: where it has been
- successively marked A. 19. 6 Linc., Auct. Q. 1. 5. 18, Auct. Q. 1.
- 6. 12 and Auct. R. supra 13.
-
- 3. All Souls College, Oxford. Wanting a 4, a 5. Given by Benj. Buckler
- in 1756: bound in the 18th cent. with the Aretinus (see p. 253).
- Marked NN. 10. 1, now LL. 10. 17.
-
- 4. Oriel College, Oxford. Perfect. Originally this was bound 4th in a
- volume containing Augustinus de dignitate sacerdotum: Meditationes
- Bernardi: Exempla Scripturae, Paris, 1478: the Jerome: Comm. Petri
- de Osoma in symbolum Quicunque vult, Paris: the Aegidius, Oxf.
- 1479: Ars bene moriendi: and Hugonis Speculum ecclesiae. Owned by
- Edmund Lyster in the 16th cent. The present binding is of the 18th
- century: but there are old manuscript signatures throughout the
- volume.
-
- 5. Oxford University Archives. Perfect. Owned by John Rhodes in 1664:
- given by Moses Pit, a London bookseller, 31 Jan. 1679/80. Bound
- with the ©Casus breves© of Johannes Andreas (n. d.).
-
- 6. Cambridge University Library. Wanting e 10, a blank leaf. This copy
- has a painting of St. Jerome, a coloured capital and border, &c.,
- and a coat of arms. It bears a George I bookplate dated 1713.
- Marked C. 5. 1, and now AB. 5. 18.
-
- 7. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Perfect. Bought for the Spencer
- Library for £150: bound by C. Lewis: marked 17320, or E. 237:
- transferred to Manchester with the whole Spencer Library.
-
- 8. The Huth Library.
-
- 9. The Earl of Pembroke’s Library.
-
- 10. Sir Henry Dryden’s Library. Wanting e 10, a blank leaf. In
- original binding, part of a volume containing Joh. Sulp. Verulanus
- de Octo partibus orationis: Aug. Senensis de loquendi regulis: the
- Jerome: Alb. de Ferrariis de horis canonicis, 1485: Kamintus on
- the pestilence: and two leaves of a Prognostication of 1486 or
- 1487.
-
- 11. Paris National Library. Bought by Lord Blandford in Feb. 1812 for
- £91: in the White Knights sale sold for £28.
-
- 12. A copy recently sold to an American. Perfect. It was originally in
- an Oxford contemporary binding with the Oxford Aegidius, 1479:
- Mich. de Hungaria’s Tredecim Sermones: “Oxoniensis cuiusdam
- exercitationes”: Adelard of Bath’s Quaestt. naturales: the Jerome
- was last. Owned by A. Hilton in the 15th cent.
-
- In 1862 a copy in F. S. Ellis’s catalogue (p. 14, no. 957) was priced
- £110.
-
- Fragments:—Leaves a 2, a 7, a 8, b 4, c 1, c 3, e 3, e 6–8 are in the
- Bodleian.
-
-
- 2. ¬Aretinus¬ (1479, see p. 1).
-
-The reasons for placing this book second are given above at pp. 241–2:
-if they are regarded as sufficient, we must take “1479” in the Aegidius
-as what we should call 1480, which is in agreement with the ordinary
-usage of the time and which gains a slight probability, in that the
-printing would have been finished on a Sunday, if the year were taken as
-1478/9. All copies are poorly printed. It was quite fitting that the
-first book printed at Oxford should be theological and the second the
-Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. British Museum. Wanting a 1, a blank leaf. In this copy alone there
- is a director for the large O of _Omnis_ on b 1^r. Owned by Will.
- Davis in 1792: then in the Grenville Library: marked “7. p. 115.
- 1,” 8. D. 5, 163. B. 2, G. 7930, and now C. 2. a. 7. Bound with it
- is a manuscript translation into Latin of Aristotle’s ©Œconomica©
- and ©Politics©, dedicated to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester.
-
- 2. Bodleian. Perfect. In this copy at o 2^r and o 2^v is a ć printed
- in the margin, apparently meaning “cancel,” since the recto is
- printed askew. Manuscript notes show that the book, which is in
- contemporary binding, was at first in the hands of an Oxford
- student (?) who received pittance from the Prior of Oseney. Then
- “Codex Michaelis Canni.” Owned by John Selden, among whose books
- it came to the Library in 1659. Marked 8^o A. 17 Art. Seld., Auct.
- Q. 1. 5. 17, Auct. R. supr. 8, and now S. Selden e. 2.
-
- 3. All Souls College, Oxford. Perfect. Bound with the Jerome (see p.
- 252).
-
- 4. Norwich Cathedral Library.
-
- 5. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Imperfect, wanting a 1, a blank
- leaf. Made up out of two copies, the Alchorne and the Freeling.
- Bound by C. Lewis: marked 15969 or G. 237: transferred as the
- Jerome.
-
- 6. The Earl of Pembroke’s Library.
-
- 7. Chetham Library at Manchester. Wants a 1 and two leaves in sign. k.
-
- 8. Lord Ashburnham.
-
- Anthony Askew possessed a copy (Sale catal. 1775, no. 998, sold for £5
- 5_s._ to Dent), and an imperfect one occurred in the Bright sale
- in 1845 (no. 180), and fetched £5 15_s._
-
- Fragments:—The Bodleian possesses fragments comprising l 3, l 6–8, v
- 3, v 6, v 7, v 8: Queen’s College, Oxford, possesses m 8, with
- some variations of reading: and i 4 was in 1888 in the possession
- of F. J. H. Jenkinson, Esq., at Cambridge.
-
-
- 3. ¬Aegidius¬ (1479/80?, see p. 1).
-
-In this work the colophon is printed in red, the only instance of colour
-printing in the early Oxford press. The book is for some reason rarer
-than the two which precede. It is noticeable that in every known copy
-the bad grammar of the printed colophon was corrected in red ink before
-it left the office.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. Bodleian. Perfect. Owned by Robert Burton, the author of the
- ©Anatomy of Melancholy©, in 1601. Originally bound first in a
- volume also containing De viginti preceptis elegantiarum,
- Bois-le-duc, 1487: Perotti grammatica: Bonaventurae Soliloquium.
- Marked 4^o A. 28 Th., then Auct. Q. 1. 5. 16, then separately
- bound as Auct. R. supra 4.
-
- 2. Oriel College Library. Perfect. See the Jerome, no. 4.
-
- 3. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Wanting a 1 and c 8, blank leaves
- and a 8. Purchased by Lord Spencer: once part of the volume
- containing the Jerome no. 12.
-
- A copy was in the Harleian Library (Catal. vol. 3, no. 6674).
-
-
- 4. ¬Cicero, Pro Milone¬ (1480?, see p. 2).
-
-This is a puzzling book. The type so closely resembles Oxford type that
-every bibliographer has accepted it provisionally as identical. Yet it
-exhibits spaced type, it uses / for a comma (both points unique in
-Oxford printing), and the sections are made up in sixes. It is also by
-many years the first classic printed in England, the next being a
-Terence in 1497. The volume probably consisted of a—e in sixes, allowing
-a leaf blank at the beginning: perhaps section e was in eight. The first
-half of each section bears signatures. The book was clearly made up of
-half quarto sheets, three to each section. Mr. Blades was of opinion
-that the type was more worn than that of the Ales: and Mr. E. G. Duff
-thinks that the spacing and other peculiarities point to a later date
-than 1480.
-
- Fragments known:—b 3–4, c 3–4 are in the Bodleian (Auct. R. supra 3),
- having been presented by Sir William H. Cope in 1872. They were
- fly leaves in a volume containing five treatises dated from 1491
- to 1505, probably bound in Oxford for William Cope (d. 1513) who
- lived near Banbury. Also c 1–2, 5–6 are in Merton College Library,
- Oxford, among some loose printed fragments.
-
-
- 5. ¬Latin Grammar¬ (1481?, see p. 2).
-
-This is only known from two leaves in the British Museum, acquired in
-1872 or late in 1871, which were found in the binding of a book, which
-in the sixteenth cent. belonged to Nicholas Browere. It is a Latin
-grammar in English, the examples of which connect its composition with
-Oxford (e. g. “I goo to grammer att Oxforde Incumbo grammatice Oxonij,”
-“Y go to Oxforde Eo Oxonium vel ad Oxonium.”) From letters in the
-©Athenaeum©, 4 and 11 Nov. 1871, and notes in the book, it appears that
-the author might be John Anwykyll (see p. 257) and that it is probably
-not by Holt or Stanbridge. The chain lines run across the page: but it
-is at present impossible to say whether the sections were in sixes or
-eights. Marked C. 33. i. 10.
-
-
- 6. ¬Ales¬ (1481, see p. 2).
-
-The woodcut border which is found in some copies of the Ales and
-Latteburius is the earliest found in English printing, though Caxton
-uses woodcut engravings in the text (for the first time) in the same
-year. It consists of birds and flowers grouped on long winding stems,
-the four pieces which form the border measuring in all not less than 11¼
-× 7¾ in. (no quite intact copy is known, the binder’s ruthless knife
-invariably removing a portion). A full-size reproduction of it is given
-in E. G. Duff’s ©Facsimiles of English types© (Lond. 1895).
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. British Museum. Without border. Wanting a 4, a 5. Re-bound lately,
- but with the original sides. Owned by William Wodebrigge,
- sub-prior of Butleigh, co. Suffolk: then by John Warner: then by
- Cranmer: then by lord Lumley. In the Old Royal Library: once 520.
- 9. 12, now C. 38. g. 1.
-
- 2. Bodleian. Without border. Perfect: in original Oxford binding,
- plain sides. Owned by Roger Balkwell in the 15th cent. Marked A.
- 5. 4 Art., then C. 7. 15 Art., now Auct. R. supra 10.
-
- 3. Oxford—Balliol.
-
- 4. Oxford—Brasenose. Without border. On vellum. Imperfect, wanting 13
- leaves. In contemporary Oxford binding, with stamped sides. Owned
- by—Claxton and Patrick Grante.
-
- 5, 6. Oxford—Magdalen. Two copies, one imperfect, both with border. In
- J. E. T. Rogers’s ©History of Prices© is a note that Magdalen
- purchased a copy of this book in 1481 for 33_s._ 4_d._
-
- 7. Oxford—New College.
-
- 8. Oxford—St. John’s (_not_ in Oriel, as has been stated).
-
- 9. Oxford—Trinity.
-
- 10. Oxford—Worcester. Without border. Imperfect, wanting a i (blank),
- k 2, y 3. Given to Gloucester Hall by Clement Barksdale.
-
- 11. Cambridge University Library. With border in three places, a 2, h
- 1, z 1. Perfect. Marked P*. 9. 15.
-
- 12. Do. Without border. Wanting a 1 (blank). Marked AB. 10. 9: with
- George I’s bookplate.
-
- 13. John Rylands Library, Manchester. With border in three places, a
- 2, h 1 and z 1. Wanting three leaves, a 1, g 6, y 8, all blank.
- Marked D. 237, E. 237, 19944, in the Spencer Library.
-
- 14. Durham Cathedral Library. Without border.
-
- 15. Dulwich College Library: bound with Lettou’s edition of Ant.
- Andreae, 1480.
-
- 16. Lincoln Cathedral Library.
-
- Fragments:—In the Bodleian r 6 and parts of C 1, E 6: in Merton
- College, Oxford, two leaves (one is i 7): in Corpus Christi
- College, Oxford, part of one leaf: in the Cambridge University
- Library, parts of E 1 and other fragments: in the British Museum
- (MS. Harl. 5929, no. 36: last leaf with colophon and date): at
- Trinity College, Cambridge.
-
-
- 7. ¬Latteburius¬ (1482, see p. 2).
-
-Some copies of this work also bear the engraved border noticed on p.
-254. Some copies have a distinct variation on sign. “kk” (= K) 7^v, thus
-
- liū super capitulum s’m trenorū Ihe, _or_
- liū suꝑ capitulū secūdū trenorū Ihe.
-
-Clearly the type was altered because s’m is a fair contraction when
-meaning “according to,” but not properly used when meaning “second.” See
-plate III.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. British Museum. With border. Perfect. In the original stamped
- leather binding. Owned by Simon Foderby in the 15th century: by
- Christopher Viscount Castlecomer, and W. F. (?) Hunter, 1824.
- Marked 1215. k. 1, 1215. k. 6, 45. b. 30. 135, now C. 37. h. 10.
-
- 2. Bodleian. With border. Perfect. Owned by John Cuthbertson, priest,
- and Robert Bonwick. Marked L. 1. 3 Th., L. 7. 2 Th., Auct. Q. 1.
- 2. 8, now Auct. R. supra 11.
-
-
- 3. Oxford—All Souls. Without border. On vellum. Perfect, except that
- part of O 6 (blank) is gone. Given by Richard Gavent formerly
- Fellow of the College. The binding is contemporary Oxford stamped
- leather. This copy is remarkable from the fact that four names,
- apparently of parchment-sellers, occur as signing certain leaves:
- on 54 leaves (representing 108) F. H.: on 31, Hawkyns or Haukins:
- on 8, Alison: on 3, J. Alexander (Alysaunder): probably some other
- signings are cut off. A comparison of two sets of similar markings
- in other books almost establishes the fact that these names do not
- represent revisers of the printing, but dimply the owners of the
- parchment. Sometimes “8 ff,” and once “8 ff alison,” occur,
- showing that the pieces were sold in bundles of eight (?). Marked
- P. 2. 18, then QQ. 8. 11.
-
- 4. Oxford—Corpus Christi College. With border. Wanting almost all of a
- 1, L 8, O 6 blank leaves. In contemporary binding. Marked X. P.
- iv. 4, then Δ. 18. 3.
-
- 5. Oxford—New College.
-
- 6, 7. Cambridge University Library. Both with border. One perfect (E.
- 4. 1), in contemporary binding of stamped leather. Given by
- Albanus Butler to Richard Butler, rector of Aston-le-Walls (co.
- Northants) 23 June 1603. The other, AB. 7. 27, only wants a 1
- (blank leaf); with a George I bookplate.
-
- 8. Cambridge—Jesus College. With border.
-
- 9. Cambridge—Trinity College. Perfect (?). Marked vi^d. 8. 9
- (described in Sinker’s ©Catalogue©, 1876).
-
- 10. John Rylands Library at Manchester. With border. Wanting only a 1
- (blank leaf). Owned by “Henri Joliff.” Marked 16741 or E. 237.
-
- 11. Lambeth Library.
-
- 12. Westminster Chapter Library. On vellum.
-
- 13. Stonyhurst Library. Wanting only three blank leaves.
-
- 14. T. Etherington Cooke, Esq., residing in Glasgow. Perfect. With
- border. In original binding.
-
- 15. Brussels Library.
-
- Copies occurred in the Sams sale (185-, £17 5_s._, one leaf in
- manuscript): Bateman sale (1893: lot 1176): Payne and Foss (1848:
- art. 3120, £8 8_s._): Gardiner sale (£9 12_s._): Towneley sale
- (1883, with border, wanting O 6, and also L 1 and L 8, H 3 and H 6
- occurring in their stead: this copy was in Quaritch’s Rough List.
- 99, no. 572, Sept. 1889, £32 10_s._): B. H. Bright sale 1845, lot
- 3364 (£7 7_s._, with another book).
-
- Fragments known:—Lord Robartes (on vellum, part of one leaf, O 3);
- Trinity College, Cambridge; Queen’s College, Oxford (on vellum; l
- 3, l 5, B 4, B 5, kk 5, kk 6); King’s College, Cambridge; Emmanuel
- College, Cambridge (on vellum, two half leaves, in q. 4. 62);
- Wadham College, Oxford (f 2, f 3, f 6, f 7); British Museum (one
- leaf, i 8, in 618. l. 18, and one leaf on vellum in Harl. MS.
- 5977. fol. 44); S. Sandars, Esq. (one leaf); New College, Oxford
- (four leaves, H 2, H 7, g 3, p 4: and on vellum four leaves, D
- 2–3, &c.); Bodleian (I 3, I 5, kk 2, kk 7, M 2, b 2–5; C 7–8 on
- vellum); Brasenose College, Oxford (on vellum, I 6); Corpus
- Christi College, Oxford (four leaves: and two leaves on vellum).
-
-
- 8. ¬Anwykyll¬ (1483?, see p. 3).
-
-Four of the chief English grammarians of the 16th century were connected
-with Magdalen College Grammar School at Oxford. The first master was
-John Anwykyll (1481?-87); the first usher and second master was John
-Stanbridge (1481?-88, 1488–94, _d._ 1510); John Holte, the author of the
-©Lac Puerorum©, was master; and Robert Whittington was Stanbridge’s
-pupil at the school. Dean Colet, William Lily and Cardinal Wolsey were
-also members of Magdalen (see Bloxam’s ©Register of Magdalen College©,
-iii., ad init.). Of the Latin Grammar in Latin which is now before us
-and has been assigned with probability by Bradshaw to Anwykyll, no
-complete copy is known, but it was reprinted at Deventer in 1489. The
-©Vulgaria Terentii© occurs also separately, and consists of sentences
-from Terence with English translation.
-
-There appear to be two different editions of this Grammar (not
-Vulgaria), for it can be shown that the Cambridge fragments are not of
-the same edition as the Bodleian book. Not only, for instance, are the
-contents of sign. h 3 in each entirely different, but the signatures
-themselves are in different type, and in the Corpus (Cambridge) fragment
-the signature is n 3, and yet it belongs to the Compendium and not the
-Vulgaria. The height of the printed page also varies considerably, and
-the width of the Vulgaria pages is less than that of the Grammar. The
-subject needs further investigation.
-
- _Parts known._
-
- 1. London—British Museum, Vulgaria Terentii only, with written date at
- end 5 Jan. 1500/1. Marked C. 33. i. 3.
-
- 2. Oxford—Bodleian. A fragment containing signn. fg^8hk^6lm^8 and
- (Vulgaria) n-q^8. Sign. i probably contained the Tertia pars
- grammaticae. With the Condover Hall (Cholmondeley) bookplate:
- bought by the Bodleian from Quaritch in 1892: in whose Rough List,
- no. 124, May 1892, it is priced £100. Now marked Inc. e. E 2
- 1483/1.
-
- 3. Oxford—Bodleian. The Vulgaria only, bound first in a volume
- containing also P. P. Vergerii de ingenuis moribus liber (Louvain,
- Joh. de Westphalia, n. d.), and Adelardi Quaestiones (n. pl. or
- d.). The following interesting inscription is in it:—“1483. Frater
- Johannes grene emit hunc librum Oxoñ de elemosinis amicorum
- suorum.” In plain 15th cent. binding. Owned also by Henry Strathyn
- at Bedford, John Uncle, Robert Hunter (all 16th cent.). Bought by
- the Bodleian at the T. Thomson sale Jan. 1866 (lot 1068) for £36.
- Marked Auct. R. supra 2.
-
- 4. Cambridge—University Library. The Vulgaria only. Bound originally
- in a volume containing Perotti Erudimenta Grammatices (Par. 1488):
- Opusculum quintu-pertitum grammaticale (Gouda, 1486); Ars
- Epistolandi Jac. P(ublicii) (n. pl. or d.); the Vulgaria; Matheoli
- Perusini tractatus de memoria (n. pl. or d.). Marked AB. 5. 16. 4.
-
- 5. John Rylands Library, Manchester. The Vulgaria only.
-
- Small Fragments known:—Cambridge University Library (two leaves, h 3,
- and [without sign.] the beginning of the 3rd part): Trinity
- College Library, Cambridge (one leaf, d 1, of the same edition as
- the University Library fragments). Photographs of these fragments
- are in the Bodleian. The Rev. W. D. Macray states in his ©Annals
- of the Bodleian© (2nd ed., 1890, p. 159, _note_) that Bradshaw
- found two leaves at Corpus and two at St. John’s (both Cambridge),
- but these really belong to the Alexander (p. 260). Four leaves are
- in the library of Lord Dillon at Ditchley, Oxfordshire, discovered
- by Mr. Macray in 1867.
-
-
- 9. ¬Hampole¬ (1483?, see p. 3).
-
-This work by Richard Rolle of Hampole (_d._ 1349) was also printed at
-Paris in 1510 and at Cologne in 1536. Noticed in J. Ph. Berjeau’s
-©Bibliophile©, no. 24 (Dec. 1863), p. 146.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. Cambridge University Library. Wants a 1 and l 4 (both blank: AB. 4.
- 31, with a George I bookplate).
-
- 2. Cambridge University Library. Wants l 4 (H* 9. 51. 5).
-
- 3. John Rylands Library, Manchester, purchased in 1893 from the
- Cambridge University Library. Wants almost all a 1 (F* 5. 26. 3,
- when at Cambridge).
-
- Fragments:—Some leaves from the Babington sale (1889) are in the
- Library of St. John’s College, Cambridge.
-
-
- 10. ¬Logic¬ (1483?, see p. 3).
-
-There is a Registrum cartarum at the end of this book, on sign. D d 8^r.
-Diagrams are on A 4^r, A 5^v, B 6^v, cf. C c 2^r.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. New College, Oxford. Wanting nearly all a 1 (blank leaf). Owned by
- John Utting. Marked Auct. V. 2. 18.
-
- 2. Merton College, Oxford. Wanting a 1 (blank), B 3, B 4. Marked D. 6.
- 13 Art., D. 8. 17 Art., then 19. E. 18.
-
- Fragments:—Bodleian (one leaf, Q 2: marked Auct. R. supra 16):
- Cambridge University Library: Trinity College, Cambridge (one
- leaf, 26 half leaves): St. John’s College, Cambridge (O 1, O 2, O
- 5, O 6): Lambeth Library (four leaves).
-
-
- 11. ¬Lyndewoode¬ (1483?, see p. 3).
-
-This contains a large wood engraving (on sign. a 1^v) of Jacobus de
-Voragine writing the Golden Legend, seated at his desk beneath a canopy;
-on each side are two trees, the foliage of which, as in the Festial, is
-represented by nearly horizontal lines in rude style. Size 4⅜ × 7⅜ in.,
-to outer bounding lines. See plate IV.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. British Museum. Wanting aa 1 and either S 10 or (the second) aa 1
- (both blank). Marked 497. i. 1, then C. 37. l. 2. In this copy f
- 1, f 2, f 7, f 8, all g, h and i, k 1, k 2 have been re-set,
- compared with the other two, which are probably the earlier issue.
- As a test, in this copy the catchword on sign. f 1^r is under
- _quamuis_, but in nos. 2 and 3 under _glosa_, as is usual.
-
- 2. British Museum. Wanting S 10 (blank); and a duplicate of f 3, f 6
- is placed after t 3. Owned by Tho. Chandler, dean of Hereford
- March 1481/2 to 1490, then by James Scudamour, who gave it to
- Richard Tomson in 1595. Marked 711. i. 15, and 41. 11. 6. 164: now
- C. 37. l. 7. The sides of the binding are old stamped leather.
-
- 3. British Museum. Wanting a 1, R 1, R 8, cc 3, cc 6, and all dd.
- Owned by Nicholas Peir(ce?), John Harrison (?), and William Graves
- who gave it to the Museum. Marked 497. i. 2.
-
- 4. Oxford, Bodleian. Perfect. In original binding of stamped leather,
- re-backed. Marked L. 4. 8 Jur., then Auct. Q. 1. 1. 4, then Auct.
- R. supra 12, now Inc. b. E 2. 1485/1.
-
- 5. Oxford, All Souls. Perfect. Marked A. 1. 29, C. 3. 12, D. 11. 12,
- now I. 11. 10. Owned by Thomas Windsor in 1634, and bp. Nathaniel
- Crewe.
-
- 6. Oxford, New College. (“Auct. V. 12”.)
-
- 7. Oxford, Queen’s College.
-
- 8. Cambridge University Library. Wanting aa 1 (nearly all), y 4, y 5.
- With a George I bookplate, 1715. Marked B. 1. 5, now AB 1. 19.
-
- 9. —— 2nd copy. Wanting A 2, S. 10, dd 1, dd 10. Marked L. 3. 38, now
- Q. 2. 14.
-
- 10. Cambridge, Clare College.
-
- 11. Cambridge, Corpus Christi College.
-
- 12. Cambridge, King’s College.
-
- 13. Cambridge, St. John’s College. On vellum.
-
- 14. John Rylands Library, Manchester: bought from the late Rev. J. E.
- Millard by Lord Spencer. Wanting a 1, S 10, aa 1, dd 10. This had
- been in the Savile sale (1862), lot 497.
-
- 15. Edinburgh, Advocates’ Library.
-
- 16. Durham Cathedral Library.
-
- 17. Glasgow, Free Church College Library.
-
- 18. E. Gordon Duff, Esq.: bought at a London sale for £12 15_s._:
- wanting a 1, S 10, aa 1.
-
- 19. Lord Crawford.
-
- 20. National Library at Paris. On vellum.
-
- A copy occurred in the Bateman sale (1893), lot 1190.
-
- Fragments known:—Bodleian (part of D 2: marked Auct R. supra 17: now
- Inc. c. E 7. 1); Jesus College, Oxford (part of a leaf of index):
- Mr. E. G. Duff possesses a Valerius Maximus of 1519, in a
- Cambridge binding (about 1520), the boards of which are entirely
- made up of the Oxford Lyndewoode; from the Hailstone Library.
-
-
-☞ ¬The following book was discovered since sheet B was printed off.¬
-
-
- 12. ¬Augustine¬ (1483?).
-
-¬Augustine¬, St. [Sign. a 2^r:—] Excitatio fidelis anime ad ele⸗|mosinam
-faciendam A b¿ea¿to Au⸗|gustino conscripta.
-
- [Oxford, about 1483]: (eight) sm. 4^o: pp. [16], sign. a^8: sign. a
- 3^r beg. _Non enim_. Contents:—sign. a 2-a 8^r, the sermon.
-
-This piece of Oxford printing was discovered in the spring of 1891 in
-the British Museum. It was originally bound with Gerson’s De modo
-vivendi (Joh. de Westphalia, n. d.), the Cordiale de quattuor novissimis
-(Delft, 1482), Albertanus de arte loquendi, 1484, Adelardi Quæstiones
-naturales, and the Historia septem sapientum. Marked 702. d. 34, now C.
-38. f. 37: it had been part of lot 4912 in the Colbert sale. A facsimile
-is given in E. G. Duff’s ©Early printed books© (Lond. 1893).
-
-
- 13. ¬Phalaris¬ (1485, see p. 4).
-
-The computation of the date by Olympiads is very uncommon, in early
-printed books: it is however the most ancient classical method. Each
-Olympiad is a period of four years, and the first is computed to have
-commenced in July, B. C. 776: so that July A. D. 1 corresponded with the
-beginning of Olympiad 195. The computation ceased for practical purposes
-in A. D. 395, and the present revival is of an artificial kind, in which
-the expression “every fifth year,” which by a Greek could be applied to
-an Olympiad (Πενταετηρίς), was taken in its ordinary sense and used for
-computation. Thus “in the 297th Olympiad from the birth of Christ” was
-in the present book taken to represent (297 × 5 =) A. D. 1485. A similar
-use is found in the 1472 (Venice) edition of the Epigrams of
-Ausonius[13]. But the 1494 (Parma) edition of the Declamations of
-Quintilian contains a futile attempt to use the ancient method, for it
-was printed “Olympiade quingentesima sexagesima octaua qui est annus a
-salute christiana M.cccc.xciiii quinto non. Iul.”, whereas it would
-properly have been 1493. And M. A. Giry (©Manuel de Diplomatique©, 1894,
-p. 96) records an unintelligible attempt to use this computation in a
-deed of 1102.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. Oxford, Corpus Christi College. Perfect. Owned by John Lacy, and
- Herbert Randolph (1724). Marked Χ P. 3. 12, then Δ. 1. 14.
-
- 2. Oxford, Wadham College.
-
- 3. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Perfect. Marked in the Spencer
- Library S. 5. 3, and 15835 (G. 237).
-
- Fragments:—Bodleian (parts of i 4, i 6, now Auct. R. supra 9): Corpus
- Christi College, Oxford (parts of l 2 and l 7): St. John’s College
- Library, Oxford (one leaf): Trin. Coll. Camb. (one leaf of sign.
- d): Westminster Abbey Library (four leaves of sign. k).
-
-
- 14. ¬Alexander¬ (1485?, see p. 4).
-
-There are editions of the Textus Alexandri by Pynson in 1505, 1513, 1516
-and by Wynkin de Worde, 1503.
-
- Fragments known:—St. John’s College, Cambridge (c 2 and c 3 [?]):
- Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (two leaves, n 3 and one
- unsigned; probably part of the Alexander).
-
-
- 15. ¬Festiall¬ (1486/7, see p. 4).
-
-Printed in “1486,” “on the day aftir Seint Edward the kyng”: which would
-seem to be March 19, 1486/7. This book is distinguished by the
-occurrence of many woodcut engravings, and by the use of a woodcut
-capital G (52 times). This latter is the only woodcut letter used in the
-early Oxford Press (see Bradshaw in the ©Communications© of the
-Cambridge Antiquarian Society, iii. 136). In the same paper (p. 138)
-Bradshaw suggests that the eleven large cuts were perhaps intended for
-an edition of the Golden Legend, and that the five smaller ones belong
-to a lost Oxford Primer on Horae. The text is nearer to that of Caxton’s
-second issue (1491) than of his first (1483). The two sets of woodcuts
-are as follows:—
-
-
- _Larger kind_ (general size, about 4½ × 4½–5½ in.).
-
- 1. ( ) Woodcut of the Crucifixion, laid sideways.
- 1^r.
-
- 2. ( ) Woodcut of St. Christopher bearing Christ, beneath a canopy.
- i^v.
-
- 3. h 5^v. Bishop under canopy, with two trees (facsimile in Dibdin’s
- _Ædes Althorpianæ_).
-
- 4. i 5^v. Martyrdom of St. Thomas.
-
- 5. k 7^r. Stoning of St. Stephen (facsimile in Dibdin).
-
- 6. l 2^r. St. John the Evangelist (?) with cup and palm-branch,
- between two figures.
-
- 7. l 6^r. Murder of the Innocents.
-
- 8. l 8^v. Murder of Thomas a Becket.
-
- 9. m 5^v. The Circumcision.
-
- 10. n 6^r. The Conversion of St. Paul.
-
- 11. o 7^v. The Annunciation.
-
-
- _Smaller kind_ (general size, about 2½ × 1½ in.).
-
- 12. c 4^v. Crucifixion.
-
- d 8^v. Space for woodcut.
-
- e 2^v. Do. ?
-
- 13. e 3^r. Pentecost.
-
- e 5^r. Do., the same woodcut.
-
- 14. f 2^v. The Trinity.
-
- 15. h 1^r. St. Andrew with his cross, with a book and trees.
-
- 16. h 1^r. St. Andrew with his cross.
-
-The prints are rude in execution, the foliage of trees being generally
-indicated simply by horizontal lines (as in a French ©Ortus Sanitatis©
-of about 1485). The shoes, sword-scabbards, and the like are often
-entirely black, showing that the cuts were intended to be coloured by
-hand. They appear to be entirely unknown elsewhere. See plate V.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- 1. Bodleian. Imperfect. Wanting all ( ), c 3, c 4, g 4, k 4, k 5, o 4,
- o 5, r 5, s 3, s 4, s 5, s 6, z 1, z 3, z 4. Marked Auct. R. supra
- 5. The variations of signn. h and i show that this is a later
- issue than no. 2. Owned by William Little.
-
- 2. Bodleian. Imperfect. Wanting all ( ), a-f, g 1, g 2, h 1, i 6, k
- 1–3, k 6–8, l 3, l 6, l 8, o 3, p 6, r 4–6, t 1, t 6, x 1, x 2, x
- 7, x 8, y, z: but y 2, y 5 are inserted from Hearne’s fragments.
- This was William Herbert’s copy: no. 730 in the Utterson sale
- 1852, where it was bought by the Bodleian for £6 10_s._: marked
- Auct. R. supra 7.
-
- 3. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Wanting a 1, a 2 (supplied in
- manuscript), z 4. Owned by Ratcliffe (sale, no. 1430, £3 2_s._),
- then Alchorne, then Johnes. No. 15409 (E. 237) in the Spencer
- Library. Dibdin’s collation is very faulty. Signn. h, i are of the
- later kind.
-
- 4. Lambeth Library. Wants z 4 (blank). The variations in signn. h, i
- are of the later type. Once archbp. Tenison’s copy. Marked once
- lxiii. 1. 19, now 38. 2. 23. f.
-
- A copy occurred for sale in Rodd’s 1831 catalogue, priced £6 6_s._
-
- Fragments:—British Museum (one leaf, y 3, in MS. Harl. 5919, no. 139):
- Wadham College, Oxford (1½ leaves): Brasenose College, Oxford
- (several leaves): parts of two leaves (q 6 and another) were
- offered by A. Iredale, bookseller of Torquay (catal. 31, Oct.
- 1887, no. 1) for 21_s._
-
-The Printing Press at Oxford ceases its work suddenly in 1486/7, and
-there is no reason for this stop at present known. The printing at St.
-Alban’s ceased at about the same time. It has been suggested that Rood
-left Oxford for Cologne, where a Theodericus printed books in 1485 and
-1486 in a type similar to that of the Ales and Latteburius. In this case
-Hunt may have continued for a short time alone, and then relinquished
-the work.
-
------
-
-Footnote 6:
-
- None is paged: nor are there catchwords.
-
-Footnote 7:
-
- Exclusive of headline, signatures, and marginal notes.
-
-Footnote 8:
-
- With fragments of the book, independently of copies.
-
-Footnote 9:
-
- As these pages pass through the press I am informed by Mr. E. G. Duff
- that Lord Crawford possesses an edition of Horace’s Opuscula printed
- in “1470” with signatures.
-
-Footnote 10:
-
- Blades was under the erroneous impression that Koelhoff printed at
- Lübeck, instead of Cologne: where also books with manuscript
- signatures occur later than 1472.
-
-Footnote 11:
-
- In 1467 Ulric Zel of Cologne (see p. 242) was unacquainted with the
- setting-rule, which made evenness easy: he adopted it in 1468–9, but
- Colard Mansion at Bruges not till 1478 (Blades, ©Books in Chains©, p.
- 128).
-
-Footnote 12:
-
- AELFREDVS . | LEGVM . ANGLIAE . | ACADEMIAE . OXON . | CONDITOR .
-
-Footnote 13:
-
- “A nativitate Christi ducentesimae nonagesimae quintae Olympiadis
- anno. II. VII. Idus Decembres,” = 7 Dec. 1472.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX B.
- The Early Sixteenth Century Press.
-
- (Supplementary to, and corrective of, pp. 5–7.)
-
-
-From December 1517 to February “1519” (1519/20?) a printing press is
-found in work at Oxford in St. John’s Street near Merton College,
-connected in 1518 with the name of Johannes Scolar and in the last book
-with the name of Carolus Kyrfoth. Both of these appear to be foreigners,
-but nothing certain has yet been discovered about them or the causes of
-the establishment and cessation of the press[14]. In 1524 none of these
-names occurs among the inhabitants of Oxford paying taxes (Oxf. Hist.
-Soc., ©City Documents©, ed. by J. E. T. Rogers, 1891, p. 5): nor are
-they otherwise known in Oxford as booksellers or stationers. Although
-Scolar uses the arms of the University (their earliest occurrence in
-print), yet the Registers of the University almost entirely ignore the
-fact that for the second time the greatest literary invention since
-speech and writing were known, was silently at work in its midst. Three
-of the books were however issued “Cum Privilegio.” It is peculiar that
-whereas theology claimed a fair proportion of the first press, it is
-entirely absent from the second; grammar, logic, arithmetic, natural
-science, and the Ethics of Aristotle being alone represented, except
-that one broadside consists of a Prognostication, which Dorne’s lists in
-1520 show to have been a popular form of literature in Oxford at that
-time. All are in small quarto, and similar in the types used, namely an
-English and Brevier black-letter, with a Great Primer for titles. Not
-only at Oxford but also at Cambridge, York, Tavistock, and Abingdon, in
-all of which there was an early 16th cent. press, printing entirely
-ceases for nearly the central forty years of that century.
-
-
- 1. ¬Burley¬ on Aristotle (1517, see p. 5).
-
- _Copies known._
-
- Oxford—Bodleian.
-
- Oxford—St. John’s College.
-
- The titlepage is reproduced in plate VI. The Royal Arms on the
- penultimate page of this treatise, and also in the 1518 Burley’s
- ©Principia©, are a wood engraving which belonged to Winkin de
- Worde, as I am informed by Mr. E. G. Duff.
-
-
- 2. ¬Dedicus¬ (1518, May, see p. 6).
-
-On the title is the woodcut mark of John Scolar engraved in Berjeau’s
-©Printers’ Marks© (Lond. 1866) no. 81, and his ©Bookworm© (Lond. 1868),
-no. 32, p. 126: see also the ©Corrections and Additions© to Chandler’s
-Catalogue of editions of Aristotle’s Ethics (Oxf. 1868), p. 7.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- London—British Museum, bought at the Crawford sale, 1891, lot 932. The
- last leaf with colophon is also in MS. Harl. 5929, fol. 41.
-
- Oxford—Corpus Christi College, wanting titlepage.
-
- Oxford—Jesus College (two copies).
-
- Cambridge—University Library: which has also a fragment containing the
- greater part of pp. 1–12, 14–17.
-
- Edinburgh—University Library (wants 4 leaves, sign. I 3–6).
-
- King’s Norton Parish Library.
-
- A copy was in the Inglis sale, 1826.
-
-
- 3. ¬De Luce¬ (1518, June 5: see p. 6).
-
- _Copies known._
-
- Oxford—Bodleian.
-
- Oxford—Jesus College.
-
- Cambridge—University Library.
-
-
- 4. ¬Burley’s¬ Principia (1518, June 7: see p. 5).
-
- _Copies known._
-
- Oxford—Bodleian.
-
- Oxford—Jesus College.
-
- Cambridge—University Library, wanting D 4.
-
- The titlepage is reproduced in plate VII. See note on the 1517
- Burley, p. 263.
-
-
-5. ¬Whittington¬ (1518, June 27: see p. 7, where in l. 3 _protouatis_ is
-a misprint for _prothouatis_. The square brackets in the title may now
-be removed).
-
- _Copies known._
-
- Oxford—Bodleian (imperfect).
-
- Oxford—Jesus College.
-
- Cambridge—University Library.
-
- Cambridge—Pembroke College (six copies).
-
- John Rylands Library.
-
- Ham House.
-
-
- 6. ¬Laet¬ (1518?: see p. 6).
-
-The title is now known to be “Prenostica” simply. The parts known are
-(1) from the Cambridge copy, from the top a head line and 34 lines, from
-the bottom 33 lines of small type and 5 of larger type: (2) from the
-Oxford copy, 22 lines from the top, and 22–24 from the bottom. At
-present the intervening space, which must be small, is unknown. The type
-is 8¼ in. broad, and red ink is used.
-
- _Copies known._
-
- Oxford—Corpus Christi College (28 fragments of the upper and lower
- parts).
-
- Cambridge—University Library (two fragments).
-
-
- 7. ¬Compotus¬ (1519: see p. 7).
-
-Beneath the title is a woodcut, 5¾ × 4⅜ in., representing a master at
-his desk, with a birch in his left hand and a book in his right: above
-him and on each side are other volumes, and before him five students on
-a bench with their books. Two windows are in the background. On A 2^r is
-a diagram of the open hand (5 × 3⅝ in.), for purposes of computation:
-and different diagrams of the hand or part of it are on A 2^v, A 4^r, A
-4^v.
-
- _Copy known._
-
- Cambridge—University Library.
-
-
- DETAILS OF THE EARLY SIXTEENTH CENTURY PRESS.
-
- ──────────────────┬─────────────┬─────────────┬─────────────────────────────
- NO. BOOK. │ DATE. │ PRINTER │ PLACE NAMED.
- │ │ NAMED. │
- ──────────────────┼─────────────┼─────────────┼─────────────────────────────
- 1 ¬Burley¬ on │1517 Dec. 4 │————————— │Academia Oxonie
- Aristotle │ │ │
- 2 ¬Dedicus¬ │1518 May 15 │J. Scolar[15]│Celeberrima Universitas
- │ │ │ Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)
- 3 ¬De Luce¬ │1518 June 5 │J. Scolar[15]│Celeberrima Universitas
- │ │ │ Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)
- 4 ¬Burley’s¬ │1518 June 7 │J. Scolar[15]│Celeberrima Universitas
- Principia │ │ │ Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)
- 5 ¬Whittington¬ │1518 June 27 │J. Scolar │Oxonia
- 6 ¬Laet¬ (1518?)│———————————— │————————— │Celeberrima Oxoniensis
- │ │ │ Academia
- 7 ¬Compotus¬ │“1519” Feb. 5│C. Kyrfoth │Celeberrima Universitas
- │ │ │ Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)
-
- ──────────────────┬──────────────┬─────┬─────────┬─────┬────────────────────
- NO. BOOK. │ PAGES. │LINES│ LARGE │HEAD │ WOODCUTS.
- │ │ IN │CAPITALS.│LINE.│
- │ │PAGE.│ │ │
- ──────────────────┼──────────────┼─────┼─────────┼─────┼────────────────────
- 1 ¬Burley¬ on │ 20 │ 55 │ + │ ⨀ │Oxf. & Royal Arms
- Aristotle │ │ │ │ │
- 2 ¬Dedicus¬ │152 (foliated)│ 56 │ + │ + │Oxf. & Royal Arms
- 3 ¬De Luce¬ │ 16 │55–6 │ + │ + │Oxf. & Magi
- 4 ¬Burley’s¬ │ 16 │ 57 │ ⨀ │ + │Oxf. & Royal Arms &
- Principia │ │ │ │ │ Scholar
- 5 ¬Whittington¬ │ 20 │ 59 │ ⨀ │ + │Oxf. & Scholar
- 6 ¬Laet¬ (1518?)│ [broadside: no complete copy known]
- 7 ¬Compotus¬ │ 16 │31–2 │ ⨀ │ + │Oxf. & Scholars &
- │ │ │ │ │ Hands
-
------
-
-Footnote 14:
-
- In 1528 we find a John Scolar, probably identical with the Oxford
- printer, printing a Breviary at Abingdon near Oxford for the use of
- the Abbey.
-
-Footnote 15:
-
- With privilege.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX C.
- A CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF PERSONS AND PROCEEDINGS CONNECTED WITH
- BOOK-PRODUCTION AT OXFORD, A.D. 1180–1640.
-
-
-Three districts in Oxford are associated with the early production of
-books.
-
-One is Bookbinders Bridge, which is still standing, namely the bridge
-which as one starts from close under the Castle in Titmouse Lane towards
-St. Thomas’s Church, crosses the second piece of water. The bridge was
-on the limits of Oseney Abbey and the neighbouring tenements were
-largely occupied by binders who worked for the Abbey. See Clark’s
-edition of Wood’s ©History of the City©, i. 433.
-
-Schidyard St., now Oriel St., is said to imply by its name that it was
-the locus schediasticorum, the place of writers on _schedae_ or sheets
-of paper. Certainly with St. John Baptist St. (now Merton St.) and Cat
-St., it was a great centre for scribes, illuminators, bookbinders, and
-the like. See Clark’s Wood, as above, i. 139, 175, 184.
-
-Also Cheney Lane, earlier St. Mildred’s Lane, and now Market St., was
-largely tenanted by the same class. See Clark’s Wood, i. 72.
-
-The stationarius (or virgifer) of the University was regularly appointed
-(see Clark’s ©Register of the University©, vol. ii, pt. 1, p. 261), and
-was generally employed to value the books of a scholar after death or
-sequestration.
-
-But these general facts require to be supplemented by the details which
-follow: with respect to which it must be remembered that many persons
-combined several of the trades here recorded, and that, for instance,
-the earliest printers always bound the books they produced.
-
-
- [_Chief Authorities_:—
-
- Coxe. = Catalogus codicum MSS. qui in collegiis aulisque Oxoniensibus
- hodie adservantur. Confecit H. O. Coxe. (Oxf. 1852.)
-
- Kirchhoff, Albrecht: Die Handschriftenhändler des Mittelalters. Zweite
- Ausgabe. (Leipz. 1853), pp. 132, 136.
-
- Magd. = Notes from the muniments of St. Mary Magdalen College, Oxford,
- by the rev. W. D. Macray. (Oxf. 1882.)
-
- Oxf. City Doc. = Oxford City Documents, 1268–1665, edited by J. E.
- Thorold Rogers. (Oxf. Hist. Soc. vol. xviii, 1891.)
-
- Twyne. = Brian Twyne’s manuscript collections in the Oxford University
- archives.
-
- Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills. = An Index to Wills proved in the Court of
- the Chancellor of the University of Oxford, by John Griffiths.
- (Oxf. 1862.)]
-
-
- (SCRIBES, ILLUMINATORS, BOOKBINDERS, STATIONERS AND BOOKSELLERS,
- PARCHMENT-MAKERS, PRINTERS.)
-
- Not later than 1180:—
-
- Peter, illuminator (Deed of Elias Bradfoth, in Oxf. Univ.
- Archives).
- Ralph, illuminator (do.).
- William, illuminator (do.).
- Thomas, scribe (“scriptor”) (do.).
- Reginald, parchment-maker (do.).
- Roger, parchment-maker (do.).
-
- c. 1190–1200. John, “illuminator”, in St. Mary’s[16] parish (Magd.).
-
- c. 1190–1200. Roger, “pergamenarius”, in St. Mary’s parish (Magd.).
-
- 1190–1215. Peter, illuminator, in St. Mary’s parish (Magd.).
-
- c. 1210–20 (?) Augustine, bookbinder, in St. Peter’s-in-the-East
- parish (Magd.).
-
- 1212, Nov. A, scribe (“Explicit opus manuum mearum, quod compleui ego
- frater A subdiaconus sancte Frideswide seruientium minimus, anno
- ... M^o CC^o ... xii^o ... anno conuersionis mee vij^o ...”:
- Paris, Bibl. Nat. MS. fonds Français 24766).
-
- In the first half of the 13th cent. occurs as a witness Reginald,
- bookbinder, in an old deed in the Oxford Univ. archives between
- Will. Burgey, and Nicholas “serviens Universitatis”, in one of the
- mayoralties of Petrus filius Toraldi. (Twyne I, p. 52.)
-
- c. 1232–40. John, illuminator, St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- c. 1232–40. Walter, bookbinder, St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1237–8. Walter de Ensham, illuminator, St. Mary’s (Magd.).
-
- 1240–57. Roger, scribe, (“exemplarius”, alias “Saumplarier”,)
- apparently dead in 1276: St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- c. 1240–90. Simon Scoticus, parchment-maker (“parcamenarius”) in
- Cattestrete, St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1242. Robert de Derbi, illuminator, in Cattestrete, St. Peter’s
- (Magd.).
-
- About the middle of the 13th cent. the following names occur in
- Twyne’s transcript of a St. Frideswide record—a deed between
- Petrus filius Toraldi and Adam filius Hugonis Ruffi about land in
- the parish of St. Mary the Virgin:—Robert, illuminator; Simon,
- parchment-maker; and as witnesses, Thomas, scribe; Peter,
- parchment-maker (Twyne XXIII, p, 69).
-
- 1251–2. Stephen, parchment-maker (“percamenarius”), in Cattestrete,
- St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1252–3. William, scribe (“le Samplarier”), St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1252–90. Stephen, bookbinder, St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1264–84. William de Pikerynge, bookbinder, (“laminator”), died before
- 1308: found both in St. Mary’s and St. Peter’s deeds: probably the
- same as William the bookbinder of Oxford, the motto on whose seal
- in 1275 was “Vivite innocue; lumen adest” (Magd.).
-
- 1266. Hugh, illuminator, St. Mary’s (Magd.).
-
- 1266–78. Symon and Yon, bookbinders, St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1267. Reginald, illuminator, St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1268–90. Martin, scribe (“Exemplarius” alias “le Saumplarier”): dead
- in 1298: St. Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- 1290. In this year it is agreed between the University and City that
- “Pergamenarii, Luminatores, Scriptores” were in the jurisdiction
- of the Chancellor of the University (©Munimenta Academica©, ed.
- Anstey, p. 52).
-
- Before 1304. Geoffrey, illuminator (“alluminator”), St. Mary’s
- (Magd.).
-
- 1308. Robert, notary and stationer in Cattestrete: St. Mary’s (Magd.).
-
- In the first quarter of the 14th cent. William of Nottingham wrote
- MSS. Merton Coll. 158, 166, 168, 169, 170 at Oxford (Coxe: see
- Little’s ©Grey Friars in Oxford©, 1892, pp. 165–6).
-
- 1340/1, Feb. Adam, bookbinder, occurs incidentally as holding a
- tenement in Schidyerd way (now Oriel St.), in the Bodleian Oxford
- charter no. 125* (Turner’s Catal., p. 307). This tenement he left
- to the altar of St. Thomas the Martyr in St. Mary the Virgin’s
- church in 1349 (Wood’s ©City©, ed. A. Clark, ii. 22, from a copy
- of the will).
-
- 1341. Symon Faunt and John Faunt, bookbinders, St. Mary’s (Magd.).
-
- 1342. In this year a MS. of William of Ockham’s Summa Logices now at
- Bâle (F. ii. 25 according to A. G. Little’s ©Grey Friars in
- Oxford©, p. 226: see Sir Tho. Phillipps’s Catalogue of MSS. at
- Bâle, p. 7) was written at Oxford.
-
- 1344. John Joye, illuminator (“lumnour”), of Cattestrete: St. Peter’s
- (Magd.).
-
- 1345. In this year the Chancellor of the University was acknowledged
- to have jurisdiction over “quattuor stationarios ad hujusmodi
- officium per ... Universitatem admissos et pro tempore admittendos
- ac Universitati juratos vel jurandos, necnon in omnes et singulos
- scriptores scholaribus in scriptorum officio servientes”
- (©Munimenta Academica©, ed. Anstey, p. 150, cf. 176; Wood’s
- ©Annals©, ed. Gutch, i. 441).
-
- 1349. In I. B. De Rossi’s ©Codices Palatini Latini bibliothecae
- Vaticanae descripti© (1886) in MS. no. 377 “adnotatur emptio
- codicis ‘pro duobus Florenis cum dimidio Anno domini
- M^o.CCC^o.XL^o nono in ciuitate oxoniensi.’”
-
- XIVth cent. Roger, stationer (Oxf. Univ. Archives, box F, no 24).
-
- XIVth cent. Adam de Walton, parchment maker (_ibid._, box F. no. 26).
-
- XIVth cent. William, bookbinder (_ibid._, box F, no. 28).
-
- c. 1350. MS. New College 134 was written at Oxford in about A.D. 1350
- (Coxe).
-
- In the 14th cent. in an undated deed in the Oxf. Univ. Archives
- between John Pilat and Walter “filius Paulini de Eynsham” about
- land in St. Mary’s parish, the following occur as
- witnesses:—Ralph, Robert, James, illuminators; Walter, Augustine,
- Adam, bookbinders (“liurs”); Simon, parchment-maker (Twyne XXIII,
- p. 103; cf. Bodl. MS. Wood D. 2, p. 489).
-
- 1353. Thomas Hamme, bookseller (“Vetus quoddam inventarium de bonis
- Thomæ Hamme bibliopolæ et stationarii ut videtur anno domini
- 1353,”) once in the Oxf. Univ. Archives, box K, no. 2; but this
- most interesting document is noted by Gerard Langbaine as having
- been stolen during the Civil War (MS. Twyne I, 278).
-
- 1358/9. Richard Lynne, stationer (“stacionarius Universitatis Oxun.”)
- (Coxe): Richard the stationer occurs in Lent 1358 (Boase’s
- ©Registrum Oxoniense©, 1st ed., p. xi).
-
- 1364. MS. New College 173 was written at Oxford in this year (Coxe).
-
- 1370. Robert, bookbinder, St. Mary’s (Magd.): Robert Bokebinder and
- Agnes his wife occur in 1377 (?) and 1380 (Oxf. City Doc., pp. 41,
- 47).
-
- 1373/4, Jan. 27. At this date “Quia, propter excessivam multitudinem
- vendentium libros Oxoniæ Universitati minime juratorum, plerique
- codices magni valoris ad partes exteras deferuntur” the University
- decreed that no booksellers except the sworn stationers or their
- deputies should sell any book exceeding half a mark in value.
- (Anstey’s ©Munimenta Academica©, p. 233: see Appendix D. I, below,
- p. 281).
-
- 1377? John, parchment-maker (“Parchemenor”), Holywell (Oxf. City Doc.,
- p. 52).
-
- 1377? Richard, parchment-maker (“Parchemenor”), Holywell (Oxf. City
- Doc., p. 52).
-
- 1377? Roger Somervyle, stationer, St. Peter’s (Oxf. City Doc., p. 52).
-
- 1380. MS. Corpus Christi College (Oxford) 151 was written at Oxford in
- this year (Coxe).
-
- 1380. Roger, illuminator (“lymenour”), St. Mary’s (Oxf. City Doc., p.
- 41).
-
- 1380. John Madesdon, illuminator (“limenour”), St. Mary’s (Oxf. City
- Doc., p. 41).
-
- 1380. William, illuminator (“Lymenour”), St. Mary’s (Oxf. City Doc.,
- p. 41).
-
- 1380. John Hyrys, parchment-maker (“Parchemener”) (Oxf. City Doc., p.
- 41).
-
- 1380. Richard, parchment-maker (“Parchemener”) (Oxf. City Doc., p.
- 43).
-
- 1380. Edward, parchment-maker (“Parchemener”) (Oxf. City Doc., p. 44).
-
- 1380. John Langeport, once stationer (“quondam stationarius”),
- north-east ward (Oxf. City Doc., p. 22).
-
- 1393. In Florence MS. Laurentian, bibl. S. Crucis, plut. xvii Sin.,
- cod. x. “Explicit compilatio quaedam ... scripta per me F[ratrem]
- I[acobum] Fey de Florentia Ordinis Fratrum Minorum in Conventu
- Oxoniae anno Domini MCCCXCiii, die ... [xi Martii]” (Bandini’s
- Catalogue, A. G. Little’s ©Grey Friars in Oxford©, p. 252).
-
- 1393. John Brother, illuminator (“limnator”), St. Mary’s (Magd.).
-
- 1403. John Brown, stationer, sold MS. Merton College 130 in this year,
- (Coxe), cf. MS. New College 104: see A.D. 1440.
-
- 1410. In the record of a tax levied on the University in this year
- occur the names of William and Roger, illuminators; Richard,
- senior and junior, parchment-makers; and Thomas and Robert,
- scribes (Twyne IV, p. 70).
-
- 1411. The University enacts that as the duties of the University
- stationers are laborious and anxious every one on graduation shall
- give clothes to one of the stationers (©Munimenta Academica©, ed.
- Anstey, p. 253).
-
- 1419. See under 1490.
-
- 1423. “Finit Menon Platonis [Latine] scriptus per Fredericum Naghel de
- Trajecto anno Domini MCCCC.XXiij ... in alma Universitate
- Oxoniensi” (MS. Corpus Christi College, Oxford, no. 243: Coxe).
-
- 1424. “Guilermus Secomps venditor librorum” may possibly be an Oxford
- bookseller in this year (see Coxe’s account of MS. Lincoln College
- Latin 14).
-
- 1424/5 John Dolle, bookbinder: see under 1453.
-
- First half of 15th cent. In Bodl. MS. e Mus. 155, p. 507 (written
- perhaps in the first half of the 15th cent.) “Explicit liber
- 3^{us} de consideracione 4^{te} essencie secundum Rogerum Bacon
- correctus et scriptus per Johannem Cokkes manibus suis propriis
- Oxon.”
-
- 1426. John Wake, illuminator (“lymner”), St. Mary’s (Magd.): he
- appears as a surety in 1434 (Univ. Register Aaa, fol. 1).
-
- 1427. “Explicit conflatus Francisci de Maronis finitus per manus
- Nicolai de Bodelswerdia anno Domini 1427 ... tum temporis Oxoniæ
- studentis” (MS. Merton College 133: Coxe). A similar inscription
- dated 1429 is in MS. Oriel College 70 (Coxe). Kirchhoff mentions
- Nicolas de Frisia alias de Bolswerdia as a bookseller in 1427–31.
-
- 1430. “Explicit conflatus Francisci de Mayronis ... finitus et
- completus anno Domini 1430 ... per manus Johannis Jacobi Spaen de
- Amsterdamis, tunc temporis Oxonie studentis” (MS. Magd. Coll.,
- Oxf., 103: Coxe).
-
- 1434. John Clerk (Clericus) occurs as a stationer in this year and
- 1438 (Univ. Register Aaa, foll. 4*, 11).
-
- c. 1436. “Stephanus ligator librorum de Oxonia” occurs at about this
- date in Cambr. Univ. MS. Dd. xiv. 2, fol. 139 (information from T.
- W. Jackson, M.A.).
-
- 1439. John Godsond occurs as a stationer (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Aaa,
- fol. 15^v): he has a dispute in the same year with John Coneley a
- “lymner,” his assistant (Anstey’s ©Munimenta Academica©, pp.
- 550–1): in 1458 he is paid for chaining some Exeter College books
- (Boase’s ©Reg. Exon.©, 1st ed., p. 21).
-
- 1440. John Brown, stationer, in this year (cited by Heyner) may be the
- same as the one noted under 1403.
-
- 1440. John More, stationer, occurs frequently: in 1440 he or a person
- of his name sells MS. Lincoln College, Latin 109, probably in
- Oxford (Coxe): on 7 Nov. 1444 he is mentioned in Anstey’s
- ©Munimenta Academica©, p. 741: in Apr. 1445 he values books in
- Oxford (_ibid._, p. 544): also in 1447–48 (_ibid._, pp. 565, 579,
- cf. 741) mentioned in the Treasurer’s accounts at Oriel, 1451–65:
- on 12 Apr. 1454 or ‘55 he sold MS. Magd. Coll. (Oxf.) 4 in Oxford
- (Coxe): in 1457 he values Exeter College books (Boase’s ©Reg.
- Exon.©, 1st ed., p. lxviii): on 21 Oct. 1457 he sold MS. Magd.
- Coll. (Oxf.) 134 in Oxford (“Mare,” in Coxe). A John More was
- living in 1460–61 and 1468–9 on the east side of Cat Street,
- probably in Lady Hall = Great St. Mary’s Entry, according to the
- St. Mary the Virgin church accounts preserved in the Bodleian
- (Oxford Rolls 13 &c.). He was also a binder (Oriel accounts).
-
- 1445. John Coneley, illuminator: see 1439: he is bound to work for
- Godsond for one year from 8 Nov. 1445 for 4 marks and 10
- shillings.
-
- 1446. “Thomas Bokebynder de Catys-street” was imprisoned by the
- Chancellor for saying that the mayor and townsfolk were not under
- oath to respect the rights of the University (Anstey, ©Munimenta
- Academica©, p. 556).
-
- 1448. William Bedewyne, illuminator (“lymnour”), “late of Oxford,” St.
- Peter’s (Magd.).
-
- XVth cent. Willelmus Sengleton wrote MS. New College 127 (Coxe): he
- may be the Will. Singleton who was admitted B.A. in 1566/7
- (©Register of the Univ.©, vol. i., ed. Boase, p. 265).
-
- XVth cent. “Expliciunt Questiones ... scripte per Johannem de Almania
- sive de Kasterle, in usum ... Thome Grace, illic [sc. at Oxford]
- in artibus graduati,” in MS. Magd. Coll. (Oxf.) 162 (Coxe).
-
- 1450–64. In these years Willelmus Salomon “Leonensis diocesis” wrote
- the works of Hugo de Sancto Caro or Hugo Viennensis in Oxford for
- Roger Keys, who in 1469/70 presented them to Exeter College, where
- they are now MSS. 51–68 (Coxe).
-
- 1452. “Johannes Bokebyndere Oxoniæ” occurs in the will of dr. Richard
- Browne (Anstey’s ©Munimenta Academica©, p. 648).
-
- 1453. John Delle or Dolle, stationer, mentioned (©Register of the
- Univ.©, vol. i., ed. Boase, p. 20, “Delle”): and in 1454 (Anstey’s
- ©Munimenta Academica©, p. 741, “Dolle”). In 1454 his name occurs
- in Bodleian Oxford Charters 491 (Turner’s Catal., p. 351). He may
- be the same as John Dolle, bookbinder, who lived in Cat Street in
- 1424/5 (Boase’s ©Reg. Exon.©, 1894, p. 295).
-
- 1453. John Reynbold, a German, agreed at Oxford to write out three
- books of Duns Scotus on the Sentences (Bodl. MS. Ballard 46, fol.
- 70). He wrote several MSS. now at Balliol and Merton between 1451
- and 1464.
-
- 1459. June 17. Will. Bokebynder occurs as a witness in Oxford, when
- MS. Merton Coll. 135 was given to the College (Coxe). In the same
- year he is mentioned in Oxford Univ. Archives, box F, no. 28.
-
- 1467. British Museum MS. Royal 6 D II once bore the following
- interesting inscription, before it was re-bound, “Iste liber
- ligatus erat Oxonii, in Catstrete, ad instantiam Reverendi Domini
- Thome Wybarun in sacra Theologia Bacalarii Monachi Roffensis, Anno
- Domini 1467” (see Casley’s ©Catalogue of the Manuscripts of the
- Kings Library© (1734), Dibdin’s ©Bibliographical Decameron©
- (1817), ii. 449: the volume contains the Letters of St. Jerome,
- and had been given to Rochester by Benedict, bp. of Rochester,
- _d._ 1226).
-
- “1468”–1486/7. Oxford printing, see Appendix A.
-
- 1473. Thomas Hunt, “universitatis Oxonie stacionarius,” sold Brit.
- Mus. MS. Burney 11 (a Latin Bible) in this year (see the
- Catalogue, printed in 1840). In 1477 and 1479 he was living in
- Haberdasher hall in the parish of St. Mary the Virgin (Bodl. MS.
- Wood F. 15, a collection of Oseney rentals: Wood’s “Thomas Howle,
- stacioniar,” of Haberdasher hall in 1477 in Bodl. MS. Wood D. 2,
- p. 587, from the above MS., is a mis-reading by Wood for Honte, i.
- e. Hunte). In 1483 he appears as agreeing to sell certain books in
- Oxford at fixed prices (the list, which is on a paper now forming
- a fly-leaf of a French translation of Livy (Paris, 1486) now in
- the Bodleian, is printed in the publications of the Oxf. Hist.
- Soc. vol. v. (©Collectanea©, I), pp. 74, 141–3). In all
- probability he is the same Thomas Hunt who in 1485 printed the
- ©Phalaridis Epistolae© at Oxford in conjunction with Theodoric
- Rood (see pp. 4, 238).
-
- 1481–85. Theodoric Rood, printed at Oxford (see pp. 2, 4, 238).
-
- 1482. F. H., — Hawkins, J. Alexander (Alison) occur as
- parchment-sellers: see p. 256.
-
- 1490. William Vavasour, scribe. MS. Corpus Christi Coll. (Oxf.) 228
- was written “per manum fratris Wyllelmi Vavysur,” “Oxonie anno
- 1490” (the date and word “Oxonie” might possibly refer to the time
- and place of the “determinationes physicæ”: but) MS. Corpus 227
- was “scriptus per me fratrem Wyllelmum, studentem Oxonie anno ...
- 1419 [1491]” and “per manum fratris Wyllelmi Vavysur ejusdem
- ordinis [sc. fratrum Minorum] ... 1491.”
-
- 1501. Sebastian Actors, bookseller of St. Mary the Virgin’s parish.
- Record of a grant of administration after his decease, 23 April
- 1501 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1501. Christopher Coke, stationer. A similar record with inventory, 13
- Dec. 1501 (_ibid._).
-
- 1502/3. William Lesquier, bookseller. A similar record, 1 Feb. 1502/3
- (_ibid._).
-
- 1506. Georgius Castellanus, bookseller (?): see p. 11.
-
- 1514. Henricus Jacobi. On Dec. 11, 1514 administration of the effects
- of Henricus Jacobi, deceased, was granted (Oxf. Univ. Archives).
- Two imperfect leaves of an edition of the ©Formalitates de mente
- magistri Johannis Duns Scoti© by Antonius Syrretus were found in
- New College Library at Oxford by R. G. C. Proctor, Esq., the first
- of which bears the words “Venundantur in vniuersitate Oxoniensi
- sub intersignio sanctissime Trinitatis ab Henrico Jacobi
- bibliopole Londoniensis.” See p. 228.
-
- 1518. John Scolar and (1519/20) Carolus Kyrfoth, printers, see pp.
- 5–7, 263.
-
- 1521. John Dorne, bookseller. His day-ledger, showing what books he
- sold and at what prices, from 19 Jan.-23 Dec. 1520, is MS. Corpus
- Christi College, Oxford, no. 131; this and two leaves of a similar
- day-book of about 1518–19, found in a binding in the same College
- library, are printed in the Oxford Historical Society’s
- ©Collectanea© volume, no. 1 (pp. 78–139) and 2 (pp. 457–62), where
- also it is shown that Dorne, who was certainly “a Dutchman,” and
- as such paid with others an alien tax at Oxford in 1524 (see
- Rogers’s ©Oxford City Documents©, Oxf. Hist. Soc. xviii, 1891, p.
- 56, as Johan Thorn), may be the Johannes Dorn who printed at
- Brunswick in 1507–9. An ©Opus Insolubilium© printed by Treveris
- was to be sold “apud I. T.”, which Mr. E. G. Duff thinks is
- probably I. Thorne.
-
- 1524. William Howberghe (Howbert or Hubbert), Douchman (Dutchman: he
- resigned his office as Stationer 11 Oct. 1532, see Boase’s ©Reg.
- Oxon.©, p. 171). Gerard Pylegreme, Douchman (his will is extant at
- Oxford, dated 7 Feb. “1537”: Oxf. Univ. Archives). Balthasar
- Churchyard, Douchman. Harry Renkens, Douchman. All these pay taxes
- as Dorne above, in 1524, in the capacity of Stationers or
- Booksellers. Richard Alcoke, bell-ringer, Margarete Page, Rose
- Cater, Henry Mancipull, and “Sir Person” are possible additions to
- this list.
-
- About 1525. Gressop, bookbinder. In Bodl. MS. Rawl. G. 47 (N. C.
- 14778) there is a note that the volume, which had been presented
- to All Souls Library by bp. Goldwell, was “resarcitus per
- Gressopum”: the date must be about 1525.
-
- 1531, Oct. A commission from the bp. of Lincoln to search the
- booksellers’ stalls at St. Frideswide’s fair for heretical books
- (Brit. Mus. MS. Lansdowne 938).
-
- 1532. David Pratt, B.A., of Cambridge, is stationer from 10 March
- 1535/6 to Oct. 1536 (Boase’s ©Reg. Oxon.©, p. 171).
-
- 1534. A patent is issued to Cambridge (where printing had been
- exercised from 1521 to 1522) allowing the University to have three
- licensed stationers and printers or sellers of books, and
- authority to print books is granted to the Chancellor and three
- Doctors. No similar patent was issued to Oxford.
-
- 1552. Henry Mylward, stationer (Boase’s ©Reg. Oxon.©, p. xx). He
- retired on 11 Apr. 1597 from old age (Clark’s ©Register©, i. 262,
- where it is suggested that his name appears as Miller in 1578/9,
- living in St. Mary’s Parish). In 1583 (July 12) Beef Hall was
- leased to him (Oxf. Univ. Archives, box O, no. 10. cf. A. no. 14).
-
- 1554, Nov. 14. Herman Evans admitted stationer, but pronounced
- “contumax” in Oct. 1563 (Clark’s ©Register©, i. 261).
-
- 1556, Aug. 11. Nicholas Wayte, admitted bookseller (Clark, i. 321).
-
- —— —— —— Richard Walles, do. (Clark, _ibid._).
-
- —— Aug. 12. James à Wood, adm. parchment-seller (Clark, i. 322).
-
- 1564, Sept. 30. Thomas Wadloffe, adm. parchment-seller (Clark,
- _ibid._).
-
- 1566, June 20. “Garbrande Harkes,” bookseller, licensed to sell wine
- (Clark, i. 323).
-
- 1566/7, Jan. 27. Conrad Myller, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321):
- licensed to sell ale in St. Mary’s parish, 16 Sept. 1572: living
- in 1587/8 (Clark, i. 325).
-
- 1567, Apr. 3. Gilbert Burnet, alias Cornyshe, adm. parchment-seller
- (Clark, i. 326).
-
- 1570, June 28. Nicholas Clyfton, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321).
-
- —— Oct. 6. Christopher Cavye, do. (_ibid._): in 1574 the Chancellor
- recommended that he should have a monopoly of second-hand books,
- since he was in difficulties (_ibid._).
-
- 1570/1, Mar. 21. William Spyre, of St. Mary’s parish, adm. bookseller
- on the Chancellor’s recommendation. Still bookseller in 1590
- (_ibid._), and stationer in 1617 and 1619 (Clark, i. 321, 343).
- Probably the same as Will “Spewe” of the Company of Stationers (C.
- R. Rivington, ©Stationers Company©, 1883, p. 27). Died before 20
- Nov. 1636 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1573, Sept. 8. ¬Joseph Barnes¬, adm. bookseller (_ibid._). He was
- licensed to sell wine from Oct. 1575 to at least Oct. 1596. He was
- sole printer to the University from 1585 to 1617, resigned on 12
- Feb. 1616/7, and died in 1618, being buried in St. Mary’s on Dec.
- 17 in that year. He lived (and printed) in a house at the west end
- of St Mary’s, now St. Mary’s Entry (see ©Letters from the
- Bodleian©, ii. 428).
-
- 1573, Sept. 8. Robert Cave, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): still a
- bookseller in 1693 (fragm. in C. C. C, Oxf., Library from M. XX.
- II).
-
- 1573, Dec. 5. Richard Garbrand, or Harks, adm. bookseller: still
- bookseller in 1599 (MS. Wood D. 3, p. 281, cf. 286, where it is
- stated that he was churchwarden of St. Mary’s in 1569); he died
- before 31 Jan 1603/4 (Clark, i. 323. compared with Griffiths’
- ©Index of Oxford Wills©).
-
- 1574, Mar. 25. Dominique Pinart, adm. bookseller (Clark, _ibid._): in
- 1583 he occurs as a bookbinder (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. Y. 99);
- still bookseller in 1616/7 (Clark, i. 321). Died before 18 Feb.
- 1627/8 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1574. John Gore occurs as an Oxford bookseller in a lease summarized
- in MS. Wood D. 3, p. 281, and lived in or near Cat St.
-
- 1577, Apr. 24. Humphrey Archer, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321).
- Administration was granted after his death on 13 Feb. 1587/8 (Oxf.
- Univ. Archives).
-
- 1577. Rowland Jenckes or Jenkes, a bookbinder, was condemned at the
- Assizes at Oxford for sedition (Wood’s ©History and Antiquities of
- the University of Oxford©, ed. Gutch, ii. (1796), p. 188: and
- Webster’s ©Treatise of Witchcraft©, p. 245, quoted by Bagford in
- Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 62).
-
- 1583. Carre occurs as a bookbinder (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. Y. 99).
-
- 1584, Aug. 15. £100 is lent by the University to Joseph Barnes with
- which to set up a press, to be repaid in six years (_ibid._ Reg.
- L. 10, fol. 287, cf. 246). In Oct. 1592 the money had not been
- repaid.
-
- 1585. For printers and publishers from 1585–1640, see also p. 311.
-
- 1585/6, Jan. 10. A Committee of Convocation at Oxford appointed to
- consider ©De libris imprimendis© (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. L. 10,
- fol. 283).
-
- 1586, June 23. An Ordinance of the Star Chamber allows only two
- presses outside London, one at Oxford and one at Cambridge, and
- only one apprentice to each press (printed in full in Arber’s
- ©Transcript©, ii. 807).
-
- 1588. In about this year occurs an Inventory of the goods of John
- Pigot, scrivener, implying his previous death (Oxf. Univ.
- Archives—Wills).
-
- 1590, Nov. 27. Robert Foxon, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): but on 7
- Mar. 1590/1 an Inventory of his goods was taken, implying previous
- death (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- —— —— Thomas Middleton, adm. bookseller (Clark, _ibid._): he died
- before 28 March 1604 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- —— —— Francis Peirce, do. (_ibid._): still bookseller in 1616/7
- (Clark, i. 521): died before 4 Jan. 1622/3 (Oxf. Univ.
- Archives—Wills).
-
- —— —— Stephen Wilson, do. (_ibid._): in 1591 he is a bookbinder also
- (Clark, i. 342).
-
- 1591, May 25. A patent was granted to Richard Wright of Oxford and his
- assigns to print Tacitus’s ©History© in English, for life. (Patent
- Roll 33 Eliz., part 17, Arber’s ©Transcript©, ii. 16). This partly
- explains the peculiarity noticed in 1591, no. 5 (p. 31, above):
- clearly it was printed nominally by Barnes, but published in
- London and perhaps in part printed there. Wright appears as
- belonging to both cities.
-
- 1593/4, Feb. 21. Thomas Gowre resigns the office of parchment seller
- and is succeeded by William Jennings (Fenninge?) (Clark, i. 322).
-
- 1594, Sept. 3. John Barnes, son of Joseph Barnes, is apprenticed to
- Rich. Watkins of St. Paul’s Churchyard, London, for seven years
- from Mich. 1594 (Arber’s ©Transcript©, ii. 195: see the same work
- under date 7 June, 1602, &c.).
-
- 1596, May 21. Application was made to Convocation for a licence to
- Joseph Barnes to have a monopoly of printing inedited Greek and
- Latin books (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. Ma., p. 15).
-
- 1597, Apr. 11. Lancelot Waistiell or Waystayle adm. stationer of the
- University: he resigned in 1608.
-
- 1598/9, Mar. 16. John Crosley adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321):
- stationer in 1611 (Clark, i. 342): died before 12 Feb. 1612/3
- (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills, where he is described as a citizen of
- London).
-
- 1600/1. Robert Billingsley occurs as a bookseller (Clark, i. 342):
- also bookbinder: he died before 17 Nov. 1606 (Oxf. Univ.
- Archives—Wills).
-
- 1603. The Stationers Company in London obtain a monopoly of printing
- Primers, Psalms and Almanacs.
-
- 1608, Apr. 18. Denis Edmonds adm. stationer.
-
- 1609. Nicholas Smith, bookbinder, died before 9 Aug. 1609 (Oxf. Univ.
- Archives—Wills): his wife Anne was Rob. Billingsley’s widow.
-
- 1609, Oct 24. John Garbrand alias Herks, bookseller, was licensed to
- sell wine (Clark, i. 323): he died before 29 Sept. 1617 (_ibid._),
- and after 21 Mar. 1616/7 (Clark, i. 321).
-
- 1609, Oct. 20. William Davies occurs as stationer (Clark, i. 342):
- still such in 1615 and 1621 and 1637 (Clark, i. 343–4): bookseller
- in March, 1616/7 (Clark, i. 321).
-
- 1609/10, Mar. 13. A tenement in St. Mary’s parish was leased to John
- Adams, stationer (Oxf. Univ. Archives, box A, no. 23): he was a
- bookbinder from 1610 to 1620 (Magd. college deeds, cf. Clark, i.
- 343). In 1637, July 20, a house just North of the Schools
- Quadrangle was “lately” in the tenure of John Adams, bookbinder
- (Agreement between Magdalen and the University in Reg. R. 24, fol.
- 149^r). For his printing, see pp. 308, 312.
-
- 1610, Dec. Henry Blewet or Bluett occurs as a bookseller in St Mary’s
- parish (Clark, i. 321): still such in 1616/7 (_ibid._): died
- before 3 Jan. 1633/4 (“bookbinder”: Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1611. Sampson Stronge alias Starkey, limner, died before 30 Mar. 1611
- (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1615/6, Jan. 2. Robert Nixon alias Waie occurs as a bookseller (Clark,
- i. 343): and in 1616/7 (i. 321).
-
- 1616/7, Feb. 12. William Wrench becomes a University printer, until 19
- Jan. 1617/8: see p. 311.
-
- —— John Lichfield, do.: see p. 311: created Inferior Bedel 20 Mar.
- 1616/7: resigned his offices Jan. 1634/5.
-
- 1616/7, Mar. 21. Richard Wylcocks is bookseller (Clark, i. 321,
- _bis_).
-
- —— —— William Turner, do. (_ibid._): is University printer from 1624
- to 1644/5: see p. 312. In 1639 he was found to have abstracted in
- 1634 the Savile Greek type “under the pretence of printing a Greek
- Chronologer (one Malala)”: and by Feb. 13, 1639/40 had brought
- them back (Wharton’s ©Remains of Laud©, ii. 174).
-
- 1616/7, Mar. 21. Edward Forrest is bookseller (Clark, i. 321).
-
- —— —— William Toldervey, do. (_ibid._).
-
- —— —— John Westall, do. (ibid.): he occurs as binding for the Bodleian
- in 1636–7 (Macray’s ©Annals©, 2nd ed., p. 77).
-
- 1617/8, Jan. 19. James Short do.: see p. 312.
-
- 1617, May 16. Roger Barnes, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): see 1626,
- below.
-
- —— June 10. William Wildgoose, do. (_ibid._).
-
- —— June 11. John Allam, do. (_ibid._).
-
- The two latter with Christopher Barker, William Johnson and John
- Chambers were reprimanded on 23 May, 1617, for setting up as
- booksellers without the Vice-Chancellor’s leave (_ibid._).
-
- 1619, July 30. Edward Miles occurs as bookseller (Clark, i. 343): he
- was Clerk of the University, and died before 1 May, 1637 (Oxf.
- Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1620/1, Jan. 6. Richard Parne adm. parchment seller, in place of Henry
- Dochin, dead, who had succeeded John Cooke (Clark, i. 322).
-
- 1623, Apr. Thomas Huggins occurs as stationer (Clark, i. 343), also in
- 1627 (of St. Mary’s parish) and 1634 (_ibid._ and 344).
-
- 1625/6. William Webbe occurs as stationer (Clark, i. 343). See p. 312.
- Still stationer in 1636/7 (_ibid._ 344), and binder to the
- Bodleian (Macray’s ©Annals©, 2nd ed., p. 77: died in 1652).
-
- 1626, June 18. Roger Barnes and John his son occur as bookbinders
- (Clark, i. 343), John is still bookbinder in 1630 (_ibid._) and
- 1636–7, (Macray’s ©Annals of the Bodleian©, 2nd ed., p. 77). Roger
- died before 30 Nov. 1631 (of All Saints parish, bookbinder and
- stationer: Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1629, June 16. The University of Cambridge begs the loan of the Greek
- matrixes given to Oxford by sir Henry Savile: the request was
- granted on June 30 on Laud’s recommendation, and the matrixes
- returned 24 June, 1631. The year in which Savile’s famous “silver”
- Greek type (with which the ©Chrysostom© of 1610–13 was printed at
- Eton) came to Oxford is not at present ascertainable.
-
- 1631. From the fine of £300 inflicted on the printer of the Wicked
- Bible of this year a fount of Greek type was purchased by Laud
- (not before 1634) for printing in London, Oxford or Cambridge, as
- the editors of the books might prefer. As a fact the printing took
- place in London, from 1637 on.
-
- 1632, Nov. 12. The first charter to Oxford allowing printing: printed
- in App D. II., p. 281: confirmed and amplified, 13 March, 1632/3
- (p. 283). Laud in a letter to the University mentions King and
- Motteshead as two printers the University might well appoint out
- of the three allowed.
-
- 1635. Leonard Lichfield succeeded his father John, as University
- printer: died in 1657.
-
- 1636. Tit. xviii, sect. 5 of the Statutes of the University is framed
- “De Typographis Universitatis”: printed in App. D. V., p. 287. The
- Architypographus is here first mentioned.
-
- 1636. John Haviland of London is stated to have a press at London,
- Oxford and Cambridge (Arber’s ©Transcript©, iii. 704).
-
- 1636–37. — Seale occurs as binding for the Bodleian (Macray’s
- ©Annals©, 2nd ed., p. 77).
-
- —— — Bott, do. (_ibid._).
-
- 1636/7, Mar. 12. See p. 285 (agreement between the University and the
- Stationers’ Company).
-
- 1637, July 11. A severe decree of Star-Chamber is issued, restricting
- printing, but allowing the rights of Oxford: printed in Arber’s
- ©Transcript©, iv. 528.
-
- 1637. In this year Laud, who had in every way facilitated the
- acquisition of good Oriental and other type by the University, was
- able to write to the Vice-Chancellor (on May 5) “You are now upon
- a very good way towards the setting up of a learned Press.”
-
- 1637, Oct. 14. The will of Hugh Jones of St. Mary Magdalen parish,
- printer (apprentice?), was proved (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).
-
- 1638, Apr. 12. The will of John Wilmot, stationer, was proved
- (_ibid._).
-
- 1639. See under 1616/7 (Turner).
-
- 1639, Aug. 12. Agreement with the Stationers’ Company: see p. 287.
-
-The following booksellers of Oxford are at present only known from their
-imprints:—
-
- Jackson, Simon, 1618.
- Cripps, Henry, 1620–39.
- Peerse, Elias, 1625–39.
- Curteyne, Henry, 1625–40.
- Butler, Thomas, 1628.
- Bowman, Francis, 1634–40.
- Allam, Thomas, 1636–39.
- Godwin, Joseph, 1637–39.
- Robinson, Thomas, 1639–40.
- Hunt, Matthew, 1639–40.
- Young, Robert, 1640.
-
-[London booksellers who published for Oxford printers are here omitted:
-see pp. 311–3.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-[The following discussion of the authorship of the ©Praise of Music©
-(1586, no. 10) is referred to on p. 20 as occurring in Appendix C, and
-is therefore here inserted.]
-
-
- ©The Praise of Music© (1586).
-
-This work is probably not by John Case, although constantly attributed
-to him. The facts of the matter may be stated as follows.
-
-The book is strictly anonymous: all that can be gathered directly from
-it is that the author was himself an enthusiastic musician, though not
-necessarily of eminence; that he was a well-read scholar, as well in the
-Fathers as in the Classics, and that his style and method point to a man
-of imaginative mind, young in years, and with considerable elegance of
-thought and expression. The printer writes a dedication to Sir Walter
-Raleigh, alluding to the book as “an Orphan of one of Lady Musickes
-children.” This can only be meant to convey the impression that the
-author was dead: on the other hand the treatise can only have been
-composed recently from the allusions to the controversy about Church
-music: in fact the author was undoubtedly a Protestant in Elizabeth’s
-reign, who approved of elaborate music in Churches, within certain
-common-sense limits.
-
-In 1588 John Case published at Oxford an “Apologia Musices” written in
-Latin, and maintaining nearly the same view about Church music as the
-book before us, to which Case makes no allusion. Case was elected
-scholar of St. John’s College, Oxford, in 1564; and in 1568 fellow. “But
-so it was,” says Wood (©Ath. Ox.©, ed. Bliss, i. 685), “that being
-Popishly affected he left his fellowship and married [in 1574] and ...
-read logic and philosophy to young men (mostly of the R. C. religion) in
-a private house in St. Mary Magd. parish.”
-
-The external evidence about the authorship in question may be put as
-follows. In favour of Case is the important fact that Thomas Watson the
-poet in a sonnet to Case does certainly seem to allude to the English as
-well as the Latin treatise. Most of the expressions may, and more than
-one must, apply to the ©Apologia©, but the allusion to Marsyas can only
-refer to the “Praise,” which indeed is mentioned by name, “Mr. John Case
-... his learned booke lately made in the prayes of Musick.” Again, the
-fact that the ©Apologia© nowhere alludes to the former poem is itself an
-argument that they were not independent of each other, while supposing
-that Case was partly ashamed of so light and poetical a production and
-desired to be judged rather by a more philosophical work, such as the
-Latin treatise, we can understand a desire to ignore the former. To this
-may be added that such considerations as the above were sufficient to
-convince critics like Dr. Farmer, Mr. Joseph Haslewood and Dr. Bliss, as
-well as almost all others who have considered the point. Against such a
-conclusion the following points may be urged. Antony à Wood, who wrote
-lives of all Oxford writers up to his own time, and who was born in
-1632, will not even suggest that Case was the author, but on the
-contrary declares that in all his searches he could never discover who
-wrote the book. Richard Heber seems also to have argued against Case’s
-connexion. With respect to Watson’s testimony it must be remembered that
-he had left the University some years before either book was published,
-and that it is quite possible that he wrote his sonnet with both books
-before him and with little on which to form a judgment except an obvious
-similarity of subject and point of view. Some catalogues are said to
-have credited the printer with the authorship, and Lowndes ascribes it
-to Barnaby Barnes!
-
-The internal evidence is against the common authorship of the two books.
-The style of E.[17] is light, poetical and imaginative, with numerous
-digressions, apologized for and repeated: that of L. is more staid and
-so to speak scholastic; the sentences and thoughts fall into a logical
-form which are natural to Case. The latter passes by the mythological
-part of the history of Music, the former finds it in accordance with his
-taste. Both authors are learned: in E. the references to the Fathers are
-as numerous as those from any other source: in L. the references to
-secular authors predominate. Both draw from common sources, such as the
-©Theatrum vitae humanae© of Beyerlinck and the classical authors: but in
-the longest quotation common to both, one from Ornithoparchus’s
-©Micrologus© (E. pp. 39–40: L. pref.), a treatise on singing and music
-(afterwards, in 1609, translated into English), in which the imaginary
-descent of Concentus and Accentus from Sonus is given, they differ
-materially in one point of the account: nor are the explanations of the
-kinds and effects of the Greek styles of music entirely in accord. So
-too there are expressions peculiar to each book which could hardly have
-been absent from the other, had the authors been the same person (as in
-E. allusions to Mercury’s three parts of music; the Roman college of
-minstrels; three causes of music, pleasure, grief and enthusiasm: in L.
-to inanimate nature moved by music, Homer as a minstrel, the idea that
-strings from wolves’ and sheep’s guts would not harmonize together, bees
-not having ears, modern musicians). But lastly the personality of the
-authors is different. Both indeed take up the same general point of
-view, that music is lawful in a Church, and both entirely neglect the
-_science_ of music though they profess to be ardent musicians: but in E.
-there is a distinct purpose to oppose the attempt to exclude all mixed
-and “exquisite” music from the public services: the author writes to his
-equals for the purpose of interesting and convincing them: in L. we see
-the dialectician addressing those trained in the schools and accustomed
-to the subtle distinctions and formalities of scholastic logic, and also
-the teacher of youth, indulging in moral and didactic reflexions (pp.
-53–55). Once more, Case, according to Wood, was known before 1574 to
-have proclivities towards the Roman Catholic religion, and accordingly
-in L. we find no word of blame addressed to that Church, the nearest
-approach being a note of triumph over the defeat of the Armada on the
-last page. Could he then have written, as the author of E., the
-following expressions, all used in contempt, “in the time of popery” (p.
-129), “popish church Musicke” (ibid.), “the hypocriticall Monkes and
-Friers sang their seuen canonicall houres” (p. 133), “rotten rythmes of
-popery and superstitious inuocation or praying vnto Saints doth not giue
-greater cause of vomit to any man than to my selfe” (p. 136)?
-
-The author of the “Praise of Musicke” may one day be discovered, but he
-will probably be found to be some other than Dr. John Case.
-
------
-
-Footnote 16:
-
- “St. Mary’s” and “St. Peter’s”, without qualification, are throughout
- this Appendix used for the parishes of St. Mary the Virgin and St.
- Peter-in-the-East.
-
-Footnote 17:
-
- E., the English ©Praise of Musicke©: L., the Latin ©Apologia musices©.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX D.
- DOCUMENTS.
-
-
- I.
-
-(Statute to prevent the removal of valuable books from Oxford, A.D.
-1373: from ©Munimenta Academica©, ed. by F. Anstey (Rolls Series) 1868,
-i. 233: with _æ_ altered to _ae_.)
-
-[Sidenote: A.D. 1373.
-
- There are a great many
- booksellers in Oxford,
- who are not sworn to
- the University; the consequence
- of which is,
- that books of great
- value are sold and
- carried away from Oxford,
- the owners of them
- are cheated, and the
- sworn stationers are
- deprived of their lawful
- business; _it is therefore
- hereby enacted_, that no
- bookseller, except the
- sworn stationers or
- their deputies, shall sell
- any book, being either
- his own property or that
- of another, exceeding
- half a mark in value,
- under pain of, for the
- first offence, imprisonment,
- for the second, a
- fine of half a mark, for
- the third, abjuring his
- trade within the
- precincts of the University.]
-
- Quia, propter excessivam multitudinem vendentium libros, Oxoniae
- Universitati minime juratorum, plerique codices magni valoris ad
- partes exteras deferuntur, veri domini librorum eorumdem exquisitis
- coloribus seducuntur, a stationariis Universitatis praedictae lucrum
- consuetum subtrahitur, in Universitatis dedecus non modicum, gravamen
- et jacturam, habita primitus de praemissis deliberatione sufficienti,
- per congregationem Regentium antiquam consuetudinem in hac parte
- renovare volentium _extitit ordinatum_, quod de caetero nullus
- librorum venditor, publicis stationariis duntaxat exceptis, seu ab eis
- legitime deputatis, aliquem librum alienum seu proprium vendat
- excedentem pretium dimidiae marcae, infra jurisdictionem domini
- Cancellarii Universitatis praefatae, sub poenis inferius annotatis;
- _videlicet_ quod, si quis legitime convictus fuerit super
- transgressione hujus ordinationis, prima vice incarceretur, et, in
- secunda vice et transgressione, solvat dimidiam marcam Universitatis
- usibus applicandam, tertia vero convictus abjuret officium sive artem
- venditionis hujusmodi infra limites superius expressatos.
-
- Facta est autem haec ordinatio vicesimo septimo die mensis Januarii,
- anno Domini millesimo trecentesimo septuagesimo tertio.
-
-
- II.
- 1632, Nov. 12.
-
-(Letters patent from Charles I granting to the University three printers
-and booksellers with privileges. Printed from the original in the Oxford
-University Archives.)
-
- ¬Carolus Dei gratia¬ Anglie Scotie Francie et Hibernie Rex fidei
- defensor &c. ¬Omnibus¬ ad quos presentes litere pervenerint salutem
- ¬Sciatis¬ quod nos de gratia nostra speciali ac ex certa scientia et
- mero motu nostris dedimus et concessimus Ac per presentes pro nobis
- heredibus et Successoribus nostris damus et concedimus dilectis nobis
- in Christo Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus Vniversitatis nostre
- Oxon licenciam quod ipsi et Successores sui per scripta comuni eorum
- Sigillo munita de tempore in tempus tres Typographos librorum
- Impressores et Bibliopolas tam de alienigenis et extra obedientiam
- nostram heredum et Successorum nostrorum ortis vel oriundis quam de
- Indigenis infra eandem obedientiam natis vel nascendis infra Septum
- vel Ambitum eiusdem Vniversitatis residentes et inhabitantes tam
- conductivas quam proprias Domos habentes vel tenentes designare
- poterint et constituere quorum singuli omnimodos libros seu Codices
- publice non prohibitos editos vel edendos et librorum exemplar
- Cancellarii eiusdem Vniversitatis vel eius vices gerentis ac trium
- Doctorum quorum vnus ad minus Sacre Theologie existat Professor quibus
- per eosdem Cancellarium magistros et Scholares facultas facta fuerit
- libros examinandi Judicio approbandos ibidem imprimere excudere ac
- Typis mandare ac tam libros et Codices illos quam alios vbicunque sive
- infra Dominia nostra heredum vel successorum nostrorum seu extra eadem
- impressos vel excusos ac vt prefertur approbatos tam in eadem
- vniversitate quam alibi vendicioni exponere vendere et distrahere
- quocies voluerint valeant et possint Quibus quidem Typographis
- librorum Impressoribus ac Bibliopolis et singulis eorum tam
- presentibus quam futuris ad omnia premissa licite et impune agendi
- licentiam similiter damus et concedimus per presentes. ¬Ac¬ pro nobis
- heredibus et Successoribus nostris vlterius volumus et concedimus quod
- huiusmodi Typographi librorum Impressores et Bibliopole eciam extra
- obedienciam nostram heredum vel Successorum nostrorum orti vel oriundi
- et eorum singuli quamdiu infra ambitum vniversitatis predicte moram
- traxerint et negocio antedicto sint intendentes in omnibus et per
- omnia tanquam fideles Subditi et ligei nostri infra Regnum Anglie
- oriundi reputentur habeantur et tractentur et singulis libertatibus
- liberis consuetudinibus legibus et privilegiis vti et gaudere valeant
- libere et quiete provt aliquis fidelis Subditus et ligeus noster
- heredum vel Successorum nostrorum infra Regnum Anglie ortus vel
- oriundus vti et gaudere debeat et ad quotas onera Consuetudines vel
- Imposiciones quascunque aliter aut alio modo quam ceteri fideles
- Subditi et ligei nostri heredum vel Successorum nostrorum infra Regnum
- Anglie orti vel oriundi Solvenda vel contribuenda nullus eorum
- arctetur vel compellatur Statutis de Alienigenis antehac editis seu
- Statutis vel Provisionibus quibusvis aliis in contrarium non
- obstantibus ¬Proviso¬ tamen quod iidem Typographi librorum Impressores
- et Bibliopole et singuli eorum extra obedienciam nostram heredum vel
- Successorum nostrorum oriundi omnia et omnimoda Custumas et Subsidia
- et alia debita et onera pro rebus et merchandizis suis extra Regnum
- Anglie traducendis vel in idem Regnum inducendis vt alienigene solvere
- teneantur et legibus Regni nostri Anglie sint obedientes ¬Eo quod¬
- expressa mencio de vero valore annuo vel de certitudine premissorum
- sive eorum alicuius aut de aliis Donis sive Concessionibus per nos seu
- per aliquem Progenitorum sive Predecessorum nostrorum prefatis
- Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus ante hec tempora facta in
- presentibus minime facta existit aut aliquo Statuto Actu Ordinacione
- Provisione Proclamacione sive Restriccione in contrarium inde antehac
- habitis factis editis ordinatis sive provisis aut aliqua alia re causa
- vel materia quacunque in aliquo non obstante ¬In Cuius¬ rei
- testimonium has literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes ¬Teste¬ me ipso
- apud Westmonasterium Duodecimo die Novembris Anno regni nostri octavo.
-
- per breve de privato Sigillo. Wolseley.
-
-
- III.
- 1632/3, March 13.
-
-(Letters patent from Charles I, confirming the charter of 12 Nov. 1632,
-and further allowing each printer to have two presses and two
-apprentices, forbidding unauthorized reprints for 21 years. Printed from
-the original in the Oxford University Archives.)
-
- ¬Carolus Dei gratia Anglie Scocie¬ Francie et hibernie Rex fidei
- Defensor &c. ¬Omnibus¬ ad quos presentes litere pervenerint salutem
- ¬Inspeximus¬ quasdam literas nostras Patentes magno Sigillo nostro
- Anglie Sigillatas Quarum tenor sequitur in hec verba Carolus dei
- gracia ... [&c., as above, dated 12 Nov. 1632, ending] ... Anno regni
- nostri Octavo ¬Sciatis¬ quod nos de gracia nostra speciali ac ex certa
- scientia et mero motu nostris predictas literas Patentes et singula in
- eisdem contenta tam predictis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus
- quam Typographis librorum Impressoribus et Bibliopolis sub forma in
- eisdem literis Patentibus specificata designandis et constituendis tam
- presentibus quam futuris concedimus et confirmamus Volentes quod eorum
- singuli libertatibus et privilegiis in eisdem contentis plenarie
- gaudeant et vtantur ¬Volumus¬ eciam et pro nobis heredibus et
- Successoribus nostris concedimus eisdem Cancellario Magistris et
- Scholaribus et Successoribus suis et Bibliopolis librorum
- Impressoribus et Typographis in vniversitate predicta designandis et
- constituendis vt predictum est dum moram trahunt et residentes sunt
- infra septum vel ambitum eiusdem vniversitatis quod liceat eorum
- cuilibet duo Prela seu Impressoria infra precincta predicta habere et
- occupare eisque vti in omnibus suis necessariis Decreto in Curia
- Camere Stellate Anno regni Domine Elizabethe nuper Regine Anglie
- vicesimo octavo [17 Nov. 1585–16 Nov. 1586] seu decreto quovis alio in
- contrarium in aliquo non obstante ¬Et¬ quod quilibet dictorum
- Typographorum librorum Impressorum et Bibliopolarum duos Apprenticios
- ad sibi deserviendum in arte et misterio predicto capere et conducere
- valeat Statutis in huiusmodi casu editis et provisis in aliquo non
- obstantibus ¬Ac¬ vt Magistri et Scholares eiusdem vniversitatis
- librorum exemplaria idiomatis diversi tam vernaculi quam peregrini in
- Bibliothecis in eadem Vniversitate hactenus latencia divulgare ac
- libros Concionum exemplaria et tractatus de novo componere et edere in
- religionis Christiane ac bonarum literarum et Artium incrementum
- incitentur Dictique Typographi et librorum Impressores labores et
- sumptus huiusmodi exemplaria ac libros typis mandandi et imprimendi
- subeant libencius ¬Sciatis¬ vlterius quod nos de vberiori gracia
- nostra speciali et ex certa scientia et mero motu nostris concessimus
- dictis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus et Successoribus suis ac
- Typographis et librorum Impressoribus infra septum vel ambitum
- Vniversitatis predicte pro tempore existentibus residentibus tam
- presentibus quam futuris in forma predicta designandis et
- constituendis Et tenore presencium pro nobis heredibus et
- Successoribus nostris volumus et concedimus quod quocies predictorum
- Typographorum seu librorum Impressorum quispiam exemplaria librorum
- Idiomatis cuiuscunque vernaculi vel peregrini ex Bibliotheca quavis
- infra Vniversitatem predictam desumpta preantea non excusa vel
- impressa Dummodo huiusmodi Exemplaria sub forma in predictis literis
- Patentibus specificata divulgari approbentur Typis mandare vel
- imprimere quod non liceat alicui cuiuscunque status vel condicionis
- infra Terminum viginti et vnius Annorum proximorum post huiusmodi
- exemplarium primam impressionem absque speciali licencia Cancellarii
- Magistrorum et Scholarium predictorum in scriptis prehabita imprimere
- seu reimprimere aut ab aliis imprimi seu reimprimi facere aut impressa
- aut reimpressa vendere venalia habere edere vel evulgare seu clam vel
- palam distrahere infra Diciones nobis vbicunque subiectas ¬Ac¬ de
- vberiori gracia nostra speciali ac ex certa scientia et mero motu
- nostris pro nobis heredibus et Successoribus nostris concessimus
- dictis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus et Successoribus suis ac
- Typographis et librorum Impressoribus infra septum vel ambitum
- vniversitatis predicte pro tempore existentibus residentibus tam
- presentibus quam futuris in forma predicta designandis et
- constituendis ¬Et volumus¬ tenore presencium quod quociescunque
- predictorum Typographorum vel librorum Impressorum quispiam Conciones
- tractatus vel libros per Magistrorum seu Scholarium predictorum
- quempiam de novo componendos et edendos Dummodo huiusmodi Conciones
- tractatus et libri vt prefertur approbentur Typis mandare vel
- imprimere quod non liceat alicui cuiuscunque status vel Condicionis
- infra decem Annos proximos post huiusmodi Concionum tractatuum vel
- librorum primam impressionem absque speciali licencia Cancellarii
- Magistrorum et Scholarium predictorum in scriptis prehabita imprimere
- seu reimprimere aut ab aliis imprimi seu reimprimi facere aut
- impressos vel reimpressos vendere venales habere edere vel evulgare
- seu clam vel palam distrahere infra Diciones nostras Typographis
- Bibliopolis librorum Impressoribus aliisque vniversis cuiuscunque
- Status vel Condicionis existant infra Diciones nostras vbicunque
- constitutis strictius inhibentes ne quis eorum infra seperatos
- Terminos decem Annorum et viginti et vnius Annorum proximorum post
- huiusmodi exemplarium Concionum tractatuum seu librorum primam
- Impressionem preter Typographos vel librorum Impressores in
- Vniversitate predicta vt predictum designandos et constituendos infra
- Diciones nostras imprimere seu reimprimere aut ab aliis imprimi seu
- reimprimi facere aut impressos vel reimpressos vendere venales habere
- edere vel evulgare seu clam vel palam infra Dominia nostra distrahere
- inducere vel importare sine licentia dictorum Cancellarii Magistrorum
- et Scholarium in Scriptis prius habita presumat sub pena
- Confiscacionis librorum huiusmodi preter Arbitrar, in mandata nostra
- contemnentes infligenda ¬Ac¬ eisdem Cancellario Magistris et
- Scholaribus damus et concedimus potestatem in locis quibusvis infra
- Dominia nostra in quibus iusta fuerit suspicionis causa libros excusos
- vel distractos contra tenorem Mandati nostri abscondi vel custodiri
- per seipsos vel Deputatos suos pacis Custode Constabulario vel
- Decennario eis asciociato scrutari et disquirere ac libros huiusmodi
- repertos capere ad loca publica ad vsum nostrum deferre ibidem
- remansuros quovsque vlterius in ea parte ordinatum fuerit ¬Mandantes¬
- insuper vniversis et singulis vice-comitibus Custodibus pacis
- Maioribus Balliuis Constabulariis Decennariis Prepositis et Ministris
- quocies ex parte predictorum Cancellarii Magistrorum et Scholarium
- fuerint requisiti quod eis auxiliantes sint consulentes et presidio
- assistentes. ¬Eo quod¬ expressa mencio de vero valore annuo vel de
- certitudine premissorum sive eorum alicuius aut de aliis Donis sive
- Concessionibus per nos seu per aliquem Progenitorum sive Predecessorum
- nostrorum prefatis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus ante hec
- tempora facta in presentibus minime facta existit aut aliquo Statuto
- Actu Ordinacione Provisione Proclamacione sive Restriccione in
- contrarium inde antehac habito facto edito ordinato sive proviso aut
- aliqua alia re causa vel materia quacunque in aliquo non obstante ¬In
- Cuius¬ rei testimonium has literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes
- ¬Teste¬ me ipso apud Westmonasterium Tertio-decimo die Marcii Anno
- regni nostri Octavo
-
- per Breve de privato Sigillo Wolseley
- (with the Seal attached).
-
-
- IV.
- 1636/7, March 12.
-
-(An Indenture between the University of Oxford and the Stationers’
-Company, by which the former releases to the latter all its rights of
-printing Bibles &c. for the term of three years from 16 Feb. 1636/7, for
-the sum of £200 yearly. Printed from the original in the University
-Archives.)
-
- ¬This Indenture made¬ the Twentieth Day of March Anno Domini 1636 And
- in the Twelueth yeare of the Raigne of our soueraigne Lord Charles by
- the grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender
- of the faith &c. ¬Betweene¬ the Chancellor Masters and Schollers of
- the vniuersity of Oxford of the one part And the Master and Keepers or
- Wardens and Communaltie of the Art or Mistery of Stationers of the
- Citty of London of the other part. ¬Whereas¬ by an Order made at
- whitehall the Ninth Day of March in the yeare of our Lord god 1635 by
- the Kings most excellent Maiestie and the right honorable the Lords
- and others of his highnes priuie Councell it is recyted that there had
- thentofore risen Diverse Debates and Controuersies betweene the
- vniuersitie of Cambridge and the Printers there And the Kings Printer
- and the Company of Stacioners in London for the printing of Diuers
- Bookes in regard of a Charter for printing graunted to the vniuersitie
- of Cambridge 26^o Hen. 8^o And that the same Controuersies and
- Contentions vpon seuerall Refferences from his Maiestie had byn setled
- by two Orders The one of the Tenth of December 1623 The other of the
- Sixteenth of Aprill 1629 And that in regard his Maiestie of his equall
- indulgence and grace to the vniuersitie of Oxford had graunted the
- like Charter for printing to the said vniuersitie of Oxford as was
- formerly graunted to the vniuersity of Cambridge It was that day
- ordered by the Board according to the Kings expresse pleasure declared
- That the vniuersitie of Oxford and their Printers should for the time
- to Come enioy the benifitt of all the Articles and Clauses in the said
- Orders of the Tenth of December 1623 And of the Sixteenth of Aprill
- 1629 As by the same Order made the said Ninth day of March relacion
- being therevnto had appeareth ¬Now this Indenture witnesseth¬ that the
- Chancellor Masters and Schollers of the said vniuersitie of Oxford for
- divers good Causes and Consideracions them therevnto moveing ¬Haue¬
- given and graunted And by these presents doe give and graunt vnto the
- said Master and Keepers or Wardens and Comunaltie their Successors and
- assignes full power License Libertie and authority to print and Cause
- to be Imprinted All and euery such and such number of Bibles and other
- Bookes and things whatsoeuer now or heretofore vsed to be printed by
- the Kings Maiesties Printer And alsoe Lilies Grammers As the said
- Chancellors Masters and Schollers or their Printer or Printers of the
- said vniuersitie may might Could or ought to print or Comprint or
- cause to be Comprinted or imprinted by force or vertue of the said
- Three seuerall Orders before mencioned or any of them ¬To haue and to
- hould¬ the said power License Libertie and authoritie vnto the said
- Master and Keepers or Wardens and Comunalty and their Successors and
- Assignes from the Sixteenth Day of February last past for and During
- the Terme of Three yeares fully to be Compleat and ended ¬At vpon and
- vnder¬ the yearely Rent or Summe of Two hundred Poundes of Currant
- English money Payable at the Feasts of the Annunciacion of the Blessed
- Ladie St Marie the Virgin and of St Michaell Tharchangell by euen and
- equall porcions The first payment thereof to begin and to be made at
- and vpon the Fiue and Twentieth Day of this instant month of March or
- within Fifteene Dayes after either or any of the said Feasts or Dayes
- of payment ¬And the said¬ Chancellor Masters and Schollers doe for
- themselues and their Successors Couenant graunt and agree to and with
- the said Master and Keepers or Wardens and Comunaltie and their
- Successors and Assignes by these presents That neither the printers of
- the said vniuersitie of Oxford nor any of them nor any person or
- persons whatsoeuer by or vpon any License or authoritie deriued or to
- be deriued from or given or graunted by the said Chauncellor Masters
- and Schollers other then the said Master and Keepers or Wardens and
- Communalty their Successors and Assignes shall or will at any tyme or
- tymes hereafter within or During the said Terme of Three yeares print
- or Comprint or Cause permit or suffer to be imprinted or Comprinted
- any Booke Bookes or parcell of Booke Bookes Copies or things
- whatsoeuer in the said Orders or any or either of them mencioned or
- which they the said Chancellor Masters and Schollers or their Printers
- may or might print or Comprint by force or vertue of the said Orders
- or any or either of them ¬And the said¬ Master and Keepers or Wardens
- and Comunaltie doe for themselues and their Successors Couenaunt
- graunt and agree to and with the said Chancellor Masters and Schollers
- and their Successors by these presents That they the said Master and
- Keepers or Wardens and Comunaltie and their Successors shall and will
- well and truely pay the said Two hundred pound in manner and forme and
- at the daies and tymes before lymited and expressed for the payment
- thereof vnto the said Chancellor Masters and Schollers ¬And lastly¬ it
- is mutually Couenanted graunted and promised by and betweene the said
- parties to these presents and their successors respectively That vpon
- and at the tyme of the Expiration of the said Terme of Three yeares
- They and either of them shall and will renue Continue and then make
- and Conclude such and the like amicable Composicion and agreement And
- vpon such termes rates and proposicions as are herein Conteyned and
- expressed for soe long tyme after and vntill it shall be reasonably
- agreed on both parts to relinquish the same ¬In witnes¬ whereof to the
- one part of these present Indentures remayning with the said Master
- and Keepers or wardens and Comunalty of the said Art or mistery of
- Stacioners of the saide Citty of London The said Chancellor Masters
- and Schollers of the said vniuersity of Oxford haue sett their Comon
- seale And to the other parte of these present Indentures remayning
- with the said Chancellor Masters and Schollers of the said vniuersitie
- of Oxford The said Master and Keepers or wardens and Comunaltie of the
- said Art or mistery of Stacioners of the said Citty of London haue
- sett their Comon seale The Day and yeares first aboue written
-
- Delivered as the Deede of the Stationers of London for the vse of the
- Chancellors M^{rs} and Schollars of the Vniversitie of Oxford 31^o
- Martij 1637. By the Warden of the sayd Companie in the presence of
-
- John French
- John Thimble
- G. Locksmyth
-
- [with a fragment of the seal]
-
-[With this Indenture is an agreement of the same date that if more than
-£200 a year be agreed to be paid to the University of Cambridge for a
-similar suspension of rights a correspondingly increased sum will be
-paid to the University of Oxford.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-A precisely similar indenture and agreement dated 12 Aug. 1639 renew the
-deeds of 1636 for a second term of three years from 17 Feb. 1639/40,
-under the same conditions.
-
-
- V.
-
-(Tit. xviii, Sect. v. of the Laudian Statutes of the University, 1636,
-printed from Griffiths’ and Shadwell’s edition, Oxford, 1888; with ae
-for æ. It would appear that no Architypographus was appointed till
-1658.)
-
-
- DE TYPOGRAPHIS UNIVERSITATIS.
-
- Cum Sereniss. REX CAROLUS eius nominis Primus, pro eo affectu quo
- Literas ac Literatos fovet, Privilegia Universitatis, quoad rem
- Typographicam nimis antehac arctata, mirum in modum amplificaverit; ne
- Clementiss. Regis indulgentia sordidi ac illiberales Artifices ad
- privatum suum quaestum abutantur: Statutum est, quod nullus
- Typographus in posterum his Privilegiis aut titulo Typographi
- Universitatis nostrae gaudebit, nisi qui in Admissione sua singulis
- Statutis et Ordinationibus circa regimen Typographorum, per Domum
- Convocationis factis, vel in posterum edendis, se submiserit.
-
- Quoniam vero in re Typographica usu compertum est, Mechanicos hosce
- Artifices (lucri sui compendium cum dispendio operis plerumque
- sectantes) Calligraphiae seu Operis decori et elegantiae minime
- studere, sed opera quaeque rudia ac inemendata in publicam lucem
- extrudere; Idcirco praesenti Statuto cautum esto, quod publicae
- Universitatis Typographiae, instruendae in Domo aliqua huic usui
- specialiter deputata, praeficiatur Architypographus unus, Vir Graecis
- Latinisque literis probe instructus, et in studiis Philologicis
- versatissimus: Cuius munus erit, Operis Typographicis ibidem praeesse;
- materiam sive supellectilem typographicam (Chartam scilicet, Praela,
- Typos, et alia huius Opificii instrumenta) ut sint in suo quaeque
- genere lectissima providere. In Operibus e publica Universitatis
- Typographia prodeuntibus, Typorum modulum, Chartae qualitatem,
- Marginum mensuram praescribere; Correctorum errata emendare; et alia
- quaecunque, ad Operis ornatum et perfectionem spectantia, sedulo
- curare. Cui muneri quo alacrius et liberius vacet, (praeter certam
- portionem lucri e libris impressis provenientis, ipsi posthaec, pro
- ratione symbolae quam ad publicae Typographiae peculium seu sortem
- communem contulerit, assignandam ab iis qui a Domo Convocationis ad
- ordinanda Statuta Typographica delegandi erunt,) Officium superioris
- Bedelli in Iure Civili, (utpote reliquis minus negotiosum,)
- quandocunque primum quoquo modo vacaverit, perpetuo in posterum
- annectendum fore praesenti Statuto cautum esto.
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX E.
- WOODCUT ORNAMENTS, TYPE, ETC.
-
-
- A. _Woodcut and Metal Ornaments._ 1585–1640.
-
-Of these there are two classes, the first large and used for the centre
-of titlepages or with conspicuous colophons (these I term _Devices_),
-the other smaller ornaments, used for borders, or to mark the beginning
-or end of a chapter, or generally for decorative purposes: these I call
-_Woodcuts_. The descriptions which follow are not intended to be fuller
-than is sufficient to distinguish the more important. The measurements
-(as always) are the least possible, and not the full size of the plate
-or block.
-
-
- I. _Devices._
-
-Of these there are, in the period under review, fourteen:—
-
- A. 3–11/16 × 2⅞ in. On a shield the arms of the University (with motto
- SAPiEN|TiAE: | ET. | FELi|CiTA|TiS. | ), within a border bearing
- ACADE=|MIA. | OXONI=|ENSIS. | At the corners are two females and two
- satyrs.
-
- Used in 1585–93, 1597–1600, and at intervals till 1635, but not from
- 1625 to 1633.
-
-
- B. 1⅞ × 1⅝ in. A metal engraving. In centre the arms of the
- University, with
-
- Sa│et
- Pi│Fe,
-
- within a ribbon bearing ACADEMIA OXONIENSIS. Above and on each side
- and below are female figures with emblems and scrolls, and underneath
- all IOSEPH’ BARNESIUS.
-
- Used only in 1591. (Barne and Tacitus.)
-
-
- B_a_. 1–15/16 × 1¾ in. A wood engraving from B, omitting Barnes’s
- name: the motto is
-
- SA│et
- PI│F:
-
- and there are other small changes.
-
- Used in 1627–8, 1630–33, 1635–7, 1640.
-
-
- C. 1¼ × 1–5/16 in. An ornamental shield, with the arms of the
- University, the legend being
-
- SA│FE
- PI│LI
- ET│CI:
-
- at the sides AC: and OX. There is a defect (a short line omitted) on
- one shoulder, which serves to distinguish it from H.
-
- Used at intervals from 1592 to 1638.
-
- There is a counterfeit of this used in London printing of at least
- 1616 and 1624: see pp. 106, 120, and H, below.
-
-
- D. 1–7/16 + in. squ. A nine-spoked wheel with two mottos “Omnia
- subiacent vicissitudini,” and “Sola virtus cadere non potest.”
-
- Used in 1592–3, 1620, 1629.
-
-
- E. 1¼ × 1–1/16 in. An ornamental shield with the Royal Arms, and at
- the sides E: and R.
-
- Used in 1594.
-
-
- F. 1–5/16 × 1–3/16 in. An ornamental shield with the arms of New
- College between two W s (William of Wykeham).
-
- Used in 1598, 1605.
-
-
- G. 1¾ in. squ. A circular watch-face, with “Donec dies est . Iohan:
- 9.4”, and figures: for John Day of Oriel.
-
- Used in 1614–5, 1620.
-
-
- H. 1–5/16 × 1⅜. Similar to C, but slightly larger. Perhaps a London
- counterfeit.
-
- Used in 1616 and 1624.
-
-
- I. 2¼ × 1–15/16 in. In centre the arms of the University on a white
- shield with
-
- SAP│FEL
- IEN│ICIT
- TJA│ATIS,
-
- and round it a band with ACADE|MIA. | OXONI=|ENSIS. At the corners are
- two winged figures, a rose and a thistle.
-
- Used in 1628, and at intervals till 1637, by Turner only.
-
-
- J. 2⅝ × 2–7/16 in. An Agnus Dei; beneath it “IOH : 1 : 26” and “ECCE
- AGN’ | DEI”, a text round it.
-
- Used in 1628.
-
-
- K. 1–7/16 × 1⅜. The arms of the University, with the motto
-
- SAP │.ET
- IENC│FELI
- TIA │CIT
- │ATE,
-
- and round it ACADEMIA. | OXONIESIS, a cherub above.
-
- Used in 1630–4, 1636–8, 1640: in and after 1634 the ATE is altered to
- ATIS.
-
-
- L. 3½ × 2⅜ in. The arms of Great Britain and Ireland, crowned, with
- “C.”, “R.” at sides of crown.
-
- Used in 1636.
-
-
- M. 4½ × 3⅜. A Tree of Knowledge, boys plucking fruit, &c.
-
- Used in 1636 (Lily’s Grammar).
-
-
- II. _Woodcuts._
-
-These are 142 in number (not counting _plain_ woodcut capitals), of
-which 32 were used by Barnes. Most of these passed on to his successors,
-who augmented them. In 1627 the two University printers printed
-separately, and John Lichfield took the larger number for himself, a few
-being used in common. It would be idle to print a complete list of
-these, but the writer has full notes of the occurrence of all that are
-found in each book. Twelve are alphabets, fifteen frames within which
-any capital could be placed, and four are arched borders.
-
-
- B. _Type._
-
-The following table exhibits the use made of different type by Oxford
-printers 1585–1640, but applies only to the chief type of the body of
-the work. Thus Pica Greek is the chief type of a book in 1591 at
-earliest, but it is found occasionally in 1587, and Long Primer Greek in
-1585. So too Great Primer Greek is used in 1624, 9. And Hebrew type is
-used sporadically from 1596 on (Long Primer, Pica and English, pointed
-and unpointed: see 1596, 8 & 9; 1601, 2; 1602, 3; &c.)
-
-
- OXFORD TYPE.
-
- ┌───────────────┬───────────────────┐
- │ │ ¬1585¬ │
- ├───────────────┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │ ¬English:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 1 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Pica │ 2 │ 6 │ 1 │ 2 │ 1 │
- │ 3 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Roman:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 Minion │ │ │ │ │ 1 │
- │ 5 Brevier │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 Long Primer │ 2 │ │ 1 │ │ 1 │
- │ 7 Pica │ 2 │ 3 │ 3 │ 3 │ │
- │ 8 English │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 9 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │
- │10 Double Pica │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Italic:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11 Long Primer │ │ │ │ 1 │ │
- │12 Pica │ │ 2 │ 3 │ 1 │ 1 │
- │13 English │ │ │ │ │ │
- │14 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Greek:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │15 Long Primer │ │ 1 │ │ │ │
- │16 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │The above table has reference only │
- │ to the chief type of the body of │
- │ the book. │
- ├───────────────┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │Number of books│ 7 │16 │ 9 │ 7 │ 5 │
- │ or pieces │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ printed at │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Oxford │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┼───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │ Average │ 8 │
- └───────────────┴───────────────────┘
- ┌───────────────┬───────────────────┬───────────────────┐
- │ │ ¬1590¬ │ ¬1595¬ │
- ├───────────────┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │ ¬English:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 1 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 2 │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Pica │ │ 1 │ 1 │ 1 │ 4 │ 1 │ 1 │ 1 │ 1 │ 2 │
- │ 3 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Roman:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 Minion │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 5 Brevier │ ½ │ │ 1 │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │
- │ 6 Long Primer │ ½ │ 1 │ 1 │ │ 2 │ │ │ │ ½ │ │
- │ 7 Pica │ 1 │2½ │1½ │ │ 2 │ 1 │ 1 │ 3 │ 1 │5½ │
- │ 8 English │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │ 2 │ │
- │ 9 Great Primer│ │ ½ │ 2 │ 1 │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │10 Double Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Italic:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │12 Pica │ ½ │ │ 2 │ │ │ │ 2 │ │ ½ │ ½ │
- │13 English │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │14 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Greek:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │15 Long Primer │ ½ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │16 Pica │ │ 1 │1½ │ 1 │ │ │ │ 2 │ │ │
- ├───────────────┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │The above table has reference only to the chief type of│
- │ the body of the book. │
- ├───────────────┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │Number of books│ 5 │ 7 │11 │ 7 │ 7 │ 4 │ 8 │11 │ 6 │ 7 │
- │ or pieces │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ printed at │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Oxford │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┼───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │ Average │ 7 │
- └───────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘
- ┌───────────────┬───────────────────┬───────────────────┐
- │ │ ¬1600¬ │ ¬1605¬ │
- ├───────────────┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │ ¬English:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 1 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Pica │ │ │ │ 2 │ 2 │ 1 │ │ │ 1 │ │
- │ 3 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Roman:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 Minion │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 5 Brevier │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │
- │ 6 Long Primer │ │ │ 1 │ │ 1 │ │ │ 1 │ 1 │ │
- │ 7 Pica │ 5 │ 2 │ 3 │ 5 │ 6 │3½ │ 1 │ │ 4 │ 2 │
- │ 8 English │ 1 │ 1 │ 7 │ 3 │ 1 │8½ │ 6 │ 9 │ 7 │ 4 │
- │ 9 Great Primer│ │ │ 1 │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │
- │10 Double Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Italic:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │
- │12 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │
- │13 English │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │14 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Greek:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │15 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │16 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │The above table has reference only to the chief type of│
- │ the body of the book. │
- ├───────────────┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │Number of books│ 5 │ 3 │12 │11 │10 │13 │ 8 │10 │17 │ 7 │
- │ or pieces │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ printed at │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Oxford │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┼───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │ Average │ 10 │
- └───────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘
- ┌───────────────┬───────────────────┬───────────────────┐
- │ │ ¬1610¬ │ ¬1615¬ │
- ├───────────────┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │ ¬English:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 1 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Pica │ │ │ 1 │ │ │ 1 │ │ │ │ 1 │
- │ 3 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Roman:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 Minion │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 5 Brevier │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 Long Primer │ 1 │ 1 │ 1 │ 1 │ │ 2 │ 1 │ 2 │ 1 │ 2 │
- │ 7 Pica │ │ │ 3 │7½ │ 7 │ 6 │ 1 │ 2 │ 4 │ 4 │
- │ 8 English │ 6 │ 1 │16 │16 │ 5 │ 5 │ 3 │ 4 │ │ 1 │
- │ 9 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │10 Double Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Italic:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │12 Pica │ │ │ │ ½ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │13 English │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │14 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Greek:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │15 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │16 Pica │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │ │ 1 │ │ │
- ├───────────────┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │The above table has reference only to the chief type of│
- │ the body of the book. │
- ├───────────────┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │Number of books│ 7 │ 2 │24 │26 │17 │16 │ 6 │ 9 │ 7 │ 8 │
- │ or pieces │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ printed at │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Oxford │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┼───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │ Average │ 12 │
- └───────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘
- ┌───────────────┬───────────────────┬───────────────────┐
- │ │ ¬1620¬ │ ¬1625¬ │
- ├───────────────┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │ ¬English:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 1 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │1½ │ 2 │
- │ 3 Great Primer│ │ │ 1 │ │ │ 1 │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Roman:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 Minion │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 5 Brevier │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 Long Primer │ 1 │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 2 │ 1 │5½ │
- │ 7 Pica │ 1 │ 3 │ 2 │ 5 │2½ │ 7 │ 1 │ │12½│6½ │
- │ 8 English │ 2 │ 2 │ 4 │ │ 2 │12 │ 3 │ 5 │ 5 │ 3 │
- │ 9 Great Primer│ │ 1 │ 1 │ │1½ │ 2 │ 5 │ │ 1 │ 1 │
- │10 Double Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Italic:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │12 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │
- │13 English │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │14 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Greek:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │15 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │16 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │The above table has reference only to the chief type of│
- │ the body of the book. │
- ├───────────────┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┤
- │Number of books│ 5 │ 6 │ 9 │ 5 │ 8 │24 │ 9 │14 │22 │19 │
- │ or pieces │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ printed at │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Oxford │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┼───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┤
- │ Average │ 12 │
- └───────────────┴───────────────────────────────────────┘
- ┌───────────────┬───────────────────┬───────────────────┬──────┐
- │ │ ¬1630¬ │ ¬1635¬ │¬1640¬│
- ├───────────────┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┼───┬───┬───┬───┬───┼──────┤
- │ ¬English:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 1 Long Primer │ │ │ │ ½ │ │ │ ½ │ ½ │ │ │ │
- │ 2 Pica │ │ 1 │ 1 │1½ │ │2½ │ │ │ 2 │ │ │
- │ 3 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Roman:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 Minion │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 5 Brevier │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 Long Primer │ 2 │4½ │ 1 │6½ │ 4 │ 4 │ 2 │7½ │ 3 │ 7 │ 3 │
- │ 7 Pica │ 5 │15½│ 3 │4½ │12 │ 3 │9½ │10 │ 5 │ 4 │ 14 │
- │ 8 English │ 7 │ 6 │ 4 │12 │ 2 │ 6 │ 5 │ 4 │10 │ 3 │ 3 │
- │ 9 Great Primer│ │ 6 │ │ 3 │ 2 │ │ 1 │ │ 3 │ 5 │ 2½ │
- │10 Double Pica │ │ │ │ │ 1 │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Italic:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │11 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │12 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │13 English │ │ │ │ │ │ ½ │ │ │ │ │ ½ │
- │14 Great Primer│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ 1 │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ¬Greek:¬ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │15 Long Primer │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │16 Pica │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴──────┤
- │ The above table has reference only to the chief type of │
- │ the body of the book. │
- ├───────────────┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬───┬──────┤
- │Number of books│14 │32 │ 9 │34 │21 │16 │18 │24 │23 │20 │ 26 │
- │ or pieces │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ printed at │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Oxford │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- ├───────────────┼───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴───┴──────┤
- │ Average │ 21 │
- └───────────────┴──────────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
-The ordinary size (_now_) of the type used in the Oxford Press from 1585
-to 1640 is as follows, see p. 144 (1629, no. 4):—
-
- _Name._ _Lines in one foot._
- Nonpareil 144
- Minion 120
- Brevier about 110
- Long Primer 90
- Pica 72
- English 64
- Great Primer 51
- Double Pica (which is double “_small_ Pica”) 41
- Canon 20
-
-The old measures make the type of all these very slightly smaller than
-the above measurements.
-
-
- C. _Notanda._
-
-It is curious to observe the small points which break the smooth course
-of ordinary printing in these earlier times, some of them marking
-progress, some a perturbation in the office, some stupidity. The
-following are random notes of some bibliographical interest.
-
- 1. The change of use in the case of _u_ and _v_ (_Vniuersity_ being
- the old spelling, and _University_ the new) may be remarked in
- progress in 1589, no. 5, and is practically completed by 1610. But a
- capital U is not found at all in the period dealt with, its place
- being in a few cases supplied by a large lower-case u.
-
- 2. For “at Oxford” the common Latin is _Oxoniæ_, but _Oxonii_ occurs
- sporadically. _Bellositi Dobunorum_ occurs in 1628: and _Rhydychen_
- (in Welsh books) in 1595, 1600.
-
- 3. In 1588 (no. 8) we first find an Oxford _édition de luxe_.
-
- 4. The state of the office is shown by 1595, no. 4 (small stock of
- type); 1601, no. 2 (Hebrew words sometimes transliterated, sometimes
- in Hebrew type: yet in 1603, no. 2, there is a complaint of the want
- of Hebrew type!); 1625, no. 16 (one sheet in different type); 1628,
- no. 16 (carelessness).
-
- 5. Red ink is found in 1479/80, 1628, 1631, 1633 and thereafter; and
- gold-printing in 1633.
-
- 6. Curiosities of workmanship will be found in 1629, no. 14; 1631,
- nos. 10, 17; 1633, nos. 26, 33; 1634, no. 9; 1635, no. 3; 1636, no. 15
- (signatures); 1638, nos. 3, 17 (do.); 1640, no. 24: and eccentricity
- on the author’s part in 1631, no. 29; 1633, no. 9 (phonetic spelling);
- 1635, no. 10. In 1613 no. 29 (Rainolds) on the first two pages of each
- section the headline is “prophecy”, but on every other page it is
- “prophecie”. 1634 no. 17 (Statuta) is a true folio, in every sense in
- which the word is used.
-
- 7. The number of books or editions issued at Oxford is roughly as
- follows:—15th cent., 15: early 16th cent., 7: 1585–1600, 125:
- 1601–1620, 230: 1621–1640, 370: total, about 750. In the 17th cent.
- about 2700 were issued: in the 18th, about 2100: in the first three
- quarters of the 19th, about 6500. The number from “1468” to 1900 may
- be estimated as likely to be about 16000.
-
- 8. Of the Oxford books issued from “1468” to 1640, the British Museum
- contains less than 70 per cent., and the Bodleian about 80 per cent.
- The following calculation is not far from the truth:—
-
- Oxford books in Brit. Mus. and Bodl. about 450
- Oxford books in Brit. Mus. only " 50
- Oxford books in Bodl. only " 150
- Oxford books in neither library " 100
- ———
- Total 750
-
-
-
-
- APPENDIX F.
- IMPRINTS.
- LISTS AND TABLES OF OXFORD IMPRINTS, 1585–1640.
-
-
-The following tables and lists explain themselves. They give a detailed
-picture of the mutual relations of Oxford and London printers and
-publishers, and the development of the Oxford book trade. It will be
-noticed how the archaisms (_Imprinted at Oxford by_, or _At Oxford,
-printed by_, &c.) are gradually worn off, with the rhetorical
-descriptions (such as _celeberrimæ Academiæ typographus_), and the use
-of colophons.
-
-In some cases we find fictitious imprints, as in 1602, nos. 5, 11, 1611
-(see impr. 7_a_), 1612 (impr. 7), 1613 (impr. 32), 1616 (impr. 35), 1626
-(impr. 67). The number of books with no printer’s or publisher’s name is
-small (see impr. 107, and Appendix, p. 151 (Stanley)), and of _books_
-with no imprint at all there are very few instances, see 1586, 12; 1602,
-8 and 9; 1603, 5; 1606, 5; 1622, 6; 1625, 9; 1635, 13.
-
-In the list which follows the spelling is modernized, the form alone is
-exact.
-
-
- 1585.
-
- (_Joseph Barnes_, 1585–1617.)
-
- ¬1.¬ Oxoniæ, ex officina typographica Josephi Barnesii celeberrimæ
- Academiæ Oxoniensis typographi.
- 1585 (also as a colophon).
-
- 1 _a_. (Omitting _typographica_ and _Oxoniensis_).
- 1589, 1591.
-
- ¬2.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, printer to the University.
- 1585–6, 1592–4, 1598, 1603, 1606–9, 1615–16.
-
- 2 _a_. ... printer to that famous University.
- 1585, 1594.
-
- 2 _b_. ... printer to the famous University.
- 1586.
-
- 2 _c_. Omitting “at.”
- 1603.
-
- ¬3.¬ Oxoniæ, ex ædibus Josephi Barnes.
- 1585.
-
- ¬4.¬ Imprinted [or Printed] at Oxford [or Oxenford] by Joseph Barnes,
- printer to the University.
- 1585 (also as colophon), 1586, 1591, 1599, 1615.
-
- 4 _a_. Adding “famous” before “University”.
- 1585.
-
-
- 1586.
-
- ¬5.¬ Oxoniæ (or -ii), ex officina typographica Josephi Barnesii.
- 1586–7, 1590, 1592, 1597, 1608.
-
- 5 _a_. Omitting _typographica_.
- 1596, 1598.
-
- 5 _b_. With _typographica_ the last word.
- 1598.
-
- ¬6.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s
- Churchyard at the sign of the Tiger’s head.
- 1586–9, 1591–2, 1595.
-
- 6 _a_. ... at the Tiger’s head.
- 1587.
-
- 6 _b_. Imprinted at Oxford by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in
- Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Tiger’s head.
- 1588–9.
-
- ¬7.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes.
- 1586, 1594, 1603–4, 1607–9, 1610–12 [once as a fictitious
- imprint], 1613–15.
-
- 7 _a_. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes.
- 1588, 1592, 1597, 1599, 1605, 1608–10, 1611 (a false
- imprint), 1613–15.
-
- 7 _b_. Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes.
- 1608.
-
- ¬8.¬ Excudebat Josephus Barnesius typographus Oxoniensis.
- [1586].
-
- ¬9.¬ Oxoniæ, ex officina Josephi Barnesii, et veneunt in cœmeterio
- Paulino sub signo capitis Tigerini.
- 1586.
-
- ¬9*.¬ Impressas en Oxford por Ioseph Barnes, en el año de salud
- M.D.L.XXXVI.
- 1586.
-
-
- 1587.
-
- ¬10.¬ Oxoniæ, typis Iosephi Barnesii.
- 1587.
-
- ¬11.¬ Oxonii (or -iæ), excudebat Iosephus Barnesius.
- 1587–88, 1590, 1592–96, 1598–99, 1601–17.
-
- 11 _a_. With _Oxoniæ_ last.
- 1599.
-
-
- 1589.
-
- ¬12.¬ Printed by Joseph Barnes, printer ... are to be sold at the
- Tiger’s head i...
- 1589.
-
-
- 1590.
-
- ¬13.¬ Oxonii, excudebat Josephus Barnesius celeberrimæ Academiæ
- Typographus.
- 1590.
-
- 13 _a_. Omitting Oxonii, and adding _Oxoniensis_ after _Academiæ_.
- 1592.
-
- 13 _b_. With “Oxoniæ”, and “almæ” for “celeberrimæ.”
- 1602–3.
-
- 13 _c_. With “Oxoniæ,” and omitting “celeberrimæ.”
- 1615, 1617.
-
-
- 1591.
-
- (_Richard Wright_, of London, 1591.)
-
- ¬14.¬ Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, for Richard Wright. Cum
- Privilegio.
- 1591.
-
- ¬15.¬ Oxoniæ. In officinâ Josephi Barnesii.
- 1591.
-
-
- 1592.
-
- ¬16.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Josephus Barnesius, væneunt cum Oxoniæ, tum ad
- caput Tigridis ad Divi Pauli Londinensium.
- 1592.
-
-
- 1595.
-
- ¬17.¬ Joseph Barnes ai printiodd yn Rhydychen.
- 1595.
-
-
- 1596.
-
- ¬18.¬ Oxoniæ, apud Josephum Barnesium.
- 1596, 1605.
-
- ¬19.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s
- Churchyard at the sign of the Bible.
- 1596, 1600–1.
-
- 19 _a_. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in
- Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Bible.
- 1597, 1599, 1600.
-
- ¬20.¬ Oxoniæ, ex officina typographica Iosephi Barnesii, et veneunt
- Londini in Cœmeterio D. Pauli, ad insigne Bibliæ (or _Bibl._).
- 1596–7.
-
-
- 1598.
-
- ¬21.¬ Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, for R. H. [i.e. Richard
- Haydocke].
- 1598.
-
-
- 1602.
-
- (_John Barnes_, of London, 1602–16.)
-
- ¬22.¬ Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John
- Barnes at the Turk’s Head in Fleet Street [London].
- 1602.
-
- ¬23.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Fleet
- Street [London] at the sign of the Turk’s Head, by John Barnes.
- 1602 (Powel: _fictitious imprint_): 1602–3.
-
- ¬24.¬ At Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, printer to the University.
- 1602 (Higins: _fictitious imprint_): 1602.
-
-
- 1603.
-
- (_Simon Waterson_, of London, 1603–6.)
-
- ¬25.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s
- Churchyard [London] at the signe of the Crown, by Simon Waterson.
- 1603–5.
-
- 25 _a_. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes ... [&c. as above.]
- 1604–6.
-
-
- 1605.
-
- ¬26.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Jos. Barnesius, prostant Londini apud Simonem
- Waterson in Cæmeterio Ædis Paulinæ.
- 1605.
-
- ¬27.¬ At Oxford ¶ Printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John
- Barnes, dwelling without Newgate [London] by S. Sepulchre’s Church,
- at the signe of Paris.
- 1605.
-
-
- 1606.
-
- ¬28.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Josephus Barnesius, & veneunt Londini apud
- Simonem Watersonum in cœmeterio Paulino ad signum Coronæ.
- 1606.
-
-
- 1612.
-
- ¬29.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John
- Barnes, dwelling near Holborn Conduit [London].
- 1612–13 (also _fictitious_).
-
- 29 _a_. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by
- John Barnes, dwelling near Holborn Conduit.
- 1613 (also _fictitious_).
-
- ¬30.¬ Printed at Oxford, for John Barnes, dwelling near Holborn
- Conduit.
- 1612.
-
-
- 1613.
-
- ¬31.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Josephus Barnesius, & Londini væneunt apud
- Johannem Barnesium propè aquȩductum Holborniensem.
- 1613.
-
- ¬32.¬ At Oxford, printed for John Barnes, and are to be sold near
- Holborn Conduit.
- 1613 (_fictitious_).
-
-
- 1614.
-
- ¬33.¬ At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John
- Barnes, over against St. Pulcher’s Church.
- 1614.
-
-
- 1616.
-
- ¬34.¬ Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, for John Barnes.
- 1616 (_perh. fictitious_).
-
- ¬35.¬ Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, for John Barnes, dwelling in
- Hosier Lane, near Smithfield.
- 1616 (_fictitious_).
-
-
- 1617.
-
- (_John Lichfield_, 1617–35. _William Wrench_, 1617.)
-
- ¬36.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Wrench, printers
- to the famous University.
- 1617.
-
- ¬37.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Gulielmus Wrench.
- 1617 (_excudebat_ once, in _Jacobi Ara_).
-
- ¬38.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Wrench.
- 1617.
-
-
- 1618.
-
- (_James Short_, 1618–24.)
-
- ¬39.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, printers to
- the famous University.
- 1618–19: (without “At”) 1620: (with “At”) 1621–24.
-
- ¬40.¬ Oxoniæ (or -ii), excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Jacobus Short.
- 1618–22, 1624.
-
- (_Simon Jackson_, 1618.)
-
- ¬41.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Jacobus Short, propter
- Simonem Jackson.
- 1618.
-
-
- 1619.
-
- ¬42.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Jacobus Short, Academiæ
- typographi.
- 1619–20, 1623–24.
-
- 42 _a_. Adding _Oxoniensis_ after _Academiæ_.
- 1622.
-
- (_William Spier_, 1619.)
-
- ¬43.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for William
- Spier.
- 1619.
-
- ¬44.¬ Printed at Oxford, by John Lichfield and James Short, printers to
- the University.
- 1619.
-
- 44 _a_. With “At Oxford” first.
-
- ¬45.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short.
- 1619, 1622, 1624.
-
-
- 1620.
-
- (_Henry Cripps_, 1620–39. _John Pyper_, of London, 1620.)
-
- ¬46.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for Henry
- Cripps, and are to be sold by John Pyper in Paules Churchyard, at
- the sign of the Cross Keys.
- 1620.
-
- ¬47.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant I. L. & I. S. Academiæ Typographi.
- 1620, 1623.
-
- ¬48.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for Henry
- Cripps.
- 1620–21, 1623–24.
-
-
- 1622.
-
- (_William Davis_, bookseller, 1622–40.)
-
- ¬49.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for William
- Davis, bookseller.
- 1622.
-
- 49 _a_. (Omitting “bookseller”).
- 1624 (?).
-
-
- 1624.
-
- (_William Turner_, 1624–40.)
-
- ¬50.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner.
- 1624–5.
-
- (_W. Jaggard_, of London, 1624.)
-
- ¬51.¬ London, printed by W. Jaggard, for W. Turner of Oxford.
- 1624.
-
-
- 1625.
-
- ¬52.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, for Henry
- Cripps.
- 1625.
-
- ¬53.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Guilielmus Turner.
- 1625–27 (Gulielmus), 1633 (Guliel.).
-
- ¬54.¬ Printed for Henry Cripps of Oxford.
- 1625 (_pr. in London_).
-
- (_Thomas Huggins_, 1625–36.)
-
- ¬55.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, and are to
- be sold by W. Turner and T. Huggins.
- 1625.
-
- ¬56.¬ Oxford, printed by I. L. and W. T. for William Turner.
- 1625.
-
- (_Elias Peerse_, 1625–39.)
-
- ¬57.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, printers to
- the famous University, for Elias Peerse.
- 1625.
-
- ¬58.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, printers to
- the famous University.
- 1625–27.
-
- 58 _a_. With _At_ Oxford.
- 1625.
-
- (_Edward Forrest_, 1625–40.)
-
- ¬59.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, for Edward
- Forrest.
- 1625–26.
-
- ¬60.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Guilielmus Turner,
- Academiæ typographi.
- 1625–27.
-
- 60 _a_. Adding _celeberrimæ_ before _Academiæ_.
- 1634.
-
- ¬61.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, printers to
- the famous University, for Henry Cripps.
- 1625.
-
- (_Henry Curteyne_, 1625–40.)
-
- ¬62.¬ Imprinted for Henry Cripps and Henry Curteyne at Oxford.
- 1625 (_pr. in London_).
-
-
- 1626.
-
- ¬63.¬ Oxford, Printed by J. L. and W. T.
- 1626.
-
- ¬64.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield & Guilielmus Turner,
- impensis Guilielmi Turner.
- 1626.
-
- ¬65.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant J. L. & W. T., impensis Thomæ Huggins.
- 1626.
-
- ¬66.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner for Wi.
- Turner, Th. Huggins, and Ed. Forrest.
- 1626.
-
- (_Walter Map_, pseudonym, 1626.)
-
- ¬67.¬ Oxonii apud Gualtherum Mapes, Academiae Bidellum [PRINTED IN
- HOLLAND].
- 1626.
-
-
- 1627.
-
- ¬68.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous
- University.
- 1627–28, 1630; 1631; 1635.
-
- 68 _a_. With “At Oxford, imprinted ...”
- 1628.
-
- 68 _b_. With “At Oxford printed ...”
- 1633 or later.
-
- 68 _c_. Omitting _famous_, and adding _Cum Privilegio_.
- 1634.
-
- 68 _d_. Adding _Cum Privilegio_.
- 1636–37.
-
- ¬69.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner.
- 1627–28 (with “Oxon.”), 1631, 1633 (with “Oxonii”), 1633,
- 1634 (with “Oxonii”), 1636 (“Oxonii” and “G. Turner”),
- 1637, 1640.
-
- ¬70.¬ Oxford, printed for Henry Cripps [by L. Lichfield].
- 1627–28, 1632, 1638.
-
- ¬71.¬ Oxford, printed by I. L. and W. T., for William Turner and Thomas
- Huggins.
- 1627.
-
- ¬72.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, Academiæ Typographus.
- 1627–1629, 1637.
-
- 72 _a_. Adding _celeberrimæ_ before _Academiæ_.
- 1628–29, 1634, 1639 with Oxonii.
-
- 72 _b_. Adding _cum Privilegio_.
- 1628.
-
- 72 _c_. Adding _celeberrimæ_ after _Academiæ_.
- 1631.
-
- 72 _d_. With “Oxoniæ ex officina Guilielmi Turneri, Academiæ
- typographi.”
- 1637.
-
- ¬73.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, Academiæ Typographus.
- 1627, 1633 (with Oxonii), 1634–35.
-
- 73 _a_. Adding _almæ_ before _Academiæ_.
- 1630–32.
-
- 73 _b_. Adding _florentissimæ_ before _Academiæ_.
- 1634 (as colophon).
-
- ¬74.¬ Oxoniæ, impensis Thomæ Huggins & Henrici Curteyn [by W. Turner].
- 1627.
-
-
- 1628.
-
- ¬75.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University, for Henry Cripps.
- 1628 (colophon), 1632 (colophon).
-
- 75 _a_. Prefixing _At_.
- 1631.
-
- (_Philemon Stephens_, of London, 1628.)
-
- (_Christopher Meredith_, of London, 1628.)
-
- ¬76.¬ Printed at Oxford, 1628. And are to be sold by Ph. Stephens and
- Ch. Meredith at the Golden Lion in Paul’s Churchyard.
- 1628.
-
- (_William Webbe_, 1628–39.)
-
- ¬77.¬ Oxford, printed [by John Lichfield] for William Webb.
- 1628.
-
- ¬78.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University, for William Webb.
- 1628–29.
-
- ¬79.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University, for Henry Curteyne.
- 1628.
-
- ¬80.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous
- University, and are to be sold by Henry Curteine.
- 1628.
-
- ¬81.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the University,
- and are to be sold by William Web.
- 1628.
-
- ¬82.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield.
- 1628, 1631, 1633, 1635.
-
- 82 _a_. Imprinted at Oxford by John Lichfield. Cum privilegio.
- 1632.
-
- ¬83.¬ Bellositi Dobunorum, excudebat W. T., impensis W. W.
- 1628.
-
- ¬84.¬ Oxford (or, At Oxford), printed by John Lichfield, printer to the
- famous University, and are to be sold by Edward Forrest.
- 1628.
-
- 84 _a_. Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University, for Edward Forrest.
- 1630–32.
-
- 84 _b_. As 84, omitting _famous_.
- 1634[18].
-
- ¬85.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University.
- 1628, 1630.
-
- 85 _a_. (Omitting “At”).
- 1629, 1631, 1633.
-
- 85 _b_. (With “that” for “the”).
- 1630.
-
- 85 _c_. As 85 _a_, with “Cum Privilegio.”
- 1634.
-
- 85 _d_. As 85, omitting “At” and “famous,” and putting “imprinted”
- for “printed.”
- 1634 (as colophon).
-
- 85 _e_. As 85, except “Printed at Oxford,” and omitting “famous.”
- 1634 (as colophon).
-
- (_Thomas Butler_, 1628.)
-
- ¬86.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the University, and
- are to be sold by Thomas Butler.
- 1628.
-
- ¬87.¬ Oxoniæ (or, Oxonii), impensis Gulielmi Webb bibliopolæ [by L.
- Lichfield?].
- 1628, 1631.
-
- 87 _a_. Omitting _bibliopolæ_.
- 1631, 1636, 1638.
-
-
- 1629.
-
- (_Robert Allott_, of London, 1629–33.)
-
- ¬88.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, & veneunt per Robertum
- Allott, Londinensem, in Cœmiterio Pauli.
- 1629.
-
- ¬89.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University, for E. Forrest and W. Webbe.
- 1629.
-
- ¬90.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, Academiæ typographus,
- impensis Henrici Curteyne.
- 1629.
-
- ¬91.¬ Oxford, printed by I. L. for Henry Curteyne.
- 1629.
-
- ¬92.¬ Oxoniæ, recudebat Johannes Lichfield, et væneunt apud Eliam
- Pearse.
- 1629.
-
- ¬93.¬ Oxford, printed by I. L.
- 1629, 1632.
-
- ¬94.¬ At Oxford, printed by W. Turner for Henry Curteyne.
- 1629.
-
- 94 _a_. Omitting “At”.
- 1640.
-
- ¬95.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield. Cum privilegio.
- 1629.
-
- 95 _a_. Omitting _cum privilegio_.
- 1634–35.
-
- ¬96.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, impensis Guilielmi Davis.
- 1629, 1631.
-
- ¬97.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the University,
- for Edward Forrest.
- 1629.
-
- 97 _a_. Adding “famous” before _University_.
- 1629–34.
-
- ¬98.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis authoris.
- 1629, 1637.
-
- 98 _a_. Adding “cum licentia & permissu.”
- 1637.
-
- (_Henry Seale_, of London, 1629.)
-
- ¬99.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, Printer to the University, and
- are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Tiger’s Head
- by Henry Seale.
- 1629.
-
- ¬100.¬ Oxford, printed by W. T. for William Turner and Thomas Huggins.
- 1629.
-
- ¬101.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat J. Lichfield, impensis Edvardi Forrest.
- 1629.
-
-
- 1630[19].
-
- ¬102.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, for Robert Allot, and are to
- be sold in Paul’s Churchyard.
- 1630.
-
- ¬103.¬ Printed by W. T. for Robert Allot.
- 1630 (a 2nd title).
-
- ¬104.¬ Oxoniæ, impensis Guilielmi Turner, celeberrimæ Academiæ
- typographi.
- 1630.
-
- ¬105.¬ Oxoniæ, typis Joh. Lichfield, impensis Hen. Curteine.
- 1630–31.
-
- 105 _a_. Substituting “excudebat” for “typis”.
- 1631.
-
- ¬106.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner for Edward Forrest.
- 1630.
-
- ¬107.¬ Printed at Oxford for the Author [by Leonard Lichfield].
- 1630–31.
-
- ¬108.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous
- University, for Thomas Huggins.
- 1630–31.
-
-
- 1631.
-
- ¬109.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, propriis impensis.
- 1631, 1637 (in secondary title the name of place is omitted
- in both years).
-
- 109 _a_. With ipsius impensis; and “Cum Privilegio” added.
- 1639.
-
- ¬110.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner Academiæ celeberrimæ
- typographus, impensis Thomæ Huggins.
- 1631.
-
- ¬111.¬ Oxoniæ, apud Johannem Lichfield Academiæ typographum pro
- Gulielmo Webb.
- 1631.
-
- ¬112.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat G. T. Academiæ celeberrimæ typographus,
- impensis Guilielmi Webb.
- 1631.
-
- 112 _a_. Oxonij excud. G. T. Academiæ Typographus impensis Guil.
- Webb. Biblio[_engraved: -polæ_ is omitted.]
- 1636.
-
- ¬113.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, almæ Academiæ typographus,
- impensis Thomæ Huggins.
- 1631.
-
- 113 _a_. Omitting _almæ_.
- 1633.
-
- ¬114.¬ Oxoniæ, pro Guiliel(mo) Turner et Th(oma) Huggins [by W.
- Turner].
- 1631.
-
- (_Michael Spark_, of London, 1631.)
-
- ¬115.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, for Michael Sparke, dwelling
- in Greene Arbor [London].
- 1631.
-
- ¬116.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner for Michael Sparke.
- 1631.
-
- ¬117.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat W. T., impensis Ed. Forrest & Hen. Curteyne.
- 1631.
-
- ¬118.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Jo. Lichfield, impensis Guil. Davis, & Ed.
- Forrest.
- 1631.
-
- ¬119.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner.
- 1631–34, 1637–40.
-
- ¬120.¬ Oxford, printed for William Turner, and Henry Curteyn, and are
- to be sold in Greene Arbor at the sign of the Blew Bible by Mich.
- Sparkes [by W. Turner].
- 1631.
-
- ¬121.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Henrici Curteyne.
- 1631, 1637 (with Oxonii), 1638.
-
- 121 _a_. With “Cum Privilegio”.
- 1634 (Oxonii).
-
- ¬122.¬ Oxford, printed by W. T. and are to be sold by M. S[parke] at
- the Blew Bible in Greene Arbor [London].
- 1631 (engraved).
-
- See 143 _a_.
-
-
- 1632.
-
- ¬123.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, impensis Henrici Cripps.
- Cum Privilegio.
- 1632.
-
- ¬124.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, and are to be sold by
- Thomas Huggins.
- 1632.
-
-
- 1633.
-
- ¬125.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, for the author [C. Butler].
- 1633–34.
-
- ¬126.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Edward Forrest.
- 1633–35.
-
- ¬127.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield printer to the University, and
- are to be sold by Thomas Huggins.
- 1633.
-
- ¬128.¬ Oxford, printed by J. L. for E. F. (on second title).
- 1633.
-
- ¬129.¬ Oxoniæ, apud Johannem Lichfield, Academiæ typographum, impensis
- Henrici Curteyne. Cum privilegio.
- 1633.
-
- 129 _a_. Omitting “cum privilegio”.
- 1633.
-
- 129 _b_. With Excudebat Johannes ... typographus, and omitting “Cum
- privilegio”.
- 1633.
-
- ¬130.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield Academiæ typographus, et
- veneunt apud Thomam Huggins.
- 1633.
-
- ¬131.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant I. L. W. T. (G. T.).
- 1633.
-
- ¬132.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebant I. L. G. T. celeberrimæ Academiæ Typographi.
- 1633 (as colophon).
-
- (_John Clarke_, of London, 1633–38.)
-
- ¬133.¬ Oxford, printed by the Printers to the University, and are to be
- sold by John Clarke under S. Peter’s Church in Corne-hill.
- 1633.
-
- ¬134.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for William Webb.
- 1633.
-
- ¬135.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Thomas Huggins. Cum
- privilegio.
- 1633.
-
- ¬136.¬ Printed by William Turner.
- 1633.
-
- ¬137.¬ Oxonii, apud Guilielmum Turner. [The reference to this impr. in
- 1631 is an error for 107.]
- 1633, 1638.
-
- ¬138.¬ Oxford, printed by I. L. printer to the University, for Thomas
- Huggins. With permission of B. Fisher.
- 1633.
-
- ¬139.¬ Oxonii, sumptibus Guilielmi Turner.
- 1633.
-
- ¬140.¬ Oxford, printed for William Turner and Robert Allott.
- 1633.
-
- ¬141.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Henry Cripps.
- 1633.
-
- ¬142.¬ Oxford, printed for William Turner [by W. Turner].
- 1633–34.
-
-
- 1634.
-
- ¬143.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat I. L., impensis Henrici Cripps. Cum
- privilegio.
- 1634.
-
- 143 _a_. Omitting “Cum privilegio”.
- 1631 (Appendix C).
-
- ¬144.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat I. L., impensis Thomæ Huggins. Cum privilegio.
- 1634.
-
- ¬145.¬ Oxonii, excudebat I. L., impensis H. Crypps, E. Forrest, & H.
- Curteyne. Cum Privilegio.
- 1634.
-
- ¬146.¬ At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, and are to be sold by
- William Webbe.
- 1634.
-
- ¬147.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, and are to be sold by Ed.
- Forrest.
- 1634.
-
- (_John Norton_, of London, 1634. _Francis Bowman_, 1634–40.)
-
- ¬148.¬ London, printed by John Norton, and are to be sold by Francis
- Bowman in Oxford.
- 1634.
-
-
- 1635.
-
- ¬149.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Henry Cripps, and are to
- be sold by Henry Curteyne.
- 1635.
-
- ¬150.¬ Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, and are to be sold by Elias
- Peerse, at his Shoppe in St. Maries Church-yard.
- 1635.
-
- (_Leonard Lichfield_, 1635–40.)
-
- ¬151.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, Academiæ typographus.
- 1635–37, 1639–40: in 1639 with “Oxonii.”
- 1640.
-
- 151 _a_. Adding _celeberrimæ_ before _Academiæ_.
- 1636.
-
- 151 _b_. Oxoniæ, typis Leonardi Lichfield, Academiæ typographi.
- 1636, 1638.
-
- ¬152.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield.
- 1635–39.
-
- 152 _a_. Prefixing _At_.
- 1635.
-
- 152 _b_. With “imprinted” for “printed”.
- 1636–37.
-
- ¬153.¬ Oxonii, excudebat Gulielmus Turner, impensis Gulielmi Webb.
- 1635–36, 1639: in 1636 “Oxoniae.”
-
- 153 _a_. With “G.” for “Gulielmus,” and “Guilielmi Webb.”
- 1636.
-
- ¬154.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield for William Webb.
- 1635–36.
-
-
- 1636.
-
- ¬155.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield for Thomas Huggins.
- 1636.
-
- ¬156.¬ Oxford, imprinted by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the
- University, and are to be sold by Edward Forrest.
- 1636.
-
- 156 _a_. With “Printed,” and “famous University.”
- 1637.
-
- 156 _b_. As 156 _a_ with “for” instead of “and are to be sold by.”
- 1639.
-
- ¬157.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield.
- 1636, 1639, 1640.
-
- ¬158.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, and are to be sold at the
- Black Bear in Paul’s Churchyard.
- 1636.
-
- (_Thomas Allam_, 1636–39.)
-
- ¬159.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Thomæ Allam.
- 1636–37.
-
- ¬160.¬ At Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, for Edward Forrest.
- 1636.
-
- 160 _a_. Omitting “At”.
- 1637.
-
- 160 _b_. As 160 _a_ with “and are to be sold by.”
- 1640.
-
- (_R. Bishop_, of London, 1636.)
-
- ¬161.¬ London, printed by R. Bishop, and are to be sold by Fr. Bowman,
- in Oxford.
- 1636.
-
-
- 1637.
-
- (_John Willimot_, or _Wilmot_, 1637–38.)
-
- ¬162.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, & veneunt apud Hen. Cripps,
- Ed. Forrest, Hen. Curteyne, & John Willimot.
- 1637 (secondary title omits name of place).
-
- 162 _a_. “pro” for “& veneunt apud.”
- 1638.
-
- ¬163.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat L. Lichfield, impensis Gulielmi Webb
- bibliopolæ.
- 1637.
-
- ¬164.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat L. Lichfield, impensis Ed. Forrest & H.
- Curteyne.
- 1637.
-
- ¬165.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat L. Lichfield, impensis H. Curteyne.
- 1637.
-
- ¬166.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Gulielmi Webb.
- 1637.
-
- (_J. Adams_, 1637. _Joseph Godwin_, 1637–39.)
-
- ¬167.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner pro J. Adams, & veneunt apud
- Joseph. Godwin.
- 1637.
-
- ¬168.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat L. L., impensis Hen. Cripps, Ed. Forrest, Hen.
- Curteyne, & Ioh. Wilmot.
- 1637.
-
- ¬169.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner for William Webb.
- 1637.
-
- ¬170.¬ Oxford, printed by L. Lichfield, for H. C. printer to the
- University. (Neither Cripps nor Curteyne were printers to the
- University, so probably there is some error.)
- 1637.
-
- (_W. Harris_, of London, 1637.)
-
- ¬171.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous
- University. 1637. And are to be sold at London by W. Harris in
- Colman Street.
- 1637.
-
-
- 1638.
-
- (_John Allam_, 1638.)
-
- ¬172.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner for John Allam.
- 1638.
-
- ¬173.¬ Oxford, imprinted for John Allam [by W. Turner].
- 1638.
-
- ¬174.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University,
- for Francis Bowman.
- 1638, 1640.
-
- ¬175.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University,
- for William Davis.
- 1638.
-
- ¬176.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Ed. Forrest.
- 1638, 1639 (with Oxonii).
-
- ¬177.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous
- University, for W. T[urner], Edw. Forrest and Will. Web.
- 1638.
-
- (_John Westall_, 1638–40.)
-
- ¬178.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guil. Turner, pro Joh. Westall, Tho. Allam &
- Jos. Godwin.
- 1638.
-
- ¬179.¬ Excusa cum Licentiâ, typis Guil: Turner typographi
- Universitatis, pro Guil: Webb.
- 1638.
-
- ¬180.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University.
- 1638–40.
-
- 180 _a_. Adding _famous_ before _University_.
- 1638.
-
- ¬181.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by John
- Clarke under St. Peter’s Church in Cornhill.
- 1638.
-
- ¬182.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield for Henry Crypps.
- 1638, 1639.
-
- ¬183.¬ Oxoniæ, typis Guil: Turner, impensis authoris (V. Bythner).
- 1638.
-
- ¬184.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, for Francis Bowman.
- 1638–39.
-
- ¬185.¬ Oxford, printed by L. Lichfield for Joseph Godwin.
- 1638–39.
-
-
- 1639.
-
- ¬186.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis authoris (G.
- Dugres).
- 1639.
-
- (_John Allen_, of Leicester, 1639.)
-
- ¬187.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by John
- Allen in “Lecester”.
- 1639.
-
- (_Thomas Thomas_, of Bristol, 1639.)
-
- ¬188.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by Tho.
- Thomas in Bristol.
- 1639.
-
- (_Thomas Robinson_, 1639–40.)
-
- ¬189.¬ Oxford, printed by William Turner for Thomas Robinson.
- 1639–40.
-
- ¬190.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Hen. Crips.
- 1639.
-
- ¬191.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Eliæ Pearse &
- Tho. Allam.
- 1639.
-
- 191 _a_. Simply reversing the order of the two publishers.
- 1639.
-
- ¬192.¬ Oxford, printed for F. Bowman, stationer [by L. Lichfield].
- 1639.
-
- (_Matthew Hunt_, 1639–40.)
-
- ¬193.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by
- Matthew Hunt.
- 1639.
-
- 193 _a_. “For” instead of “and are to be sold by.”
- 1640.
-
- 193 _b_. As 193 _a_, beginning “Printed at Oxford by.”
- 1640.
-
-
- 1640.
-
- (_Robert Young_, 1640.)
-
- ¬194.¬ Oxford, printed by Leon: Lichfield, printer to the University,
- for Rob: Young & Ed. Forrest.
- 1640.
-
- ¬195.¬ Excudebat Oxonii Leonardus Lichfield primarius Academiæ
- typographus, impensis Roberti Young & Edvardi Forrest.
- 1640.
-
- ¬196.¬ Printed [at] Oxford for Francis Bowman [by L. Lichfield].
- 1640 (engraved title).
-
- ¬197.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonard. Lichfield, impensis Matthiæ Hunt.
- 1640.
-
- ¬198.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guiliel. Turner, impensis Joh. Westall.
- 1640.
-
- ¬199.¬ Oxford, printed for Leonard Lichfield.
- 1640.
-
- ¬200.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Edvardi Forrest.
- 1640.
-
- ¬201.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield impensis Guliel. Davis.
- 1640.
-
- ¬202.¬ Oxford, printed by L. L.
- 1640.
-
- (_Richard Royston_, of London, 1640.)
-
- ¬203.¬ Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, for Richard Royston, in
- Ivy Lane.
- 1640.
-
- (_Samuel Enderby_, of London, 1640.)
-
- ¬204.¬ Oxford, printed by Leon. Lichfield, for Samuel Enderby.
- 1640.
-
- ¬205.¬ Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Tho. Robinson.
- 1640.
-
-
- OXFORD PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS.
-
- PRINTER ~, in combination +; PUBLISHER ○, in combination ⨀; L = London.
-
- [The printers’ names are in small capitals: the names following each
- printer, in roman type and with a — preceding, are of publishers for
- whom the printer worked.]
-
- ┌───────────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬──
- │ 1. │ 1585 │ 1590 │ 1595 │ 1600 │ 1605 │
- ├───────────────────┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼──
- │ 1 JOS. BARNES │~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│1
- │ 2 — London shop │ │○│○│○│○│ │○│O│ │ │○│○│○│ │○│○│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │2
- │ 3 — R. Wright │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │3
- │ — author of book│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 — John Barnes L │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│○│ │○│ │ │ │ │4
- │ 5 — S. Waterson L │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│○│○│○│ │ │ │5
- └───────────────────┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴──
-
- ┌───────────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬────┬──
- │ 2. │ 1610 │ 1615 │ 1620 │ 1625 │ 1630 │1635│
- ├───────────────────┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼────┼──
- │ 1 JOS. BARNES │~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │1
- │ (_cont._) │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 4 — John Barnes L │¨│¨│○│○│○│ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │4
- │ (_cont._) │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ 6 WILLIAM WRENCH │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│+│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │6
- │ 7 JOHN LICHFIELD │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│+│+│+│+│+│+│+│+│+│+│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│~│ ~ │7
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │+│ │ │ │ │ │+│ │ │
- │ 8 — S. Jackson │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │8
- │ 9 — W. Spier │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │9
- │10 — H. Cripps │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │○│○│○│ │○│○│ │ │○│○│○│○│ ⨀ │10
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │
- │11 — J. Pyper L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │11
- │12 — W. Davis │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │○│ │ │ │ │○│ │⨀│ │ │ │ │12
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │
- │13 — T. Huggins │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│⨀│⨀│ │ │○│○│○│○│○│ │13
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │14 — E. Peerse │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ ○ │14
- │15 — W. Turner │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │15
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │16 — E. Forrest │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │○│○│○│○│○│○│○│ │16
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │⨀│ │⨀│ │ │⨀│ │
- └───────────────────┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴────┴──
-
- ┌───────────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬────┬──
- │ 3. │ 1615 │ 1620 │ 1625 │ 1630 │ 1635 │1640│
- ├───────────────────┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼────┼──
- │17 — W. Webbe │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │○│ │○│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │17
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │18 — H. Curteyne │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│○│○│ │○│⨀│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │18
- │19 — T. Butler │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │19
- │20 — H. Seale L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │20
- │21 — J. Clarke L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │21
- │22 [— B. Fisher] │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │22
- │23 JAMES SHORT │¨│¨│¨│+│+│+│+│+│+│+│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │23
- │ — S. Jackson │¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — W. Spier │¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — H. Cripps │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — J. Pyper │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — W. Davis │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │24 WILLIAM │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│+│○│○│~│~│~│~│⨀│~│○│○│~│~│~│~│~│ ~ │24
- │ TURNER[20] │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│+│+│+│ │⨀│○│~│ │~│~│ │ │ │⨀│○│ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│⨀│⨀│ │ │ │○│ │+│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — T. Huggins │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│⨀│⨀│ │⨀│ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — E. Peerse │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — E. Forrest │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │ │ │○│⨀│ │ │○│ │ │⨀│⨀│ │ ○ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — H. Cripps │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│⨀│○│ │
- │ — H. Curteyne │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│○│ │⨀│ │ │○│ │ │⨀│⨀│ │ ○ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │○│○│ │ │
- │ — W. Webbe │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │○│ │ │ │○│○│○│○│○│ │
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │
- │25 — R. Allot L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │25
- │ — author of book│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │○│○│ │ │○│○│ │ │
- │26 — M. Sparke L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │26
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ — J. Clarke L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │27 — London shop │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │ │27
- │28 — J. Willimot │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│⨀│ │ │28
- │29 — J. Adams │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │29
- │30 — J. Godwin │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│⨀│ │ │30
- │31 — W. Harris L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │ │31
- │32 J. Allam │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │32
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │
- │33 J. Westall │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ ○ │33
- │34 — T. Robinson │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ ○ │34
- └───────────────────┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴────┴──
-
- ┌────────────────────────────┬─────────┬────┬──
- │ 4. │ 1635 │1640│
- ├────────────────────────────┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼────┼──
- │35 LEONARD LICHFIELD │~│~│~│~│~│ ~ │35
- │ │ │ │ │ │ │ ○ │
- │ — W. Webbe │○│○│○│ │ │ │
- │ — T. Huggins │¨│○│ │ │ │ │
- │ — E. Forrest │¨│○│⨀│○│○│ ⨀ │
- │ │ │ │○│ │ │ ○ │
- │36 — T. Allam │¨│○│○│ │⨀│ │36
- │ — H. Curteyne │¨│¨│○│ │ │ │
- │ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │
- │ — H. Cripps │¨│¨│⨀│○│○│ │
- │ — J. Willimot (or Wilmot)│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │
- │37 — F. Bowman │¨│¨│¨│○│○│ ○ │37
- │ — W. Davis │¨│¨│¨│○│ │ ○ │
- │ — J. Clarke │¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │
- │ — J. Godwin │¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │
- │ — author of book │¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │
- │38 — J. Allen of Leicester │¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │38
- │39 — T. Thomas of Bristol │¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │39
- │ — E. Peerse │¨│¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │
- │40 — M. Hunt │¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ ○ │40
- │41 — R. Young │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│ ⨀ │41
- │42 — R. Royston L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│ ○ │42
- │43 — S. Enderby L │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│ ○ │43
- └────────────────────────────┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴────┴──
-
- ┌────────────────────────────────┬─────────┬─────────┬─────────┬────┬──
- │ 5. │ 1625 │ 1630 │ 1635 │1640│
- ├────────────────────────────────┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼─┬─┬─┬─┬─┼────┼──
- │PUBLISHERS, WITH NO OXFORD │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ PRINTER’S NAME. │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ H. Cripps [London[21] or with│⨀│ │○│○│ │ │ │○│ │ │ │ │ │○│ │ │
- │ Lichfield] │○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ H. Curteyne [London or with │⨀│ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ Turner] │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ ‘W. Mapes’ │¨│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ T. Huggins [with Turner] │¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │44 P. Stephens │¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │44
- │45 C. Meredith │¨│¨│¨│⨀│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │45
- │ W. Webbe [with Lichfield] │¨│¨│¨│○│ │ │○│ │ │ │ │○│ │○│ │ │
- │ author of book [do.] │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│○│ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ F. Bowman[22] [London or with│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│○│ │○│ │ │○│ ○ │
- │ Lichfield] │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │ │
- │ J. Allam [with Turner] │¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│¨│ │ │ │ │○│ │ │
- └────────────────────────────────┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴────┴──
-
------
-
-Footnote 18:
-
- The references to impr. 84 _b_ in 1630–32 are errors for 84 _a_.
-
-Footnote 19:
-
- “_Oxoniæ_” simply is found on an _Appendix_ by Hen. Stanley, 1630, but
- is not a genuine imprint (see p. 233).
-
-Footnote 20:
-
- W. Jaggard printed in London for Turner in Oxford in 1624.
-
-Footnote 21:
-
- _i. e._ the _printer_ was either a London man (as in 1625) or, if at
- Oxford, Lichfield (as in 1627–8, 1632, 1638).
-
-Footnote 22:
-
- John Norton printed in London for Bowman in Oxford, 1634.
-
- R. Bishop printed in London for Bowman in Oxford, 1636.
-
-
-
-
- INDEX
-
-
-(Where practicable, the references in this Index are to the year and the
-first letter of the heading in that year: otherwise to pages.)
-
-
- A.
-
- A., sub-deacon of St Frideswide’s, Oxford, mentioned p. 267.
-
- A., J., 1634. _See_ Allen, John.
-
- A., N., 1616. _See_ Nixon, Anthony.
-
- A., R., 1624. _See_ Ayton, sir Robert.
-
- A., T., 1612. _See_ Abbay, Thomas.
-
- Abbas, Georgius. _See_ Abbot, George.
-
- Abbay, Thomas, of Virginia. Smith’s Proceedings of the English
- Colonies, ed. by him. 1612 S.
-
- Abbot, George, archbp. of Canterbury. Quaestiones sex totidem
- praelectionibus in schola theologica Oxoniae habitis discussae,
- 1597. 1598 A.
- — Reasons which dr. Hill hath brought for the upholding of papistry,
- unmasked. 1604 A.
- — Letter to him from the Chancellor of the University of Oxford
- (1606?), in Latin. 1607 W.
- — Dedications to him. 1610 B, D, 1614 P, 1620 D, 1628 F, 1635 F.
- — The copy of a letter sent from my Lord’s Grace of Canterbury (about
- Preachers). 1622 A.
- — Letter about preachers (1622) mentioned. 1622 H.
-
- Abbot, George, M.P. for Guildford, mentioned. 1621 B.
-
- Abbot, Robert, bp. of Salisbury. Testimonial from him to C. Angelus,
- 1616. 1618 A.
-
- Abingdon. _See_ Godwin, Thomas, 1614.
- — Discourses there by J. Prime, mentioned. 1587 P.
- — Printing there, mentioned, p. 263.
-
- Abot, Jeffra, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Accomplishment of the prophecies. _See_ Du Moulin, Pierre.
-
- Achilles Tatius. The Loves of Clitophon and Leucippe (tr. by A.
- Hodges). 1638 A.
-
- Achitophel, 1628. _See_ Carpenter, Nathaniel.
-
- Acontius, Jacobus. Stratagemata Satanae, et epistola ad J. Wolfium.
- 1631 A.
-
- Acrostics. 1619 O, 1623 O.
-
- Actors, Sebastian, bookseller, mentioned, p. 272.
-
- Adam, bookbinder, mentioned, pp. 268, 269.
-
- Adam de Walton, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Adams, J., bookseller, &c., mentioned, pp. 276, 308, 312.
-
- Advice of a son to his mother (against Roman Catholicism). 1616 A.
-
- Aegidius de Columna, of Rome, the _doctor fundatissimus_. De peccato
- originali. 1479 A, p. 253.
-
- Æsop, mentioned. 1633 B.
-
- Æthiopic, p. 230.
-
- Affaniae. _See_ Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.
-
- Agatharchides. Excerpta de Rubro Mari, Gr. et Lat. 1597 A, p. 229.
-
- Airay, Christopher. Fasciculus praeceptorum logicorum. 1628 A, 1633 A.
-
- Airay, Henry, provost of Queen’s coll., Oxford. Dedications to him.
- 1613 R, 1614 R.
-
- Albin, Jean d’. Answer to his Notable discourse against heretics (1575)
- by Thomas Sparke (the original treatise is here reprinted). 1591 S.
-
- Alchemy. _See_ Thornborough, bp. John.
-
- Alchorne sale, mentioned, pp. 253, 261, cf. 227.
-
- Alciatus, Andreas. Excerpt from his Formula Romani Imperii. 1634 P.
-
- Alcock, Richard, bell-ringer, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Aleman, Mateo. The Rogue, or the Life
- of Guzman de Alfarache, tr. from the Spanish by J. Mabbe. 1630 A.
-
- Alemannia, Johannes de. _See_ Johannes de Alemannia.
-
- Alexander (Alison), J., parchment-seller, mentioned, pp. 256, 272.
-
- Alexander de Hales (not de Ales or Alesius). Latin Commentary by him on
- the De anima of Aristotle. 1481 A, p. 254, _see_ p. 11 (“1511”).
-
- Alexander de Villa Dei. Textus Alexandri, cum sententiis (a fragment).
- 1485 A, p. 260.
-
- Alexandria. _See_ 1638 A.
-
- Alfarache, Guzman de. _See_ Aleman, Mateo.
-
- Alfred, king, mentioned, p. 251.
-
- Alitophilus, pseud. _See_ Barclay, John.
-
- Allam, John, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 277, 308, 312, 313.
-
- Allam, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 307, 313.
-
- Allen, John. The younger brother his apology. 1634 A.
-
- Allen, John, bookseller, of Leicester, mentioned, pp 309, 313.
-
- Allen, Thomas, of Gloucester hall, Oxford. MS. of Gregory the Great
- belonging to him, mentioned. 1610 J.
- — Laudatio funebris in obitum ejus, per Gul. Burton. 1633 B.
- — Latin poem on him, by R. James. 1633 M.
-
- Allen, cardinal William. Answer to two books by him, by bp. Bilson.
- 1585 B.
- — Dedication to him in 1589 mentioned. 1602 S.
-
- Allnutt, William Henry, mentioned. p. vii, 1613 B.
-
- Allot, Robert, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 302, 312.
-
- Almanac. _See_ Booker, John (1637).
- — _See_ Cowper, Thomas (1637).
- — _See_ Wyberd, John (1637).
-
- Ambrose, st. Extract from his works, in English. 1637 F.
-
- Ames, William. Bellarminus enervatus, ed. 3^{ia}. 1629 A.
-
- Amoenitates humanae. _See_ Puteanus, Erycius.
-
- Ampelius, Lucius. Liber memorialis ex bibliotheca Cl. Salmasii. 1638 F.
-
- Amsterdam, mentioned, pp. 8, 9.
-
- Anagrams, 1619 O, 1623 O, 1624 O, 1625 O (_bis_), 1633 O.
-
- Anatomy of Melancholy. _See_ Burton, Robert.
-
- Anchoran, John, mentioned. 1633 G, 1634 S.
-
- Andrewes, bp. Lancelot. His ©Tortura Torti© mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Andrewes, John. Christ his cross. 1614 A.
-
- Angelus, Christophorus. Πόνησις Χ. Ἀγγέλου. 1617 A.
- — — (the same in English). 1617 A.
- — Account of his sufferings, second issue. 1618 A.
- — Testimonials to him, from the University of Oxford and the bp. of
- Salisbury. 1618 A.
-
- Anglo-Saxon. Anglo-Saxon fount used in 1634. 1634 R.
-
- Annalia Dubrensia, mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Anne, princess, born 1636. Flos Britannicus (poems on her birth by
- members of the University of Oxford). 1636 O.
-
- Anne of Denmark, queen, _d._ 1619, mentioned. 1605 O.
- — Academiae Oxoniensis Funebria sacra ... Annae ... dicata (Latin
- poems). 1619 O.
-
- Anne de Rohan, lady. Dedication to her, by Pierre Du Moulin, in
- English. 1609 D, 1634 D.
-
- Answer. Brief answer unto certain objections against the descension of
- Christ into Hell. _See_ Parkes, Richard, 1604.
-
- Anthony, Francis. Cotta contra Antonium. 1623 C.
-
- Antichristians. _See_ Sparke, Thomas, 1591.
-
- Anti-Possevinus, 1625. _See_ James, Richard.
-
- Antonius, Franciscus. _See_ Anthony, Francis.
-
- Anwykyll, John. Latin Grammar and Vulgaria Terentii, ascribed to him.
- 1483 A, p. 257.
-
- Anyan, Thomas. Sermon. 1615 A.
-
- Aphorismi. _See_ Piscator, Johannes.
-
- Apology for women. _See_ Heale, William.
-
- Apostles’ Creed. _See_ Creed.
-
- Appleton, co. Berks. Dedication to the parishioners. 1628 D.
-
- Aquepontanus, Joannes. _See_ Bridgwater, John.
-
- Arabic. _See_ Pasor, Matthias, 1626.
- — Poem in Arabic. 1612 H.
- — De Arabicae linguae utilitate et praestantia oratio, habita a T.
- Greaves, 1637. 1639 G.
- — mentioned, p. 230.
-
- Arber, prof. Edward, mentioned. P. vii, 1612 S.
-
- Archaeologia Attica. _See_ Rous, Francis.
-
- Archdeacons. _See_ Articles.
-
- Archer, Humphrey, bookseller, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Aretinus, Franciscus. _See_ Franciscus of Arezzo.
- — Leonardus. _See_ Brunus, Leonardus, of Arezzo.
-
- Aretius, Jacobus. _See_ Martin, James.
-
- Argenis. _See_ Barclay, John.
-
- Aristophanes. The Knights, in Greek. 1593 A.
-
- ARISTOTLE:
- The spurious Peplus mentioned. 1587 S.
- Interpretes librorum Aristotelis, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.
- Latin speeches, &c., by B. Holyday, touching the De Anima, Ethics,
- Rhetoric, &c. of Aristotle. 1633 H.
- Index Aristotelicus to Pavonius’s Summa Ethicae. 1633 P.
- ©De Anima.©
- Latin commentary on the De Anima (περὶ ψυχῆς) of Aristotle, by
- Alexander de Hales. 1481 A, p. 254, _see_ p. 11 (“1511”).
- ©Ethics.©
- Speculum moralium quaestionum in universam Ethicen Aristotelis,
- authore J. Caso. 1585 C, 1596 C.
- ©Ethics©, Eudemian.
- Commentarius in Magna Moralia Aristotelis, authore Johanne Caso.
- 1586 C.
- Reflexus speculi moralis qui commentarii vice esse poterit in Magna
- Moralia Aristotelis, auctore J. Caso. 1596 C.
- ©Ethics©, Nicomachean.
- Latin translation by Leonardus Brunus (Aretinus). 1479 A, p. 253.
- Questiones super libros Ethicorum (Aristotelis) Joannis Dedicus.
- 1518 D.
- An Oxford ed. of “1498” mentioned, p. 10.
- Commentarii in aliquot Aristotelis libros ad Nicomachum, ab Edw.
- Brerewood. 1640 B.
- ©Oeconomica.©
- Thesaurus oeconomiae seu comm. in Oeconomica, authore J. Caso. 1587
- C (doubtful), 1597 C, 1598 C (doubtful).
- — mentioned, p. 253.
- ©Organon.©
- Summa veterum interpretum in universam Dialecticam Aristotelis,
- auctore J. Case. 1592 C, 1598 C.
- ©Physica.©
- Ancilla philosophiae seu epitome in octo libros Physicorum, authore
- J. Caso. 1599 C.
- Lapis philosophicus, comm. in 8 libros Physicorum, auctore J. Caso.
- 1599 C.
- ©Politics.©
- Sphaera civitatis (comm. on the Politics, by J. Case). 1588 C.
- _See_ 1596 C.
- Johannis Buridani quaestiones in octo libros Politicorum
- Aristotelis. 1640 B.
- — mentioned, p. 253.
- ©Posterior Analytics.©
- Latin commentary by Walter Burley on the Posterior Analytics of
- Aristotle. 1517 B, _see_ p. 11 (“1512”).
- Analysis Analyticorum Posteriorum, opera et studio G. P[owel.] 1594
- P.
- — per G. Powel. 1631 P.
- ©Sophistici Elenchi.©
- Analysis librorum de Sophisticis Elenchis per G. Powel. 1598 P.
- — “1564,” “1594,” mentioned p. 13, 1594 P.
-
- Arithmetic. _See_ Buscherus, Heizo.
- — _See_ Computus.
-
- Armada, mentioned. 1588 P.
- — A Skeltonicall salutation ... (on the Armada). 1589 S.
-
- Arminianism, mentioned. 1626 B.
-
- Arminius, Jacobus, mentioned. 1626 A.
-
- Arran, earl of. _See_ Hamilton, James.
-
- Arretinus, Leonardus. _See_ Brunus, Leonardus, of Arezzo.
-
- Arschotanus, dux, mentioned. 1640 P.
-
- Articles. _See_ Berkshire.
- — _See_ Bridges, John.
- — _See_ King, John.
- — _See_ Oxford—Diocese.
- — _See_ Thornborough, John.
- — A general (undated) form of Articles of Visitation, apparently for
- Bishops or Archdeacons. 1633 A.
- — The xxxix Articles of 1562. 1636 A. _See_ James, Thomas.
- — Articuli Christianae fidei, versu, expressi per J. Glanville. 1613
- G.
- — Articles agreed on at Charenton. _See_ France, 1623.
-
- Ashburnham, Bertram, earl of Ashburnham, mentioned, p. 253.
-
- Askew, Anthony, mentioned, pp. 8, 227, 253.
-
- Atkyns, Richard. His ©Original and Growth of Printing©, 1664, p. 245.
-
- Attonitus, Richardus, pseudonym. Veritas odiosa. Fragmenta colloquii
- Machiavelli et Mercurii. 1626 A.
-
- Augustine, bookbinder, mentioned, pp. 267, 269.
-
- Augustine, st., bp. of Hippo. Sermo beati Augustini de misericordia et
- pia oratione pro defunctis. 1483 H.
- — mentioned. 1613 B.
- — De haeresibus. 1631 V.
- — Excitatio fidelis animae (1483?) p. 259.
-
- Aurum potabile. _See_ Cotta, John, 1623.
-
- Ave Maria. The Ave Maria to the queen of France. 1611 J.
-
- Aylmer, John, bp. of London. Letter from him mentioned. 1589 S.
-
- Ayton, sir Robert. In obitum Thomae Rhaedi. Faciebat A.R.A. (a poem)
- 1624 A.
-
-
- B.
-
- B., A., 1591. _See_ Devereux, Robert, earl of Essex.
-
- B., A., 1640. _See_ Rogers, Hugh.
-
- B., C. Tumulus Gustavi Adolphi; a Latin poem. 1636 B.
-
- B., D. _See_ under B., M.
-
- B., E. The curse of sacrilege; a sermon on tithes (on Mal. iii. 9).
- 1630 B.
-
- B., E. M., 1636. _See_ Bolton, Edmund (Maria).
-
- B., F., 1639. _See_ Bowman, Francis.
-
- B., I., 1616. _See_ Barnes, John.
-
- B., I. Translated Du Moulin’s Confutation of Purgatory. 1612 D.
-
- B., J., mentioned. 1640 F.
-
- B., M., wife of D. B. Dedication to her. 1599 R.
-
- B., R., 1631. _See_ Bolton, Robert.
-
- B., R., 1603. _See_ Brett, Richard.
-
- B., T., 1637. _See_ Barlow, bp. Thomas.
-
- Babington sale, mentioned, p. 258.
-
- Babington, Anthony. Sermon on Babington’s conspiracy, by John Rainolds.
- 1586 R.
-
- Babington, bp. Gervase. Dedication to him. 1602 S.
-
- Bacon, Francis, lord Verulam. The two books of the Proficience and
- Advancement of Learning. 1633 B.
- — Of the advancement and proficience of learning, translated into
- English by Gilbert Wats: with poems on Bacon, &c. 1640 B, _see_
- Frontispiece.
- — Latin poem to him by G. Herbert. 1637 T.
- — Portrait of him mentioned. 1640 B.
- — Latin letter from him to Trinity college, Cambridge. 1640 B.
-
- Bacon, Roger. De retardandis senectutis accidentibus, and de sensibus
- conservandis. 1590 B.
-
- Bagford, John, mentioned, Pp. 10–12, 1614 A, 1631 S, &c.
-
- Bailey, Walter. Discourse of certain baths near Newnham Regis,
- mentioned. 1587 B.
- — Treatise touching the eyesight. 1602 B, 1616 B, 1654 B, 1673 B.
-
- Baker, Sir Richard, kt., mentioned. 1639 B.
-
- Baker and Leigh, book auctioneers. Their sale 1775, mentioned, p. 8.
-
- Bâle. Poems about Bodl. MS. Roe 20 (Council of Bâle). 1631 O.
-
- Balkwell, Roger, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Balzac, Jean Louis Guez de. A collection of some modern epistles of M.
- de Balzac, translated out of French, vol. 4. 1639 B.
-
- Banbury, earl of. _See_ Knollys, William.
-
- Bancroft, John, bp. of Oxford. Articles for his first Visitation. 1632
- B.
- — — second do. 1635 B.
- — — third do. 1638 B.
- — Dedication to him, describing his public benefactions in the
- diocese. 1639 G.
-
- Bancroft, Richard, archbp. of Canterbury, _d._ 1610. Dedications to
- him. 1601 H, 1605 H, 1608 P, 1610 B, 1634 M.
- — Dedicatory poem to him, in Latin. 1606 B.
- — A MS. of Gregory the Great in his possession mentioned. 1610 J.
- — mentioned. 1610 R.
-
- Bandinel, dr. Bulkeley, mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Baptism. Use of the Cross in baptism: _see_ Hutten, Leonard.
-
- Baptismal regeneration. _See_ Burges, Cornelius.
-
- Barclay, John. Argenis (with essays on it). 1634 B.
- — Euphormionis Satyricon (partly by Alitophilus), accessit
- Conspiratio Anglicana (the Gunpowder plot). 1634 B.
- — Poematum libri duo. 1636 B.
-
- Barclay, William, mentioned. 1634 B.
-
- Barker, Christopher, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Barksdale, Clement, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Barlaamus. Περὶ τῆς τοῦ Πάπα ἀρχῆς, with Latin version by John Lluyd or
- Lloyd. 1592 B.
-
- Barlow, Richard. Pietas in patrem (English poems on his death by his
- son bp. Barlow and others). 1637 B.
-
- Barlow, bp. Thomas. Pietas in patrem, or a few tears upon the death of
- his father. 1637 B.
- — Exercitationes de Deo, per T. B. (with Scheibler’s Metaphysica).
- 1637 S.
- — mentioned. 1640 S, p. 252.
-
- Barne, Thomas. Sermon at Paul’s Cross, 1591. 1591 B.
-
- Barnes, John, son of Joseph, bookseller of London, mentioned, 1602 H,
- 1617 H, W, pp. 275, 277, 296, 311.
- — Preface by him, as “I. B.” 1616 B.
-
- Barnes, Joseph. Address to the earl of Leicester. 1585 C, 1596 C.
- — Complimentary Latin verses to him. 1585 C.
- — mentioned. 1588 C, 1606 O, 1626 B, pp. 274–5, 289, 293, 311.
- — Votum typographi ad regem (a Latin poem). 1603 O.
- — Application for a license to him to have a monopoly of printing
- classical books, 1596, p. 276.
- — Note of 78 copies of James’s ©Concordantiae© received from him 30
- July, 1607. 1607 J.
-
- Barnes, Robert, fellow of Magdalen coll. Oxford. Editor of “Beatae
- Mariae Magdalenae Lachrimae.” 1606 O.
- — Sermon at Henley at the Visitation, 1626. 1626 B.
-
- Barnes, Roger, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277 (_bis_).
-
- Barneveldt, Jan van Olden, mentioned. 1626 A.
-
- Baronet’s burial. _See_ Potter, Barnabas.
-
- Bartholinus, Casparus. Anatomicae institutiones. 1633 B.
- — Enchiridion ethicum. 1633 B.
-
- Bas, William. _See_ Basse, William.
-
- Basse or Bas (?), William. Great Britain’s Sunset. 1613 B.
- — other poems by him (?) mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Bassett, lady Elizabeth. Dedication to her. 1612 S.
-
- Bateman sale, mentioned, pp. 256, 259.
-
- Baterel, Guillermus. Edited Buridan’s Quaestiones in octo libros
- Politicorum Aristotelis. 1640 B.
-
- Bates, William. His ©Vitae selectorum virorum© referred to. 1602 B,
- 1613 O, 1617 D.
-
- Baxter, Nathaniel, mentioned. 1635 D.
-
- Bayley, Thomas. De merito mortis Christi, et modo Conversionis,
- diatribae duo in schola theologica Oxon., 1621. 1626 B.
- — Concio ad clerum, 1622. 1626 B.
-
- Baylie, dr. Richard. Dedication to him. 1638 G.
-
- Bayly, rev. John. Two sermons. 1630 B.
-
- Bayly, Lewis, bp. of Bangor. Dedication to him. 1630 B.
-
- Bayning, Paul, 2nd viscount Bayning. Poems by Christ Church men on his
- death. 1638 O.
-
- Bayning, Penelope, viscountess. Dedication to her. 1638 O.
-
- Baynton, Anne. _See_ Rogers, Hugh.
-
- Beacon, Richard. Solon his follie, or a politique discourse touching
- the reformation of Common-weales. 1594 B, p. 229.
-
- Beal, sir Robert. Dedication to him. 1596 M.
-
- Beaudesert, lord. _See_ Paget, lord.
-
- Becanus, Martinus. His ©Refutatio Torturae Torti© alluded to. 1613 B.
-
- Bedé, Jean. The Mass displayed, tr. by E. C. 1619 B.
-
- Bedford, countess of. Dedication to her. 1593 S.
-
- Bedford, earl of. _See_ Russell, Francis.
-
- Bedingfield, Robert. Sermon at Paul’s Cross (on Rom. vi. 23). 1625 B.
-
- Bedwin, William, illuminator, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Bees. _See_ Butler, Charles.
-
- Beesley, Henry. Complimentary poems. 1634 F.
-
- Belgium. Dedication to the Belgian States. 1629 A.
-
- Bellarmine, cardinal Robert. _See_ Leyden.
- — Rainoldus de Romanae Ecclesiae idololatria (adversus Bellarminum,
- &c.). 1596 R.
- — Scholastica Theologiae institutio adversus Bellarminum, auctore L.
- Trelcatio. 1606 T.
- — mentioned. 1613 B.
- — Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the Prophecies, written against
- Bellarmine. 1613 D.
- — De confessionis auricularis vanitate adversus card. Bellarminum,
- auctore I. Denisono. 1621 D.
- — Bellarminus enervatus, auctore Gul. Amesio, ed. 3^{ia}. 1629 A.
-
- Bellositum Dobunorum. _See under_ Oxford, _ad init._
-
- Bellum Grammaticale (by Andreas Guarna). Prologue and Epilogue to it by
- W. Gager, in Latin. 1592 G, p. 229.
-
- Benefield, Sebastian. Doctrinae Christianae sex capita totidem
- praelectionibus discussa. 1610 B.
- — Sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford (on Ps. xxi 6). 1611 B.
- — Commentary on Amos chap. 1, with a sermon on 1 Cor. ix. 19. 1613 B.
- — — Latin translation in 1615, mentioned, ibid.
- — — reprint in 1629, mentioned, ibid.
- — Commentary on Amos chapp. 2, 3, mentioned. 1613 B.
- — Sermon, on Amos iii. 6. 1613 B.
- — Eight sermons. 1614 B.
- — The sin against the Holy Ghost, 12 sermons. 1615 B.
- — His Haven of the afflicted, a sermon, “1615”. 1615 H.
- — Dedication to him. 1619 B.
- — mentioned. 1627 F.
-
- Bene fundatum, a lost Oxford book (about 1517–19), p. 12.
-
- Bense, Petrus. Analogo-diaphora (a treatise on French, Italian and
- Spanish grammar). 1637 B.
-
- Bercka, Gerard ten Raem de. _See_ Raem, Gerard ten.
-
- Berkley, lady Elizabeth. Dedication to her. 1626 W.
-
- Berkshire, archdeaconry. Visitation articles, 1615 (Lionel Sharpe).
- 1615 S.
- — — 1631 (Edw. Davenant) 1631 D.
- — — 1635 (John Rives). 1635 R.
-
- Bernard, st. Collectanea, out of St. Bernard, &c., by J. Panke. 1618 P.
-
- Bernard, Richard. Fabulous foundation of the Popedom. 1619 B.
-
- Bettes, Francis. A label for his books given to New College, Oxford,
- 1593, p. 229.
-
- Beza, Theodorus. Sermons on the Song of Solomon i-iii, tr. into
- English. 1587 B.
- — Preface to him. 1630 P.
-
- BIBLE:—
- For the monopoly of printing Bibles, _see under_ Oxford—Printing
- (printing privileges).
- Account of the Lithuanian translation, Oxf. “1569”, mentioned, p.
- 13.
- Biblii Summula, mentioned. 1586 S.
- Catalogus expositorum S. Scripturae in bibl. Bodleiana, auctore T.
- James. 1605 J.
- Catalogus interpretum S. Scripturae in bibliotheca Bodleiana (per
- J. Verneuil). 1635 V.
- A nomenclator of such tracts and sermons as have been printed in
- English on any place of Holy Scripture, by J. Verneuil. 1637 V.
- Hen. Stanley, appendix ad libros tam Veteris quam Novi Testamenti,
- 1630, p. 233.
- The Wicked Bible (1631), mentioned, p 277.
-
- _Old Testament_:—
- _Genesis._
- Exposition of Gen. xxxiii. 1–3, by J. Overton. 1586 O.
- _Job._
- Explanationes Ricardi Hampole super lectiones Job. 1483 H.
- _Psalms._
- Meditation on part of the 7th Psalm. 1613 B.
- Day’s Descant on David’s Psalms (1–8). 1620 D.
- The Psalms translated by King James i. 1631 B.
- Liber Psalmorum et precum in usum ecclesiae Cathedralis Oxon. 1639
- P.
- _Ecclesiastes._
- An exposition of Ecclesiastes, 1573, mentioned. 1586 E.
- Solomon’s Sermon with a paraphrase by Antonio de Corro, englished
- by Tho. Pye. 1586 E.
- _Song of Solomon._
- Beza’s sermons on the Song of Solomon i-iii, tr. into English. 1587
- B.
- Concordantiae patrum in librum Canticorum, auctore T. James. 1607
- J.
- _Lamentations of Jeremiah._
- Latin commentary on the Lamentations by Johannes Latteburius. 1482
- L, p. 255.
- _Minor Prophets._
- Pareus’s Comm. on Joel, Amos and Haggai, in Latin. 1631 P.
- _Amos._
- Benefield’s commentary on Amos chap. 1. 1613 B.
- — on chapp. 2, 3, mentioned, ibid.
- _Obadiah._
- The prophecy of Obadiah explained in connexion with 1 Pet., by J.
- Rainolds. 1613 R.
- _Jonah._
- Lectures upon Jonas, by John Kinge. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.
-
- _New Testament_:—
- Disticha J. Scheprevi in Novum Testamentum. 1586 S.
- Disticha in Novum Testamentum in editione Erasmi inserta. 1586 S.
- _Matthew._
- Analysis cap. 24, authore F. Trigge. 1591 T.
- Pareus’s Comm. on St. Matthew, in Latin. 1631 P.
- _Romans._
- Comment. in cap. 12 ep. ad Rom. (by Francis Trigge). 1590 T.
- Prodromus, a logical resolution of Romans cap. 1, by G. Powel. 1602
- P.
- — (the same in Latin; dubious). 1615 P.
- _Corinthians._
- Latin commentary on the two Epistles by W. Sclater. 1633 S.
- _Galatians._
- Exposition by J. Prime. 1587 P.
- _Hebrews._
- 12 Sermons on Heb. x. 26–31, by S. Benefield. 1615 B.
- _1 Peter._
- The prophecy of Obadiah explained in connexion with 1 Pet., by J.
- Rainolds. 1613 R.
- _Revelation._
- Noctes sacrae seu lucubrationes in primam partem Apocalypseos (by
- Francis Trigge). 1590 T.
-
- Bibliotheca scholastica. _See_ Rider, John.
-
- Billingsley, Robert, bookseller, &c., mentioned, p. 276 (_bis_).
-
- Bilson, bp. Thomas. True difference between Christian subjection and
- unchristian rebellion. 1585 B.
- — — mentioned. 1585 P.
- — Dedication to him. 1608 C.
- — mentioned, p. 228.
-
- Binding. Bookbinders, &c., in Oxford, pp. 267–78.
-
- Bird, John. Grounds of Latin Grammar. 1639 B.
-
- Bisham, mentioned. 1592 E, p. 229.
-
- Bishop, Richard, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 307, 313.
-
- Bishops. _See_ Articles.
- — _See_ Petition.
-
- Blades, William. His ©Books in chains©, mentioned, p. 248, cf. 249, &c.
-
- Blandford, lord. _See_ Churchill, George Spencer, 4th duke of
- Marlborough.
-
- Blaxton, John. The English Usurer, or usury condemned. 1634 B.
- — 2nd impression. 1634 B.
-
- Blessed Birthday. _See_ Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.
-
- Blewet, or Bluett, Henry, bookseller, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Bliss, dr. Philip, mentioned. 1612 W, 1613 G, 1618 A, 1631 P, 1632 C,
- &c.
-
- Blon, C. le. _See_ Le Blon, C.
-
- Blount, Edward, printer, mentioned. 1630 A.
-
- Blunt, sir Richard. Dedication to him. 1626 B.
-
- Boaz and Ruth. _See_ Parsons, Bartholomew.
-
- Bodleian library. _See_ Oxford—Bodleian library.
-
- Bodley, dr. Laurence, canon of Exeter cathedral. Dedications to him.
- 1614 P, 1637 P.
-
- Bodley, sir Thomas. Dedications to him. 1598 L, 1599 R.
- — Justa funebria Ptolemaei Oxoniensis (Latin verses on sir T. Bodley
- by members of the University of Oxford: and speech on him by I.
- Wake). 1613 O.
- — Bodleiomnema (Latin poems on Bodley, by members of Merton college,
- Oxford). 1613 O.
- — Poems in Italian and Latin on his death, by L. Petrucci. 1613 P.
- — mentioned. 1625 P.
-
- Bollifant, Edmund, printer, mentioned, p. 228.
-
- Bolswert, Nicholas de. _See_ Nicholas de Bolswert.
-
- Bolton, Edmund (Maria), _d._ 1633 (?). His ©Hypercritica© mentioned.
- 1591 T.
- — Translated Florus into English, as “E. M. B.” and “Philanactophil.”
- 1636 F.
-
- Bolton, Robert. Helps to humiliation, by R. B. 1631 B.
-
- Bond, Nicholas, pres. of Magdalen coll. Oxford. Dedications to him.
- 1592 S, 1602 B, 1604 S.
-
- Bonwick, Robert, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Book of Common Prayer. _See_ Prayer, Book of Common.
-
- Bookbinder, John, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Bookbinder, Thomas, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Bookbinder, William, mentioned, p. 272.
-
- Bookbinders. _See_ Binding.
-
- Booker, John. Almanack sive Prognosticon astrologicum. 1637 B.
-
- Book-production. _See_ Oxford—Printing.
- — _See_ Transcription.
- — List of persons concerned with it, at Oxford, pp. 267–78.
-
- Booksellers, &c., in Oxford, pp. 267–78.
-
- Bookworm, periodical, mentioned, p. 11.
-
- Bordeaux, mentioned. 1626 C.
-
- Bott, —, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 278.
-
- Bourchier, Thomas, archbp. of Canterbury, mentioned, p. 245.
-
- Bowing at the name of Jesus. _See_ Page, William, 1631.
- — _See_ Widdowes, Giles.
-
- Bowman, Francis, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 306, 313.
- — Preface by F. B(owman), 1639 B.
-
- Bowman, Thomas. Auction catalogue of his books (Oxf. 1687), mentioned.
- 1597 C, 1613 R, 1615 C, 1631 P.
-
- B. P. N. _See_ 1599 R, 1625 J.
-
- Brabant. A dedication to the three Ordines Brabantiae. 1640 P.
-
- Brackley, viscount. _See_ Egerton, Thomas.
-
- Bradshaw, William. Treatise of the Cross in baptism, mentioned. 1605 H.
-
- Brasbridge, Thomas. Quaestiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis, 1586, p.
- 228: 1592 B, 1615 B.
-
- Brassicanus (Kohlburger), Johannes Alexander. Annotationes in
- Salvianum. 1629 S, 1633 S.
-
- Breda, Jacobus de, mentioned, p. 242.
-
- Brent, dr. Nathaniel, warden of Merton College, Oxford. Dedications to
- him. 1628 D, 1637 R.
-
- Brent, William. Dedication to him. 1586 O.
-
- Brerewood, Edward. Logica (Lond. 1614), mentioned. 1614 S.
- — Tractatus logici. 1628 B, 1631 B, 1637 B.
- — Treatise of the Sabaoth, with Byfield’s Answer and Brerewood’s
- Reply. 1630 B, 1631 B.
- — — A second treatise on the Sabbath. 1632 B.
- — Tractatus duo, de meteoris, (de mari), de oculo. 1631 B.
- — Tractatus ethici, sive commentarii in aliquot Aristotelis libros ad
- Nicomachum. 1640 B.
-
- Breton, Nicholas. Pilgrimage to Paradise, joined with the Countess of
- Pembroke’s Love. 1592 B.
- — Breton’s Bower of delights, 1591, mentioned. 1592 B.
-
- Brett, Richard. Agatharchides and Memnon (excerpts in Greek and Latin),
- ed. by Brett. 1597 A, p. 229.
- — Symeon’s Lives of Stt. John and Luke, ed. by R. Brett in Greek and
- Latin. 1597 S.
- — Theses magistri Bret, respondentis in Comitiis Oxon. 1597, p. 230.
- — Iconum sacrarum decas, authore R. B. 1603 B.
-
- Bridegroom and his Bride, 1625. _See_ Rawlinson, John.
-
- Bridges, John, bp. of Oxford. Articles at his visitation, 1604. 1604 B.
-
- Bridgwater, John. Concertatio eccl. Catholicae per Joannem Aquepontanum
- (1594), mentioned. 1594 L.
-
- Brierwood, Edward. _See_ Brerewood, Edward.
-
- Bright Sale, mentioned, pp. 253, 256.
-
- Bristol. Latin oration at Bristol by J. Sprint 16 Apr. 1587. 1587 S.
- — mentioned. 1639 F.
-
- Bristol, earl of. _See_ Digby, George and John.
-
- Britain, Great. Dedication to the schoolmasters of Great Britain, in
- Latin. 1634 S.
-
- British Museum. _See_ London—British Museum.
-
- Broad, Thomas. Dialogue between a Jew and a Christian (on Sunday). 1621
- B.
- — Three questions answered (on Sunday observance). 1621 B.
-
- Bromley, sir Thomas, lord chancellor of England. Dedication to him,
- 1585. 1586 C.
-
- Broncar, Henricus, mentioned. 1640 C.
-
- Brooke, sir Richard, of Norton. Dedication to him. 1628 B, 1631 B, 1637
- B.
-
- Brother, John, illuminator, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Browere, Nicholas, mentioned, p. 254.
-
- Brown, John, stationer, mentioned, pp. 270, 271.
-
- Browne, Thomas. The copy of the University sermon, 24 Dec. 1633 (on Ps.
- cxxx. 4). 1634 B.
-
- Bruges, Giles, lord Chandos, mentioned. 1592 E.
-
- Brunus, Leonardus, of Arezzo. Latin translation of Aristotle’s
- Nicomachean Ethics, by Leonardus Arretinus. 1479 A, p. 253.
- — a supposed edition of 1498, p. 10.
-
- Brussels. The Library mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Buckhurst, lord. _See_ Dorset, earl of.
-
- Buckingham, duke of, _d._ 1629. _See_ Villiers, George.
-
- Buckingham, Katharine, duchess of. Dedication to her. 1630 W, 1631 W.
-
- Buckler, Benjamin, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Budden, dr. John. Gulielmi ... Waynfleti ... vita obitusque. 1602 B.
-
- Büssenmecherus, Johannes. Extract from a book by him, in Latin. 1640 C.
-
- Bullokar, W., mentioned. 1633 B.
-
- Bunny, Edmund. Treatise tending to pacification [accompanying a revised
- edition of R. Parsons’ Christian exercise]. 1585 P (_bis_).
- — Account by him of his connexion with Parsons’s Resolution or
- Directory. 1610 B.
- — Of divorce for adultery and marrying again. 1610 B, 1613 B.
-
- Bunny, Francis. Answer to a popish libel intituled “a Petition to the
- Bishops.” 1607 B.
-
- Burgersdicius, Franco. Idea Philosophiae tum Naturalis, tum Moralis,
- ed. 3^{ia}. 1631 B.
- — Idea Philosophiae tum Moralis, tum Naturalis, ed. 4^a. 1637 B.
-
- Burges, Cornelius. Baptismal regeneration of elect infants. 1629 B.
-
- Burgundus, Nicolaüs. Latin poem on Puteanus’s Comus. 1634 P.
-
- Burhill, Robert. Edited a sermon by bp. Smith, 1602. 1602 S.
- — Invitatorius panegyricus. 1603 O.
- — In controversiam inter Johannem Howsonum et Thomam Pyum tractatus.
- 1606 B.
- — De potestate regia et usurpatione papali. 1613 B.
-
- Buridanus, Johannes. Error for Walter Burley, mentioned, p. 10.
- — Quaestiones in octo libros Politicorum Aristotelis. 1640 B.
-
- Burley, Walter. Latin commentary on the Posterior Analytics of
- Aristotle. 1517 B, p. 263.
- — — “1512,” p. 11.
- — De materia et forma (principia). 1518 B, p. 264.
- — — “1500,” p. 10.
- — De relativis (principia). 1518 B, p. 264.
-
- Burmannus, Petrus, Secundus. Letter of his, mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Burnet, alias Cornish, Gilbert, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Burton, Robert, mentioned. 1599 R, 1627 H, 1637 V, 1638 O.
- — Anatomy of Melancholy. 1621 B, 1624 B, 1628 B, 1632 B, 1638 B.
- _See_ p. 232.
- — Note on the connexion between Ferrand’s Ἐρωτομανία and Burton’s
- ©Anatomy of Melancholy©. 1640 F.
-
- Burton, Samuel, archdeacon of Gloucester. Articles to be enquired of in
- his Visitation, 1629. 1629 B.
-
- Burton, William. Laudatio funebris in obitum Thomae Alleni. 1633 B.
-
- Bury, Richard de. _See_ Richard de Bury.
-
- Buscherus, Heizo. Arithmetica in usum Paedagogii Gisseni. 1631 S.
-
- Bushell, Thomas. Speeches and songs at the presentment of Mr. Bushell’s
- Rock (at Enstone) to the Queen, 23 Aug. 1636. 1636 B.
-
- Butler, Alban, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Butler, Charles. Rhetoricae libri duo, 1598, 1600 B, 1618 B, 1629 B, p.
- 230.
- — — mentioned. 1633 B.
- — Rhetorica and Oratoria, 1629, mentioned, p. 233.
- — The feminine monarchy or a treatise concerning bees. 1609 B, 1633
- B, 1634 B.
- — Συγγένεια, de propinquitate matrimonium impediente. 1625 B.
- — Oratoriae libri duo. 1629 B, 1633 B.
- — mentioned. 1633 P.
- — The English grammar (in phonetic spelling and type). 1633 B, 1634
- B.
-
- Butler, rev. Richard, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Butler, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 302, 312.
-
- Byfield, Nicholas. Answer to Brerewood’s treatise on the Sabbath, with
- Brerewood’s Reply. 1630 B, 1631 B.
-
- Byrd, Josias. Love’s peerless paragon, a sermon. 1613 B.
-
- Bythner, Victorinus. Tabula directoria (a Hebrew grammar). 1637 B.
- — Lingua Eruditorum, hoc est Institutio Linguae Sacrae (a Hebrew
- grammar). 1638 B.
-
- Bywater, prof. Ingram, mentioned, p. 229.
-
-
- C.
-
- C., A., 1586. _See_ Corro, Antonio de.
-
- C., Ch., 1638, _See_ Croke, dr. Charles.
-
- C., D. E., mentioned. 1608 C.
-
- C., E., 1619. _See_ Chaloner, Edward.
-
- C., G., 1624. _See_ Carleton, George.
-
- C., I., 1588. _See_ Case, John.
-
- C., J., 1628. _See_ Casa, Giovanni della.
-
- C., N., Cosmopolitanus. _See_ Carpenter, Nathaniel.
-
- Ca:, Io., mentioned. 1640 C.
-
- Calvin, Jean. Aphorismi maximam partem ex Institutione Calvini
- excerpti, per J. Piscatorem. 1630 P.
-
- Cambrai (Cameracum). _See_ Sanderson, John.
-
- Cambridge. _See_ Letters—Latin.
- — Mention of early printing there. 1585 C.
- — Mention of the patent for printing, 1534, p. 273.
- — Letter from the University to that of Oxford, 7 Oct. 1603, about
- Church reformation: in Latin. 1603 O, 1604 O.
- — Cambridge books mentioned. 1603, Heydon. _See_ 1624 C.
- — Booker’s Almanac printed there in 1636. 1637 B.
- — Dedication to the two Universities. 1640 B.
- — University Library mentioned. 1608 W, p. 264 (_quater_), 265
- (_bis_).
- — Oxford 15th cent. books in the University Library, p. 240.
- — Bp. Moore’s library, now in the University Library, mentioned, p.
- 11.
- — Clare college mentioned, p. 259.
- — Corpus Christi college mentioned, pp. 259–60.
- — Emmanuel college mentioned. 1633 D, p. 256.
- — Jesus college mentioned, p. 256.
- — King’s college mentioned, pp. 256, 259.
- — Pembroke college mentioned, p. 264.
- — St. John’s college mentioned. 1485 A, pp. 258 (_bis_), 259, 260.
- — Latin letter from Bacon to Trinity college, Cambridge. 1640 B.
- — Trinity college mentioned, pp. 255, 256 (_bis_), 257, 258, 260.
-
- Camden, William. Camdeni Insignia (poems and orations by members of the
- University of Oxford). 1624 O.
- — mentioned. 1625 W.
- — Parentatio historica manibus Camdeni oblata, De obitu Camdeni,
- Dedicatio imaginis Camdenianae, auctore D. Whear. 1628 W.
-
- Cameron, John. Examination of those plausible appearances which seem
- most to commend the Romish Church. 1626 C.
- — Of the sovereign judge of controversies in matters of religion.
- 1628 C.
-
- Campian, Edmund. His Decem Rationes mentioned. 1601 H.
- — Tobiae Matthaei concio apologetica adversus Campianum. 1638 M.
-
- Cannus, Michael. mentioned, p. 253.
-
- Canon Law. _See_ Law—Canon Law.
-
- Canons. Liber quorundam Canonum disciplinae ecclesiae Anglicanae, A. D.
- 1571. 1636 A.
-
- _Cantica Canticorum._ _See_ Bible—_Song of Solomon_.
-
- Capel, Richard. Connected with Pemble’s Vindiciae fidei. 1622 P.
- — Perhaps edited Pemble’s De sensibus internis. 1629 P.
-
- Cardiff, lord. _See_ Herbert, Henry.
-
- Carewe, sir Gawain. Funeral sermon on him, 1584, by John Chardon. 1586
- C.
-
- Carey, lady, wife of sir Robert Carey. Dedication to her. 1613 P.
-
- Carleton, bp. George. Heroici characteres. 1603 C.
- — Ἀστρολογομανία, the madness of Astrologers (against Heydon). 1624
- C.
-
- Carlisle, earl of. _See_ Hay, James.
-
- Carmelianus, Petrus, of Brescia. Ad lectorem carmen (before Phalaris’s
- Letters in Latin). 1485 P.
-
- Carpenter, Nathaniel. Philosophia libera. 1622 C, 1636 C, 1637 C.
- — Geography. 1625 C.
- — — 2nd ed. 1635 C.
- — Achitophel, or the picture of a wicked politician. 1628 C, 1640 C.
- — Chorazin and Bethsaida’s woe, a sermon on Matt. xi. 21. 1640 C.
-
- Carre, —, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Carrus, Nicolaüs. Demosthenis Orationes 15 cum interpretatione Nic.
- Carri. 1593 D.
-
- Cartwright, Francis. Manner of the murther of W. Storre, by F.
- Cartwright, 1602. 1603 S.
-
- Cartwright, William. The Royal Slave, a tragi-comedy (anonymous). 1639
- C, 1640 C.
-
- Cartwright, bp. William, mentioned. 1638 O.
-
- Cary, sir Lorenzo, son of viscount Falkland. Dedication to him. 1628 T,
- 1640 T.
-
- Casa, Giovanni della. Ethica juvenilis, auctore J. C. 1628 C, 1630 C.
-
- Casaubon, Arnold, father of Isaac Casaubon, mentioned. 1614 P.
-
- Casaubon, Isaac. His Epistola ad Frontonem Ducaeum, etc., mentioned.
- 1614 P.
-
- Case, John. Speculum moralium quaestionum in universam Ethicen
- Aristotelis. 1585 C, 1596 C.
- — — mentioned. 1596 C.
- — Summa veterum interpretum in universam Dialecticam Aristotelis.
- 1592 C, 1598 C.
- — — a “1584” issue mentioned. 1585 C.
- — Reflexus speculi moralis, seu commentarius in Magna Moralia
- Aristotelis. 1586 C, 1596 C.
- — The ©Praise of Music© (attributed to John Case). 1586 M.
- — — Discussion of the authorship of the ©Praise of Music© (Oxf. 1586)
- attributed to him, p. 279.
- — Thesaurus Oeconomiae. 1587 C (doubtful), 1597 C, 1598 C (doubtful).
- — — a “1578” issue mentioned, p. 13.
- — Apologia musices. 1588 C.
- — — mentioned. 1586 M, p. 279.
- — Sphaera civitatis (comm. on the Politics of Aristotle). 1588 C, cf.
- 1615 C.
- — — mentioned. 1596 C.
- — Poem to Nicholas Breton. 1592 B.
- — Ancilla philosophiae, seu epitome in octo libros Physicorum
- Aristotelis. 1599 C.
- — Lapis philosophicus, comm. in 8 libros Physicorum Aristotelis. 1599
- C.
- — Cursus philosophicus, 3 vols., 1597. _See_ 1597 C, _note_.
- — A Preface to Richard Haydocke. 1598 L.
- — Mentioned. 1627 H.
-
- Casimir, Ernest. _See_ Ernest Casimir.
-
- Castellanus, Georgius, bookseller at Oxford, 1506, mentioned, p. 11.
-
- Castlecomer, viscount. _See_ Wandesford, Christopher.
-
- Catechism. _See_ Hutchins, Robert, 1617.
- — Ursinus’s lectures on the Heidelberg Catechism, tr. into English.
- 1587 U, 1589 U, 1591 U, 1595 U, 1601 U.
- — A catechism (the Heidelberg Catechism, ed. by Sparke and Seddon).
- 1588 C (_bis_.)
- — The English Catechism explained by W(illiam) D(ickinson). 1628 D.
- — Catechesis religionis Christianae (Heidelberg Catechism). 1629 C.
- — Church Catechism in Latin, English, and French. 1633 G.
- — A short catechism, by John Downe. 1635 D.
-
- Cater, Rose, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Catherine, princess, mentioned, 1638 O.
-
- Catilinariae proditiones. In Catilinarias proditiones ac proditores
- domesticos odae 6. 1586 C.
-
- Cause, John, mayor of Plymouth. Dedication to him. 1637 F.
-
- Caussin, Nicolas. The unfortunate politique by C. N. (i. e. N.
- Caussin), translated into English by G. P. 1638 C, 1639 C.
-
- Cave, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Cavye, Christopher, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Caxton, William. Caxton’s ©Chronicles of England© (1482), mentioned, p.
- 9.
- — mentioned. 1585 C, pp. 242, 246.
-
- Caxton Exhibition, mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Cayer, Pierre Victor Palma. Treatise against him by Du Moulin. 1612 D.
-
- Cecil, Robert, earl of Salisbury, _d._ 1612. Dedication to him. 1634 B.
-
- Cecil, sir William, earl of Salisbury. Dedication to him. 1633 D, 1634
- D.
-
- Cecill, T., engraver, mentioned. 1630 H.
- — Encyclopaedia (Oxford statutes) engraved by him. 1635 O.
-
- Cenotaphia. _See_ Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.
-
- Cenotaphium Jacobi, 1625. _See_ King, John.
-
- Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel, mentioned. 1640 F.
-
- Chaldee. Poem in Chaldee. 1612 H.
- — Study of Chaldee at Oxford, mentioned. 1627 P.
-
- Chaloner, Edward. Bede’s Masse displayed, tr. by E. C(haloner?) 1619 B.
- — Six sermons. 1629 C.
-
- Chambers, John, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Chandler, professor Henry William, mentioned. 1640 B.
-
- Chandler, dean Thomas, mentioned, p. 258.
-
- Chandos, lord. _See_ Bruges, Giles.
-
- Chardon, bp. John. Funeral Sermon of sir Gawain Carewe, 1584. 1586 C.
- — Sermon on John ix. 1–3. 1586 C.
-
- Charenton. Articles agreed on at Charenton. _See_ France, 1623.
-
- Charisteria. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- Charles i, King. Dedications to him. 1607 C, 1613 P (_bis_), 1614 P,
- 1620 J, 1621 H, 1625 O, R, 1626 P, 1633 B, C, 1636 B, 1638 J, 1640
- B, O.
- — Latin poem to him. 1613 B.
- — Carolus redux: Latin poem to congratulate Charles on his return
- from Spain, with a Latin speech by J. King. 1623 O.
- — Epithalamia Oxoniensia in Caroli cum Henrietta Maria Connubium.
- 1625 O.
- — Britanniae Natalis (Oxford University Poems to the king on the
- birth of Charles ii). 1630 O.
- — Proclamation by him about King James’s Psalter, with his arms
- (engraved). 1631 B.
- — Musarum Oxoniensium pro rege suo Soteria. 1633 O.
- — Solis Britannici perigaeum (poems by Oxford men). 1633 O.
- — Vitis Carolinae gemma altera: poems to Charles i, &c. to
- commemorate the birth of James ii, in Latin, &c.: by members of
- the University of Oxford. 1633 O.
- — Coronae Carolinae quadratura: poems on the birth of his daughter,
- by members of the University of Oxford, in Lat. and English. 1636
- O.
- — Flos Britannicus (poems to him and the queen on the birth of the
- princess Anne by members of the University of Oxford). 1636 O.
-
- Charles ii, King. Britanniae Natalis (Oxford University poems on the
- birth of Charles ii). 1630 O.
- — Dedications to him. 1632 O, 1634 B, 1637 J, 1639 D, 1640 B.
- — Takes part in a masque at Richmond, 12 Sept. 1636. 1636 M.
-
- Charles the Great. _See under_ Ubaldini, Petruccio.
-
- Charles Emmanuel I, duke of Savoy, _d._ 1630. Dedication to him. 1634
- B.
-
- Chaucer, Geoffrey. Amorum Troili et Creseidae libri duo priores
- Anglico-Latini (per F. Kinaston). 1635 C.
-
- Chetham library. _See_ Manchester.
-
- Chetwind, Edward. Concio ad clerum (on Acts xx. 24). 1608 C.
-
- Chicheley, archbp. Henry. Vita Henrici Chichele ... ab A. Duck. 1617 D.
-
- Chillingworth, William. The religion of Protestants. 1638 C.
-
- Chilmead, Edmund. Translated Ferrand’s ©De la maladie d’amour© into
- English. 1640 F.
-
- ©Choir and Musical Record©, 1864, mentioned. 1586 M.
-
- Cholmondeley family, of Condover, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Chorazin. _See_ Carpenter, Nathaniel.
-
- Christ. _See_ Jesus Christ.
-
- Christ his Cross, 1614. _See_ Andrewes, John.
-
- Christian iv, King of Denmark. Dedication to him. 1610 R.
-
- Chronicles. Caxton’s ©Chronicles of England©, “Oxf. (15th cent.),”
- mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Chronograms. 1619 M, O, 1622 O, 1623 O, 1624 C, O, 1625 K, O (_bis_),
- 1628 W, 1629 P, 1630 O, 1633 O (_bis_), 1636 O, 1637 B (_bis_), 1637
- T.
-
- Chrysostom, st. Homiliae, Oxf. “1565,” mentioned, p. 13.
- — Six homilies, in Greek, ed. by John Harmar. 1586 C.
- — Two homilies, in Greek (Lond. 1543), mentioned. 1586 C.
- — Theorremon (selections from st. Chrysostom, in English, by J.
- Willoughby). 1602 C.
-
- Church. Summa colloquii de capite et fide ecclesiae (1583). 1610 R.
- — Of the Church, five books, by Rich. Field. 1628 F, 1635 F.
-
- Churchill, George Spencer, lord Blandford, 4th duke of Marlborough,
- _d._ 1840, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Churchowse, George, mayor of Salisbury. _See_ Salisbury.
-
- Churchwardens. The oath of Churchwardens and Sidemen, at a Bishop’s
- Visitation. 1599 K, 1603 T, 1604 B, 1619 H.
- — Oath to be taken by Churchwardens and Sworn-men, at an Archdeacon’s
- Visitation. 1629 B.
-
- Churchyard, Balthasar, stationer, mentioned, p. 273.
- — Thomas. A handful of gladsome verses. 1592 C.
-
- Chytraeus, David, mentioned. 1596 M.
-
- Chytraeus, Nathan. Translated Della Casa’s Ethica juvenilis into Latin.
- 1628 C, 1630 C.
-
- Cicero, Marcus Tullius. Fragment of the Oratio pro T. Annio Milone.
- 1480 C, p. 254.
- — Libellus primus Epistolarum, Oxf. “about 1519,” mentioned, p. 12.
- — Quaestiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis, per T. Brasbridge, 1586, p.
- 228.
- — — 1592. 1592 B.
- — — 1615. 1615 B.
- — Godwin’s Romanae Historiae Anthologia, specially intended to
- illustrate Cicero. 1614 G.
-
- Cirenbergius, Johannes, of Dantzig. Poems to him by members of the
- University of Oxford. 1631 O.
-
- City Match, the, a play. _See_ Mayne, Jasper, 1639.
-
- Civil Law. _See_ Law—Civil Law.
-
- Clapham, John, mentioned. 1640 C.
-
- Clarke, John, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 305, 312, 313.
-
- Classicum poenitentiale. _See_ Kingsmill, Thomas.
-
- Claxton, —, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Clayton, dr. Thomas, regius professor of Medicine at Oxford. Letter to
- him from John Day, in Latin, 11 July, 1612. 1612 D, 1615 D.
- — Dedication to him. 1631 P.
-
- Clein, Franciscus. Designed the titlepage of 1632 O.
-
- Cleland, James. Ἡρω-παιδεία, or the institution of a young Nobleman.
- 1607 C.
- — The Instruction of a young Nobleman (the same book). 1612 C.
-
- Clement, st., of Rome. Epistola ad Corinthios prima, et fragmentum
- secundae, edente P. Junio. 1633 C, see 1632 C.
-
- Clerk, John (Clericus), stationer, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Clifton, Nicholas, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Clinton, Bridget, countess of Lincoln. Dedication to her. 1622 C.
-
- Clinton, Elizabeth, countess of Lincoln. The countess of Lincoln’s
- Nursery. 1622 C.
-
- Co., Ty. Verses by him. 1596 F.
-
- Coeffeteau, Nicolas. Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the Prophecies,
- written against Coeffeteau. 1613 D.
-
- Coins. _See_ Numismatics.
-
- Coke, Christopher, stationer, mentioned, p. 272.
-
- Coke, sir Edward, lord chief justice. Dedication to him. 1608 J.
-
- Cokkes, Johannes, scribe, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Colbert sale mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Coleman, Charles. Composed music for a Masque in 1636. 1636 M.
-
- Collegium Anti-Bellarminianum. _See_ Leiden.
-
- Collier, John Payne, mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Colmore, Matthew. Oratio funebris in obitum G. Sanctpaul. 1613 C.
-
- Cologne. Cologne printing mentioned, pp. 242, 243, 247–8, 250.
-
- Columna, Aegidius de. _See_ Aegidius de Columna.
-
- Columna, Guido de. _See_ Guido de Columna.
-
- Combachius, Johannes. Metaphysicorum libri duo, ed. 3^{ia}. 1633 C.
-
- Comenius, Johannes Amos. Saltonstall’s Index to the Porta linguarum
- (Clavis ad Portam). 1634 S.
- — Conatuum Comenianorum praeludia (Porta sapientiae reserata: edita a
- S. Hartlibio). 1637 C.
- — mentioned. 1633 G.
-
- Common Prayer, book of. _See_ Prayer, Book of Common.
-
- Communicants, mentioned. 1629 B, 1629 C.
-
- Communion, Holy. _See_ Preston, John.
- — Last will and testament of Jesus Christ, a treatise on the Lord’s
- Supper, by bp. Thornborough. 1630 T.
-
- Compendium. _See_ Lux, 1518.
-
- Computus. Compotus manualis ad usum Oxoniensium cum commento (Paris,
- 1498), mentioned. 1519 C.
- — Compotus manualis ad usum Oxoniensium, 1519. 1519 C, p. 265.
-
- Comus. _See_ Puteanus, Erycius.
-
- Concilia. _See_ Councils.
-
- Coneley, John, illuminator, mentioned, pp. 270, 271.
-
- Confession. _See_ Denison, John.
-
- Consilia Evangelica. _See_ Evangelical Counsels.
-
- Constitutiones. Constitutiones provinciales, with the Latin Commentary
- of Will. Lyndewoode. 1483 L, p. 258.
-
- Cooke, sir Edward. _See_ Coke, Edw.
-
- Cooke, F., of Eggington. Dedication to him. 1597 P.
-
- Cooke, James. Juridica trium quaestionum ad Majestatem pertinentium
- determinatio, in Vesperiis, 1608. 1608 C.
-
- Cooke, John, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Cooke, T. Etherington, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Cooke, Toby, printer in London, mentioned, 1589 S.
-
- Cooper, Thomas, bp. of Winchester. Dedication to him. 1588 P.
-
- Cooper, Thomas. Nonae Novembres (on the Gunpowder Plot of 1605). 1607
- C.
-
- Cope, sir William H., mentioned, p. 254.
-
- Corbet, Richard, bp. of Oxford. Oratio funebris in obitu Thomae Bodleii
- (really by I. Wake) attributed by error to Corbet. 1613 O.
- — Articles to be enquired of in his Visitation, 1629. 1629 C.
-
- Corderoy, Jeremy. Short dialogue (on) good works, 2nd ed. 1604 C.
-
- Coricaeus, pseud. _See_ R., C. A.
-
- Cornish, Gilbert. _See_ Burnet, Gilbert.
-
- Cornwall, 1605. _See_ Hutton, Thomas.
-
- Corro, Antonio de, (Corranus). Lectures on Ecclesiastes, paraphrased.
- 1586 E.
-
- Corsellis, Frederic. The Corsellis forgery, p. 245, _see_ also pp. 8,
- 9, 227.
-
- Corsellis, Nicolas. His epitaph, p. 247.
-
- Cosin, Richard. Ecclesiae Anglicanae Politeia in tabulas digesta, ed.
- per Tho. Crompton. 1634 C.
-
- Cosmography. _See_ Heylyn, Peter.
-
- Cosmopolitanus, pseud. _See_ Carpenter, Nathaniel.
-
- Coton, William, bp. of Exeter. Dedication &c. to him. 1605 H.
-
- Cotta, John. Cotta contra Antonium, or an Ant-antony (about Aurum
- potabile). 1623 C.
-
- Cottbus in Silesia, mentioned. 1609 R.
-
- Cotton, Henry, bp. of Salisbury. Oratio Sarisburiae habita 6 Jun.
- (1599) cum Episcopus gradum D.D. susciperet, authore T. Holland.
- 1599 H.
- — Dedication to him. 1600 T.
-
- Cotton, sir Robert. Two Latin poems on him by R. James. 1633 M.
-
- Cotton, William, bp. of Exeter. Dedication to him. 1613 P.
-
- Councils. _See_ Bâle.
- — Council of Vienne, 1311–12: decree mentioned. 1627 P.
-
- Coventry. Sermon preached there with local opposition, &c. 1610 H.
-
- Coventry, Thomas, i. e. lord Coventry. Dedications to him. 1626 B, 1633
- B, E.
-
- Coverdale, Miles. Reprint of an edition by him of Wyclif’s Wicket. 1612
- W.
- — Translation into Welsh of his translation of Wermueller’s ©Precious
- Pearl©. 1595 W.
-
- Cowper, Thomas. An almanack for 1637. 1637 C.
-
- Cox, William. Latin letters to and from him. 1627 V.
-
- Crakanthorp, Richard. Introductio in metaphysicam. 1619 C.
-
- Cranmer, archbp., mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Crawford and Balcarres, earl of. _See_ Lindsay, James Ludovic.
-
- Crawford sale, mentioned, p. 264.
-
- Creed. Expositio in Symbolum Apostolorum. _See_ Rufinus, Tyrannius.
-
- Crewe, bp. Nathaniel, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Cripps, Henry, mentioned, pp. 278, 298, 311, 312, 313.
-
- Critici Sacri, mentioned. 1616 F.
-
- Criticism. _See_ Textual Criticism.
-
- Croke, dr. Charles. A sad memorial of Henry Curwen by Ch. C(roke). 1638
- C.
-
- Crompton, Thomas. Edited Cosin’s ©Ecclesiae Anglicanae Politeia©. 1634
- C.
-
- Crosfield, Thomas, of Queen’s college, Oxford. Translated and edited
- Gregorius’s Letter relating the martyrdom of Ketaban. 1633 G.
- — May have issued the ©Synopsis Statutorum© and ©Encyclopædia© (both
- 1635 O), and the ©Speculum Academicum© (1638), p. 235.
-
- Crosley, Alexander. Two English poems by him. 1609 B.
-
- Crosley, John, bookseller and stationer, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Cross in baptism. _See_ Hutten, Leonard.
-
- Crosse, Richard. Edited Ursinus’s Catechism. 1601 U.
-
- Cuddesdon, mentioned. 1639 G.
-
- Culenburg, mentioned, p. 243.
-
- Curio, Coelius Secundus, _d._ 1569. Pusillus Grex, refutatio libelli
- (de amplitudine regni Dei) C. S. Curionis, authore Thoma de
- Vicariis. 1627 V.
- — mentioned. 1638 V.
-
- Curle, bp. Walter. Dedication to him. 1639 K.
-
- Cursol, Stephanus de, mentioned. 1639 W.
-
- Curteyne, Henry, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 299, 312, 313.
-
- Curwen, Henry. A sad memorial of H. Curwen (by Ch. C[roke]). 1638 C.
-
- Curwen, sir Patricius and lady. Dedication to them. 1638 C.
-
- Cuthbertson, John, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Cyclus Praelectorum. _See_ Oxford—University, 1635.
-
- Cydonius, Andreas Eudaemon-Johannes. _See_ Eudaemon-Johannes, Andreas.
-
- Cyprian, st. De bono patientiae, ed. by J. Stephens. 1633 C.
- — Extract from his works, in English. 1637 F.
-
-
- D.
-
- D., C., 1633. _See_ Downinge, Calybute.
-
- D., E., 1588. _See_ Dyer, Edward.
-
- D., I., 1628. _See_ Doughty, John.
-
- D., I., 1607. _See_ Dunster, John.
-
- D., I. Engraver’s initials (?). 1601 H.
-
- D., I., H., 1610. _See_ H., I., D.
-
- D., W., 1628. _See_ Dickinson, William.
-
- Damme, P. v., mentioned, pp. 9, 227.
-
- Danby, earl of. _See_ Danvers, Henry.
-
- Daniel, rev. C. H., of Worcester coll., Oxford. His reprint (1883) of
- the Sixe idyllia (1588) of Theocritus, mentioned. 1588 T.
-
- Danvers, Henry, lord Danvers, baron Dauntsey (Dantesey), earl of Danby.
- Dedication to him, as lord “Davers.” 1624 R.
-
- Date. Mistakes in date, in early printed books, p. 250.
- — by Olympiads, pp. 4, 260.
- — how referred to, p. viii.
-
- Dauntsey, baron. _See_ Danvers, Henry.
-
- Davenant, Edward, archdeacon of Berkshire. Visitation articles, 1631.
- 1631 D.
-
- Davers, lord. _See_ Danvers, Henry.
-
- David’s Enlargement. _See_ 1625 K.
-
- David’s Strait. _See_ 1625 K.
-
- Davies, John. Microcosmos, the discovery of the little world (a poem on
- man, with other poems by and to J. Davies). 1603 D, 1605 D.
-
- Davis, Richard. His sale catalogues, mentioned. 1607 K, 1614 S, 1631 P,
- 1639 J.
-
- Davis, William, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 253, 276, 298, 311, 312,
- 313.
-
- Dawes, Lancelot. Two assize sermons. 1614 D.
- — His Sermons (1653), mentioned. 1614 D.
-
- Day, —, of Ch. Ch., Oxford, mentioned. 1632 D.
-
- Day, John, printer in London, 16th cent., mentioned. 1614 D.
-
- Day, John, of Oriel college, Oxford. Two sermons (on Ps. xxvii. 4),
- 1609. 1612 D, 1615 D.
- — Day’s Dial, twelve lectures. 1614 D.
- — “David’s Desire to go to Church,” mentioned. 1615 D.
- — Day’s festivals or twelve of his sermons (and short pieces on the
- Sacraments). 1615 D.
- — Day’s Descant on David’s Psalms (1–8). 1620 D.
- — mentioned, p. 290.
-
- Daye, Lionel. Concio ad clerum (on Luke xvii. 31), 1609. 1632 D.
-
- Day’s Dial. _See_ Day, John.
-
- Dead, Office for the. _See_ Liturgy.
-
- Dedicus (Dethick?), Joannes. Quaestiones super libros Ethicorum
- (Aristotelis). 1518 D, p. 264.
-
- Defence of truth. _See_ Price, Daniel.
-
- Defensio fidei catholicae. _See_ Grotius, Hugo.
-
- Defunctorum exequiae. _See_ Liturgy.
-
- Deliciae deliciarum. _See_ Epigrams.
-
- Delle, John. _See_ Dolle, John.
-
- Democritus, junior, pseudonym. _See_ Burton, Robert.
-
- Demosthenes. Orationes 15, cum interpretatione Nic. Carri. 1593 D.
- — Orationes quindecim, Graece. 1597 D.
-
- Denison, John. De confessionis auricularis vanitate et de sigilli
- confessionis impietate. 1621 D.
-
- Dent, —, mentioned, pp. 9, 227, 253.
-
- Derby, dowager countess of. _See_ Egerton, Alice.
-
- Derby, earl of. _See_ Stanley, Ferdinand.
- — _See_ Stanley, Henry.
-
- Derby, Robert de. _See_ Robert de Derby.
-
- Descent into Hell. _See_ Parkes, Richard, 1604.
-
- Dethick, John. _See_ Dedicus, Joannes.
-
- Deventer, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Devereux, Robert, earl of Essex. Dedications to him. 1590 G, 1592 G,
- 1594 P, 1596 P, R, 1598 P, 1607 C, p. 234.
- — Preface to Savile’s Tacitus by A.B., said to be by the earl of
- Essex. 1591 T.
- — Devoraxeis, carmen per. G. Carleton. 1603 C.
-
- Devon, 1605. _See_ Hutton, Thomas.
-
- Devoraxeis. _See_ Devereux, Robert, earl of Essex.
-
- Diarium astronomicum. _See_ Wyberd, John.
-
- Dickinson, William. Milk for babes, the English Catechism explained.
- 1628 D.
-
- Digby, lord George, 2nd earl of Bristol, _d._ 1676. Dedication to him.
- 1631 P.
-
- Digby, sir John, earl of Bristol, mentioned. 1630 A.
-
- Digby, sir Kenelm. Dedications to him. 1633 J, M.
-
- Digesta scholastica. _See_ Morrice, Thomas.
-
- Digges, sir Dudley. Dedication to him. 1612 D.
-
- Dillon, Harold A. L., viscount Dillon, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Dioscorides. Scriptores in Dioscoridem, in bibl. Bodleiana, 1605 J.
-
- Divine right of Kings, 1611. _See_ Benefield, Sebastian.
-
- Divinity. Manuduction unto divinity, 1625. _See_ James, Thomas.
-
- Dochin, Henry, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Doddington, sir William. Dedication to him. 1637 P.
-
- Dolle or Delle, John, stationer and bookbinder, mentioned, pp. 270,
- 271.
-
- Dormer, Robert, i.e. lord Dormer. Dedication to him. 1626 P.
-
- Dorne (Thorn), John, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 12, 273: as I. T. (?),
- p. 273.
-
- Dorset, earl of. _See_ Sackville, Richard, Robert, and Thomas.
-
- Doughty, John. Two discourses, by I. D. 1628 D.
-
- Dousa, Janus. Declamatio in I. Wouweri Umbram. 1636 W.
-
- Dovelike Soul, 1625. _See_ Rawlinson, John.
-
- Downe, John. Certain treatises, ed. by G. Hakewill. 1633 D.
- — Of the true nature and definition of justifying faith (with several
- other treatises, verses and translations, by the same author).
- 1635 D.
-
- Downeham, bp. George. The Christian’s Freedom (two editions). 1635 D.
-
- Downinge, Calybute. A discourse of the state Ecclesiastical in relation
- to the Civil, by C. D. 1633 D.
- — 2nd ed. 1634 D.
-
- Drake, lady Elizabeth, widow of sir Francis Drake. Dedication to her.
- 1596 F.
-
- Drake, sir Francis. Sir Francis Drake (a poem by C. Fitz-Geffrey, two
- issues). 1596 F.
-
- Dramatic. _See_ Plays.
-
- Draudius, Georgius. His ©Bibliotheca Exotica©, 1625, mentioned. 1607 D,
- 1609 D.
- — His ©Bibliotheca Classica© (1625) mentioned. 1615 D.
-
- Dryden, sir Henry, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Dublin. Trinity College, mentioned, p. 12, 1608 W.
-
- Ducæus, Fronto (Le Duc), mentioned. 1614 P.
-
- Duck, Arthur. Vita Henrici Chichele archiep. Cantuar. 1617 D.
-
- Dudley, Ambrose, earl of Warwick. Oration to him by J. Sprint, in
- Latin. 1587 S.
-
- Dudley, lady Mary. Dedication to her. 1586 E.
-
- Dudley, Robert, earl of Leicester. Dedications &c. to him. 1585 C, 1587
- B, S, 1588 H, 1596 C.
- — Carmen in adventum Lecestrensis Comitis ad collegium Lincolniense.
- 1585 D.
- — Poem to him (29 Aug. 1566?) by J. Sprint, in Latin, 1587 S.
- — Oration to him by J. Sprint, in Latin. 1587 S.
-
- Duff, Edward Gordon, mentioned, p. vii, 1586 S, pp. 228, 254, 259
- (_bis_), 273.
-
- Dugres, Gabriel. Dialogi Gallico-anglico-latini. 1639 D.
-
- Dukas, Jules, mentioned. 1634 B.
-
- Dulwich. The College Library, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Du Moulin, Pierre, the elder. Heraclitus or meditations upon the vanity
- and misery of human life, by Peter du Moulin, translated by R.
- S(tafford?). 1609 D, 1634 S.
- — The waters of Siloë to quench the fire of purgatory (a confutation
- of Purgatory). 1612 D.
- — The accomplishment of the prophecies, or the third book in defence
- of the Catholic Faith. 1613 D.
- — Sermon before the king, 1615. 1620 D.
-
- Duns Scotus, Johannes. Scriptum Oxoniense super primum Sententiarum (P.
- Lombardi), 1519, p. 11.
- — mentioned, p. 227.
-
- Dunster, John. Protestation against popery, by I. D. 1607 D, 1609 D.
- — Caesar’s penny, a sermon (on 1 Pet. ii. 13–14: on Passive
- Obedience) 1610 D.
-
- Du Plessis, seigneur de. _See_ Mornay, Philippe de.
-
- Duppa, dr. Brian. Dedications to him. 1634 L, 1638 G.
-
- Durham. The Cathedral Library mentioned, pp. 255, 259.
-
- Du Val, A. Treatise against him by Du Moulin. 1612 D.
-
- Dyer, Edward. Dedication to E. D., perhaps E. Dyer. 1588 T.
-
-
- E.
-
- Ea., parishioner of St. Mary’s, Oxford, about 1610–15, mentioned. 1615
- D.
-
- Ecclesia. _See_ Church.
-
- Echo. An echo song. 1636 B.
-
- Eclogarius. _See_ Panke, John.
-
- Edinburgh. 1638 (Burton) was partly printed at Edinburgh.
- — The Advocates’ library, mentioned, pp. 259, 264.
-
- Edmonds, Denis, stationer, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Edrychus, Georgius. _See_ Etheridge, George.
-
- Edward, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Egerton, Alice, countess of Ellesmere, dowager countess of Derby, i. e.
- Alice Spencer. Dedication to her. 1613 B.
-
- Egerton, John. Dedication to him. 1599 C.
-
- Egerton, sir Thomas, lord Ellesmere. Dedications to him. 1586 H, 1589
- H, 1597 A, K, 1599 C, K, 1600, B, K, R, 1612 R, 1614 B, 1615 A, 1618
- B, 1629 B, p. 230 (1598).
-
- Eggington, co. Derby. Dedication to the parishioners of Eggington of a
- sermon preached there by S. Presse, 1596. 1597 P.
-
- Eidyllia. _See_ Henry, prince, 1612.
-
- Elizabeth, princess, daughter of James i, mentioned. 1613 B, P.
- — Epithalamia sive lusus Palatini in nuptias Frederici et Elizabethae
- (verses by Oxford men). 1613 O.
-
- Elizabeth, princess, _d._ 1650. Coronae Carolinae quadratura, poems on
- the princess’s birth by members of the University of Oxford. 1636 O.
-
- Elizabeth, queen. Dedications to her. 1585 B, 1591 T, 1594 B, 1614 R,
- (_bis_), 1631 A.
- — Sermon by J. Prime comparing her with Solomon. 1585 P.
- — De legato (a treatise to support the queen in putting Mary queen of
- Scots to death.) 1587 L.
- — The consolations of David briefly applied to queene Elizabeth, a
- sermon by J. Prime. 1588 P.
- — Churchyard’s Handful of gladsome verses given to the queen’s
- majesty at Woodstock, 1592. 1592 C.
- — Speeches to her Majesty at Bisham, Sudeley and Rycote, 1592. 1592
- E, p. 229.
- — Latin poem to her by W. Gager, 1592. 1592 G.
- — Sandford’s Εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια in honour of the Queen’s visit to
- Oxford, 1592. 1592 S.
- — Mention of the celebration of the Queen’s Day (Nov. 17). 1601 H,
- 1602 H.
- — Πανηγυρὶς Elizabethae, a sermon 17 Nov. 1599, by T. Holland. 1601
- H.
- — Ad Elizabetham carmen, per G. Carleton. 1603 C.
- — Invitatorius panegyricus, de reginae posteriore ad Oxoniam adventu:
- per Rob. Burhill. 1603 O.
- — Oxoniensis academiae funebre officium in memoriam Elisabethae
- reginae. 1603 O.
- — Merton College case (disputing a lease to the Queen). 1623 O.
-
- Ellesmere, countess of. _See_ Egerton, Alice.
-
- Ellesmere, lord. _See_ Egerton, sir Thomas.
-
- Ellis, F. S., mentioned, p. 253.
-
- Enchiridion oratorium. _See_ Pemble, William.
-
- Encyclopaedia. _See_ Oxford—University, 1635.
-
- Enderby, Samuel, bookseller of London, mentioned. 1640 S, pp. 310, 313.
-
- England. _See_ Armada, Chronicles, Gunpowder Plot.
- — Account of a stay in England, by L. Petrucci (in Ital. and Latin
- verse). 1613 P.
- — Dedication to the nation. 1618 A.
- — The joyful reuniting the two kingdoms, England and Scotland, by Bp.
- Thornborough. (Also his “Discourse of the Union.”) 1605 T.
- — Historia Britannica, hoc est de rebus gestis Britanniae seu Angliae
- commentarioli tres (by J. T. Clain). 1640 C.
- — Church of England. _See_ Articles, Canons.
- — — The authority of the Church. _See_ Mason, Francis.
- — — Church and State. _See_ Downinge, Calybute, 1633.
- — — Ecclesiae Anglicanae Politeia. _See_ Cosin, Richard.
- — — Constitutiones provinciales, with a Latin commentary by W.
- Lyndewoode. 1483 L, p. 258.
- — — Answer of the University of Oxford to the petition of the Church
- of England desiring reformation of the Church. 1603 O (4 issues,
- one undated), 1604 O.
- — — Latin letter on the Church by dr. John Rainolds. 1614 R.
- — — Speech in behalf of the Clergy, by sir B. Rudyard. 1628 R.
- — — Form of Articles of Visitation, undated, apparently for Bishops
- or Archdeacons. 1633 A.
-
- English. _See_ Phonetic spelling.
- — Grammars. _See_ Butler, Charles.
- — Lexicons. [For lexicons of English and some other language see
- under the name of the other language.]
- — — Glossary of hard words in Wycliff. 1608 W.
-
- Ensham, Walter de. _See_ Walter de Ensham.
-
- Enstone, co. Oxon. _See_ Bushell, Thomas.
-
- Enze, earl of. _See_ Gordon, George.
-
- Epigrams. _See_ Gamage, William.—_See_ Reinolds, John.
- — Deliciae deliciarum sive Epigrammatum in Bibl. Bodleiana ἀνθολογία,
- opera A. Wright. 1637 D.
-
- Epistolae. _See_ Letters—Latin.
-
- Epistolae Eucharisticae. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- Epithalamia Oxoniensia. _See_ Oxford—University.
-
- Erasmus, Desiderius. Disticha in Novum Testamentum in editione Erasmi
- inserta. 1586 S.
- — Moriae Encomium. _See_ 1633 E.
-
- Ernest, grand duke of Austria. Dedication to him. 1633 R.
-
- Ernest Casimir, count of Nassau. Dedication to him. 1629 A.
-
- Errata. _See_ Pararuades.
- — Note about authors’ revision of proofs and responsibility for
- Errata. 1638 C.
-
- Essex, earl of. _See_ Devereux, Robert.
-
- Eternity. _See_ Tipping, William.
-
- Etheridge (Edrychus), George. Edited Shepery’s Hippolytus, with a
- preface. 1586 S.
-
- Ettenius, Christophorus. Dedication to him. 1634 P.
-
- Euclid. Praelectiones 13 in Elementa Euclidis, auctore H. Savilio. 1621
- S.
-
- Eudæmon-Johannes, Andreas (L’Heureux), a Jesuit, mentioned. 1613 B.
- — Castigatio A. Eudæmon-Johannis, per I. Prideaux. 1614 P.
-
- Euphormio, pseud. _See_ Barclay, John.
-
- Europe. Of the state of Europe, by G. Richardson. 1627 R.
-
- Eustathia. _See_ Roche, Robert.
-
- Evangelical Counsels. _See_ Benefield, Sebastian, 1610.
-
- Evans, Edward. Verba dierum, or the day’s report of God’s glory (4
- sermons.) 1615 E (two issues).
-
- Evans, Herman, stationer, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Evans, William. A translation of the book of Nature into the use of
- Grace. 1633 E.
-
- Excommunication. Forma sententiae excommunicationis. 1636 A.
-
- Exequiae defunctorum. _See_ under Liturgy.
-
- Exeter, diocese. Dedication to the bp. and clergy. 1633 D.
-
- Eye. The vanity of the eye. _See_ Hakewill, George.
-
- Eye-sight. _See_ Bailey, Walter; Fernelius, Johannes; Riolanus,
- Johannes.
-
-
- F.
-
- F., A. Saints’ Legacies (perhaps by A. Farindon). 1631 F, 1640 S.
- — — mentioned, p. 235.
-
- F., C., 1596. _See_ Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.
-
- F., J. B., mentioned. 1640 F.
-
- Faber, —. Gemma Fabri, mentioned. 1586 S.
-
- Fabricius, J. S. Meditationes, Oxf. “1576,” mentioned, p. 13.
-
- Fabulous foundation of the Popedom. _See_ Bernard, Richard, 1619.
-
- Farindon, Anthony. _See_ F., A.
-
- Farmer, dr. Richard. Farmer sale, 1798, mentioned. 1589 S.
-
- Farrear, Robert. Direction to the French Tongue. 1618 F.
-
- Faunt, John and Simon, bookbinders, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Faustus, Johannes. _See_ Fust, Johann.
-
- Fawkner, Antony. The widow’s petition, an assize sermon on Luke xviii.
- 3. 1635 F.
-
- Felix, Marcus Minucius. Octavius. 1627 F, 1631 F, 1636 F.
- — Octavius, tr. into English by R. James. 1636 F.
-
- Fell, bp. John, mentioned. 1638 O.
-
- Fell, dr. Samuel. Primitiae sive oratio ... et concio ... (1626). 1627
- F.
-
- Feltham, Owen. Verses by him. 1638 R.
-
- Feminine monarchy. _See_ Butler, Charles.
-
- Fenninge, William. _See_ Jennings, William.
-
- Fernelius, Johannes. Extracts from his works about the eyesight. 1616
- B.
-
- Ferrand, Jacques. Ἐρωτομανία, or a treatise of love or erotic
- melancholy. 1640 F.
-
- Ferrar, Nicholas. Translated Valdés’ ©Considerations© into English.
- 1638 V.
-
- Festivall, or Festiall. _See_ Mirk, John.
-
- Fetiplace, John, son of Richard. Dedication to J. Phetiplacius. 1596 C.
-
- Fetiplace, Richard. Dedication to R. Phetiplacius. 1596 C.
-
- Fetiplace, William, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Fey, Jacobus, de Florentia, scribe, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Field, rev. Nathaniel. Edited his father’s treatise on the Church. 1628
- F, 1635 F.
- — dr. Richard. Of the Church, five books, ed. by Nath. Field. 2nd ed.
- 1628 F.
- — — 3rd. ed. 1635 F.
-
- Fischer, Johann. _See_ Piscator, Johannes.
-
- Fisher, B., mentioned, pp. 305, 312.
-
- Fitz-Geffrey, Charles. Sir Francis Drake, a poem (two issues). 1596 F.
- — Affaniae, sive epigrammatum libri tres, et cenotaphia. 1601 F.
- — The Blessed Birthday: also Holy Raptures (poems). 1634 F.
- — Compassion towards captives, three sermons at Plymouth. 1637 F.
-
- Flavel, John. Tractatus de demonstratione. 1619 F, 1624 F.
-
- Flemynge, sir Thomas, lord chief justice. Dedication to him. 1608 W.
-
- Fletcher, John. Rule a wife and have a wife, a comedy. 1640 F.
- — The tragedy of Rollo (the Bloody Brother). 1640 F.
-
- Flit, Thomas, of Worcester. Dedication to him. 1598 I.
-
- Floritius. Dedication to him. 1634 P.
-
- Florus, Lucius Annaeus. Oratio de eo, per Deg. Whear. 1625 W.
- — Rerum a Romanis gestarum libri iv, cum comm. J. Stadii. 1631 F,
- 1638 F.
- — Excerpts from him. 1634 P.
- — The Roman Histories, tr. into English by E. M. B(olton). 1636 F.
-
- Foderby, Simon, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Forrest, Edward, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 277, 299, 311, 312, 313.
-
- Foxgrave. _See_ Vosgraf.
-
- Foxle, George. The groans of the spirit. 1639 F.
-
- Foxon, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- France. Articles agreed on by the Reformed Churches of France at
- Charenton, Sept. 1623. 1623 F, 1624 F.
-
- Franciscus, of Arezzo. Latin translation of the Letters of Phalaris by
- Franciscus Aretinus. 1485 P.
-
- Franeker. Dedication to four curators of the University. 1629 A.
-
- Frederick iii, Elector Palatine. Authorized the Heidelberg Catechism in
- 1562. _See_ Catechism, 1587, &c.
- — Edict about the Heidelberg Catechism, 1563/4, in Latin. 1629 C.
-
- Frederick v, Elector Palatine, mentioned. 1613 B, P.
- — Epithalamia sive lusus Palatini in nuptias Frederici et Elizabethae
- (Verses by Oxford men). 1613 O.
-
- Freeling, mentioned, p. 253.
-
- French. _See_ Bense, Petrus.
- — _See_ Farrear, Robert.
- — _See_ Grave, Jean de.
- — Reglas grammaticales para aprender la lengua Española y Francesa.
- 1586 S.
- — Janitrix (a French Grammar, in Latin, by P. Morlet). 1596 M.
- — Le guichet François, par J. Sanford. 1604 S.
- — Brief extracts of the former Latin (French) Grammar, done into
- English by John Sanford. 1605 S.
- — Poems. 1613 O, 1622 O, 1630 O, 1633 O, 1636 O (_bis_), 1638 O, 1640
- O.
- — Dialogi Gallico-anglico-latini, per G. Dugres. 1639 D.
-
- Frewen, Accepted. Oratio (in obitum principis Henrici), 7 Dec. 1612.
- 1612 H.
- — mentioned. 1638 T.
-
- Friars. _See_ Wycliff, John.
-
- Friesland. Dedication to senators of Friesland. 1629 A.
-
- Frisia, Nicholas de. _See_ Nicholas de Bolswert.
-
- Froben, Johann, printer at Bâle, mentioned. 1627 F.
-
- Fromondus, Libertus. Meteorologicorum libri sex. 1639 F.
-
- Fuller, Nicholas. Miscellaneorum theologicorum libri 1–4. 1616 F, _see_
- p. x.
-
- Fuller, Thomas. His Abel Redivivus mentioned. 1607 W.
-
- Fust, Johann, printer of Mainz, mentioned 1585 C.
-
-
- G.
-
- G. _See_ Gager, William.
-
- G., H. Five short Latin poems signed at end “H. G.” 1636 B.
-
- G., I., 1634. _See_ Gregory, dr. John.
-
- G., M., 1593. _See_ Gwinne, Matthew.
-
- G., R. R., 1599. _See_ Roche, Robert.
-
- G., T. An answer to Wither’s Motto (in verse). 1625 G.
-
- Gaetani, Enrico. _See_ Sermonetta, cardinal.
-
- Gager, William. Edited the Exequiae Philippi Sidnaei. 1587 S.
- — Poem to N. Breton. 1592 B.
- — Meleager (a play, with other short poems). 1592 G.
- — Panniculus Hippolyto Senecae tragoediae assutus, 1591. 1592 G.
- — Prologus in Rivales comoediam, and other short pieces. 1592 G.
- — Ulysses Redux, tragoedia. 1592 G.
- — An apology for women, against dr. G(ager): by W. Heale. 1609 H.
- — The overthrow of stage plays by way of controversy betwixt Gager
- and Rainolds, 2nd ed. 1629 R.
-
- Galen. Scriptores in Galenum, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.
-
- Gallager. _See_ Vicars, Thomas.
-
- Gallinager. _See_ Goldsmith, John.
-
- Gamage, William, of Jesus College, Oxford. Linsi-woolsie, or two
- centuries of epigrams. 1613 G.
-
- Gamelia. _See_ Rogers, Hugh.
-
- Garassus, Franciscus, S. J., mentioned. 1639 B.
-
- Garbrand, alias Herks, John, bookseller. Latin poem by him. 1634 B.
- — mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Garbrand, alias Harkes, Richard, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Gardiner sale, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Gardyner, dr. Richard. Sermon on Gen. xlv. 8. 1622 G.
- — Concio ad clerum, 14 Feb. 1631 (on 1 Tim. iv. 16), with some
- biographical details in the dedication. 1631 G.
- — Christmas sermon, on John i. 14. 1638 G.
- — Easter sermon, on Rom. viii. 11. 1638 G.
- — Sermon on Matth. ii. 2. 1639 G.
-
- Garnet, Henry, Jesuit, mentioned. 1608 C, 1614 P.
-
- Gavent, Richard, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Gemma Fabri. _See_ Faber, —.
-
- Geneva. _See under_ Wells, Will.
-
- Gentilis, Albericus. De injustitia bellica Romanorum. 1590 G.
- — Complimentary poem by him. 1592 G.
- — Short poem by him mentioned. 1592 G.
- — Ad Tit. C. de Maleficis &c. commentarius. 1593 G.
- — Italian sonnet by him to J. Budden. 1602 B.
- — Letter from him to dr. Howson, 12 Aug. 1603, in Latin. 1606 B.
- — Four Latin letters between him and dr. Rainolds about stage plays,
- 1593, 2nd ed. 1629 R.
-
- Geoffrey, illuminator, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Geography. _See_ Carpenter, Nathanael; Heylyn, Peter; Pemble, William.
-
- Georgians. Note about them, by T. Crosfield. 1633 G.
-
- Geree, John. Edited Pemble’s ©Vindiciæ fidei©. 1629 P.
-
- Gerhardus, Johannes. Meditationes sacrae. 1633 G.
-
- Gidding, Little. A Little Gidding binding mentioned. 1638 V.
-
- Giessen (Gissenum). _See_ Buscherus, Heizo.
-
- Gifford, Roger, physician. Dedication to him. 1590 J.
-
- Gigliis, Johannes de. _See_ Johannes de Gigliis.
-
- Giles, sir Edward and lady Mary. Dedication to them. 1613 P.
-
- Gillow, Joseph, mentioned. 1610 R.
-
- Glanville, John, of Balliol coll., Oxford. Articuli Christianae fidei,
- versu expressi. 1613 G.
-
- Glasgow. Free Church College library mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Gloucester, archdeaconry. Articles to be enquired of in the
- Archdeaconry of Gloucester, 1629. 1629 B.
-
- Gloucester, city. Sermon delivered there, by S. Benefield. 1613 B.
-
- Gloucester, Humphrey, duke of, mentioned, p. 253.
-
- Goade, Edward. Dedication to him. 1633 S.
-
- Godsond, John, stationer, mentioned, pp. 270, 271.
-
- Godwin, bp. Francis. Orders for the reformation of abuses in the
- diocese of Llandaff. 1603 G.
- — Calculation of the value of large numbers of sesterces. 1630 H.
-
- Godwin, Joseph, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 308, 312, 313.
-
- Godwin, Thomas. Romanae Historiae Anthologia, an English exposition of
- the Roman Antiquities, for the use of Abingdon school. 1613 G, 1614
- G, 1616 G, 1620 G, 1623 G, 1625 G, 1628 G, 1631 G, 1633 G, 1638 G.
- — Synopsis antiquitatum hebraicarum. 1616 G.
- — — mentioned. 1614 G.
- — His ©Moses and Aaron© mentioned. 1616 G.
- — mentioned. 1637 R.
-
- Goffe, Thomas. Oratio funebris in obitum Gul. Goodwin (two editions).
- 1620 G.
- — Oratio funebris in obitum Henrici Savilii. 1622 O.
-
- Gold printing. 1633 O.
-
- Goldsmith, John (“Gallinager,” = of Henfield). Latin letters to and
- from him. 1627 V.
-
- Gomarists, mentioned. 1626 A.
-
- Good works. _See_ Corderoy, Jeremy.
-
- Goodman, Godfrey, bp. of Gloucester. His arguments against the eternity
- of the world, as printed by dr. Hakewill. 1635 H.
-
- Goodwin, dr. William, dean of Christ Church, Oxford. Sermon before the
- king. 1614 G.
- — Dedication to him. 1619 B, M.
- — Oratio funebris in obitum ejus, auctore T. Goffe (two editions).
- 1620 G.
-
- Gordon, George, earl of Enze, afterwards 2nd marquis of Huntly.
- Dedication to him. 1607 C.
-
- Gore, John, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Gower, Thomas, parchment seller, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Gowrie’s conspiracy, A.D. 1600. Sermon on it by J. Prideaux. 1637 P.
-
- Grammar. _See_ under the language.
-
- Grante, Patrick, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Grave, Jean de. The pathway to the Gate of Tongues (Latin, French, and
- English: including the Church Catechism). 1633 G.
-
- Graves, William, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Gravius, Thomas. _See_ Greaves, Thomas.
-
- Great Britain. _See_ Britain, Great.
-
- Great Britain’s Sunset. _See_ Basse, William.
-
- Greaves, Thomas (Gravius). De linguae Arabicae utilitate et
- praestantia. 1639 G.
-
- Greek. First Greek book printed at Oxford (Cambridge & in England).
- _See_ 1586 C.
- — Tabulae ad grammatica Graeca introductoriae, per Joh. Prideaux.
- 1607 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.
- — Greek poems, 1613 O (_bis_), 1619 O, 1622 O, 1623 O, 1624 O, 1625 O
- (_bis_), 1630 O, 1633 O (_bis_), 1636 O (_bis_), 1637 B, 1638 B,
- O, 1639 J, 1640 O.
- — Greek poem on lord Spencer of Wormleighton, by R. Parre. 1628 P.
- — mentioned, p. 230.
- — Savile’s Greek type, mentioned, pp. 276, 277.
-
- Gregorius, monk. Letter relating the martyrdom of Ketaban, 1614. 1633
- G.
-
- Gregorius de Valentia. Rainoldus de Romanae Ecclesiae idololatria
- (adversus Gregorium, &c.) 1596 R.
-
- Gregory the Great. Bellum Gregorianum (a table of passages corrupted in
- the Roman editions of Gregory’s works). 1610 J.
- — Collectanea, out of St. Gregory, &c., by J. Panke. 1618 P.
-
- Gregory, dr. John (“I. G.”) Edited Ridley’s View of the civil and
- ecclesiastical law, 2nd ed. 1634 R.
-
- Grene, Johannes, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Grenewey, R., mentioned, p. 229.
-
- Gressop, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Grey, Arthur, lord Grey of Wilton, Dedications to him. 1585 S, 1588 C
- (_bis_), 1591 S, 1594 S.
- — Funeral sermon on him, by T. Sparke, 1593. 1593 S.
- — In obitum ejus θρηνῳδία, auctore I. Sandfordo. 1593 S.
- — mentioned. 1606 O.
-
- Grey, lady Joanna Sybil. Dedication to her. 1606 O.
-
- Grey, Thomas, lord Grey of Wilton. Dedication to him. 1593 S.
-
- Grey, William, son of Arthur, lord Grey of Wilton. Dedication to him.
- 1605 S.
- — Beatae Mariae Magdalenae lachrymae in obitum Gul. Grey. 1606 O.
-
- Grey of Wilton, lady. Dedication to her. 1593 S.
-
- Groans of the spirit. _See_ Foxle, George.
-
- Grosart, dr. Alexander B., mentioned. 1596 F, 1601 F, 1603 D, 1634 F.
-
- Grotius, Hugo. Defensio fidei catholicae de satisfactione Christi
- adversus Faustum Socinum. 1636 G.
- — De Veritate religionis Christianae. 1639 G.
-
- Guadus. _See_ Wade, —.
-
- Guarna, Andreas. _See_ Bellum grammaticale.
-
- Guido de Columnia. Historia Trojana per T. R. “Oxf. 1480,” mentioned,
- p. 9.
-
- Guild, William. Throne of David. Oxf. “1569,” mentioned, p. 13.
-
- Gulston, bp. William. The Bibliotheca Gulstoniana (1688), mentioned.
- 1626 W, 1628 W.
-
- Gumbleden, John. God’s great mercy, a sermon. 1628 G.
-
- Gunpowder plot. _See_ Barclay, John; Hakewill, George; Rainolds, John,
- 1586 and 1613; Taylor, bp. Jeremy.
- — Nonae Novembris (by Tho. Cooper). 1607 C.
- — Univ. Sermon, 5 Nov. 1609. 1612 D, 1615 D.
-
- Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, _d._ 1632. Latin poem on him, with
- chronogram, by D. Heinsius. 1637 T.
- — Tumulus Gustavi Adolphi, a Latin funeral poem by C. B. 1636 B.
-
- Gwinne, Matthew. Epicedium in obitum Henrici comitis Derbeiensis. 1593
- G.
-
-
- H.
-
- H., A., 1638. _See_ Hodges, Anthony.
-
- H., F., parchment seller, mentioned, pp. 256, 272.
-
- H., G. _See_ Hakewill, George.
-
- H., H. Greek epigram by him. 1639 J.
-
- H., I. Discourses of Ursinus, &c., translated by I. H. 1600 U.
-
- H., I. Latin complimentary poem to C. Butler. 1633 B.
-
- H., I. D. Preface by him. 1610 H.
-
- H., L., 1605. _See_ Hutten, Leonard.
-
- H., M., 1640. _See_ Hunt, Matthew.
-
- H., the lady M. Dedication to her. 1609 H.
-
- H., N. Edited Carpenter’s ©Chorazin© and probably his ©Achitophel©.
- 1640 C.
-
- H., R., 1598. _See_ Haydocke, Richard.
-
- H., S., 1640. _See_ Harding, Samuel.
-
- H., T., 1579. _See_ Hill, Thomas.
-
- H., T., 1605. _See_ Hutton, Thomas.
-
- H., T., 1634. _See_ Hickes, Thomas.
-
- H., W., 1609. _See_ Heale, William.
-
- H., W., 1613–14. _See_ Hinde, William.
-
- Haarlem. Haarlem printing, mentioned, p. 246.
-
- Habakkuk, the prophet. Sermon by Hooker, on Habakkuk’s faith, &c. 1612
- H.
-
- Haberdashers’ Company. _See_ London—Haberdashers’ Company.
-
- Hacket, Roger. Sermon on 1 Sam. xi. 5–7. 1591 H.
-
- Hailstone sale, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Hakewill, dr. George. The vanity of the eye. 1608 H (_bis_), 1615 H,
- 1633 H.
- — Dedication to him, as the donor of a new Chapel to Exeter college,
- Oxford. 1625 P.
- — Comparison between the days of Purim and that of the Powder
- Treason, by G. H. 1626 H.
- — An apology of the power and providence of God: by G. H. 1627 H,
- 1630 H (with author’s name), 1635 H.
- — Edited Downe’s treatises, and prefixed a funeral sermon by himself.
- 1633 D.
- — Dedication to him. 1637 P (ix).
-
- Hales, Alexander de. _See_ Alexander de Hales.
-
- Hales, John. Oratio funebris (on sir Thomas Bodley). 1613 O.
- — Sermon, on 2 Pet. iii. 16. 1617 H.
-
- Hales Owen, Worcestershire, mentioned in 1481 A.
-
- Hall, bp. Joseph. Letter by him about J. Downe, 1631. 1633 D.
- — mentioned. 1639 W.
-
- Ham house, mentioned, p. 264.
-
- Hamilton, James, 2nd marquis of Hamilton, earl of Arran, _d._ 1625.
- Dedications to him. 1625 P, 1637 P.
-
- Hamilton, James, duke of Hamilton, _d._ 1649. Dedication to him. 1622
- C.
-
- Hamme, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Hampole, Richard Rolle of. Explanationes super lectiones Job. 1483 H,
- p. 258.
-
- Hampton Court. The Royal Slave, a tragi-comedy by W. Cartwright, acted
- at Hampton Court. 1639 C, 1640 C.
-
- Harding, Samuel. Sicily and Naples, or the Fatal Union, a tragedy, by
- S. H. 1640 H.
-
- Harington, sir John. Dedication to him. 1607 C.
-
- Harkes, Garbrand, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Harkes, or Herks, John. _See_ Garbrand, John.
-
- Harkes, Richard. _See_ Garbrand, Richard.
-
- Harley, Robert, earl of Oxford, mentioned, pp. 252, 254.
-
- Harmar, John. Six homilies of St. Chrysostom, in Greek, ed. by J.
- Harmar. 1586 C.
- — Beza’s sermons on the Song of Solomon i-iii, tr. into English by J.
- Harmar. 1587 B.
-
- Harris, W., bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 308, 312.
-
- Harrison, John, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Hart, Horace, mentioned, p. vii.
-
- Hart, John. Summa Colloquii J. Rainoldi cum J. Harto de capite et fide
- Ecclesiae, &c. (1583). 1610 R.
-
- Hartlibius, Samuel. Edited Comenius’s Porta Sapientiae. 1637 C.
-
- Hatton, Christopher lord. Dedications to him. 1588 C, 1590 B.
- — William. Dedication to him. 1588 C.
-
- Haven of the Afflicted. _See_ Benefield, Sebastian.
-
- Haviland, John, printer, mentioned, p. 278.
-
- Hawkins, —, parchment seller, mentioned, pp. 256, 272.
-
- Hay, lord. Dedication to him. 1606 C.
-
- Hay, James, earl of Carlisle. Dedication to him. 1625 L.
-
- Haydocke, Richard. Lomazzo’s Arts of Painting, tr. by R. H(aydocke).
- 1598 L (misplaced on p. 46).
-
- Hayes, William. The paragon of Persia (assize sermon at St. Mary’s,
- Oxford, 7 July, 1624). 1624 H.
-
- Haywood, dr. William. Dedication to him. 1637 D.
-
- Hazlitt, W. Carew, mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Heale, William. An apology for women, by W. H. 1609 H.
-
- Hearne, Thomas, mentioned. 1586 C, p. 261.
-
- Heath, John. Translated Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the Prophecies.
- 1613 D.
-
- Heber, Richard, mentioned. 1613 G, 1640 R.
-
- Hebrew, p. 230.
- — Notes of the use of Hebrew type. 1596 U, 1601 H, 1602 C, 1603 J,
- 1605 J, 1620 J, 1625 N, W.
- — Poems. 1613 O (_bis_), 1619 O, 1622 O, 1623 O, 1625 O (_bis_), 1636
- O (_bis_), 1640 O.
- — Study of Hebrew at Oxford mentioned. 1627 P.
- — Tabula directoria (a Hebrew grammar), by V. Bythner. 1637 B.
- — Lingua Eruditorum, a Hebrew grammar, by V. Bythner. 1638 B.
-
- Hedwigius. Hedwigii liber “Oxon. 1470,” mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Heidelberg Catechism. _See_ Catechism.
-
- Heinsius, Daniel. Complimentary Latin poem by him, on Vossius’s
- Rhetoric. 1631 V.
- — Latin poem on Puteanus’s Comus. 1634 P.
- — Latin poem by him on Gustavus Adolphus. 1637 T.
-
- Henley. Some Henley notes. 1626 B.
-
- Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles i. Epithalamia Oxoniensia in Caroli
- cum Henrietta Maria connubium. 1625 O.
- — Dedication to her. 1634 B, 1636 M.
- — Speeches, &c. at the presentation of Bushell’s Rock to her, 23 Aug.
- 1636. 1636 B.
- — Coronae Carolinae quadratura, poems partly to her on the birth of
- the princess Elizabeth, 1635, by members of the University of
- Oxford. 1636 O.
- — Flos Britannicus (poems partly to her on the birth of the princess
- Anne, 1636/7, by members of the University of Oxford). 1636 O.
-
- Henry, prince, _b._ 1640. Poems by members of the University of Oxford
- in honour of his birth. 1640 O.
-
- Henry of Bourbon, Dauphin of France. Dedication to him. 1634 B.
-
- Henry, prince of Wales, _d._ 1612. Poem to him by J. Davies. 1603 D,
- 1605 D.
- — Dedications to him. 1605 J, 1607 C, W, 1608 P, 1610 P.
- — Mentioned. 1605 O.
- — Eidyllia in obitum Henrici. 1612 H.
- — Luctus posthumus, sive ... Magdalenensium officiosa pietas (poems
- on prince Henry’s death). 1612 H.
- — Oratio (in obitum ejus), per Acc. Frewen. 7 Dec. 1612. 1612 H.
- — Great Britain’s Sunset, a poem by W. Basse, on prince Henry’s
- death. 1613 B.
- — Prince Henry his first anniversary, an essay by D. Price. 1613 P.
- — — his second anniversary, by dr. D. Price. 1614 P.
-
- Heraclitus. _See_ Du Moulin, Pierre.
-
- Herbert, family, earls of Pembroke. _See also_ Wilton.
-
- Herbert, —, earl of Pembroke, mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Herbert, Charles, son of the earl of Pembroke. Dedication to him. 1634
- T.
-
- Herbert, George. Latin poem to Bacon. 1637 T.
- — Letter from him to N. Ferrar on the latter’s translation of Valdés’
- ©Considerations©. 1638 V.
- — Latin poem on Bacon’s ©Instauratio Magna©. 1640 B.
-
- Herbert George R. C., earl of Pembroke, mentioned, pp. 252, 253.
-
- Herbert, Henry, lord Cardiff. Dedication to him. 1594 P.
-
- Herbert, Henry, earl of Pembroke. Dedication to him. 1587 S, U, 1589 U,
- 1591 U, 1593 U, 1601 U.
-
- Herbert, Mary. _See_ Pembroke, Mary countess of.
-
- Herbert, Philip, earl of Pembroke (and Montgomery), _d._ 1669.
- Dedications to him. 1625 C, 1634 T, 1640 J.
-
- Herbert, William, bibliographer, mentioned, p. 261.
-
- Herbert, William, earl of Pembroke. Dedications &c. to him. 1592 T,
- 1622 O, 1625 C, W, 1626 P, 1629 C, Z, 1630 T.
-
- Hereford, diocese, 1586. _See_ Westfaling, Herbert.
-
- Heresies. _See_ Sparke, Thomas, 1591.
-
- Herks. _See_ Harkes.
-
- Hermaica gymnasmata (Latin exercises). 1589 H.
-
- Herod the Great. The unfortunate politique (i. e. Herod), by C. N. (i.
- e. N. Caussin). 1638 C.
-
- Herodotus. Historiarum liber primus (Graece). 1591 H.
-
- Heropaideia. _See_ Cleland, James.
-
- Hesse, Ludwig and Philip landgraves of. Dedications to them. 1637 S.
-
- Hetone, —, subdean of Christ Church, Oxford. Dedication to him. 1586 C.
-
- Heureux, L’. _See_ Eudæmon-Johannes, Andreas.
-
- Heydon, sir Christopher. Answer to his ©Defence of Judiciary
- Astrology©, 1603, by bp. George Carleton. 1624 C.
-
- Heylyn, Edward. Poem by him. 1621 H, &c.
-
- Heylyn, Peter. Microcosmus, or a little description of the great world
- (Cosmography). 1621 H, 1625 H, 1627 H, 1629 H, 1631 H, 1633 H, 1636
- H, 1639 H.
-
- Hickes, Francis. Translated select Dialogues of Lucian. 1634 L.
-
- Hickes, Thomas. Edited his father’s translation of select Dialogues of
- Lucian, with Life of Lucian and notes (“T. H.”) 1634 L.
-
- Hieronymus, S. _See_ Jerome, st.
-
- Higins, John. Answer to mr. William Perkins. 1602 H (_bis_).
-
- Hill, dr. Thomas. Reasons which dr. Hill hath brought for the upholding
- of papistry, unmasked. By George Abbot. 1604 A.
- — His book on bees (1579, &c.), mentioned. 1609 B.
-
- Hill, William, of Pitminster. Dedication to him. 1612 S.
-
- Hilton, A., mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Hinde, William, of Queen’s college, Oxford. Path to Piety. 1613 H.
- — Edited works of dr. John Rainolds. 1613 R, 1614 R.
-
- Hinton, William, archdeacon of Coventry, mentioned. 1610 H.
-
- Hippocrates. Scriptores in Hippocratem, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.
-
- Hippolytus. _See_ Shepery, John.
-
- Historia Britannica. _See_ England.
-
- History. De ratione legendi Historias. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- Hodges, Anthony. Translated the ©Loves of Clitophon and Leucippe© of
- Achilles Tatius. 1638 A.
-
- Hoernen, Arnold ther, mentioned, pp. 242, 243.
-
- Hole, William, engraver. Map of Virginia by him. 1612 S.
-
- Holland, dr. Thomas. Oratio Sarisburiae habita 6 Jun. (1599) cum
- Episcopus gradum D. D. susciperet. 1599 H.
- — Πανηγυρὶς Elizabethae, a sermon 17 Nov. 1599: whereunto is adjoined
- an apologetical discourse. 1601 H.
- — Dedication to him. 1607 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.
- — Funeral sermon on him, by R. Kilbie. 1613 K.
-
- Holmes, Randle. His Academy of Armory (1688), mentioned, p. 8.
-
- Holte, John, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Holyday, Barten. Persius’s satires tr. by B. Holyday, 2nd impression.
- 1616 P.
- — Philosophiae politobarbarae specimen. 1633 H.
-
- Holyoak, W. H., bookseller, of Leicester, mentioned, p. 230.
-
- Holyoke, Francis. Sermon on obedience (on Hebr. xiii. 17). 1610 H, 1613
- H.
- — Rider’s Dictionary, recast by Holyoke (F. de Sacra Quercu).
- Lat.-Engl. and Engl.-Lat. 1627 H.
-
- Holyoke, Thomas, mentioned, 1589 R, 1627 H.
-
- Hommius, Festus. LXX disputationes theologicae adversus Pontificios.
- 1630 H, 1639 H.
-
- Hooker, Richard. MS. of Gregory the Great belonging to him, mentioned.
- 1610 J.
- — Sermon on Faith in the elect, especially of Habakkuk’s faith. 1612
- H.
- — Sermon on Pride. 1612 H.
- — Remedy against sorrow, a sermon. 1612 H.
- — Sermon on Justification (on Hab. i. 4). 1612 H: 2nd ed., 1613 H.
- — Travers’s Supplication against Hooker. 1612 T.
- — Answer to a supplication by mr. Walter Travers. 1612 H.
- — Two sermons on Jude 17–21. 1614 H.
- — His Ecclesiastical Polity, mentioned. 1614 H.
-
- Hopper, Simon. Composed dances for a Masque in 1636. 1636 M.
-
- Horace. A 1470 edition with signatures, p. 248 _n._
-
- Horner, John and Anna, of Mells. Dedication to them. 1612 S.
-
- Howard, Theophilus, duke of Suffolk, _d._ 1640. Dedication to him. 1626
- R.
-
- Howberghe, William (Hubbert), stationer, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Howle, Thomas. An error for Hunt, Thomas. _See_ p. 272.
-
- Howson, dr. John, bp. of Oxford. Sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford, 17 Nov.
- 1602, on Church festivities. 1602 H, 1603 H.
- — Uxore dimissa ... aliam non licet superinducere: thesis. 1602 H,
- 1606 H.
- — Letter to him from Alb. Gentilis, 12 Aug. 1603, in Latin. 1606 B.
- — In controversiam inter Johannem Howsonum et Thomam Pyum tractatus
- (auctore Rob. Burhill). 1606 B.
- — Articles to be enquired of ..., 1619, 1628, 1619 H, 1628 H.
- — Directions to preachers in his diocese. 1622 H.
-
- Hubbert, William. _See_ Howberghe, William.
-
- Hubbocke. William. Oration to the king at the Tower of London, 12 March
- 1603/4, in Latin and English. 1604 H.
-
- Huggins, Thomas, stationer, mentioned, pp. 277, 299, 311, 312, 313.
-
- Hugh, illuminator, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Hugh, of Lincoln, st. Dissertation on his life, by T. Holland. 1601 H.
-
- Huish, Alexander. Edited Flavel’s Tractatus de demonstratione. 1619 F.
-
- Hulderic, prince, of Denmark. Dedication to him. 1633 B.
-
- Humfrey, Laurence. Latin poems by him. 1585 C, 1587 S, 1614 G.
- — Edited Summa et Synopsis Novi Testamenti, and wrote the “Admonitio
- ad Studiosos” in it. 1586 S.
- — mentioned, 1586 S.
- — A view of the Romish Hydra, sermons. 1588 H.
- — Dedications to him. 1615 B, p. 228.
-
- Humiliation. _See_ Bolton, Robert.
-
- Humphrey duke of Gloucester. _See_ Gloucester, Humphrey duke of.
-
- Hungerford, sir Anthony. The advice of a son to his dear mother a Roman
- Catholic; and the memorial of a father. 1639 H.
-
- Hungerford, sir Edward. Edits two treatises of his father. 1639 H.
-
- Hunt, Matthew, bookseller. Edited the ©Historia Britannica©, as “M. H.”
- 1640 C.
- — mentioned, pp. 278, 310, 313.
-
- Hunt, Thomas, stationer and printer, mentioned. 1485 P, pp. 238, 241,
- 272.
-
- Hunter, Robert, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Hunter, W. F., mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Huntly, 2nd marquis of. _See_ Gordon, George.
-
- Hutchins, Edward. Assize sermon, 1586. 1586 H.
- — Sermon on Gal. 5. 12. 1586 H.
- — Sermon on Cant. iv. 7. 1589 H.
-
- Hutchins, Robert. Short catechism (_no date_). 1617 H.
-
- Huth, Henry. His library mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Hutten, Leonard. Answer to a treatise of the Cross in baptism. 1605 H.
-
- Hutton, Thomas. Reasons for refusal of subscription to the Book of
- Common Prayer (by) Ministers of Devon and Cornwall, with an answer.
- 1605 H.
-
- Hyrys, John, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 269.
-
-
- I.
-
- I., T., 1599, 1625. _See_ James, Thomas.
-
- I., W. Translated the ©Jesuit’s Pater Noster© from the French. 1611 J.
-
- Idylls. _See_ Henry, prince, 1612.
-
- Ieronimus. _See_ Jerome, st.
-
- Ilium in Italiam. _See_ Sansbury, John.
-
- Illuminators, &c., in Oxford, pp. 267–78.
-
- Imitation of Christ. _See_ Kempis, Thomas à.
-
- Imprimaturs. _See_ 1638 C.
-
- In controversiam ... _See_ Burhill, Robert, 1606.
-
- Index Expurgatorius. Index generalis librorum prohibitorum a
- Pontificiis, per T. James. 1627 J.
-
- Indulgence. Indulgence of “Oxf. 1489,” mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Ingleby, C. M., mentioned, p. 230.
-
- Inglis sale, 1826, mentioned. 1589 S, p. 264.
-
- Ingmethorp, Thomas. Sermon. 1598 I.
-
- Innocent iii, pope. Indulgence of 1489 or 1499 by him, mentioned, p.
- 10.
-
- Instructions for young gentlemen. _See_ Sermonetta, card.
-
- Insubrica historia. _See_ Puteanus, Erycius.
-
- Iredale, A., bookseller of Torquay, mentioned, p. 262.
-
- Ireland. Proverb about Tuesday being unfortunate to Irish. 1612 D.
-
- Ironside, dr. Gilbert. Seven questions of the Sabbath briefly disputed.
- 1637 I.
-
- Isocrates. Πρὸς Δημόνικον, πρὸς Νικοκλέα, Νικόκλης. _See under_ 1586 C.
- — In Isocratis Busiridem praefatio, per Joh. Prideaux. 1607 P, 1629
- P, 1639 P.
-
- Italian. _See_ Bense, Petrus; Petrucci, Lodovico.
- — Grammar or introduction to the Italian tongue, by J. Sanford. 1605
- S.
- — Italian poems. 1606 O, 1613 O.
-
- Italicus, Peregrinus, de Lugo. Principia seu introductiones, Lond.
- 1506, mentioned, p. 10.
-
- Ive, Simon, musical composer, mentioned. 1636 B.
-
-
- J.
-
- J., S., 1614. _See under_ S., N.
-
- Jackson, Henry, of C.C.C., Oxford. Edited Hooker’s sermon on
- Justification. 1612 H.
- — Edited Wyclif’s Wicket. 1612 W.
- — Probably edited several of Hooker’s smaller treatises. 1612 H.
- — Translated Benefield on Amos into Latin (1614–15). 1613 B.
- — Edited two sermons of dr. Hooker. 1614 H.
- — Mentioned as editor of Rainold’s Orationes. 1614 R.
-
- Jackson, Simon, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 297, 311, 312.
-
- Jackson, Thomas, pres. of Corpus Christi college, Oxford. Two sermons.
- 1617 J.
- — Diverse sermons. 1637 J.
- — Treatise of the consecration of the Son of God. 1638 J.
- — His judgement on Valdés’ ©Considerations©. 1638 V.
-
- Jacobi, Henricus, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 228, 273.
-
- Jacobus de Voragine, mentioned, p. 258.
-
- Jaggard, William, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 298, 312.
-
- James, illuminator, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- James i, king. Dedications, &c., to him. 1603 B, D, O (_bis_), W, 1604
- O, 1605 D, K, T, 1608 S, 1613 P, 1619 O, 1621 D, 1634 B, C, R, 1635
- M.
- — Ad Jacobum carmen, per G. Carleton. 1603 C.
- — Academiae Oxoniensis pietas erga Jacobum regem. 1603 O.
- — Oration to him in the Tower of London, 12 March 1603/4, by W.
- Hubbocke, in Latin and English, with dedication to the king. 1604
- H.
- — Musa hospitalis Ecclesiae Christi Oxon. (poems to greet the king,
- &c.). 1605 O.
- — Rex Platonicus, sive de adventu Regis ad academiam Oxoniensem, 27
- Aug. 1605; narratio ab Is. Wake. 1607 W (_bis_), 1615 W, 1627 W,
- 1635 W, 1663 W.
- — mentioned. 1613 B.
- — His Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance, mentioned. 1613 D.
- — Jacobi ara (congratulatory poems by the University of Oxford, on
- his return from Scotland). 1617 O.
- — Sermon by J. Rawlinson on the king’s “inauguration,” 24 March.
- 1614/5: dedicated also to the king. 1619 R.
- — Mandate about preaching (1622) mentioned. 1622 H.
- — Latin speech to him by dr. J. Prideaux. 24 Aug. 1624. 1624 P.
- — Cenotaphium Jacobi (a funeral oration by dr. John King, with a list
- of the king’s works, &c.). 1625 K.
- — Oxoniensis academiae Parentalia memoriae Jacobi dicata. 1625 O.
- — The Book of Psalms translated by James i. 1631 B.
-
- James ii, king. Poems to celebrate his birth by members of the
- University of Oxford, in Latin, &c. 1633 O.
-
- James, dr. Francis. Dedication to him. 1614 G.
-
- James, Richard. Anti-possevinus, a sermon. 1625 J.
- — Concio ad clerum (Matth. xvi. 18). 1633 J.
- — Edited sir Thomas More’s Epistola ad academiam Oxon., adding some
- Latin poems of his own on Cotton and Allen. 1633 M.
- — Translated Felix’s Octavius into English. 1636 F.
-
- James, dr. Thomas. Richardi de Bury Philobiblon, ed. by T. I. (i. e. T.
- James). 1599 R.
- — Catalogus librorum (impressorum et manuscriptorum) bibliothecae
- Bodleianae, cum elencho expositorum. 1605 J.
- — Enlarged edition of his catalogue of Expositors of the Bible, by J.
- Verneuil. 1635 V.
- — Concordantiae patrum in librum Canticorum. 1607 J.
- — Apology for John Wycliff. 1608 J.
- — Two short treatises of Wycliff, ed. by dr. James, with Glossary.
- 1608 W.
- — Bellum Gregorianum sive corruptionis Romanae in Operibus Gregorii
- loca insigniora (ed. by James). 1610 J.
- — The Jesuit’s downfall threatened against them, with the Life of
- father Parsons. 1612 J.
- — Catalogus bibl. Bodleianae, cum appendice. 1620 J.
- — Humble and earnest request (about restoring perverted texts of the
- Fathers): signed “T. I.” 1625 J.
- — — Explanation or enlarging of the Supplication (a reprint with
- comments of the Request, with rules of Textual Criticism and
- biographical details). 1625 J.
- — His Ecloga Oxonio-Cantabrigiensis mentioned. 1625 J.
- — A manuduction or introduction unto divinity (comments on the
- Articles, &c.). 1625 J.
- — Index generalis librorum prohibitorum a Pontificiis. 1627 J.
-
- James, William, dean of Christ Church, Oxford. Dedications to him. 1586
- C, 1591 T.
- — mentioned. 1587 S.
-
- Jeanes, Henry. A Christian’s careful abstinence from all appearance of
- evil. 1640 J.
-
- Jenkinson, F. J. H., mentioned, pp. vii, 253.
-
- Jenks, Rowland, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Jennings (Fenninge?), William, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Jenson, Nicholas, printer, mentioned. 1485 P.
-
- Jerome, st. For Expositio s. Hieronymi in Symbolum Apostolorum. _See_
- Rufinus, Tyrannius.
-
- Jersey, earl of. _See_ Villiers, Victor Albert.
-
- Jests. Merry jests concerning Popes, monks, and friars. 1617 W.
-
- Jesuits. _See_ James, dr. Thomas, 1612.
- — Relation of an alleged imposture by them in Georgia, 1614. 1633 G.
- — Decretum Universitatis Oxoniensis (contra Jesuitas). 1622 O.
-
- Jesuit’s Pater Noster. The Jesuit’s Pater Noster given to Philip iii
- king of Spain, with the Ave Maria. Englished by W. I. 1611 J.
-
- Jesus Christ. “The last will and testament of Jesus Christ.” _See_
- Communion, Holy.
- — _See_ Spark (1622, Spark of Christ’s beauty).
- — Descent in Hell. _See under_ Parkes, Richard, 1604.
- — Christus, sive dicta et facta Christi, per H. Tozer. 1634 T.
-
- Jewell, bp. John. Apologia ecclesiae Anglicanae, in Greek. 1614 J.
- — — in Greek and Latin. 1639 J.
- — mentioned. 1628 R, 1633 D.
-
- Johannes de Alemannia, alias de Kasterle, scribe, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Johannes Chrysostomus. _See_ Chrysostom, st.
-
- Johannes Duns Scotus. _See_ Duns Scotus, Johannes.
-
- Johannes de Gigliis (Liliis). Indulgence from him 1489 or 1499,
- mentioned, p. 10.
-
- Johannes, Andreas Eudæmon. _See_ Eudæmon-Johannes, Andreas.
-
- John, st., the Evangelist. Life of him by Symeon, ed. by R. Brett in
- Greek and Latin. 1597 S.
-
- John, illuminator, mentioned, p. 267 (_bis_).
-
- John, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- John Rylands library. _See_ Manchester.
-
- Johnes sale, mentioned, p. 261.
-
- Johnson, Benjamin. Poem by him. 1630 A.
- — mentioned, 1640 F, H.
-
- Johnson, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Joliffe, Henry, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Jones, Hugh, printer, mentioned, p. 278.
-
- Josephus, Flavius. Εἰς Μακκαβαίους ἢ περὶ αὐτοκράτορος λογισμοῦ, with
- Latin translation. 1590 J.
-
- Joye, John, illuminator, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Julius, Christianus, Erricus and Gregorius, Danes. Dedication to them.
- 1629 P.
-
- Junius, Francis. Funeral oration on Z. Ursinus, tr. into English. 1600
- U.
-
- Junius, Patricius. _See_ Young, Patrick.
-
- Jus canonicum. _See_ Law—Canon Law.
-
- Jus civile. _See_ Law—Civil Law.
-
- Justification. _See_ Pemble, William.
-
- Juxon, bp., mentioned, p. 252.
-
-
- K.
-
- Kasterle, Johannes de. _See_ Johannes de Alemannia.
-
- Kellett, dr. Edward. Dedication to him. 1633 S.
-
- Kempis, Thomas à. The Imitation of Christ, revised by W. P(age). 1639
- K.
-
- Ketaban. _See_ Gregorius, monk.
-
- Kilbie, Kichard. Funeral sermon on dr. Holland. 1613 K.
-
- Killigrew, sir William, mentioned. 1629 T.
-
- Kinaston, sir Francis. Translated the first two books of Chaucer’s
- Troilus and Cressida into Latin verse. 1635 C.
-
- King, —, printer, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- King, Henry, Sermon on Ps. xxxii. 5 (part of “Two Sermons ...”). 1625
- K.
-
- King, bp. John. Lectures upon Jonas. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.
- — Funeral sermon by him on John Piers archbp. of York, 1594. 1597 K,
- 1599 K, 1600 K.
- — Sermon at York, 1595. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.
- — Articles ministered in his visitation as archdn. of Nottingham,
- 1599, 1605, 1599 K, 1605 K.
- — The fourth sermon (on Cant. viii. 11) preached at Hampton Court, 30
- Sept. 1606. 1606 K, 1607 K.
- — Five sermons before the King. 1607 K.
- — Sermon, on Ps. xlvi. 7–11. 1607 K.
- — Sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford (on 1 Chron. xxix. 26–8). 1608 K.
- — Sermon at Whitehall, 5 Nov. 1608 (on Ps. xi. 2–4). 1608 K.
- — Dedications to him. 1611 B, 1613 B, G.
- — Πανακαδημικὸς sive gratulatio pro Carolo reduce. 1623 O.
- — Cenotaphium Jacobi (an oration). 1625 K.
- — Sermon on 2 Sam. xxiv. 14 (part of “Two Sermons ... “). 1625 K.
- — mentioned, p. 225.
-
- King’s Norton, mentioned, p. 264.
-
- Kingsmill, Thomas. Classicum poenitentiale (et) De Scandalo. 1605 K.
-
- Kingsmill, William. Edited the “Encomion Rodolphi Warcoppi.” 1605 O.
-
- Knight, Roger, mentioned. 1607 D.
-
- Knight, William, of Broadgates hall, Oxford, mentioned. 1622 O.
-
- Knollys, William, lord Knollys of Grays, afterw. earl of Banbury.
- Dedication to him. 1605 O.
-
- Knott, Edward. _See_ Wilson, Matthias.
-
- Kohlburger, Johann Alexander. _See_ Brassicanus, Joh. Alex.
-
- Korsellis. _See_ Corsellis.
-
- Kynaston, sir Francis. _See_ Kinaston, sir Francis.
-
- Kyrfoth, Carolus, printer at Oxford, mentioned. 1519 C, p. 263.
-
-
- L.
-
- L., G. (1636, 1638). _See_ Langbaine, Gerard.
-
- L., H., 1595. _See_ Lewis, Hugh.
-
- L., R., 1594. _See_ Lewes, Richard.
-
- L., T., 1622. _See_ Lodge, Thomas.
-
- Lactantius, Lucius Coelius Firmianus, mentioned. 1627 F.
-
- Lacy, John, mentioned, p. 260.
-
- Laet, Jaspar. Praenostica excerpta e praenosticis Jasparis Laet. 1518
- L, p. 264.
-
- Lake, dr. Arthur, warden of New College, bp. of Bath and Wells.
- Dedications to him. 1616 E, 1617 T, 1619 F, 1625 T.
-
- Lancaster, sir James, mentioned. 1626 C.
-
- Langbaine, dr. Gerard. Edited Longinus de grandiloquentia, as “G. L.”,
- and added a Latin poem on T. Wethereld. 1636 L, 1638 L.
- — Translated Ranchin’s Council of Trent. 1638 R.
-
- Langport, John, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Langton, dr. William, pres. of Magdalen college, Oxford. Dedications to
- him. 1614 J, 1639 J.
-
- Large paper copies. 1634 R.
-
- Latewar, Richard, pres. of St. John’s coll., Oxford. Poem by him, in
- Latin. 1588 C.
-
- Lathbury, John. Latin Commentary on the Lamentations of Jeremiah by
- “Johannes Latteburius.” 1482 L, p. 255.
-
- LATIN:
- _Grammars._
- _See_ Sanford, John.
- Latin Grammar in English. 1481 L, p. 254.
- Anwykyll’s Compendium totius grammaticae. 1483 A, p. 257.
- Lily’s Grammar in Latin and English. 1636 L.
- Grounds of Grammar by J. Bird. 1639 B.
- _Lexicons._
- Bibliotheca scholastica, a double dictionarie (Engl.-Lat. &
- Lat.-Engl.) by John Rider. 1589 R.
- Dictionarium Etymologicum Latinum a Francisco de Sacra Quercu
- (Holyoke). 1627 H.
- Bibliotheca Rideri scholastica, ed. by F. Holyoke (English-Latin).
- 1627 H.
-
- Latteburius, Johannes. _See_ Lathbury, John.
-
- Laud, archbp. William. Dedications to him. 1631 G, 1634 Z, 1636 Z, 1637
- I, 1638 T, 1639 B, G, W.
- — mentioned, 1631 P, 1638 C, 1639 H; cf. p. vii.
- — His action with respect to Potter’s ©Want of Charity©. 1633 P.
- — The “Laudian Statutes” of the University of Oxford. 1634 O.
- — Proclamation by him as Chancellor of the University of Oxford about
- the City Market. 1634 O.
- — Mention of his donations to the Bodleian. 1639 G.
-
- Laurence, Thomas. Two sermons. 1635 L.
-
- LAW:
- _See_ Zouche, Richard.
- Dedication to law students. 1629 Z.
- _Canon Law._
- For the Canon Law of England _see under_ England—Church.
- Interpretes Juris Canonici, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.
- _Civil Law._
- Interpretes Juris Civilis, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.
-
- Layer Marney, Essex, mentioned, p. 246.
-
- Le Blon, C. Engraved a title for Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, 3rd
- and following edd. 1628 B.
-
- Le Duc, Fronto. _See_ Ducæus, Fronto.
-
- Lee Priory press, mentioned. 1596 F.
-
- Leech, Humphrey. Doctrinae Christianae sex capita (adversus H. Leech
- [©Triumph of Truth©]), auctore S. Benefield. 1610 B.
- — — The defence of Truth, by D. Price, against the ©Triumph of Truth©
- by H. Leech. 1610 P.
-
- Legatus. De legato et absoluto principe perduellionis reo. 1587 L.
-
- Legh, Edward. Selected Observations concerning the first twelve Cæsars.
- 1635 L.
-
- Legh, Henry. Dedication to him. 1635 L.
-
- Legh, sir Urian. Sermon at his wedding, by W. Massie, 1586. 1586 M.
-
- Leicester, mentioned. 1639 F.
-
- Leicester, earl of. _See_ Dudley, Robert.
-
- Leigh, sir Thomas. Dedication to him by J. Verneuil, acknowledging his
- and his grandfather (sir Thomas Leigh)’s help. 1628 C.
-
- Lennox, duke of. _See_ Stewart, Ludovic.
-
- Leslie, Henry. Sermon at Windsor, on Heb. iii. 8. 1625 L.
-
- Lesquier, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. 272.
-
- Letters, Latin.
- Cujusdam Christiani Epistola (Camb., 1521), mentioned. 1586 C.
-
- Lewes, Richard. Apologia innocentiae et integritatis R. L[ewes]
- adversus E. Osb[erni] calumnias. 1594 L.
- — Concio habita Oxoniae A.D. 1594 per R. L. (on Phil. iii. 1). 1594
- L.
- — Sermon at Paules Cross (Gen. xxvii. 1–10). 1594 L.
-
- Lewin, sir Justinian. Dedication to him. 1631 W.
-
- Lewis, Hugh. Translation by H. L[ewis] into Welsh of Coverdale’s
- English translation of Wermueller’s ©Precious Pearl©. 1595 W.
-
- Lex Talionis, 1625. _See_ Rawlinson, John.
-
- Ley, John. Letter from him. 1616 P.
-
- Leyden. Ger. Joh. Vossii Theses quas disputandas proposuit in academia
- Leidensi. 1628 V.
- — LXX disputationes theologicae in gratiam Collegii
- Anti-Bellarminiani in acad. Leydensi, auctore F. Hommio. 1630 H,
- 1639 H.
-
- L’Heureux, André, alluded to. 1613 B.
-
- Lhuyd, John. Edited the Peplus Philippi Sidnaei. 1587 S.
- — Edited Josephus Εἰς Μακκαβαίους with a Latin translation and a few
- notes. 1590 J.
- — Barlaamus de papae principatu, Gr.-Lat., ed. by J. Luidus. 1592 B.
-
- Lichfield, John, printer. Latin poem by him. 1633 O.
- — His disputes with Turner mentioned. 1636 L.
- — mentioned, pp. 276, 297, 311.
-
- Lichfield, Leonard, printer. Poems by him. 1636 O, 1638 O, 1640 O.
- — mentioned, pp. 278, 306, 313.
-
- Liliis, Johannes de. _See_ Johannes de Gigliis.
-
- Lily, William. Lily’s Latin Grammar, in Latin and English. 1636 L.
-
- Limbomastix. _See under_ Willett, Andrew.
-
- Lincoln, Sir George St. Paul’s work there. 1613 C.
- — The Cathedral library mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Lincoln, countesses of. _See_ Clinton, Bridget and Elizabeth.
-
- Lindsay, James Ludovic, earl of Crawford and Balcarres, mentioned pp.
- 248, 259.
-
- Linsi-woolsie. _See_ Gamage, William.
-
- Lion in the Lamb, the. _See_ Wall, John, 1628.
-
- Listrius, Gerardus. _See_ Lystrius, Gerardus.
-
- Lithotheorikos. _See_ Thornborough, bp. John.
-
- Lithuanian. _See under_ Bible.
-
- Little, William, mentioned, p. 261.
-
- Liturgy. Explanationes Ricardi Hampole super illas lectiones Job quae
- solent in exequiis defunctorum legi. 1483 H, p. 258.
-
- Llandaff, diocese. Orders for the reformation of abuses issued by the
- bishop. 1603 G.
-
- Llewellin, Martin, mentioned. 1638 O.
- — Poem by him, 1640 F.
-
- Lloyd, John, 1590, 1592. _See_ Lhuyd, John.
-
- Loarte, Gaspare, mentioned. 1585 P.
-
- Lodge, Thomas. Wrote a preface to, and possibly revised, the countess
- of Lincoln’s ©Nursery©. 1622 C.
-
- Logic. _See_ Airay, Christopher; Brerewood, Edward; Flavel, John;
- Prideaux, dr. John; Sanderson, John; Sanderson, Robert; Smiglecius,
- Martinus; Smith, Samuel.
- — Logical treatises, partly by Swineshede, in Latin. 1483 L, p. 258.
-
- Loidoromastix. _See under_ Willett, Andrew.
-
- Lomazzo, Giovanni Paolo. Artes of curious painting &c., tr. by R.
- Haydocke. 1598 L (misplaced under 1599).
-
- Lombard, Peter. _See under_ Duns Scotus, Johannes.
-
- LONDON:
- Summa colloquii (in Turre Londinensi habiti, 1583). 1610 R.
- The fearful summer, or London’s Calamity (the plague), by John
- Taylor (a poem). 1625 T.
- _British Museum._
- mentioned. 1613 B, O, R. 1631 S, 1640 R, pp. 233, 264.
- Bagford collections mentioned. 1631 S.
- Clementis Romani Epistola ad Corinthios prima, edited from the
- Alexandrine MS. by Patricius Junius. 1633 C.
- Oxford 15th cent. books there, p. 240.
- _Guildhall._
- A MS. there mentioned, p. 247.
- _Haberdashers’ Company._
- Dedication to it. 1613 H.
- _Lambeth._
- The library mentioned, pp. 227, 245, 256, 258, 262.
- _Merchants’ Company._
- Dedication to it. 1608 P.
- _Printing._
- _See_ pp. 311–3.
- Sheet of paper printed on the Thames 18 Jan. 1716, mentioned, p. 8.
- _St. Magnus._
- Mentioned. 1629 B.
- _Skinners’ Company._
- Dedication to it. 1626 C.
- _Stationers’ Company._
- Monopoly of Psalms, mentioned. 1615 P.
- Mentioned. 1633 G.
- Its relation to Oxford printing in 1636. 1636 L.
- Its monopoly of primers, &c. (1603) mentioned, p. 276.
- Agreement between it and the University of Oxford, 1636/7, 1639,
- pp. 278, esp. 285, 287.
- _Temple._
- Dispute between Travers and Hooker about the Temple pulpit. _See_
- Travers, Walter, 1612.
- _Tower of London._
- Description of it by W. Hubbocke, chaplain there. 1604 H.
- _Westminster._
- Printing there, mentioned, pp. 246, 250.
- The Chapter library, mentioned, pp. 256, 260.
-
- Longinus, Dionysius. De grandiloquentia (Gr. & Lat.), ed. by dr. Gerard
- Langbaine. 1636 L.
- — 2nd ed. 1638 L.
-
- Lord’s Prayer. The Jesuit’s Pater Noster. 1611 J.
-
- Lots. Defence of the lawfulness of lots in gaming against N. N., by J.
- Downe. 1633 D.
-
- Louis, prince, of Nassau. Dedication to him, 1614. 1630 H, 1639 H.
-
- Louis xiii, King of France. Dedication to him. 1634 B.
- — Advertisement by him, about Balzac. 1639 B.
-
- Louvain, mentioned. 1640 P.
-
- Love’s peerless paragon. _See_ Byrd, Josias.
-
- Lowe, sir Thomas. Dedication to him and others. 1613 H.
-
- Lucian. Cupido (in Greek), mentioned. 1586 C.
- — Select dialogues translated by F. Hickes, with notes and Life by T.
- Hickes. 1634 L.
- — Epigram by him on his own dialogues, with translation. 1634 L.
-
- Luctus posthumus. _See under_ Henry, prince, 1612.
-
- Lübeck, mentioned, p. 248.
-
- Lugdunum Batavorum. _See_ Leyden.
-
- Lugo, Peregrinus Italicus de. _See_ Italicus, Peregrinus, de Lugo.
-
- Luidus, Ioannes. _See_ Lhuyd, John.
-
- Luke, st., the Evangelist. Life of him by Symeon, ed. by R. Brett in
- Greek and Latin. 1597 S.
-
- Lumen. Quaestiones de lumine et luce, Oxf. “1500”, mentioned, p. 10.
-
- Lumley, —, lord Lumley, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Lusus Palatini. _See_ 1613 O.
-
- Lux. Compendium quaestionum de luce et lumine, Oxf. “1510”, mentioned,
- p. 11.
- — Compendium quaestionum de luce et lumine. 1518 L, p. 264.
-
- Lycophron. Alexandra (or Cassandra), in Greek. 1592 L.
-
- Lyford, William. Edited Pinke’s ©Trial©: _see_ Pinke, William, 1630,
- 1631, 1636.
-
- Lyndewoode, William. Opus W. Lyndewoode (de Tylia nemore) super
- Constitutiones provinciales. 1483 L, p. 258.
-
- Lynne, Richard, stationer, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Lyster, Edmund, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Lystrius, Gerardus, Rhenensis. Oratio, Carmen, &c., mentioned, pp. 8,
- 9, 227.
-
-
- M.
-
- M., C. B., 1629. This is Carolus Butler, Magdalenensis: _see_ Butler,
- Charles, 1629 B, 1633 B.
-
- M., T., 1617. _See_ Morrice, Thomas.
-
- Mabbe, James, of Magdalen college, Oxford. Translated Aleman’s Rogue.
- (Diego Puede-Ser = J. Maybe). 1630 A.
-
- Machiavelli, Niccolo, interlocutor. _See_ Attonitus, Richardus, 1626.
-
- Madesdon, John, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Majestas. _See_ Cooke, James, 1608.
-
- Maldon, co. Surrey. Merton College Case (about Maldon). 1623 O.
-
- Maleficae. _See under_ Gentilis, Albericus.
-
- Manchester. The Chetham library mentioned, p. 253.
- — Oxford 15th cent. books owned by the John Rylands (Spencer)
- library, p. 240.
- — The John Rylands (once the Spencer) library, mentioned, pp. 228,
- 249, 264.
-
- Manciple, Henry, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Mandevill, Robert. Timothy’s task, or a Christian sea-card. 1619 M.
-
- Mansell, lady Katherine. Dedication to her. 1613 G.
-
- Manuduction, 1625. _See_ James, Thomas.
-
- Manuscripts. _See_ Transcription.
- — Table of MSS. used by dr. Tho. James in his Manuduction unto
- divinity. 1625 J.
-
- Map, Walter, mentioned. 1626 A, p. 313.
-
- Market Raisin. _See_ Rasen Market.
-
- Marlborough. Sermon preached there by B. Parsons. 1637 P.
-
- Marprelate controversy, mentioned. 1587 P, 1588 P.
-
- Marshall, William. Engravings by him. 1631 B, 1636 L, 1638 A, L, 1639
- B, 1640 B (_see_ frontispiece).
-
- Martin, scribe, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Martin, James (“Jacobus Aretius”). Editor of verses on prince Henry.
- 1612 H.
-
- Martyr, Peter. De Sacramento Eucharistiae, “1549”, mentioned, p. 12.
- — Letter from him to bp. Jewell, in Latin. 1639 J.
-
- Mary, St., the Virgin. Our Lady’s Psalter. _See_ Psalter.
-
- Mary, queen of Charles i. Musarum Oxoniensium Charisteria pro regina
- Maria. 1638 O.
-
- Mary de’ Medici, queen of France. The Ave Maria to the queen of France.
- 1611 J.
-
- Mary countess of Pembroke. _See_ Pembroke, Mary countess of.
-
- Mary, queen of Scots. De legato (a treatise to support queen Elizabeth
- in putting Mary queen of Scots to death). 1587 L.
-
- Mason, Francis. The authority of the church, 2nd ed. 1634 M.
-
- Masque. The king and queen’s Entertainment at Richmond in a Masque, 12
- Sept. 1636. 1636 M.
-
- Mass displayed. _See_ Bedé, Jean.
-
- Massie, William. Wedding sermon, 1586. 1586 M.
-
- Massinger, Philip, mentioned. 1640 F.
-
- Matthew, archbp. Tobias. Dedication to him. 1593 G.
- — Concio apologetica adversus Campianum (on Deut. xxxii. 7). 1638 M.
-
- Matthias, grand duke of Austria. Dedication to him. 1633 R.
-
- Maurer, Benjamin Auber. Dedication to him, 1621. 1631 V.
-
- Maurice, prince of Orange, mentioned. 1626 A.
- — Dedication to him, 1614. 1630 H, 1639 H.
-
- Maurice, Nicholas, mentioned. 1592 C.
-
- Mauritius de Portu Hiberniae, mentioned, p. 227.
-
- Mawle of Heretics. Name given to S. Price. 1614 P.
-
- Maximilian, grand duke of Austria. Dedication to him. 1633 R.
-
- Maximus Tyrius. Disputationes tres (in Latin). 1614 R.
-
- May games. Sermon against May-games, 1598, by H. R(oberts). 1600 R.
-
- Mayence. Mayence printing mentioned, p. 246.
-
- Mayne, Jasper, mentioned. 1638 O.
- — The City Match, a comedy. 1639 M.
-
- Medicine. _See_ Primerose, James.
-
- Mediolanum. _See_ Milan.
-
- Meditation. _See_ Bible—_O.T._—©Psalms© (1613).
-
- Meerman sale, mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Meisey Hampton. _See_ Meysey Hampton.
-
- Melancholy. The Anatomy of Melancholy. _See_ Burton, Robert.
-
- Memnon. Excerpta de Heraclaea Pontica, Gr. et Lat. 1597 A, p. 229.
-
- Mercurius, interlocutor. _See_ Attonitus, Richardus, 1626.
-
- Mercurius Davidicus. _See_ 1634 M.
-
- Meredith, Christopher, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 301, 313.
-
- Merry jests. _See_ Jests.
-
- Meslier, Hugo, 1506, mentioned, p. 11.
-
- Metaphysics. _See_ Crakanthorp, Richard.
-
- Metaphysic. _See_ Scheibler, Christophorus.
-
- Meteorology. _See_ Fromondus, Libertus.
-
- Meysey Hampton, co. Gloucester. Sermons delivered there, by S.
- Benefield. 1613 B.
-
- Michelborne, Edward. Dedication to him, with his reply. 1601 F.
-
- Michelborne, Thomas. Verses by him. 1596 F.
-
- Microcosmos. _See_ Davies, John.
-
- Microcosmus. _See_ Heylyn, Peter.
-
- Middleton, dr. Conyers, mentioned, p. 247.
-
- Middleton, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Milan (Mediolanum). _See_ Zouche, Richard.
- — mentioned. 1640 P.
-
- Miles, Edward, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Millard, rev. J. E., mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Miller, Conrad, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Miller, Henry, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Millissent, sir John. Dedication to him. 1625 T.
-
- Milward, Henry, stationer, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Mirk, John. The book that is called Festivall. 1486 M, p. 260.
-
- Miscellanea theologica. _See_ Fuller, Nicholas.
-
- Molinaeus, Petrus. _See_ Du Moulin, Pierre.
-
- Montacutius, R. _See_ Mountague, bp. Richard.
-
- Montague, James, bp. of Bath and Wells, afterwards of Winchester.
- Dedications to him. 1616 G, 1617 J.
-
- Montgomery, earl of. _See_ Herbert, Philip.
-
- Montpellier. Description of the University (academia Monspeliaca) by J.
- Primerose, in Latin. 1631 P.
-
- Moore, John, bp. of Ely. His Library (now at Cambridge) mentioned, p.
- 9.
-
- Moore, Robert. Diarium historico poeticum. 1595 M.
-
- More, Jean, Poems on John Sanford, in French. 1605 S.
-
- More, John, stationer, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- More, sir Thomas. Epistola ad academiam Oxoniensem. 1633 M.
-
- Moreton, near Thame, mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Morgan, William, bp. of St. Asaph. Dedication to him. 1602 P.
-
- Morlet, Pierre. Janitrix (a French Grammar, in Latin). 1596 M.
-
- Mornay, Philippe de, seigneur Du Plessis. Two homilies (two issues, one
- with and one without the author’s name). 1612 M.
- — Homily on Matt. xvi. 18, tr. from the French by I. V. 1615 M.
-
- Morrice, Thomas. Digesta scholastica, per T. M. (T. Morrice?). 1617 M.
-
- Moss, Joseph William, mentioned. 1640 B.
-
- Motteshead, —, printer, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Mottoes. _See_ Proverbs.
-
- Moulin, Pierre du. _See_ Du Moulin, Pierre.
-
- Mountague, bp. Richard. Apparatus ad Origines Ecclesiasticas,
- collectore R. Montacutio. 1635 M.
-
- Mourray, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1607 C.
-
- Murder. _See_ Storre, William.
-
- Muretus, Marcus Antonius. Verse translation of his Institution for
- Children, by J. Downe. 1635 D.
-
- Murray, sir David. Dedication to him. 1613 P.
-
- Musae regnantes. Running title of I. Wake’s ©Rex Platonicus©, 1607, &c.
-
- Music. The praise of music (attributed to J. Case). 1586 M.
- — — discussion on its authorship, p. 279.
- — Apologia musices, by J. Case. 1588 C.
- — — mentioned, p. 279.
- — The first music printed (engraved) at Oxford. 1609 B.
-
- Mychelborne, Thomas. _See_ Michelborne, Thomas.
-
- Mystery of godliness. _See_ Spark, William.
-
-
- N.
-
- N. Exercitatio adversus N., auctore Johanne Downe. 1635 D.
-
- N., B. P. _See_ B. P. N.
-
- N., C., 1638. _See_ Caussin, Nicolas.
-
- N., E. Dedication to him. 1613 B.
-
- N., K. Dedication to her. 1613 B.
-
- N., N. Treatises by J. Downe against N. N. 1633 D.
-
- N., S. (an error for S., N.). 1614 N.
-
- Naghel, Fredericus, de Trajecto, scribe, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Nassau, count of. _See_ Ernest Casimir.
-
- Natural science. _See_ Sennertus, Daniel.
-
- Netherlands. _See_ Belgium.
-
- Nettles, Stephen. Answer to the Jewish part of Selden’s History of
- tithes. 1625 N.
-
- Neville, sir Henry, of Pillingbere, Berkshire. Dedications to him. 1603
- C, 1628 W.
-
- New Sarum. _See_ Salisbury.
-
- New Testament. _See_ Bible—_New Testament_.
-
- Newcastle upon Tyne. Sermons preached there by T. Jackson. 1637 J.
-
- Newnham Regis. Discourse of certain baths near Newnham Regis, 1587, p.
- 22.
-
- Newton, N., printer, mentioned, p. 228.
-
- Nicholas de Bolswert (Bodelswerdia), alias de Frisia, scribe,
- mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Nichols, John. His Progresses of James i, mentioned. 1604 H.
-
- Nider, Johannes. His Expositio Decalogi mentioned, p. 247.
-
- Nixon, Anthony. The dignity of man, by N. A. 1616 N.
-
- Nixon, alias Way, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Nobleman. Instruction of a young nobleman. _See_ Cleland, James.
-
- Nonae Novembres. _See_ Cooper, Thomas.
-
- Nonsuch, co. Surrey. Sermon preached there, 1605. 1605 W.
- — mentioned. 1607 C.
-
- Normandy. _See_ Zouche, Richard.
-
- Norris, Henry, lord Norris, mentioned. 1592 E.
-
- Norton, John, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 306, 313.
-
- Nottingham, William of. _See_ William of Nottingham.
-
- Noye, William, attorney general. Dedication to him. 1633 C.
-
- Numismatics. Comparison of foreign and English coins. 1621 H.
- — Of the value of the Roman sesterce, by G(eorge) H(akewill). 1627 H.
-
- Nuntius chronogrammaticus. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- Nursing. _See_ Clinton, Elizabeth, countess of Lincoln.
-
-
- O.
-
- Oath. _See_ Churchwardens.
- — _See_ Supremacy.
-
- Octavius. _See_ Felix, Marcus Minucius.
-
- Odes. _See_ Catilinariae proditiones.
-
- Offenius, a Dane, mentioned. 1629 P.
-
- Oldys, William. His ©British Librarian© mentioned. 1634 A.
-
- Olympiads, as a method of reckoning time, mentioned, p. 260.
-
- Optic glass of humours. _See_ Walkington, Thomas.
-
- Orange, prince of. _See_ Maurice, prince of Orange.
- — _See_ Philip, prince of Orange.
-
- Oratory. _See_ Butler, Charles.
-
- Orford, W., of Exeter coll. Oxford, mentioned. 1614 P.
-
- Origines ecclesiasticae. _See_ Mountague, bp. Richard.
-
- Orthography. _See_ Phonetic spelling.
-
- Orthologus, interlocutor. 1619 B.
-
- Osberne, Edward. Apologia innocentiae R. L[ewes], adversus E. Osb[erni]
- calumnias. 1594 L.
-
- Osborne, Thomas, bookseller. His book-sale in 1756 mentioned, p. 8.
-
- Our Lady’s Psalter. _See_ Psalter.
-
- Overton, John. Exposition of Gen. xxxiii. 1–3. 1586 O.
-
- Ovid. His Heroïdes (Hippolytus) mentioned. 1586 S.
- — The Metamorphoses englished by G(eorge) S(andys). 1632 O.
-
- Owen, sir Roger. Dedication to him. 1614 P.
-
- Owen, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1597 S.
-
- OXFORD:
- Invitatorius panegyricus, de Elizabethae reginae posteriore ad
- Oxoniam adventu: per Rob. Burhill. 1603 O.
- Visit of Abr. Scultetus to Oxford, mentioned. 1613 B.
- Description of recent buildings in Oxford, 1624, in Latin. 1624 P.
- Cowper 1637. An almanack referred to the famous university and city
- of Oxford. 1637 C.
- Note on _Oxonia_, _Oxonium_, _Rhydychen_, _Bellositum Dobunorum_, p.
- 292. _See_ 1628 V.
- _All Souls College._
- Mentioned, pp. 252, 256, 259.
- _Balliol College._
- Story of damage to the library done by father Parsons, and his
- expulsion. 1612 J.
- Mentioned, p. 255.
- _Bodleian Library._
- Mentioned as a Panbiblion, by R. Haydocke. 1598 L.
- Mentioned. 1599 C, R, 1608 W, pp. 263, 264 (_ter_).
- Early history of it, by T. James. 1605 J.
- Catalogus librorum (impressorum et manuscriptorum), auctore T.
- James. 1605 J.
- MSS. mentioned. 1608 J.
- MSS. of Gregory the Great mentioned. 1610 J.
- Dedications to the Curators. 1620 D, 1627 J.
- Catalogus universalis librorum, auctore Thoma James. Accessit
- Appendix. 1620 J.
- — the University paid for the above catalogue. 1620 J.
- List of books in the library prohibited by Roman Catholic
- authority. 1627 J.
- Arabic MSS. there in 1626 mentioned. 1627 P.
- Fictitious entry of a 1628 Catalogus librorum. 1628 B.
- Poems to Johannes Cirenbergius about MS. Roe 20 (Council of Bâle).
- 1631 O.
- Appendix ad Catalogum librorum, per J. Rouse. 1635 R.
- Catalogus interpretum S. Scripturae in bibliotheca Bodleiana (per
- J. Verneuil). 1635 V.
- Deliciae deliciarum sive Epigrammatum in bibliotheca Bodleiana
- ἀνθολογία, opera A. Wright. 1637 D.
- A Nomenclator of Sermons (chiefly in the Bodleian) by J. Verneuil.
- 1637 V.
- Statuta, 1620. 1638 O.
- Mention of Laud’s benefactions. 1639 G.
- Oxford 15th cent. books there, p. 240.
- _Brasenose College._
- Dedication to it. 1631 B.
- Mentioned, pp. 255, 256, 262.
- _Christ Church._
- Ulysses Redux, tragoedia in Aede Christi publice recitata, 1591,
- auctore Gul. Gager. 1592 G.
- Musa hospitalis Ecclesiae Christi Oxon. (poems to greet the King
- &c.). 1605 O.
- Liber precum publicarum in usum ecclesiæ Cathedralis Christi Oxon.
- 1615 P, 1639 P.
- Dedication to the dean and canons. 1638 B.
- Poems by Ch. Ch. men on lord Bayning’s death. 1638 O.
- The Royal Slave, a tragi-comedy by W. Cartwright, acted at Christ
- Church in 1636. 1639 C, 1640 C.
- Bp. Bancroft mentioned as inscribing the Cathedral communion plate.
- 1639 G.
- _City._
- Orders for the market, issued by the Chancellor of the University
- (undated). 1602 O.
- — 1606. 1606 O.
- Mention of S. Price as a City Lecturer in 1613–14. 1614 P.
- Proclamation by the Chancellor of the University for the
- well-ordering of the Market. 1634 O.
- Bookbinder’s bridge, Schidyard st., St. John Baptist st., Cat st.,
- and Cheney lane, mentioned as connected with books, p. 266.
- Mention of a commission to search St. Frideswide’s Fair for
- heretical books, 1531, p. 273.
- _Colleges and Halls._
- Miscellanea de antiquis aulis et collegiis, auctore B. Twyne. 1608
- T.
- Dedication to Heads of Houses. 1612 D.
- Lists of Colleges in official order of dignity, and of antiquity:
- also of Founders of Colleges, &c. 1612 D.
- _Corpus Christi College._
- MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.
- Sir George St. Paul’s benefaction to the college mentioned. 1613 C.
- Mentioned, pp. 230, 256 (_bis_), 260 (_bis_), 264, 265.
- _County._
- Dedication to the Judges and Justices of the County. 1612 J.
- _Diocese._
- Articles to be inquired of in the diocese, 1619. 1619 H.
- — 1628. 1628 H.
- — 1629. 1629 C.
- — 1632. 1632 B.
- — 1635. 1635 B.
- — 1638. 1638 B.
- Directions to preachers. 1622 H.
- _Exeter College._
- Threni Exoniensium in obitum Iohannis Petrei, filii Guil. Petrei.
- 1613 O.
- Sermon at the consecration of the chapel. 1624: by dr. J. Prideaux,
- with notes of Exeter men. 1625 P, 1637 P (ix).
- Mentioned. 1634 T.
- _Jesus College._
- Mentioned, p. 259, p. 264 (_quater_).
- _Lincoln College._
- Carmen in adventum Lecestrensis Comitis ad collegium Lincolniense.
- 1585 D.
- _Magdalen College._
- _See_ Waynflete, William.
- Hermaica gymnasmata (exercises by a Magdalen man). 1589 H.
- Sanford’s Εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια, on occasion of a banquet at Magdalen to
- Queen Elizabeth’s retinue, 1592. 1592 S.
- Two poems to the college by J. Davies. 1603 D, 1605 D.
- Dedication to, and rhetorical description of, the college, by J.
- Sanford. 1605 S.
- Beatae Mariae Magdalenae lachrymae in obitum Gulielmi Grey. 1606 O.
- Luctus posthumus, sive ... Magdalenensium officiosa pietas. (Poems
- on prince Henry’s death.) 1612 H.
- Mentioned, p. 255.
- _Magdalen hall._
- Dedication to its members. 1629 P.
- _Merton College._
- MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.
- Mentioned. 1613 B, pp. 254, 255, 258.
- Bodleiomnema (Latin poems on sir Thomas Bodley’s death, by members
- of Merton). 1613 O.
- Merton College Case. 1623 O.
- _New College._
- Six homilies of St. Chrysostom in Greek, ed. from New college MSS.
- 1586 C.
- Peplus Philippi Sidnaei (poems by New college men). 1587 S.
- Dedications to the college. 1602 T, 1609 R.
- Encomion Rodolphi Warcoppi (poems in his memory by New college
- men). 1605 O.
- MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.
- Account of New college by L. Petrucci, in Ital. and Latin verse.
- 1613 P.
- Mentioned. 1615 E, pp. 228, 255, 256 (_bis_), 258, 259, 290.
- A book-label there, printed by Barnes, 1593, p. 229.
- _Oriel College._
- MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.
- Dedications to it. 1612 D, 1615 D.
- Day’s Dial, dedicated to Oriel college, and comprising 12 lectures
- there delivered, by John Day. 1614 D.
- Mentioned, pp. 252, 254.
- _Printing._
- _See_ Greek; Hebrew; Turner, William.
- List of printers &c. in Oxford, pp. 267–78.
- Allusion to the origin of printing. 1585 C.
- First printing in England (in 1459) ascribed to it, p. 8.
- Printing there in “1461”, p. 8.
- Description of Oxford type, “1468”–1486/7, p. 241: 1517–9, p. 263:
- 1585–1640, p. 290.
- The Oxford Jerome in the University archives mentioned, p. 252
- (_bis_).
- Notes of the first book at the new Press, 1585. 1585 C.
- Description of Devices, Woodcuts &c., 1585–1640, p. 289.
- A Committee of Convocation de libris imprimendis, 1586, p. 275.
- One press at Oxford allowed, 1586, p. 275.
- Errata excused. 1591 S.
- John Sanford was “Corrector Typogr.” in 1592. 1592 T.
- Fictitious Oxford imprints of books really printed in London, p.
- 292.
- Note of the time taken to print a book. 1608 P.
- The first music printed (engraved) at Oxford. 1609 B.
- Amount produced by a press in 1625. 1625 J.
- Description of type in use in 1629. 1629 B.
- Printing in red. 1631 P, 1634 C, R, 1635 L, M, 1637 B, C, W, 1638
- O, pp. 253, 292.
- In gold, 1633 O, p. 292.
- The first two charters allowing printing to the University, 1632,
- 1632/3, pp. 277, esp. 281 and 283.
- Printing privileges at Oxford 1632–36/7. 1636 L.
- Note of an Oxford book begun in 1768 and still in progress. 1634 O.
- Agreement with the Stationers’ Company, 1636/7, 1639, pp. 278, esp.
- 285, 287.
- Decree of Star-Chamber, allowing rights of printing, 1637, p. 278.
- A case of the author having no proofs sent him. 1637 I.
- The Statute de Typographis, pp. 278, esp. 287.
- Architypographus mentioned, pp. 278, 288.
- Sheldonian press mentioned. 1608 W.
- _Queen’s College._
- Mentioned, pp. 253, 256, 259.
- _St. John’s Coll._
- MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.
- Complimentary Latin verses by St. John’s men. 1640 S.
- Mentioned, pp. 255, 260, 263.
- _St. Mary the Virgin_, parish.
- Oratio funebris habita ab I. Wake in templo B. Mariae, 25 Maii
- 1607. 1607 W, 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.
- Dedication to the parish. 1612 D.
- Mention of mr. Day’s first sermon as vicar, 1609. 1612 D.
- _Trinity College._
- Decretum de gratiis collegio rependendis. 1602 O.
- Mentioned, p. 255.
- _University._
- Agreement that parchment-sellers, illuminators and scribes were in
- the jurisdiction of the University, A.D. 1290, p. 268.
- — a similar acknowledgment about stationers, A.D. 1345, _ibid._
- Valuable books only to be sold by the authorized stationers, A.D.
- 1373/4, pp. 269, 281.
- Statute about stationers receiving clothes from graduates, 1411, p.
- 270.
- Compotus manualis ad usum Oxoniensium. 1519 C.
- Said to have instituted the keeping of Nov. 17 as the Queen’s Day,
- in 1569 (?). 1601 H; cf. 1602 H.
- State alluded to. 1587 P.
- Petition to Convocation (1590) about Case’s Sphaera civitatis,
- mentioned. 1588 C.
- Sanford’s Εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια on occasion of Queen Elizabeth’s visit
- to Oxford, &c., 1592. 1592 S.
- Dedications to it. 1592 B (“the gentlemen of Oxford”), 1604 S, 1608
- C, R, 1610 B (preface), 1619 M, 1627 H, P, 1628 W, 1631 P, 1637
- B, W (the Vice-chancellor and Heads of Houses), 1640 B (the two
- Universities).
- Quaestiones &c. in Schola Theologica, 1597, p. 230.
- Theses R. Brett in Comitiis, 1597, p. 230.
- Account of conferment of D.D. degree. 1599 H.
- De manuscriptis Oxoniensibus [list of authors, an appendix to T.
- James’s edition of Richard de Bury’s Philobiblon]. 1599 R.
- Chancellor’s Orders for the Market (undated). 1602 O.
- Answer of the University to the Petition of Ministers desiring
- reformation of the Church. 1603 O (4 issues, one undated), 1604
- O.
- Funebre officium in memoriam Elisabethae reginae. 1603 O.
- Academiae Oxoniensis pietas erga Jacobum regem (poems). 1603 O.
- Rex Platonicus, sive de adventu Jacobi Regis ad academiam
- Oxoniensem, 27 Aug. 1605, narratio ab Is. Wake. 1607 W (_bis_),
- 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W, 1663 W.
- Orders of the Chancellor for the Market. 1606 O.
- Theses for D.C.L. degree, 1608. 1608 C.
- Ilium in Italiam (engravings of University and college arms, with
- poems). 1608 S.
- Reference to the Act of 1608. 1609 H.
- Theological prælections by S. Benefield, in Latin. 1610 B.
- Allusion to the subject of Evangelical Counsels at Oxford (1609?).
- 1610 P.
- Account of a stay in Oxford 1610–13, by L. Petrucci: in Ital. and
- Latin verse. 1613 P.
- Testimonials given to C. Angelus, 1610 and 1618. 1618 A.
- Sir George St. Paul’s benefaction to the New Schools (about 1612?).
- 1613 C.
- Case of a commoner of Corpus Christi college not matriculated. 1613
- C.
- Epithalamia sive lusus Palatini in nuptias Frederici et
- Elizabethae. (Verses by Oxford men.) 1613 O.
- Thesis at the Act. 1613, quoted. 1613 P.
- Justa funebria Ptolemaei Oxoniensis (Latin verses on sir Thomas
- Bodley, by members of the University). 1613 O.
- Carmina funebria in obitum Georgii de Sancto Paulo (perhaps by
- members of the University). 1614 S.
- Allusion to lord Paget’s benefactions to the Margaret Professor of
- Divinity. 1615 B.
- Jacobi ara (congratulatory poems to James i). 1617 O.
- Funebria sacra memoriae Annae reginae dicata (Latin poems). 1619 O.
- Clerk of the University mentioned (Edward Miles, about 1620–30), p.
- 277.
- Thomae Baylaei diatribae duae in Schola Theologica Oxon., 1621.
- 1626 B.
- Form of Latin oath to be taken by all graduates (in favour of
- Passive Obedience). 1622 O.
- Decretum Universitatis damnans propositiones neotericorum. 1622 O.
- Ultima linea Savilii. Justa Academica. 1622 O.
- Carolus redux: Latin poems to congratulate Charles i. 1623 O.
- Schola moralis in funere Whiti pullata (poems and oration). 1624 O.
- Oxoniensis Academiae Parentalia memoriae Jacobi dicata. 1625 O.
- Epithalamia Oxoniensia in Caroli regis cum Henrietta Maria
- connubium. 1625 O.
- Oratio auspicalis primi praelectoris Camdeniani (Deg. Whear.) 1625
- W.
- Approbation of dr. James’s literary schemes. 1625 J.
- John Taylor’s Farewell to Oxford, and notes of his stay there. 1625
- T.
- Oratio habita in Schola Theologica 9 Nov. (1626) per Sam. Fell.
- 1627 F.
- Oriental studies mentioned. 1627 P.
- Ordo sive series electionis Procuratorum, with Statuta de
- Procuratoribus. 1629 O.
- The relation of the University to play acting, mentioned. 1629 R.
- Britanniae Natalis (poems on the birth of Charles ii). 1630 O.
- Ad Johannem Cirenbergium carmen (8 poems by members of the
- University). 1631 O.
- The burning of Pareus’s treatises at Oxford in 1622, mentioned.
- 1631 P.
- Vitis Carolinae gemma altera (poems). 1633 O.
- Musarum Oxoniensium pro rege suo soteria (poems). 1633 O.
- Solis Britannici [i.e. regis] perigaeum (poems by Oxford men). 1633
- O.
- Corpus Statutorum universitatis Oxoniensis. 1634 O, cf. p. 292.
- Bidding prayer (informal). 1634 B.
- Proclamation by the Chancellor for the well-ordering of the Market.
- 1634 O.
- Residence without matriculation or taking a degree. 1634 S.
- Encyclopaedia, seu orbis literarum (Cyclus Praelectorum) (engraved
- sheet of times and subjects of lectures &c.: possibly by T.
- Crossfield). 1635 O.
- Synopsis seu epitome statutorum (possibly by Tho. Crossfield). 1635
- O.
- Flos Britannicus (poems on the birth of the princess Anne). 1636 O.
- Coronae Carolinae quadratura. 1636 O.
- Musarum Oxoniensium Charisteria pro regina Maria. 1638 O.
- Speculum Academicum, 1638, p. 235.
- Poems by members of the University in honour of the birth of prince
- Henry. 1640 O.
- Epistolae Genevensium et Oxoniensium, 1708, mentioned. 1608 W.
- .tb
- Summorum Oxoniensis academiae magistratuum catalogus. 1608 T.
- Antiquitatis academiae Oxoniensis apologia, auctore B. Twyno. 1608
- T, 1620 T.
- The University Arms, pp. 289–90.
- Quaestiones in Vesperiis et Comitiis, p. 225.
- _Wadham College._
- Mentioned, pp. 256, 260, 262.
- _Worcester College._
- Mentioned, 1608 R, p. 255.
-
- Oxford, earl of. _See_ Harley, Robert.
-
-
- P.
-
- P., B., 1637. _See_ Parsons, Bartholomew.
-
- P., G., 1594, 1598. _See_ Powell, Griffith.
- — Translated part of N. Caussin’s ©Cour Sainte© into English. 1638 C.
-
- P., H., 1593. _See_ Price, Henry.
-
- P., I., of St. John’s college, Oxford. Distich by him, in Latin, p.
- 228.
-
- P., I., 1600. _See_ Perrot, sir James.
-
- P., I., 1624. _See_ Prideaux, John.
-
- P., P., 1640. _See_ Papillon, Philip.
-
- P., R., 1585, 1610. _See_ Parsons, Robert, 1585.
-
- P., T., 1586. _See_ Pye, Thomas.
-
- P., W., 1626. _See_ Pinke, William.
-
- P., W., 1639. _See_ Page, dr. William.
-
- P., W. T. List of foreign coins. 1627 H.
-
- Paffroet, Richard, mentioned, p. 242.
-
- Page, Margaret, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Page, dr. William. A justification of bowing at the name of Jesus. 1631
- P.
- — Revised the ©Imitation of Christ©, in English. 1639 K.
-
- Paget, William, lord Paget of Beaudesert. Dedication to him. 1615 B.
-
- Palmer, Clement Sadler, London bookseller, mentioned. 1631 F.
-
- Panke, John. Short admonition by way of dialogue. 1604 P.
- — The fall of Babel (against Papists). 1608 P.
- — — 1613, p. 231.
- — — 1623, 1623 P.
- — Eclogarius or the title of Supreme Governor given to his Majesty,
- confirmed (on the oath of Supremacy). 1612 P.
- — Collectanea, out of St. Gregory and St. Bernard (against the Roman
- Church). 1618 P.
-
- Papillon, Philip. Edited Harding’s Sicily and Naples, as ‘P. P.’ 1640
- H.
-
- Papistogelastes, 1614. _See_ S., N.
-
- Paragon of Persia. _See_ Hayes, William.
-
- Parallelus Torti. _See_ Eudaemon-Johannes, Andreas.
-
- Pararuades (= Errata). 1621 T.
-
- Parchment-sellers, &c., in Oxford, pp. 267–78.
-
- Parentalia, 1625. _See_ Oxford—Univ.
-
- Parentatio historica. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- Pareus, David, mentioned. 1622 O, 1631 P.
- — Commentarius in SS. Matthaeum, Petrum, et in Joelem, Amos,
- Haggaeum. 1631 P.
-
- Paris. The National Library mentioned, pp. 252, 259.
-
- Parkes, Richard. His ©Apologie© referred to. 1604 A.
- — A brief answer unto certain objections against the descension of
- Christ into hell. (anon.) 1604 A, 1613 A.
- — mentioned, p. 230.
-
- Parkhurst, bp. John, mentioned 1586 S.
-
- Parne, Richard, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Parre, bp. Richard. Burial sermon on lord Spencer, 1627, on Ps. xxxvii.
- 37. 1628 P.
- — Sermon on Rev. iii. 4. 1628 P.
-
- Parry, David. Reprint of two of his prefaces in the 1587 ed. of
- Ursinus’s Catechism. 1600 U.
- — Two discourses of Ursinus, translated by Parry. 1600 U.
-
- Parry, Henry, bp. of Gloucester. Ursinus’s Summe of Christian religion,
- tr. by H. Parrie. 1587 U, 1589 U, 1591 U, 1595 U, 1601 U.
- — Concio de victoria Christiana, in Apoc. iii. 21. 1593 P, 1594 P.
- — Summa colloquii J. Rainoldi cum J. Harto (1583), H. Parraeo
- interprete. 1610 R.
-
- Parsons, Bartholomew. Dorcas, a sermon (on Acts ix. 36). 1631 P.
- — Sermon on Boaz and Ruth (Ruth iv. 11). 1633 P.
- — Funeral sermon on sir F. Pile, on Is. lvii. 2. 1636 P.
- — Honos et onus Levitarum, on Tithes vindicated. By B. P. 1637 P.
- — Sermon on Eph. vi. 12–13. 1637 P.
-
- Parsons, Robert, the Jesuit. Book of Christian exercise appertaining to
- Resolution. By R. P. [i.e. R. Parsons]. 1585 P (_bis_).
- — Christian Directory, mentioned. 1585 P.
- — mentioned, 1608 J.
- — ‘R. P.’s ©Resolution© or ©Directory© mentioned. 1610 B.
- — Life of Parsons, by dr. James. 1612 J.
- — mentioned, p. 228.
-
- Pasor, Matthias. Oratio pro linguae Arabicae professione, 1626. 1627 P.
-
- Pass, Simon, engraver. Titlepage by him. 1636 P.
-
- Passive Obedience. _See_ Dunster, John, 1610.
- — Decretum Universitatis Oxoniensis (in favour of Passive Obedience).
- 1622 O.
-
- Pater Noster. _See_ Lord’s Prayer.
-
- Path to piety. _See_ Hinde, William.
-
- Patten, William. _See_ Waynflete, William.
-
- Pavonius, Franciscus. Summa Ethicae. 1633 P.
-
- Payne and Foss, messrs., booksellers, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Peerse, Elias, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 299, 311, 312, 313.
-
- Peirce, Frances, bookseller, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Peirce, Nicholas, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Pembelus, Guilielmus. _See_ Pemble, William.
-
- Pemble, William. Vindiciae fidei or a treatise of justification by
- faith. 1625 P, 1629 P.
- — Five sermons. 1628 P.
- — — 2nd ed. 1629 P.
- — De sensibus internis tractatus. Guil. Pembeli. 1629 P.
- — Brief introduction to Geography. 1630 P.
- — Sum of moral philosophy. 1630 P, 1632 P.
- — Enchiridion Oratorium (?). 1633 P.
-
- Pembroke, earl of. _See_ Herbert, George R. C., Henry, Philip, William.
-
- Pembroke, Mary countess of. The Countess of Pembroke’s Love (with a
- dedication to her), by Nicholas Breton. 1592 B.
-
- Penry, John. Exhortation unto Wales, 1588, mentioned. 1587 P.
- — Supplication on behalfe of Wales. 1587 P.
- — View of publike wants within Wales, 1588, mentioned. 1587 P.
-
- Peregrinus. _See_ Vincentius Lirinensis.
-
- Peregrinus, de Lugo. _See_ Italicus, Peregrinus, de Lugo.
-
- Periam (sir William?), mentioned, 1614 P.
-
- Perkins, rev. William. An answer to mr. William Perkins, by John
- Higins. 1602 H (_bis_).
- — mentioned. 1628 R.
-
- Perrot, sir James. Discovery of discontented minds. 1596 P.
- — The first part of the consideration of humane condition. By I.
- P[errot]. 1600 P.
-
- Persius, Satires tr. into English by B. Holyday. 2nd impression. 1616
- P.
-
- Person, sir (?), mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Peter, illuminator, mentioned, p. 267 (_bis_).
-
- Peter, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Petition. Petition to the Bishops, Preachers, and Gospellers (1606?),
- mentioned. 1607 B.
-
- Petra, Gabriel de. Edited Longinus De grandiloquentia, 1612. 1636 L.
-
- Petre, John, lord Petre of Writtle. Threni Exoniensium in obitum
- Johannis filii Guilielmi Petrei. 1613 O.
-
- Petre, William, lord Petre of Writtle, _d._ 1637. Dedication to him.
- 1613 O.
-
- Petrucci, Lodovico. Raccolta d’ alcune rime. Farrago poematum (&c.).
- 1613 P.
-
- Phaedra. _See_ Shepery, John.
-
- Phalaris. The letters of Phalaris translated into Latin by Franciscus
- Aretinus. 1485 P, p. 260.
-
- Pharamus. _See_ Snelling, Thomas.
-
- Phelps family, mentioned, p. 229.
-
- Phetiplacius, Richardus, &c. _See_ Fetiplace, Richard, &c.
-
- Philalethes, interlocutor. 1619 B.
- — Poem signed ‘Philalethes.’ 1631 V.
-
- Philanactophil, pseudonym. _See_ Bolton, Edmund (Maria).
-
- Philip, prince of Orange. Dedication to him. 1634 P.
-
- Philip iii, king of Spain. The Jesuit’s Pater Noster given to Philip
- iii, king of Spain. 1611 J.
-
- Philobiblon. _See_ Richard de Bury.
-
- Philosophia libera. _See_ Carpenter, Nathaniel.
-
- Philosophy. _See_ Bartholinus, Caspar.
- — _See_ Burgersdicius, Franco.
- — _See_ Combachius, Johannes.
- — _See_ Holyday, Barten.
- — _See_ Pavonius, Franciscus.
- — _See_ Pemble, William.
- — _See_ Scheiblerus, Christophorus.
- — De philosophia, Panathenaicae duae in Comitiis Oxonii habitae (1585
- & 1586) (possibly by Tho. Savile). 1586 P.
-
- Phonetic spelling. _See_ 1633 B, 1634 B.
-
- Photius. His ©Bibliotheca© mentioned. 1597 A.
-
- Pickering, William de. _See_ William de Pickering.
-
- Pictorius, Georgius, mentioned. 1609 B.
-
- Pie, Thomas, 1586. _See_ Pye, Thomas.
-
- Piers, John, archbp. of York. Dedication to him. 1587 P.
- — Funeral sermon on him by J. King, 1594. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.
-
- Pietas erga benefactores. _See_ Whear, Degory; Wower, Jan.
-
- Pigot, John, scrivener. Mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Pile, sir Francis, bart., _d._ 1635. Dedication to him. 1631 P.
- — Funeral sermon on him, by B. Parsons. 1636 P.
-
- Pile, sir Francis, _d._ 1649. Dedication to him. 1636 P.
-
- Pilgrim, Gerard, stationer, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Pilgrimage to Paradise. _See_ Breton, Nicholas.
-
- Pinart, Dominique, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Pinke, William. Translated and published (as ‘W. P.’) Cameron’s
- Examination of the Romish Church. 1626 C.
- — The trial of our sincere love to Christ (2 sermons: ed. by W.
- Lyford). 1630 P.
- — — 2nd ed. 1631 P.
- — — 3rd ed. 1636 P.
- — The trial of a Christian’s sincere love unto Christ, 2nd ed. (4
- sermons). 1634 P.
-
- Pinner, Charles. Sermon on 1 Tim. iv. 16. 1596 P.
- — Sermon on 1 Pet. ii. 17. 1597 P.
- — Sermon on 1 Tim. iv. 8. 1597 P.
-
- Piper, John, bookseller, of London, mentioned, pp. 298, 311, 312.
-
- Piscator, Johannes [Fischer?] Aphorismi doctrinae Christianae, 11^a
- editio. 1630 P.
-
- Piscator, Philippus Ludovicus. Preface by him. 1630 P.
-
- Pit, Moses, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Pitt, Thomas. _See_ Pye, Thomas.
-
- Plays. _See_ Cartwright, William.
- — _See_ Fletcher, John.
- — _See_ Gager, William.
- — _See_ Harding, S.
- — _See_ Mayne, Jasper.
- — _See_ Randolph, Thomas.
- — _See_ Snelling, Thomas.
- — The overthrow of stage plays, by dr. John Rainolds. 2nd ed. 1629 R.
-
- Pliny the younger. Plinii Epistolae “Oxon. 1469”, with forged imprint,
- pp. 8, 9, 227.
-
- Plouvierius, Maximus, mentioned. 1640 P.
-
- Plummer, rev. Charles, mentioned. 1592 S.
-
- Plutarch. Περὶ παίδων ἀγωγῆς. _See under_ 1586 C.
- — De morbis animi et corporis (in Latin). 1614 R.
- — De utilitate ex hostibus capienda (in Latin). 1614 R.
-
- Plymouth. _See_ Fitz-Geffry, Charles.
-
- Pococke, dr. Edward, mentioned. 1639 G.
-
- Polybius, mentioned. 1591 T.
-
- Popery. _See_ Rome.
-
- Popham, sir John, of Littlecote. Sermon before him, by C. Pinner. 1597
- P.
-
- Porter. Endymion. Dedication to him. 1631 W.
-
- Portu Hiberniae, Mauritius de. _See_ Mauritius de Portu Hiberniae.
-
- Possevinus, Antonius, _d._ 1611, mentioned. 1614 R.
- — Anti-Possevinus, a sermon by Rich. James. 1625 J.
-
- Pots, Richard, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Potter, bp. Barnabas. The baronet’s burial (sermon on sir Edw.
- Seymour). 1613 P.
-
- Potter, dr. Christopher. Want of charity justly charged on Romanists.
- 1633 P.
- — mentioned. 1638 C.
- — Dedication to him. 1638 R.
-
- Powel, David, mentioned. 1602 P.
-
- Powel, Gabriel. Positions concerning Usury. 1602 P.
- — Prodromus, a logical resolution of Rom. cap. 1. 1602 P.
- — — (the same in Latin: dubious). 1615 P.
- — Consideration of the papists’ reasons for toleration of popery.
- 1604 P.
-
- Powel, Griffinus. _See_ Powell, Griffith.
-
- Powell, Griffith. Analysis Analyticorum Posteriorum Aristotelis, operâ
- and studio G. P. 1594 P.
- — False date of a book by him, mentioned. 1594 P.
- — Analysis librorum Aristotelis de Sophisticis Elenchis, per G. P.
- 1598 P.
- — — a supposed edition of 1564 mentioned, p. 13.
- — Analysis librorum Aristotelis de Demonstratione. 1631 P.
-
- Powell, Nathaniel, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Powell, Thomas. Sermon. 1613 P.
-
- Powhatan. Picture of him, 1612 S.
-
- Poza, don Francisco de Roias marquesse de. Dedication to him. 1630 A.
-
- P. R. _See_ R., P.
-
- Praenostica, 1518. _See_ Laet, Jaspar.
-
- Praise of Music, 1586. _See_ Music.
-
- Pratt, David, stationer, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Prayer, Book of Common. Reasons for refusal of subscription to the Book
- of Common Prayer, with an answer by T. Hutton. 1605 H.
- — Liber precum publicarum in usum ecclesiae Cathedralis Christi Oxon.
- 1615 P, 1639 P.
-
- Prayers. _See_ Winchester.
- — Precationes aliquot privatae et publicae. 1629 C.
-
- Preachers. Letter from the archbp. of Canterbury (about preachers).
- 1622 A.
-
- Preaching, 1622. _See_ Howson, John.
-
- Preces. _See_ Prayers.
-
- Prejudice, prejugé. Note on the use of the words. 1626 C.
-
- Prenostica, 1518. _See_ Laet, Jaspar.
-
- Presse, Simon. Sermon at Eggington, 1596. 1597 P.
-
- Preston, dr. John. Three sermons on the Lord’s Supper. 1631 P.
-
- Price, dr. Daniel. Sermon, on Is. ii. 3. 1608 P.
- — Sermon, on Matt. xiii. 45–6. 1608 P.
- — Sermon, on Rev. ii. 26. 1608 P.
- — The defence of Truth against the ©Triumph of Truth© by H. Leech.
- 1610 P.
- — Act sermon. 1613 P.
- — Spiritual odours to the memory of prince Henry in four sermons.
- 1613 P.
- — Prince Henry his first anniversary. 1613 P.
- — Prince Henry his second anniversary. 1614 P.
-
- Price, Henry. Poem to N. Breton. 1592 B.
- — Epicedium in obitum Henrici comitis Derbeiensis. 1593 G.
-
- Price, Sampson. Sermon. 1614 P.
-
- Price, prof. William. Oratio funebris in laudem Tho. White. 1624 O.
-
- Prideaux, Edmund. Dedication to him and his wife. 1637 P.
-
- Prideaux, dr. John, rector of Exeter College, Oxford. Tabulae ad
- grammatica Graeca introductoriae: et ad eandem linguam παραίνεσις.
- 1607 P, 1608 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.
- — Castigatio Andreae Eudæmon-Johannis. 1614 P.
- — Ephesus backsliding, a sermon. 1614 P, 1636 P.
- — Dedications to him. 1615 M, 1619 B, 1625 N, 1630 B.
- — Two Sermons on Matt. v. 25. 1615 P, 1636 P.
- — Alloquium regi Jacobo Woodstochiæ habitum 24 Aug. 1624; signed “I.
- P.” 1624 P, 1625 P.
- — Perez-Vzzah, a sermon, on 2 Sam. vi. 6–7. 1625 P.
- — Sermon at the consecration of Exeter college chapel, 1624. 1625 P,
- 1636 P.
- — Concio ad Artium baccalaureos (1 Sam. xiv. 26). 1626 P.
- — Lectiones decem prout publicè habebantur Oxoniae in Vesperiis,
- 1616–25. 1626 P.
- — Orationes novem inaugurales, 1616–25: et concio (in Act. vii. 22).
- 1626 P.
- — Lectiones novem. 1627 P.
- — Tyrocinium ad syllogismum legitimum contexendum expeditissimum.
- 1629 P.
- — Certain Sermons. 1637 P.
- — Heptades logicae. 1639 P.
-
- Prime, John. Sermon on 1 Kings x. 9. 1585 P.
- — Exposition of St. Paul to the Galatians. 1587 P.
- — The Consolations of David, a sermon on Ps. xxiii. 4. 1588 P.
-
- Primerose, James. Academia Monspeliensis descripta, Laurus Monspeliaca.
- 1631 P.
-
- Printing at Oxford, “1468”-1640. _See_ Oxford—Printing.
-
- Procter, R. G. C., mentioned, p. 228.
-
- Prognosticon astrologicum. _See_ Booker, John, 1637.
-
- Promises. _See_ F., A.
-
- Proverbs. Reusneri Symbola imperatoria (largely a discussion of
- mottos). 1633 R, 1638 R.
-
- Prynne, William, mentioned. 1630 W, 1631 P, W, 1633 P.
-
- Psalms. _See under_ Bible.
-
- Psalter. Notice of “Our Lady’s Psalter.” 1620 D.
-
- Puede-Ser, Diego. _See_ Mabbe, James.
-
- Puleston, Roger. Dedication to him. 1586 H.
-
- Purchas, Samuel, mentioned. 1612 S.
-
- Purgatory. _See_ Du Moulin, Pierre.
-
- Puritans. Decretum Universitatis (contra Puritanos). 1622 O.
- — Described in ten subdivisions. 1630 W, 1631 W.
-
- Pusillus grex. _See_ Vicars, Thomas.
-
- Puteanus, Erycius. Comus. 1634 P.
- — Historia Insubrica. 1634 P.
- — Amoenitatum humanarum diatribae duae, prior de Laconismo, altera
- Thyrsi Philotesii. 1640 P.
- — Suada Attica, sive orationum selectarum syntagma. Item Palæstra
- Bonae Mentis, de Morte, &c. 1640 P.
-
- Pye, Thomas. Translation by him of A. de Corro’s lectures on
- Ecclesiastes. (“Solomon’s sermon”). 1586 E.
- — English letter to him from dr. John Rainolds, 27 Feb. (1603/4?).
- 1606 B.
- — His Epistola ad ... Joh. Howsonum (1603) mentioned. 1606 B.
- — In controversiam inter Johannem Howsonum et Thomam Pyum tractatus
- (auctore Rob. Burhill). 1606 B.
-
- Pye, sir Walter, kt., jun. Dedication to him. 1633 T.
-
- Pym, John. Dedication to him. 1628 W.
-
- Pyne, Henry. Sale of his books (1886) mentioned. 1595 T.
-
- Pynson, Richard, printer of London, mentioned. 1485 A, p. 11.
-
- Pyper, John. _See_ Piper, John.
-
-
- Q.
-
- Quaritch, Bernard, mentioned. 1612 S, pp. 256, 257.
-
- Quarles, Francis. Poem by him. 1634 B.
-
- Quentell, Heinrich, mentioned, p. 243.
-
-
- R.
-
- R., C. A., “Coricæus”. Poem to R. Roche. 1599 R.
-
- R., H., 1600. _See_ Roberts, Hugh.
-
- R., H., 1640. _See_ Rogers, Hugh.
-
- R., I., 1625. _See_ Rawlinson, John.
-
- R., I., 1614. _See_ Raynolds, John.
-
- R., P. P. R. = Professor Regius. 1629 Z.
-
- R., R., 1599. _See_ Roche, Robert.
-
- R., T., 1638. _See_ Randolph, Thomas.
-
- R., T. _See_ Rood, Theoderic.
-
- Radford, J. His Directory mentioned. 1610 B.
-
- Raem. Gerard ten, de Bercka, mentioned, pp. 242, 249.
-
- Rainolds, dr. John. Sermon on Ps. xviii. 47–51 about the Gunpowder
- plot, 1586. 1586 R, 1613 R.
- — Orationes duae. 1587 R, 1608 R.
- — De Romanae Ecclesiae idololatria. 1596 R.
- — — mentioned. 1614 R.
- — English letter from him to Thomas Pye, 27 Feb. (1603/4?). 1606 B.
- — Oratio funebris habita ab I. Wake (in memoriam I. Rainoldi) 25 Maii
- 1607. 1607 W, 1608 W, 1614 R, 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.
- — Summa colloquii J. Rainoldi cum J. Harto de capite et fide
- Ecclesiae &c. (1583). 1610 R.
- — — supposed ed. of 1619 mentioned. 1619 R.
- — Orationes quinque cum aliis opusculis. 1613 R.
- — — mentioned (1613, 1619, 1628). 1614 R.
- — The prophecy of Obadiah, explained. 1613 R, _see_ p. 292.
- — Orationes duodecim cum aliis opusculis. 1614 R.
- — — London editions of 1619 and 1628 described. 1614 R.
- — Discovery of the Man of Sin, a sermon, by I. R. 1614 R.
- — The overthrow of stage plays: with letters between the author and
- Albericus Gentilis, 1593. 2nd ed. 1629 R.
-
- Rainolds, William. Latin letter to him from dr. John Rainolds. 1614 R.
-
- Raleigh, William, barrister. Dedication to him. 1601 F.
-
- Ralph, illuminator, mentioned, pp. 267, 269.
-
- Ramus, Petrus, mentioned. 1592 C, 1598 C.
-
- Ranchin, Guillaume. Review of the Council of Trent. 1638 R.
-
- Randol, John. Sermon at St. Mary’s Oxford (on Mark iii. 24). 1624 R.
-
- Randolph, Robert, mentioned. 1638 R, 1640 H, p. 260.
-
- Randolph, Thomas. Poems, with the Muses’ Looking-glass and Amyntas (by
- T. R.). 1638 R.
- — The Jealous Lovers, mentioned. 1640 R.
- — Poems, 2nd edition. 1640 R.
- — Latin poem in memory of Bacon. 1640 B.
-
- Rasen Market, co. Lincoln (Market Raisin). Account of a murder there,
- 1602. 1603 S.
-
- Rassenghem, Maximilianus de. Dedication to him. 1639 F.
-
- Ratcliffe sale, mentioned, p. 261.
-
- Ratcliffe, Henry, earl of Sussex. Acrostic to him. 1589 R.
-
- Ravenspergerus, Hermannus, mentioned. 1636 G.
-
- Ravis, bp. Thomas, mentioned (1605). 1613 B.
-
- Rawley, W., mentioned. 1640 B.
-
- Rawlinson, John. Sermon, on Cant. vi. 13. 1606 R.
- — Mercy to a beast, a sermon. 1612 R.
- — Vivat rex, a sermon, on 1 Sam. x. 24, 1614/5. 1619 R.
- — Sermon on Cant. iv. 8. 1622 R.
- — Quadriga salutis, four ... Lent sermons at Whitehall. (Dovelike
- Soul, Lex Talionis, Surprising of Heaven, Bridegroom and Bride: by
- “I. R.”.) 1625 R.
-
- Read, Thomas. In obitum Thomae Rhaedi. Faciebat R. A[yton]. (a poem).
- 1624 A.
-
- Recusants, mentioned. 1629 B, 1629 C, 1635 B.
-
- Redman, William. Dedication to him. 1616 N.
-
- Red printing. _See_ Oxford—Printing.
-
- Reginald, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Reginald, illuminator, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Reginald, parchment seller, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Reinolds, John. Epigrammata (in Reges). 1611 R.
- — — (in Episcopos). 1612 R.
-
- Renkens, Harry, stationer, mentioned, p. 273.
-
- Reusner, Nicolas. Symbola imperatoria, ed. 5^a. 1633 R.
- — — ed. 6^a. 1638 R, _see_ p. x.
-
- Reuter, Adam. Quæstiones juris controversi. 1609 R.
- — De consilio. 1626 R.
-
- _Rex Platonicus._ _See_ Wake, Isaac.
-
- Reynbold, John, scribe, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Rhaedus, Thomas. _See_ Read, Thomas.
-
- Rheims. Address by John Rainolds to the English Roman Catholic students
- at Rheims, in Latin. 1596 R.
- — Dedication to the English Seminaries at Rome and Rheims. 1610 R.
-
- Rhetoric. _See_ Butler, Charles.
- — _See_ Thorne, William.
- — _See_ Vossius, Gerard John.
-
- Rhodes, John, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Rhydychen, (= Oxford), in Oxford imprints. _See_ Oxford, _ad init._
-
- Richard, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 269 (_bis_).
-
- Richard, sen. and jun., parchment-sellers, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Richard, stationer, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Richard de Bury. Philobiblon, sive de amore librorum. 1599 R.
-
- Richardson, Gabriel. Of the state of Europe. 1627 R.
-
- Richardson, sir Thomas, kt. Dedication to him. 1625 B.
-
- Richardson, William. Edited Crakanthorp’s Metaphysica. 1619 C.
-
- Richmond. The king and queen’s Entertainment at Richmond, in a Masque,
- 12 Sept. 1636. 1636 M.
-
- Ricott. _See_ Rycote.
-
- Rider, bp. John. Bibliotheca classica, a double dictionarie (Engl.-Lat.
- and Lat.-Engl.). 1589 R.
- — Rider’s dictionary, recast by F. Holyoke (Lat.-Engl. and
- Engl.-Lat.). 1627 H.
-
- Ridley, sir Thomas. A view of the civil and ecclesiastical law, 2nd ed.
- edited by I. G[regory]. 1634 R.
-
- Rimbault, Edward Francis, mentioned. 1586 M.
-
- Riolanus, Johannes, the elder. Extracts from his works on the eyesight.
- 1616 B.
-
- Rives, George and John. _See_ Ryves, George and John.
-
- Robartes, Thomas Charles Agar, lord Robartes, mentioned. 1592 B, S,
- 1625 P, p. 256.
-
- Robert, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Robert, illuminator, mentioned, pp. 267, 269.
-
- Robert, notary and stationer, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Robert, scribe, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Robert de Derby, illuminator, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Roberts, Hugh. Sermon (on 1 Pet. ii. 11), 1598, by H. R. 1600 R.
- — The day of hearing, lectures on Hebr. iii. 7–19: by H. R. 1600 R.
-
- Robinson, Henry, bp. of Carlisle. Dedication to him. 1614 D.
-
- Robinson, Hugh. Preces in usum Scholae Wintoniensis: Grammaticalia:
- Antiquae historiae synopsis. 1616 R.
-
- Robinson, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 309, 312.
-
- Roche, Robert, of Magdalen coll., Oxford. Eustathia or the constancie
- of Susanna (a poem). 1599 R.
-
- Rodd, Thomas, bookseller of London, mentioned, p. 262.
-
- Roe, sir Thomas. Dedication to him. 1629 T.
- — Poems partly about him. 1631 O.
-
- Roger, illuminator, mentioned, pp. 269, 270.
-
- Roger, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 267 (_bis_).
-
- Roger, scribe, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Roger, stationer, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Rogers, Hugh. Gamelia, poems on the wedding of H. R(ogers) with A(nne)
- B(aynton). 1640 R.
-
- Rohan, Anne de. _See_ Anne de Rohan.
-
- Rolle, Richard. _See_ Hampole, Richard Rolle of.
-
- Romanae Historiae Anthologia. _See_ Godwin, Thomas.
-
- Romanus, Aegidius. _See_ Aegidius de Columna.
-
- Rome, Church of. _See_ Index Expurgatorius.
- — Address by John Rainolds to the English Roman Catholic students at
- Rome, in Latin. 1596 R.
- — Consideration of the papists’ reasons for toleration of popery, by
- G. Powel. 1604 P.
- — Protestation against popery, by “I. D” (unster.) 1607 D.
- — List of the Popes. 1608 P.
- — Bellum Gregorianum (a table of passages corrupted in the Roman
- editions of Gregory the Great’s works: ed. by dr. James). 1610 J.
- — Dedication to the English Seminaries at Rome and Rheims. 1610 R.
- — Papistogelastes, or apologues of the Abuses of the Synagogue of the
- Pope, 1614. _See_ S., N.
- — Sermon by W. Goodwin against the jurisdiction of the Roman Church
- over sovereigns. 1614 G.
- — S. Price a violent impugner of Roman Catholicism. 1614 P.
- — Advice of a son to his mother (against Roman Catholicism). 1616 A.
- — Merry jests concerning Popes, monks and friars. 1617 W.
- — Collectanea (“Romanism condemned,” 1835) by J. Panke. 1618 P.
- — Confutation of Papists by Papists, by dr. Tho. James. 1625 J.
- — Treatment of texts by Roman Catholic theologians, mentioned. 1625
- J.
- — Examination of those plausible appearances which seem most to
- commend the Romish Church. 1626 C.
- — A Preservative from becoming a Papist, by B. T. 1629 T.
- — LXX disputationes adversus Pontificios, auctore F. Hommio. 1630 H,
- 1639 H.
- — Want of Charity justly charged on Romanists. _See_ Potter,
- Christopher, 1633.
- — The advice of a son to his mother a Roman Catholic, by sir A.
- Hungerford. 1639 H.
- — Fabulae pontificiae dissipatae, authore M. Wescombe. 1639 W.
-
- Rood, Theoderic, de Colonia, printer at Oxford, mentioned. 1485 P, pp.
- 9 (T. R.), 238, 241–3, 272.
-
- Rosaecranzius, Oligerus. Dedication to him. 1633 B.
-
- Rous, Francis. Verses by him. 1596 F.
- — Archaeologia Attica. 1637 R.
- — — mentioned. 1614 G.
-
- Rous, Richard. Verses by him. 1596 F.
-
- Rouse, dr. John, Bodley’s librarian. Wrote a preface to and edited
- complimentary poems to Johannes Cirenbergius about Bodl. MS. Roe 20.
- 1631 O.
- — Dedication to him. 1635 C.
- — Appendix ad Catalogum librorum in Bibliotheca Bodleiana. 1635 R.
-
- Royal Slave. _See_ Cartwright, William.
-
- Royston, Richard, bookseller of London, mentioned. 1640 S, pp. 235,
- 310, 313.
-
- Rudyerd, sir Benjamin. Speech in behalf of the Clergy, by sir B.
- Rudierd. 1628 R.
- — Dedication to him. 1628 W.
-
- Rufinus, Tyrannius. Expositio in Symbolum Apostolorum (ascribed falsely
- to st. Jerome). 1468 R, p. 245.
- — — mentioned, pp. 8, 10.
-
- Russell, lady, mentioned. 1592 E.
-
- Russell, Francis, earl of Bedford. Funeral sermon on him, 1585, by Tho.
- Sparke. 1585 S, 1594 S.
-
- Russell, Francis, earl of Bedford. Dedication to him. 1629 B.
-
- Russell, dr. Walter, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Rycote, mentioned. 1592 E, p. 229.
-
- Ryves, dr. George, warden of New college, Oxford. Dedication to him.
- 1602 T.
- — Poem on his death, by L. Petrucci, in Ital. and Latin. 1613 P.
-
- Ryves, dr. John. Articles of visitation for the archdeaconry of Berks,
- 1635. 1635 R.
-
-
- S.
-
- S., E. Supposed author of the ©Historia Britannica©. 1640 C.
-
- S., G., 1632. _See_ Sandys, George.
-
- S., I., 1608. _See_ Sansbury, John.
-
- S., I., 1614. _See_ Smith, John.
-
- S., N. Papistogelastes, or Apologues by which are discovered the Abuses
- of the Synagogue of the Pope, written in Italian by N. S., tr. into
- French by S. J., and thence into English by Rowland Willet. 1614 S.
-
- S., R., 1609. _See_ Stafford, Francis.
-
- S., S., 1613. _See_ Smith, Samuel.
-
- S., S. F., 1609. _See_ Stafford, sir Francis.
-
- S., T., 1628, 1631, 1640. _See_ Sixsmith, Thomas.
-
- S., W., 1612. _See_ Simmonds, William.
-
- Sabaoth, Sabbath. The two words confused. 1631 B.
-
- Sabbath. _See_ Brerewood, Edward.
- — _See_ Ironside, Gilbert.
-
- Sackville, Richard, earl of Dorset. Dedication to him. 1622 G.
-
- Sackville, Robert, earl of Dorset. Dedication to him. 1608 T.
-
- Sackville, Thomas, lord Buckhurst, earl of Dorset. Dedications to him.
- 1592 B, G, 1597 C, 1598 A, 1600 P, 1602 H, 1604 A.
- — Orders for the Oxford City Market, issued by him as Chancellor of
- the University (undated). 1602 O.
- — Letter from him to the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford
- (1606?), in Latin. 1607 W.
-
- Sacra Quercu, F. de. _See_ Holyoke, Francis.
-
- Sacrilege. _See_ B., E.
-
- St. Alban’s. Printing there mentioned, pp. 246, 262.
-
- St. Paul, sir George, of Snarford. Oratio Matt. Colmori in obitum G.
- Sanctpaul. 1613 C.
- — Carmina funebria in obitum Georgii de Sancto Paulo. 1614 S.
-
- Saints’ Legacies. _See_ F., A.
-
- Salisbury. Dedication to G. Churchowse, Mayor, and the corporation of
- “New Sarum.” 1618 P.
-
- Salisbury, earl of. _See_ Cecil, Robert.
- — _See_ Cecil, William.
-
- Salmasius, Claudius. _See_ Ampelius, Lucius.
-
- Salomon, Willelmus, scribe, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Saltonstall, Wye. Clavis ad portam (index to Comenius’s Porta
- linguarum). 1634 S.
-
- Salvianus, st. Account of him from Trithemius, in Latin. 1629 S.
- — De gubernatione Dei. 1629 S, 1633 S.
- — Epistolae. 1629 S.
- — Ad Ecclesiam Catholicam, auctore “Timotheo.” 1629 S.
-
- Sams sale, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Sanctpaul. _See_ St. Paul.
-
- Sandars, S., mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Sanderson, dr. John, canon of Cambrai. Institutiones dialecticae, ed.
- 3^{ia}. 1602 S.
- — — ed. 4^{ta}. 1609 S.
-
- Sanderson, Robert. Logicæ Artis Compendium. 1615 S, 1618 S, _see_ p. x,
- 1631 S, 1640 S.
- — — mentioned. 1602 S.
-
- Sandys, Edwin, archbp. of York. Dedication to him by E. Bunny. 1585 P
- (_bis_).
-
- Sandys, George. The Metamorphoses of Ovid, englished by G. S(andys):
- with a translation of the 1st Aeneid of Virgil. 1632 O.
-
- Sanford, rev. John, of Magdalen coll., Oxford. Apollinis et Musarum
- εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια. 1592 S.
- — Mentioned as corrector typographicus. 1592 T.
- — In obitum domini Arthuri Greii θρηνῳδία. 1593 S.
- — God’s arrow of the pestilence, a sermon. 1604 S.
- — Le guichet François (French grammar). 1604 S.
- — Brief extracts of the former Latin (French) grammar, done into
- English. 1605 S.
- — Grammar or introduction to the Italian tongue (with a poem on the
- author, in French, by J. More). 1605 S.
- — Latin poem by him. 1614 G.
-
- Sansbury, John. Ilium in Italiam (by “I. S.”) 1608 S.
-
- Sarum, New. _See_ Salisbury.
-
- Sasquesahanoug. _See_ Susquehanna.
-
- Saumur, mentioned. 1626 C.
-
- Savery, Salamon. Engraved a title of 1632 O.
-
- Savile sale, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Savile, sir Henry, mentioned. 1586 P.
- — Translation of part of Tacitus’s Histories, &c. 1591 T.
- — Praelectiones 13 in Elementa Euclidis. 1621 S.
- — Ultima linea Savilii, Justa Academica (with list of Savile’s
- benefactions, &c.) 1622 O.
-
- Savile, Thomas, of Merton college, Oxford. De philosophia: two speeches
- possibly by him, 1585 and 1586. 1586 P.
-
- Savoy, duke of. _See_ Charles Emmanuel I.
-
- Scandalo, de. _See_ Kingsmill, Thomas.
-
- Schattenus, Severinus, à Schattenhall. Dedication to him, 1618. 1632 S.
-
- Scheiblerus, Christophorus. Philosophia compendiosa, cui accedit H.
- Buscheri Arithmetica, ed. 5^{ta}. 1631 S.
- — Liber Commentariorum Topicorum. 1637 S.
- — Metaphysica. 1637 S, 1638 S.
-
- Scheprevus, Johannes. _See_ Shepery, John.
-
- Sclater, William. The Christian’s strength, a sermon on Phil. iv. 13.
- 1612 S.
- — The Ministers portion, a sermon on 1 Cor. ix. 13–14. 1612 S.
- — The sick soul’s salve, a sermon on Prov. xviii. 14. 1612 S.
- — Utriusque Epistolae ad Corinthios explicato analytica. 1633 S.
-
- Sclater, William, junior. Edited his father’s Utriusque Epistolae ad
- Corinthios explicatio. 1633 S.
-
- Scolar, John, printer, mentioned, pp. 263–4.
-
- Scoticus, Simon. _See_ Simon Scoticus.
-
- Scotland. Union of Scotland and England. _See_ England, 1604–5.
-
- Scotus, Johannes Duns. _See_ Johannes Duns Scotus.
-
- Scourge for a railer. _See under_ Willett, Andrew.
-
- Scribes, &c. in Oxford. Pp. 267–78.
- — _See also_ Transcription.
-
- Scudamore, James, mentioned, p. 258.
-
- Scultetus, Abraham. A dedication to him, &c. (1614–15), mentioned. 1613
- B.
-
- Seale, —, bookbinder at Oxford, mentioned, p. 278.
-
- Seale, Henry, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 303, 312.
-
- Secomps, Guilermus, bookseller, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Seddon, John. A catechism (the Heidelberg Catechism partly ed. by
- Seddon). 1588 C (_bis_).
-
- Selden, John, mentioned. 1592 B, p. 253.
- — Answer to Selden’s History of Tithes, by S. Nettles. 1625 N.
-
- Seneca, Lucius Annaeus. Motto from him. 1585 C.
- — His Hippolytus mentioned. 1592 G.
-
- Sennertus, Daniel. Epitome naturalis scientiae, ed. 3. 1632 S.
-
- Sermonetta, card., i. e. Enrico Gaetani. Instructions for young
- gentlemen. 1633 S.
-
- Sermons. Note on their length, &c. 1606 R, 1619 R, 1625 B.
-
- Serranus, Johannes. Commentary on Ecclesiastes mentioned. 1586 E.
-
- Setting-rule, p. 249 _n._
-
- Seymour, sir Edward. The baronet’s burial, a sermon on sir E. Seymour,
- by B. Potter. 1613 P.
-
- Shakespeare, William. Epitaph on him by W. Basse, mentioned. 1613 B.
- — mentioned. 1640 H, p. 230.
-
- Sharpe, Lionel, archdeacon of Berkshire. Articles in his visitation,
- 1615. 1615 S.
-
- Shepery, John (Scheprevus). Disticha Johannis Scheprevi in Novum
- Testamentum. 1586 S.
- — Hippolytus Ovidianae Phaedrae respondens. 1586 S.
- — — mentioned (“1542,” “1584”), pp. 12, 13.
-
- Sherman, Abraham. Edited Chaloner’s sermons, 1629. 1629 C.
-
- Short, James, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 277, 297, 312.
-
- Sicily and Naples. _See_ Harding, Samuel.
-
- Sidesmen. The oath of Churchwardens and Sidemen. 1599 K.
-
- Sidney, sir Philip. Exequiae Philippi Sidnaei. 1587 S.
- — Peplus Philippi Sidnaei (poems by New college men). 1587 S.
- — P. Sidnæi funus, per G. Carleton. 1603 C.
-
- Signatures in books, pp. 247–8.
-
- Simmonds, William, D.D., of Magdalen coll., Oxford, and Virginia.
- Smith’s Map of Virginia ed. by him. 1612 S.
-
- Simon, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- Simon, parchment-seller, mentioned, pp. 267, 269.
-
- Simon Scoticus, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Sin against the Holy Ghost. _See_ Benefield, Sebastian.
-
- Singer, S. W., mentioned, p. 247.
-
- Singleton, dr. Thomas, principal of Brasenose coll., Oxford. Dedication
- to him. 1613 P.
-
- Singleton, William, mentioned, p. 271.
-
- Sixsmith, Thomas. Edited Brerewood’s Tractatus logici as “T. S.” 1628
- B, 1631 B, 1637 B.
- — Edited Brerewood’s de Meteoris, &c. (“T. S.”). 1631 B.
- — Edited Brerewood’s Commentaries on the Ethics of Aristotle, as “T.
- S.” 1640 B.
-
- Skelton, John. A Skeltonicall salutation ... (on the Armada). 1589 S.,
- p. 228.
-
- Skinners’ Company. _See_ London—Skinners’ Company.
-
- Slatyer, William, mentioned. 1633 S.
-
- Smiglecius, Martinus. Logica. 1634 S.
-
- Smith, capt. —, mentioned, p. 9 (_bis_).
-
- Smith, George, mentioned, p. 227.
-
- Smith, John, of Magdalen coll., Oxford. Translated Jewell’s ©Apologia©
- into Greek. 1614 J, 1639 J.
-
- Smith, capt. John, of Virginia. His General History of Virginia and
- Works mentioned. 1612 S.
- — A map of Virginia with a description of the country (and) The
- proceedings of those Colonies. 1612 S.
-
- Smith, Miles, bp. of Gloucester. Assize sermon at Worcester. 1602 S.
- — Dedication to him. 1613 B.
-
- Smith, Nicholas. _See_ Wilson, Matthias.
-
- Smith, Nicholas, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Smith, Samuel. Aditus ad Logicam (autore S. S.). (1613 S, 1614 S), 1617
- S, 1618 S, 1627 S, 1633 S, 1639 S.
-
- Smyth. _See_ also Smith.
-
- Smyth, Richard. Munition against man’s misery, 2nd ed. 1612 S.
- — — 3rd ed. 1634 S.
-
- Snarford. _See_ St. Paul, sir George.
-
- Snelling, Thomas, of St. John’s college, Oxford. Thibaldus tragoedia
- (issued afterwards as Pharamus). 1640 S.
-
- Socinus, Faustus, mentioned. 1636 G.
-
- Solomeaux, Paul, of Vendome. Verses by him. 1638 C.
-
- Solon. _See_ Beacon, Richard, 1594.
-
- Somers, John lord. His Tracts alluded to. 1602 H.
-
- Somerville, Roger, stationer, mentioned, p. 269.
-
- Sophronius, abbot, mentioned. 1633 G.
-
- South, Warner. Poem by him, in Latin. 1609 B.
-
- Southampton, earl of. _See_ Wriothesley, Thomas.
-
- Southcot, Thomas of Moones Ottery. Dedication to him. 1612 S.
-
- Spaen, Johannes Jacobus, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Spain. _See_ Armada.
-
- Spanish. _See_ Bense, Petrus.
- — Reglas grammaticales para aprender la lengua Española y Francesa.
- 1586 S.
- — Poems in Spanish. 1606 O, 1612 H.
-
- Spark. A spark of Christ’s beauty (discourse on Is. ix. 6). 1622 S.
-
- Sparke, Michael, printer of London, mentioned. 1631 W, 1633 G, pp. 304,
- 312.
- — His business mark. 1631 B.
-
- Sparke, Thomas. Funeral sermon on the earl of Bedford, 1585. 1585 S,
- 1594 S.
- — A catechisme (the Heidelberg catechism ed. by Sparke, who prefixes
- a treatise on catechising, and Seddon). 1588 C (_bis_).
- — Answer to John de Albine’s Notable discourse against heresies. 1591
- S.
- — Funeral sermon at Whaddon on lord Grey, 1593. 1593 S.
-
- Sparke, William. The mystery of godliness. 1628 S.
-
- Speculation. Twofold treatise ... one of Speculation, the other a
- discovery of youth and old age. 1612 T.
-
- Speculum Academicum, 1638, p. 235.
-
- Spelling. _See_ Phonetic spelling.
-
- Spelman, sir Henry, mentioned, 1628 R.
-
- Spencer library. _See_ Manchester.
-
- Spencer, Alice. _See_ Egerton, Alice.
-
- Spencer, Robert, lord Spencer of Wormleighton. Sermon at his burial,
- 1627, and poems on him, by R. Parre. 1628 P.
-
- Spencer, William, lord Spencer of Wormleighton. Dedications to him.
- 1628 P, 1629 T.
-
- Spiegelius, mentioned, p 229.
-
- Spier, William, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 298, 311, 312.
-
- Spire, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Spiritual odours. _See_ Price, Daniel.
-
- Sprint, John. Ad Comites Warwicensem et Leicestrensem oratio, 1587.
- 1587 S.
-
- Stadius, Johannes, _d._ 1579. Commentarius in L. Annaeum Florum. 1631
- F, 1638 F.
-
- Stafford, sir Francis. Probably the “S. F. S.” to whom a dedication is
- addressed in 1609. 1609 D, 1634 D.
-
- Stafford, Robert. Probably the translator of Du Moulin’s Héraclite into
- English. 1609 D, 1634 D.
-
- Stainton-in-the-Street, or Great Stainton, co. Durham, mentioned. 1598
- I.
-
- Stamford. Sir George St. Paul’s work there. 1613 C.
-
- Stanbridge, John, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Stanhope, sir Henry. Dedication to him. 1627 W.
-
- Stanhope, lady Katharine. Dedication to her. 1628 W.
-
- Stanley, Ferdinand, earl of Derby. Dedication to him. 1593 G.
-
- Stanley, Henry. Appendix ad libros tam Veteris quam Novi Testamenti,
- 1630, p. 233.
-
- Stanley, Henry, earl of Derby. Epicedium in obitum Henrici comitis
- Derbeiensis, auctoribus M. Gwinne et H. Price. 1593 G.
-
- Stanley, James, lord Strange. Dedication to him. 1640 B.
-
- Starkey, S. _See_ Strong, Sampson.
-
- Stationers, &c., in Oxford. Pp. 267–78.
-
- Stationers’ Company, & Hall. _See_ London—Stationers’ Company.
-
- Stephanus, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Stephen, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Stephen, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Stephens, Philemon, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 301, 313.
-
- Stephens, Jeremy. Edited Cyprian De bono patientiae. 1633 C.
-
- Stewart, Francis, master of Murray. Dedication to him. 1607 C.
-
- Stewart, John, son of the duke of Lennox. Deduction to him. 1607 C.
-
- Stewart, Ludovic, duke of Lennox. Dedication to him. 1621 T.
-
- Stinton, George. Sermon Worcester Cathedral in time of pestilence (on 1
- Kings viii. 37–39). 1637 S.
-
- Stonor. The Stonor press alluded to. 1601 H.
-
- Stonyhurst, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Storre, William. Manner of the cruel murther of William Storre, 1602.
- 1603 S.
-
- Strada, Firmianus. Prolusiones academicæ. 1631 S.
-
- Strange, lord. _See_ Stanley, James.
-
- Strangwayes, sir John. Dedication to him. 1630 A.
-
- Strathyn, Henry, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Stricturae breves. _See_ Wells, rev. William.
-
- Stronge, alias Starkey, Sampson, illuminator, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Studley, Thomas, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Suares, Jacques, a Portuguese Franciscan. Treatise against him by Du
- Moulin. 1612 D.
-
- Sudeley, mentioned. 1592 E, p. 229.
-
- Suffolk, duke of. _See_ Howard, Theophilus.
-
- Suggeneia (συγγένεια), 1625. _See_ Butler, Charles.
-
- Suinesheved. _See_ Swineshede, Roger.
-
- Summaster, George, principal of Broadgates hall, Oxford. Dedication to
- him. 1614 H.
-
- Supremacy, Oath of. _See_ Panke, John.
-
- Supreme Governor. _See under_ Panke, John.
-
- Surprising of Heaven, 1625. _See_ Rawlinson, John.
-
- Susannah. _See_ Roche, Robert.
-
- Susquehanna, U. S. A. Picture of a “Sasquesahanoug” native. 1612 S.
-
- Sussex, earl of. _See_ Ratcliffe, Henry.
-
- Swayne, Robert (and Martha), printers of London, mentioned. 1631 F,
- 1640 S, p. 235.
-
- Swearing, 1625. _See_ Taylor, John.
-
- Swineshede, Roger (Suinesheved, Swincet). Insolubilia Swynishede (a
- logical treatise). 1483 L.
-
- Sylvester, Joshua. Poem by him. 1634 B.
-
- Symbolum. _See_ Creed.
-
- Symeon Metaphrastes. Lives of Stt. John and Luke, in Greek and Latin,
- ed. by R. Brett. 1597 S.
-
- Synopsis anni. _See_ Wyberd, John.
-
- Synopsis statutorum. _See_ Oxford—University, 1635.
-
- Syriac. Poem in Syriac. 1612 H. _See_ p. 230.
-
- Syrretus, Antonius. Formalitates de mente Johannis Duns Scoti, pp. 227,
- 273.
-
-
- T.
-
- T., B. A Preservative from becoming a Papist. 1629 T.
-
- T., I:, _see_ Dorne, John.
-
- T., W., 1633. _See_ Tipping, William.
-
- Tacitus. End of Nero and beginning of Galba. Histories, bks. 1–4. Life
- of Agricola. In English by sir H. Savile. 1591 T.
- — mentioned, p. 229.
-
- Tavistock, mentioned, pp. 249, 263.
-
- Taylor, bp. Jeremy. Gunpowder treason sermon at St. Mary’s, 1638: on
- Luke ix. 54. 1638 T.
-
- Taylor, John, the Water Poet. The fearful summer, or London’s Calamity.
- 1625 T.
- — Against swearing. 1625 T.
- — His Farewell to Oxford. 1625 T.
-
- Teimurases, prince, mentioned. 1633 G.
-
- Tenison, archbp., mentioned, p. 262.
-
- Terence. Vulgaria Terentii (sentences from Terence in Latin and
- English). 1483 A, p. 257.
-
- Terry, John. The trial of truth (1st part). 1600 T.
- — Sermon, on John xvii. 17. 1617 T.
- — Theological logic, the 3rd part of the Trial of truth. 1625 T.
-
- Textual Criticism, 1625. Rules by dr. James: _see_ James, Thomas.
-
- Thame. Thame Park, mentioned. 1613 B.
-
- Theocritus. Sixe idyllia in English verse. 1588 T.
-
- Theodoricus, printer at Cologne, 1485–6, mentioned, pp. 243, 262.
-
- Theological logic, 1625. _See_ Terry, John.
-
- Theology. Scholastica locorum communium theologiæ institutio, auctore
- L. Trelcatio. 1606 T.
-
- Theorremon. _See_ Chrysostom, st.
-
- Thesaurus, Emanuel. Cæsares, et Carmina. 1637 T.
-
- Thibaldus. _See_ Snelling, Thomas.
-
- Thicknesse, Francis Henry, suffragan bp. of Leicester, mentioned. 1588
- H.
-
- Thistlethwaite, Peregrine and Dorothy. Dedication to them. 1633 P.
-
- Thomas, st., of Aquino. Index Thomisticus to Pavonius’s Summa Ethicae.
- 1633 P.
-
- Thomas, scribe, mentioned, p. 267 (_bis_), 270.
-
- Thomas, Thomas, bookseller, of Bristol, mentioned, pp. 309, 313.
-
- Thomas, Thomas, printer, of Cambridge, mentioned. 1585 C.
- — His dictionary (Camb. 1588), mentioned. 1589 R.
-
- Thomson sale, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Thorn, Johan. _See_ Dorne, John.
-
- Thornborough, bp. John. Articles at his first visitation. 1603 T.
- — His “Discourse proving the utilitie of the Union of England and
- Scotland,” 1604, mentioned. 1605 T.
- — The joyful reuniting the two kingdoms, England and Scotland. 1605
- T.
- — Λιθοθεωρικός sive nihil, aliquid, omnia (alchemical). 1621 T.
- — The last will and testament of Jesus Christ (treatise on the Lord’s
- Supper). 1630 T.
-
- Thornburgh, dr. Edward, archdeacon of Worcester. Articles in his
- Visitation, 1638. 1638 T.
-
- Thorne, William, of New college, Oxford. Tullius seu Ῥήτωρ. 1592 T.
-
- Thorpe, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned. 1640 C.
-
- Throckmorton, sir Clement. Dedications to him. 1610 H, 1627 H.
-
- Timotheus, pseud. _See_ Salvianus, st.
-
- Timothy’s task. _See_ Mandevill, Robert.
-
- Tipping, William. A discourse of Eternity, by W. T. 1633 T.
- — A return of thankfulness for recovery out of sickness. 1640 T.
-
- Tithes. _See_ B., E.
- — _See_ Parsons, Bartholomew.
-
- Todkill, Anas, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Toldervey, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Tolson, dr. John, provost of Oriel college, Oxford. Dedication to him.
- 1640 T.
-
- Tombes, John. Edited Pemble’s Five sermons. 1628 P, 1629 P.
-
- Tomson, Richard, mentioned, p. 258.
-
- Tortura Torti. _See_ Andrewes, Lancelot.
-
- Tortus, Matthaeus. Pseudonym of card. Bellarminus. 1613 B.
-
- Toulouse, mentioned. 1639 W.
-
- Towneley sale, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Townley, Zouch. Oratio in memoriam Gul. Camdeni. 1624 O.
-
- Tozer, Henry. Directions for a godly life. 1628 T, 1640 T.
- — Sermon (A Christian amendment). 1633 T.
- — Christus, sive dicta et facta Christi. 1634 T.
- — Christian wisdom, a sermon on 1 Kings x. 40. 1639 T.
- — Sermon on John xviii. 3. 1640 T.
-
- Trafford, sir Edmond. Sermon at his daughter’s wedding, dedicated to
- him, by W. Massie, 1586. 1586 M.
-
- Trafford, Margaret. Sermon at her wedding, by W. Massie, 1586. 1586 M.
-
- Transcription. Cost in 1625. 1625 J.
- — _See_ Scribes.
-
- Travers, Walter. Supplication to the Privy Council (against Hooker).
- 1612 T.
- — Answer to his supplication, by Rich. Hooker. 1612 H.
-
- Treatise containing the aequity of an humble supplication in the
- behalfe of Wales, 1587. _See_ Penry, John.
-
- Trelcatius, Lucas. Scholastica locorum communium theologiæ institutio
- adversus Bellarminum. 1606 T.
-
- Trent, Council of. _See_ Ranchin, Guillaume.
-
- Treveris, Peter. Referred to as a printer at Oxford! p. 10: cf. p. 273.
-
- Trial of truth, 1600. _See_ Terry, John.
-
- Trigge, Francis. Comment. in cap. 12 ep. ad Rom. 1590 T.
- — Noctes sacrae seu lucubrationes in primam partem Apocalypseos. 1590
- T.
- — Analysis cap. 24 Evangelii secundum Matthaeum. 1591 T.
- — Sermon (on Is. xxiv. 1–3) at Grantham, 1592. 1594 T, 1595 T.
-
- Trithemius, Johannes. Account of st. Salvianus, in Latin. 1629 S.
-
- Truman, rev. Richard. Christian memorandum or Doctrine of Reproof. 1629
- T.
-
- Tuesday. Proverb about Tuesday being unfortunate to Irish. 1612 D.
-
- Turkey. Account of hardships endured by Chr. Angelus at the hand of the
- Turks: in Greek. 1617 A.
- — — (the same in English). 1617 A.
-
- Turkish. Poem in Turkish. 1612 H.
-
- Turner, William, printer, of Oxford and London. Note on the connexion
- between his two establishments. 1633 G.
- — Address to the reader. 1633 B: 1634 B (_bis_).
- — His disputes with John Lichfield, mentioned. 1636 L.
- — mentioned, pp. 276, 298, 311, 312.
-
- Turnour, Robert, mentioned, p. 246.
-
- Tutet, M. C., mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Twittee, Thomas, of Oriel college, Oxford. Concio ad clerum (1 Pet.
- iii. 8). 1640 T.
-
- Two Sermons. _See_ King, Henry, 1625.
-
- Twofold treatise. _See under_ Speculation, 1612.
-
- Twyne, Brian. Antiquitatis Academiæ Oxoniensis apologia. 1608 T, 1620
- T.
- — Miscellanea de antiquis aulis et collegiis. Ibid.
- — Summorum Oxoniensis Academiae magistratuum catalogus. Ibid.
- — Wrote the preface of the Corpus Statutorum Universitatis Oxon. 1634
- O.
-
- Tylia nemore, Willelmus de. _See_ Lyndewoode, William.
-
- Type at Oxford. _See_ Oxford—Printing.
-
- Tyrius, Maximus. _See_ Maximus, Tyrius.
-
- Tyrwhitt, William, mentioned. 1639 B.
-
-
- U.
-
- U, letter. Change from u consonantal to v in printing, noticed. 1589 U,
- p. 292.
-
- Ubaldini, Petruccio. La Vita di Carlo Magno, mentioned. 1599 U.
-
- Umbra. _See_ Wouwerus, Joannes.
-
- Uncle, John, mentioned, p. 257.
-
- Underhill, John, vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford. Latin
- Verses by him quoted. 1585 C.
-
- Unfortunate politique, the. _See_ Caussin, Nicolas.
-
- University. Note on the old spelling of the word, p. 292.
-
- Unton, sir Henry. Dedications to him. 1588 C, 1594 L.
- — Funebria d. Henrici Unton (memorial poems). 1596 U.
-
- Urmstone, rev. Shaw, mentioned, p. 230.
-
- Ursino, card. Alexander. Dedication to him. 1631 S.
-
- Ursinus, —, mentioned. 1594 P.
-
- Ursinus, Zacharias. Summe of Christian religion (based on the
- Tractationes theologicae), tr. by H. Parrie. 1587 U (_see_ p. x),
- 1589 U, 1591 U, 1595 U, 1601 U.
- — Discourses, translated by I. H. 1600 U.
- — Funeral oration on him by F. Junius, tr. into English. 1600 U.
-
- Urso of Salerno, 13th cent. physician. De primarum qualitatum arcanis &
- effectibus. 1590 B.
-
- Ussher, archbp. James. Letter about Hakewill’s Apology. 1630 H.
- — Dedication to him. 1640 C.
- — mentioned. 1640 C.
-
- Usury. _See_ Blaxton, John.
- — _See_ Powel, Gabriel.
-
- Utterson sale, mentioned, p. 261.
-
- Utting, John, mentioned, p. 258.
-
-
- V.
-
- V, letter. _See_ under U.
-
- V., I., 1615, 1620, 1637. _See_ Verneuil, John.
- — mentioned. 1612 M.
-
- V., I. P., 1624. _See_ Prideaux, John.
-
- Valdés, Juan de. Hundred and ten Considerations, tr. into English by N.
- Ferrar. 1638 V.
-
- Valentia, Gregorius de. _See_ Gregorius de Valentia.
-
- Valois, house of, mentioned. 1634 B.
-
- Vaughan, archdn. Richard. Dedication to dr. R. “Vychan,” in Welsh. 1595
- W.
-
- Vavasour, William, scribe, mentioned, p. 272.
-
- Veldener, Jean, mentioned, p. 243.
-
- Venice. Venetians mentioned as early printers and booksellers. 1485 P.
- — Venetian printing mentioned, p. 250.
-
- Vergerius, Petrus Paulus, mentioned. 1638 V.
-
- Veritas odiosa. _See_ Attonitus, Richardus.
-
- Verneuil, John. Perhaps (as “I. V.”) translated 1615 M (Mornay) from
- the French: possibly also 1612 M (Mornay).
- — Translated (as “I. V.”) a sermon by Du Moulin. 1620 D.
- — Translated Cameron’s Sovereign judge. 1628 C.
- — Catalogus interpretum S. Scripturae in bibliotheca Bodleiana
- (anonymous, by J. Verneuil, but based on James’s work). 1635 V.
- — A Nomenclator of such tracts and sermons as have been printed in
- English on any place of Holy Scripture, by I. V. 1637 V.
-
- Vernon, sir Robert. Dedication to him. 1604 C.
-
- Verulam, lord. _See_ Bacon, Francis, lord Verulam.
-
- Vicars, Thomas. Edited Mandevill’s Timothy’s task. 1619 M.
- — Edited Carleton’s Ἀστρολογομανία. 1624 C.
-
- Vicars, Thomas (“Gallager,” = of Cockfield). Pusillus grex, refutatio
- Caelii Secundi Curionis (with some letters). 1627 V.
-
- Vienne. _See_ Councils.
-
- Vigilius. Extract from Vigilius about the Incarnation. 1600 U.
-
- Villa Dei, Alexander de. _See_ Alexander de Villa Dei.
-
- Villiers, George, duke of Buckingham, _d._ 1629. Dedications to him.
- 1628 F, S, 1636 F.
-
- Villiers, Victor Albert, earl of Jersey, mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Vincentius Lirinensis. Vincentii vel Peregrini Adversus Haereses
- Commonitoria duo. 1631 V.
-
- Vindiciae fidei. _See_ Pemble, William.
-
- Virgil. The first Aeneid tr. into English verse by G. S(andys). 1632 O.
- — mentioned. 1485 P.
-
- Virginia. _See_ Smith, capt. John, 1612.
-
- Vitae selectorum virorum. _See_ Bates, William.
-
- Vitellescus, Mutius. Dedication to him. 1633 P.
-
- Vitriol. Regarded as of importance in alchemy, by bp. Thornborough.
- 1621 T.
-
- Voeglerus, Hieronymus. Dedication to him. 1636 W.
-
- Voragine, Jacobus de. _See_ Jacobus de Voragine.
-
- Vosgraf or Foxgrave, a possible printer, mentioned, p. 12.
-
- Vossius, Gerardus Johannes. Theses theologicae et historicae. 1628 V,
- 1631 V.
- — Rhetorices contractae sive partitionum oratoriarum libri V, ed.
- altera. 1631 V.
- — Responsio ad judicium H. Ravenspergeri de Grotii Defensione fidei
- catholicae (he also edited Grotius’s original work). 1636 G.
-
- Vries, dr. Abr. de. His sale at Amsterdam 1864, mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Vychan. _See_ Vaughan.
-
-
- W.
-
- W., A., 1631. _See_ Walkington, Thomas.
-
- W., D., 1596. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- W., J., 1640. _See_ Westall, John.
- — 1628. _See_ Wouwerus, Joannes.
-
- W., R., 1614. _See_ Willet, Rowland.
- — of Hart hall, Oxford. Translated ©Merry Jests© out of French. 1617
- W.
-
- W., S. Latin complimentary poems to C. Butler. 1633 B (_bis_).
-
- W., T. Radices Graecae linguae. 1627 H.
-
- Waade (or Wadd), William. Acrostic to him. 1589 R.
-
- Wade, —. Preface addressed to him. 1586 S.
-
- Wadloffe, James, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Wake, Isaac. Rex Platonicus. 1607 W (_bis_), 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.
- — Oratio funebris habita ab I. Wake (in memoriam I. Rainoldi) 25 Maii
- 1607. 1607 W, 1608 W, 1614 R, 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.
- — Oratio funebris (on sir Thomas Bodley). 1613 O.
-
- Wake, John, illuminator, mentioned, p. 270.
-
- Wakeman, Robert. Act Sermon 1604 (on Acts ii. 46). 1605 W.
- — Sermon before the King 30 Apr. 1605 (on 2 Chron. ix. 8). 1605 W.
- — Sermon, on Jonah iii-v (1603) 2nd impression. 1606 W.
- — Jonah’s Sermon and Nineveh’s Repentance. 3rd ed. 1612 W.
-
- Wales. Supplication on behalfe of Wales [by J. Penry]. 1587 P.
-
- Walkington, Thomas. The Optic-glass of Humors by T. W. (also attributed
- to Tho. Wilbie and T. Wombwell). 1631 W.
-
- Wall, dr. John. Verses by him. 1616 P.
- — The watering of Apollos, a Sermon on Acts xviii. 28. 1625 W.
- — Jacob’s Ladder, a sermon on 1 Pet. v. 6. 1626 W.
- — Sermon on Matth. xxi. 9. 1627 W.
- — The Lion in the Lamb, a sermon on Rev. vii. 10. 1628 W.
-
- Walles, Richard, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Wallop, sir Henry. Dedication to him. 1616 F.
-
- Walsingham, sir Francis. Dedications to him. 1589 R, 1627 H.
-
- Walter, bookbinder, mentioned, pp. 267, 269.
-
- Walter de Ensham, illuminator, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Walton, Adam de. _See_ Adam de Walton.
-
- Walton, Izaak, mentioned, 1613 B.
-
- Wandesford, Christopher, viscount Castlecomer, mentioned, p. 256.
-
- Warcop, Ralph. Encomion Rodolphi Warcoppi (poems to his memory). 1605
- O.
-
- Warner, John, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Warwick, earl of. _See_ Dudley, Ambrose.
-
- Watering of Apollos. _See_ Wall, John.
-
- Watermarks, p. 244.
-
- Waters of Siloë. _See_ Du Moulin, Pierre.
-
- Waterson, Simon, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 296, 311.
-
- Wats, Gilbert. Translated Bacon’s ©Advancement of learning©, and wrote
- prefaces, &c. 1640 B.
-
- Watson, sir Lewis. Dedication to him. 1635 F.
-
- Watt, dr. Robert, mentioned, 1633 P.
-
- Way, R. _See_ Nixon, Robert.
-
- Waynflete, bp. William (Patten), founder of Magdalen college, Oxford.
- Gulielmi ... Waynfleti ... vita obitusque (auctore J. Buddeno). 1602
- B.
- — mentioned. 1589 H.
-
- Waystiell, Lancelot, stationer, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Wayte, Nicholas, bookseller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Webbe, William, stationer, &c., mentioned, pp. 277, 301, 312, 313.
-
- Welbourn, co. Linc., mentioned. 1591 T.
-
- Wells, rev. William. Epistola ad authorem libelli Stricturae breves in
- Epistolas Genevensium et Oxoniensium [anon.] (imprint 1608 for
- 1708). 1608 W.
-
- Welsh. Welsh book printed at Oxford. 1595 W.
-
- Wenman, sir Richard, lord Wenman. Dedication to him. 1613 B.
-
- Wermueller, Otto. Perl mewn Adfyd (translated from the German into
- English by Miles Coverdale, and from English into Welsh by H.
- Lewys). 1595 W.
-
- Wescombe, Martin. Fabulae pontificiae dissipatae. 1639 W.
-
- West, James, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Westall, John, bookseller. Signs the preface of 1640 P, as “J. W.”
- — mentioned, pp. 277, 309, 312.
-
- Westerman, William, mentioned. 1640 B.
-
- Westfaling, Herbert, bp. of Hereford, Articles to be inquired of by the
- Churchwardens &c. within the diocese of Hereford, 1586. 1586 W.
-
- Westphalia, John of, mentioned, p. 242.
-
- Wethereld, Thomas, of Queen’s college, Oxford. Latin poem on his death,
- by Gerard Langbaine. 1636 L.
-
- Wh., Diag. 1596. _See_ Whear, Degory.
-
- Whaddon. _See under_ Sparke, Thomas, 1593.
-
- Wharton, rev. Rich. (?), vicar of St. Mary the Virgin’s, Oxford,
- mentioned. 1612 D.
-
- Whear, Degory. Verses by him, signed D. W. and Diag. Wh. 1596 F.
- — Parentatio historica, sive commemoratio Gul. Camdeni. 1624 O, 1628
- W.
- — Nuncius chronogrammaticus (de Camdeno). 1624 O, 1628 W.
- — De ratione et methodo legendi historias: praemittitur Oratio
- auspicalis. 1625 W.
- — Pietas erga benefactores, mentioned. 1626 W.
- — Latin letters to accompany his ©Methodus historica©, 1625. 1628 W.
- — Pietas erga benefactores (Parentatio historica manibus Camdeni
- oblata, 1623: Nuntius Chronogrammaticus, de obitu Camdeni:
- Dedicatio imaginis Camdenianae, 1626: Epistolae eucharisticae:
- Charisteria, 1626). 1628 W.
- — Relectiones hyemales de ratione et methodo legendi historias (3rd
- ed.). 1637 W.
-
- Whichford, mentioned, 1632 D.
-
- Whitaker, William. Latin letter to him from dr. John Rainolds. 1614 R.
-
- White, Antony. Truth and error, two sermons. 1628 W.
-
- White, dr. Thomas. Schola moralis philosophiae Oxon. in funere Whiti
- pullata (poems and oration). 1624 O.
-
- Whitgift, John, archbp. of Canterbury. Dedication to him. 1602 P.
- — mentioned. 1610 B.
-
- Whittington, Robert. De heteroclitis nominibus et de gradibus
- comparationis. 1518 W, pp. 257, 264.
- — “1500,” p. 10.
- — De concinnitate grammatices. Oxf. “1519,” mentioned, p. 12.
-
- Wickliffe, John. _See_ Wyclif, John.
-
- Widdowes, Giles. The schismatical puritan, a sermon (on 1 Cor. xiv.
- 40). 1630 W, 1631 W.
- — mentioned. 1631 P.
-
- Wiffin, Richard, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.
-
- Wight, John, printer, mentioned, p. 228.
-
- Wilbie, Thomas. _See_ Walkington, Thomas.
-
- Wilcox, Richard, bookseller, mentioned, p. 276.
-
- Wildgoose, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. 277.
-
- Wilkinson, John, of Magdalen coll. Oxford, mentioned. 1612 H.
-
- Willett, Andrew. His ©Limbomastix© and ©Loidoromastix or a scourge for
- a railer© referred to. 1604 A.
-
- Willett, Rowland. Translated ©Papistogelastes© by N. S., as “R. W.”
- 1614 S.
-
- William, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 268 (_bis_).
-
- William, illuminator, mentioned, pp. 267, 269, 270.
-
- William, scribe, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- William of Nottingham, scribe, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- William de Pickering, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 267.
-
- Williams, John, archbp. of York. De humorum numero &c. 1590 B.
- — Edited Roger Bacon’s treatise de Senectute and Urso’s de primis
- qualitatibus. 1590 B.
- — University sermon on Rev. x. 1. 1597 W.
- — Dedications to him. 1625 J, W, 1627 R.
-
- Willoughby, John. Theorremon, (selections from st. Chrysostom, made and
- translated by J. Willoughby). 1602 C.
- — Treatise for the preparation of the Lord’s Supper. 1603 W.
-
- Wilmot, John, stationer, &c., mentioned, pp. 278, 307, 312, 313.
-
- Wilson, Mathias, alias Edw. Knott, alias Nicholas Smith, a Jesuit.
- Charity Mistaken by Edw. Knott, mentioned. 1633 P.
- — The Religion of Protestants (an answer to Wilson’s ©Charity
- maintained©) by W. Chillingworth. 1638 C.
-
- Wilson, Stephen, bookseller and bookbinder, mentioned, p. 275.
-
- Wilson, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1614 R.
-
- Wilton, co. Wilts. Book in the earl of Pembroke’s Library at Wilton,
- mentioned, p. 9.
-
- Wilton, lord Grey of. _See_ Grey, Arthur.
-
- Wiltshire. A masque chiefly in Wiltshire dialect. 1636 M.
-
- Winchester. Preces in usum scholae Wintoniensis &c., auctore H.
- Robinson. 1616 R.
-
- Windsor. Thomas, mentioned, p. 259.
-
- Winniffe, dr. Thomas, dean of St. Paul’s. Dedication to him. 1640 C.
-
- Winterton, R., mentioned. 1633 G.
-
- Wirley, rev. Edward, rector of St. Ebbe’s, Oxford. Two Greek poems by
- him. 1638 B.
-
- Wither, George. An answer to Wither’s Motto, by T. G. 1625 G.
- — Poems by him. 1634 B (_bis_).
-
- Wodebrigge, William, mentioned, p. 255.
-
- Wolfius, Johannes, of Zürich. Latin letter to him from J. Acontius,
- 1562. 1631 A.
-
- Wolley, sir John and lady Elizabeth. Dedication to them. 1595 M.
-
- Wolsey, cardinal, mentioned, p. 12.
-
- Wombwell, Thomas. _See_ Walkington, Thomas.
-
- Wood, Antony. Date depending on his accuracy. 1614 D.
- — Confuses the editions of Rainolds’s ©Orationes©. 1614 R.
- — His Athenæ Oxonienses mentioned, _passim_.
-
- Wood, James, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. 274.
-
- Woodcuts. _See_ Engravings.
-
- Woodstock. Churchyard’s Handful of gladsome verses given to the Queen
- at Woodstock, 1592. 1592 C.
-
- Worcester, archdeaconry. Articles in the Visitation of Edw. Thornburgh,
- archdeacon of Worcester, 1638. 1638 T.
-
- Worcester, city. Dedication to it. 1637 S.
-
- Worde, Wynkin de, mentioned. 1485 A, p. 263.
-
- Wotton under Edge, co. Gloucester. Sermon delivered there in 1605, by
- S. Benefield. 1613 B.
-
- Wotton, sir Henry. Dedication to him. 1637 B.
-
- Wouwerus, Johannes. Pietas erga Benefactores. 1626 W.
- — mentioned, 1628 W; as J. W. 1628 C.
- — Dies aestiva sive de Umbra paegnion, cum Dousae in eam
- declamatione. 1636 W.
-
- Wrench, William, printer, mentioned, pp. 276, 297, 311.
-
- Wright, Abraham. Deliciae deliciarum, sive Epigrammatum ἀνθολογία,
- opera A. Wright. 1637 D.
-
- Wright, John, publisher of London, mentioned. 1617 H.
-
- Wright, Richard, of Oxford, mentioned, pp. 229, 311.
-
- Wright, Richard, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. 275, 295.
-
- Wright, Robert. Editor of Untoni Funebria. 1596 U.
-
- Wright, William, mentioned, p. 252.
-
- Wriothesley, Thomas, earl of Southampton. Dedication to him. 1628 P.
-
- Writtle. _See_ Petre.
-
- Wroughton, lady Katherine. Dedication to her. 1604 P.
-
- Wybarun, dr. Thomas. A binding done for him in 1467, mentioned, p. 272.
-
- Wyberd, John. Synopsis Anni Christi 1637, sive Diarium (an almanac with
- prognostications). 1637 W.
-
- Wyclif, dr. John. Apologie for John Wyclif, by dr. James: with a Life
- of Wyclif. 1608 J.
- — Two short treatises (Four articles, and objections of Friars): ed.
- by dr. James, with glossary. 1608 W.
- — Wickliffe’s wicket, a treatise on the Sacrament (a reprint of an
- ed. of 1546 (?)). 1612 W.
-
- Wyffin. _See_ Wiffin.
-
-
- Y.
-
- Yon, bookbinder, mentioned, p. 268.
-
- York, mentioned, p. 263.
-
- Young, dr. John, dean of Winchester. Dedications to him. 1623 G, 1625
- G.
-
- Young, Patrick (Patricius Junius). Edited Clement’s Epistola ad
- Corinthios prima. 1633 C.
- — Dedication to him. 1635 C.
-
- Young, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, pp. 278, 310, 313.
-
- Younger brother’s apology. _See_ Allen, John.
-
- Youth and Old Age. _See under_ Speculation, 1612.
-
-
- Z.
-
- Z., R., 1629, 1640. _See_ Zouche, Richard.
-
- Zamoyskius, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1634 S.
-
- Zel, Ulric, mentioned, pp. 242, 249.
-
- Zouche, dr. Richard. Elementa jurisprudentiae, autore R. Z. 1629 Z.
- — — (with author’s name). 1636 Z.
- — mentioned. 1634 O.
- — Descriptio juris et judicii feudalis, secundum consuetudines
- Mediolani et Normanniae. 1634 Z.
- — Descriptio juris et judicii ecclesiastici secundum canones et
- constitutiones Anglicanas. 1636 Z.
- — Descriptio juris et judicii temporalis secundum consuetudines
- feudales et Normannicas. 1636 Z.
- — Descriptio juris et judicii militaris, nec non maritimi, autore R.
- Z. 1640 Z.
- — Descriptio juris et judicii sacri. 1640 Z.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
- Oxford
-
- PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
-
- BY HORACE HART, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY
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- Oxford Historical Society.
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- PUBLICATIONS.
-
-
- 1884.
-
- ¬1. Register of the University of Oxford.¬ Vol. I. (1449–63; 1505–71),
- edited by the Rev. C. W. BOASE, M.A., pp. xxviii + 364. (Price to
- the public, without discount, and prepaid, 16_s._)
-
- ¬2. Remarks and Collections of Thomas Hearne.¬ Vol. I. (4 July 1705—19
- March 1707), edited by C. E. DOBLE, M.A., pp. viii + 404. (16_s._)
-
-
- 1884–85.
-
- ¬3. The Early History of Oxford (727–1100), preceded by a sketch of
- the Mythical Origin of the City and University.¬ By JAMES PARKER,
- M.A. With three illustrations, pp. xxxii + 420. (20_s._)
-
-
- 1885.
-
- ¬4. Memorials of Merton College, with biographical notices of the
- Wardens and Fellows.¬ By the Hon. GEO. C. BRODRICK, Warden of
- Merton College. With one illustration, pp. xx + 416. (16_s._, to
- members of Merton 12_s._)
-
- ¬5. Collectanea, 1st series¬, edited by C. R. L. FLETCHER, M.A.
- (Contents:—_a._ Letters relating to Oxford in the XIVth Century,
- edited by H. H. Henson; _b._ Catalogue of the Library of Oriel
- College in the XIVth Century, edited by C. L. Shadwell; _c._ Daily
- ledger of John Dorne, bookseller in Oxford, 1520, edited by F.
- Madan; _d._ All Souls College _versus_ Lady Jane Stafford, 1587,
- edited by C. R. L. Fletcher; _e._ Account Book of James Wilding,
- Undergraduate of Merton College, 1682–88, edited by E. G. Duff;
- _f._ Dr. Wallis’s Letter against Maidwell, 1700, edited by T. W.
- Jackson.) With two illustrations, pp. viii + 358. (16_s._)
-
-
- 1886.
-
- ¬6. Magdalen College and King James II, 1686–88.¬ A series of
- documents collected and edited by the Rev. J. R. BLOXAM, D.D.,
- with additions, pp. lii + 292. (16_s._, to members of Magdalen
- 12_s._)
-
- ¬7. Hearne’s Collections¬ [as No. 2 above]. Vol. II. (20 Mar. 1707—22
- May 1710), pp. viii + 480. (16_s._)
-
- ¬8. Elizabethan Oxford.¬ Reprints of rare tracts. Edited by the Rev.
- C. PLUMMER, M.A. (Contents:—_a._ Nicolai Fierberti Oxoniensis
- Academiæ descriptio, 1602; _b._ Leonard Hutton on the Antiquities
-
- of Oxford; _c._ Queen Elizabeth at Oxford, 1566 [pieces by J.
- Bereblock, Thomas Nele, Nich. Robinson, and Rich. Stephens, with
- appendices]; _d._ Queen Elizabeth at Oxford, 1592, by Philip
- Stringer; _e._ Apollinis et Musarum Eidyllia per Joannem Sandford,
- 1592), pp. xxxii + 316. (10_s._)
-
-
- 1887.
-
- ¬9. Letters of Richard Radcliffe and John James, of Queen’s College,
- Oxford, 1749–83¬: edited by MARGARET EVANS, with a pedigree, pp.
- xxxvi + 306. (15_s._, to members of Queen’s 10_s._ 6_d._)
-
- ¬10. Register of the University of Oxford, Vol. II. (1571–1622), part
- 1. Introductions.¬ Edited by the Rev. ANDREW CLARK, M.A., pp.
- xxxii + 468. (18_s._)
-
-
- 1887–8.
-
- ¬11. Do. Part 2. Matriculations and Subscriptions.¬ Edited by the Rev.
- ANDREW CLARK, M.A., pp. xvi + 424. (18_s._)
-
-
- 1888.
-
- ¬12. Do. Part 3. Degrees.¬ Edited by the Rev. ANDREW CLARK, M.A., pp.
- viii + 448. (17_s._)
-
- ¬13. Hearne’s Collections¬ [as No. 2 above]. Vol. III. (25 May 1710—14
- December, 1712), pp. iv + 518. (16_s._)
-
-
- 1889.
-
- ¬14. Register of the University of Oxford, Vol. II, Part 4. Index.¬
- Edited by the Rev. ANDREW CLARK, M.A., pp. viii + 468. (17_s._)
-
- ¬15. Wood’s History of the City of Oxford.¬ _New Edition._ By the Rev.
- ANDREW CLARK, M.A. Vol. I. The City and Suburbs. With three Maps
- and several Diagrams, pp. xii + 660. (25_s._, to citizens of
- Oxford 20_s._; the two Maps of old Oxford separately, not folded,
- 1_s._ 6_d._, to citizens 1_s._)
-
-
- 1890.
-
- ¬16. Collectanea, 2nd series¬, edited by Professor MONTAGU BURROWS.
- Contents:—_a._ The Oxford Market, by O. Ogle; _b._ The University
- of Oxford in the Twelfth Century, by T. E. Holland; _c._ The
- Friars Preachers of the University, edited by H. Rashdall; _d._
- Notes on the Jews in Oxford, by A. Neubauer; _e._ Linacre’s
- Catalogue of Grocyn’s Books, followed by a Memoir of Grocyn, by
- the Editor; _f._ Table-Talk and Papers of Bishop Hough, 1703–1743,
- edited by W. D. Macray; _g._ Extracts from the ‘Gentleman’s
- Magazine’ relating to Oxford, 1731–1800, by F. J. Haverfield.
- Appendix: Corrections and Additions to Collectanea,
-
- Vol. I. (Day-book of John Dorne, Bookseller at Oxford, A.D. 1520, by
- F. Madan, including ‘A Half-century of Notes’ on Dorne, by Henry
- Bradshaw.) With one diagram, pp. xii + 518. (16_s._)
-
- ¬17. Wood’s History of the City of Oxford¬ [as No. 15 above]. Vol. II.
- Churches and Religious Houses. With Map and Diagram, pp. xii +
- 550. (20_s._, to citizens of Oxford 16_s._; Map of Oxford in 1440,
- separately, not folded, 9_d._, to citizens 6_d._)
-
-
- 1890–91.
-
- ¬18. Oxford City Documents¬, financial and judicial, 1268–1665.
- Selected and edited by J. E. THOROLD ROGERS, late Drummond
- Professor of Political Economy in the University of Oxford. pp.
- viii + 440 (+ 2 loose leaves for vols. 6 and 16). (12_s._)
-
-
- 1891.
-
- ¬19. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood, antiquary, of Oxford,
- 1632–1695, described by Himself.¬ Collected from his Diaries and
- other Papers, by the Rev. ANDREW CLARK, M.A. Vol. I. 1632–1663.
- With seven illustrations. pp. xvi + 520. (20_s._)
-
- ¬20. The Grey Friars in Oxford.¬ Part I, A History of the Convent;
- Part II, Biographical Notices of the Friars, together with
- Appendices of original documents. By ANDREW G. LITTLE, M.A., pp.
- xvi + 372. (16_s._)
-
-
- 1892.
-
- ¬21. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood¬ [as No. 19]. Vol. II.
- 1664–1681. With ten illustrations. pp. xxviii + 576. (20_s._)
-
- ¬22. Reminiscences of Oxford, by Oxford men, 1559–1850.¬ Selected and
- edited by LILIAN M. QUILLER COUCH, pp. xvi + 430. (17_s._, to
- members of the University 10_s._ 6_d._)
-
-
- 1892–93.
-
- ¬23. Index to Wills proved and Administrations granted in the Court of
- the Archdeacon of Berks, 1508–1652.¬ Edited by W. P. W.
- PHILLIMORE, M.A. (Issued in conjunction with the British Record
- Society.) pp. viii + 200. (10_s._)
-
-
- 1893.
-
- ¬24. Three Oxfordshire Parishes. A History of Kidlington, Yarnton and
- Begbroke.¬ By Mrs. BRYAN STAPLETON. With a coloured map and 2
- sheet-pedigrees, pp. xx + 400. (17_s._, to residents in the three
- villages 10_s._)
-
-
- ¬25. The History of Corpus Christi College, with Lists of its
- Members.¬ By THOMAS FOWLER, D.D., President of the College. With
- three illustrations. pp. xvi + 482. (20_s._, to members of Corpus
- 12_s._ 6_d._)
-
-
- 1894.
-
- ¬26. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood¬ [as No. 19]. Vol. III.
- 1681/2–1695. With three illustrations. pp. xxxii + 548. (21_s._)
-
- ¬27. The Register of Exeter College, Oxford¬, with a history of the
- College, and illustrations. By the Rev. C. W. BOASE, M.A. Third
- edition, enlarged. pp. [8] + clxxxiv + 400. (_Presented to the
- Society by the author_: 15_s._, to members of the College 10_s._)
-
- ¬28. The Cartulary of the Monastery of St. Frideswide at Oxford.¬
- Edited by the Rev. S. R. WIGRAM, M.A. With illustrations. Vol. I.
- General and City Charters. pp. xvi + 503 + six pages (loose) of
- corrections to Vol. XXIV. (21_s._)
-
-
- 1895.
-
- ¬29. The Early Oxford Press, a bibliography of printing and publishing
- at Oxford, ‘1468’-1640.¬ With notes, appendixes and illustrations.
- By FALCONER MADAN, M.A. pp. xii + 366. (Separate copies can be
- obtained only from the Clarendon Press, price 18_s._ The Society
- can only supply it in sets.)
-
-
- _Forthcoming Publication._
-
-
- 1895.
-
- ¬30. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood¬ [as No. 19]. Vol. IV:
- Addenda. With illustrations. pp. xii + 322.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The 5th (and last) vol. of CLARK’S edition of ©Wood’s Life and Times©,
- the 3rd (and last) vol. of the same Editor’s ©Wood’s History of
- the City of Oxford©, the 2nd vol. of the ©Cartulary of St.
- Frideswide’s© edited by the Rev. S. R. WIGRAM, the 4th vol. of
- ©Hearne’s Diaries© edited by C. E. DOBLE, Esq., the ©Place Names
- of the diocese of Oxford©, ©Collectanea© III, edited by Prof. M.
- BURROWS, and other volumes are in active preparation.
-
- * * * * *
-
- A full description of the Society’s work and objects can be obtained
- by application to any of the Committee residing at Oxford (P.
- LYTTELTON GELL, Esq., Headington Hill; FALCONER MADAN, Esq. (_Hon.
- Treasurer_), 90 Banbury Road; the Rev. the PROVOST OF QUEEN’S COLLEGE
- (Dr. MAGRATH); and C. L. SHADWELL, Esq., Frewin Hall, Oxford). The
- annual subscription is one guinea, and ¬the published volumes as a set
- can be obtained by new members at one-fourth the published price (i.
- e. 10_s._ 6_d._ a year)¬.
-
- _Jan._, 1895.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
-
-
- Changed From To On
- Page
-
- “sensibus conservandis.” “sensibus | conservandis.” 29
-
- “illustratus, & emendatus” “_illustratus, & emendatus_” 29
-
- “Oxford. [motto,” “Oxford. | [motto” 63
- 86
-
- “tenere. [motto,” “tenere. | [motto,” 68
-
- “Panke. [motto” “Panke. | [motto” 82
-
- “Doctore. [motto” “Doctore. | [motto” 115
-
- “Vectensi. | line” “Vectensi. | [line” 124
-
- “a from of approbation” “a form of approbation” 124
-
- “Ordinary | line” “Ordinary | [line” 125
-
- “Tem-plo” “Tem-|plo” 136
-
- “Author. | motto” “Author. | [motto” 137
-
- “Artes. [two” “Artes. | [two” 139
-
- “sign. 1^r” “sign. A 1^r” 146
-
- “See Wood’s Ath. Oxon., 256” “See Wood’s Ath. Oxon., iii. 256” 150
-
- “T. S. [line” “T. S. | [line” 153
- 196
-
- “Oxford | The” “Oxford] | The” 161
-
- “Illustrantur à [line” “Illustrantur à | [line” 169
-
- “1636. | motto” “1636. | [motto” 192
-
- “line] BY” “line] | BY” 214
-
- “line.] The” “line.] | The” 222
-
- “doctoris sub= tilissimi” “doctoris sub=|tilissimi” 227
-
- 1. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
- 2. Silently corrected typographical errors.
-
-
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-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Early Oxford Press, by Falconer Madan
-
-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'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Early Oxford Press
- A Bibliography of Printing and Publishing at Oxford
- '1468'-1640 With Notes, Appendixes and Illustrations
-
-Author: Falconer Madan
-
-Release Date: October 10, 2017 [EBook #55727]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EARLY OXFORD PRESS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Richard Tonsing, Adrian Mastronardi and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c001'><strong>Transcriber's Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>EARLY OXFORD PRESS</div>
- <div class='c000'><i>MADAN</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>London</div>
- <div class='c000'>HENRY FROWDE</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Oxford University Press Warehouse</span></div>
- <div><span class='sc'>Amen Corner, E.C.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_a_002.jpg' alt='DOMINVS ILLUMINATIO MEA' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>New York</div>
- <div class='c000'>MACMILLAN &amp; CO., 66 FIFTH AVENUE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='Frontispiece' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_frontis.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>AN OXFORD TITLE-PAGE, 1640</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'><i><span class='xlarge'>The</span><br /> Early Oxford Press</i><br /> <br /> <span class='large'>A BIBLIOGRAPHY OF PRINTING AND PUBLISHING AT OXFORD<br /> ‘1468’–1640</span><br /> <span class='small'><i>WITH NOTES, APPENDIXES AND ILLUSTRATIONS</i></span></h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>FALCONER MADAN, M. A.</span></div>
- <div><span class='xsmall'>FELLOW OF BRASENOSE COLLEGE, OXFORD</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class='large'>Oxford</span></div>
- <div>AT THE CLARENDON PRESS</div>
- <div class='c000'>1895</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Oxford</div>
- <div>PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS</div>
- <div>BY HORACE HART, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The present work was undertaken early in 1889, and is an
-attempt to describe in detail the products and working of the
-Oxford Press in its early days. Though eclipsed by the glories
-of the later University Press, the first period, included in this
-book, has a natural importance of its own. The Fifteenth and
-early Sixteenth Century presses<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c007'><sup>[1]</sup></a> are necessarily of interest, and
-when printing became firmly established in 1585 it began to
-reflect faithfully the current tendencies of thought and study in
-the University. Theology is predominant, animated on its controversial
-side with fierce opposition to the Church of Rome, but
-the quieter fields of classical work are well represented, and side
-by side is seen an increasing study of English literature. Of
-lighter books there are few, and of chapbooks perhaps only one
-(1603, no. 5).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The most important works produced at Oxford between 1585
-and 1640 were Richard de Bury’s Philobiblon (1599), Wycliff’s
-treatises (1608), capt. John Smith’s Map of Virginia (1612),
-Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy (1621, &amp;c.), Field on the
-Church (1628, &amp;c.), Sandys’ translations of Ovid’s Metamorphoses
-(1633), the University Statutes (1634), Chaucer’s Troilus
-and Cressida in English and Latin (1635), Chillingworth’s
-Religion of Protestants (1638), and Bacon’s Advancement and
-Proficience of Learning, in English (1640: see frontispiece).
-There are of course many books on logic, philosophy and the
-like, intended for the University curriculum, and many collections
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>of the rhetorical poems by which the University was expected
-to condole or rejoice with every change in the royal estate. 180
-pages of mechanical grief at Elizabeth’s death in 1603 are at once
-followed by 200 pages of equally mechanical congratulations to
-James I: and the metrical tears dropped in turn on the grave of
-the latter monarch in March 1625, are in May succeeded with
-indecorous haste by songs of joy on the marriage of his successor.
-Some volumes of English poems and plays occur, by Skelton,
-Nicholas Breton, Churchyard, Fitz-Geffrey, Randolph, Cartwright,
-Fletcher, and others, and a few still lighter pieces, such
-as a Masque at Richmond, partly in Wiltshire dialect, and
-“Bushell’s Rock,” both in 1636. There are traces of the study
-of Spanish, French and Welsh, as well as of Latin and Greek;
-and an attempt to introduce phonetic writing and spelling was
-made by Charles Butler in 1633 and 1634. Even theological
-disputes are lightened by the solemn account of certain Jesuits
-in the East, who dressed up a carcase as that of a queen recently
-deceased, obtained much glory from the miracles it wrought,
-until the real corpse arrived and the priests vacated the vicinity
-(1633, Gregorius). There is something surprising in Oxford
-being chosen as the printing-place of a book to persuade mothers
-to nurse their own children (1622, Clinton); and an episcopal
-alchemist is not often to be met with in real life (1621, Thornborough).
-It is less to be wondered at that a college which had
-leased land to Queen Elizabeth for a quiet five thousand years,
-should try to be relieved of its agreement within fifty (1623,
-Oxford).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There is no need of a general history of the University Press
-at this time, as distinguished from the annals which the Appendixes
-of this work present. The printers were privileged
-members of the University, and occasionally printed “cum
-privilegio,” but there is little to invest their personal proceedings
-with importance. Though it is true that money was advanced
-in 1585 by the Earl of Leicester, Chancellor of the University, to
-set up Joseph Barnes with a new press, and that the charter of
-privileges in 1632 gave the University direct control of the
-printing, there are as yet few signs of actual academical patronage
-or interference, and the failures and successes of the printers
-and publishers, which can be traced in detail in Appendixes C
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>and F, are the ordinary fluctuations of trade. Nor can the
-Oxford press at this time claim much connexion with the greater
-world of the English Court or Church. After it was placed on
-a permanent footing by the Earl of Leicester, its one great patron
-and protector within our period was Archbishop Laud, who
-occupied a similar position to that of Bishop Fell at a later
-period in the same century.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The year 1640 has been chosen as the inferior limit of this
-bibliography, partly because both the British Museum Catalogue
-of early English books and Arber’s Transcript of the Registers
-of the Stationers’ Company stop at that point, partly because
-the interest in the products of the press as such was found to be
-rapidly diminishing, and partly in consequence of the break-up
-of all quiet progress during the convulsions of the Rebellion,
-combined with the dismal prospect of that trackless wilderness—the
-literature of the Civil War.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The present bibliography presents, it is believed, four features
-of novelty:—the better representation of the titlepage by the
-use of Roman and Italic capitals as well as ordinary type; the
-mention of the chief type used in each book; the furnishing of
-the first words of certain pages, to facilitate the identification of
-imperfect copies; and the insertion of actual pages<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c007'><sup>[2]</sup></a> of books
-printed at Oxford, selected from works which are cheap and
-common. These points are explained and discussed in a paper
-on <cite>Method in Bibliography</cite>, printed at pp. 91–106 of vol. 1 of the
-Transactions of the Bibliographical Society (1893), to which the
-reader is referred, if he wishes to see a fuller account of the
-whole aim and method of the present book.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The best thanks of the writer are due for general help to
-Mr. E. Gordon Duff, Librarian of the John Rylands (late
-Spencer) Library at Manchester, to Mr. F. J. H. Jenkinson,
-Librarian of the Cambridge University Library, and to Mr. W.
-H. Allnutt of the Bodleian: but especially to the Delegates of
-the Clarendon Press both for undertaking on liberal terms a work
-which can scarcely prove remunerative, and for enabling the
-Oxford Historical Society to supply copies to its members, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>vol. xxix, at a price far below its actual cost<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c007'><sup>[3]</sup></a>. Mr. Horace Hart,
-the Controller of the Press, has taken a warm personal interest
-in the printing, and any merits of form which may be found are
-due to his experience and to the co-operation of his compositors.
-Nothing, however, can relieve the writer of responsibility for the
-errors and shortcomings which will be detected; and he can only
-plead that it is better to bring out an imperfect book, if it is
-a useful one and the result of hard work, than, by straining after an
-unattainable completeness, to delay indefinitely its publication.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>F. MADAN.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, <i>Dec.</i>, 1894.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'><span class='sc'>Minor Points.</span></h3>
-
-<p class='c009'><i>Dates.</i> The books classed under a given year, such as 1615, are necessarily
-such as were issued between 25 March 1615 and 24 March 1616,
-since no means exist for dividing them according to the historical year. In
-recording a date between Jan. 1 and March 24, the form used is invariably the
-double one, such as 23 Feb. 161<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>, by which is implied what we understand
-by 23 Feb. 1616.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>Numbers of books.</i> Some notes on the number of books printed at Oxford
-will be found on p. <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>, and of books printed or published at Oxford on
-p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>, among the Notanda.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>References.</i> The usual style of reference throughout the book (including
-index) is to the <i>year</i> followed by the <i>initial letter</i> of the particular heading;
-as 1634 C, when the reference is to no. 9 on p. <a href='#Page_177'>177</a> (Cosin). A few references
-will be found in the earlier pages to years beyond 1640, made before it was
-decided to close the work at that year.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>Titles.</i> The heading usually presents the author’s name in the form by
-which he is generally known to posterity, as “James ii, king,” although at
-the time of the book referred to he was prince James.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_ix'>ix</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>LIST OF CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='LIST OF CONTENTS'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='4%' />
-<col width='89%' />
-<col width='5%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='c011'></th>
- <th class='c011'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c012'>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Preface</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_v'>v</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>List of Illustrations and Tables</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_x'>x</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Plan of the Bibliography</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_xi'>xi</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>The Oxford Press:—</span></td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>Fifteenth Century</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>Early Sixteenth Century</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_5'>5</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>Fictitious or Lost Oxford books, &amp;c., 1459–1584</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_8'>8</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>The Oxford University Press, 1585–1640</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>Periodical</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_225'>225</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>Supplement of Additions and Corrections</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_227'>227</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>List of Undated books</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_236'>236</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Appendix A</span>—The Fifteenth Century Press (a detailed account of books, type, copies known, &amp;c.)</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_237'>237</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Appendix B</span>—The Early Sixteenth Century Press</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_263'>263</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Appendix C</span>—A chronological list of persons and proceedings connected with book-production at Oxford, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1180–1640</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_266'>266</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'>— Discussion of the authorship of the <cite>Praise of Music</cite>, 1586</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_279'>279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Appendix D</span>—Documents (Statute, 1373—Charters, 1632, 163<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>, 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>—Statute, 1636)</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_281'>281</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Appendix E</span>—Woodcut and metal ornaments, tables of use of type, notanda</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_289'>289</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Appendix F</span>—Lists of Imprints and tables of Oxford printers and publishers, 1585–1640</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_293'>293</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Index</span></td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_315'>315</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_x'>x</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND TABLES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary='LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND TABLES'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='7%' />
-<col width='71%' />
-<col width='21%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='c014'><span class='sc'>Plate</span></th>
- <th class='c011'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c013'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>I.</td>
- <td class='c011'>A collotype (as are also plates II-VII) of the titlepage of Wats’s translation of Bacon’s <cite>Advancement of Learning</cite> (Oxford, 1640), see p. <a href='#Page_217'>217</a>: here reduced one-third in length and breadth</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#Frontispiece'>Frontispiece</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c016' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Oxford type, “1468”-86.</span></th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>II.</td>
- <td class='c011'>Type 1 (see p. <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>). The last page of the first Oxford book, bearing the famous colophon with date MCCCCLXVIII, discussed on pp. <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>–52</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#II'>At end.</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>III.</td>
- <td class='c011'>Types 2 and 3 (see pp. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>–3). The upper part of the first page of the Latteburius, printed in 1482. Parts of the curious woodcut border are also shown, which is the first used in English printing</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#III'>At end.</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c011'>Types 3, 4, 5, 6 (see pp. <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>–4). The upper part of K7<sup>v</sup> of the Lyndewoode, printed in 1483 (?). The coloured initials are of course inserted by hand in the original</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#IV'>At end.</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>V.</td>
- <td class='c011'>Types 5, 7 (see pp. <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>–4). The text of f2<sup>v</sup> of the <cite>Festial</cite>, printed in 148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (?), showing one of the smaller woodcuts and the woodcut capital G</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#V'>At end.</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c016' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Oxford type, 1517–19.</span></th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c011'>(<i>a</i>) The titlepage of Burley on the Posterior Analytics of Aristotle, printed in 1517 (see pp. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>), showing the large wood-engraving of the University Arms and the ordinary large type.</td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c011'>(<i>b</i>) The four last lines of the back of the titlepage reproduced above, showing the ordinary large and small type</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#VI'>At end.</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c011'>The titlepage of Burley de Materia et Forma, printed in 1518 by John Scolar. The woodcut represents a master and scholar. The type is the largest, used in titles only</td>
- <td class='c013'><i><a href='#VII'>At end.</a></i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c016' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Oxford printing, 1585–1640.</span></th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c017' colspan='3'>Each of the first seven hundred copies of this work contains three specimens of actual pages from old Oxford books, copies of which are both common and cheap. Thus nos. 1–200 contain pages from (1) Ursinus’s Summe of Christian Religion, 1587, (2), N. Fuller’s Miscellanea Sacra, 1616, (3) Carpenter’s Philosophia Libera, 1636: nos. 201–322 (1) Ursinus, (2) Fuller, (3) Reusner’s Symbola, 1638: nos. 323–500 (1) Ursinus, (2) Sanderson’s Logica, 1618, (3) Reusner: nos. 501–700 (1) Ursinus’s Summe of Christian Religion, 1589, (2) Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the prophecies, 1613, (3) Grotius’s Defensio fidei catholicæ, 1636.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c017' colspan='3'>After no. 700, at least one actual page will be given, and its provenance will be indicated by a note of the form “38.20,” implying a page from the 20th book of 1638 (Reusner).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c016' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>List of Tables.</span></th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c015'></th>
- <th class='c011'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c013'>PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c018' colspan='2'>Details of the 15th century books</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_238'>238</a>–9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c018' colspan='2'>Owners of copies of ditto</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_240'>240</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c018' colspan='2'>Details of the early 16th century books</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Details'>265</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c018' colspan='2'>Type used in Oxford books, 1585–1640</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_291'>291</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c018' colspan='2'>The relations of Oxford printers and publishers, 1585–1640</td>
- <td class='c013'><a href='#Page_311'>311</a>–3</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_xi'>xi</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PLAN OF THE BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>15th and early 16th century.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>The books of these periods are in some respects exceptionally treated, but the
-general plan is similar to that of the later press. Pages <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>–7 (printed off in 1889) must
-be taken in close connexion with Appendixes A and B, which correct and supplement
-those pages in important points.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1585–1640.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. After the heading (which in all cases is the author or a body representing the
-author, if known; otherwise the catch-title) comes the title, reproduced faithfully so far
-as was possible with the employment of four types. A fifth minute type indicates
-letters represented by contractions in the original. The occurrence of a “motto”
-(whether a text or quotation), a device (see p. <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>) or woodcuts (see p. <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>) is noted
-in square brackets. A * before the heading implies “undated”: a † “no place of
-printing mentioned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>2. Next follows the technical description, comprising:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>a.</i> The number of the imprint (see pp. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>–310: it would have been better to
-add the names of the printer and publisher to the bare reference).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>b.</i> The date.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>c.</i> The apparent size of a page of an ordinary uncut copy, according to the scale,</p>
-
-<div class='block c020'>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <th class='c014' colspan='2'><i>for narrow sizes</i></th>
- <th class='c021' colspan='2'><i>for broad sizes</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='c014'>in.</th>
- <th class='c022'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='c014'>in.</th>
- <th class='c017'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>12–18</td>
- <td class='c022'>folio</td>
- <td class='c014'>12–18</td>
- <td class='c017'>large 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c023'>9–12</td>
- <td class='c022'>large 8<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='c023'>9–12</td>
- <td class='c017'>4<sup>o</sup></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>7–9</td>
- <td class='c022'>8<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='c014'>7–9</td>
- <td class='c017'>small 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>6–7</td>
- <td class='c022'>12<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='c014'>6–7</td>
- <td class='c017'>square 12<sup>o</sup></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>5–6</td>
- <td class='c022'>16<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>&#8196;&amp;c.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>4–5</td>
- <td class='c022'>24<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>The number of leaves in a section (quire or gathering) precedes, within round
-brackets, when different from what is suggested by the apparent size: as “(eights)
-small 4<sup>o</sup>.” When it has been desirable to indicate further the way in which the
-original sheets of paper have been folded, the words <i>single</i>, <i>double</i>, or <i>treble</i> (for once,
-twice, or thrice folded) are used on p. <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>d.</i> The number of pages of a perfect copy, in square brackets when there is no
-printed pagination, as “pp. [16] + 121 + [9].” When printed pagination does not occur
-in the book at all, the signatures are also given.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>e.</i> The first words of the 11th page, and of later ones in the case of a large work,
-always in italics.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>f.</i> The common type of the body of the work, followed by the terms Roman, Italic,
-or English (i. e. Black-letter): see pp. <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>–2.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>g.</i> The contents. <i>Every page not mentioned is blank</i>, without exception.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>3. Notes on the book. A reference to Wood’s <cite>Athenæ</cite> and <cite>Fasti Oxonienses</cite>, as
-edited by Bliss (1813–20), has been considered as superseding in most instances any
-biographical account of the author. And the limitation of the present work to a
-bibliography of a press, not of books connected with the University, has been borne in
-mind.</p>
-
-<div class='ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>THE OXFORD PRESS.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>The Fifteenth Century Press<a id='r4' /><a href='#f4' class='c007'><sup>[4]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>“1468.”</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>[<b>Rufinus</b>, of Aquileia]. [Sign. a 1<sup>r</sup>:—] Incipit exposicio sancti
-Ieronimi in | simbolum apostolorum ad papam laure<span class='small'>n</span>tiu<span class='small'>m</span>. [Sign. e 9<sup>v</sup>:—]
-Explicit exposicio sancti Ieronimi in | simbolo apostolorum ad papam
-laure<span class='small'>n</span>|cium Impressa Oxonie Et finita An|no domini . M . cccc . lxviij .
-xvij . die | decembris.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, “1468”: 8<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [84], signn. a-d<sup>8</sup> e<sup>10</sup>: sign. b 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>tali generacione</i>. Contents:—pp. (1–82)
-the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The work here ascribed to St. Jerome is in reality by Tyrannius Rufinus of
-Aquileia, <i>d.</i> 610.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1479.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Aegidius</b> de Columna, of Rome. [Sign. a 2<sup>r</sup>:—] Incipit
-tractatus sole<span class='small'>n</span>nis fratris Egi|dij de ordine fratrum Augustinensium de |
-peccato originali [Sign. c 7<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit tractatus breue [altered by
-hand to <i>breuis</i>] et vtilis de | origi<span class='small'>n</span>ali peccato Editus a fratre Egidio |
-Romano ordinis fratru<span class='small'>m</span> heremita<span class='small'>rum</span> san|cti augustini. Impresso [altered
-by hand to <i>impressus</i>] et finito [<i>finitus</i>, as before] Oxonie. | A natiuitate
-d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . cccc . lxxix . xiiij . die | mensis marcij</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, probably 14<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span>:
-8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [48], signn. a-c<sup>8</sup>: sign. b 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>quod contrahamus</i>. Contents:—pp. (3–46)
-the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The <i>editio princeps</i> of this work by bp. Aegidius de Columna, of Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Aristotle.</b> [Sign. y 6<sup>r</sup>:—] Explicit textus ethicorum Aristotelis |
-per leonardu<span class='small'>m</span> arretinu<span class='small'>m</span> lucidissime transla|tus correctissimeq<span class='small'>ue</span>.
-Imp&thinsp;ressus Oxoniis | Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . cccc. lxxix.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, 1479: 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[348], signn. a-x<sup>8</sup> y<sup>6</sup>: sign. b 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>Mnis ars</i>. Contents:—pp. (3–4) “prefacio
-leonardi arretini in libros ethicorum”:
-(5–15) “prologus” by the same:
-(17–347) the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A Latin translation of the Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle by Leonardus Brunus
-of Arezzo (Arretium).</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1480.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>*†<b>Cicero</b>, Marcus Tullius. [M. Tulli Ciceronis Oratio pro T.
-Annio Milone.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>[Oxford, about 1480]: 6<sup>o</sup>: probably 60 pages, signn. a-e<sup>6</sup>. Contents:—pp. (probably
-3–60) the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known from fragments containing signn. b 3, b 4, e 3, e 4, in the Bodleian
-Library at Oxford. It is still not absolutely certain that this book was printed at
-Oxford. If it was, this, and not the Andria of Terence printed by Pynson in 1497,
-was the first English edition of any part of a classic author in the original language.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1481.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Alexander</b> de Hales, the <i>doctor irrefragabilis</i>. [Sign. g 5<sup>v</sup>:—]
-Explicit expositio venerabilis | Alexandri sup<span class='small'>er</span> primu<span class='small'>m</span> lib<span class='small'>rum</span> de a<span class='small'>n</span>i<span class='small'>m</span>a.
-[Sign. y 7<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit elucidantissima exposi⸗|tio egregij Alexandri
-sup<span class='small'>er</span> secundu<span class='small'>m</span> | libru<span class='small'>m</span> de anima. [Sign. <span class='fss'>H</span> 8<sup>r</sup>:—] Explicit sentenciosa
-atq<span class='small'>ue</span> studio | digna expositio venerabilis Alexan|dri sup<span class='small'>er</span> terciu<span class='small'>m</span> lib<span class='small'>rum</span>
-de anima. Imp⸗|pressum p<span class='small'>er</span> me Theodericu<span class='small'>m</span> rood de | Colonia in alma
-vniu<span class='small'>er</span>sitate Oxon̄. | Anno incarnac<span class='small'>i</span>onis d<span class='small'>omi</span>nice. M . cccc . | lxxxi . xi .
-die mensis Octobris.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, 1481: la. 8<sup>o</sup>,
-perhaps (eights) fol.: pp. [480], signn.
-a-f<sup>8</sup>, g<sup>6</sup>, h-s<sup>8</sup>, t-x<sup>6</sup>, y-z and <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>H</span><sup>8</sup>: sign.
-b 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>vel non sit</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>vna natura</i>.
-Contents:—signn. a 2<sup>r</sup>-g 5<sup>v</sup>, bk. 1, with
-short preface: h 1<sup>r</sup>-y 7<sup>v</sup>, bk. 2: z 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span> 8<sup>r</sup>,
-bk 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The <i>editio princeps</i> et unica of the Latin Commentary on the De Anima (<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">περὶ ψυχῆς</span>)
-of Aristotle, made by Alexander de Hales (i.e. probably Hailes near Winchcombe)
-the <i>doctor irrefragabilis</i> (<i>d.</i> 1245), to be distinguished from Alexander de Ales or Alesius.
-Of this book there are two issues, the earlier with no border, the later with an
-elaborate woodcut border, the first ever found in an English printed book, surrounding the
-entire printed text of sign. a 2<sup>r</sup>. There are two similar issues of the Lathbury, 1482.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. *†<b>Latin Grammar.</b> [A Latin Grammar in English with
-examples, only known from two leaves in the British Museum, signn. b 2
-and (presumably) b 5: b 2 beg. “case As I muste”, ends “adyectyuys
-and voy”: b 5 beg. “Also when y haue”, ends “que<span class='small'>m</span> queris”. Date
-probably 1481: probably sm. 4<sup>o</sup> (but in eights), the chain lines being across
-the page.]</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1482.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>†<b>Lathbury</b>, John. [Sign. b 8<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit p<span class='small'>ro</span>logus Sequitur li⸗|ber
-moraliu<span class='small'>m</span> sup<span class='small'>er</span> trenis Iheremie p<span class='small'>ro</span>⸗|phete &amp;c̄. [Sign. z 8<sup>v</sup>:—] Et sic
-e<span class='small'>st</span> fmis huius op<span class='small'>er</span>is mo⸗|raliu<span class='small'>m</span> sup<span class='small'>er</span> ca . <span class='fss'>I</span> . treno<span class='small'>rum</span> ihere. p<span class='small'>ro</span>ph<span class='small'>et</span>e In |
-cipit treno<span class='small'>rum</span> Capitulum s<span class='small'>ecundu</span>m. [A similar colophon follows chapter
-2 on sign. K (“k k”) 7<sup>v</sup>.] [Sign. L 7<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit exposicio ac moralisacio
-| tercij capituli trenoru<span class='small'>m</span> Iheremie pro|phete . Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni M .
-cccc . lxxxij vlti⸗|ma die mensis Iulij | [Sign. O 5<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit tabula
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>sup<span class='small'>er</span> opus trenoru<span class='small'>m</span> | compilatu<span class='small'>m</span> per Iohannem Lattebu . | rij ordinis
-minorum.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, [Oxford] 1482: la. 8<sup>o</sup>,
-perhaps (eights) fol.: pp. [584], signn.
-a-z, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>I</span>, kk, <span class='fss'>L</span>-<span class='fss'>M</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>N</span>-<span class='fss'>O</span><sup>6</sup>: sign. b 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>strennuitatem</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>didit &amp;c̄.</i> Contents:—signn.
-a 2<sup>r</sup>-b 8<sup>v</sup>, prologue: c 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>L</span> 7<sup>v</sup>,
-the work in 3 chapters: <span class='fss'>M</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>O</span> 5<sup>v</sup>,
-alphabetical index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The <i>editio princeps</i> et unica of the Latin Commentary on the Lamentations of
-Jeremiah, made by John Lathbury. Of this book there are two issues, with and without
-the woodcut border mentioned under the Alexander de Hales, 1481.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1483.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. [*†<b>Anwykyll</b>, John]. [Compendium totius grammaticae].
-[Sign. n 1<sup>r</sup>:—] Uulgaria quedam abs Terentio in Anglica<span class='small'>m</span> ling|uam
-traducta.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No doubt printed at Oxford, probably
-in 1483: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [256?], signn.
-a-q<sup>8</sup>(?). Contents:—signn. a-m, the
-work(?), n 1<sup>r</sup>-q 8<sup>v</sup>, Vulgaria Terentii.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A Latin Grammar in Latin believed to be by John Anwykyll, of which this edition
-is only known from fragments, but which was reprinted at Deventer in 1489. The
-Vulgaria Terentii (sentences from Terence with English translation) was sold as a
-separate part, and still exists complete in itself. There are two issues of the Grammar,
-not at present clearly distinguished.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. *†<b>Hampole</b>, Richard Rolle of. [Sign. a 2<sup>r</sup>:—] Explanationes
-notabiles deuotissimi viri Ricardi | Hampole heremite sup<span class='small'>er</span> lectio<span class='small'>n</span>es illas
-beati Iob q<span class='small'>ue</span> solent | in exequijs defunctoru<span class='small'>m</span> legi q<span class='small'>ue</span> no<span class='small'>n</span> minus historia<span class='small'>m</span>
-q<span class='small'>uam</span> tropo|logiam &amp; anagogiam ad studentiu<span class='small'>m</span> vtilitatem exactissi⸗|me
-annotauit. [Sign. k 6<sup>v</sup>:—] Sermo beati Augustiui de misericordia | et
-pia oracione pro defunctis. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>[Oxford, probably 1483]: (sixes) 12<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [128], signn. a-k [“lr”]<sup>6</sup> l<sup>4</sup>: sign.
-b 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>visitat ad</i>. Contents:—sign.
-a 2<sup>r</sup>-k 6<sup>r</sup>, Hampole on Job: k 6<sup>v</sup>-l 3<sup>v</sup>,
-Augustine.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. *<b>Logic.</b> [Sign. A 2<sup>r</sup>:—] Uonia<span class='small'>m</span> ex t<span class='small'>er</span>mi<span class='small'>ni</span>s fiu<span class='small'>n</span>t p<span class='small'>ro</span>p<span class='small'>osici</span>o<span class='small'>n</span>es ...
-[19 Latin treatises on logical subjects].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No place or date [Oxf., about 1483]:
-(sixes) 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [328], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Z</span>, <span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>C</span>c<sup>6</sup>:
-<span class='fss'>D</span>d<sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>nulla proposicio</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span>b 1<sup>r</sup>
-<i>illis superfluum</i>. Contents:—signn.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span>d 5<sup>v</sup> nineteen logical treatises, the
-last ending “Explicit tractatus de motu
-velocitatis. Sequitur tabula”: <span class='fss'>D</span>d 6<sup>r</sup>-8<sup>r</sup>,
-a table in Latin giving the heads of the
-parts of each treatise, each group preceded
-by “Tractatus”: <span class='fss'>D</span>d 8<sup>r</sup> “Ad lectores
-carmen” and “Registrum cartarum”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These nineteen logical treatises are strung together to form a systematic work on
-Logic: at the end of the 17th, on sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>b 3<sup>v</sup>, is “Et sic finiuntur insolubilia swynishede.”,
-i. e. Roger Swineshede (Suinesheved, Swincet &amp;c.), but he was probably only
-the author of that part. The last treatise is physical rather than logical.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. *<b>Lyndewoode</b>, William. [Sign. S 9<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit opus
-magistri wil|helmi lyndewoode Super con⸗|stituc<span class='small'>i</span>ones prouinciales laus
-deo. [Sign. dd 7<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit tabula co<span class='small'>m</span>pendiosa super librum | qui
-intitulatur p<span class='small'>ro</span>uincialis co<span class='small'>m</span>pilata per wil⸗|helmu<span class='small'>m</span> de Tylia nemore completa
-In festo | co<span class='small'>n</span>uersacionis Sancti Pauli . Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni | Millesimo .
-CCCC . xxxiij.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>No imprint, but Oxford about 1483:
-(eights) fol.: pp. [732], signn. a-c<sup>8</sup>, d<sup>6</sup>,
-e-i<sup>8</sup>, k<sup>6</sup>, l-o<sup>8</sup>, p<sup>6</sup>, q-s<sup>8</sup>, t<sup>6</sup>, v-y<sup>8</sup>, z<sup>6</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup>,
-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>6</sup>, <span class='fss'>F</span>-<span class='fss'>N</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>O</span><sup>6</sup>, <span class='fss'>P</span>-<span class='fss'>R</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>S</span><sup>10</sup>, aa-cc<sup>8</sup>, dd<sup>10</sup>: sign.
-b 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>de hijs habes</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>supra c.
-proxi.</i>, bb 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>eas delinquat</i>. Contents:—sign.
-a 1<sup>v</sup>, woodcut of a doctor
-at his desk: a 2<sup>r</sup>, “Prologus”: a 2<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>S</span> 9<sup>v</sup>,
-the work in five books: aa 2<sup>r</sup>-aa 2<sup>v</sup>
-“tabula constitucionum prouincialium”:
-aa 3<sup>r</sup>-dd 7<sup>v</sup>, an index: dd 8<sup>r</sup>-10<sup>r</sup>, table
-of Constitutions according to author.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The <i>editio princeps</i> of the Provincial Constitutions of England, in Latin, with a
-Latin Commentary on them by William Lyndewoode (<i>d.</i> 1446). See 1664 <span class='fss'>L</span>,
-1679 <span class='fss'>L</span>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1485.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. *†<b>Alexander</b> de Villa Dei. [Textus Alexandri cum sententiis].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>[Oxford, about 1485]: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known from two leaves (signn. c<sup>2</sup>-c<sup>3</sup>) in the Library of St. John’s College,
-Cambridge. A grammatical work, of which other editions were printed in London
-by Wynkin de Worde (sine anno) and Pynson (1516), and elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Phalaris.</b> [Sign. a 2<sup>r</sup>:—] Francisci Aretini Oratoris p<span class='small'>re</span>⸗|clarissimi
-in eloq<span class='small'>ue</span>ntissimas Phala|ridis tyranni epistolas per ipsum | e
-greco in latinu<span class='small'>m</span> versas. Prohe⸗|mium foeliciter incipit [Sign. m 6<sup>r</sup>:—]
-Hoc oposculu<span class='small'>m</span> in alma vniuersi⸗|tate Oxonie. A Natali christiano |
-Duce<span class='small'>n</span>tesima &amp; nonagesi<span class='small'>m</span>a septima. | Olimpiade foeliciter impressum e<span class='small'>st</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Oxford, 1485, printed by Theodoric Rood
-and Thomas Hunte: (eights) squ. 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[176], signn. a-d<sup>8</sup>, e<sup>6</sup>, f<sup>8</sup>, g<sup>6</sup>, h<sup>8</sup>, i<sup>6</sup>, k-l<sup>8</sup>,
-m<sup>6</sup>: sign. b 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Udio vos</i>. Contents:—sign.
-a 1<sup>v</sup> “Carmeliani Brixiensis Poete
-ad lectorem Carmen,” 12 elegiac lines:
-a 2<sup>r</sup>-m 6<sup>r</sup>, the work: on m 6<sup>v</sup> after the
-colophon “Hoc Teodericus rood quem
-collonia misit | Sanguine germanus nobile
-pressit opus | Atque sibi socius thomas fuit
-anglicus hunte. | Dij dent vt venetos
-exuperare queant | Quam ienson venetos
-decuit vir gallicus artem | Ingenio didicit
-terra britanna suo. | Celatos veneti nobis
-transmittere libros | Cedite nos alijs vendimus
-o veneti | Que fuerat vobis ars primum
-no ta latini | Est eadem nobis ipsa reperta
-patres. | Quamuis semotos toto canit orbe
-britannos | Uirgilius. placet his lingua
-latina tamen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A Latin translation of the spurious Letters of Phalaris.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1486.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>[†<b>Mirk</b>, John]. [Sign. (&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup>:—] Incipit liber qui | vocatur festialis
-[Sign. z 3<sup>r</sup>:—] Here endith the boke | that is callid festiuall. | the
-yere of oure lord M | cccc . lxxxvi . the day aftir | seint Edward the
-kyng.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Imprint as above, n. pl., but Oxford
-1486 (probably 19 Mar. 148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>): la. 8<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [348], signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>8</sup>, a-b<sup>8</sup>, c<sup>6</sup>, d<sup>8</sup>, d⸴<sup>8</sup>, e<sup>6</sup>,
-f<sup>8</sup>, g<sup>4</sup>, h<sup>8</sup>, i<sup>6</sup>, k-l<sup>8</sup>, m<sup>6</sup>, n-o<sup>8</sup>, p<sup>6</sup>, q<sup>8</sup>, r<sup>6</sup>, s<sup>8</sup>,
-t-v<sup>6</sup>, x<sup>8</sup>, y<sup>6</sup>, z<sup>4</sup>: sign. b 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>diuerse
-skylles</i>. Contents:—sign. (&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup>, woodcut
-of Crucifixion: (&nbsp;) 1<sup>v</sup>-z 3<sup>r</sup>, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>English sermons on the holy days and a few of the Sundays of the year: written or
-collected by John Mirk, canon of Lilleshall. Other early English printed editions
-exist, beginning with one by Caxton in about 1483. Variations are found in the
-setting up of signn. h and i. The first two leaves are not at present known to exist.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>The Early Sixteenth Century Press<a id='r5' /><a href='#f5' class='c007'><sup>[5]</sup></a>.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1517.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'><b>Burley</b>, Walter. ¶ Tractatus expositorius ⁄ super libros poste⸗|rioru<span class='small'>m</span>
-Arestotilis: preclarissimi philisophi | Walteri Burlei artium liberalium
-| et trium philosophiaru<span class='small'>m</span> magi⸗|stri meritissimi: ac in sacra | theologia
-doctoris perspi|cacissimi planissimiq<span class='small'>ue</span> | suis posteris Oxoniensibus
-admodum vtilis incipit feli⸗|citer cum summa diligentia. | recognitus.
-[Then <i>woodcut</i>]. [Sign. B 6<sup>v</sup>:—] Explicit scriptum planissimi doctoris
-Walteri | Burlei super libros posterioru<span class='small'>m</span> Impressum | in academia Oxonie
-anno dominice i<span class='small'>n</span>|carnatio<span class='small'>n</span>is . M . CCCCC . xvii . | Die vero dece<span class='small'>m</span>bris
-quar|to ad laudem dei | &amp; profectum | stude<span class='small'>n</span>tiu<span class='small'>m</span>. [Then <i>woodcut</i>: then]
-Fata regunt finem: spero dij cepta secundent. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford 1517: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [20], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>6</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Sed
-quia</i>. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title, with
-arms of University: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 5<sup>v</sup>, the work:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 6<sup>r</sup>, royal arms: <span class='fss'>B</span> 6<sup>v</sup>, colophon with
-arms of University repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A Latin Commentary by Walter Burley on the Posterior Analytics of Aristotle.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1518.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Burley</b>, Walter. ¶ Tractat<span class='small'>us</span> p<span class='small'>er</span>breuis de materia &amp; forma: |
-M<span class='small'>a</span>g<span class='small'>ist</span>ri Walteri Burlei doctoris planissimi. [Then <i>woodcut</i>: then] ¶ Aliud
-perbreue co<span class='small'>m</span>pendiu<span class='small'>m</span> de relatiuis e⸗|iusdem doctoris vtile tamen admodum
-| nouellis logicis. [Sign. B 3<sup>r</sup>:—] ¶ Finit tractatus duorum principio⸗|rum
-et de relatiuis. M<span class='small'>a</span>g<span class='small'>ist</span>ri Walte|ri Burley Oxoniensis. | ¶ Finis.
-[Sign. B 4<sup>v</sup>:—] ¶ Impositus est finis tractatui doctoris planissimi | de
-duobus principijs . s.[iue] mater ia et forma et de rela⸗|tiuis cum speciali
-priuilegio p<span class='small'>er</span> septe<span class='small'>n</span>niu<span class='small'>m</span> ex edicto dig|nissimi cancellarii Oxonie. [Then
-<i>woodcut</i>: then] ¶ Impressum est presens opusculum in celeberima |
-vniuersitate Oxoniensi per me Ioannem Scolar in | viculo diui Ioannis
-baptiste moram trahentem An⸗|no d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . CCCCC . deci<span class='small'>m</span>ooctauo.
-Mensis vero Iu⸗|nij die septimo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, 1518: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [16], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>est
-dare</i>. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>
-3<sup>r</sup>, the work in two parts: <span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, woodcut
-of royal arms: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>2. <b>Dedicus</b>, Joannes. Questiones | moralissime super li⸗|bros
-Ethicoru<span class='small'>m</span> eruditissimi | viri Ioannis Dedicus artium libe⸗|ralium triumq<span class='small'>ue</span>
-philosophiarum magistri | optime meriti / et in moralibus pre ceteris satis
-pe⸗|riti feliciter incipiunt subtilissimis Oxoniensibus in philo⸗|sophia morali
-lucubrare cupientibus non magis | vtiles q<span class='small'>uam</span> necessarie. | [Then <i>engraving
-of the University arms</i>]. [Sign. N 4<sup>v</sup>:—] ¶ Explicitum est Ioannis
-Dedici Oxoniensis in | morali philosophia eruditissimi preclaru<span class='small'>m</span> opusculum
-| questionu<span class='small'>m</span> / subtilissimediscucientiu<span class='small'>m</span> (licet sparsim cu<span class='small'>m</span> | quada<span class='small'>m</span>
-tame<span class='small'>n</span> depende<span class='small'>n</span>tia) singulas materias in dece<span class='small'>m</span> | libris ethicoru<span class='small'>m</span> Arestotilis
-inuestigatas / vti summa | industria lucubranti patebit. Impressumq<span class='small'>ue</span> in
-cele⸗|berima vniuersitate Oxoniensi per me Iohannem | Scolar in viculo
-sancti Ioannis Baptiste mora<span class='small'>m</span> tra⸗|hente<span class='small'>m</span> . Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . CCCCC .
-decimooctauo . Men⸗|sis vero Maij die decimoquinto . [<i>ornament</i>] | ¶ Cu<span class='small'>m</span>
-priuilegio . | ¶ Uetitum est per edictum sub sigillo ca<span class='small'>n</span>cellariatus | ne
-quis in septennio hoc insigne op<span class='small'>us</span> imprimat | vel aliorum ductu impensis
-venditet in vni⸗|uersitate Oxonie: aut infra precinctum | eiusdem: sub
-pena amissionis omnium | librorum et quinq<span class='small'>ue</span> libraru<span class='small'>m</span> ster⸗|lingorum
-pro singulis sic ve<span class='small'>n</span>|ditis ubiubi impressi fue⸗|rint preter pena<span class='small'>m</span> pretax⸗|atam
-in decreto. | ¶ Cornicum oculos configere noli.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxf. 1518: (eights &amp;
-fours) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [152], foll. 75 + [1],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>G</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>H</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>I</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>K</span><sup>4</sup>,
-<span class='fss'>L</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>M</span>-<span class='fss'>N</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>pertinet ad</i>.
-Contents:—p. (1) Title and large woodcut:
-(2) large woodcut of the royal arms
-with supporters &amp;c.: (3–152) the work:
-(152) colophon, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Of Johannes Dedicus (perhaps, as has been suggested by prof. H. W. Chandler,
-Dethick) nothing is known. The Quaestiones extend to the end of the 5th book of
-the Ethics, and the last paragraph is a summary of the 6th.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. *<b>Laet</b>, Jaspar. [at end:—] FIniunt prenostica exerpta a
-prenosticis egregii viri magistri Iasparis | Laet angligenis cognitu maxime
-vtilia. Et in celebe⸗|rima oxoniensi academia | [<i>woodcuts</i>] impressa
-[<i>woodcuts</i>]. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Imprint as above, Oxford, [probably
-1518]: 4<sup>o</sup>[?]: broadside. Contents:—on
-1st page, the Praenostica.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known from the lower half of the sheet preserved in the Cambridge University
-Library, where the upper half is also believed to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Lux.</b> ¶ Co<span class='small'>m</span>pendium questionu<span class='small'>m</span> de luce et lumine [followed
-by a small woodcut and the four quaestiones]. [Sign. B 4<sup>v</sup>:—] ¶ Cum
-priuilegio dignissi⸗|mi Cancellarij vniuer⸗|sitatis Oxonie. [Then a large
-<i>woodcut</i>: then] ¶ Finit compendium questiuncularum de luce &amp; de |
-lumine nouiter recognitum. Impressu<span class='small'>m</span>q<span class='small'>ue</span> in celiberi⸗|ma vniuersitate
-Oxoniensi per me Ioannem Sco⸗|lar in viculo diui Ioannis baptiste moram
-trahentem | Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . CCCCC . deci<span class='small'>m</span>ooctauo . Mensis vero |
-Iunij die quinto.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, 1518: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [16], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>vt
-intentio</i>. Contents:—<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>
-4<sup>r</sup>, the work: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the colophon.</p>
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>5. <b>Whittington</b>, Robert. ¶ De heteroclitis nominibus. | ¶
-Editio Roberti Whittintoni lichfeldien|sis Grammatice magistri: et
-protouatis | anglie in florentissima Oxoniensi achade|mia Laureati ⁄ de
-heteroclitis nominibus | et gradibus comparat<span class='small'>i</span>onis. [Then <i>woodcut</i>: then
-a “tetrastichon” and a “distichon.”] [Sign. B 4<sup>v</sup>:—] [Roberti] whittintoni
-lichfeldiensis de heteroclitis no|[minibus &amp; de] gradibus co<span class='small'>m</span>parationis
-Oxonie impressa p<span class='small'>er</span> | [me Ioannem] Scolar in viculo diui Ioannis
-baptiste mo|[ram tra]hentem Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . CCCCC . decimooctauo |
-[M]ensis vero Iunij . die vicesimoseptimo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above, Oxford, 1518: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [16], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>6</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Hic
-tapes</i>. Contents:—<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title &amp;c. as
-above: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the work (on <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup> also
-occur a woodcut of the arms of the University
-and the colophon).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known from an imperfect copy in the Bodleian rescued from the binding of a
-book.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1519.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'><b>Compotus.</b> ¶ Compotus manualis | ad vsu<span class='small'>m</span> Oxoniensiu<span class='small'>m</span>. |
-[<i>device</i>]. [sign. B 4<sup>v</sup>:—] ¶ Impressum est presens opusculu<span class='small'>m</span> in ce⸗|leberrima
-vniuersitate Oxoniensi p<span class='small'>er</span> | me Carolum Kyrfoth. In vico | diui
-Joa<span class='small'>n</span>nis baptiste mora<span class='small'>m</span> | trahe<span class='small'>n</span>te<span class='small'>m</span> Anno d<span class='small'>omi</span>ni . M . D . xix. Me<span class='small'>n</span>sis |
-vero Februarij . die V. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Imprint as above, Oxford, 1519: sm.
-4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-¶ <i>Februarius</i>. Contents:—<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title,
-and woodcut: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the Compotus:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, University arms and colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A system of arithmetic illustrated by wood engravings of the open hand, values
-being attached to each part. Panzer after Maittaire mentions a Paris ed. of 1498
-“cum commento.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>Fictitious Or Lost Oxford Books.<br /> <span class='large'>1459–1584.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1459.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>A small sheet of paper printed on the ice-bound Thames at London
-18 Jan. 1716 ascribes to Oxford the first printing in England, in the
-year 1459. Most of the information on the sheet is derived from
-Atkyns’s <cite>Original and Growth of Printing</cite> (Lond. 1664).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1461.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Printing was “practised in Oxford in 1461,” according to Randle
-Holmes’s <cite>Academy of Armory</cite> (Chester, 1688), quoted in Bigmore,
-i. 337.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1469–70.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>In Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1393 we read:—“In the late Tho. Osborne’s
-catalogue of books for sale in June 1756, No. 1345 ‘Plinii Secundi
-Epistolarum, Liber primus. Exemplar elegans, literis initial. colorat.
-corio turcico, fol. deaur. lineis rubris &amp; auro elegans ornat. 15l. 15s.
-Oxon. apud F. Corsellis. 1469.’ To which is added this note, ‘Hocce
-unicum est exemplar notum, a variis allegatum, et vix uni visum adeo ut
-Phoenix librorum dici mereratur [<i>sic</i>], certe primus est ex libris a Corcellis
-impressis, cui nomen suum adjunxerit, secundus vero ordine
-omnium quos unquam ille impressit, priorem scilicet scimus fuisse,
-Jeronymi Expositionem in Symbol. Apostol. Oxoniae 1468. Anno
-1470, varia idem typographus impressit Opuscula, addito in fine nomine,
-sed nec unicum eorum reperitur hodie integrum. Possident quidam
-amatores fragmenta aliqua poematum Latinorum, ut Gerardi Lystrii
-Rhenensis, &amp;c. Carmen Listrii lividorum hominum venenosas linguas,
-&amp;c.’ This raised the curiosity of the book collectors, who considered
-this article as a confirmation of what R. Atkins had asserted about
-printing at Oxford. They all flocked to Osborne’s shop, who instead
-of the book, produced a letter from a man at Amsterdam, filled with
-frivolous excuses for not sending them to him. They were disappointed,
-and looked on the whole as a <span class='sc'>Hvm</span>; however the Plinii Epistolæ, and
-Ger. Listrii Oratio, &amp;c. afterwards appeared at an auction at Amsterdam,
-and were bought for the late Dr. Ant. Askew; and were sold again at an
-auction of his books, by Baker and Leigh, in Feb. 1775. Lot 2064, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>2622, to which articles are annexed, viz. to Lot 2064, ‘Ad finem hæc
-verba, <i>Impr. Oxon. apud F. Corsellis</i>, 1470, Manu recentiore exarata
-sunt.’ Also to lot 2622, ‘Hæc verba, <i>Imprim. Oxon. ap. Corsellis</i>, 1469,
-Manu recentiore exarata sunt.’ To those who are at all conversant in
-early printing, the dates will appear at first sight a bungling forgery.”
-So far Herbert’s Ames, cf. Bowyer and Nichols’s <cite>Origin of Printing</cite>,
-2nd ed. (Lond. 1776), p. 171. The full entry of art. 2064 is “Listrii
-(Ger.) Oratio habita in Enarrationem Dionysii Halicarnassii; Dionysii
-Orbis expositio e Greco tralata Prisciano interprete; Ejusdem Carmen in
-venenosas Linguas Hominum, &amp; Epicedium doctissimi Adoloscentis
-Ingenisissimique Petri Thessaliensis”: sold to Mr. Dent for £2 3<i>s.</i>: art.
-2622 has 1569 for 1469, and was sold to Capt. Smith for £1 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>In the Auction Catalogue of the Library of Dr. Abr. de Vries of
-Haarlem (Amsterdam, Frederick Muller, 1864) art. 181 was:—“<span class='sc'>Corcellis.</span>—Collection
-de lettres, copies authentiques, déclarations et notices
-en 1756 et 57 sur l’imposture fameuse du falsaire <span class='sc'>G. Smith</span>, à Amsterdam
-et la Haye, qui fabriqua une édition de <cite>Plinii epistolae</cite>, avec souscription:
-<i>Oxoniae</i>, <i>Corcellis</i>. 1469. <cite>Hedwigii liber</cite> 16. ibidem. 1470, etc. et
-trompa Mr. P. v. Damme et autres en Angleterre.—Recueillie et conservée
-pour prouver son innocence à la falsification et annotée par Mr. v.
-Damme. 12 pc. <span class='fss'>MS.</span> Collection très-curieuse, contenant e. a. 7 lettres de
-Smith à v. Damme, une lettre forgée ou falsifié du Comte de Pembroke,
-une lettre de P. Burman Sec., copie d’une déclaration de Meerman, etc.
-etc.” It is to be hoped that this interesting collection will be brought to
-light again.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>In the <cite>Monthly Miscellany, or Memoirs for the Curious</cite> (June 1708),
-p. 177 it is stated that in the Bishop of Ely’s Library (now at Cambridge)
-are books “of the first printing in England at Oxford in 1469.”</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1480.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Guido de Columnia de historia Trojana, per T. R. (<i>Theodore Rood</i>).
-Quarto. 1480.” So Herbert’s Ames, p. 1393. The source of the error
-was discovered by Cotton to be a forgery in a copy of Guido sine anno
-et loco preserved in the Earl of Pembroke’s Library at Wilton (<cite>Typ. Gaz.</cite>,
-1st ser., 2nd ed., p. 209.)</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>Before 1487.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Books from the Oxford Press.... 208*. The Chronicles of England.
-Folio. Lent by the Earl of Jersey.” So in the Catalogue of the Caxton
-Celebration, 1877, p. 28. Some error. The reference is no doubt to
-Caxton’s Chronicle of England, printed in 1482.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1489.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>When Cotton printed his <cite>Typographical Gazetteer</cite>, 2nd series, (Oxf.
-1866) he believed that an Indulgence of 1489 (altered to 1499), in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>Library of Trinity College, Dublin, was printed at Oxford. It is “a
-small broadside on vellum, consisting of 24 lines only, printed very
-closely and occupying a space of about nine inches by six.” The Indulgence
-is from Johannes de Gigliis alias de Liliis Apostolicus Subdiaconus,
-granted by Pope Innocent iii: and is dated 1499, there being
-no name of place or date of printing. There is no doubt that Cotton
-was mistaken in attributing this piece to the Oxford press.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1498.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. Bagford, in his inaccurate way, gives the title of an edition of the
-Greek text of the Ethics of Aristotle by Aretinus “Oxon. 1498” (Brit.
-Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 3). He mentions the 1479 edition of the
-Latin text separately, but the former date can only be due to some
-confusion with the latter.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. The Rufinus of 1468 appears as dated 1498 in Panzer, who quotes
-Schoenemann i. 585, and also in Migne’s <cite>Patrologia Latina</cite>, xxi. col. 17.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1499.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Indulgence: see 1489.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1500.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. Buridanus: see next article.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. “Gualtheri Burley Tractatus de materia et forma ac de relativis.
-Oxonii 1500. 4.” So in Panzer ii (1794) p. 244, quoting Maittaire p.
-739, ex Bibl. Bodl. p. 117 (an allusion to an error in the Bodleian
-Catalogue of 1674, repeated in the 1738 Catalogue p. 206). Bagford
-makes the same mistake, twisting the author’s name into Johannes
-Buridanus (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 3). Even Hain (no. 4142)
-has copied from Panzer. The colophon of 1518. B shows how the error
-arose, as Cotton points out (<cite>Typ. Gaz.</cite>, 1st ser., 2nd ed., p. 209).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3, 4. Bagford is responsible for two more fictitious Oxford books of
-1500. a <cite>Quaestiones de lumine et luce</cite> (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 3,
-Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, fol. 103: a confusion with 1518. L) and a
-Whitinton <i>de heteroclytis nominibus</i> printed at Oxford by Peter Treveris (!)
-(Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, fol. 103: see 1518. W).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1506.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>The following book though not printed at Oxford supplies information
-about an Oxford bookseller:—[sign. a 1<sup>r</sup>:—] “Principia seu introduc-tiones
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>f<i>rat</i>ris peregrini ytalici de lugo in via doctoris subtilis: adipisci
-eiusde<i>m</i> doctoris doctrinam cupientibus. [at foot:—] Uenu<i>n</i>dant<i>ur</i>
-autem in alma ac florentissima vniuersitate Oxonie<i>n</i>se. in intacte v<i>ir</i>g<i>in</i>is
-ac i<i>m</i>maculate / vico: s<i>an</i>cti ioha<i>n</i>nis eua<i>n</i>geliste / ad intersignium.
-[Then follow 4 tractatus: then on sign. g 4<sup>r</sup>:—] Expliciunt principia seu
-introductiones (pro iuuenib<i>us</i>) fratris peregrini de lugo ... Imp<i>re</i>ssa
-aut<i>em</i> Londini. p<i>er</i> Richardu<i>m</i> pyns<i>on</i>. cum solerti cura ac diligentia
-Honestissimi Iuuenis ac prudentissimi Hugonis Meslier. Expe<i>n</i>s<i>is</i> aut<i>em</i>
-georgii castellani / oxonii morantis / ad intersignium sancti Ioha<i>n</i>nis
-euangeliste: in quo venundatur op<i>us</i> hoc. Finis....” Then follows
-a 5th treatise, ending with a letter from Peregrinus de Lugo dated
-“Tholose quarto Kalendas Februarij . M . ccccc . vj.” Herbert’s Ames
-(iii. 1396) refers this book to Oxford, although at i. 252 it is referred
-rightly to Pynson’s press at London.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1510.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>References to a <cite>Compendium quaestiuncularum de luce et lumine</cite>, Oxford
-1510, will be found in Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 22<sup>v</sup>,
-Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, p. 104), no doubt from the <cite>Catalogus librorum
-MSS<sup>rum</sup> Angliæ et Hiberniæ</cite> (Oxf. 1697, fol.), tom. 2, p. 280, col. 1,
-among the printed books of John Moore bp. of Norwich. An error for
-1518.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1511.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>The 1481 Alexander de Hales appears in Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS.
-Harl. 5901, fol. 23, Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, p. 104) as of 1511, printed
-at Oxford.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1512.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Walterus Burleius, super libros Posteriorum. 1512. 4<sup>o</sup>.” So in
-Cotton’s <cite>Typ. Gaz.</cite>, 2nd ser., p. 169, and in a longer form in Herbert’s
-Ames iii. 1396, and Panzer vii. p. 494, quoting Brüggemann i. 172.
-The source of the mistake is easily found in the colophon of 1517. B,
-a “v” having been overlooked. The error is repeated in the <cite>Bookworm</cite>
-(1868) p. 126.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>Before 1519.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>According to Cotton (<cite>Typ. Gaz.</cite>, 2nd ser., p. 169) an edition of “Jo.
-Duns Scotus, Scriptum Oxoniense super primum Sententiarum” (Paris
-1519) professes to be “impressa juxta editionem Oxoniensem.” This
-cannot be correct, unless <i>editio</i> refers only to some traditional method of
-exposition or arrangement at Oxford.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>About 1519.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>“The following book printed at the charge of Cardinal Wolsey, with
-the King’s arms on one side, and the cardinal’s on the other; though it
-has neither date nor printer’s name, was probably performed about this
-time [1519] at this place [Oxford].” ‘Libellus prim. epistol. M. Tullii
-Cicer. Decus Oxoniensium, finitum universitate Oxoniensi. Quarto.’ So
-in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1398, and substantially in Bagford’s account (Brit.
-Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 24<sup>v</sup>, Bodl. MS. Rawl. D. 375, fol. 103): see
-Cotton’s <cite>Typ. Gaz.</cite>, 2nd ser., p. 169. Clearly a blunder. The book
-which is said to be at Trinity College, Dublin, could not be found there
-in 1885.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1519.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Roberti Whitintoni Lichfeldiensis Protovatis Angliæ in Florentissimâ
-Oxoniensi Academiâ Laureati, Opusculum de Concinnitate Grammatices
-&amp; Constructione recognitum Anno Domini xix supra Sesquimillesimum,
-in 4to.” So Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 23<sup>v</sup>, cf. Bodl. MS.
-Rawl. D. 375, p. 103). Probably not printed at Oxford.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>Before 1520.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>John Dorne, bookseller in Oxford, sold in 1520 several copies of a
-small book described in his day-book as “Bene fundatum,” “Bene
-fundatum Oxonie” or “Bene fundatum uosgraf.” This seems to be a
-trace of a real Oxford book now lost, but no such printer as Vosgraf or
-Foxgrave (Dorne was from the Low Countries) is known. It would
-probably belong to the 1517–19 press. See Dorne’s book edited in the
-<cite>Collectanea</cite> vol. i of the Oxford Historical Society, 1885. Cotton erroneously
-reads the title as “Bene sum datum.”</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1542.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Shepery’s <cite>Hippolytus</cite>: see under 1586. S.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1549.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“P. Martyr de Sacramento Eucharistiæ, disputatio hab. in acad., 1549,”
-4<sup>o</sup>. So in the <cite>Catalogus librorum R. Davisii</cite>, pt. 4 (1692), p. 7, cf. p. 10.
-Some error.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1564.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Analysis libri Aristotelis de Sophisticis Elenchis, opera et studio
-Griff. Poweli.” So in the <cite>Catalogus librorum R. Davisii</cite>, pt. 2 (1686),
-p. 72. Error for 1594, which see.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1565.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ιωαννοῦ τοῦ Χρυσοστομου Ομιλιαι.</span> Oxonii 1565 in forma minore.” So
-in the <cite>Bibliotheca Gudiana</cite> (Hamb. 1706), p. 75: thence in Brüggemann,
-p. 422. An error for 1586, which see.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1569.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. Guild’s <cite>Throne of David or an Exposition of the 2nd of Samuel</cite>. Error
-in the <cite>Catalogus librorum R. Davisii</cite>, pt. 1 (1686), p. 164, for 1659,
-which see.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. “1569. An account of the Lithuanian translation of the Bible is in
-the Brit. Museum. Quarto.” So Herbert’s Ames, iii. p. 1398. For
-1659, which see under <i>Chylinski</i>, Samuel B.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1576.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Fabricius, J. S.: “Meditationes Sacræ de unitate Ecclesiæ Britannicæ.
-1576,” 8vo. So <i>twice</i> in the <cite>Catalogus librorum R. Davisii</cite>, pt. 2 (1686)
-p. 20, pt. 3 (1688) p. 11. For 1676, which see.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1578.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>“Thesaurus œconomiæ ... Johanne Caso Authore. 1597 ... Again
-1578.” So Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1407. Perhaps for 1598, which see, but
-even that is perhaps an error for 1597!</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1584.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Shepery’s <cite>Hippolytus</cite>: see under 1586. S.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>The Oxford University Press.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1585.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bilson</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>THE TRVE DIFFE-</span>|<span class='fss'>RENCE BETWEENE CHRI-</span>|<span class='fss'>STIAN
-SUBIECTION AND</span> | <span class='fss'>VNCHRISTIAN REBELLION</span>: | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN THE PRINCES
-LAWFULL</span> | power to commaund for trueth, and indepriuable | right to
-beare the sword are defended against the | Popes censures and the
-Iesuits sophismes vt-|tered in their <span class='sc'>Apologie</span> and <span class='fss'>DE-</span>|<span class='fss'>FENCE OF ENGLISH</span>
-| <span class='fss'>CATHOLIKES</span>: | <i>With a demonstration that the thinges refourmed in the
-Church of England by the</i> | <i>Lawes of this Realme are truely Catholike,
-notwithstanding the vaine shew</i> | <i>made to the contrary in their late</i> Rhemish
-Testament: <i>by</i> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Bilson</span> Warden of Winchester. | Perused and
-allowed by publike authoritie. | [<i>Device</i>: then <i>two mottos</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1585 (<span class='fss'>CIↃIↃXXCV</span>): (eights)
-sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] + 820 + [10]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>wee bee farre</i>, p. 111 <i>be not Judges</i>:
-chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–12) Epistle dedicatorie to queen
-Elizabeth: (13) “the generall contents
-of euerie part”: (14–22) “To the Christian
-Reader”: 1–820 the work, in 4 parts:
-(1–9) “the speciall contents of euery
-part”: (9) “Faultes escaped”, i.e. errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author &amp;c. see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 169: where it is pointed out that
-the book has a curious history. Its ostensible purpose is to uphold the doctrine afterwards
-called “passive obedience” by refuting two books which were regarded as subversive
-of the Queen’s temporal power, (1) <cite>An apologie and true declaration of the institution ...
-of the tvvo English colleges ... in Rome ... (and) in Rhemes</cite>, 1581 (ascribed
-to card. Will. Allen), (2) <cite>A true, sincere and modest defence of English catholiques that
-suffer for their faith</cite>, n. d. (asserted by Antony à Wood to be also by card. Allen).
-But Wood declares that the Queen “conceiving it convenient for her worldly designs
-to take on her the protection of the Low-Countries against the King of Spain, did
-employ our author ... to write the said book” to <i>justify</i> the Netherland revolt. And
-certain it is that in consequence of the temperance and fairness with which Bp. Bilson
-treats his subject, the parliamentary party in Charles I’s time used this book to <i>oppose</i>
-“passive obedience.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c010'>Probably issued about the end of November, 1585. Greek type is used on p. 263
-and perhaps elsewhere. Another ed. appeared at London in 1586: an extract from
-pp. 520–21 was reprinted in 1641 and again in Somers’s Tracts, 2nd ed., iv. 29 (Lond.
-1810).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Case</b>, John. [<i>Ornament</i>] <span class='fss'>SPECVLVM MORALIVM</span> | <span class='fss'>QVAESTIONVM
-IN VNIVERSAM ETHICEN</span> | Aristotelis, Authore Magistro <span class='sc'>Iohanne Caso</span> |
-Oxoniensi, olim Collegij Diui Io-|hannis Præcursoris | Socio. | [then the
-University Arms: then a <i>motto</i> from Seneca].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>Impr. 1, so also colophon: 1585:
-(eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [28] + 401 + [19]: p.
-11 beg. <i>Opp. Iuuenes</i>, p. 111, <i>Distinctio</i>:
-chiefly Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-Title: (3–7) Epistola nuncupatoria to
-Robert Dudley, earl of Leicester, chancellor
-of the University, signed “Iohannes
-Casus”: (8–10) “Ad studiosos iuuenes
-vtriusque academiae”: (10) “Prosopopœia
-Libri Ad Lectorem”: (11) “Honoratissimo
-suo domino et patrono Comiti
-Leicestrensi &amp;c. Iosephus Barnesius Typographus
-Oxonie nsis”: (12–23) Complimentary
-Latin verses to the author:
-between (24) and (25), “Tabula virtutum
-et vitiorum omnium”, a folio leaf printed
-on one side only: (25–28) Præfatio: 1–401
-the work in 6 books: (1–2) “Peroratio
-ad lectorem”: (4–17) Index: (17)
-Errata and colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first book printed at the new Oxford press. The allusions to this and kindred
-facts are (1) in the “Epistola Nuncupatoria.” Case says of the reasons for dedicating
-the work to the Earl of Leicester “Unum est nouum hoc præli beneficium, quod te
-authore nostra Academia nuper recepit ... Prælum hoc nouum (cuius author existis)
-hunc nouum de moribus libellum pressit. Ne ergo author libelli præli authori videatur
-ingratus, tibi primùm eiusdem fructum ex animo propinauit ...” (2) the printer himself
-writes “Admirabilem hanc artem typographicam (Mecęnas amplissime) primum Iohannes
-Faustus Moguntiæ fauste genuit [the marg. supplies “Anno 1450”], eandem Guilielmus
-Caxtonus ciuis Londinensis probè aluit &amp; perpoliuit: Laus summa debetur authori qui
-invenit, laus magna debetur mercatori qui primùm ad nos transuexit ... Londinum diù in
-hac arte floruit, &amp; non inuideo: Cantabrigia eandem nunc didicit, Oxonia recepit, &amp;
-certè gaudeo. Nam si characteres typographi sint vera insignia &amp; arma Mineruæ; vbi
-terrarum potius floreret hæc nobilis scientia, quàm vbi vera publicè docetur sapientia?
-vt enim à fonte in riuum dulcis aqua, ita hîc quidem à mente in prælum dulcissima
-Musa fluet. Non nugæ, non aniles fabulæ, non Aristarchi dentata opera hîc excudentur:
-ea solùm ex his prælis in lucem venient quȩ sapientum calculis approbentur,
-&amp; Sybillȩ foliis sint veriora. Hoc vnum nunc restat (vir inclytissime) vt hunc librum
-opus alterius ingenij &amp; pignus laboris mei tuo honori offeram ... Vt ergo Thomas
-Thomasius collega meus [Cantabrigiensis] suo, ita ego Iosephus Barnesius tibi (vir
-summe) meo patrono dominoque gratulor: nos ambo &amp; publico pro multis, &amp; priuato
-nomine pro magnis in nos meritis vobis vtriusque Academiæ patronis deuincti sumus,
-gratias immortales vterque agimus, maiores in posterum pollicemur”: (3) the Vice-chancellor,
-J. Underhill, writes “Non dedit hoc seclo prælum Oxoniense priorem [librum]
-| Doctrinâque dabunt secula nulla parem.” (4) Laurence Humfrey says “Hoc Speculum
-vobis nunc Oxoniensis alumnus | Porrigit, en præli dat quoque primitias.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is clear that neither the Vice-chancellor nor the printer of this volume had any
-suspicion that there had been printing in Oxford previous to the publication of the
-present volume, unless “recepit” be a vague allusion to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The work is a companion one to the same author’s <cite>Summa veterum interpretum in
-universam dialecticam Aristotelis</cite>, Lond., Tho. Vautrollerius, 1584, see 1592. C, 1598.
-C: and there is even a typographical connexion between the two.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For an account of the author, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 685. The method adopted
-by Case is by <i>quaestiones</i>, <i>oppositiones</i> and <i>responsiones</i> in the manner of the disputations
-in the schools at the time. Other editions were issued at Oxford in 1596, and at
-Frankfurt in 1589, 1610 and 1625. See 1596. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. Corro, Antonio de. Sermons on Ecclesiastes: see 1586. E.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Dudley</b>, Robert, earl of Leicester. [<i>ornament</i>] <span class='fss'>IN</span> | <span class='fss'>ADVENTVM
-ILLVSTRIS-</span>|<i><span class='fss'>SIMI LECESTRENSIS COMITIS AD</span></i> | <i>Collegium Lincolniense</i>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 3: “tertio idus Ianuarij” 1585:
-(one) 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2]: chiefly Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title as above: large
-device of University arms: then “Carmen
-gratulatorium” of 8 elegiac lines, <i>beg.</i>
-“Comiter hoc factum est”: then imprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. The visit appears from Wood’s <cite>Annals</cite> ii. 223 to have been in Jan.
-1584/5, and the date of printing 11 Jan. 158<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>. The difficulties in the way of regarding
-this sheet as the first printing of the new Oxford Press are the form of the date, which
-usually implies Jan. 158<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>, the assertion of Barnes that the Case was the first production,
-and the improbability that the Committee of Convocation appointed to consider
-“de libris imprimendis” on 23 Dec. 1584 would proceed to action so soon as 11 Jan.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>1584/5. But the fitness of the earlier date is too obvious to be gainsaid. This piece is
-probably the first printed sheet issued by Barnes.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Parsons</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKE OF</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN EX-</span>|<span class='fss'>ERCISE
-APPERTAI-</span>|ning to <span class='sc'>Resolvti-</span>|<span class='fss'>ON</span>, that is, shewing | how that we should
-re-|solue our selues to be-|come Christians in-|deede. <i>By R. P.</i> | <i>Perused,
-and accompanied</i> | <i>nowe with a treatise ten-</i>|<i>ding to pacificati-</i>|<i>on, By</i> |
-<span class='fss'>EDMVND BVNNY</span>. [Then a <i>motto</i> from Hebr. xiii. 8: the whole title and
-imprint is within a border of ornament.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2<i>a</i> (colophon 4): 1585: sm. 12<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [28] + 494 + [2] + 140: p. 11 beg. <i>ons,
-or if</i>, 111 <i>confidence</i>, 2nd p. 11 <i>helpes whatsoeuer</i>,
-111 <i>hel should</i>: chiefly Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
-Bunny’s Epistle dedicatorie to Edwin
-Sandys, archbp. of York (9–18) Bunny’s
-“Preface to the reader”: (19–28) “The
-contentes of ... this booke”: 1–493
-[misprinted 439], the work, in 2 parts:
-(1) title of Bunny’s treatise: 1–140, the
-treatise: before p. 1 of the treatise is an
-oblong sheet 5 × 11 in., folded, containing
-on one side in two divisions “A table
-... of the treatise following”: on p. 140
-is also a colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Of this book also there is a curious history. Gaspare Loarte, a Spanish Jesuit who
-spent most of his life at Rome, wrote an “Essercitio della vita christiana” some time
-before 1569. In 1570, J. Sancer, a friend of Robert Parsons the Jesuit, published a
-translation into English of one of the three parts of the work. In 1582 Parsons himself
-published “The firste booke of the Christian Exercise, appertayning to resolution”
-in two parts, which is practically a new work based on part of the original “Essercitio.”
-Loarte is mentioned in the preface, but the author only signs his name by the initials,
-R. P. This was again issued without Parsons’ knowledge in 1584.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In 1585 (or according to Wood and Ames, copied by Herbert and Dibdin, in 1584)
-Edmund Bunny printed and published the first edition of an adaptation of Parsons’
-book fitted for Protestant readers “at London, by N. Newton, for Iohn Wight,” 8<sup>o</sup>.
-The dedication is to the archbp. of York and the preface dated 9 July 1584 at Bolton-Percy.
-The book was entered at Stationers’ Hall on 28 Aug. 1584. The Oxford
-edition before us is a reprint of this London edition with no intentional variation,
-except the omission of the arms of the archbishop of York on the <i>verso</i> of the title of
-the London issue. Some of the woodcut ornaments and capitals of the two issues are
-identical.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In “1585, Aug. 30” Parsons again put out his book in a revised and largely
-augmented form with a new title “A Christian Directorie” which when complete was
-to consist of three books, the first of which, treating of Resolution, is alone contained
-in this edition. The preface contains a criticism of the London issue of Bunny’s
-adaptation, which provoked “A briefe answer vnto those idle and friuolous quarrels
-of R. P. against the late edition of the Resolution: By Edmund Bunny.” Lond.,
-1589, 8<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Other editions of Bunny’s adaptation of Parsons’ “Christian exercise” are 1586
-(Lond., “by I. Iackson and Ed. Bollifant for John Wight,” 12<sup>o</sup>; in Herbert’s possession),
-1589 (Lond., 12<sup>o</sup>: Bohn), 1594 (Lond., 24<sup>o</sup>: Bohn), 1609 (Lond., 12<sup>o</sup>: Bohn),
-1615 (Lond., 12<sup>o</sup>). See also next art. Parsons’ own work was several times reprinted:
-and in 1591 appeared an edition of his “Christian Directorie,” anonymously
-adapted, as the former work, for the use of Protestants, and with the deceptive title
-“The second part of the booke of Christian Exercise, appertayning to Resolution, or
-a Christian directorie ... written by the former authour R. P.” (Lond., 12<sup>o</sup>). This
-was several times reprinted, as in 1592, 1594, 1598, 1615. See also Wood’s <cite>Ath.
-Oxon.</cite>, ii. 221: and the next art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Parsons</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKE OF</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN EX-</span>|<span class='fss'>ERCISE
-APPERTAI-</span>|<span class='fss'>NING TO</span> <span class='sc'>Resolvtion</span>, | that is, shewing how that | wee shoulde
-resolue our|selues to become Christi-|ans indeede, <i>By R. P.</i> | <i>Perused,
-and accompanied now</i> | <i>with a treatise tending to</i> | <i>Pacification, By</i> | <span class='fss'>EDMVND
-BVNNY</span>. | [<i>motto.</i> The whole title is within a border.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>Impr. 2<i>a</i> (colophon 4): 1585: sm. 12<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [30] + 492 + [2] + 140: p. 11 beg. <i>what
-man</i>, 111 <i>Gospell, which</i>: also p. 11
-<i>nounce all</i>, 111 <i>it they should</i>: chiefly
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—as
-preceding article, without the folded
-“Table” to Bunny’s treatise, viz.:—p.
-(1) title: (3–9) epistle: (10–19) preface:
-(20–29) contents: 1–491, the treatise:
-(1) title: 1–140 Bunny’s treatise, with
-colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This volume is apparently identical in text (not spelling or punctuation) with the
-preceding art., but is entirely reset: from p. 252 of this edition (= 254 of the other)
-the two correspond page for page in Parsons’ treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Prime</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A SERMON BRIEF-</span>|<span class='fss'>LY COMPARING THE E-</span>|<span class='fss'>STATE
-OF KING SALOMON AND</span> | his Subiectes togither with the condi-|tion of
-Queene <span class='sc'>Elizabeth</span> | and her people. | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN SAINCT MA-</span>|<i>ries in
-Oxford the</i> 17. <i>of Nouember, and</i> | <i>now printed with some small alteration</i>,
-| <i>by</i> <span class='sc'>Iohn Prime</span>, | 1585. | [<i>ornament.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 4: 1585: sm. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>passion, that</i>:
-chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–5) Epistle “to the Christian
-reader”: (6–30), the sermon, on 1 Kings
-x. 9: (31–32) “A praier in consideration
-of the former respects.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 653. The Epistle is dated 27 Nov. 1585, and alludes
-to Bilson’s book as “euen now comming foorth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. Shepery, John. See 1586. S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Sparke</b>, Thomas. “‘A Sermon preached at Cheanies the
-14. of September, 1585, at the burial of the right Honorable the Earle of
-Bedford, by Thomas Sparke Doctor of Diuinitie.’ The university’s arms.
-‘Imprinted at Oxford by <i>him</i> Printer to that famous Vniuersitie.’ My
-copy is cut so close at bottom that it is uncertain whether there was any
-date added. Dedicated ‘To—Arthur Lord Gray of Wilton, Knight of—the
-Garter.—At Bletchley the 25 of September, 1585.—Thomas
-Sparke.’ The text, ‘Apocal. 14. 13. I heard a voice from heauen’ &amp;c.
-At the end of the sermon ‘September 22. An. Do. 1585,’ Besides; 110
-pages, W. H. 16<sup>o</sup>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The above is the account of the book in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1399, in the account of
-Joseph Barnes’s press at Oxford in 1585. The copy sold in the Heber sale, 9 April
-1835, Catal. pt. vi, p. 248, art. 3559 for 8<i>s.</i> was probably Herbert’s. Ames in his
-<cite>Typographical Antiquities</cite> (Lond. 1749) gives a shorter title and describes the book as
-a quarto. Other edd. are Lond. 1585, in eights (pp. [10] + 106), and Oxf. 1594
-(with 25 <i>December</i> at end of dedication, pp. [10] + 110): but both are different from
-the present book, if Herbert’s description may be trusted.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1586.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Case</b>, John. “‘Reflexus speculi moralis, seu commentarius
-in magna moralia Aristotelis. Authore Johanne Caso.’ Again 1596.
-Octavo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The above is from Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1401, slightly altered from Ames, p. 453:
-but both are probably errors for 1596: see 1596. C.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>2. <b>Catilinariae proditiones.</b> “‘In Catilinarias proditiones, ac
-proditores domesticos, Odæ 6.’ The university arms. ‘Oxoniæ, ex
-Officina Typographica Josephi Barnesii, &amp; veneunt in cœmeterio Paulino
-sub signo capitis Tygurini. Anno 1586.’ On the back, in a lozenge
-form, ‘Odæ sex ornatissimis viris D. Doctori Jameso Ædis Christi Oxon.
-decano, et doctori Hetono prodecano, cæterisque clarissimis atque optimis
-viris eiusdem ecclesiæ præbendariis, &amp; privatæ observantiæ, et publicæ
-pietatis ergô dicatæ.’ 8 leaves, the first has only signature A. Brit.
-Museum. Octavo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The above is from Herbert’s Ames, iii. p. 1401. In May 1886 the officials of the
-British Museum were unable to find the book. A copy was sold at the Bliss sale in
-1858 (Catal. pt. 2, art. 7) to Stenson a bookseller for £4 4<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Chardon</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON PART OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE NINTH CHAPTER</span>
-| <span class='fss'>OF THE HOLY GOSPEL</span> | <span class='fss'>OF IESVS CHRIST</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ACCORDING TO</i></span> | <span class='fss'>S. IOHN</span>: |
-Preached at S. Maries in | Oxford by <i>Iohn Chardon</i> | Doctor of
-Diuinitie. | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2<i>b</i>: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>streight
-waie</i>: chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–10) Epistle dedicatory to
-Ambrose earl of Warwick, Oxf. 6 Oct.
-1586: (11–44) the sermon, on John ix.
-1–3: (45–47) “The prayer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 716.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Chardon</b>, bp. John. “‘A comfortable sermon for all such
-as thirst and desire to be ioined with their head Jesus Christ, &amp;c. Preached
-at the funerals of Syr Gawen Carewe, very worshipfully buried in the
-Cathedral Church of Exeter, 22d April, 1584, By John Charden
-bachelor of Divinity.’ The text, 1 Thes. 4; 13–18. Octavo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1400: see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 716, Maunsell i. 97.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Chrysostom</b>, St. <span class='fss'>D. IOANNIS CHRY-</span>|<span class='fss'>SOSTOMI ARCHIE-</span>|<span class='fss'>PISCOPI CONSTANTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>NOPOLITANI</span>,
-<i>Homiliæ sex</i>, | Ex manuscriptis Codicibus Noui
-Collegij; | <span class='sc'>Ioannis Harmari</span>, eiusdem Col-|legij socij, &amp; Græcarum
-literarum in | inclyta <span class='sc'>Oxoniensi</span> Academia | Professoris Regij, opera &amp; |
-industria nunc primùm | græcè in lucem | editæ. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1586 (<span class='fss'>CIↃIↃXXCVI</span>): (eights)
-16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] + 138: p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">σίον
-ἀυτοῦ</span>, 111 <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">πάντες συμφωνοῦσιν</span>: chiefly
-Long Primer Greek. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–12) Epistola dedicatoria to sir
-Thomas Bromley, lord chancellor of England,
-Oxf. 28 Dec. [1585]: 1–138, the
-six Homilies, in Greek.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“Primitiæ typographici nostri in græcis literis preli,” as the dedication says. The
-first Greek book printed in England was also a Chrysostom (Two Homilies, Lond.,
-Reg. Wolfe, 1543), but separate Greek words occur in the first book printed at Cambridge
-(Cujusdam ... Christiani Epistola, 1521), and single words cut in wood still
-earlier. The six homilies are 1. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Κατὰ τῶν παρατηρούντων τὰς νεομηνίας</span> (Migne, <cite>Patrol.
-Gr.</cite>, Chrysost., i. 953.) 2–5. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εἰς τὸν Λάζαρον, αʹ, βʹ, γʹ, δʹ</span> (ibid. 963, 981, 991, 1005). 6. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εἰς
-τὸ Περὶ δὲ τῶν κεκοιμημένων</span> (ibid. 1017). See p. 12 (1565), Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 138.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>An imperfect book, (signn. <span class='fss'>A</span> 2-<span class='fss'>D</span> 7), containing Isocrates <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πρὸς Δημόνικον</span>, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πρὸς
-Νικοκλέα</span>, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Νικόκλης ἢ συμβουλευτικὸς λόγος τρίτος</span>, Plutarch <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Περὶ παιδῶν ἀγωγῆς</span> and
-“Luciani Cupido,” all in Greek, once owned by Thomas Hearne and now in the
-Bodleian Library, is in similar type to this Chrysostom and is accordingly assigned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>by Hearne to Barnes’s Press. But minute inspection shows that some of the woodcuts
-of the book are not identical with any used at Oxford. It is probably London
-printing (not Bynneman 1581 nor 1621: perhaps Bishop 1599: see Brüggemann,
-p. 128.)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Ecclesiastes.</b> <span class='fss'>SOLOMONS SERMON:</span> | <span class='fss'>OF MANS CHIEF</span> | <span class='fss'>FELICITIE:
-CALLED</span> | <span class='fss'>IN HEBREW KOHELETH,</span> | <span class='fss'>IN GREEKE AND LATIN</span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIASTES.</span> |
-With a learned, godly, and familiar pa-|raphrase vppon the same:
-gathe-|red out of the Lectures of A. | C. &amp; now englished for | the benefit
-of the | vnlearned. | [<i>motto &amp; device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 4: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 219 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>that is brought</i>,
-111 <i>and this meditation</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) Epistle
-dedicatorie to the “lady Marie Dudley,”
-Oxford, 8 Mar. 1586, signed “T. P.”:
-(8–16) “To the Christian reader ...”
-with the writer’s name, Th. Pie: 1–219,
-the paraphrase, the text of Ecclesiastes
-occurring in the margin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This book is a translation into English of “Sapientissimi regis Salomonis concio
-de summo hominis bono quam ... Latini Ecclesiasten vocant, in Latinam linguam ab
-Antonio Corrano ... versa et ex eiusdem prælectionibus paraphrasi illustrata: accesserunt
-&amp; notæ quædam” (Lond., 1579) with the omission of the notes. For Ant. de
-Corro see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 578: and for Thomas Pye, <i>ibid.</i> ii. 59. Wood was
-not acquainted with this earliest work of Pye, but alludes to the book (as above, i. 581)
-as Corro’s “Sermons on Ecclesiastes. Abridged by Thomas Pitt. Oxon 1585, oct.,
-which is called by some Pitt’s Paraphrase on Ecclesiastes”! The name Pitt, but not
-the error of date, may be taken from Maunsell, who three times (i. 38, 81, 104) alludes
-to the book as by Tho. Pitt. Pye in his Epistle states with respect to the original
-Latin edition, “which treatise, as it came first to the print, myselfe by occasion being
-charged with som ouerseeing of the presse, at the earnest request aswel of the author
-himself, as of other many, I translated into English: being the rather a greate deale
-moued thereunto, because there was no comment or like exposition then extant in our
-vulgar tongue vpon this part of Scripture.” This latter statement is not strictly true,
-since “An exposition of Salomon’s booke called Ecclesiastes” was printed in
-London in 1573. In 1585 Serranus’s commentary translated into English by T.
-Wilcocke was printed in London.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Hutchins</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>A SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN S.</span> | <span class='fss'>PETERS
-CHURCH AT</span> | <span class='fss'>WEST-CHESTER THE XXV</span> | <span class='fss'>OF <i>SEPTEMBER</i>, 1586.</span> | <span class='fss'>CONTAINING
-MATTER</span> | <span class='fss'>FIT FOR THE TIME</span>: | By Edward Hutchins Maister | of Arts,
-and Fellowe of Bra-|zennose College. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: (1586): (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32]: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>the fould</i>: chiefly
-Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to Roger Puleston:
-(5–30) the sermon, on Gal. 5. 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 453. The only copy seen, that in the British
-Museum, wants the last leaf, presumably blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Hutchins</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CHED IN WEST-</span>|<span class='fss'>CHESTER
-THE VIII.</span> | <span class='fss'>OF OCTOBER, 1586.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BEFORE THE IVD-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>GES AND CERTAIN</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>RECVSANTES</i></span>: | Wherein the conditions of al he-|retiques, but especiallie
-of stub-|born and peruerting Papists, | are discouered, &amp; the duty | of al
-magistrats concer-|ning such persons, ap-|plied &amp; opened | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Edward
-Hvtchins</span>, <i>Ma-</i>|<i>ster of Artes, &amp; Fellowe of</i> <span class='sc'>Bra-</span>|<span class='fss'>SENNOSE</span> Colledge. | ...</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: (1586): (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>are they</i>:
-chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) dedication to Thomas Egerton:
-(5–32) the sermon, on Canticles ii.
-15.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 452.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>9. <b>Massie</b>, William. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CHED AT TRAFFORD</span> | <span class='fss'>IN
-LANCASHIRE AT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>THE MARIAGE OF A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>DAVGHTER OF THE</span> | right Worshipfull
-Sir <span class='sc'>Ed-</span>|<span class='sc'>mond Trafforde</span> | Knight, the 6. of Sep-|<i>tember Anno</i>,
-1586. | By <span class='sc'>William Massie</span> bacheler in di-|uinity, and fellow of Brasen-nose
-Col-|ledge in Oxforde. | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>of body, sorrow</i>:
-chiefly Pica English. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to sir E.
-Trafford: (5–32) the sermon, on Ps.
-cxxviii.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 237. The marriage was between Margaret Trafford
-and Sir Urian Legh, kt., of Adlington, a member of the same College as the
-preacher.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Music.</b> <span class='fss'>THE PRAISE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF MVSICKE</span>: | Wherein besides the
-antiquitie, | dignitie, delectation, &amp; vse there-|of in ciuill matters, is also
-decla-|red the sober and lawfull vse of the | same in the congregation
-and | Church of God. [<i>device, then motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 152: p. 11 beg. <i>Musicke of</i>, 111 <i>proper
-place</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) dedication by the printer to
-“sir Walter Rawley”: (5–8) “The preface
-to the Reader”: 1–152, the work in
-12 chapters, with the sub-title “The
-antiquitie and original of Musicke ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This work has been constantly attributed to John Case, the author of the <cite>Apologia
-Musices</cite>, Oxf. 1588, but the present writer believes that from internal evidence it
-cannot be regarded as his. See Appendix C, and Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 686. It was
-reprinted in the <cite>Choir and Musical Record</cite> 1864, by dr. Rimbault, who contributed an
-introduction.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Overton</b>, John. <span class='fss'>IACOBS</span> | <span class='fss'>TROVBLE-</span>|<span class='fss'>SOME IOVR-</span>|<span class='fss'>NEY TO BE-</span>|<span class='fss'>THEL</span>:
-Conteining a briefe ex-|position, or excellent | Treatise of the
-four first | verses of the 33. Chapter | of <span class='fss'>GENESIS</span>: | <i>Set foorth by</i> <span class='sc'>Iohn
-Over-</span>|<span class='fss'>TON</span>, <i>Maister of Arts</i>. | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 75 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>many wise</i>: Pica
-English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-Epistle dedicatory to William Brent,
-Welsborne, 1 Apr. 1586: (8) Gen. xxxiii.
-1–3: 1–75, the treatise: (1–5) “A prayer
-against the enimies of the Church of
-Christ ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This book was the “first fruits” of the author’s study.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. *†<b>Philosophy.</b> <span class='fss'>DE</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSO-</span>|<span class='fss'>PHIA,</span> | <span class='fss'>PANATHENA-</span>|<span class='fss'>ICAE DUAE:</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IN COMITIIS OXONII HABITAE.</span> | [<i>woodcuts and motto.</i> The whole title is
-within a border.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>N. pl.: n. d. (1586?): (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [32], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>lem,
-Demosthenem</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1–2) unknown: (3) title: (5) three
-Quaestiones: (6–18) “Panathenaica prima,
-v. Id. Iulii 1585. habita”: (19–20) three
-Quaestiones: (20–31) “Panathenaica secunda,
-iii Id. Iulii 1586. habita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Bodleian Catalogue suggests that these speeches are perhaps by Thomas
-Savile (see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 591), brother of sir Henry Savile, both of Merton.
-There is no place of imprint, but probably it is Oxford printing. Wood did not
-know the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Rainolds</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON PART</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE EIGH-</span>|<span class='fss'>TEENTH
-PSALM</span>: | Preached to the publik assem-|blie of Scholers in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>Vniuer-|sitie of Oxford the last day | of August, 1586. by | <span class='sc'>Iohn
-Rainolds</span>: | Vpon occasion of their meeting to giue | thankes to God
-for the late detection | <i>and apprehension of Traitours, who</i> | wickedlie
-conspired against the <i>Queens Maiestie and the</i> | state of the Realme. |
-[<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [40],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>C</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>But al
-this</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> “Aj.”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, “Iohn
-Rainoldes, to the Reader,” Oxford, 24
-Oct. 1586: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, Ps. xvii. 47–51: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>
-4<sup>v</sup>, the sermon, on Ps. xviii. 47–51: <span class='fss'>C</span> 4<sup>v</sup>,
-Ps xxi. 7–9.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 15. Reprinted at Oxford in 1613. Occasioned by
-“Babington’s conspiracy”: there are several references to current events.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. *<b>Shepery</b>, John. <span class='fss'>HYPPOLITVS OVIDIANÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>PHAEDRAE RES-</span>|<span class='fss'>PONDENS,
-PER IOAN-</span>|<span class='fss'>NEM SCHEPREVVM SOMA-</span>|<span class='fss'>TO CHRISTIANVM.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 8: [1586]: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[80], signn. *,<span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Scilicet
-expectas</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
-*1<sup>r</sup>, title: *2<sup>r</sup>-*7<sup>v</sup>, “Ioannis Schepreui
-præfatio, in epistolam Hyppoliti sui ad
-Phædram, ad M. Guadum dedicatam,” in
-Latin elegiacs: *8<sup>r</sup>-*8<sup>v</sup>, “Candido lectori
-Georgius Edrychus medicus S. P. D.,” a
-Latin preface: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span> 8<sup>r</sup>, the poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 135. This work is an imaginary reply of Hippolytus to
-the temptations of Phaedra, in Ovidian elegiacs. The author, John Shepery, of Corpus
-Christi College (“Somatochristianus”), tells us in the preface that it was composed
-as a return for kindness shown him by one Guadus (Wade ?, whom the editor describes
-as a chaplain to Henry viii), but delayed for some years. Shepery died in 1542,
-aged 32 years. George Etheridge (“Edrychus”) was a pupil of Shepery, fellow of
-Corpus, and a Roman Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date is fixed at 1586 by two passages: Etheridge in his preface states that
-for about 53 years he had been a member of the University: he was admitted scholar
-of Corpus in Nov. 1534. Also Dr. Humphrey in his introduction to the <cite>Summa et
-synopsis</cite> (see below) alludes to the <cite>Hippolytus</cite> as “nuperrime impressum.” Wood
-places the date at about 1584, and the Bodleian catalogue of 1843 assigns the book
-to 1542, owing to the date of Shepery’s death, which happens to occur prominently
-at the end of Etheridge’s preface.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Shepery</b>, John. <span class='fss'>SVMMA</span> | <span class='fss'>ET SYNOPSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>NOVI TESTAMEN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TI
-DISTICHIS DV-</span>|<span class='fss'>CENTIS SEXAGIN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TA, QVAE TOTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>DEM CAPITIBVS</span> | <span class='fss'>RESPONDENT</span>,
-| <i>comprehensa</i>: | Prior a <span class='fss'>IOANNE SCHEPREVO</span> | Oxoniensi olim conscripta:
-Posterior ex <span class='sc'>Erasmi</span> | <span class='sc'>Roterodami</span> <i>Editione decerpta: Tyrunculis &amp; om-</i>|nibus
-pietatis &amp; Theologiæ candidatis non inutilis, à | <span class='sc'>Lavrentio
-Hvmfredo</span> <i>recognita, &amp; iu-</i>|uandæ memoriæ causâ, edita: | Cui præmissa
-est eiusdem | <i>De Scholis &amp; studijs Christianorum piè &amp; metho-</i>|<i>dicè instituendis
-breuis Admonitio</i>. | [<i>motto</i> by L. H.(umfrey).]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1586: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [62],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>C</span><sup>9</sup> (see below) <span class='fss'>D</span><sup>6</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>
-beg. <i>disticha Ioannis</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>r</sup> “Admonitio
-Laurentii Humfredi ad Studiosos”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>v</sup>, “Librorum Novi Testamenti
-elenchus &amp; ordo per Cor. Graphæ ...”:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 3<sup>v</sup> “Disticha Ioannis Sheprevi ...”:
-verso of leaf after <span class='fss'>C</span> 3-<span class='fss'>D</span> 6<sup>r</sup>, “Disticha ...
-in Editione Erasmi Roterodami inserta.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The “Summa Ioannis Sheprevi” is a set of elegiac stanzas, each stanza describing
-the contents of a chapter in the New Testament, and beginning successively with the
-letters of the alphabet, written by John Shepery, of Corpus Christi College, Reader of
-the Hebrew Lecture from about 1537 to his death in 1542. The <cite>Summa</cite> is stated by
-Wood to have been first published at Strasburg in about 1556 by John Parkhurst bp.
-of Norwich, next in Lond. 1560 (Wood), and from Humfrey’s ed. in “Gemma Fabri,”
-Lond. 1598, and “Biblii (or Bibliorum) summula,” Lond. 1621, etc. The first distich
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>is “A priscis oritur Christus, turbatur Ioseph, | Angelus hunc retinet, virgo beata
-parit.” MS. C. C. C. (Oxf.) 266 contains these verses.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The “Synopsis” is a similar set of elegiac stanzas, without the alphabetical succession
-of first letters, first inserted in the Latin editions of Erasmus’s New Testament,
-from that of 1542 on. The author appears to be unknown: the first distich is
-“Angelus in somnis iustum solatur Ioseph, | Prototoco Mariæ nomen Iesus erit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In the preface Dr. Humfrey states that his object in editing the book was to recall
-young students to the study of the text of the Bible, and that he had collated a MS.
-copy of the <cite>Summa</cite> with bp. Parkhurst’s edition, and had compared different editions of
-the <cite>Synopsis</cite>: he alludes also to the Hippolytus of Shepery as “nuperrime impressum.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 135, 560. Dr. Philip Bliss noted in his copy “Whoever
-wants to write a history of the Oxford press should first get together all the little vols
-printed by Jo. Barnes, of which this is one of the rarest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Spanish.</b> <span class='fss'>REGLAS GRAM-</span>|<span class='fss'>MATICALES PARA A</span>|<span class='fss'>PRENDER LA LENGVA
-ESPA-</span>|n̄ola y Francesa, confiriendo la | vna con la otra, segun el or-|den
-de las partes de la o-|ration Latinas. | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 9*: 1586: 12<sup>o</sup> in size.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known from a title-page in the British Museum (Bagford Collection, 463. h. 8,
-no. 456). Mentioned in Ames and Herbert’s Ames, but not in such terms as to prove
-that either editor had seen the book complete. For the reference to the British
-Museum and a transcript of the title I am indebted to Mr. E. G. Duff, of Wadham
-College, Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Westfaling</b>, Herbert. “‘Articles Ecclesiasticall to be inquired
-of by the Church-wardens and the Sworne-men within the dioces
-of Hereford in the first visitation of the reuerend father in God, Harbart
-Bishop of the said dioces: this present yeare M . D . lxxxvi and the xxviii.
-yeare of the raigne of our most gracious soueraigne Lady Queene Elizabeth,
-&amp;c. And so hereafter, till the next visitation, and from time to time
-to be presented.’ B, in fours: 70 articles. W. H. Quarto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1401.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1587.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. [Bailey, Walter.] A briefe discours of certain Bathes ...
-neare vnto ... Newnam Regis, 1587.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Probably not printed at Oxford, but at London, though ascribed to the former place
-in the British Museum Catalogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Beza</b>, Theodorus. <span class='fss'>MASTER BEZAES SER-</span>|<span class='fss'>MONS VPON THE THREE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>FIRST CHAPTERS OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CANTICLE OF CANTICLES:</span> | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN ARE HANDLED
-THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHIEFEST POINTS OF RELIGION</span> | <span class='fss'><i>CONTROVERSED AND DEBATED BE-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>TWEENE
-VS AND THE ADVERSA-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>RIE AT THIS DAY, ESPECIALLY TOV-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>CHING
-THE TRVE IESVS CHRIST AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE TRVE CHVRCH, AND THE CER-</span>|<span class='sc'>TAINE &amp;
-INFALLIBLE MARKS</span> | <span class='fss'>BOTH OF THE ONE AND</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE OTHER.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>TRANSLATED
-OVT OF FRENCH INTO</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH BY</span> <span class='sc'>Iohn Harmar</span>, <span class='fss'>HER HIGHNES</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PROFESSOR
-IN THE GREEKE TOVNG</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IN THE VNIVERSITIE OF OXFORD,</span> | <span class='fss'>AND
-FELOWE OF THE NEWE</span> | <span class='fss'>COLLEGE THERE.</span> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6<i>a</i>: 1587: (fours) 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12]
-+ 435 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>and because no</i>,
-111 <i>with all rigor</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) epistle dedicatory
-to the earl of Leicester: (7–12) “The
-Argument of the xlv. Psalme, seruing for
-an Argument of ... the Canticle of Canticles
-...”: 1–435, the sermons (thirty-one)
-on the Song of Solomon chapp. 1–3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 138. The best account of this work will be extracts
-from the Epistle dedicatory. John Harmar the translator was in this year Proctor,
-Regius professor of Greek and Fellow of New College. He says, “I was requested,
-right honorable, by manie of my friends to emploie the time of this last vacation of
-mine from my publique readinges in the Vniuersitie, in the translating of Master
-Bezaes Sermons vpon the Canticle of Canticles, which I had a little before receaued
-from the Francfurt mart in French, into our vulgare and Mother tongue.” The
-patronage of Lord Dudley is acknowledged and details of the translator’s life are given,
-as that he attended Beza’s lectures and sermons at Geneva. The work translated was
-no doubt Beza’s “Sermons sur les trois premiers chapitres du Cantique des cantiques
-de Salomon,” <i>Genève, Jehan le Preux</i>, 1586, 8<sup>o</sup> (Brunet).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Case</b>, John. “‘Thesaurus oeconomiae, seu commentarius oeconomica
-Aristotelis. Authore Johanne Caso.’ Again 1598. Quarto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1402, after Ames: but perhaps an error for 1597.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Legatus.</b> <span class='fss'>DE LEGATO ET ABSOLV-</span>|<span class='fss'>TO PRINCIPE PERDV-</span>|<span class='fss'>ELLIONIS
-REO.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 10: 1587: (eight) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>8</sup>: p. (11) beg. <i>su fortuito</i>: Pica
-Italic. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–16)
-the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This anonymous treatise is a formal and precise legal argument on the question
-“Utrum legatus alicuius principis absoluti vel ipse princeps absolutus morte sit afficiendus,
-si in aliena republica, contra vitam principis vel salutem totius reipublicae, nefariam
-coniurationem fuerint machinati.” It was intended to support Queen Elizabeth
-in her resolution to execute Mary Queen of Scots, and seems to have been written
-after 4 Dec. 1586 (p. 13) and before the execution 8 Feb. 1587: but there is no clue
-to the author.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. [<b>Penry</b>, John.] <span class='fss'>A TREATISE</span> | <span class='fss'>CONTAINING</span> | <span class='fss'>THE AEQVITY OF</span> |
-<span class='fss'>AN HVMBLE SVPPLI-</span>|<span class='fss'>CATION WHICH IS TO BE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>EXHIBITED VNTO HIR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>GRACIOVS
-MAIESTY AND</span> | this high Court of Parliament | <i>in the behalfe of the Countrey
-of</i> | Wales, that some order may | <i>be taken for the preaching of</i> | the
-Gospell among those | people. | Wherein also is set downe as much of
-the | estate of our people as without offence | could be made known, to
-the end that | our case (if it please God) may be piti-|ed by them who are
-not of this assem-|bly, and so they also may be driuen to | labour on our
-behalfe. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1587: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. 62
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>The Necessity</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title:
-3–10, “To al that mourn in Sion ...”:
-11–62, the work: (1) “To the reader”
-explanation and erratum.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author’s name nowhere occurs, but there can be but little doubt that
-the volume was written by John Penry of St. Alban hall, Oxford (B.A. 1586),
-who is conspicuous in the Marprelate controversy and who published <cite>An exhortation
-vnto the Gouernours and people of Wales, to labour earnestly to haue the preaching of
-the Gospell planted among them</cite> (n. pl. or d., and n. pl. 1588): and also <cite>A View of
-... publike wants &amp; disorders ... in the service of God ... within Wales</cite>, n. pl. 1588.
-The author says, p. 63, “Some rumor of the speedy dissolution of the Parliament
-enforced me from the 32 Pag. or there abouts (so much being already vnder the presse)
-to cut off more of the booke by two parts than is now in the whole.” Parliament sat
-in 1586 from 28 Oct. to 2 Dec. and not during 1587. At pp. 53–4 Penry alludes to the
-state of the Universities. Wood does not know of this work, and the best account of
-the author is in Cooper’s <cite>Athenæ Cantabr.</cite>, ii. 154.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>6. <b>Prime</b>, John. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>EXPOSITION,</span> | <span class='fss'>AND OBSERVATI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ONS VPON
-SAINT</span> | <span class='fss'>PAUL TO THE GALA-</span>|<span class='fss'>THIANS, TOGETHER</span> | with incident Qæstions
-de-|<i>bated, and Motives re-</i>|moued, by | <span class='fss'>IOHN PRIME</span>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1587: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 317 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>moment</i>, 111
-<i>dangerous</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7), dedication to John
-Pierce bishop of Salisbury, Oxford, 30
-Jan. “1587”: 1–317, the work: (2–3)
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 653. Compiled from notes of fortnightly discourses at
-Abingdon.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Rainolds</b>, John. <span class='fss'>IOHANNIS RAINOLDI</span> | <span class='fss'>ORATIONES DU<i>Æ</i></span>: | Ex
-ijs quas habuit in Collegio | Corporis Christi, quum | linguam Graecam |
-profiteretur. | <span class='fss'>HABITÆ, QVVM STUDIA, DE</span> | more per ferias intermissa, |
-repeterentur: | <i>Prior, quæ duodecima, post vaca-</i>|<i>tionem Natalitiam;</i> |
-<i>Posterior, decima tertia, post va-</i>|<i>cationem Paschalem;</i> | <i>Anno</i> 1576. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1587: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [88]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>ignorantiam</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. 1 “A”: 3, title: 5–8,
-“Iohannes Rainoldus Academicis Oxoniensibus
-S. P. D.,” with preface following,
-Oxf. 2 Feb.: 9–85, the two Orations.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are general exhortations to study, selected out of twenty orations of the kind.
-They are reprinted in the various editions of Rainolds’s Orations. See Wood’s <cite>Ath.
-Oxon.</cite>, ii. 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Sidney</b>, sir Philip. <span class='fss'>EXEQVIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ILLVSTRISSIMI</span> | <span class='fss'>EQVITIS, D.
-PHILIP-</span>|<span class='fss'>PI SIDNAEI, GRATISSI-</span>|<span class='fss'>MAE MEMORIAE AC NO-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>MINI IMPENSÆ</i>.</span> | [<i>device</i>:
-then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1587: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [96],
-signn. *, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>L</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Et verò</i>:
-Pica Roman and Italic. Contents:—sign.
-*1<sup>r</sup>, title: *2<sup>r</sup>-3<sup>v</sup>, Epistola dedicatoria
-to the earl of Leicester, signed
-“Guilielmus Gagerus,” Oxf., 22 Oct.
-1587: *4<sup>v</sup>, Latin poem by Laurence
-Humfrey: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>L</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the poems, in Latin:
-<span class='fss'>L</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, an erratum.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Sir Philip Sidney died at Arnheim 7 Oct. 1586. Dr. William James, dean of
-Christ Church, urged W. Gager to collect and edit poems which had been privately
-made at the time of Sidney’s death: the editor found it necessary from considerations
-of space to reject Hebrew, Greek, French and Italian poems, but it may be doubted
-whether the printer possessed Hebrew type. See next art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Sidney</b>, sir Philip. <span class='fss'>PEPLVS</span> | <span class='fss'>ILLVSTRISSIMI</span> | <span class='fss'>VIRI D. PHILIPPI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SIDNAEI SVPRE-</span>|<span class='fss'>MIS HONORIBVS</span> | <span class='fss'>DICATVS.</span> | [<i>woodcut</i>, then two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1587: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 54 + [2]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Cur temet</i>: Pica Roman and
-Italic. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–4, dedication
-to Henry Herbert earl of Pembroke,
-in Latin, by “Ioannes Luidus,”
-New college, Oxford, 26 Aug. 1587:
-5–54, the work: 54, two errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The title is an allusion to the spurious Peplus of Aristotle, a commemoration of the
-heroes who fell before Troy. The editor was John Lhuyd, and the poems (almost all
-Latin) are all by New College men, among whom the earl of Pembroke, Sidney’s
-brother-in-law, had been educated. See preceding art., and Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i.
-523.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>10. <b>Sprint</b>, John. <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>ILLVSTRIS-</span>|<span class='fss'>SIMOS COMI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TES WARWICENSEM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ET LEICESTRENSEM ORA-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>TIO GRATVLATORIA</i></span> | <span class='fss'>BRISTOLLIÆ HABITA</span> | <span class='fss'><i>APRIL.
-ANNO</i></span> | 1587. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: (1587): (eight) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>8</sup>: p. (11) beg. <i>Atque hic</i>: Pica
-Italic. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1 unknown:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, introduction to the
-speech, in Latin: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, dedication to lord
-Leicester by “Ioh. Sprint” dean of
-Bristol: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>v</sup>, the speech, 16 Apr.
-1587: <span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>r</sup>, “In aduentum Illustrissimi
-Comitis Leicestrensis cùm primùm Cancellarius
-Oxoniensis Academiam accederet”
-(29 Aug. 1566?), a poem of 13
-hexameters, the initial letters of the words
-forming a complimentary wish.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Extremely rare: see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 333, where the poem &amp;c. is reprinted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Ursinus</b>, Zacharias. <span class='fss'>THE SVMME</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'><i>RELIGION</i></span>: |
-Deliuered by <span class='sc'>Zacha-</span>|<span class='sc'>rias Vrsinvs</span> in his Le-|<i>ctures vpon the Cateckism
-auto-</i>|rised by the noble Prince <span class='sc'>Frede-</span>|<span class='fss'>RICK</span>, throughout his dominions: |
-<i>Wherein are debated and re-</i>|solued the Questions of whatsoe-|<i>uer new
-points of moment, which haue beene</i> | <i>or are contro-</i>|<i>uersed in Diuinitie.</i> |
-<i>Translated into English by</i> <span class='sc'>Hen-</span>|<span class='sc'>rie Parrie</span>, <i>out of the last &amp; best</i> | <i>Latin
-Editions, together with some sup-</i>|<i>plie of wants out of his Discourses of
-Di-</i>|<i>uinitie, and with correction of sundrie</i> | <i>faults &amp; imperfections, which
-ar as yet</i> | <i>remaining in the best corrected Latine.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1587: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 1047 + [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>alone is it</i>, 111
-<i>iecting it of</i>, 1001 <i>Now we haue</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within a border: (3–8) Epistle dedicatorie
-to the earl of Pembroke, signed by
-Parry: (9–15) “To the Christian readers,”
-by Parry: 1–1047, the work: (2–9), “A
-table ...” of contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Other editions were printed at Oxford in 1589, 1591, 1595, 1601. The work,
-which is a commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism, appears to be a cento from
-the Tractationes Theologicae of Ursinus (vol. 1, 1587, fol.). See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>,
-ii. 192. Parry’s Prefaces are reprinted in 1600. U.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1588.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Ca[se]</b>, Jo[hn]. <span class='fss'>APOLOGIA MV-</span>|<span class='fss'>SICES TAM VO-</span>|<span class='fss'>CALIS QVAM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>INSTRUMEN-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>TALIS ET</i></span> | <span class='fss'>MIXTÆ.</span> | [four <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1588: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6]
-+ 78 (“77”): p. 11 beg. <i>am, Lydiam</i>:
-Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) dedication “Henrico Vntono et
-Guilielmo Hattono ... Io. Ca. S. P. D.,”
-with preface signed “I. C.,” Oxf. 30 Nov.
-1588: 1-“77” the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. By John Case, cf. 1586. M, Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 686. The dedication is
-to two persons for their fathers’ interest in music. Sign. F consists of F 1 &amp; F 3 only,
-paged 74–77 instead of 75–78. Copies usually have a border, &amp;c. of red ink lines,
-throughout.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>SPHÆRA CIVITATIS,</span> | <span class='fss'>AVTHORE MAGISTRO</span> | <span class='fss'>IOHANNE
-CASO OXONI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ENSI, OLIM COLLEGII DIVI</span> | Iohannis Præcursoris socio. |
-[<i>device</i>, then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>Impr. 11: 1588: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[36] + 740 + [12]: p. 11 beg. <i>regni plusquam</i>,
-111 <i>Communitas</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) 4 verses to
-the author from the “Sphæra Civitatis”!
-with a curious engraving of the sphere
-surmounted by the head and shoulders
-of the queen: (3) Latin poem to the
-author signed “Richardus Late-War”
-pres. of St. John’s college: (5–9) Epistola
-dedicatoria to Christopher lord Hatton:
-(10–25) “Ad Christianum lectorem,”
-11 May 1588: (26–28) complimentary
-poems: (29–36) “Quæstiones et dubia
-quæ in octo libris Politicorum continentur,”
-a table of contents: (36) two complimentary
-poems: 1–740, the work:
-(1–4) “Peroratio operis,” 11 May, 1588:
-(5–11) “Rerum contentarum index.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 686. A commentary on the Politics of Aristotle, made
-into a general political treatise. On 16 July 1590 Barnes petitioned for a decree of
-Convocation that every determining bachelor should purchase this work, but it does
-not appear that any action was taken on the petition. Reprinted at Frankfurt in
-1616.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Catechism.</b> <span class='fss'>A CATECHISME,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR SHORT KIND OF IN-</span>|<span class='fss'>STRVCTION,
-WHEREBY</span> | <span class='fss'>TO TEACH CHILDREN AND</span> | <span class='fss'>THE IGNORAVNTER SORT, THE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>CHRISTIAN
-RELIGION</i>.</span> | <i>Whereunto is prefixed a learned Treatise of the necessity
-and vse of</i> | <i>Catechising: together with Godly praiers most fit for al estates
-at al</i> | <i>times.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1588: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [10] + 212
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>God, committed</i>, 111
-<i>lowest partes</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title: (3–9) Epistle dedicatory by
-Thomas Sparke and John Seddon to
-Arthur lord Grey of Wilton, Bletchley,
-30 Jan. 1587: 1–61, the treatise on catechising,
-signed by Sparke: 62, a prayer:
-63–194, the catechism: 195–211, prayers,
-with a confession of the faith: 212 “Causes
-why men doe not vnderstand the holie
-Scriptures,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 190 (bis). This is the Heidelberg Catechism
-translated into English by Thomas Sparke and John Seddon, with scriptural proofs
-annexed to each paragraph, and a long treatise on catechising. See next art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Catechism.</b> <span class='fss'>A CATECHISME, OR SHORT</span> | <span class='fss'>KIND OF INSTRVCTION,
-WHEREBY,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>TO TEACH CHILDREN, AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE IGNORAVNTER SORT, THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>CHRISTIAN RELIGION</i></span> | <i>Whereunto, is prefixed, a learned Treatise, of the
-necessity, &amp; vse of Ca-</i>|<i>techising: together, with Godly praiers, most fit, for
-al estates, at al times.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1588: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12]
-+ 274 (?): p. 11 beg. <i>the greatnes</i>, 111 <i>I
-beleeue</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title: (3–11) Epistle, as before: 1–80,
-the treatise, as before: 81, “The causes
-...” &amp;c. as before at end: 82, a prayer:
-83–254, the catechism: 255–274, prayers
-&amp;c. as above.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reprint of the preceding quarto edition, with slight varieties of spelling,
-arrangement, &amp;c.: the type is newly set up throughout.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Humfrey</b>, Laurence. <span class='fss'>A VIEW</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE ROMISH</span> | <span class='fss'>HYDRA AND
-MON-</span>|<span class='fss'>STER TRAISON A-</span>|<span class='fss'>GAINST THE LORDS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ANNOINTED: CON-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>DEMNED BY
-DAVID</span> | <span class='fss'>1. <i>SAM.</i> 26 <i>AND NOWE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CONFVTED IN SE-</span>|<span class='fss'>VEN SERMONS</span> | To perswade
-Obedience to Prin-|ces, Concord among ourselues, and a | <i>generall Reformation
-and Repen-</i>|taunce in all states | By L. H. | [<i>two mottos.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1588: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 192: p. 11 beg. <i>as R. Holcot</i>, 111
-<i>Kent, Roger</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “The Dialogue and talk
-of Dauid ...” (1 Sam. xxvi. 8–12): (3–17)
-Epistle dedicatory to the earl of Leicester,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>Oxf., “Decemb. 28” [1587], furnishing
-the author’s full name: (18–24) “A table
-of the special points and common places”:
-(24) “Faultes escaped correct thus,” six:
-1–192, the seven sermons, on 1 Sam. xxvi.
-8–12.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> (i. 560) represents this as a London book, but
-Maunsell (i. 100) and Herbert (iii. 1403) testify to this Oxford edition. The
-Bodleian copy wants the title and all after p. 186, the account of which is from a very
-accurate description obligingly supplied from a copy in the Peterborough Cathedral
-Library by the Bishop of Leicester in Dec. 1888.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Prime</b>, John. [<i>woodcut.</i>] <span class='fss'>THE CONSO-</span>|<span class='sc'>lations of David</span>, | <span class='fss'>BREEFLY
-APPLIED TO</span> | <span class='sc'>Qveene Elizabeth: in a</span> | Sermon preached in Ox-|ford
-the 17. of Nouember. | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Prime</span>, | 1588. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6<i>b</i>: 1588: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>ventereth
-his</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, Epistle dedicatorie to
-the bp. of Winchester, Oxf. 7 Dec. 1588:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, the sermon, on Ps. xxiii. 4: <span class='fss'>B</span> 7<sup>v</sup>,
-2 Kings vi. 15–16.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 653. The Marprelate controversy and the defeat of the
-Armada are mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Sparke</b>, Thomas. “Treatise to prove that Ministers publicly,
-and Householders privately, are bound to catechise their Parishioners and
-Families &amp;c. Oxon. 1588. oct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 190): the treatise is part of the Catechism above, and is
-unlikely to have been separately issued.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Theocritus.</b> <span class='fss'>SIXE IDILLIA</span> | <span class='fss'>THAT IS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIXE SMALL, OR PETTY</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'>POEMS, OR ÆGLOGVES, CHO-</span>|<i>sen out of the right famous Sicilian</i> | Poet
-<span class='sc'>Theocritus</span>, and tran-|<i>slated into English verse</i>. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1588: (eight) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>8</sup>: p. (11) beg. <i>The heauens</i>: Long
-Primer Italic. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title, within a border: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup> “E. D. <i>Libenter
-hic &amp; omnis exantlabitur</i> | <i>Labor,
-in tuæ spem gratiæ</i>,” [Hor. Epod i. 23–4],
-within a border: “<span class='fss'>H</span>” 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>r</sup>, Idylls 8,
-11, 16, 18, 21, 31 of Theocritus.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only copy known is in the Bodleian. It was reprinted in 1883 at the private
-press of Mr. C. H. Daniel of Worcester College, Oxford. Each idyll is preceded by
-an “argument” and followed by an “embleme” or motto. It has been suggested
-that E. D. to whom the dedication is addressed, may be Edward Dyer. This is the
-first Oxford <i>édition de luxe</i>, except perhaps the xvth. cent. issues on vellum.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1589.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Hermaica gymnasmata.</b> <span class='fss'>HERMAICA GYM-</span>|<span class='fss'>NASMATA.</span> | Literarum
-nobilitas, &amp; gloria. | <span class='fss'>LITERAE ORTV CAELESTES</span>, | genere divinæ,
-authoritate &amp; gratia illustres, | <i>studijs sapientum præclaræ, fructu saluta-</i>|<i>res,
-iucunditate præstantes</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 1<i>a</i>: 1589: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[88], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>luat: aut</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, “Tituli” of the 22
-Exercises: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, “Philologo”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>
-3 (“<span class='fss'>A</span> 3”)<sup>v</sup>, the exercises: <span class='fss'>F</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, note
-that the 3rd Exercise is out of its place:
-<span class='fss'>F</span> 4, unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>Very rare. Twenty-two short anonymous exercises in Latin prose, such as would
-serve for College or University disputations. By a Magdalen man, the “Epitaphius”
-being on William of Waynfleet, cf. the Phasma, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Hutchins</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>A SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT</span> | <span class='fss'>S. MARIES IN
-OXFORD</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON THE FEAST OF EPI-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>PHANY CONCERNING</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE TRVE COMFORT
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'><i>GOD HIS CHVRCH TRVLY</i></span> | <span class='fss'>MILLITANT AND APOLO-</span>|<i>gie of the same</i>. |
-Ianuary 6. 1589. | By Edwarde Hutchins Maister | of Arts, and fellow of
-Brazen-|nose College in Oxford. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6<i>b</i>: (1589): (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>blessing:
-no</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to Thomas
-Egerton: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 8<sup>r</sup>, the sermon, on Cant.
-iv. 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 452, where the book is divided into two, without cause.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Rider</b>, John. <span class='fss'>BIBLIOTHECA</span> | <span class='fss'>SCHOLASTICA.</span> | <span class='fss'>A DOVBLE DICTIONARIE,</span>
-| Penned for all those that would haue within short | space the vse
-of the Latin tongue, either to speake, or write. | <i>Verie profitable and
-necessarie for Scholers, Courtiers, Lawyers and their</i> | Clarkes, Apprentices
-of London, Travellers, Factors for Marchants, | and briefly for all Discontinuers
-within her Majesties realmes | of England and Ireland. | <i>Compiled
-by</i> Iohn Rider, <i>Master of Artes, and preacher of Gods word</i>. |
-[<i>device.</i>] |
-<span class='overunder'>{ <span class='small'>First reade</span><br />{ <span class='small'>With others c...</span><br />{ <span class='small'>Then censure</span></span>
-<i>Read the Preface, Le...</i> | [<i>imprint</i>] | Cum
-privile... |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 12: 1589: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>. pp.
-[12] + 1800 columns. 3 in a page + ? &nbsp; :
-col. 111 beg. <i>Belching</i>, 1001, <i>Notched</i>:
-Minion. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to sir Francis Walsingham,
-signed “Iohannes Riderus,” Oxford, 1 Oct.
-[1589], in Latin: (5) “To the Reader,”
-signed “Ioh. Ridir,” 30 Sept.: (6) “Directions
-for the Reader”: (7) “Rideri
-gratitudinis carmen, ad suum prænobilem
-Mecænatem,” acrostics “Comiti Sussexio”
-and “VVilielmo VVaddo”: (8–12) complimentary
-Latin verses to the author:
-coll. 1–1800, the work, English-Latin: (?)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 457, <cite>Notes and Queries</cite>, 6th S. iv. 274. The
-above description is from a copy of the first part, with damaged title, in the Bodleian.
-Rider claims that the Dictionarie is the first “that hath the English before the Latine,
-with a ful Index of al such latine words as are in any one common Dictionarie” and
-that it has 4000 more words than any other. He acknowledges the pecuniary help of
-the earl of Sussex and Will. Waade. The book is a “retort courteous” to the Cambridge
-dictionary by Tho. Thomas of 1588. Several edd. were subsequently issued
-(see 1627. H), and Thomas Holyoke refashioned it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Skelton</b>, John. “A Skeltonicall salutation, | or condigne
-gratulation | and iust vexation | of the Spanish nation, | that in a
-bravado | spent many a crusado | in setting forth an armado | England
-to invado | 4to, Oxf. J. Barnes, 1589.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the <cite>Catalogue of the ... library of ... Benjamin Heywood Bright ... which
-will be sold by auction ... 1845</cite>, art. 5276, p. 331. Extremely rare. J. Payne Collier
-once saw a copy (<cite>Notes and Queries</cite>, 1st S. i. 18, 1849), the imprint being nearly as
-No. 5<i>b</i>. There were copies in the Farmer sale (1798, sold to lord Spencer) and
-Inglis sale (1826). In <cite>Notes and Queries</cite>, <i>ibid.</i>, p. 12 is printed a letter from John
-Aylmer bp. of London to the Lord Treasurer about “this foolish rime.” The London
-reprint, which contains a Latin version said not to be in the Oxford edition (but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>query?) “imprinted at London for Toby Cooke, 1589” (sm. 4<sup>o</sup>, 8 leaves), is not
-uncommon. See also Brydges, <cite>Censura Literaria</cite>, 2nd ed., p. 18, Ames and
-Herbert’s Ames.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Ursinus</b>, Zacharias. <span class='fss'>THE SVMME</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'>RELIGION</span>: |
-Delivered by <span class='sc'>Zacharias Vrsinvs</span> in | his Lectures vpon the Catechisme,
-authori-|<i>sed by the noble Prince</i> <span class='sc'>Fredericke</span> | throughout his Dominions: |
-Wherein are debated and resolved the Questions | <i>of whatsoever points of
-moment, which haue beene</i>, | or are controversed in Divinity. | <i>Translated
-into English by</i> <span class='sc'>Henry Parry</span>, <i>out of the last and</i> | best Latine Editions,
-together with some supplie of | <i>wants out of his Discourses of Divinity,
-and with correction</i> | of sundry faults &amp; imperfections, which are | as yet
-remaining in the best corrected Latine. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1589: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 966 + [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>nister comfort</i>,
-111 <i>might fal?</i>, 501 <i>father al</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to the earl of
-Pembroke, signed by Parry: (9–15) “To
-the Christian readers,” by Parry: 1–966,
-the work: (1–9) “A Table ...” of contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1587. U. It is noteworthy that the change from u consonantal to v can be
-traced in progress by a comparison of this title with that of the first edition.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1590.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bacon</b>, Roger. <span class='fss'>LIBELLVS ROGERII BA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CONI ANGLI, DOCTISSIMI
-MA-</span>|thematici &amp; medici, De retardandis senectu-|<i>tis accidentibus, &amp; de
-sensibus</i> |<a id='t29a'></a> conservandis. | Item, | <span class='fss'>LIBELLVS VRSONIS</span> | <span class='fss'>MEDICI, DE PRIMARVM
-QVALI-</span>|tatum arcanis &amp; effectibus. Vterq<span class='small'>ue</span> affixis ad | <i>marginem notulis
-illustratus, &amp; emendatus</i><a id='t29b'></a>, | in lucem prodijt, operâ Iohannis Willi-|<i>ams
-Oxoniensis, cuius</i> | sequitur | Tractatus Philosophicus, de humo-|rum
-numero &amp; natura, complexionis, morbi, | <i>perturbationum origine, caloris
-&amp; humidi nati-</i>|vi virtute &amp; munere in humano corpore, &amp; de | <i>aëris infectione,
-vndè non rarò humores</i> | &amp; spiritus coinquinantur. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1590: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 31 + [1] + 134 + [2], (signatures continuous):
-p. 11 beg. <i>cana rerum</i>, also <i>tur.
-Sed potest</i>, 111 <i>li, tendones</i>: Brevier Roman
-(1st part), Pica Italic (2nd and 3rd parts).
-Contents:—p. (1), title: (3–5) epistola
-dedicatoria to Christopher lord Hatton
-by J. Williams: (6–7) “Ad lectorem,”
-a preface, mentioning some errata: (8)
-title of Bacon’s treatise, and a poetical
-Latin “R. Baconi vita”: 1–31, Bacon’s
-treatise: 1–29, Urso’s treatise: 33–134,
-Williams’s treatise, signed at end by the
-author.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The preface contains curious critical principles. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 132.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Gentilis</b>, Albericus. <span class='fss'>ALBERICI GEN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TILIS I. C. PROFES-</span>|<span class='fss'>SORIS
-REGII</span> | <span class='fss'>DE INIVSTITIA BELLICA</span> | <span class='fss'>ROMANORVM ACTIO.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 13: 1590: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 23
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>rum vos non</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1), “¶j”: (3)
-title: (5–8) dedication “Roberto Devoraxio ... comiti
-Essexio,” Oxford, 24
-Dec. 1590: 1–23, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 91. The author says that he has a treatise
-ready prepared defending the precise opposite of the present argument.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>3. <b>Josephus.</b> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΦΛΑΒΙΟΥ ΙΩΣΗΠΟΥ ΕΙΣ ΜΑΚΚΑ-</span>|<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">βαίους λόγος: ἢ περὶ
-ἀυτοκράτορος λογισμοῦ.</span> | Flavij Iosephi de Maccabæ-|<i>is; seu de Rationis
-imperio liber</i>. | <span class='fss'>MANUSCRIPTI CODICIS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OPE, LONGE, QVAM</i></span> | antehac, &amp; emendatior,
-&amp; au-|<i>ctior: cum Latina interpreta-</i>|<i>tione ac notis Ioannis Luidi</i>. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1590: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 33 + [4] + 39 + [4], signn. ¶<sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>8</sup>:
-p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">οὐχ οὕτως</span>, also <i>ramo Moses</i> or
-<i>sim vt</i>: Long Primer Greek and Latin.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication
-to Roger Gifford physician to the King
-by Ioannes Luidus, in Latin, Oxford, 29
-Sept. 1590: 1–33, &amp; (1), text of Josephus:
-(2–4) “Veterum de hocce Iosephi libello
-elogia”: 1 (“6”)-39, Latin tr. of Josephus:
-(1–3) “Adversaria” including
-various readings: (3–4) “Castigationes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 738 for John Lhuyd or Lloyd. The paging of the
-second part is very irregular up to p. 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Trigge</b>, Francis. “Comment. in cap. 12. ad Rom. Ox.
-1590.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Bliss’s ed. of Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 759.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Trigge</b>, Francis. “Noctes sacræ seu lucubrationes in primam
-partem apocalypseos in quibus perspicue docetur quænam sit vera
-ecclesia, et quæ falsa, quod hoc seculo tam multos in religione et fide
-suspensos tenet, &amp;c. Oxon. 1590, 4to. <span class='sc'>Rawlinson.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Bliss’s ed. of Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 760. A copy was sold in the Davis sale
-at Oxford in 1686 (Catal. pt. 1, p. 26).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1591.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Barne</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CHED AT PAVLS CROSSE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE THIRTEENTH OF IVNE, THE SE-</span>|cond Sunday in Trinitie tearme 1591.
-by | <span class='sc'>Th</span><span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ω</span><span class='sc'>mas Barne</span> <i>student in Diuinity</i>. [<i>three mottos</i>, then a <i>metal
-engraving</i> (arms of the University &amp;c.)].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 4: 1591: 8<sup>o</sup> in size.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Extremely rare. Only known from a titlepage preserved in the Bodleian Library.
-Probably this is the source of Herbert’s description (iii. 1405). He calls the
-book a quarto: the size of the close-cut titlepage is 6<span class='fraction'>9<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. × 3¾ in. The metal engraving
-is curious: see 1591. T.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Hacket</b>, Roger. “Roger Hacket, his sermon at Paules
-Crosse on 1 Sam. xi; 5, 6, 7 ... Octavo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Herbert’s Ames, p. 1404, from Maunsell, i. 100. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii.
-317.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Herodotus.</b> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">FEBRVARII.Υ Α῾ΛΙΚΑ´ΡΝΑΣΣΕ´ΩΣ Ι῾ΣΤΟΡΙ-|Ω῀Ν
-ΠΡΩ´ΤΗ, ΚΛΕΙΩ´.</span> | <span class='fss'>HERODOTI HALICAR-</span>|<span class='fss'>NASSENSIS HISTORIARVM</span> | liber
-primus, Clio. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>Impr. 15: 1591: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 69 + [3]:
-p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">βιώτατον</span>: Pica Greek. Contents:—p.
-1, title: 2, “Herodoti vita ex
-Suida,” &amp;c.: 3–69, Herodotus, bk. 1: 69,
-“Errata graviora sic corrigenda.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Sparke</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>AN ANSWERE TO MA-</span>|<span class='fss'>STER IOHN DE ALBINES,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>NOTABLE DISCOVRSE AGAINST</span> | heresies (as his frendes call his booke) |
-<i>Compiled by</i> <span class='sc'>Thomas Spark</span> <i>pastor</i> | of Blechley in the county of Buck. |
-[two <i>mottos</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 4: 1591: 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [76] + 426 +
-[6]: p. 11 beg. <i>you are quite</i>, 111 <i>thing
-which it</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p.
-(1) Title: (3–14) Epistle dedicatorie
-to Arthur lord Grey of Wilton, signed
-“Thomas Sparke”: (15–76) “The preface
-to the Reader,” including (27–76) an
-answer to the preface to Albines’ book:
-1–407, the treatise: 408–426, “A short
-answere to a new offer ... an enumeration
-of six ... signes of Antichristians
-...”: (1–4) “A Table”: (5) “Faults
-escaped in printing, through the absence
-of the author, the hardnes and smalnes of
-the hand, wherein the copy was offered
-to the presse, and the vnacquaintance of
-the ouerseers with the same.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In answer to Jean de Albin’s treatise against heresies printed in English at Douai
-in 1575: the text of which appears to be entirely reprinted in this edition. See
-Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 190.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Tacitus.</b> <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ENDE OF NERO</span> | <span class='fss'>AND BEGINNING OF</span> | <span class='fss'>GALBA.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>FOWER BOOKES OF THE HISTO-</span>|<span class='sc'>ries Of Cornelivs Tacitvs</span>. | <span class='fss'>THE LIFE OF
-AGRICOLA.</span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>[Colophon on sign. <span class='fss'>H</span> 2<sup>r</sup>:—] impr. 14:
-[on titlepage:—<span class='fss'>M . D . LXXXXI</span>] 1591:
-(sixes) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 17 + [1] + 267 + [1]
-+ 80 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>so good a</i>, and <i>another
-Prince</i>, 111 <i>xxix. The setting</i>, 11 <i>ted
-to all</i>: 1st pt. Great Primer, 2nd pt. Pica,
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to the Queen, signed “Henry
-Savile”: (5–6) “A. B. To the Reader”:
-1–17, the Ende of Nero, &amp;c.: 1–267, the
-translation of Tacitus’s Histories bks. 1–4,
-and (p. 237) his Life of Agricola: 1–48,
-Annotations upon the four books and the
-Life: 49–75, “A view of certain militar
-matters,” with plan of Roman camp at
-p. 59: 75–77, “The explication of a place
-in Polybius” about Greek money: 78–80,
-“Translations of the marginall Greeke”:
-(1) “A note of the editions vsed in such
-authors as are cited by page”: (2) “Errours
-of the printe, or changes”: (3)
-colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 312. The A. B. of the preface was believed to be lord
-Essex (Edm. Bolton’s <cite>Hypercritica</cite> ad fin., Oxf. 1722). There is something peculiar
-about this edition, for bibliographers describe it as London, and the woodcut in the
-dedication is not otherwise known to belong to Barnes. The titlepage and form are
-rather of London than Oxford. A metal engraving in the text is perhaps Barnes’s:
-see 1591. B.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Trigge</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>ANALYSIS CAPI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TIS VICESIMI QVARTI</span> | <span class='fss'>EVANGELII
-SECVNDVM</span> <span class='sc'>Matthævm</span>, | in qua Prophetiæ omnes, &amp; quæ ad
-Sinagogam, | <i>&amp; quæ ad Antichristum seductorem illum, &amp; quæ ad nostra</i> |
-<i>tempora spectant, clarè explicantur, nec non ministerium ec-</i>|<i>clesiasticum cum
-omnibus suis adiunctis declaratur</i> | <i>ac delineatur</i>. | Authore <span class='sc'>Francisco
-Triggo</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 1<i>a</i>: 1591: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-128: p. 11 beg. <i>loquutus est</i>, 111 <i>ti ora
-vult</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) dedication to Will. James,
-dean of Christ Church, vice-chancellor,
-“ex Welburnia mea” 19 Apr. 1591:
-1–128, the Analysis.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 759.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>7. <b>Ursinus</b>, Zacharias. <span class='fss'>THE SVMME</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'>RELIGION</span>: |
-[&amp;c. as 1589. U, except in l. 7 : for ., l. 9 comma added after <i>beene</i>, l. 15
-is in italic, in imprint “Ty|<i>gres head</i>. 1591” for “Tygres | <i>head</i>.
-1589”].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1591: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 966 + [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>nister comfort</i>,
-111 <i>might fall?</i>, 501 <i>father al</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–16), as 1589. U: 1–966, the catechism:
-(1–9) “A table ...” of contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1587. U.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1592.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Barlaamus.</b> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΤΟΥ῀ ΣΟΦΩΤΑ´ΤΟΥ ΒΑΡΛΑΑ`Μ ΛΟ´ΓΟΣ ΠΕΡΙ` |
-ΤΗ῀Σ ΤΟΥ῀ ΠΑ´ΠΑ ἈΡΧΗ῀Σ.</span> | <span class='fss'>BARLAAMI DE PAPAE PRINCI-</span>|<span class='fss'>PATV LIBELLVS.</span> |
-<i>Nunc primùm Græcé &amp; Latiné editus opera</i> <span class='sc'>Ioannis</span> | <span class='sc'>Lvidi</span> <i>Procuratoris
-Academiæ Oxoniensis</i>. | Ad | Illustrissimum Dominum Bucchurstium |
-eiusdem Academiæ Cancellarium | Amplissimum. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1592: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [40],
-signn. ¶, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἀξιοῦσθαι
-χειροτονίας</span>: Pica Greek and Roman.
-Contents:—¶ 1<sup>r</sup>, “¶ j”: ¶ 2<sup>r</sup>, title: ¶ 2<sup>v</sup>,
-arms of Buckhurst engraved on metal:
-¶ 3<sup>r</sup>-¶ 4<sup>r</sup>, epistle dedicatory to Thomas
-Sackville lord Buckhurst, afterwards earl of
-Dorset, 1 Jan. “1592,” i. e. 159<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>2</span></span>: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>
-3<sup>r</sup>, the Greek text: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, the Latin
-text.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 739. This is the editio princeps of the work of bp.
-Barlaamus. A copy presented by the author to John Selden, now in the Bodleian, is
-without the device on the titlepage.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Brasbridge</b>, Thomas. Quæstiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis,
-compendiariam totius Opusculi Epitomen continentes. 16<sup>o</sup>: (Impr. 5).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>From notes of a copy belonging to lord Robartes, seen by me in Dec. 1879. The
-dedication is dated 1586, of which date there is a copy of the book in Christ Church
-Library, Oxford: see 1615. B, an edition noticed in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 526.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Breton</b>, Nicholas. <span class='fss'>THE PILGRIMAGE TO PARA-</span>|<span class='fss'>DISE, IOYNED
-WITH THE</span> | Countesse of Pembrookes loue, compiled | <i>in verse by</i>
-<span class='sc'>Nicholas Breton</span> | <i>Gentleman</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1592: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 102
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>But, waking</i>: Primer
-(Great Primer?) Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4), epistle dedicatory to
-Mary Countess of Pembroke: (5) “To
-the Gentlemen studients and Scholers of
-Oxforde,” 12 Apr. 1592, with a note disclaiming
-an edition “of late printed in
-london by one Richarde Ioanes ... entituled
-<i>Bretons bower of delight</i>,” as unauthorized
-and to a large extent not his
-own poems: (6) “To my honest true
-friende Master Nicholas Breton,” signed
-“Iohn Case”: (7–8) poems by Will.
-Gager and Henry Price to Breton: 1–65,
-the pilgrimage: 66–102, the countess of
-Pembroke’s love, both poems in 6-line
-stanzas: (1) 7 “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Hazlitt’s <cite>Handbook</cite>, p. 56.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>SVMMA</span> | <span class='fss'>VETERVM INTER-</span>|<span class='fss'>PRETVM IN VNIVER-</span>|<span class='fss'>SAM
-DIALECTICAM ARISTO-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>TELIS; QVAM VERE FALSO-</i></span>|ue Ramus in Aristotelem
-inueha-|tur, ostendens. | <i>Auctore.</i> | <span class='fss'>IOANNE CASE OXONIENSI</span>, | olim Collegii
-D. Ioannis Præcurso-|ris socio. | <i>Omnibus Socraticæ Peripateticæq<span class='small'>ue</span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>philosophiæ studiosis in</i> | <i>primis vtilis ac necessaria.</i> | <i>Recognita &amp; emendata.</i> |
-Cum <span class='sc'>Indice</span> rerum &amp; verborum locupletiss. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1592: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 201 + [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>Resp. Definitio</i>,
-111 <i>Opponens Aliquid</i>: Brevier Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “Ioannis
-Readi carmen, in dialecticam Ioannis
-Casi”: (3–5) Epistola nuncupatoria to
-Rob. Dudley earl of Leicester: (6–8)
-“Ad benevolum lectorem,” dated “Idibus
-August.”: 1–201 the work: (1–6) Index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition of this book was issued at London by Thomas Vautrollier in 1584.
-The text of the treatise appears to be an inaccurate reprint of the 1584 edition, but
-most of the complimentary verses, with Nicholas Maurice’s preface dated Sept. 1582,
-are here omitted: and there are other slight alterations. See 1598. C. See Wood’s
-<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 686.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Churchyard</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>HANDEFVL OF</span> | <span class='fss'>GLADSOME VERSES</span>, |
-giuen to the Queenes Maiesty | <i>at Woodstocke this Prograce</i>. | 1592. | By |
-<span class='sc'>Thomas Chvrchyarde.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1592: sm. 4<sup>o</sup> (perhaps [fours]
-8<sup>o</sup>): pp. [20]. signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>C</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>
-beg. <i>That pleaseth</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title, within border:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to the Queen: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>
-4<sup>v</sup>, “A few volu ntary verses to the
-general readers”: <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the Handful
-of Verses: <span class='fss'>C</span> 2<sup>v</sup> “[A V]erse of variety to
-all those that honors the onely Phœnix of
-the world” i. e. the Queen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Extremely rare: a copy is in the British Museum. Reprinted in H. Huth’s <cite>Fugitive
-Tracts in Verse</cite>, 1st Ser., no. xxxi (privately printed, Lond. 1875.)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Elizabeth</b>, queen. [Speeches delivered | to Her Majesty this
-last Progress | at the Rt. Hon. the Lady Russels, at | Bissam; the Lord
-Chandos | at Sudeley; the Lord | Norris, at Ricott.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>[Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1592]: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Daphnes
-mischance</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—[<span class='fss'>A</span>
-1<sup>r</sup>, title?]: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the speeches,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. In the British Museum copy, the only one at present known (?), the
-titlepage (A 1) is lost, a transcript being supplied apparently from some other copy:
-also B 1 is lost. The text is reprinted in John Nichols’ <cite>Progresses ... of Queen
-Elizabeth</cite>, new edition, iii. (London. 1823), p. 130, but the source is not stated. A
-copy was sold in the Heber sale (Catal. pt. ii, p. 198, lot 3800) in 1834. Herbert’s
-Ames in the Additions iii. 1813 mentions the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Gager</b>, William. <span class='fss'>MELEAGER.</span> | Tragœdia noua. | <span class='fss'>BIS PVBLICE
-ACTA IN</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ÆDE CHRISTI</i></span> | Oxoniæ. [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1592: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[96], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Non
-leuior</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, letter dedicatory to
-Robert earl of Essex, 1 Jan. “1592”
-(159<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>?), signed “Guilielmus Gagerus”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, Complimentary poems to the
-author, one by Albericus Gentilis: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>
-5<sup>r</sup>, short poetical and prose account of
-the play by the author: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>v</sup> “Personae”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 6<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 7<sup>v</sup>, the play with prologues, argument
-and epilogues: <span class='fss'>E</span> 8<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 5<sup>v</sup>, “Panniculus
-Hippolyto Senecæ Tragœdiæ assutus
-1591,” a short play: <span class='fss'>F</span> 6<sup>r</sup> “Apollo
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">προλογίζει</span> ad Serenissimam Reginam Elizabetham
-1592,” a poem: <span class='fss'>F</span> 6<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, Prologue
-and Epilogue to “Bellum Grammaticale.”
-[<span class='fss'>F</span> 8 not seen].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the controversy caused by the publication of this play (which had been acted
-according to the letter dedicatory in 1581 or 1582 and 1584 or 1585), see Wood’s <cite>Ath.
-Oxon.</cite>, ii. 88.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>8. <b>Gager</b>, William. <span class='fss'>VLYSSES REDVX</span> | <span class='sc'>Tragoedia Nova.</span> | <span class='fss'>IN
-AEDE CHRISTI OXONIAE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PVBLICE ACADEMICIS RE-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>CITATA, OCTAVO IDVS</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'>FEBRVARII.</span> 1591. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1591: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[96], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Viæque
-fessum</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, “Prologus ad
-Academicos” in verse: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, epistle
-dedicatory to lord Buckhurst, Ch. Ch.,
-10 May 1592, signed “Guilielmus Gagerus”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, complimentary poems,
-&amp;c., one by Albericus Gentilis: <span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>v</sup>,
-“Personæ”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, the play: <span class='fss'>F</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>
-6<sup>v</sup>, five Latin pieces by Gager, including
-a “Prologus in Rivales, Comœdiam.”
-[<span class='fss'>F</span> 8 not seen].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 89.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Lycophron.</b> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΛΥΚΟΦΡΟΝΟΣ ΤΟΥ | ΧΑΛΚΙΔΕΩΣ | Αλεξάνδρα.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>LYCOPHRONIS CHAL-</span>|cidensis Alexandra. | <i>In vsum Academiæ Oxoniensis.</i> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 13<i>a</i>: 1592: (fours) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[2] + 44 + [2] : p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ὠνητὸς ἀιθαλω</span>:
-Pica Greek. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within a border: 1–44, the work: (1–2)
-(not seen.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The poem is better known as the <cite>Cassandra</cite>, which is the running title throughout.
-Some various readings are printed in the margin.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Sanford</b>, John. <span class='fss'>APOLLINIS ET MVSARVM</span> | <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἘΥΚΤΙΚΑ` ἘΙΔΎΛΛΙΑ</span>, |
-<span class='sc'><i>in serenissimæ reginæ</i> Elizabethae</span> | auspicatissimum Oxoniam aduentum,
-de-|<i>cimo die Calend. Octobris, An: M . D . LXXXXII.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1592 : sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Cernis vt</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, Latin poetical dedication
-to dr. Nicholas Bond, vice-chancellor
-and president of Magdalen college, signed
-“Ioannes Sanfordus”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the
-Idylls.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare, unknown even to Wood and Nichols (<cite>Progresses of Qu. Elizabeth</cite>). Two
-copies are in the British Museum, and lord Robartes has an imperfect one, seen in
-1881. Reprinted literatim in the Oxford Historical Society’s viii<sup>th</sup> volume, (Oxf.,
-1887, 8v<sup>o</sup>), where see notes by the editor, the rev. Charles Plummer. The poems are
-‘in honour of the Queen’s Visit, and especially in connection with a banquet given by
-the President and Fellows of Magdalen to the nobles and Privy Councillors of the
-Queen’s retinue,’ 22 Sept. 1592.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Thorne</b>, William. <span class='sc'>Dvcente Deo.</span> | <span class='fss'>WILLELMI THORNI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>TVLLIVS, SEV</span> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ρ῾ΉΤΩΡ</span> <span class='fss'>IN TRIA</span> | <span class='fss'><i>STROMATA DIVISVS</i>.</span> | [<i>motto.</i>] | <span class='fss'>E NOVO
-BEATÆ MARIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>WINTON IN OXON COLLEGIO.</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 16: 1592: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32] + 253 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Primi Stromatis</i>,
-111 ‘<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πρόληψις</span>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) Engraved
-arms and motto of lord Pembroke,
-with verses: (3–8) epistle dedicatory to
-William Herbert heir of lord Pembroke:
-(9–25) “Eidem Willelmi Thorni parænesis
-ad Rhetoricam <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἐγκωμιαστική</span>”:
-(26–30) complimentary verses to Thorn:
-(31–32) address to the reader, in Latin:
-(32) 3 lines of errata: 1–253, the work,
-in three Stromata and an appendix: (1)
-“Errata sic corrigenda.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 480. A treatise on Rhetoric. A poem on p. (30)
-shows that John Sanford of Magdalen was ‘Corrector Typograph.’</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1593.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Aristophanes.</b> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΑΡΙΣΤΟΦΑΝΟΥΣ | ἹΠΠΕΙΣ.</span> | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | <span class='fss'>ARISTOPHANIS</span>
-| <span class='sc'>Eqvites</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1593: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [56],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>G</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Κλέπτων τὸν
-οἶνον</span>: Pica Greek. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title within border: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ὑπόθεσις</span>
-and <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Δράματος πρόσωπα</span>: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the
-play.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first separate edition of this comedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Demosthenes.</b> “‘Demosthenis Orationes 15, cum interpretatione
-Nicolai Carri; 3 Olynthiacarum, 4 Philippicarum.’ Quarto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1405. Possibly a mistake for 1597.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Gentilis</b>, Albericus. “‘Albericus Gentilis Commentarii de
-Malificis &amp; Mathemat. &amp; aliis similibus.’ Quarto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1405. In the reprint (<cite>Hanover</cite>, 1604) the title is ‘Alberici
-Gentilis, I. C., Professoris Regii, Ad Tit. C. de Maleficis et Math. &amp; ceter.
-similibus commentarius ...;’ the preface is dated Oxford 26 June 1593, and addressed
-to dr. Toby Matthew.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>G[winne]</b>, M[atthew], and Henry Price. <span class='fss'>EPICEDIVM</span> | <span class='fss'>IN
-OBITVM ILLVS-</span>|<span class='fss'>TRISSIMI HEROIS HEN-</span>|<span class='fss'>RICI COMITIS DER-</span>|<span class='sc'>BEIENSIS. &amp;C.</span> | [<i>device</i>:
-then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1593: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Epitaphium</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, epistle dedicatory
-to Ferdinand Stanley (“Sanleio”) earl
-of Derby, signed M[atthew] G[winne],
-H[enry] P[rice]: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, seven Latin
-poems or epitaphs, the last signed in full
-“Henricus Priceus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 702, ii. 415.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Parry</b>, Henry. “Concio de Victoria Christianâ, in Apoc. 3.
-21. Oxon. 1593–94. Lond. 1606.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 193: see 1594. P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Sparke</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>CHED AT WHADDON</i></span> | in
-Buckinghamshyre the 22. of | <i>Nouember</i> 1593. <i>at the buriall of</i> | the Right
-Honorable, <span class='sc'>Arthur</span> | <i>Lorde</i> <span class='sc'>Grey</span> <i>of Wilton, Knight of the</i> | most Honorable
-order of the Garter, | <i>by</i> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Sparke</span> Pastor of | <i>Blechley</i>. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1593: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 87 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>talkes of</i>: Pica
-English. Contents:—(1) title, within
-border: (3–7) Epistle dedicatorie to the
-countess of Bedford, her daughter lady
-Grey and Thomas lord Grey of Wilton,
-Bletchley, 1 Dec. 1593: (8) “In obitum
-clarissimi Herois, Domini Arthuri Greij.
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">θρηνῳδία</span>,” a Latin hexameter poem by
-“Ioannes Sanfordus”: 1–87, the sermon,
-on Is. lvii. 1–2: 87, “Faultes escaped,”
-eight errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 190.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1594.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Beacon</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>SOLON HIS FOLLIE,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A POLITIQVE
-DIS-</span>|<span class='fss'>COVRSE, TOVCHING THE</span> | Reformation of common-weales conque-|red,
-declined or corrupted. | <span class='sc'>by Richard Beacon gent. stv-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>DENT OF GRAYES
-INNE, AND SOME-</i></span>|times her Maiesties Attorney of the province | <i>of
-Mounster in Irelande</i>. | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1594: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] + 114
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>nius. Sol:</i>, 111, <i>the
-thirde matter</i>: Pica English. Contents:—pp.
-(1–2) (not seen, but presumably
-blank): (3) title: (5–8) Epistle dedicatorie
-to the queen: (9) “The Authour
-to the Reader,” (10) “The booke vnto
-the Reader”: (1–114) the treatise: (1–2)
-(not seen, but presumably blank).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. [<b>Lewes</b>, Richard.] [<i>woodcuts</i>] <span class='fss'>APOLOGIA</span> | <span class='fss'>INNOCENTIAE ET</span> |
-<span class='fss'>INTEGRITATIS R. L.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SACRÆ THEOLOGIÆ BAC-</i></span>|calaurei adversus inquissimas
-| E. Osb. transfugæ sacrifi-|culi calumnias ad Acade-|micos
-Oxonienses. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1594: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>&amp; Apostolus</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>v</sup>, the Apologia: <span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>
-8<sup>r</sup>, “Concio habita Oxoniæ festo cineritio,
-<span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 1594 per R. L. B. S. Th. Textus
-ex 3. cap. Ep. D. Pau. ad Philipp. Ver.
-1.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. A diatribe against Edward Osberne’s <cite>Palinodia</cite>, printed in the <cite>Concertatio
-ecclesiae catholicae in Anglia</cite> by Johannes Aquepontanus (Bridgwater), <i>Augsburg</i>
-1594, p. 240, in which Osberne who had been twice converted to the Roman Catholic
-religion had made reflexions on Lewes a Protestant. The clue to the author’s name is
-sign. A 5<sup>v</sup> compared with p. 241 of the Concertatio. Some account of the author is
-in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 227.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Lewes</b>, R[ichard]. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>CHED AT PAVLES</i></span> | Crosse,
-by <span class='sc'>R. Lewes</span>, Bacche-|ler of Divinitie, concerning <i>Isaac</i> | his Testament,
-disposed by the | Lord to <i>Iacobs</i> comfort, though it | were intended to
-<i>Esau</i> by his fa-|ther; shewing, that the counsel of | God shal stand,
-albeit the whole | worlde withstande it. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2<i>a</i>: 1594: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Isaac,
-see</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title, within a border: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, Epistle
-dedicatory to sir Henry Unton, dated
-“This xviij of June”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 8<sup>v</sup>, the
-sermon, on Gen. xxvii. 1–10.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 227.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Parry</b>, Henry. <span class='fss'>VICTORIA CHRISTIANA.</span> | <span class='fss'>CONCIO AD</span> | <span class='fss'>CLERVM:
-HABITA</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONIAE ANNO</span> | Domini. 1591. | <i>H. Parry Auctore.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1594: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>culeo
-suo</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, epistle dedicatory to
-William Herbert, lord Cardiff: sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 7<sup>r</sup>(?: <span class='fss'>C</span> 7 not seen), the sermon, on
-Rev. iii. 21: <span class='fss'>C</span> 8 (not seen, probably
-blank.).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 193, where an edition of 1593 is mentioned, perhaps by
-error.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Powel</b>, Griffith. <span class='fss'>ANALYSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ANALYTICO-</span>|<span class='fss'>RVM POSTERIORVM</span> |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span><span class='fss'><i>SIVE LIBRORVM ARISTO</i>-</span>|telis de Demonstratione, in | qua singula capita
-per quæ-|stiones &amp; responsiones | perspicuè exponuntur: | <i>adhibitis</i> |
-<span class='fss'>QVIBVSDAM SCHOLIIS</span>, | ex optimis quibusq<span class='small'>ue</span> interpretibus | <i>desumptis, operâ
-&amp; studio G. P. Oxoniensis</i> | <i>confecta &amp; edita in vsum iuniorum</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1594: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ “344” [really 333] + [3]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>mia magnitudinem</i>, “111” <i>singularis</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–6) epistle dedicatory to Robert
-earl of Essex, signed “Griffinus Powel,”
-Jesus coll. Oxford, Feb. 27: (7–10) “Ad
-Lectorem Academicum”: (11–15) “Prolegomena”:
-1-“344,” the Analysis.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 283. In the preface the author promises a similar
-analysis of the Topica, Sophistici Elenchi (see 1598. P) and Physica, and says that his
-method is derived from that of Ursinus. The paging is very wild: the signatures are
-¶, A-X<sup>8</sup> = 352 pages. See 1564. Diagrams occur in the text and margins.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. Powel, Griffith. “Analysis libri Aristot. de Sophisticis
-Elenchis. Ox. 1594.” A mistake in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii.
-283 for 1598: see 1598. P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Sparke</b>, <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PREACHED AT</i></span> | Cheanies the 14. of |
-<i>September</i>, 1585, <i>at the bu-</i>|riall of the Right Honora-|<i>ble the Earle of</i>
-<span class='sc'>Bedforde</span>, | <i>by</i> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Sparke Do-</span>|<i>ctor of Divinitie.</i> | <i>Newly perused
-and corrected by</i> | <i>the Authour.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1594: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [10]
-+ 110: p. 11 beg. <i>as good</i>: Pica English.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within border:
-(3–10) Epistle dedicatorie to Arthur lord
-Grey of Wilton, dated Bletchley. 25 Dec.
-1585: 1–110, the sermon, dated at end
-22 Sept. 1594.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 193. A new ed. of 1585. S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Trigge</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>GODLY AND FRVIT-</span>|<span class='fss'>FVLL SERMON PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>CHED
-AT GRANTHAM</i>.</span> | Anno. Dom. 1592. | by | <span class='sc'>Francis Trigge</span>. |
-Wherein as in a glasse, every de-|gree may plainely see their spots and
-staines: | <i>and may bee thereby made in deede beautifull</i> | (if they doe
-not hate to be reformed) | <i>against the appearance of</i> | <i>Jesus Christ</i>. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1594: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [96],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>state of Christes</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, address “To the Christian
-Reader”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 8<sup>r</sup>, the sermon, on
-Is. xxiv. 1–3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 759: and 1595. T.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1595.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Moore</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>DIARIVM HISTORICOPOETICVM,</span> | <span class='fss'>IN QVO</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PRAETER CONSTELLATIO-</span>|<span class='fss'>NVM VTRIVSQVE HEMISPHAE-</span>|<span class='fss'>RII, ET ZODIACI, ORTVS,
-ET OCCA-</span>|sus, numerum stellarum causarum-|q́<span class='small'>ue</span>, ad poesin spectantium,
-vari-|<i>etatem, declarantur</i> | <span class='fss'>CVIVSQUE MENSIS DIES FERE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SINGVLI, REGVM,
-IMPERATORVM</i></span>, | Principum, Pontificum, virorumq̄<span class='small'>ue</span> doctorum, na-|<i>talibus</i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span><i>nuptiis, inaugurationibus, morte de</i>⸗|<i>niq̄<span class='small'>ue</span>, aut re alia quacunq<span class='small'>ue</span> insig-</i>|<i>niore,
-celebriores</i>, | sic, | <span class='fss'>VT NIHIL PAENE DESIDERARI POSSIT</span>, | ad perfectam rerum
-gestarum Chronolo-|giam, cum, ex auctoribus probatissimis, accu-|<i>rata
-quoq<span class='small'>ue</span> annorum ratio margini</i> | <i>ascribatur</i>. | [<i>motto</i>] | Suasu, &amp; permissu
-superiorum. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1595: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 102
-+ [6]: p. 11 beg. <i>Sic respiraram</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-Epistola Dedicatoria to sir (?) John Wolley
-and his wife Elizabeth, signed “Robertus
-Moore,” New College, Oxford, 6 July
-1595: (7–8) address “Ad Lectorem Benevolum”:
-(8) “Auctoris ad libellum
-parænesis,” a short poem: 1–102, the
-work: (1–6) Index: (6) five errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 654. The book is a long hexameter poem, divided
-into twelve books, one for each month, in which historical events are successively
-alluded to.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Trigge</b>, Francis. “Trigge (F.) Godly and Fruitfull Sermon,
-at Grantham, 1592, <i>black letter</i>, <i>Oxford</i>, 1595.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the Pyne Auction sale catalogue at Sotheby’s, art. 1058, sold on 8 July 1886.
-Quaritch ascertained that the date was correct. Probably a reissue of 1594. T.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Ursinus</b>, Zacharias. <span class='fss'>THE SVMME</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'>RELIGION</span>: |
-Delivered by <span class='sc'>Zacharias Vrsinvs</span> in | his Lectures vpon the Catechisme,
-authori-|<i>sed by the noble Prince</i> <span class='sc'>Fredericke</span> | throughout his dominions. |
-Wherein are debated and resolved the Questions | <i>of whatsoever pointes of
-moment, which have beene</i> | or are controversed in Divinity. | <i>Translated
-into English by</i> <span class='sc'>Henry Parry</span>, <i>out of the last and</i> | best Latine Editions,
-together with some supply of | <i>wantes out of his Discourses of Divinity, and
-with correction</i> | of sundry faults &amp; imperfections. which are | <i>as yet
-remaining in the best corrected Latine</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 6: 1595: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 966 + [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>nister comfort</i>,
-111 <i>might fall</i>, 801 <i>he that hath</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to the earl of
-Pembroke: (9–15) “To the Christian
-readers”: 1–966, the treatise: (1–9) “A
-table ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1587. U.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Wermueller</b>, Otto. <span class='fss'>PERL MEWN ADFYD</span> | neu, |
-<span class='blackletter'>Perl ysprydawl, gwyrthfawrocaf,</span>
-| <i>yn dyscu i bôb dyn garu, a chofleidio y groes</i>, |
-<i>meis peth hyfryd angenrheidiawl ir enaid, pa</i>|<i>gonffordd sy yw gael o honi,
-ple, ac ym ha fodd</i>, | <i>y dylid ceisiaw diddanwch, a chymorth ym hob</i> |
-<i>adfyd: a thrachefn, pa wedd y dyle bawb i ym-</i>|<i>ddwyn i hunain mewn
-blinder, yn ol gair duw</i>, | <i>a escrifennwyd yn gyntaf mewn Dwitch</i> | <i>gann
-bregethwr dyscedig</i> Otho Wer-|mulerus, <i>ac a droed ir Saesonaeg</i> | <i>gann
-D. Miles Coverdal</i>, | <i>ac yrawrhon yn hwyr ir</i> | <i>Gambraeg gann.</i> | H L.
-| [Welsh <i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 17: 1595: 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] + 246
-+ [6]: pp. 11 beg. <i>mal i llefarod’</i>, 111
-<i>duw, er</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–11) dedication to dr. Richard
-Vychan (Vaughan), archdn. of Middlesex,
-signed “Huw Lewys”: (12–13) poem
-“At yr vnrhyw wr” by Lewys: (15–23)
-“Ir darlennydd Christnogaidd rhad a
-thangneddyf Ynghrist”: 1–246 the work:
-(1–4) poem “Cowydd ir Iesu” by Lewys:
-(5) “Gweddi ferr yw doedyd mewn
-adfyd.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>A translation into Welsh by Hugh Lewis of Wermueller’s <cite>Spiritual and most precious
-Pearl</cite>, a religious treatise, translated from the German into English by Miles
-Coverdale (<i>Lond.</i> 1550). See M. Williams’s <cite>Cofrestr o’r holl Lyfrau printjedig ...
-yn y Faith Gymraeg ...</cite> (Lond. 1717), <cite>Cambrian Bibliography</cite> by the rev. William
-Rowlands, ed. by the rev. D. S. Evans (<cite>Llandidloes</cite>, 1869, 8v<sup>o</sup>), p. 71. This is the
-first Welsh book printed at Oxford and the first occurrence of Rhydychen (Oxenford)
-in Oxford imprints. The translator begs the reader to excuse the absence of <i>y</i> in
-some places before <i>n</i> and <i>r</i>, the printer’s stock being too small. For the same reason
-<i>dd</i> is usually <i>d’</i> and <i>ll</i> <i>l’</i>. If a word is here and there omitted it should be remembered
-that the printing is done by Englishmen!</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1596.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>REFLEXVS</span> | <span class='fss'>SPECVLI MORALIS</span> | <span class='fss'>QVI COMMENTARII
-VICE</span> | esse poterit in Magna Moralia Aristo-|telis: auctore <span class='sc'>Johanne
-Caso</span>, | in Medicina Doctore, Collegij | Divi Iohannis Præcursoris | Oxon.
-olim socio. | [<i>five mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5<i>a</i>: 1596: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 271 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>one ab</i>, 111 <i>Quæst.</i>
-3: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–5) Epistola dedicatoria to Richardus
-Phetiplacius, Oxf. 20 Sept. 1596: (7–11)
-address “Ad Lectorem, Benevolum” 26
-Nov. 1596: (13–15) 5 Latin poems on
-the book: 1–198, the work: 199–200,
-“Peroratio operis, ad lectorem” 20 Sept.
-1596: 201–206, “Quæstionum ... ordo
-...”: 207–208, “Index Capitum”: 209–268,
-“A B Cedarium moralis philosophiæ
-Johanni Phetipacio Richardi Phetiplacii
-filiolo: omnibusque Tyronibus virtutum
-studiosis, scriptum &amp; commendatum,” by
-question and answer: 269–271, “Peroratio
-ad adolescentem studiosum lectorem,” 30
-Nov. (1596).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 687. The first address shows that for a time the printer
-refused to produce the work, which is related to the <cite>Speculum</cite> of 1585, for fear that it
-might be reprinted at once elsewhere, and he suffer loss as in the case of the <cite>Sphæra
-Civitatis</cite> of 1588. See 1586. C. A presentation copy has red lines round the page,
-on three sides double. This book is strictly the second part of the next art., Case’s
-<cite>Speculum</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>SPECVLVM</span> | <span class='fss'>QVÆSTIONVM</span> | <span class='fss'>MORALIVM, IN VNI-</span>|<span class='fss'>VERSAM
-ARISTOTELIS</span> | Philosophi summi Ethicen, cui ad-|ditur brevis commentarius
-in magna | Moralia Aristotelis, qui ab Autho-|re Reflexus speculi
-Moralis | nominatur, | <span class='fss'>IOHANNE CASO OXONIENSI</span> | Doctore in Medicina
-olim Collegii præ-|cursoris socio Authore, | <span class='fss'><i>NVNC DENVO RECOGNITVM</i></span>, |
-<i>&amp; à mendis plerisque repurgatum</i>. | <span class='fss'>CVM INDICE VERBORVM ET RERVM</span> |
-præcipuè memorabilium locuplete. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 20: 1596: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32] + folded sheet + 533 + [27]: p. 11
-beg. <i>empli causa</i>, 111 <i>tur: quod</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–9)
-epistola nuncupatoria to the earl of Leicester,
-dated 7 Mar. “1585”: (11–15),
-address “ad studiosos iuvenes utriusque
-academiæ,” with a short poem: (17–31)
-complimentary Latin verses: a “Tabula
-virtutum et vitiorum omnium,” folio sheet
-printed on one side only: 1–531, the
-work: 532–533, “Peroratio ad lect
-orem”: (1–26) Index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reprint of 1585. C. The above title covers the preceding article, Case’s <cite>Reflexus
-Speculi</cite>, but for convenience they are separately treated.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Fitz-Geffrey</b>, Charles. <span class='sc'>Sir</span> | <span class='fss'>FRANCIS DRAKE</span> | <i>His</i> | Honorable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>lifes com-|mendation, and his | Tragicall Deathes lamentation. | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1596: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[106], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>, one leaf, <span class='fss'>B</span>-<span class='fss'>G</span><sup>8</sup>: sign.
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>See how Apollo</i>: Long Primer
-English. Contents: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title, within
-border: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> poetical dedication to
-lady Elizabeth widow of sir F. Drake,
-signed by the author of the book “Charles
-Fitz-geffrey”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup> “To the Authour,”
-poem, beg. <i>Once dead</i>, signed “Richard
-Rous”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup> “To C. F.,” poem, beg.
-<i>When to</i>, signed “Francis Rous”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>
-“To the Authour,” poem, beg. <i>Englands
-Vlysses</i>, signed “D. W.”: 5th leaf<sup>r</sup> “In
-Dracum redivivum; Carmen,” beg. <i>Quis
-vostrûm</i>, signed “Thomas Michelborne”:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span> 8<sup>v</sup>, the poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 607. The book was reprinted in the same
-year with small differences in the text chiefly of spelling, but with considerable
-changes in the prefatory matter: see below. It was also reprinted in 1819 at the Lee
-Priory Press, and edited by dr. Grosart in 1881<span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span>. The poem is in 7-line stanzas,
-rhyming ABABBCC. Woodcut ornaments occur at the top and bottom of almost
-every page, and the book has the appearance of an <i>édition de luxe</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Fitz-Geffrey</b>, Charles. <span class='sc'>Sir</span> | <span class='fss'>FRANCIS DRAKE</span> | <i>his</i> | Honorable
-lifes com-|mendation, and his | Tragicall Deathes | lamentation. |
-<span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>motto.</i>] | Newly Printed with additions. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1596: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[112], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>G</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>See how
-Apollo</i>: Long Primer English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title, within border:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> poetical dedication to lady Elizabeth
-Drake, signed “Charles Fitz-geffrey”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup> “To C. F.,” poem, beg. <i>Once dead</i>,
-signed “Richard Rous”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup> “To
-C. F.,” poem, beg. <i>When to</i>, signed
-“Francis Rous”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup> “To C. F.”,
-poem, beg. <i>Many greate</i>, signed “Thomas
-Mychelborne”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> “To the Author,”
-poem, beg. <i>Englands Vlysses</i>, signed
-“Diag. Vvh.,” i. e. Degory Whear: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>
-“Ad Dracum,” English poem, beg.
-<i>Weepe not</i>, signed “Ty. Co.”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 6<sup>v</sup>,
-address “To the Reader” signed “C. F.”
-Broadgates (Oxford), 17 Nov. 1596: <span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>
-8<sup>v</sup>, quotations ending “Hæc ferè sunt
-quæ de Draco nostro apud exoticos poetas
-legimus”: <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span> 8<sup>v</sup>, the poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See preceding article.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. This issue is almost identical with the first, but the whole text appears
-to be newly set up, with minute differences.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Morlet</b>, Pierre. <span class='fss'>IANITRIX</span> | siue | <span class='fss'><i>INSTITVTIO AD PER-</i></span>|fectam
-linguæ Gallicæ | cognitionem ac-|<i>quirendam</i>. | Authore <span class='sc'>Petro Morleto</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Gallo</span>. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1596: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 92 + [4] : p. 11 beg. <i>Antequam
-verò</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1)
-title, within a border: (3–7) Epistola
-dedicatoria to sir Robert Beal, dated
-Broadgates Hall, “15 Mar. 1596”: (9–13)
-complimentary poems in Latin and
-Greek: (14) “Errata”: 1–92 the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare: a French grammar, in Latin, by Pierre Morlet (?). The dedication
-states that the author was tutor to sir Robert Beal, having been introduced by David
-Chytræus.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Perrot</b>, sir James. “A Discovery of Discontented Minds
-wherein their several sorts &amp; purposes are described especially such as are
-gone beyond y<sup>e</sup> Seas. Dedicated to y<sup>e</sup> Earl of Essex by James Perrot &amp;
-printed at Oxford in 4<sup>to</sup> by Joseph Barnes Printer to the University—1596.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>Very rare. The above is from Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5904 (Bagford’s Collections),
-foll. 20 &amp; 171. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 606, Herbert’s Ames, p. 1406, both notices
-derived from Oldys’s <cite>Catalogue of pamphlets in the Harleian Library</cite> (Harleian
-Miscellany, vol. x. (1813), p. 358, where ‘Quarto, in thirty-four pages’ is added).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Pinner</b>, Charles. [Sermon by Charles Pinner at Marlborough,
-on 1 Tim. iv. 16.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>(Impr. ?: 1596?): (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-53 +[3]: p. 11 beg. <i>through knowledge</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—p. 1 title: 3–4,
-Epistle dedicatory to “master Iohn
-Bailife” of Marlborough, dated from
-Wotton Basset, 20 Oct. 1596: 5–53, the
-sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare: see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 667. In the Bodleian copy, the only one
-known, the title is lost, so that the date is uncertain. But the book was certainly
-printed at Oxford, the woodcut on p. 5 being decisive.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Rainolds</b>, John. <span class='fss'>JOHANNIS RAINOLDI,</span> | <span class='fss'>DE ROMANÆ ECCLE-</span>|<span class='fss'>SIÆ
-IDOLOLATRIA, IN</span> | <span class='fss'>CVLTV SANCTORVM, RE-</span>|liquiarum, imaginum, aquæ, salis,
-olei, | alarumq<span class='small'>ue</span> rerum consecratarum, &amp; | sacramenti Eucharistiæ, |
-<span class='fss'>OPERIS INCHOATI</span> | <span class='sc'>Libri dvo</span>. | <span class='fss'><i>IN QVIBUS CUM ALIA MVLTA</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>VARIORVM
-PAPISMI PATRONO-</i></span>|<i>rum errata patefiunt: tûm inprimis Bellarmini</i>, | <i>Gregoriiq<span class='small'>ue</span>
-de Valentia, calumniæ in Calvi-</i>|<i>num ac ceteros Protestantes, argutiæq<span class='small'>ue</span></i> |
-pro Papistico idolorum cultu | discutiuntur &amp; ven-|tilantur. |
-[<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 18: 1596: eights, sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 646: p. 11 beg. <i>cisse tantùm</i>, 111
-<i>am secundum</i>, 501 <i>bus Gentium</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “¶ 1”
-alone: (3) title: (5–12) dedicatory epistle
-to the earl of Essex, in Latin, Queen’s
-coll. Oxford, 7 July 1596: (13–15) “Index
-tractatuum, librorum, et capitum”: 1–609,
-the work in two books, preceded by
-an “Epistola ad Anglicorum Seminarioram
-alumnos Romæ &amp; Rhemis” and
-preface, and followed by an “Admonitio
-ad lectorem”: 609–627, “Index locorum
-Sacræ Scripturæ”: 628–646, “Index rerum
-præcipuarum.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 15. Hebrew Pica type occurs on p. 497 and elsewhere,
-both pointed and without points: and unpointed Long Primer on pp. 169, 451, 603,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Unton</b>, sir Henry. <span class='fss'>FVNEBRIA</span> | <span class='fss'>NOBILISSIMI AC</span> | <span class='fss'>PRÆSTANTISSIMI</span>
-| <span class='fss'>EQVITIS</span>, | <span class='sc'>D. Henrici Vntoni</span>, | <span class='fss'><i>AD GALLOS BIS LEGATI</i></span> | Regij,
-ibiq<span class='small'>ue</span> nuper fato functi, | <span class='fss'>CHARISSIMÆ MEMORIÆ</span>, | <i>ac desiderio, à Musis
-Oxoniensi</i>⸗|<i>bus Apparata</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1596: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [68],
-signn. ¶, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>G</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>H</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Virtutis
-môvere</i>: Pica Italic. Contents:—sign.
-¶ 1<sup>r</sup> title: ¶ 1<sup>v</sup> “Liber ad Lectorem,”
-Latin poem: ¶ 2<sup>r</sup>-¶ 2<sup>v</sup>, address
-“Benevolo lectori,” signed “Robertus
-Wright,” Trinity college, Oxford, 13
-June 1596: ¶ 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, poems in memory
-of Unton, the only two not Latin being
-on sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> in Greek and Hebrew: see
-below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 648. The first (unpointed) Hebrew type used at Oxford
-appears in the poem alluded to above, a Pica fount. Some (probably early) copies
-omit the preface, the ‘Liber ad Lectorem’ occurring on sign. ¶ 2<sup>r</sup>, the page preceding
-and following being blank.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1597.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Agatharchides.</b> <span class='fss'>AGATHAR-</span>|<span class='fss'>CHIDIS ET MEM-</span>|<span class='fss'>NONIS HISTORI-</span>|corum,
-quæ supersunt, | <i>omnia, è Græco iam recèns in</i> | <i>Latinum traducta</i>: |
-per | <span class='sc'>Rich. Brettvm</span>, Oxonien-|sem, è Collegio Lincoln. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1597: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 128 + “140” (really 142) + [2]: p. 11
-beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἐπιβουλευθῆναι</span>, 111 <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ρίευσεν. ἐκεῖθεν</span>,
-also 11 <i>bus coctum</i>, 111 <i>actarum</i>: Pica
-Greek and Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-“*j” only: (3) title: (5–13) Epistola
-dedicatoria to sir Thomas Egerton, dated
-20 Aug. 1597: 1–62, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἐκ τῶν τοῦ Ἀγαθαρχίδου
-περὶ τῆς ἐρυθρᾶς θαλάσσης </span>:
-63–128, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἐκ τῶν τοῦ Μέμνονος</span>:
-1–71, “Excerpta quaedam ex Agatharchide
-de rubro mari”: 72–140, “Ex
-Memnone excerpta quædam” de statu
-Heraclææ Ponticæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 611. The excerpts of both authors are from Photius’s
-<cite>Bibliotheca</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THESAVRVS OECONO-</span>|<span class='fss'>MIÆ, SEV COMMENTA-</span>|<span class='fss'>RIVS IN
-OECONOMICA A-</span>|ristotelis; in quo veræ divitiæ fami-|liarum, earumq<span class='small'>ue</span>
-leges, partes, &amp; | <i>officia describuntur</i>: | <span class='sc'>Johanne Caso</span> Authore. | [<i>device</i>,
-then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 20: 1597: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + folded sheet + 277 + [13]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>prætoriam</i>, 111 <i>admittantur</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) epistola
-dedicatoria to lord Buckhurst: (9–11)
-epistola ad lectorem: (12) two complimentary
-poems: then a small folio sheet
-containing an analysis of the work:
-1–245, the work, in two books: 246–277,
-“Appendix Thesauri Oeconomici”: (1)
-“Peroratio operis ad Lectorem”: (2–12),
-“Index rerum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 687: also 1578, 1587. C, 1598. C. In the Epistola
-Case gives some account of his works, printed and manuscript. A reference in the
-Bowman Catalogue (Oxf. 1687) p. (14) to Case’s <cite>Cursus Philosophicus</cite> in 3 volumes
-(Oxf. 1597) can only refer to a set of Case’s books of various years.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Demosthenes.</b> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΔΗΜΟΣΘΕΝΟΥΣ | ΛΟΓΟΙ ΙΕ.</span> | [<i>woodcuts</i>] |
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ολυνθιακοὶ. γ. | κατὰ Φίλιππον. δ. | Περὶ εἰρήνης. | Περὶ τῶν ἐν Χεῤῥονήσῳ. |
-Επιστολὴ Φιλίππου. | Πρὸς τὴν Φίλιππου ἐπιστολὴν. | Περί συνταξέων. | Περὶ
-συμμοριῶν. | Περὶ Ροδίων ἐλευθερίας. | Υπὲρ Μεγαλοπολιτῶν.</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 20: 1597: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [96]: p.
-11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">νὴς καὶ πολλῶν</span>: Pica Greek.
-Contents:—p. 1, title, within border:
-3–96, the orations &amp;c. some with <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ὑποθέσεις</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1593. D.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>King</b>, John. <span class='fss'>LECTVRES</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON IONAS,</span> | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED AT</span> | <span class='fss'>YORKE</span> |
-In the yeare of our Lorde 1594. | By <span class='sc'>John Kinge</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19<i>a</i>: 1597: (eights) 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12]
-+ 706, not including two unpaged title-leaves,
-see below, + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Who
-hath instructed</i>, 111 <i>their former labours</i>,
-671 <i>&amp; these (in</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5–11) Epistle dedicatorie
-to the lord keeper sir Thomas
-Egerton: 1–660, the 48 lectures: after
-660 “<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED</span> | <span class='fss'>AT THE
-FVNERALLES OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE MOST REVEREND</span> |
-<span class='sc'>father, John</span>, late | Arch-bishoppe of
-Yorke, <i>No-</i>|<i>vemb. the</i> 17. <i>in the yeare
-of</i> | <i>our Lorde</i>, 1594.” [<i>device</i>: then
-impr. 7<i>a</i>, 1597: then a blank page]:
-661–683, the sermon, on Ps. cxlvi. 3–4:
-after 683 a blank page (684), then “<span class='fss'>A</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED</span> | <span class='fss'>IN YORKE THE
-SEVEN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TEENTH DAY OF NO-</span>|<span class='fss'>VEMBER
-IN THE YEARE OF</span> | our Lorde 1595.
-being the | <i>Queenes day</i>.” | [<i>device</i>, then
-impr. 7<i>a</i>, 1597: then a blank page]:
-685–706, the sermon, on 2 Kings xxiii.
-25: 706, “Faultes escaped in Printing
-...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>See 1599. K, 1600. K: other edd. were printed at London. For King, see Wood’s
-<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 294.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Pinner</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON, VPON</span> | the wordes of Paul the
-Apostle | vnto Timothie, Epist. 1. Chap. 4. | <i>vers.</i> 8. | <span class='fss'><i>PREACHED AT
-LITLE-</i></span>|cot, in the Chappel of the Right Ho-|nourable <span class='sc'>Sir Iohn Pompham</span>, |
-Knight, Lord chiefe Iustice, of En-|gland, before his honourable |
-Lordeshippe, and to the as-|semblie there, the 17. of | <i>Iulie</i>, 1597. | By
-<span class='sc'>Charles Pinner</span>, Minister of | <i>the Church of Wotton Basset, in</i> | <i>North-Wiltshire</i>.
-| [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19<i>a</i>: 1597: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-40: p. 11 beg. <i>haue or doe</i>: Pica English.
-Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–5, epistle
-dedicatorie to John Sims, dated Wotton
-Basset, 23 July 1597: 7–40, the sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 667.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Pinner</b>, Charles. “Sermon ... <i>Honour all Men, love brotherly
-Fellowship, on</i> 1 <i>Pet. 2.</i> 17. Oxon 1597, in oct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 667.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Williams</b>, rev. John. “<i>De Christi Justitia &amp; in Regno
-spirituali Ecclesiæ Pastorum Officio, Concio ad Clerum, Oxon. in cap.</i> 10.
-<i>Rev. vers.</i> 1. Oxon. 1597. qu[arto].”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 132, copied by Herbert.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Presse</b>, Symon. “‘A sermon preached at Eggington, in the
-County of Darby, concerning the right vse of things indifferent, the 8. Day
-of August, 1596. By Symon Presse Minister there. Feare God, honour
-the Kinge. 1 Pet. 2; 17. Printed at Oxford—, and are to bee solde in
-Paules Church-yard at the signe of the Bible. 1597.’ Dedicated ‘To his
-loving Parishioners Mr. F. Cooke,’ &amp;c. The text, 1 Cor. 8; 10–13.
-Pages 28, including the title. W. H. Sixteens.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1406: see Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 220. Impr. 19<i>a</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Symeon</b>, Metaphrastes. <span class='fss'>VITÆ SANC-</span>|<span class='fss'>TORVM EVAN-</span>|<span class='fss'>GELIST.</span>
-<span class='sc'>Iohan-</span>|<span class='sc'>nis, &amp; Lvcæ</span>, à <span class='sc'>Sy-</span>|<span class='sc'>meone Metaphraste</span> <i>olim con-</i>|<i>cinnatæ, iam
-recens</i> | <i>traductæ à</i> | <span class='sc'>Rich. Bretto</span>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 20: 1597: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 95 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>Montem Tabor</i>:
-Pica Greek and Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) “Ai” only: (3) title, within border:
-(5–14) Epistola dedicatoria to judge
-Thomas Owen (Ovvinus), dated Lincoln
-college, Oxford, 23 Dec 1596: 1–95, “<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Οἱ
-βίοι τῶν ἁγίων Εὐαγγελιστῶν Ἰωάννου καὶ
-Λουκᾶ ὑπὸ Συμεὼν τοῦ Μεταφράστου πάλαι
-ἀναταχθέντες</span>” in Greek and Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 611. The editor has practically made the Latin translation
-a commentary by expanding where his author was obscure, and the like.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1598.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Abbot</b>, George, archbp. of Canterbury. <span class='fss'>QVÆSTIO-</span>|<span class='fss'>NES SEX,
-TOTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>DEM PRÆLECTIO-</span>|<span class='fss'>NIBVS, IN SCHOLA</span> | <span class='fss'>THEOLOGICA, OXONIÆ,</span> | <span class='fss'>PRO
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>FORMA, HABITIS,</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCVSSÆ, ET</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCEPTATÆ.</span> | <span class='fss'>ANNO. 1597.</span> | <span class='fss'>IN QVIBVS, E
-SACRA SCRIP-</span>|<span class='fss'>TVRA, ET PATRIBVS AN-</span>|tiquissimis, quid statuendum | sit,
-definitur: | <span class='sc'>per Georgivm Abbatem</span> | tunc Collegij Baliolensis | socium. |
-[<i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5<i>b</i>: 1598: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-214 (“224” the next p. to 24 being
-“35”) + [18]: p. 11 beg. <i>verè est</i>, 111
-<i>secretâque(**not sure of accent)</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) “A” between woodcuts: (3) title:
-(5–10) Epistola dedicatoria to lord Buckhurst,
-dated University college, Oxford,
-16 May 1598: (11) List of contents:
-1–21, Præfatio ad lectorem: 23-“224,”
-the six lectures: (1–15) “Index rerum
-præcipuarum.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 562. Reprinted at Frankfurt in 1616, with the title
-‘Georgii Abbatti ... Explicatio sex illustrium quæstionum ...’</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>SVMMA</span> | <span class='fss'>VETERVM INTER-</span>|<span class='fss'>PRETVM IN VNIVERSAM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>DIALECTICAM ARISTOTELIS;</span> | <span class='fss'><i>QVAM VERE FALSOVE RAMVS</i></span> | in Aristotelem
-inuehatur, | ostendens. | <i>Auctore.</i> | <span class='fss'>IOANNE CASE OXONIENSI</span>, | olim Collegij
-D. Ioannis Præcur-|soris socio. | <i>Omnibus Socraticæ Peripateticæq<span class='small'>ue</span> philosophiæ</i>
-| <i>studiosis in primis vtilis ac necessaria.</i> | <i>Recognita &amp; emendata.</i> |
-Cum <span class='sc'>Indice</span> rerum &amp; verborum locupletiss. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1598: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 201 + [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>Respondens. Definitio</i>:
-111 <i>Oppon. Aliquid</i>: Brevier
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
-as 1592. C: 1–201, the work: (1–6)
-Index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 686. A reprint of 1592. C, almost <i>literatim</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. Case, John. “1587. ‘Thesaurus oeconomiae, seu commentarius
-oeconomica Aristotelis. Authore Johanne Caso.’ Again 1598.
-Quarto.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Herbert’s Ames p. 1402: see 1587. C. Error for 1597?</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Ingmethorp</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON VPON</span> | <span class='fss'>PART OF THE
-SE-</span>|cond chapter of the first e-|pistle of S. Iohn: | <i>Preached by</i> <span class='sc'>Thomas
-Ingmethorp</span>. | The summe whereof is briefly compri-|sed in this Hexameter:
-| <i>Omne tulit punctum qui</i> <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">πράξιν</span> <i>miscuit arti</i>: | He beares the bell
-awaie, | that liues, as he doth saie. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1598: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 45 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>of Christ. This</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–5) dedication to “master Thomas
-Flit” of the city of Worcester, the author’s
-godfather, dated Stainton-in-the-Street,
-1 Mar. “1597”: (7–8) “To the Reader”:
-1–45, the sermon, on 1 John ii. 3–6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 592.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Powell</b>, Griffith. <span class='fss'><i>ANALYSIS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>LIB. ARISTOTELIS</span> | <span class='fss'>DE SOPHISTICIS
-ELEN-</span>|chis, in qua singula capita per | quæstiones &amp; responsiones |
-perspicuè &amp; dilucidè ex-|ponuntur, | <i>Adhibitis</i> | Quibusdam scholiis ex
-optimis quibusq<span class='small'>ue</span> in-|terpretibus desumptis, in quibus natura | &amp; modi
-Fallaciarum plenè | explicantur, | <i>Necnon</i> | Exemplis, partim Sophistarum
-Paralogismis, partim Hæreticorum Elenchis | illustrantur, | <i>operâ &amp; studio</i>
-G. P. <i>Oxoniensis confecta &amp; edita</i> | <i>in vsum iuniorum</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>Impr. 5<i>a</i>: 1598: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 396 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>hostias quas</i>,
-111 <i>tariam &amp;</i>: Long Primer Roman and
-Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) dedication to the earl of Essex,
-signed “Griffinus Powel,” Jesus coll.,
-Oxford, 3 Apr. (1598): (7–8) “Ad lectorem
-Acamedicum”: (8) “Liber ad
-Lectorem,” a Latin poem: (9–16) Prolegomena:
-1–396, the Analysis of the
-two books.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 283: and 1594. P. (<i>bis</i>), 1664. P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. Richard de Bury. Philobiblon: see 1599. R.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1599.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'>ANCILLA</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ, SEV</span> | <span class='fss'>EPITOME IN OCTO
-LI=</span>|<span class='fss'>BROS PHYSICORUM</span> | <span class='fss'>ARISTOTELIS</span>, | <i>Authore</i>, | Jo. Caso Oxon. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1599: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 73
-+ [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>De genere</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to the young John Egerton
-“ab ȩdibus meis Oxon.”, 26 Oct. 1599:
-1–4, “Ad lectorem benignum”: 5–73,
-the work: (2–7) Index: (7) “Corrigenda.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 687. Connected with the <cite>Lapis philosophicus</cite>, see below:
-but issued (apparently) slightly later. In the preface Case alludes to his approaching
-end, and his unpublished work on Philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Case</b>, John. <span class='fss'><i>LAPIS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHICVS SEV</span> | commentarius in
-8<sup>o</sup> lib: | <i>phys: Aristot: in quo</i> | <i>arcana</i> | <i>Physiologiæ exa</i>⸗|minantur |
-<span class='sc'>avctore Io: Caso</span> | <i>in Medicina Doctore</i> | Oxoniensi |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11<i>a</i>: (1599): (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [32] + 871 [“869,” for 109–112 are
-omitted and 274–279 doubled, in the
-pagination] + [17]: p. 11 beg. <i>magnum
-pondus</i>, 113 <i>si materia</i>, 501 <i>tatur si ergo</i>:
-Pica Italic and Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, engraved, see below: (3–8)
-dedication to sir Thomas Egerton: (9–17)
-“Epistola ad lectorem,” 31 Oct.
-1599: (18) “In primæ paginæ decem
-Imagines Decastichon”: (19–25) complimentary
-verses, in Latin and Greek:
-(26–32) “Quæstiones &amp; dubia quæ in
-octo libris Physicorum continentur”:
-1–30, “Prolegomena”: 31-“869,” the
-work: (1) “Lectori benevolo,” 31 Oct.
-1599: (2–15) Index: (16) “Lectori ingenuo
-et philosopho” (errata).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 687. The titlepage is an elaborate engraving on metal,
-the title within 10 squares arranged</p>
-
-<div class='block c020'>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>4.</td>
- <td class='c014'>5.</td>
- <td class='c017'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>3</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>2</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c017'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>1.</td>
- <td class='c014'>10.</td>
- <td class='c017'>9,</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>representing Chaos, Nature, Fortune, the
-Fates, Time, Phaethon and Arctos, Sky, Space, Infinity and Terminus, Effigy of Case.
-The last compartment represents the author in effigy on a tomb with the words “Casus
-in occasum vergit vivitque sepultus.” The whole tone of the prefaces is pathetic, Case
-feeling that he was close to his end, which actually came on 23 Jan. 1599/1600. At p. (7)
-is a reference to the new Bodleian: at (p. 11) it is stated that some German friends
-with those at Oxford offered to pay the expense of printing the book rather than that
-it should not be printed at all, and that the author carefully revised and pruned it five
-times before publication. In an epilogue to the first book (p. 170), dated 25 June
-1597, Case apologises to a friend for not giving the <i>text</i> of each book and for not
-printing his discourse on Philosophy in general. See the <cite>Ancilla philosophiae</cite>, above.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Holland</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>SA-</span>|<span class='fss'>RISBVRIÆ HABITA</span> | <i>viii. Id.
-Iun.</i> | <span class='fss'>CVM REVERENDVS IN CHRIS-</span>|to Pater <span class='sc'>Henricvs</span> permissione divinâ |
-Episcopus Sarisburiensis gradum | Docto-|ratus in Theologiâ susciperet,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>ex de-|<i>creto Convocationis Oxoniensis</i>. | <i>Authore</i> <span class='sc'>T. Holland</span> <i>Theol. Doct.</i> |
-<i>&amp; Profess. Regio.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1599: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>tutis, eruditionis</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–12) the Oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 111: <cite>Reg. Univ. Oxon.</cite>, vol. 2 (ed. Clark), pt. i, p. 145.
-The Commission to confer the degree on bp. Henry Cotton (of Magdalen) is dated
-2 June 1599. The oration gives an interesting account of the ceremony of conferment
-(6 June) and its symbolism.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. James, Thomas. (Bagford’s statement that James’s “Catalogue
-of the Oxford and Cambridge Manuscripts” appeared in this year (Brit.
-Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 65), is due to the title of the Appendix of
-Richard de Bury’s <cite>Philobiblon</cite>, see below. The Catalogue came out in
-1600.)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Kinge</b>, John, bp. of London. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES MINISTRED</span> | <span class='fss'>IN THE
-VISITATION OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVLL</span> | Maister <span class='sc'>John King</span> Arch-deacon
-| <i>of Nottingham, in the yeare of our</i> | <i>Lord God</i>. 1599. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 4: (1599): sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. 29. <i>Whether
-they</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–10) the 43 questions: (11)
-“The oath of the Church-wardens and
-side-men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>King</b>, John. <span class='fss'>LECTVRES</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON IONAS,</span> | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED AT</span> | <span class='fss'>YORKE</span> |
-In the yeare of our Lorde 1594. | By <span class='sc'>John Kinge</span>: | <i>Newlie corrected and
-amended</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19<i>a</i>: 1599: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 706 + [2], not counting two extra
-title-leaves, see below: p. 11 beg. <i>Who
-hath instructed</i>, 111 <i>their former</i>, 671 <i>&amp;
-these in</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—precisely
-as 1597, K, except <span class='fss'>LATE</span> not “late,”
-<i>No-</i>|<i>vem.</i>, not <i>No-</i>|<i>vemb.</i>, 1494 (by error)
-not 1594, and 1599 on both extra titles,
-not 1597: there is no list of Errata. The
-first and last leaves have not been seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 295. A reprint of 1597. K.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Lomazzo</b>, Giovanni Paolo (Lomatius). [<i>engraved title</i>:—]
-<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>TRACTE CONTAI=</span>|<span class='fss'>NING THE ARTES</span> | of curious Paintinge Caruinge &amp; |
-Buildinge | written first in Italian by Jo: | Paul Lomatius painter of
-Milan | <span class='fss'>AND ENGLISHED BY</span> | <span class='fss'>R. H.</span> student in Physik | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 21, as colophon: 1598: (sixes)
-la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] + 119 + [1] + 218 + [2]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>hardly bee able</i>, 111 <i>wise a
-master</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) engraved title, see below: (3–4)
-dedication to sir Thomas Bodley, signed
-“Richard Haydocke,” New coll., Oxford,
-24 Aug. 1598: (5–12) (the Translator)
-to the ingenuous Reader: (13–14)
-“Iohn Case D. of Physicke to his friende
-<i>R. H.</i> of New Colledge”: (15) “The
-titles of the bookes,” five in all: (17–23)
-“A table of the Chapters ...”: 1–7,
-“The preface to the worke” by Lomazzo:
-9–11, “The division of the
-worke”: 13–119, and 1–218, the work:
-(1) Device and colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 678. Lomazzo’s <cite>Trattato dell’ arte de la pittura</cite> was
-published at Milan in 1584, and Haydocke’s Preface gives an account of its rarity in
-England. Only five out of the seven books of the original are here published. In the
-dedication the translator alludes to Bodley’s design of “erecting and restoring of this
-worthie Panbiblion or Temple of all the Muses,” the Bodleian.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The title is an elaborate engraving on metal, the words on an oval in the centre: at
-top “IO: PAOLO LOMAZZO:” surrounding his bust: on either side Juno and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>Apollo (?): on either side the oval, the arms of the University and of New College:
-below, in the centre a bust of the translator surmounted by his arms, between figures
-derived from classical mythology. In the book are thirteen full-page engravings
-marked A-I, K-N, and a profusion of woodcut ornaments. On the last page but
-one occurs the large device of the University arms, within a border: then the colophon:
-then a woodcut of the arms of New College between two Ws (William of Wykeham).
-By some confusion this book is dated 1605 by Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901,
-fol. 66).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Richard</b> de Bury, bp. of Durham, <i>d.</i> 1345. <span class='fss'>PHILOBIBLON</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RICHARDI</span> | <span class='fss'>DUNELMENSIS</span> | <i>sive</i> | <span class='fss'>DE AMORE LIBRORVM, ET INSTI-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>TVTIONE
-BIBLIOTHECÆ</i></span>, | <i>tractatus pulcherrimus</i>. | Ex collatione cum varijs manuscriptis
-edi-|<i>tio jam secunda</i>; | cui | <i>Accessit appendix de manuscriptis
-Oxoniensibus</i>. | Omnia hæc, | <i>Opera &amp; studio T. I. Novi Coll. in alma
-Academia</i> | <i>Oxoniensi Socij</i>. [<i>motto</i>, preceded by “B. P. N.,” then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1599: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 62
-+ [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>tiqui pro</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-Epistola dedicatoria to sir Thomas Bodley,
-“ex Musæo meo in Collegio Novo.
-Iulij. 6. 1599,” signed “Thomas James”:
-(7) “Vita ex Balæo”: 1–4, “Præfatio
-auctoris ad lectorem”: 5, “Capitula
-libri sequentis”: 7–62, the work in 20
-chapters: (3–10) “Appendix de manuscriptis
-Oxoniensibus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 466. This is the first English edition of the
-first book on the love of books. The <i>editio princeps</i> is that of 1473 printed at Cologne:
-the next Spires, 1483 and Paris 1500. An account of these editions and of the known
-MSS. of the <cite>Philobiblon</cite> will be found in E. C. Thomas’s edition (Lond., 1888). The
-mysterious “<i>B. P. N.</i>” on the titlepage (followed by “Non quæro quod mihi vtile est,
-sed quod multis”) is explained by him as perhaps “Bibliothecae Praefectus Novae”
-or “Nostrae” or rather “Bono Publico Natus:” it has been suggested that they may
-stand for “Beati Pauli Norma,” alluding to 1 Cor. x. 33. The Editor explains that
-it was intended that the work should be followed by an Appendix containing a catalogue
-of all MSS. at Oxford, a purpose which seriously delayed the issue of the book.
-In fact the whole of the text of the <cite>Philobiblon</cite> was printed off in 1598, as is proved
-by a single copy still preserved in the Bodleian dated in that year but containing only
-the titlepage, (identical in type with the published one, except in one figure of the
-date) and pp. 1 to 62 + [2 blank]. As it is, the Appendix only contains an alphabetical
-list, without references, of the authors of which manuscripts were preserved at
-Oxford: the intended catalogue appears in the <cite>Ecloga Oxonio-Cantabrigiensis</cite>, Lond.,
-1600. The preface alludes to the founding of the Bodleian, but dr. James had not yet
-been appointed Librarian. There is no sufficient ground for supposing with mr.
-Thomas (<i>ut supra</i>, p. lv) and mr. Macray (<cite>Annals of the Bodleian</cite>, 2nd ed., p. 25)
-that the single advance copy of 1598 implies an issue or edition of that year.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Roche</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>EVSTATHIA</span> | <i>or the</i> | <span class='fss'>CONSTANCIE OF SVSANNA</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CONTAINING THE PRESER-</span>|vation of the Godly, subversion of the wic-|ked,
-precepts for the aged, instructi-|<i>ons for youth, pleasure</i> | <i>with profitte</i>. |
-Penned by R. R. G. [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19<i>a</i>: 1599: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[128], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>H</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Then
-clims</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to “Mistris
-M.B. wife to ... D.B. Esquier,”
-signed Robert Roche: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> “To the
-Reader,” a poem: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>v</sup>, “Coricæus
-to the Author,” a poem signed “C. A. R.”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, “An induction to the story”:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, the poem: <span class='fss'>H</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, “Faultes
-escaped.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Bodleian copy, which belonged to Robert Burton, is perhaps unique. See
-Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 682, where extracts are given from this poem, which is chiefly
-in a peculiar 7-line stanza, ABABBCC. G. on the titlepage is no doubt <i>Gentleman</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>10. Ubaldini, Petruccio. (The edition of “La Vita di Carlo
-Magno Imperadore. Di nuevo corretta” by P. Ubaldini, doubtfully
-ascribed in the Catalogue of the Printed Books in the British Museum to
-the Oxford Press, was certainly not printed there.)</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1600.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. “‘Rhetoricæ libri duo, quorum Prior de
-Tropis &amp; Figuris, Posterior de Voce &amp; Gestu, Præcipiti [<i>sic</i>] in vsum
-scholarum accuratiûs editi. Oxoniæ, Excudebat—1600. ... Viro virtutis
-&amp; honoris nomine nobilissimo, Thomæ Egertono, Equiti, Domino Custodi
-magni sigilli Angliæ, Carolus Butler Magdalenensis, S. D.—Basingstochiæ,
-5 Jdus Martii. 1600.’ ... Some commendatory verses; Lat. &amp; Gr. ... Ad
-lectorem.’ I3, in eights, besides the prefixes. W. H. Sixteens.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Herbert’s Ames, iii. 1409. For the author, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 209,
-Bloxam’s <cite>Magd. Reg.</cite>, i. 20. See 1618. B, 1629. B.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Holland</b>, Robert. “‘Darmerth, neu Arlwy Gweddi, a
-ddychymygwyd er mawr dderchafiad Duwioldeb, ac i chwanegu Gwybodaeth
-ac Awydd yr annysgedig ewyllysgar i iawn wasanaethu’r gwir
-Dduw. Gan Robert Holland, gweinidog gair Duw, a Pherson Llan
-Ddeferowg, yn sir Gaerfyrddin’ [Rhydychain, 4plyg.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in W. Rowland’s <cite>Cambrian Bibliography</cite>, ed. by D. S. Evans, (Llanidloes,
-1869) p. 72. It is ascribed also to Oxford in M. Williams’s <cite>Cofrestr</cite> (Lond. 1717):
-but the evidence is at present not sufficient to establish a connexion with Barnes’s
-press: nor is the present place of any copy known to the editor of Rowlands.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. Holland, Thomas. Panegyris: see 1601. H.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>King</b>, John. <span class='fss'>LECTVRES</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON IONAS</span> | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED AT</span> | <span class='fss'>YORKE</span> |
-In the yeare of our Lorde 1594. | By <span class='sc'>John Kinge</span>: | <i>Newly corrected and
-amended</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19<i>a</i>: 1600: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 706 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Who hath
-instructed</i>, 111 <i>their former</i>, 671 <i>&amp; these
-in</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly as
-1599. K, except (in 2nd title) “Lord”
-not “Lorde,” 1594 not 1494, (in 3rd title)
-<span class='fss'>NOVEM-</span>|<span class='fss'>BER</span> not <span class='fss'>NO-</span>|<span class='fss'>VEMBER</span>, <i>daie</i> not
-<i>day</i>: and dates on titles 1600 not 1599.
-The first and last leaves have not been
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reprint of 1599. K.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Perrot</b>, sir James. [<i>woodcut.</i>] <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>FIRST PART</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE
-CONSIDE-</span>|<span class='fss'>RATION OF HV-</span>|mane Condition: | <span class='fss'><i>WHERIN IS CONTAINED</i></span> |
-<i>the Morall Consideration of a mans selfe:</i> | <i>as what, who, and what
-manner</i> | <i>of man he is</i>. | Written by I. P. Esquier. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1600: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-60: p. 11 beg. <i>of the earth</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–6) dedication
-to lord Buckhurst, dated Haroldston 16
-Nov. 1600, signed “I. P.”: (7–8) “To
-the indifferent and friendly Reader,” signed
-“Iames Perrott”: 1–60, the work, in
-three sections.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 605. The second part was to be the Political consideration
-of things under us, the third the Natural Consideration of things about
-us, the last the Metaphysical Consideration of things above us: but they were never
-published.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Roberts</b>, Hugh. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>DAY OF HEARING</span>: | <i>Or</i>, | <span class='fss'>SIX LECTVRES
-VPON THE</span> | latter part of the thirde Chapter of the Epi-|stle to the
-Hebrewes: of the time and | meanes that God hath appointed for | <i>men
-to come to the knowledge of his</i> | <i>truth, that they may be sa-</i>|<i>ved from his
-wrath</i>. | The summary pointes of every one of which Lectures are set |
-downe immediatly after the Epistle dedicatory. | Herevnto is adioyned
-a Sermon against | <i>fleshly lusts, &amp; against certaine mischie-</i>|<i>vous May-games
-which are the</i> | <i>fruit thereof</i>. | By H. R. Master of Artes, and now |
-<i>Minister of the word</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19<i>a</i>: 1600: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 116 + [32]: p. 11 beg. <i>which he
-wrought</i>, 111 <i>now for the</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–10) dedication
-to sir Thomas Egerton, signed
-“Hugh Roberts”: (11–12) “The Contents
-or briefe summe of the Lectures
-...”: 1–116, the six lectures on Heb. iii.
-7–11, 12–13, 14, 15, 16–17, 18–19: (1)
-title of sermon “<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>GODLY AND</span> | <span class='fss'>NECESSARY
-SERMON</span> | against fleshly lustes;
-and against cer-|taine mischievous May-games,
-which | are the fruite thereof.
-Preached | <i>vpon the first Sabbath day in
-Maie</i>, | <i>in the yeere</i>. 1598. | By H. R.
-Master of Artes, and now | Minister of
-the word. | [<i>Motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>].” Impr.
-19<i>a</i>, 1600: (3–5) “To the Reader”:
-(7–32) the sermon, on 1 Pet. ii. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In the preface to the sermon it is hinted that the publication of the sermon was
-prevented when it was first delivered “now more then a yeere and a halfe agone.”
-Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 703), describes this book as “<i>Lond.</i> 1600, <i>quarto</i>,” wrongly.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Terry</b>, John. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>TRIAL OF TRVTH</span>: | <i>Containing</i>
-| <span class='fss'>A PLAINE AND SHORT DISCOVE-</span>|ry of the chiefest pointes of the Doctrine
-of the | great Antichrist, and of his adherentes the | false Teachers and
-Heretikes of these | last times. | [<i>mottos</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1600: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] +
-160: p. 11 beg. <i>a faithfull brother</i>, 111
-<i>are remitted</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) Epistle dedicatorie to
-bp. Henry Cotton, signed “Iohn Terry”:
-(9–22) “To the Christian Reader.” also
-signed: (23–24) “The principall vses of
-this Treatise”: 1–160, the work (first
-part.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 410. For the second and third parts, see 1602. T,
-(which contains on the last page “Faultes escaped in printing the first part”),
-1625 T.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Ursinus</b>, Zacharias. <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>COLLECTION OF CERTAINE</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED
-DISCOVRSES,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>WRITTEN</i></span> | <span class='fss'>BY THAT FAMOVS MAN OF MEMORY</span> | <span class='sc'>Zachary
-Vrsine</span>; Doctor and Pro-|<i>fessor of Divinitie in the noble and flou-</i>|rishing
-Schoole of <span class='sc'>Nevstad</span>. | <i>For explication of divers difficult points</i>, | laide
-downe by that Author in his | <span class='sc'>Catechisme</span>. | Lately put in Print in Latin
-by the last | labour of <span class='sc'>D. David Parry</span>: and | <i>now newlie translated into
-English</i> | <i>by</i> I. H. <i>for the benefit and</i> | <i>behoofe of our Christian</i> | <i>country-men</i>.
-| [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1600: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ “341” (really 327, for 180–191 and
-236–237 are omitted in the pagination) +
-[1]: p. 11 beg. <i>vnto it certaine</i>, 111 <i>ble
-that it is</i>: Pica Roman. Contents: | p.
-(1) title: (3–5) “To the Reader”: (7)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>“A table of the several discourses”:
-1–341, the nine discourses (1 is Parry’s
-prefaces to the 3rd and 4th parts of Ursinus’s
-Catechism in the first edition see
-1587. U); 5, 6 are translated by Parry;
-3 is a passage out of Vigilius about the
-Incarnation; 9 a funeral oration on Ursinus
-(who died “6 Mar. 1583”) by
-Francis Junius: (1) “Faultes escaped.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. The editor apologizes in the preface for this “three weekes worke,” due to
-the importunity of the printer, after the editor had given over the task when only
-begun.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1601.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Fitz-Geoffrey</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>CAROLI</span> | <span class='fss'>FITZGEOFRIDI</span> | <span class='fss'>AFFANIAE</span>: |
-sive | <span class='fss'>EPIGRAMMATVM</span> | <i>Libri tres</i>: | Ejusdem | <span class='fss'>CENOTAPHIA</span>. | [<i>motto</i>, then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1601: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[200], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>M</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>N</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>Vel si quid</i>, <span class='fss'>M</span> 1<sup>r</sup> <i>Si non immemor</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup> poetical Latin dedication to
-Edw. Michelborne: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, Michelborne’s
-reply in Latin verse: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, poetical Latin
-dedication to William Raleigh barrister:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>M</span> 1<sup>v</sup> the Affaniae in 3 books: <span class='fss'>M</span> 2<sup>r</sup>
-[<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>CENOTAPHIA.</i></span> | A | <span class='sc'>Carolo
-Fitzgeofrido</span> | <i>Posita &amp; sacrata</i> | D.
-M. &amp; piæ Memoriæ | nonnullorum, |
-<i>Quos nunc emeritæ permensos tempora
-vitæ</i> | <i>Secreti sinus orbis habet mundusq<span class='small'>ue</span>
-piorum</i>. | [<i>woodcuts</i>]: then impr. 11,
-1061 [<i>sic</i>]: <span class='fss'>M</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>N</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the epitaphs.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 607. The epigrams and epitaphs are of much
-interest, and some are translated and printed in Dr. Grosart’s <cite>Poems of Charles
-Fitzgeoffrey</cite>, 1881.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Holland</b>, Thomas. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πανηγυρὶς</span> | <i>D. Elizabethæ, Dei Gratiâ
-Angliæ, Franciæ, &amp; Hiberniæ Reginæ</i>. | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT PAVLS</span> |
-in London the 17. of November Ann. Dom. 1599. the | one and fortieth
-yeare of her Maiesties raigne, and aug-|mented in those places wherein,
-for the shortnes of the | time, it could not there be then delivered. |
-<i>VVherevnto is adioyned an Apologeticall discourse</i>, | <i>whereby all such
-sclanderous Accusations are fully</i> | <i>and faithfully confuted, wherewith the
-Honour of</i> | <i>this Realme hath beene vncharitably traduced by</i> | <i>some of our
-adversaries in forraine nations, and at</i> | <i>home, for observing the</i> 17. <i>of
-November yeerely in</i> | <i>the forme of an Holy-day, and for the ioifull exerci-</i>|<i>ses,
-and Courtly triumphes on that day in the honour</i> | <i>of her Maiestie
-exhibited.</i> | By <span class='sc'>Thomas Holland</span>, Doctor of Divinity, | &amp; her Highnes
-Professor thereof in her Vni-|versity of Oxford. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1601: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [166],
-signn. <i>a</i>-<i>c</i>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>R</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>S</span><sup>2</sup>, and one folded leaf,
-see below: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Moses, who</i>,
-<span class='fss'>O</span> 1<sup>r</sup> <i>shall be safe</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<i>a</i> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <i>a</i> 1<sup>v</sup> Latin poem
-on the Queen’s arms: then a folded leaf,
-see below: <i>a</i> 2<sup>r</sup>-<i>c</i> 2<sup>v</sup> “To al faithful
-Christians ...”: <i>c</i> 3<sup>r</sup>-<i>c</i> 3<sup>v</sup> dedication to
-Richard Bancroft, bp. of London, dated
-“Oxoniæ, è Collegio Exon.” 1 Oct.
-1599: <i>c</i> 4<sup>r</sup> “Faultes escaped, and certaine
-observations”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, the sermon,
-on Matt. xii. 42: <span class='fss'>H</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>S</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, the
-Apology.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 111, and 1602. <span class='fss'>H</span>. At sign. <span class='fss'>L</span> 3<sup>r</sup> begins a long dissertation
-on St. Hugh of Lincoln, and at sign. <span class='fss'>N</span> 3<sup>r</sup> the author claims for the University of
-Oxford the first celebration of Nov. 17 as the Queen’s Day, in 1569? The Stonor
-Press and Edm. Campian’s <cite>Decem Rationes</cite> are alluded to in sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 4. The folding
-leaf contains a woodcut of the royal arms between two pillars connected by a scroll
-bearing the words <span class='fss'>VIVAT·RE·</span> On the base of the columns are “<span class='fss'>I</span>” “<span class='fss'>D</span>” (the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>engraver’s initials?). The woodcut, which is of a rough character, is 5<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. × 6<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in.
-A curious usage has been pointed out to me: on sign. <span class='fss'>D</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>E</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>P</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>Q</span> 1<sup>r</sup> and perhaps
-elsewhere Hebrew words are transliterated, but in <i>b</i> 2<sup>r</sup>, <span class='fss'>O</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>O</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>P</span> 1<sup>r</sup> unpointed Hebrew
-type is used. In the Laing Sale ii. 3709 (15 Apr. 1880) there is mention of a 1600
-edition of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Ursinus</b>, Zacharias. [<i>woodcuts.</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE SVMME</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRISTIAN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RELIGION:</span> | <span class='sc'>delivered by Zacharias Vrsinvs in his</span> | Lectures vpon the
-Catechisme, authorised by the noble | <i>Prince</i> <span class='sc'>Fredericke</span> <i>throughout his
-dominions</i>. | Wherein are debated and resolved the Questions of what-|<i>soever
-pointes of moment, which haue beene or are</i> | <i>controversed in Divinitie</i>. |
-Translated into English first by D. Henrie Parry, and late-|ly conferred
-with the last and best Latine Edition of | <span class='sc'>D. David Parevs</span> <i>Professor of
-Divinity</i> | <i>in Heidelberge</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 19: 1601: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 1139 + [13]: p. 11 beg. <i>authors, we</i>,
-111 4. <i>VVhat are</i>, 1111 <i>ever of the elect</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) “To the Christian Readers Henry
-Parry ...”: (7–8) “To the same Christian
-Readers Richard Crosse ...”: 1–1139,
-the catechism: (1–10) “A Table
-...”, a short analysis of the book: (10)
-“Faults escaped”: pp. (11–12) have not
-been seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1587. <span class='fss'>U</span>. Richard Crosse edited this edition with some slight additions.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1602.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. [<b>Bailey</b>, dr. Walter.] [<i>woodcuts.</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>BRIEFE</span> | <span class='fss'>TREATISE TOV=</span>|ching
-the preservation of | <i>the eie sight, consisting partly</i> | in good order
-of diet, and partly | in vse of medicines. | <i>The sixte Edition.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6]
-+ 25 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>rected by the</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-a preface: 1–17, 19–25, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. For author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 586: the first edition with the author’s
-name is that of 1616. An edition of 1586 (London) is in the British Museum, but
-the other four preceding the present one appear to be unknown. See 1616. <span class='fss'>B</span>, 1654. <span class='fss'>B</span>,
-1673. <span class='fss'>B</span>: other editions were issued, not at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Budden</b>, dr. John. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>GVLIELMI</span> | <span class='fss'>PATTENI, CVI</span> | <span class='fss'>VVAYNFLETI
-AGNOMEN</span> | <span class='fss'>FVIT, WINTONIENSIS ECCLE-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>SIÆ PRÆSULIS QVONDAM</i></span> |
-pientissimi, Summi Angliæ Cancellarij, | Collegijq<span class='small'>ue</span> Beatæ Mariæ Magdalenæ |
-apud Oxonienses fundato⸗|<i>ris celeberrimi, vi</i>⸗|<i>ta obitusq<span class='small'>ue</span></i>. |
-[<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1602: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-84: p. 11 beg. <i>centis pænè</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-Epistola nuncupatoria to dr. Nicholas
-Bond president of Magdalen college, Oxford,
-signed “Johannes Buddenus”: (7–11)
-complimentary verses, in Latin, except
-one Italian sonnet by Alberico Gentile:
-1–84, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 282. Budden was philosophy reader at Magdalen (afterwards
-principal of New Inn hall and Broadgates hall), and this biography was
-entrusted to him by the college. The running title is “Waynfleti <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">παλιγγενεσία</span>.”
-Several original documents are printed in the work: which was reprinted in [Bates’s]
-<cite>Vitæ selectorum aliquot virorum</cite>, Lond. 1681, p. 49. Rhetoric is more prominent
-than historical treatment.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>3. <b>Chrysostom</b>, st. <span class='sc'>Theorrem<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ω</span>n</span>: | <i>or</i>, | <span class='fss'>THE ANCIENT AND
-MOST</span> | comfortable Goldenmouth’d Father, | S<sup>t</sup>. <span class='sc'>Chrysostome</span> Arch-bishop
-of | Constantinople, treating on severall places | of holy scripture:
-selected, and tran-|slated faithfully according to | the Greeke Copies: |
-<i>by</i> | <span class='sc'>John Willovghbie</span>. | [3 <i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 287 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>saultes of
-humane</i>, 111 <i>belōgs much time</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–15)
-Epistle dedicatorie to a kinsman of the
-author lately deceased: (16–21) “To the
-Christian Reader,” dated from “Brodegats
-hall,” Oxford, 2 Sept. 1602: (22–23)
-“<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Τοῖς περὶ τῶν λόγων τουτωνί Ελληνο-Αγγλοικῶν
-ἐυγνωμώνως ἔχουσιν</span>,” a Greek
-preface: (24) “The names of the [seven]
-Tractes contained in this Booke,” and a
-quotation: 1–287, the treatises.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 28. Wood did not know Willoughby as an author, and
-Bliss could find no trace of his academical career. But a John Willoughby certainly
-matriculated at Exeter College in 1585 (<span class='fss'>B.A.</span> 1589, <span class='fss'>M.A.</span> 1593). The treatises are on the
-Pharisee and the Publican (Luke xviii), on Ps. xlix. 16, on Ps. xxxix. 6, on the Sick
-of the Palsy (John v), on 2 Cor. xii. 9, on the Shepherd and Sheep, &amp;c. (John xx)
-and “A Tracte of <i>Vertue</i> and <i>Vice</i>.” Unpointed English and Long Primer Hebrew is
-used on pp. 1, 26, 67, 107.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Higins</b>, John. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE TO</span> | <span class='fss'>MASTER
-WILLIAM</span> | <span class='fss'>PERKINS, CONCER-</span>|ning Christs Descen-|<i>sion into Hell</i>: | <i>By</i> |
-<span class='sc'>John Higins</span>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 52: p. 11 beg. <i>to it they</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) preface “To the Christian Reader,”
-Winsam, 22 June 1602: 1–51, the treatise:
-52, “Faultes escaped in the printing
-... Finis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 734, and following art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. Higins, John. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSWERE</span> | <span class='fss'>TO MASTER WILLI-</span>|am Perkins,
-concerning | <i>Christs Descension in-</i>|to hell. | By <span class='fss'>IOHN HIGINS</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 24: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 51 + [1]: p 11 beg. <i>it they must</i>:
-Small Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) preface “To the Christian
-Reader,” Winsam, 22 June 1602: 1–51,
-the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See preceding art. Like the Powel below this book was certainly not printed
-at Oxford, and the imprint is fictitious, the type and woodcuts being unknown at
-Oxford. These falsifications can hardly be unconnected with the fact that John Barnes,
-the son of Joseph Barnes, in this year set up business for himself in London. The text
-is a reprint of no. 4 above.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Howson</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT S</span><sup>t</sup>. | <span class='fss'>MARIES
-IN OXFORD,</span> | <span class='fss'>THE 17. DAY OF NO-</span>|vember, 1602. in defence of | <i>the Festivities
-of the Church</i> | of <i>England, and namely</i> | <i>that of her Maiesties</i> |
-<i>Coronation</i>. | By <span class='fss'><i>IOHN HOVVSON DOCTOR OF</i></span> | <i>Divinitie, one of her Highnes
-Chaplaines, and</i> | <i>Vicechancellour of the Vniversitie</i> | <i>of Oxforde</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 23: 1602: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [36],
-signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>ship or
-honor</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-(&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup> title: (&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to
-lord Buckhurst, dated from Christ Church,
-Oxford, 29 Nov. 1602: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, the
-sermon, on Ps. cxviii. 24.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1603. <span class='fss'>H</span>, and Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 518. On a kindred subject with Holland’s
-speech printed in 1601: the priority of the University in celebrating the Queen’s day
-is again mentioned. Reprinted in Somers’ <cite>Tracts</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>7. <b>Howson</b>, dr. John. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>VXORE</span> | <span class='fss'>DIMISSA PROPTER</span> |
-fornicationem aliam non | <i>licet superinducere</i>. | <span class='fss'>TERTIA THESIS</span> | <span class='fss'>IOANNIS
-HOVSONI</span> | Inceptoris in Sacra Theolo-|gia, proposita &amp; disputata in |
-<i>Vesperijs Oxonij</i>. | 1602. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: [2] +
-61 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>dij, &amp; quæ</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–61,
-the essay.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1606. <span class='fss'>H</span>, and Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 60, 518, iii. 18, where a bibliography is
-given of the controversy excited by Dr. Howson’s Thesis. The actual day of disputation
-was 10 July 1602. There are two issues of this book, one in which the title is a
-separate leaf, independent of the four sections (<span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup>) which follow, <span class='fss'>D</span> 8 being blank:
-the other where the title is <span class='fss'>A</span> 1, <span class='fss'>D</span> 8 being the last leaf of the <i>text</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. †<b>Oxford</b>, Trinity College. Decretum de Gratiis Collegio
-rependendis. | [the text of the decree.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No imprint, but probably printed at
-Oxford: (1602?): (one) fol.: pp. [2]:
-l. 11 beg. I. <i>Imprimis</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title and text of the
-decree.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A Latin decree passed by the President and Fellows of Trinity college on 12 Dec.
-1602, compelling all who have been or are on the foundation of the college to show
-their gratitude by a proportionate gift of money, and enjoining on all future scholars
-an oath that they will fulfil this decree. Signed by the President and Fellows. There
-is another issue similar in form but apparently printed in London, which can readily be
-distinguished by having a headline of woodcuts, and 43 (instead of 52) lines of print.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. *†<b>Oxford</b>, University. [Orders for the Market of the City of
-Oxford, issued by the Chancellor of the University: beg. “Thomas
-Baron of Buckurst,” ends “transgressor of this commaundement. God
-save the Queene.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No impr.: [not later than 1602]:
-(ones) fol.: pp. [4]: English Roman.
-Contents:—pp. (1, 3) the orders (probably
-30 in number).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only copy known was rescued from a binding in Brasenose College Library at
-Oxford, where it now is. The titles of Lord Buckhurst are given, and show that the
-earliest possible date is 15 May 1598 when he became Lord High Treasurer: the
-latest being 24 March 160<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>, when the Queen died. No doubt the sheets were fastened
-together forming one long notice. The Brasenose copy has lost a few lines at the end
-of the first column (67 lines left), the second is complete (62 lines).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Powel</b>, Gabriel. <span class='fss'><i>PRODROMVS.</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A LOGICALL</span> | <span class='fss'>RESOLVTION OF
-THE</span> | I. Chap. of the Epistle of | <i>the Apostle <span class='fss'>PAVLE</span></i> | <i>vnto the Romanes</i>. |
-<span class='sc'>Togither with svch</span> | severall Jnstructions, Notes, Ob-|<i>servations, and
-Vses, as naturally</i> | <i>arise out of every particular</i> | <i>Verse. By</i> | <i>Gabriel
-Powel.</i> | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>asterisks</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 22: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 267 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>sumption is</i>,
-111 <i>profit al, wisdom</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–12) Epistle
-dedicatorie to John Whitgift archbp. of
-Canterbury and William Morgan bp. of
-St. Asaph, dated from St. Mary hall,
-Oxford, 5 July 1602: (13–15) “To the
-Christian Reader,” dated similarly: 1–267,
-the work: (1) “Faults escaped in
-the Printing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1615. <span class='fss'>P</span>: Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 25. The dedications are due to his patrons’
-favour to his father David as well as to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>11. Powel, Gabriel. <i>Theologicall and Scholasticall</i> | Positions,
-concerning | Vsurie. | Set forth, by <i>Definitions</i> and <i>Partitions</i>, | framed
-according to the rules of | a naturall Method. | [<i>asterisks</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 23: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 71 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>and quantitie</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A”:
-(3) title: (5–13) Epistle dedicatorie to
-Ralph Hockenhul and Hugh Hurlston,
-dated from St. Mary hall, Oxford, 1 Apr.
-1602: (14) “The Contents of this Treatise”:
-1–71, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 25. In spite of the imprint this book, like the Higins
-(No. 5) above, was not printed at Oxford, the type but especially the woodcuts (with
-one exception) being entirely unknown at Oxford. It was printed no doubt in London,
-and the imprint falsified, perhaps in order to escape the necessity of registration at the
-office of the Stationers’ Company.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. Rawlinson, John. See under 1612. <span class='fss'>R</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Sanderson</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>INSTITVTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ONVM DIALEC-</span>|<span class='fss'>TICARVM LI-</span>|<i>bri
-Quatuor</i>, | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IOANNE SANDERSONO</span>, | Lancastrensi, Anglo, Liberalium |
-artium Magistro, &amp; sacræ Theologiæ | <i>Doctore, Metropolitanæ Ec-</i>|<i>clesiæ
-Cameracensis Ca-</i>|<i>nonico, conscripti</i>. | <i>Editio tertia.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1602: 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 228 +
-[4]: p. 11 beg. <i>Vox singularis</i>, 111 <i>victus,
-habitus</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) “Auctoris
-Præfatio ad iuventutem bonarum artium
-studiosam”: 1–228, the work: (pp. (3–4)
-not seen.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. This John Sanderson of Lancashire, doctor of Theology, canon of Cambrai,
-seems to have escaped the notice of biographers. The better known bp. Robert
-Sanderson also wrote on Logic, see 1615. <span class='fss'>S</span>. The preface throws no light on the life of
-the author. For the 4th ed., see 1609. <span class='fss'>S</span>. The first edition was printed by Plantin
-at Antwerp in 1589, the dedication to cardinal Allen being dated from Antwerp 1 Jan.
-“1589,” but neither in the dedication nor in the congratulatory poems which follow
-in this first edition is there any biographical matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Smith</b>, bp. Miles. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED AND</span> | <span class='fss'>GODLY
-SERMON</span>, | preached at Worcester, | <i>at an Assise</i>: | <i>By</i> | <span class='fss'>THE REVEREND</span> |
-and learned, <span class='sc'>Miles</span> | <span class='sc'>Smith</span>, <i>Doctor of</i> | <i>Diuinitie</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 23: 1602: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 64: p. 11 beg. <i>him, and so</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–13) Epistle dedicatorie to Gervase
-Babington, bp. of Worcester, dated from
-C. C. C., Oxford, Nov. 12. 1602, signed
-“Robert Burhil” who issued the sermon:
-(15) “The chiefe points of matter ... in
-the sermon ...”: 1–63, the sermon, on
-Jer. ix. 23–24.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 360. The preface states that the sermon was
-issued without the knowledge of the author, he being too modest to publish his works.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Terry</b>, John. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE SECOND PART</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OF</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE TRIAL
-OF TRVTH</span>: | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN IS SET DOWNE THE</span> | proper fountaine or foundation
-of all good | <i>works, &amp; the fowre principal motiues which the spi</i>⸗|<i>rit of God
-so often vseth in the sacred scriptures to perswade</i> | therevnto: | togither
-with the contrariety of the doctrine of | the Church of Rome to the
-same: wherein also are ope-|ned not only the causes of all true piety and
-godli-|ness, but also of all heresie and Idolatry, which is | and hath beene
-among Gentiles and Iewes, | and vs likewise that are called | Christians. |
-By <span class='sc'>John Terry</span>. | [two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>Impr. 23: 1602: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [38] +
-125 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>venemous drops</i>, 111
-<i>mande the carefull</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–14) Epistle dedicatorie
-to dr. George Rives, Warden, and
-all other students of New College, Oxford:
-(15–37) “To the Christian Reader”:
-(37) a short prayer: 1–125, the work:
-(1) “Faultes escaped” in parts one and
-two.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1600. <span class='fss'>T</span>, Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 410.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1603.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Brett</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>ICONVM SA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CRARVM DECAS, IN</span> | <span class='fss'>QVA E SVBIECTIS
-TYPIS</span> | compluscula sanæ doctrinæ | <i>capita eruuntur</i>. | Autore <i>R. B.</i>
-Sacræ Theol. Baccalaureo. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 72:
-p. 11 beg. <i>divini vultus</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Latin dedication
-to the King, signed “Richardus
-Brett,” 12 Aug. 1603: 1–72, the work, in
-ten essays.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 611. The preface explains ‘Icones inscripsi prȩsens
-opusculum, quia sub typis varia fidei &amp; morum adumbrat documenta. Nam ... est
-aliquando sub cute literæ, suavis quædam &amp; interior medulla.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. Burhill, Robert. Invitatorius panegyricus: see under <i>Oxford</i>
-(no. 9, below).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Carleton</b>, George. <span class='fss'>HEROICI CHARACTERES.</span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>ILLVSTRISSI-</span>|<span class='fss'>MVM
-EQVITEM</span>, | <i>Henricum Nevillum</i>. | <span class='sc'>Autore</span>, | <i>Georgio Carletono</i>. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 48
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Numine tanta</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-Latin poetical dedication to sir Henry
-Nevill: 1–48, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 423, 425. The pieces are “Ad ... Elizabetham ...
-Carmen Panegyricum,” “Ad ... Iacobum ... Carmen Panegyricum,” “Devoraxeis,”
-on the earl of Essex, “P. Sidnæi funus,” all Latin hexameter poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Davies</b>, John, of Hereford. <span class='fss'><i>MICROCOSMOS.</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE DISCOVERY</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF THE LITTLE</span> | World, with the government | thereof. | [<i>motto</i>] | By
-<span class='sc'>Iohn Davies</span>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 23: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-254 + [30]: p. 11 beg. <i>The Day</i>, 111 <i>And<sup>e</sup>
-Providence</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a border: (3)
-poetical dedication to king James: (4)
-Do. to the queen: (5–8) short poems by
-Davies: (8–16) complimentary verses to
-the author or book: 1–28, “A Preface
-...” to the king: (29–38) “Cambria to
-the ... Prince of Wales,” both poems:
-39–232, the work: 233–254, “An extasie,”
-a poem: (1–20) short poems by
-Davies, including two to Magdalen college,
-p. (17): (20–29) complimentary
-verses to the author or book.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 262, and 1605. <span class='fss'>D</span>. The poem describes the whole
-state of man, his condition, qualities and surroundings, in a discursive manner which
-allows a short history of England to come in (at p. 131). The stanzas are 9-line,
-rhyming <span class='fss'>ABABBCBCC</span>. The author was a professional calligrapher in Oxford, not a
-member of the University. Davies’s <cite>Works</cite> were edited by dr. Grosart in 1878. An
-ed. of 1611 is perhaps only due to a misprint in a 17th cent. bookseller’s catalogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>5. †<b>Godwin</b>, Francis, bp. of Hereford. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>TO THE
-PARSON, VICAR</span> | or Cur ate, of &#8196;&#8196;&#8196;&#8196; | and to everie of them. | [letterpress
-of the articles.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No imprint: (1603): (two) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. 4: p. 3 beg. <i>or M. Doctor Trevor</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—p. 1, head
-title, as above: 1–4, the orders: signed
-at end “Matherne. Sept. 30. 1603. <i>Fr.
-Landaven.</i>,” i.e. F. Godwin, then bp. of
-Llandaff.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. Orders of the bishop of Llandaff for the reformation of abuses in his
-diocese. The woodcuts are sufficient to prove by their particular imperfections that
-this is a product of the Oxford press.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Howson</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | [&amp;c. precisely as 1602. H,
-except that a line “The second Impression.” is added after “of Oxforde”
-before the woodcuts.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 23: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 30
-+ [2]: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>ship or honor</i>, p.
-11 <i>&amp; hyems erat</i>: English Roman. Contents:—(exactly
-as 1602. <span class='fss'>H</span>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 518. This is a verbatim but not literatim reprint of
-1602. <span class='fss'>H</span>, except as noted above.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>ACADEMIÆ OXONIENSIS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PIETAS</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Erga</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SERENISSI-</span>|<span class='fss'>MVM ET POTEN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TISSIMVM IACOBVM AN-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>GLIÆ SCOTFÆ FRANCIÆ</i></span> |
-<i>&amp; Hiberniæ Regem, fidei defenso</i>⸗|<i>rem, Beatissimæ Elisabethæ nu-</i>|<i>per
-Reginæ legitimè &amp; au-</i>|<i>spicatissimè succedentem</i>. | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 13<i>b</i>: 1603: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [4] + 207 + 1: p. 11 beg. <i>Virginis
-atque</i>: 111 <i>Votum pro</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
-to the King in Latin, by the university:
-1–207, the poems: (1) “Votum Typographi
-ad ... Regem,” a poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>More than 470 Latin poems, with a few in Greek, Italian, and French. On p. 17
-there is a complaint of the lack of Hebrew type. There is an earlier and less common
-issue without the “Votum typographi,” the page being left blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE VICECHAN-</span>|<span class='fss'>CELOVR,
-THE DOCTORS</span>, | both the Proctors, and other the | Heads of
-Houses in the Vniversi-|<i>tie of Oxford</i>: | (<i>Agreeable, vndoubtedly, to the
-ioint and Vniforme</i> | <i>opinion, of all the Deanes and Chapters, and all
-o-</i>|<i>ther the learned and obedient Cleargy</i>, | <i>in the Church of England.</i>) |
-To the humble Petition of the Ministers of the | Church of England,
-desiring Reformation of cer-|taine Ceremonies and Abuses of the Church. |
-[two <i>mottos</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] + 32,
-signn. ¶, ¶¶, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. ¶¶ 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>you
-hartely</i>, p. 11 beg. <i>Concerning the</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–13) “Epistle dedicatorie” to the archbp.
-of Canterbury and the Chancellors of
-the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge,
-beg. “Many and excellent”: 1–5, “The
-humble petition of the Ministers ...”:
-6–32, “The Answer ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Three other issues are known:—(<i>a</i>), title identical except that the imprint is no. 25:
-after p. (13) comes (14–16) a letter from the University of Cambridge to that of Oxford
-in Latin, 7 Oct. 1603, introduced by a few sentences “to the reader”: the rest
-identical: (<i>b</i>) with title identical till the 9th line which runs:—“<i>opinion, of all the
-Deanes and Chapters, and all other</i> | <i>the learned &amp; obedient Cleargy, in the Church
-of Eng:</i> | And confirmed by the expresse consent of the | Vniversitie of Cambridge.) |
-To the humble Petition” [&amp;c. as before]: with the same imprint as (<i>a</i>), but in small
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>roman type. Four new leaves follow the title, *2<sup>r</sup>-*4<sup>r</sup> containing a dedication to the
-king, and ¶ 1<sup>r</sup> the arms of the University with woodcuts above and below. Then follows
-“the Præface,” the title only being re-set, and the headline being no longer “The
-Epistle | dedicatorie” but “The Præface | to the <span class='fss'>LL</span><sup>s</sup>”, while on ¶¶ 4<sup>v</sup> a passage from
-Gregory Nazianzen is inserted: all the rest is identical with the other issues: *(<i>c</i>)
-identical with (<i>b</i>) throughout except that the imprint is no. 2 and is without date. Of
-these four editions or issues, the first is very rare, being perhaps stopped in the course
-of issue: <i>a</i> is common, <i>b</i> less so, <i>c</i> rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 3 (where a doubtful 1641 edition is referred to): 1604. <span class='fss'>O</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>OXONIENSIS ACADEMIÆ</span> | Funebre Officium
-| <span class='fss'><i>JN</i></span> | <span class='fss'>MEMORIAM</span> | <span class='fss'>HONORATISSIMAM</span> | <span class='fss'>SERENISSIMÆ ET BEATIS=</span>|<span class='fss'>SIMÆ
-ELISABETHÆ, NVPER</span> | <i>Angliæ, Franciæ, &amp; Hiberniæ</i> | <i>Reginæ</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 13<i>b</i>: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-182 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Lugentem</i>, 111 <i>Sævit,
-&amp;</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) poetical Latin dedication to
-the king: 1–182, the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Chiefly Latin poems in memory of queen Elizabeth: a few Greek occur, one Hebrew
-(p. 5, cf. 97, 171), one French (p. 64), one Italian (p. 171). The longest poem is one
-by Robert Burhill entitled “Invitatorius Panegyricus ... de ... Reginæ posteriore
-ad Oxoniam adventu,” which Wood mentions (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> iii. 18) as a separate publication.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Storre</b>, William. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>MANNER OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE CRVELL OVT-</span>|<span class='fss'>RAGIOVS
-MVRTHER OF</span> | <span class='sc'>William Storre</span> <i>Mast. of Art, Mi</i>⸗|nister, and
-Preacher at Market Raisin in | the County of Lincolne: | <span class='sc'>Committed</span> |
-<i>By Francis Cartwright one of his parishioners</i>, | <i>the</i> 30. <i>day of August
-Anno.</i> 1602. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12?],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup> (?): sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>thirsted
-for</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–11?) the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Extremely rare. The only known copy, in the Bodleian, has sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4 imperfect,
-and has lost all after that leaf. The pamphlet was reprinted with slight changes at
-London in 1613 with the title “Three bloodie Murders ...” of which this is the
-first. “The Life, confession, and heartie repentance of Francis Cartwright, gentleman;
-for his bloudie sinne in killing of one Master Storr, Master of Arts ... written with
-his owne hand” was published at London in 1621. Storre was a Fellow of Corpus
-Christi College at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Thornborough</b>, bp. John. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>TO BE
-MINISTRED</span> | <span class='fss'>AND TO BE ENQVIRED</span> | <span class='fss'>OF, AND ANSWERED IN</span> | the first generall
-visitation of | <i>the reverend father in God, John</i>, | <i>by Gods permission,
-Bishop</i> | <i>of Bristoll</i>. | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2<i>c</i>: 1603: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-18: p. 11 beg. <i>or keep</i>: Pica English.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) “The Tenor
-of the oath ministred to the Church-wardens,
-and sworne men”: 1–18, the
-articles, 37 + 41 in number.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Willoughby</b>, John. “<cite>A Treatise for the Preparation of the
-Lord’s Supper.</cite> Oxon. 1603, ded. to K. James I. at which time the
-author was living in Oxon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 744: very rare: a copy is mentioned in “A catalogue
-of choice English books ... which will be sold by Auction, 6 Aug. 1688” (Lond.
-1688, 4<sup>o</sup>) Appendix p. 7.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1604.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Abbot</b>, archbp. George. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>REASONS</span> | <span class='fss'>VVHICH DOCTOVR
-HILL</span> | <span class='fss'>HATH BROVGHT, FOR THE</span> | vpholding of Papistry, which is false⸗|<i>lie
-termed the Catholike Religion:</i> | <i>Vnmasked, and shewed to be very weake,
-and vpon exa</i>⸗|<i>mination most insufficient for that purpose</i>: | By <span class='sc'>George
-Abbot</span> Doctor of Divinity &amp; Deane | of the Cathedrall <i>Church in
-VVinchester</i>. | The first Part. | [two <i>mottos</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + “438” (really 436 for 384–5 are
-omitted in the pagination) + [8]: p. 11
-beg. <i>is both</i>, 111 <i>G. Abbot</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) large device of the
-University arms between woodcuts: (3)
-title: (5–7) Epistle dedicatorie to lord
-Buckhurst, dated from University college
-Oxford, 4 Jan. “1604”: 1–438, the
-work: (1–6) “To the Christian Reader.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 562. The book is in answer to dr. Thomas Hill’s
-“Quartron of reasons of Catholike Religion,” Antw. 1600: but contains only ten out
-of sixteen answers which the author had prepared.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bridges</b>, John, bp. of Oxford. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES TO</span> | <span class='fss'>BE ENQVIRED OF
-WITHIN THE</span> | Dioces of Oxford, giuen by the Reuerende | <i>Father in God</i>
-<span class='sc'>Iohn</span> <i>by Gods permission now</i> | Bishop of Oxford in his Visitation begun |
-<i>the second day of October</i>. 1604. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1604: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>your Parish</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the 55 articles: <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> “the oath
-of the Church-wardens and Sidemen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Corderoy</b>, Jeremy. <span class='fss'>A SHORT DIA-</span>|<span class='fss'>LOGVE, WHEREIN</span> | is
-proved, that no man | can be saved without good | vvorkes. Edit. 2.
-With some Additions | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[22] + 2 + 110 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>vvhich no
-doubt</i>, 101 <i>workes he may</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents: p. (1) title: (3–6) Epistle
-dedicatorie to sir Robert Vernon, signed
-“Ieremy Corderoy”: (7–21) “To the
-Christian Reader,” also signed: 1–2, 1–110,
-the work, the half title being “A
-short dialogue between a Gallant, a
-Scholler of Oxforde, and a Church-Papist ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 47. The first edition may be the one of <i>Lond.</i>
-1604 recorded by Watt in the <cite>Bibliotheca Britannica</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Hubbocke</b>, William. <span class='fss'>AN ORATI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ON GRATULATORY TO</span> | the
-High and Mighty <span class='sc'>Iames</span> of <i>England</i>, | <i>Scotland, France and Ireland,
-King, Defendor of the</i> | faith, &amp;c. On the twelft day of February last
-pre-|<i>sented, when his Maiesty entered the Tower of</i> | London to performe
-the residue of the solemni-|<i>ties of his Coronation thorough the citie of
-London</i> | differred by reason of the plague: and publi-|<i>shed by his Highnesse
-speciall allowance</i>. | <i>VVherein both the description of the Tower of</i> |
-<i>London and the vnion of the kingdomes is</i> | <i>compendiously touched</i>: | By |
-<span class='sc'>William Hvbbocke</span>. |[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>I wil giue</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, Latin dedication to the king:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the speech, in Latin: <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>,
-the same in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>Extremely rare: the only copy at present known is in the Bodleian, but there was a
-copy among the Harleian Pamphlets. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 753. The speech was
-really delivered on <i>March</i> 12, not February, 160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>, Hubbocke being Chaplain at the
-Tower. The speech describes the Tower as mint, armoury, jewel-house, &amp;c. It is reprinted
-in Nichols’s <cite>Progresses of king James I</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Oxford.</b> <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE VICECHAN-</span>|<span class='fss'>CELOVR</span> ... [&amp;c.
-exactly as 1603, <i>Oxford</i> Answer, variation <i>b</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [46],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>F</span><sup>2</sup> (&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>But
-these</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–6) dedication to the king: (7–15)
-“The Præface”: (16–17) Letter from
-Cambridge, 7 Oct. 1603, introduced by a
-short note: (18) quotation from Gregory
-Nazianzen: (19–22) “The humble petition
-of the Ministers ...”: (23–44) “The
-Answere ... to the Petition ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 3, and 1603. <span class='fss'>O</span>. This is a reprint of variation <i>b</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Panke</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SHORT ADMONI-</span>|tion by way of Dialogue, to
-all | those who hitherto vpon pretence of | of their vnworthines haue
-dangerously, | <i>in respect of their salvation, with held them-</i>|selues from
-comming to the Lordes Table: | <i>Exhorting them without any longer
-delay</i> | <i>to present themselues herevnto.</i> | <i>VVherein is shewed that there is an
-vn</i>⸗|worthy receiving of baptisme, an vnworthy | <i>hearing of the worde, and
-an vnworthy pre-</i>|senting our selues to prayer aswell as an vn·|worthy
-receiving of the supper, which | yet these vnworthies worthi-|ly thinke
-not of. | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Iohn Panke</span>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[72], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>adding to</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, epistle dedicatorie
-to lady Katherine Wroughton,
-dated from Broad Hinton, 25 Mar.
-“1604”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 6<sup>v</sup>, “To the Christian
-and Godly Reader”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the dialogue,
-between “Romannus the scholler”
-and “Tuberius the gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 274.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. [<b>Parkes</b>, Richard.] <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>BRIEFE</span> | <span class='fss'>AN-</span>|<span class='fss'>SVVERE VNTO CER-</span>|<span class='fss'>TAINE
-OBIECTIONS AND</span> | Reasons against the descension of Christ | <i>into hell,
-lately sent in writing vnto a Gen-</i>|<i>tleman in the Countrey</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 58
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>tweene Death</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-“To the Christian Reader”: 1–58, the
-work: (1) “A note for the Readers Instruction,”
-bibliographical, on the meaning
-of certain references to books.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1613. <span class='fss'>A</span>. This controversy about the Descent into Hell began with the manuscript (?)
-objections referred to in the title: then came this book (which is anonymous, but
-confessed by the author in his <cite>Apologie</cite>, see below), followed by (1) [Andrew Willett’s]
-<cite>Limbomastix, that is a Canuise of Limbus Patrum</cite> (published without the author’s
-knowledge), with a reply to the <cite>Brief answere</cite> (Lond. 1604); then (2) by an interminable
-rejoinder by Richard Parkes (<cite>An Apologie</cite>, Lond. 1607, of which the first part
-is a revised issue of the <cite>Brief Answer</cite>,) answered by Willett’s <cite>Loidoromastix: that
-is a scourge for a rayler</cite> (Cambr. 1607). The <cite>Brief Answer</cite> holds the orthodox
-opinion of the “local descension of Christ’s soul to Hell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Powel</b>, Gabriel. <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CONSIDERATION OF</span> | the Papists Reasons
-of State and Reli-|gion, for toleration of Poperie | in England, | <span class='fss'><i>INTIMATED
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>IN THEIR</i></span> | <i>Supplication vnto the Kings Maie-</i>|<i>stie, &amp; the States of
-the Pre-</i>|<i>sent Parliament</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-128: p. 11 beg. <i>Priest: or</i>, 111 <i>and was
-the</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) “To the Christian Reader,”
-signed “Oxford, from S<sup>t</sup>. Marie Hall. 13.
-of Aprill. 1604. ... Gabriel Powel”:
-1–125, the work: 126–128, “The Auctors
-Teares and humble Petition vnto Almightie
-God.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 25.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Sanford</b>, John. <span class='fss'>GODS ARROWE</span> | <i>Of the</i> | <span class='fss'><i>PESTILENCE</i></span>. | <i>By</i> |
-<span class='sc'>John Sanford</span> Master of Artes, and Chapleine of Magdalen | <i>Colledge in
-Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1604: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>that verse of</i>: Pica
-English. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
-Epistle dedicatorie to the University of
-Oxford, dated from Magdalen college 13
-Mar. 160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>: 1–55, the discourse, on Ps.
-xxxviii. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 472. Intended as a sermon, but the author found himself
-disabled in speech, and could not deliver it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Sanford</b>, J[ohn]. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | Le | <i>Guichet François</i>. | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>JANICVLA ET BREVIS INTRO-</i></span>|<i>ductio ad Linguam Gallicam</i>. | [three <i>mottos</i>:
-then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1604: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [40 +
-inserted leaf], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup>, and one leaf
-after <span class='fss'>D</span> 1: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>ta aliaq;</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, Latin dedication to dr.
-Bond president of Magdalen college Oxford,
-signed “I. Sanfordus”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>v</sup>
-“Ad Gallicæ Linguæ Studiosum Lectorem”:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 472. This is a French grammar and syntax written
-in Latin. After sign. <span class='fss'>D</span> 1 is a folio folded leaf, printed on one side only, a “Tabula
-coniugationum.” See 1605. <span class='fss'>S</span>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1605.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Davies</b>, John, of Hereford. <span class='fss'><i>MICROCOSMOS.</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE DISCOVERY</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF THE LITTLE</span> | World, with the governe-|ment thereof. | [<i>motto</i>] | By
-Iohn Davies. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 27: 1605: &amp;c. as 1603. <span class='fss'>D</span>. Contents:—exactly as 1603. <span class='fss'>D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See 1603. <span class='fss'>D</span>, of which this is a reissue, with no alteration whatever except
-a new titlepage.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Hutten</b>, Leonard. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE TO A CER-</span>|<span class='fss'>TAINE TREATISE
-OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CROSSE IN BAPTISME.</span> | <i>Intituled</i> | A Short Treatise of the Crosse
-in Baptisme, con-|tracted into this Syllogisme. | [<i>the syllogism follows in
-six lines</i>] | VVherein not only the weaknesse of the Syllogisme it|selfe,
-but also of the grounds and proofes there-|of, are plainely discovered. |
-<i>By L. H. Doct. of Divinitie.</i> | [two <i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-139 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>tions were</i>, 111
-<i>swaded to set</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) Epistle dedicatory
-to the archbp. of Canterbury, signed
-“Leon. Hutten”: 1–139, the answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 533. The book to which this is a reply is [William
-Bradshaw’s] <cite>Short treatise of the crosse in Baptisme</cite>, <i>n. p.</i> 1604, in which the unlawfulness
-of the use of the cross was insisted on.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Hutton</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>REASONS FOR REFVSAL</span> | <span class='fss'>OF SVBSCRIPTION TO
-THE</span> | booke of Common praier, vnder the | hands of certaine Ministers
-of Devon, and | Cornwall word for word as they were ex-|hibited by
-them to the Right Reverend | Father in God <span class='sc'>William Co-</span>|<span class='fss'>TON</span> Doctor
-of Divinitie | <i>L. Bishop of Exceter</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>VVITH AN ANSVVERE AT SE-</i></span>|verall
-times returned them in publike conference | <i>and in diverse sermons vpon
-occasion prea-</i>|ched in the Cathedrall Church of <i>Exceter</i>, | by <span class='sc'>Thomas
-Hvtton</span>, Bachi-|ler of Divinitie &amp; fellow of | S<sup>t</sup>. Iohns Coll. in Oxon. |
-<span class='fss'>AND NOW PVBLISHED AT</span> | <i>the very earnest intreatie of some especiall</i> | friends
-for a farther contentment of o-|ther the Kings Maiesties good | and
-loyall subiects. | [<i>motto</i> then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 200:
-p. 11 beg. <i>are, wherein</i>, 111 <i>times haue
-thought</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-1 title: 3–6, Epistle dedicatorie to the
-bp. of Exeter: 7–10, “To my fellow
-brethren the ministers of Devon and
-Cornwall ...”: 10–17, “To the Christian
-Reader”: 18–34, the Reasons: 35–200,
-the Answer to the Reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 646. A “Second and last part of Reasons for Refusall
-...” was published in London in 1606, and “The Remoouall of certaine imputations
-laid vpon the Ministers of Deuon: and Cornwall by one M. T. H. ...,” printed abroad
-in 1606: and other books on the controversy later.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>James</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>CATALOGVS LIBRORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>BIBLIOTHECÆ PVB-</span>|<span class='fss'>LICÆ
-QVAM VIR ORNATIS-</span>|simus <span class='sc'>Thomas Bodleivs</span> Eques | Auratus in
-Academia Oxoniensi nuper in-|stituit; continet autem Libros Alphabeti-|cè
-dispositos secundum quatuor | Facultates: | <span class='sc'>Cvm</span> | <span class='fss'><i>QUADRVPLICI
-ELENCHO</i></span> | Expositorum S. Scripturæ, Aristotelis, Iuris | <i>vtriusq<span class='small'>ue</span> &amp;
-Principum Medicinæ, ad vsum</i> | Almæ Academiæ Oxoniensis. | <i>Auctore</i> |
-<span class='sc'>Thoma James</span> | Ibidem Bibliothecario. | [<i>woodcuts</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 18: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-“655” (really 651) + [67]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>A.</i> 11. 1. <i>Chron.</i>, 111 <i>P.</i> 1. 1. <i>Philon.</i>, p.
-501 <i>V</i> ¶ <i>Hug. de</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “Observanda in
-hoc catalogo”: (3–4) Epistola dedicatoria
-to Henry Frederick prince of Wales:
-(5–8) “Præfatio ad Benevolum Lectorem,”
-dated “E Bibliotheca publica
-Oxoniæ Iunij 27. Anno. 1605.”: 1–162,
-catalogue of “Libri Theologici”: 163–179,
-“Catalogus Expositorum S. Scripturæ
-iuxta ordinem Voluminum vtriusque
-Testamenti dispositus”: 180, “Ad Lectorem”:
-181–218, “Libri Medici”:
-219–274, “Libri Iuris”: 275–415, “Libri
-Artium”: 417–425, “Interpretes librorum
-Aristotelis”: 427–640, “Appendix”
-to each of the four faculties: 641–646,
-“Appendix ad Expositores S Scripturæ”:
-646–648, “Appendix ad Interpretes Lib.
-Arist.”: 648–651, “Interpretes Juris Civilis”:
-651–652, “Interpretes Juris Canonici”:
-652–653, “In omnia vel pleraque
-Scripta Hippocrat.”: 653–655,
-“Scriptores in Cl. Galenum”: 655,
-“Scriptores in Dioscoridem”: (2–67)
-“Index Auctorum in hoc volumine”:
-(68) “Nomina Hebraica quæ corruptè
-imprimuntur: &amp; quia defuerunt characteres
-Hebraici, Latinè hîc omnia exprimimus”:
-(68) “Errata in Latinis nominibus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii 466. and 1620. <span class='fss'>J</span>. The catalogue includes also the
-MSS. then in the Library. In the dedication the “Bibliotheca Bodleiana” is stated
-to be not yet four years old, having been formally opened on 8 Nov. 1602. The
-preface gives an interesting account of the early history of the Library. In the pagination
-a leaf is omitted after p. 426, but “457” follows “450”: the total number of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>pages is no doubt 726 (signn. ¶ <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Y</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>Z</span><sup>2</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>Z</span>z, <span class='fss'>A</span>aa-<span class='fss'>Z</span>zz, <span class='fss'>A</span>aaa-<span class='fss'>X</span>xxx<sup>4</sup> (&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup>), so that
-Upcott (<cite>English Topography</cite>, iii. p. 1122, Lond. 1818) is wrong. Other editions of the
-complete catalogue of Bodleian printed books were issued at Oxford in 1620, 1674,
-1738 and 1843, and one of the MSS. in 1697.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>King</b>, John, bp. of London. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES MINISTRED</span> | <span class='fss'>IN THE
-VISITATION OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE RIGHT WORSHIPFVL MAI-</span>|ster <span class='sc'>Iohn King</span>, Doctor of
-divinitie, Arch-|deacon of Nottingham, in the yeare of | <i>our Lord God</i>.
-1605. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8 + ?]:
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> + ?: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Visiting of</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-?, the articles.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. The only recorded copy, in the Bodleian, contains only sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>. For
-the issuer see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 294.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Kingsmill</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>CLASSICVM</span> | <span class='fss'>POENITENTIALE</span>, | <span class='sc'>Thoma
-Kingesmillo</span>, auctore, | <i>olim Socio Coll. Magdalenensis &amp; non ita</i> | <i>pridem
-Hebraicæ Linguæ in alma Aca-</i>|<i>demia Oxon: professore regio</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 26: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [56] +
-130 + [2] + 65 + [3]: p. 11 be. <i>resipiscentiam</i>,
-111 <i>mitto cætera</i>, 2nd p. 11 beg.
-<i>suluerunt, vos</i>: English and (2nd part)
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–47) dedication to the king: (49–56)
-“Ad Lectorem”: 1–130, the treatise:
-(1) a title:—“[<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS</span> |
-<span class='fss'>DE SCANDALO</span> | <span class='fss'>EODEM AVCTORE.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]”
-Impr. 11, 1605: 1–65, the second
-treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 758. These two treatises on the moral state of England
-are printed without list of contents, index or even division into paragraphs. No one
-but the author and compositor can have ever read them, and the former had been
-insane, though according to Wood he recovered his powers.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Oxford</b>, Christ Church. <span class='fss'>MVSA HOSPITALIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIÆ CHRISTI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OXON.</span> | <i>Jn adventum Fælicissimum Sereniss.</i> <span class='sc'>Iacobi</span> | <i>Regis</i>, <span class='sc'>Ann</span>æ <i>Reginæ</i>,
-&amp; <span class='sc'>Henrici</span> <i>Prin-</i>|<i>cipis ad eandem Ecclesiam.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 18: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [48],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the
-poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Christ Church poems to commemorate the visit of the King, Queen, and Prince
-Henry to Oxford and Christ Church, 27–30 Aug. 1605. All but one (Greek) are in
-Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Oxford</b>, New College. <span class='fss'>ENCOMION</span> | <span class='fss'>RODOLPHI VVARCOP-</span>|<span class='fss'>PI ORNATISSIMI,
-QVEM</span> | habuit Anglia, Armigeri, qui commu-|ni totius patriæ
-luctu extinctus est | <i>Die Iovis Kalend. Aug.</i> 1605. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 18: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Magne Deus</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to Will. lord
-Knollys de Grays, unsigned: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 3<sup>v</sup>,
-poems to the memory of Warcop, the
-first signed “W. Kingesmillus,” the
-editor of the volume, “Oxonij e Coll.
-Novo die 25. Octob.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> i. 754, <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite> i. 366. The poems, which are all except
-one (Greek) in Latin, are by New College men and edited by William Kingsmill of
-New College, a nephew of Warcop, who was himself at Ch. Ch. The device on the
-titlepage bears the arms of New College, between W. W. (William of Wykeham).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Sanford</b>, John. <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>BRIEFE EX-</span>|<span class='fss'>TRACT OF THE FOR-</span>|<span class='fss'>MER LATIN
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>GRAMMER,</span> | <span class='fss'>DONE INTO ENGLISH, FOR</span> | the easier instruction of | <i>the
-Learner</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>L in the
-middest</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, dedication to William
-Grey son of Arthur lord Grey of Wilton,
-signed “John Sanford”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the
-extracts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 472. The word “Latin” on the title seems to
-be a mistake for “French,” see 1604. <span class='fss'>S</span>, to which this is a sort of appendix.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Sanford</b>, John. <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMER</span> | <span class='fss'>OR INTRODVCTION</span> | <span class='fss'>TO THE
-ITALIAN</span> | <span class='fss'><i>TONGVE</i>.</span> | §§§ | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25: 1605: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp [8] + 44
-+ [4?]: p. 11 beg. <i>as i Soldati</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-motto from Dante: (3–6) dedication to
-Magdalen college, Oxford, signed “Joannes
-Sanford”: (7) “To the reader”:
-(8) poem “Sur l’Autheur” in French,
-by Jean More: 1–44, the grammar:
-perhaps two blank leaves follow.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>> ii. 472. The grammar includes a short syntax.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. *<b>Thornborough</b>, John, bp. of Bristol. <span class='fss'>THE IOIE-</span>|<span class='fss'>FVLL AND
-BLESSED REV-</span>|niting the two mighty &amp; famous King⸗|domes, England &amp;
-Scotland into their an-|<i>cient name of great Brittaine</i>. | By <span class='sc'>John Bristoll</span>. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: [1605?]: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 80: p. 11 beg. <i>Therefore the wise</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) dedication to king James: 1–80,
-the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The preface alludes to “my two bookes,” the other being “A discourse plainely
-proving the euident vtilitie and vrgent necessitie of the ... Vnion of ... England
-and Scotland ...” (Lond., 1604, sm. 4<sup>o</sup>), which latter was the subject of a remonstrance
-of the House of Commons to the House of Lords, 26 May 1604, ending in an
-apology on the part of the author. There is nothing but Wood’s express statement
-(<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> iii. 5) to settle whether this book was published at the close of 1604 or in
-1605: so that statement has been accepted. Otherwise it would seem that the two
-books were not long separated in point of time. Both were reprinted at London in
-1641.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Wakeman</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'>PRACTISE.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> |
-Sermon preached on the Act-Sun-|<i>day in S<sup>t</sup>. Maries Church in</i> | <i>Oxford.
-Iul.</i> 8. 1604. | By <span class='sc'>Rob. Wakeman</span> Bachelor | of Divinity and fellow of
-Balioll | Colledge in Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: 1605: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-92 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>ple but serued</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 2,
-“Points handled in this Sermon”: 3–92,
-the sermon, on Acts ii. 46.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 471, and 1612. <span class='fss'>W</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Wakeman</b>, Robert. <span class='sc'>Salomons Exaltation.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON
-PREA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CHED BEFORE THE</span> | <span class='sc'>Kings</span> Maiestie at None-|<i>Such, April.</i> 30. 1605. |
-By <span class='sc'>Rob. Wakeman</span> Bachelor | of Divinity and fellow of Balioll | Colledge
-in Oxford. |<a id='t63'></a> [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: 1605: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[2] + 68 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>halt goe</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-1–68, the sermon, on 2 Chron. ix. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 471.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1606.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. [<b>Burhill</b>, Robert.] <span class='fss'>IN CONTRO-</span>|<span class='fss'>VERSIAM INTER IO-</span>|<span class='fss'>HANNEM
-HOWSONVM</span> | &amp; <i>Thomam Pyum</i> S. T. Doctores de | <i>novis post divortium
-ob adulteri-</i>|<i>um nuptijs</i>. | <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS MODESTVS ET</span> | Christianus in sex
-commentationes, &amp; | <i>Elenchum monitorium distinctus</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>VBI ET AD EXCVSAM
-D. PYI AD</i></span> | D. Howsonum Epistolam, quâ libri Howsoni-|<i>ani
-refutationem molitur, &amp; ad ejusdem</i> | <i>alteram manuscriptam Epistolam
-e-</i>|<i>iusdem argumenti, quâ contra</i> Al-|bericum Gentilem <i>iurispruden-</i>|<i>tiæ
-apud Oxonienses professorem</i> | <i>regium disputat, diligenter</i> | <i>respondetur</i>. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1606: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-206 + [20]: p. 11 beg. <i>non licuisse</i>, 111
-<i>polluatur? Ita</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “Auctoris protestatio
-de calumniâ”: (3) “Admonitiones
-ad Lectorem”: (4) 17 lines of
-errata, not found in all copies, &amp; sometimes
-pasted on: (5–6) Latin poem to
-Rich. Bancroft archbp. of Canterbury:
-(7–11) “Dispositio totius operis”: 1–176,
-the work in six parts: 177–206, the
-Elenchus: (1) “Ad Lectorem,” a preface
-to what follows: (2–10) “To Master
-Doctor Pye,” a letter in English from
-dr. “John Rainolds,” dated 27 Feb.
-[160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>?]: (13) “Ad Lectorem,” introductory:
-(15–20) Latin letter from Albericus
-Gentilis to dr. Howson, dated from London,
-12 Aug. 1603.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> iii. 18, also ii. 15 and 60. Thomas Pye’s work against
-Howson’s Thesis is entitled “Epistola ad ... D. Johannem Housonum, quâ Dogma
-ejus ... refutatur ...” Lond. 1603. The signatures show that this work (which
-is strictly anonymous) is part of the art. <cite>Howson</cite> below, and was indeed printed
-before it, and written before there was any intention of reprinting the <cite>Thesis</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Howson</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>VXORE DI-</span>|<span class='fss'>MISSA PROPTER FOR-</span>|nicationem
-aliam non licet | <i>superinducere</i>. | <span class='fss'>TERTIA THESIS</span> | <span class='fss'>IOANNIS HOWSONI IN-</span>|ceptoris
-in Sacra Theologia, propo-|sita &amp; disputata in Vesperijs | <i>Oxonij</i>.
-1602. | <i><span class='fss'>ACCESSIT EIVSDEM THESEOS</span></i> | <i>defensio contra reprehensiones T.
-Pyi</i> | <i>S. T. Doctoris.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 28: 1606: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 36
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>tis impetum</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-“Ad Lectorem,” a note that the pages
-of the 1602 edition are noted in the
-margin, because the “Defensio” refers
-to them: 1–36, the thesis.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 518, and 1602. <span class='fss'>H</span>, of which this is a verbatim reprint. The
-entry above under <i>Burhill</i> is really part of this work, but treated separately for
-convenience.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>King</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>FOVRTH</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>HAMPTON
-COVRT ON</i></span> | <i>Tuesday the last of Sept.</i> 1606. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>John
-Kinge</span> Doctor of Divinity, and | <i>Deane of Christ-Church in Oxon</i>. |
-[<i>device</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1606: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 49
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>stration of the</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within lines: 1–49, the sermon, on Cant.
-viii. 11: 49, “Faults escaped in the
-printing ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 295: and 1607. <span class='fss'>K</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>4. <b>Oxford</b>, Magdalen college. <span class='fss'>BEATÆ MAR-</span>|<span class='fss'>IAE MAGDALENAE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>LACHRYMÆ, IN OBITVM</span> | <span class='fss'>NOBILISSIMI IVVENIS GU-</span>|<span class='sc'>lielmi Grey</span>, Domini
-<span class='sc'>Arthvri</span> | <span class='sc'>Grey</span> <i>Baronis de VVilton, aureæ</i> | <i>Periscelidis Equitis Clarissimi</i>,
-| <i>Filij natu minoris</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1606: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-42: p. 11 beg. <i>Perpetuos</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
-to lady Joanna Sybil Grey, dowager
-lady Grey, mother of William Grey, signed
-“Rob. Barnes,” dated Magd. coll. Oxford,
-11 March (160<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>): 1–42, the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems by members of Magdalen college, Oxford, in memory of William Grey, who
-matriculated at Magdalen, 18 May 1604 and died 18 Feb. 160<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>. The editor of the
-volume was a son of the printer of the book and a Fellow of Magdalen. The poems
-are Latin except four Greek, one Spanish (?) and one Italian.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. *†<b>Oxford</b>, University. [Orders for the Market of the City of
-Oxford, issued by the Chancellor of the University: beg. “Thomas
-Earle of Dorset,” ends “transgressor of this commaudement. God
-saue the King.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No impr.: [1606]: (one) obl. fol.:
-pp. [2]: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) the orders (31 in number).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>“Proclaimed July 2<sup>o</sup>, 1606. Dr. Abbotts Vice-Chancellor,” according to a MS.
-note on the copy in the Oxford University Archives.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Rawlinson</b>, rev. John. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>FOVRE SVM-</span>|<span class='fss'>MONS OF THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>SHVLAMITE</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <i>Sermon preached at Pauls Crosse vpon</i> | <i>Rogation
-Sunday, the</i> 5. <i>of</i> | May. 1605. | By <span class='sc'>John Rawlinson</span>, Bache-|lor of
-Divinitie, and fellow of | Saint Iohns Colledge in | Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>: then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: 1606: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[10] + 82 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>and commeth</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–9) “To the Reader,” dated from St.
-John’s College in Oxon, 10 Jan [160<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>]:
-1–82 the sermon, on Cant. vi. 13: [(3–4)
-have not been seen.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 506. The author states that the sermon occupied
-two hours in delivery.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Trelcatius</b>, Lucas. <span class='fss'>SCHOLASTICA,</span> | <span class='fss'>ET METHODICA</span>, | Locorum
-Communium, | <i>S. Theologiæ Institutio</i>, | Didacticè, &amp; Elencticè in Epitome
-explicata: | <span class='fss'>IN QVA</span>, | <i>Veritas Locorum Communium, definitionis cu-</i>|<i>iusq<span class='small'>ue</span>
-Loci, per Causas suas Analysi asseritur:</i> | <i>Contraria verò Argumenta,
-imprimis</i> | <i>Bellarmini, Generalium</i> | <i>Solutionum appendice</i> | <i>refutantur</i>:
-Auctore, <span class='sc'>Lvca Trelcatio</span>, L. F. | <i>Pastore, &amp; Professore</i>. | [<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1606: (eights?) 12<sup>o</sup>?.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known at present from a titlepage in the Bagford collections at the British
-Museum, but no doubt other copies exist. Probably a reprint of the first edition,
-Lugd. Bat. 1604, 4<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Wakeman</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>IONAHS SERMON,</span> | <span class='fss'>AND</span> | <i>Ninivehs repentance</i>.
-| <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT</span> | Pauls Crosse Jun. 20. 1602. and now |
-thought fit to be published for | our meditations in | these times. | <i>By</i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span><span class='sc'>Ro. Wakeman</span> <i>Master of Arts</i>, | <i>and fellow of Balioll Colledge</i> | <i>in
-Oxford</i>. | The second Impression. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 25<i>a</i>: 1606: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 102 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>to send his</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–5) “To the Christian Reader,” dated
-from “Balioll Colledg in Oxford October.
-10. 1603.”: (7) “Ionah. 3. 4. 5. The
-Analysis of the Text.”: 1–102, the sermon,
-on Jonah iii. 4–5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 471. No copy of the first impression, which may
-have been printed at Oxford in 1603 or 1604, has yet been seen. There is no allusion
-to this being a second edition, in the preface.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1607.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bunny</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE TO A</span> | <span class='fss'>POPISH LIBELL IN-</span>|tituled
-<i>A Petition to the Bishops</i>, | <i>Preachers, and Gospellers</i>, | lately
-spread abroad in | the North partes. | By <span class='sc'>Francis Bvnny</span> <i>Prebenda-</i>|<i>ry
-of Durham; sometimes fel-</i>|<i>low of Magdalen Col-</i>|<i>ledge in Oxford</i>. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1607: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 159 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>who would</i>, 111
-<i>receiue some</i>: English Roman. Contents:—pp.
-(1–2) [not seen]: (3) title:
-(5–15) “To all Popish Recusants ...”:
-1–159, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 201. The “Petition” came out in “September last”
-(1606?).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Cleland</b>, James. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΗΡΩ-ΠΑΙΔΕΙΑ</span>, | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>THE INSTITVTION OF A</span> |
-<span class='fss'>YOVNG NOBLE MAN</span>, | <span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>James Cleland</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-“271” (really 269, for 249–50 are omitted
-in the pagination) + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>the
-first booke</i>, 111 <i>fained voice</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines:
-(3–4) dedication to prince Charles: (5–8)
-“To the Noble Reader”: (9) “The
-Subiect and Order of these six Bookes”:
-(15) some errata, with introductory note:
-(16) dedication of the preface and book
-1 to lord Hay: 1–10 the preface: 11–271,
-the work in six books each with a dedication,
-see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1612 <span class='fss'>C</span>, which is simply a reissue with new titlepage. The author recommends
-a nobleman to go to no University, but to Prince Henry’s Court or Academy at
-Nonsuch. The 2nd book is dedicated to Thomas Mourray, tutor to prince Charles:
-the 3rd to George earl of Essex, son of the marquess of Huntly: the 4th to sir John
-Harington, son of lord Harington: the 5th to mr. Francis Stewart Master of Mourray,
-and to mr. John Stewart son of the duke of Lennox: the 6th to Robert earl of Essex.
-The author was not an Oxford man, nor, apparently, connected with the place in any
-way.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Cooper</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>NONÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>NOVEMBRIS</span> | <i>Æternitati Consecratæ</i> |
-<span class='sc'>Jn</span> | <i>Memoriam admirandæ illius liberationis</i> Principis, | <i>&amp;</i> Populi <i>Anglicani
-à Proditione</i> | <i>Sulphurea</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] +
-124: p. 11 beg. <i>Num laqueus</i>, 111 <i>mus
-Deum</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3) dedication to the king and
-parliament: (4–7) “Præfatio ad Lectorem ...,”
-signed “Thomas Cooper”:
-(8–23) “Præludia ad Nonas,” short poems
-by Cooper: (23) “Errata ...”: 1–124,
-the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 612, <cite>Fasti</cite> i. 285, but the identity of the author appears
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>to be still quite uncertain. The work is a rhetorical commentary, almost a sermon, on
-the Gunpowder Plot of 5 Nov. 1605: but seems to afford no clue to the connexion of
-the author with Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>D</b>[<b>unster]</b>, I[ohn]. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>PROTESTATION A-</span>|<span class='fss'>GAINST POPERY BY</span> |
-<i>way of a Confession of Christian</i> | <i>Religion collected for the benefit</i> | <i>of
-private friends</i>. | [two <i>mottos</i>: then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1607: eights, 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2]
-+ 38: p. 11 beg. <i>of his transgression</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-1–38, the treatise, signed on last page
-“I. D.”, followed by a short poem “To
-the reader” signed “Roger Knight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1609 <span class='fss'>D</span>, and for the author Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 142. The poem on p. 38
-explains that the work was written “some time agoe” “for priuate vse.” The
-Bodleian Catalogue (perhaps following Draudius’s <cite>Bibliotheca Exotica</cite>, Frankf. 1625,
-p. 293) ascribes this book to John Dunster, but Wood did not know the author.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>James</b>, dr. Thomas. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>CONCORDANTI<i>Æ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SANCTORVM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PATRVM HOC EST VERA ET</span> | <span class='fss'>PIA LIBRI CANTICORVM PER</span> | Patres
-vniversos tam Græcos quam Lati-|<i>nos expositio</i>. | <i>Auctore Thoma Iames
-in Alma Academia Oxo-</i>|<i>niensi Proto-Bibliothecario &amp;</i> | <i>olim Socio Coll.
-Novi.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 18
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. 930. <i>Hieron.</i>; English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-motto: (3) “Lectori pio doctoque ...”,
-dated 30 July 1607: (4) List of Commentators
-on the Song of Solomon: 1–18,
-the work, a catena of references to printed
-expositions of the Song: 1–2, bibliographical
-list of editions cited.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. One of the Bodleian copies (4<sup>o</sup> A. 64 Th.) has a MS.
-list by James of 26 presentation copies, out of 78 copies “receaued of Mr. Joseph
-[Barnes?] ... 30 Jul”, and some private opinions and suggestions about the book.
-The preface explains that if this instalment was well received, the author intended to
-proceed to similar publications for the rest of the Bible.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>King</b>, bp. John. “John King’s Five Sermons preached
-before the King. Oxf. 1607.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in “Catalogi variorum ... librorum Richardi Davis ... Pars Tertia” (1688),
-p. 83, cf. “... Pars secunda” (1686), p. 125. Rare. See next art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>King</b>, bp. John. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>FOVRTH</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>HAMPTON COVRT ON</i></span> | <i>Tuesday the last of Sept.</i> 1606. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>John Kinge</span> Doctor of Divinity, and | <i>Deane of Christ-Church
-in Oxon.</i> | [<i>device</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 49 +
-[1]: p. 11 beg. <i>stration of the</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-lines: 3–49, the sermon, on Cant. viii. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reprint of 1606 <span class='fss'>K</span>. This is perhaps part of the preceding article.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>King</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN OXO<sup>N</sup></span>: | the 5. of
-November. 1607. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>John Kinge</span> Doctor of Divinity,
-Deane | <i>of Christ Church, and Vicechancellor</i> | of the Vniversity. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>Impr. 7: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 35
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>causes and</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—(3) title, within lines:
-1–35 the sermon, on Ps. xlvi. 7–11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 295.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Prideaux</b>, John. <span class='fss'>TABVL<i>Æ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>AD GRAM-</span>|<span class='fss'>MATICA GRÆCA</span> | <span class='fss'>INTRODVCTORIÆ.</span>
-| <span class='fss'>IN QVIBVS</span> | <i>Succinctè compingitur, brevissima, sed tamen ex-</i>|<i>pedita,
-singularum partium orationis decli</i>⸗|<i>nabilium, Variandi ratio</i>. |
-<i>Accessit</i> | Vestibuli vice, ad eandem linguam <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">παραίνεσις</span>, in gratiam |
-tyronum, quibus vt convenit explicatiora evol-|vere, ita necesse est hæc
-ipsa | ad vnguem tenere. |<a id='t68'></a> [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [34],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup>, (&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>profero
-clarâ</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to dr.
-Tho. Holland, signed “Jo. Prideaux”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>v</sup> “In Isocratis Busiridem de
-Græcæ linguæ studio, Præfatio”: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span> 4<sup>v</sup>
-“Grammatices Græcæ. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Σχεδάρια.</span>”,
-the work in six sections: (&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup> “Conclusio
-ad Lectorem,” and short epigram.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267 where the date 1608 may be an error for 1607: and
-1629 <span class='fss'>P</span>, 1639 <span class='fss'>P</span>, both of which edd. supply the date of the dedication as “1 Jan.
-1607 = 160<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span>,” but are otherwise apparently simply reprints. The dedication declares
-that the work was due to the suggestion of dr. Holland, and done in the last Whitsuntide
-holidays (1606).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Wake</b>, Isaac. <span class='fss'>REX PLATONICVS</span>: | <span class='sc'>Sive</span>, | <span class='fss'>DE POTEN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TISSIMI
-PRINCIPIS</span> | <span class='fss'>IACOBI BRITANNIARVM</span> | Regis, ad illustrissimam Academiam |
-<i>Oxoniensem, adventu, Aug.</i> 27. | Anno. 1605. | <i><span class='fss'>NARRATIO</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>AB ISAACO
-VVAKE, PVBLICO A-</span></i>|<i>cademiæ ejusdem Oratore, tum temporis</i> | <i>conscripta,
-nunc verò in lucem</i> | <i>edita, non sine authoritate</i> | <i>Superiorum.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1607: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-140 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>cademiæ</i>, 111 <i>Romanas</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title; (5–8) dedication to Henry
-prince of Wales, dated “Oxoniæ, e Collegio
-Mertonensi”, 19 June (1607): 1–140,
-the work, with the running title
-“Rex Platonicus, Sive Musæ Regnantes”:
-(1–2) Latin letter from the Chancellor of
-the University to the Vice-Chancellor,
-about the royal visit, with a preface by
-Wake.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 540. For other edd., which are only slightly altered,
-but add a funeral oration, see next art., and 1615 <span class='fss'>W</span>, 1627 <span class='fss'>W</span>, 1635 <span class='fss'>W</span>, 1663 <span class='fss'>W</span>. The
-visit of the King was from 27 to 30 Aug. 1605. The author says he wrote the account
-at the actual time of the visit. The oration was also printed at Oxford in 1608, and
-in English in Fuller’s <cite>Abel Redivivus</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. ——. <span class='sc'>Rex Platonicvs</span>: | <span class='fss'>SIVE,</span> | <span class='fss'>DE POTENTIS-</span>|<span class='fss'>SIMI PRINCIPIS IA-</span>|<span class='fss'>COBI
-BRITANNIARVM</span> | Regis, ad illustrissimam Aca-|demiam Oxoniensem, |
-<i>adventu, Aug.</i> 27. | Anno. 1605. | <span class='fss'><i>NARRATJO</i></span> | <span class='fss'>AB ISAA</span>c<span class='fss'>O WAKE, PVBLI-</span>|co
-Academiæ ejusdem Oratore, | <i>tunc temporis conscripta, nunc i-</i>|<i>terum in
-lucem edita, multis</i> | <i>in locis auctior &amp; emen-</i>|<i>datior</i>. | Editio Secunda. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1607: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 224 + [18]: p. 11 beg. <i>minum memoriam</i>,
-111 <i>cumano irruunt</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) dedication to prince Henry, dated
-as 1st ed.: 1–224, the work: (1–3) the
-Chancellor’s letter, with preface: (4)
-device: (5) <span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>FVNEBRIS HA-</span>|bita
-in Templo be-|<i>atæ Mariæ Oxon.</i> | Ab
-<span class='sc'>Isaaco Wake</span>, | <span class='fss'>PVBLICO ACADE-</span>|miȩ
-Oratore, <i>Maij</i> 25. <i>An.</i> | 1607. quum
-mœsti | <i>Oxonienses, pijs mani-</i>|<i>bus</i> <span class='sc'>Iohannis</span>
-| <span class='sc'>Rainoldi</span> | <i>parentarent</i>. | [<i>woodcuts</i>,
-then Impr. 11, 1607.]: (6–18) the
-oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare: see preceding art.: for edd. of the Oration, see also preceding art.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1608.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Chetwind</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>CONCIO AD</span> | <span class='fss'>CLERVM PRO GRA-</span>|dû habita
-Oxoniæ. 9. die | <i>Decembris.</i> 1607. | Per <span class='sc'>Edoardvm Chetwind</span> è Coll. |
-<i>Exoniensi sacræ Theologiæ</i> | <i>Bacchalaureum.</i> | <i>Matri Academiæ Sacra.</i> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1608: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4]
-+ 40 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>vt vobis</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) “Methodus, brevisque summa totius
-concionis”: 1–40, the sermon, on
-Acts xx. 24: (1) “Ad Lectores ...
-amicos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 641.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Cooke</b>, James. <span class='fss'>IVRIDICA TRIVM QV<i>Æ</i>STI-</span>|<i>onum ad Maiestatem
-pertinentium deter-</i>|<i>minatio</i>; | <span class='fss'>IN QVARVM PRIMA ET VLTIMA</span> | Processus
-Iudicialis contra <i>H. Garnetum</i> institutus, ex Iure Civili &amp; Canonico defenditur: |
-<span class='fss'>IN SECVNDA SVPREMA ET VNI-</span>|versalis Principum potestas explicatur,
-&amp; ex eisdem | <i>principijs succinctè asseritur</i>; | <span class='fss'>OPPOSITA PRAECIPVE
-EPISTOLAE CVI-</span>|dam Dedicatoriæ Ad clarissimum virum. D. E. C. | militem,
-advocatum fiscalem Generalem à Ca-|tholico, (vt ipse subscribit) Theo-|logo
-conscriptæ; | <i>Habita Oxoniæ in vesperijs Comitiorum Anno Do-</i>|<i>mini</i>
-1608. <i>à</i> <span class='sc'>Jacobo Cooke</span> <i>Novi</i> | <i>Collegij Socio Inceptore in</i> | <i>Iure Civili</i>. |
-[<i>motto</i>, in Greek: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 49
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>intelligitur?</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) dedication to Tho. Bilson bp. of Winchester:
-1–49, the three theses and their
-determination.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 95. The theses were for the degree of D.C.L., chosen
-by the candidate himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Hakewill</b>, George. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>VANITIE OF</span> | the eie. | First beganne
-for the Comfort of a | Gentlewoman bereaved of | her sight, and
-since vpon | occasion inlarged &amp; | published for the | Common | good, |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>George Hakewill</span> <i>Master</i> | <i>of Arts, and fellow of Exe-</i>|<i>ter Coll. in
-Oxford</i>. [<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1608: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6]
-+ 161 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>and by consequence</i>,
-111 <i>gers may not</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6) “The
-Contents ...”: pp. 1–161, the work, in
-31 chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 255: and next art., 1615 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1633 <span class='fss'>H</span>. The treatise
-contains all that can be said on physical and moral grounds against the Eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. ——. [exactly as above, except that after “<i>Oxford</i>.” is added]
-“| <i>The second Edition augmented by the</i> | <i>Authour.</i> |”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1608: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[6] + 170 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>and by consequence</i>,
-111 <i>maker; I</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—(1–6) as 1st ed.: 1–170, the
-work, in 31 chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See preceding art., of which this is a reprint with additions, except that the titlepage
-is not reprinted but only re-set.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>5. <b>James</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIE FOR IOHN</span> | <span class='sc'>Wickliffe</span>, shewing
-his conformitie | with the new Church of England; with an-|swere to
-such slaunderous obiections, | as haue beene lately vrged against him |
-by Father Parsons, the Apolo-|gists, and others. | <span class='fss'><i>COLLECTED CHIEFLY
-OVT OF</i></span> | diuerse works of his in written hand, by Gods e-|speciall providence
-remaining in the Publike | Library at Oxford, of the Honorable
-foun-|dation of S<sup>r</sup>. <span class='sc'>Thomas Bodley</span> Knight: | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Thomas James</span> keeper
-of the same. [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 75
-+ [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>providence, which</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) dedication to sir Edw. Cooke, lord
-chief justice of the Common Pleas, dated
-“From the Library in Oxford <i>Feb.</i> 10.
-1608”: (8) “Faults escaped in the printing ...”:
-1–3, “the Preface vnto all true
-Catholicks, and Christian Readers”: 5–75,
-the Apology: 2–5, “Iohn VVickliffs
-life collected out of diuerse Auctors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. This is closely connected with the Wycliff art.,
-below: and on p. 60 marg. the other is said to be “printed with this Apologie”: the
-form of the signatures also indicates connexion. The Bodleian MSS. quoted seem to
-be MSS. Bodl. 288 and 647, perhaps with others.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>King</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT WHITE-</span>|<span class='fss'>HALL THE 5.
-DAY OF NO.</span>|vember, ann. 1608. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>John King</span> Doctor
-of Divinity, Deane of | <i>Christ=Church in Oxon: and Vicechauncel-</i>|<i>lor of
-the Vniversity</i>. | <i>Published by commandement.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 40
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Seldome shal</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-lines: 1–40, the sermon, on Ps. xi. 2–4,
-within lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 295.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. ——. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN S</span><sup>t</sup>. <span class='fss'>MARIES</span> | at Oxford the 24. of
-March being the | day of his sacred Maiesties inauguration | <i>and Maundie
-thursday</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>John Kinge</span> Doctor of Divinity, Deane |
-<i>of Christ Church, and Vicechancellor</i> | <i>of the Vniversitie</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 30:
-p. 11 beg. <i>dome, hee</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: 1–30,
-the sermon, on 1 Chron. xxix. 26–28,
-within lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 295.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Panke</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THE FAL OF BABEL.</span> | <i>By the confusion of
-tongues, directly proving against the</i> | Papists of this, and former ages;
-that a view of their wri-|<i>tings, and bookes being taken, it cannot be discerned
-by any man</i> | <i>living, what they would say, or how be vnderstoode, in the</i> |
-<i>question of the sacrifice of the Masse, the Reall pre-</i>|<i>sence or transubstantiation;
-but in explaning</i> | <i>their mindes, they fall vpon such termes</i>, | <i>as the
-Protestants vse and allow</i>. | <span class='fss'>FVRTHER</span> | In the question of the Popes supremacy
-is shewed, how they | abuse an authority of the auncient father S<sup>t</sup>.
-Cyprian, A Canon of | the 1. Niceene counsell, And the Ecclesiasticall
-historie of Socra-|tes, and Sozomen. And lastly is set downe a briefe of
-the suc-|cession of Popes in the sea of Rome for these 1600. yeeres |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span><i>togither; what diversity there is in their accompt, what here-</i>|<i>sies, schismes,
-and intrusions there hath bin in that sea</i>, | <i>deliuered in opposition against
-their tables, where-</i>|<i>with now adaies they are very busie; and o-</i>|<i>ther things
-discovered against them</i>. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Panke</span>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [34] +
-147 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>fence &amp; proofe</i>, 111
-<i>shop of Rome</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) general Epistle dedicatorie
-to Protestants at Oxford, Cambridge
-and elsewhere, dated “From Tydworth
-the 1. of Nouember. 1607”: (9–29)
-“To al ... Recusants ...”, dated as
-before: (31–2) “The names of the Popish
-Writers, out of which this booke hath
-beene gathered.”: 1–147, the work, in
-the form of a dialogue between “Tuberius
-the Gent.” and “Romannus the Scholler”:
-(2–3) “The names of the Bishops or
-Popes of Rome for these 1600. yeeres ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 274. The work has no divisions, index or table of
-contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Price</b>, Daniel. <span class='fss'>THE MARCHANT.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT
-PAVLES</span> | Crosse on Sunday the 24. of Au-|gust, being the day before
-Bar-|tholomew faire. 1607. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>Daniell Price</span> <i>Master
-of Arts, of Exeter</i> | <i>Colledge in Oxford</i>. | [<i>device.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 38:
-p. 11 beg. <i>of many who</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines: (3–4)
-dedication “to the honorable Companie
-of Merchants of the Cittie of London”,
-dated from Exeter Coll., Oxford, 20 Apr.
-1608: 1–38, the sermon, on Matt. xiii.
-45–46: every page of the book is within
-lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 511.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. ——. <i>Prælium &amp; præmium.</i> | <span class='fss'>THE CHRISTIANS WARRE</span> | and
-rewarde. | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED</span> | before the Kings Maiestie at VVhite-|<i>hall
-the</i> 3. <i>of May.</i> 1608. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>Daniell Price</span> <i>Master of
-Arts of Exeter</i> | <i>Colledge, and Chapleyn in ordinarie</i> | <i>to the</i> <span class='sc'>Prince</span>. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>b</i>: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 34
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>guler, effectual</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within lines: (3–4) dedication to the
-archbp. of Canterbury, dated from Exeter
-coll., Oxford, 19 June 1608: 1–34, the
-sermon on Rev. ii. 26: every page of the
-book has a border of lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 511. The dedication implies that the book took four
-days to print (?), and claims to be the first from the University Press since the archbishop
-(Richard Bancroft) became Chancellor (23 Apr. 1608).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. ——. <span class='fss'>RECVSANTS</span> | <span class='fss'>CONVERSION:</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT S</span><sup>t</sup>. |
-<span class='sc'>James</span>, before the <span class='sc'>Prince</span> on the 25. | <i>of Februarie.</i> 1608. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>Daniell Price</span> <i>Master of Arts, of Exeter</i> | <i>Colledge in
-Oxford</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 35
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>ctions and</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-lines: 1–2, dedication to prince Henry:
-3–35, the sermon, on Is. ii. 3, within
-lines: (2–3) [not seen].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 511.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Prideaux</b>, John. [The <cite>Tabulae ad Grammatica Græca</cite>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>assigned by Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267) to this date, is probably the
-1607 edition, which see.]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Rainolds</b>, John. <span class='fss'>IOHANNIS RAI-</span>|<span class='fss'>NOLDI ORATI-</span>|<i>ones duæ</i>, | Ex
-ijs quas habuit in Collegio Cor-|poris Christi, quum linguam | Græcam
-profiteretur. | <span class='fss'>HABITAE, QVVM STVDIA, DE</span> | more per ferias intermissa, |
-repeterentur: | <i>Prior, quæ duodecima, post vaca-</i>|<i>tionem Natalitiam;</i> |
-<i>Posterior, decima tertia, post vaca-</i>|<i>tionem Paschalem;</i> | <i>Anno.</i> 1576. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1608: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 106 + [6]: p. 11 beg. <i>non exhorter</i>, 101
-<i>&amp; in</i>: Pica English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–8) “Iohannes Rainoldus Academicis
-Oxoniensibus ...”, dated “è
-Colleg. Corp. Christ. Februar. 2:” 1–52,
-the first oration: 53–106, the second
-oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only copy at present met with is one in Worcester College Library at Oxford,
-but there is no special reason why the book should be scarce.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>S[ansbury]</b>, I[ohn]. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>ILIVM IN ITALIAM.</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'>OXONIA AD</span> | <span class='fss'>PROTECTIONEM</span> | <i>Regis sui omnium opti-</i>|<i>mi filia, pedisequa</i>. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1608: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Flos
-regum</i>: Long Primer Italic. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, dedication to
-the king, signed “I. S.”, i. e. John Sansbury:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, the work, the verso of
-every leaf being blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare and valuable. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 58, where some extracts are given.
-Each leaf bears an engraving of the arms of the University or a College, and a short
-Latin poem following. The title appears to indicate the struggle of king James and
-England against Italian wiles, the words being from Virg. Aen. i. 72, where the context
-bears a different meaning. The dedication shows that the poems were written in 1606.
-The arms are in some respects peculiar, and were probably engraved at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Twyne</b>, Brian. <span class='fss'>ANTIQVI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TATIS ACADEMIÆ OXO-</span>|<span class='fss'>NIENSIS APOLOGIA.</span> |
-<i>In tres libros divisa.</i> | <span class='fss'>AVTHORE</span> | <span class='sc'>Briano Twyno</span> <i>in facultate
-Artium Ma-</i>|<i>gistro, &amp; Collegij Corporis Christi in eâdem</i> | <i>Academia
-Socio.</i> [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-384 + [72]: p. 11 beg. <i>perit quod nemo</i>,
-111 <i>xitq;, sed etiàm</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) dedication to
-Robert Sackvill earl of Dorset, dated from
-Corpus Christi college, Oxford, 3 June
-1608: 1–384, the work, in three books:
-(1–10) “Index rerum et verborum ...”:
-(11–21) “Catalogus authorum ... quibus
-Author ... vsus est”: (21) “Errata ...”:
-(23–54) “Miscellanea quædam de antiquis
-aulis et studentium collegiis ...”,
-according to parishes: (55–72) “Summorum
-Oxoniensis Academiæ Magistratuum
-[Chancellors, Vice-Chancellors,
-Proctors] ... catalogus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 109 (where there is much about the fate of the MS.,
-Twyne’s intentions, &amp;c.) ii. 358. This is the first history of Oxford, but to some extent
-thrown into a controversial form, to prove the prior antiquity of Oxford to that of
-Cambridge. For a man of 28 it is, as Wood says, a wonderful performance. Almost
-all Twyne’s Oxford collections are still preserved in the University Archives and the
-Library of Corpus Christi college, Oxford. See 1620 T.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Wake</b>, Isaac. <span class='fss'>ORATIO FV-</span>|<span class='fss'>NEBRIS HABI-</span>|ta in Templo beatæ |
-<i>Mariæ Oxon.</i> | Ab <span class='sc'>Isaaco Wake</span> | [&amp;c. precisely as in 1607 W.] |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>Impr. 11: 1608: (twelve) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24], sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>1</sup>2: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>occasionis
-ratione</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 9<sup>r</sup>, the oration: (<span class='fss'>A</span> 1 and
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 12 not seen).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reprint of 1607 <span class='fss'>W</span> (speech in 2nd ed.), which see.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. [Wells, William.] Epistola ad authorem anonymum Libelli
-... cui titulus Stricturæ Breves in Epistolas D.D. Genevensium &amp; Oxoniensium.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Oxonii, e Theatro Sheldoniano, ... <span class='fss'>MDC</span>viii, 4<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>An error for 1708.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Wycliff</b>, John. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>TVVO SHORT TREA-</span>|<span class='fss'>TISES, AGAINST
-THE</span> | <i>Orders of the Begging Friars</i>, | <i>compiled by</i> | <span class='sc'>That</span> | <span class='fss'><i>FAMOVS
-DOCTOVR OF THE CHVRCH</i></span>, | <i>and Preacher of Gods word</i> <span class='sc'>John Wickliffe</span>, |
-<i>sometime fellow of Merton, and Master of</i> | <i>Ballioll Coll. in Oxford, and
-afterwards</i> | Parson of Lutterworth in Lece-|<i>stershire</i>. | Faithfully Printed
-according to two ancient | Manuscript Copies, extant, the one in | Benet
-Colledge in Cambridge, the o-|ther remaining in the Publike Li-| brarie at
-Oxford. | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1608: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 62
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>thow shalt haue</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(2) “Faults escaped in the printing ...”:
-(3–8) Epistle dedicatorie to sir Thomas
-Flemynge, lord chief justice of England:
-signed “Tho: Iames,” “from the Publike
-Librarie in Oxford. Feb. 10. 1608”:
-1–17, “A complaint of Iohn VVickliffe,
-exhibited to the King and Parliament”:
-19–62, “A Treatise of Iohn VVickliffe
-against the orders of Friars”: (1–2) “An
-exposition of the hardest words,” a glossary.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 468. This is still the only printed edition of these two
-works of Wyclif, edited by dr. James. The usual titles of the treatises are “Four
-Articles” and “Objections of Freres.” This book is usually found with the James
-volume above, which is alluded to in the dedication. Dr. James does not specify the
-MSS. from which these treatises are printed, but MS. C.C.C. (Cambr.) 296 seems to
-have both, while MS. Bodley 647 only contains the latter of the two.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1609.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>FEMININE MONARCHIE</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Or</span> | <span class='fss'>A
-TREATISE CONCERNING BEES,</span> | <span class='fss'>AND THE DVE ORDERING OF THEM</span>: | <i>Wherein</i> |
-The truth, found out by experience and diligent | observation, discovereth
-the idle and fond | conceipts, which many haue writ-|ten anent this
-subiect. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Char</span>: <span class='sc'>Bvtler</span> Magd. | [<i>device.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1609: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [240],
-signn. <i>a</i><sup>4</sup> <i>b</i>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>N</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>O</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>animum,
-artem</i>, <span class='fss'>L</span> 1<sup>r</sup> <i>In Aquarius</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—sign. <i>a</i> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <i>a</i> 2<sup>r</sup>-<i>a</i>
-4<sup>r</sup>, “The preface to the Reader”, dated
-from Wotton (St. Lawrence) 11 July
-1609: <i>a</i> 4<sup>v</sup>-<i>b</i> 1<sup>r</sup>, three commendatory
-poems, by Warner South (Latin) and
-A. Crosley: <i>b</i> 1<sup>v</sup>-<i>b</i> 8<sup>v</sup>, “The contents of
-this Booke”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>O</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 209, and 1633 <span class='fss'>B</span>, 1634 <span class='fss'>B</span>, 1682 <span class='fss'>B</span> (in Latin): there are
-also edd. at Lond. 1623 and (in Latin) 1673. This is a remarkable book, from the
-style and evident practical experience of its author. Rude engravings occur on signn.
-<span class='fss'>C</span> 7<sup>r</sup>, <span class='fss'>C</span> 7<sup>v</sup> and (the first music printed at Oxford) <span class='fss'>F</span> 1<sup>r</sup>. The author mentions incidentally
-in the preface that a book on bees by T. H. of London (presumably Thomas
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>Hill’s <cite>Profitable instructions for the ordering of bees</cite>, Lond. 1579 and 1593) is really a
-plagiarism from Georgius Pictorius.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Du Moulin</b>, Pierre (<i>d.</i> 1658). <span class='fss'>HERACLITUS</span>: | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>MEDITATIONS
-VPON THE</span> | vanity &amp; misery of humane life, first | written in French by
-that excel-|lent Scholler &amp; admirable di-|vine <i>Peter Du Moulin</i> Mi-|nister
-of the sacred | word in the refor-|med Church | of Paris: | <i>And translated
-into English by</i> | R. S. Gentleman. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1609: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[14] + 121 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>time is</i>, 111
-<i>will say</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) Epistle dedicatorie “to
-his much honored Father: S. F. S.”:
-(7–13) “The authors epistle dedicatory
-to the Lady Ann of Rohan, Sister to the
-Duke of Rohan”, signed “Peter du Moulin”:
-1–121, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1634 <span class='fss'>D</span>. The original edition of Pierre Du Moulin’s Héraclite, ou de la Vanité
-et Misère de la vie humaine was printed in 1609. The present translator was probably
-Robert Stafford of Exeter college, who matr. on 15 Mar. 160<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span> at the age of 16, his
-father being sir Francis (?) Stafford, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 291, and especially
-Bliss’s MS. additions in his own copy of the <cite>Athenæ</cite> in the Bodleian. The coincidence
-of initials with Richard Smith in the 1634 edition seems to be accidental. See next
-art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. ——. [Another issue, almost identical in appearance, but entirely
-reprinted: easy tests of the two issues are such as (1) on the titlepage
-of this second issue, if it be the second, the fourth line begins immediately
-under the beginning of the third line, whereas in the first
-issue it begins an <i>em</i> to the right: (2) the O of the imprint is upside
-down in the first issue: (3) in the title of the author’s Epistle the
-second issue has “Anne”, the first “Ann”: (4) p. 41 l. 6 of text, the
-first issue has “Enuy”, the second “Envy”: (5) p. 121 l. 1 of text, the
-first issue ends with “God”, the second with “God is.” But it is
-difficult to say which is a reprint of the other: the second issue is more
-modern in spelling and type, and the woodcut ornaments are possibly
-less worn in the first. In fact it is conceivable that the second issue is
-in reality a few years later.]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>D</b>[<b>unster</b>], I[ohn]. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>CONFESSION OF</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN RELIGION.</span> |
-[four <i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1609: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. 52
-+ [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>and punishment</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–48,
-the treatise: on p. 48 “Etiam sic
-sentio, sic credo. I. D.”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 42. This is a reprint, omitting the poem
-at the end, of 1607 <span class='fss'>D</span>. The paging is wild.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>H</b>[<b>eale</b>], W[illiam]. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIE</span> | <span class='fss'>FOR VVOMEN.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>AN
-OPPOSITION TO M</span><sup>r</sup>. | D<sup>r</sup>. G. his assertion. Who held | in the Act at
-Oxforde. | <i>Anno.</i> 1608. | <i>That it was lawfull for husbands to beate</i> | <i>their
-wiues.</i> | By W. H. of Ex. in Ox. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1609: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 66:
-p. 11 beg. <i>lemnize marriage</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication “to the honourable and right-vertuous
-Ladie, the Ladie M. H. ...”:
-(5) “The contents of this Apologie”:
-(6) the arms of the University: 1–66, the
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 89, where Wood states that the author was William
-Heale and the person opposed dr. William Gager, D.C.L. in 1589. The question
-“An liceat marito uxorem verberare” was one of those selected for the degree of
-D.C.L., 11 July 1608, but Gager was neither inceptor nor respondent. The lady
-M. H. seems from the dedication to have commanded Heale to undertake the task of
-replying and to have allowed him scant time in which to do it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Reuter</b>, Adam. <span class='fss'>EX L. VT</span> | <span class='fss'>VIM 3. D. IVST:</span> | <span class='fss'>ET JVRE.</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>QVÆSTIONES</i></span> | Iuris controversi | 12. | <i>Auctore</i> | <span class='sc'>Adamo Revter</span>. Cotbusio
-L. | Siles. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1609: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [56],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>G</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>pi patitur</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to New College, dated
-“Cursim ex Musæo. Oxon.” 1 Jan.
-“1609”: (5–56) the 12 quaestiones.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 420. Wood is mistaken in calling Reuter a Welshman.
-He was a Silesian from Cottbus, as he testifies above and in the admission register of
-the Bodleian, 3 Sept. 1608. L probably stands for Licentiatus utriusque juris. He
-was never matriculated.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Sanderson</b>, John. <span class='fss'>INSTITVTIONVM</span> | <span class='fss'>DIALECTICARVM</span> | <i>Libri
-Quatuor</i>, | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IOANNE SANDERSONO</span>, | Lancastrensi, Anglo, Liberalium |
-<i>artium Magistro, et sacræ Theologiæ</i> | <i>Doctore, Metropolitanæ Ec-</i>|clesiæ
-Cameracensis Ca-|nonico, conscripti. | <i>Editio quarta.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1609: 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 91 +
-[1]: beg. <sup>h</sup><i>Propriū est</i>: Brevier Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “Auctoris
-praefatio. Ad iuventutem bonarum artium
-studiosam”: 5–91, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reprint of 1602 <span class='fss'>S</span>, which see.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1610.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Benefield</b>, Sebastian. <span class='fss'>DOCTRINÆ CHRISTIANÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>SEX CAPITA</span>, |
-<span class='fss'><i>TOTIDEM PRÆLECTIONIBVS</i></span> | <i>in Scholâ Theologicâ Oxoniæ pro formâ</i> |
-<i>habitis discussa, &amp;</i> | <i>disceptata</i>. | <span class='fss'>ACCESSIT APPENDIX AD CA-</span>|put secundum,
-de Consiliis Evangelicis, in | quâ ad omnes <span class='sc'>SS. Patrvm</span> autorita-|tes,
-ab <span class='sc'>Hvmphredo Leechio</span> | pro iisdem asserendis citatas, | respondetur. |
-<span class='sc'>Avtore</span> | <span class='sc'>sebastiano Benefield.</span> | <span class='fss'>SS. THEOLOGIÆ D. COLLEGII</span> | Corporis
-Christi Socio. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1610: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [20] +
-208 + [12]: p. 11 beg. <i>&amp; Sacerdotes</i>, 111
-<i>ci me dedet</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) dedication to bp. George
-Abbot, dated “Oxon. è Collegio Corporis
-Christi. Junii 7. 1610”: (7) “Catalogus
-eorum quæ hoc opere continentur”: (9–20)
-præfatio ad Academicos Oxonienses,
-10 June 1610: 1–208, the work: p. 145
-is a titlepage:—“<span class='fss'>APPENDIX</span> | <span class='fss'>AD CAPVT</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SECVNDVM, DE</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSILIIS EVANGELI-</span>|<span class='fss'>CIS</span>,
-in quâ ad omnes <span class='sc'>S. S. Pa-</span>|<span class='fss'>TRVM</span> autoritates,
-ab <span class='sc'>Hvm-</span>|<span class='sc'>phredo Leechio</span> pro |
-<i>iisdem asserendis cita-</i>|<i>tas, respondetur</i>. |
-<span class='sc'>Avtore</span> | <span class='sc'>Sebastiano Benefield.</span> | <span class='fss'>SS.
-THEOLOGIÆ D. COLLEGII</span> | Corporis
-Christi Oxon. Socio. | [2 <i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>,
-then impr. 7 and date]: (1–4) “Index
-locorum Sacræ Scripturæ ...”: (5–12)
-“Index rerum”: (12) “Ad lectorem ...
-Errata typographica ...” (corrected in
-some copies.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 488. This work is a reply to a challenge from Leech.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bunny</b>, Edmund. <span class='fss'>OF DIVORCE</span> | <span class='fss'>FOR ADVLTERIE, AND</span> | Marrying
-againe: that there is | <i>no sufficient warrant so to do</i>. | <i><span class='sc'>VVith a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>NOTE IN THE END</span></i>, | <i>that</i> R. P. <i>many yeeres since was answered.</i> | By
-<span class='sc'>Edm. Bvnny</span> Bachelour of Divinitie. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1610: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [22] +
-171 + [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>ces, which</i>, 111 <i>they
-had not</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–5) Dedication to archbp.
-Bancroft, dated Oxford, 3 July 1610: (6–11)
-the preface, dated Bolton Percy, 13
-Dec. 1595: (12–18) “An Advertisement
-to the Reader,” dated Oxford 4 June
-1610: (19–20) “The Contents of the
-Treatice ...”: (21–22) “The Table of
-Method” an inserted quarto leaf folded,
-printed on the recto only, a logical plan
-of the argument: 1–171, the treatise:
-(1–3) “Another note for the Reader”
-against R. P. and Radford, dated Oxford,
-22 June 1610: (4–9) “The Alphabet
-Table ...,” an index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 222. The dedication states that the treatise was completed
-many years before (1595?) and that archbp. Whitgift had it in his hands and
-approved it. The advertisement gives further details of the occasion and history of the
-treatise. The note alludes to Bunny’s connexion with Robert Parsons’ <cite>Resolution</cite> or
-<cite>Directory</cite>, see 1585 <span class='fss'>P</span>, and J. Radford’s <cite>Directory</cite>. See 1613 <span class='fss'>B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Dunster</b>, John. <span class='fss'>CÆSARS PENNY,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A SERMON OF</span> | <span class='fss'>OBEDIENCE,
-PROVING</span> | by the practise of all ages, that all per-|<i>sons ought to be
-subiect to the</i> | <i>King, as to the Su-</i>|<i>periour</i>. | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT S</span><sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>MARIES</span> | in
-Oxford at the Assises the 24 | of Iuly 1610. | <span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>John Dvnster</span>
-<i>Master of Arts and Fel-</i>|<i>low of Magdal. Colledge</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1610: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6]
-+ 38 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>offendere nō</i>: English
-Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–6)
-dedication to George Abbot bp. of London:
-1–38, the sermon, on 1 Pet. ii. 13–14.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 142.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Holyoke</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON OF OBEDIENCE</span> | <span class='fss'>ESPECIALLY
-VNTO AVTHORITIE</span> | Ecclesiasticall wherein the principall controver-|sies
-of our church are handled, and many of | their obiections which are
-refractorie to | the government established, answered | <i>though briefly as
-time and space could</i> | <i>permit; being preached at a Visita-</i>|<i>tion of the
-Right Worsh:</i> | <i>M</i><sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>D. Hinton</span>, | <i>in Coventree</i>. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Fran: Holyoke</span>. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1610: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 32:
-p. 11 beg. <i>readeth, receiueth</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-short dedication to sir Clement Throckmerton:
-(3–4) preface to the author signed
-I. D. H.: 1–32, the sermon, on Hebr.
-xiii. 17: 32, “To the Reader”, an apology
-for the rude style.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 346: and 1613 <span class='fss'>H</span>. The author is the well-known writer
-of the Latin and English Dictionary. From the preface it is clear that the sermon,
-which is written in an uncompromising tone, caused great opposition in Coventry, of
-which town some curious details of the puritanical feeling are given: it is now published
-“not altogether against” the author’s mind. See 1613 <span class='fss'>H</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>James</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>BELLVM GREGORIANVM</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>CORRVPTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ONIS
-ROMANÆ IN OPE-</span>|<span class='fss'>RIBUS D.</span> <span class='sc'>Gregorii</span> <span class='fss'>M. JUS-</span>|su Pontificum Rom.
-recognitis atq<span class='small'>ue</span> | editis, ex Typographia Vaticana, | <i>Loca insigniora,
-observata à</i> | <i>Theologis ad hoc offici-</i>|<i>um deputatis</i>. [three <i>stars</i>: then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>Impr. 11: 1610: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>: p. 7 beg. <i>Romæ</i> 1591: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(2) dedication to English theologians by
-“Tho. Iames” in Latin: (3–4) preface
-“benevolo lectori”: (5–7) the list of
-passages: (7–8) conclusion: (8) list of
-MSS. used.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A table of passages corrupted in the Rome edition of 1591 and the Bâle ed. of 1564,
-of the Epistolae, Moralia and Pastoralia of Gregory the Great, compared with the
-readings of MSS. in the Bodleian, New, Oriel, Merton, Corpus and St. John’s colleges,
-and belonging to Richard Bancroft, archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas Allen, and
-Rich. Hooker, the task being undertaken by 12 theologians.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Price</b>, Daniel. [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>DEFENCE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF TRVTH
-AGAINST A</span> | <i>booke falsely called</i> | <span class='fss'>THE TRIVMPH OF TRVTH</span> | sent over from
-Arras A. D. 1609. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Hvmfrey Leech</span> late Minister. | <i>Which booke in
-all particulars is answered</i>, | <i>and the adioining Motiues of his</i> | <i>revolt
-confuted</i>: | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Daniell Price</span>, of Exeter Colledge in | Oxford, Chaplaine
-in ordinary to the most high | and mighty, the <i>Prince</i> of <i>Wales</i>. | [<i>motto</i>,
-then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1610: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 379
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>ving to vindicate</i>, 111
-<i>your soule</i>: English Roman. Contents—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to the Prince
-of Wales: 1–379, the work: (1) a postscript:
-then “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 511. The book is an answer to Leech’s <cite>A triumph of
-truth. Or declaration of the doctrine concerning Evangelicall counsayles; lately
-delivered in Oxford ...</cite> <i>n. pl.</i> 1609, 8<sup>o</sup>: and appears to reprint the whole of the latter
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Rainolds</b>, John. <span class='fss'>SVMMA COLLO-</span>|<span class='fss'>QVII JOHANNIS RAINOLDI</span> | <span class='fss'>CVM
-JOHANNE HARTO</span> | <i>De Capite &amp; Fide Ecclesiæ</i> | <span class='fss'>UBI VARIÆ OBITER TRACTANTUR
-QVÆSTI-</span>|ones, de <i>Sufficientia</i>, &amp; <i>orthodoxa expositione Scripturarum</i>,
-<i>Ministerio</i> | <i>Ecclesiæ</i>, <i>Functione Sacerdotali</i>, <i>Sacrificio Missæ</i>,
-unà cum aliis, | quȩ in religione agitantur controversiis; prȩcipuè |
-verò, &amp; ex instituto, quæstio de <i>Ecclesiæ regi-</i>|<i>mine</i>, explicata in iis quȩ
-de Christi su-|premâ Monarchiâ, de Petri prȩ-|tensâ, Papȩ usurpatâ,
-Princi-|pis <i>legitimâ supremitate</i> | disputantur. | <span class='fss'><i>A JOHANNE RAINOLDO
-CONSCRIPTA, CONVENIENTER COM-</i></span>|pendiis illis quæ uterque scripto mandârat:
-examinata demum, à <span class='sc'>Johan-</span>|<span class='sc'>ne Harto</span>, atq<span class='small'>ue</span> (post addita
-quædam, quædam mutata ut ipsi | commodum videbatur) pro fideli
-narratione eorum, quæ | inter ipsos in Colloquio disserebantur, | habita
-&amp; comprobata. | <span class='fss'>ANTE QVATVOR ET VIGINTI ANNOS EX AN-</span>|<i>glico sermone
-in Latinum versa, nunc autem primùm jussu, curáq<span class='small'>ue</span> Reverendis-</i>|<i>simi
-atq<span class='small'>ue</span> vigilantissimi Præsulis</i>, <span class='sc'>Richardi Bancrofti</span>, | <i>Cantuariensis Archi-episcopi</i>
-(<i>qui non domesticarum modò</i>, | <i>quibus præest, sed etiam exterarum
-Ecclesiarum</i> | <i>bono impensè studet</i>,) <i>è situ &amp; pulvere evo-</i>|<i>cata, &amp; in lucem
-emissa</i>. | <span class='sc'>Henrico Parraeo</span>, <i>Gloucestrensi Episcopo, interprete</i>. | [<i>line.</i>] |
-[<i>device.</i>] | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1610: (sixes), la. 8<sup>o</sup> or perhaps
-fol.: pp. [16] + 402 + [14]: p. 11
-beg. <i>bras; neque</i>, 111 <i>tit, &amp; præ</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
-(5–7) dedication to Christian iv, king of
-Denmark (brother of the Queen) by
-Parry: (9–10) “Iohannes Hartus candido
-Lectori,” dated “ex Arce Londinensi,
-Julii 7”: (11–16) “Johannes Rainoldus
-alumnis anglicorum Seminariorum Romæ
-&amp; Rhemis”: 1–402, the work: (3–11)
-“Index rerum ...”: (12–14) “Index
-locorum Sacræ Scripturæ”: (14) “Errata
-typographica: quorum quædam in
-omnibus, quædam in quibusdam exemplaribus
-tantùm.” Every page is within a
-border of lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 15. The original <cite>Summe of the Conference</cite> was published
-at London in 1584 &amp;c. The conference itself was at the Tower of London in about
-1583, see Gillow’s <cite>English Catholics</cite> iii (1888?). 155.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1611.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Benefield</b>, Sebastian. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN S</span><sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>MARIES</span> |
-Church in Oxford, March xxiv. MDCX. | at the solemnizing of the
-happy in-|<i>auguration of our gracious sove-</i>|<i>raigne</i> <span class='sc'>King Iames</span>. | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN
-IS PROVED THAT KINGS DOE</span> | hold their kingdomes immediately from
-God. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Sebastian Benefield</span> D. of Divinitie | <i>Fellow of Corpus
-Christi College</i>. |[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1611: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 18
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>vp, is avowed</i>: English
-Roman. Contents.—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to John King, bp. of London,
-dated “from my study in Corpus Christi
-College. Septemb. 9. 1611”: 1–18, the
-sermon, on Ps. xxi. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 488. The Bp. of London had only been consecrated
-the day before this dedication.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. Davies, John. Microcosmos: see 1603 <span class='fss'>D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Jesuit’s Pater Noster.</b> <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>IESVITES PATER</span> | <span class='fss'>NOSTER</span> |
-<i>Giuen</i> | <span class='fss'>TO PHILIP</span> III <span class='fss'>KING</span> | of <span class='fss'>SPAINE</span> for his new | <i>yeares gift this
-present</i> | yea e. 1611. | <i>Together with the Ave Maria.</i> | Written first in
-French: Engli-|shed by <i>W. I.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: (four) 16<sup>o</sup> or 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>There are</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title,
-within a border: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, “The Jesuits
-Pater Noster,” beg. “O Mighty Phillip
-King Of men”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, “The Ave
-Maria to the Queene of France”, beg.
-“WHen Iudas with a kisse betraid his
-Lord.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The only copy known is in the British Museum. A bitter satire against the Jesuits.
-In each piece the stanzas consist of four English lines and a Latin clause of the Pater
-Noster or Ave Maria (24 and 8 respectively). This piece was probably not printed
-at Oxford, two of the woodcuts being not otherwise found there.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Reinolds</b>, John. <span class='fss'>EPIGRAMMATA,</span> | <span class='fss'>AVCTORE IOAN-</span>|<span class='fss'>NE REINOLDO
-IN LL.</span> | Baccalaureo. Novi Colle-|gij socio. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1611: (eight) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> beg. 21. <i>Guiderius</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup> divisions of “Prima
-Chilias complectens disticha tantùm anthrôpina
-in decem centurias divisa”. (Reges,
-Episcopi, Barones, Doctores, Equites,
-Graduati, Armigeri, Scholares, Generosi,
-Generalia): <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> “Prima centuria reges
-Britannici &amp; Anglici in Honorem regis
-Jacobi,” with a motto: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup> “Elenchum
-personarum tibi lector exhiberemus, nisi
-libellus ipse esset pro Elencho”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>
-8<sup>v</sup> the prima Centuria, 111 Latin distiches:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 8<sup>v</sup> “Ad Lectorem,” promising
-10 Centuriae.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 148, and 1612 <span class='fss'>R</span>. This is a first instalment of 111
-distiches on Kings and Queens of Britain: only the second part (Episcopi) seems
-to have subsequently seen the light, in 1612.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1612.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Cleland</b>, James. The Instruction of | a young Noble-man, |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>IAMES CLELAND</span>. | [<i>woodcut: the whole title is within a border of
-ornament.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: in every other point identical with 1607 <span class='fss'>C</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reissue of the sheets of 1607 <span class='fss'>C</span>, errata and all, with a new titlepage sewn
-in, the old one being torn off. The new titlepage was not printed at Oxford, as is
-shown by the woodcut ornaments and general style, but probably by W. Stansby for
-John Barnes in London.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Day</b>, John, of Oriel college, Oxford. <span class='fss'>CONCIO AD CLERVM.</span> |
-Habita in Templo <i>B. Mariæ</i> Oxon. | <i>Iunij</i> 25 <i>Ann. Dom.</i> 1612. |
-<span class='sc'>Joannes</span> c. 9. v. 1. [<i>error for</i> 4] | <i>Donec</i> <span class='sc'>Dies</span> <i>est</i>. | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 25
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Magistratus indicat</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(2–3) Latin dedication to the heads of
-Colleges and Halls at Oxford, signed
-“Joannes Dayus,” with a list of the
-Heads: (4) text of the sermon, 2 Kings
-vi. 1–4: 1–25, the sermon: (2–3) Latin
-letter from Day to dr. Thomas Clayton,
-dated from Oriel coll. Oxford, 11 July
-(1612).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 412, and 1615 <span class='fss'>D</span>. The dedication gives a complete
-list of the Heads of Houses, and two official orders of the Colleges, in dignity, and in
-antiquity. The letter gives details of possible future publications by Day and personal
-points about dr. Clayton, who advised the printing of this sermon. At p. 21 is a list
-of Founders of Colleges.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Day</b>, John. Concio ad Clerum “In Joh. 9. 4. Oxon. 1612.
-qu[arto].”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 412, after the notice of the preceding art., and no
-doubt due to confusion with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Day</b>, John. <span class='fss'>DAVIDS DESIRE</span> | <span class='fss'>TO GO TO CHVRCH</span>: | as it was published in
-two | Sermons in <i>S</i><sup>t</sup> <i>Maries</i> | in Oxford. | The <i>One</i> the <i>fift</i> of <i>November</i>
-in the After-|noone to the Vniversity 1609. The | <i>Other</i> on Christmas
-Day fo llow-|ing to the Parishioners | of that place. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Day</span>
-Bachelour of Divinity, and one of the <i>Fellowes</i> of | <i>Oriell Colledge</i>. |
-[<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 104: p. 11 beg. <i>Even that</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) [not seen]:
-(3) title: (5) dedication to Oriel college
-and St. Mary’s parish, Oxford: (7–15)
-“The Epistle dedicatorie”: 1–57 the 1st
-sermon, on Ps. xxvii. 4: 57, an Erratum:
-59–104, the 2nd sermon, on the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 412, and 1615 <span class='fss'>D</span>. The second sermon is stated by the
-author to have been his first preached as Vicar of St. Mary’s, succeeding mr. Wharton.
-At p. 40 he mentions Tuesday as a proverbially fatal day to the Irish.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Du Moulin</b>, Pierre, the elder. <span class='fss'>THE WATERS OF SILOE.</span> | <span class='fss'>TO
-QVENCH</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FIRE OF PVRGATORY</span> | and to drowne the traditions, Lim-|boes,
-mans satisfactions and all Popish | Indulgences, against the rea-|<i>sons
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>and allegations of a Portu-</i>|<i>gall Frier of the order of</i> | S<sup>t</sup>. Frances,
-<i>suppor-</i>|<i>ted by three</i> | <i>treatises</i>. | The one written by the same Franciscan
-and | entituled <i>The fierie torrent, &amp;c.</i> | The other two by two Doctors of
-Sorbon. | The one intituled <i>The burning furnasse</i>. The | other <i>The
-fire of Helie</i>. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Peter Dv Movlin</span> Minister of | Gods word. |
-[<i>motto</i>] | Faithfully translated out of French by <i>I. B.</i> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 30: 1612: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[34] + 406: p. 11 beg. <i>assured of</i>, 111 <i>one
-part of</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5–7) Epistle dedicatory to
-“sir Dudley Digs,” signed “I. B.”: (9–32)
-“The Preface to the Reader”: (33–34)
-“The Contents of this booke”:
-1–406, the work, entitled “A Confutation
-of Purgatory.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The Friar against whom this book was written was Jacques (sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>) i. e. Jacques
-Suares, and the two Doctors were P. V. Palma Cayer and A. Duval (sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>). The
-first French edition was printed in 1603, entitled <cite>Accroissement des eaux de Siloé ...</cite>
-The work is one of Du Moulin’s less known productions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Henry</b>, prince, <i>d.</i> 1612. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>EIDYLLIA</span> | <span class='fss'>IN OBITVM
-FVLGENTISSIMI</span> | <span class='sc'>Henrici</span> | Walliæ Principis duodecimi, Romæq<span class='small'>ue</span> ruentis |
-Terroris maximi, | <i>Quo nihil maius meliúsve terris</i> | <i>Fata donavere,
-boniq<span class='small'>ue</span> Divi</i> | <i>Nec dabunt, quamvis redeant in aurum</i> | <i>Tempora priscum</i>. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [36],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Amyntas</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, short dedication to the memory
-of prince Henry, in Latin: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the
-poems: <span class='fss'>E</span> 2<sup>v</sup> “Lectori <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ξυναποθνήσκοντι</span>,”
-an epilogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The writers and editor of these poems on the death of Prince Henry are more
-disguised than usual. The editor was undoubtedly “Jacobus Aretius,” i. e. James
-Martin, of Broadgates hall. There is one poem in Chaldee (Hebrew type), one in
-Syriac, one in Arabic, one in Turkish (all three in Roman type) and a few in Greek.
-There are three Idylls, “Amyntas,” “Tityrus,” and “Daphnis,” in Latin hexameter
-verse, presumably by the Editor.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. ——. <span class='fss'>LVCTVS POSTHVMVS</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>ERGA DEFVN-</span>|<span class='fss'>CTVM ILLVSTRIS-</span>|<span class='fss'>SIMVM</span>
-<span class='sc'>Henricvm</span> <span class='fss'>WAL-</span>|<span class='fss'>LIÆ PRINCIPEM, COL-</span>|legij Beatæ <span class='sc'>Mari</span>æ <span class='sc'>Magdalen</span>æ |
-apud Oxonienses Mecænatem | longè indulgentissimum, | <i>Magdalenensium
-of-</i>|ficiosa Pietas. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-62 + [8]: p. 11 beg. <i>Multâque Myrrhæ</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(2) distich, within a border: 1–62, the
-poems: 1–7, “... Oratio funebris habita
-apud Magdalenenses tempore Prandij exequialis,
-7<sup>o</sup> Decemb. quo die desideratiss.
-Principi Henrici funeri iusta persoluta
-fuere,” signed “Accep. Frewen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems, chiefly in Latin (a few in Greek and one Spanish), by members of Magdalen
-College, on the death of Prince Henry (<i>d.</i> 6 Nov. 1612), who was connected with the
-College through his tutor John Wilkinson.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Hooker</b>, dr. Richard. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OF</i></span> | M<sup>r</sup>.
-<span class='fss'>RICHARD HOOKER TO A</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SVPPLICATION PREFERRED</i></span> | by M<sup>r</sup>. <span class='sc'>Walter
-Travers</span> to | the H H. Lords of the Pri-|<i>vie Counsell</i>. | [<i>University
-arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 32
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>ver heard that</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–32,
-the Answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 697, and under <i>Travers</i>, below: both treatises have
-often been reprinted. This and the following treatises by Hooker seem to have been
-edited by Henry Jackson, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 577.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. ——. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED</span> | <span class='fss'>AND COMFORTA-</span>|<span class='fss'>BLE SERMON OF THE</span> | certaintie
-and perpetuitie of | <i>faith in the Elect; especially</i> | <i>of the Prophet Habak-</i>|<i>kuks
-faith</i>. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>RICHARD HOOKER, SOME-</span>|times fellow of Corpus Christi |
-<i>College in Oxford</i>. | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 17
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>ly enimy is</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title; 1–17,
-the sermon, on Hab. i. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 697.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. ——. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVRSE OF IV-</span>|<span class='fss'>STIFICATION, WORKES</span>, | and
-how the foundation of faith | <i>is overthrowne</i>. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Richard Hooker</span>,
-sometimes Fellow | of Corpus Christi College | <i>in Oxford</i>. | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> |
-[<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 69
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>should make vs</i>, 61,
-<i>men, how many</i>: English Roman. Contents:
-p. (1) title: (3–4) “To the
-Christian reader” signed “from Corpus
-Christi College in Oxford” “Henry Iackson”:
-1–69, the Sermon (on Hab. i. 4):
-(2–3) (not seen).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 697. This is the first edition, and apparently the first of
-Jackson’s issues of Hooker’s sermons.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. ——. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE NATVRE</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>OF PRIDE</i></span>, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>RICHARD HOOKER, SOME-</span>|times fellow of Corpus Christi |
-<i>College in Oxford</i>. | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 17
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>dome as my</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–17,
-the sermon, on Hab. ii. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 697.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. ——. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>REMEDIE</span> | <span class='fss'>AGAINST SOR-</span>|<span class='fss'>ROW AND FEARE</span>, |
-delivered in a funerall | <i>Sermon</i>, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>RICHARD HOOKER, SOME-</span>|times
-fellow of Corpus Christi | <i>College in Oxford</i>. | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 14:
-p. 11 beg. <i>full and faintharted</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–14,
-the sermon, on John xiv. 27.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 697.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>James</b>, dr. Thomas. <i>The Iesuits Downefall</i>, | <span class='fss'>THREATNED</span> |
-<span class='fss'>AGAINST THEM</span> | <span class='fss'>BY THE SECVLAR</span> | Priests for their wicked liues, accur-|<i>sed
-manners, Hereticall doctrine, and more then Matchiavil-</i>|<i>lian Policie</i>. |
-<span class='fss'><i>TOGETHER</i></span> | <span class='fss'>WITH THE LIFE OF FATHER</span> | <span class='sc'>Parsons</span> <i><span class='fss'>AN ENGLISH</span></i> |
-<span class='fss'><i>IESVITE</i>.</span> | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-72: p. 11 beg. <i>by a secular</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–9)
-Epistle dedicatory to the “Iudges and
-Iustices of Peace for the Countie of
-Oxon.”, dated “From the Publique Library
-in Oxford, Sept. 16. 1612”, signed
-“Tho. James”: (10–12) “The Propositions”:
-1–51, 100 propositions against
-Jesuits stated and commented on: 52–72,
-the Life of Parsons.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. A story is told at p. 53 of Parsons disfurnishing
-the Balliol College Library of “many ancient bookes and rare Manuscripts”,
-and of his expulsion at a later period from the College.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. [<b>Mornay</b>, Philippe de, seigneur Du Plessis.] [<i>woodcuts.</i>] |
-<span class='fss'>TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>HOMILIES</span> | <span class='fss'>CONCERNING</span> | the meanes how to re-|<i>solue the controver-</i>|<i>sies
-of this time</i>. | <span class='asterism'>*&#8196;*&#8196;*<br />*&#8196;*</span> | <i>Translated out of French.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 138: p. 11 beg. <i>it be</i>, 111 <i>the one</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) “To the Reader”: 1–71, homily
-on Matt. xvii. 5 (<i>Hunc audite</i>): 72–138,
-homily on Matt. xix. 8 (<i>Non sic fuit ab
-initio</i>): 138, “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. There is another issue of this book in the same year, identical in every
-respect, even to the Errata, except that on the title after the asterisks and before the
-woodcuts come the words “<i>First written in French by</i> Ph. | Mornay, <i>and now translated</i>
-| <i>into English</i>” instead of the single line of the first issue. The second issue
-appears to be less rare. In each sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1 is almost entirely gone, which consisted of
-the titlepage in some early form before a preface was decided on. The preface even
-in the second issue pretends that the author is unknown to the translator: who <i>may</i> be
-identical with the “I. V.” of 1615 <span class='fss'>M</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Panke</b>, John. <span class='fss'><i>ECLOGARIVS</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR BRIEFE SVMME</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE
-TRVTH OF THAT</span> | Title of Supreame Governour, given | to his Maiestie
-in causes Spirituall, | and Ecclesiasticall, from the Kings of Israell, | in
-the old Testament; the Christian Em-|perours in the Primitiue Church; |
-confirmed by 40. Epistles of Leo the Bishop of Rome, vnto | the
-Emperours, Theo-|dosius, Martianus, | and Leo. | <i>Not published before.</i> |
-<span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Panke</span>. |<a id='t82'></a> [<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2]
-+ (82 + ?): p. 11 beg. <i>may take an oath</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-1-(82-?) the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. The running title is “The truth of the oath | of Supremacie.” All
-after p. 82 (sign. <span class='fss'>F</span> 2) is at present unknown, the British Museum copy being imperfect:
-but probably other copies exist.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Sclater</b>, William, of King’s college, Cambridge. [<i>woodcut.</i>] |
-<span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIANS</span> | <span class='fss'>STRENGTH.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>William Sclater</span>. | <span class='fss'>BATCHELAR OF
-DIVINITY</span> | <i>and Minister of the word of God at</i> <span class='sc'>Pit-</span>|<span class='fss'>MISTER</span> <i>in Somerset</i>. |
-[<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 17
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <sup>k</sup><i>Be warmed</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to William Hill of Pitmi[n]ster:
-1–17, the sermon, on Phil. iv. 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 228.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. ——. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>MINISTERS</span> | <span class='fss'>PORTION.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>William
-Sclater</span>. | <span class='fss'>BATCHELAR OF DIVINITY</span> | <i>and Minister of the Word of God
-at</i> <span class='sc'>Pit-</span>|<span class='fss'>MISTER</span> <i>in Somerset</i>. | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 49
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Christs priesthood</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to Thomas Southcot of
-Moones-Ottery in Devon: 1–49, the sermon,
-on 1 Cor. ix. 13–14.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 228.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>18. ——. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SICK SOVLS</span> | <span class='fss'>SALVE.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>William
-Sclater</span>. | <span class='fss'>BATCHELAR OF DIVINITY</span> | <i>and Minister of the word of God
-at</i> <span class='sc'>Pit-</span>|<span class='fss'>MISTER</span> <i>in Somerset</i>. | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 36:
-p. 11 beg. <i>wish? The</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
-to John and Anna Horner of Melles in
-Somerset: 1–36, the sermon, on Prov.
-xviii. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 228.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Smith</b>, capt. John. <span class='fss'><i>A MAP OF VIRGINIA</i></span> | <span class='sc'>VVIT<span class='small'>H</span> A DESCRIPTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ON
-OF THE COVNTREY, THE</span> | Commodities, People, Govern-|ment
-and Religion. | <i>VVritten by Captaine</i> <span class='sc'>Smith</span>, <i>sometimes Go-</i>|<i>vernour
-of the Countrey.</i> | <span class='fss'>WHEREVNTO IS ANNEXED THE</span> | proceedings of those
-Colonies, since their first | departure from England, with the discourses,
-| Orations, and relations of the Salvages, | and the accidents
-that befell | them in all their Iournies | and discoveries. | <i><span class='fss'>TAKEN
-FAITHFVLLY AS THEY</span></i> | <i>were written out of the writings of</i> | <span class='sc'>Doctor
-Rvssell. Richard Wiefin.</span> | <span class='sc'>Tho. Stvdley. Will. PhettiPlace.</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Anas Todkill. Nathaniel Povvell.</span> | <span class='sc'>Ieffra Abot Richard
-Pots.</span> | And the relations of divers other diligent observers there |
-<i>present then, and now many of them in England</i>. | <i>By <span class='fss'>VV. S.</span></i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + map
-+ 39 + [5] + 110 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>some
-neere</i>, also <i>Such actions</i>, 101 <i>those humors</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) dedication “To the hand” (explained
-by “I found it only dedicated to a Hand,
-and to that hand I addresse it”), signed
-“T. A.”: (5–7) glossary of Indian words,
-with a few sentences &amp;c.: after p. (8) a
-map, see below: 1–39, “The description
-of Virginia by captaine Smith”: (2) title,
-“The proceedings of the English colonie”
-&amp;c. as next art.: (4–5) “To the Reader”,
-signed “T. Abbay”: 1–110, the Proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare: priced in Quaritch’s Rough List 88, (1888), no. 174 (cf. 181), at £125:
-the map alone at £40. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 650. The map of Virginia which
-follows p. 8 is about 12<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. high × 16⅜ in. broad, taking the extreme limits of the
-copperplate (the inner bounding line is 12⅜ × 15¾ in.): the title “Virginia” is on a
-scroll, and below the Scale of Leagues is “Discovered and Discribed by Captain Iohn
-Smith | Grauen by William Hole”: at the top left corner (to the reader) is a picture
-of Powhatan in state, and at the top right corner a figure of a “Sasquesahanoug” man.
-This first state of the map ought <i>not</i> to have “1607” below the inscription about
-Powhatan, <i>nor</i> “1606” below the word “Smith” in the words below the Scale, <i>nor</i>
-“Page 41 | Smith” in the lower right corner, <i>nor</i> the latitude and longitude marks on
-any side except the base; all of which additions are on the reissue of the map in
-Smith’s <cite>General Historie of Virginia ...</cite> (Lond. 1624, fol.), and also in the reissue in
-<cite>Purchas his Pilgrimes</cite>, 4th part, Lond. 1625, except that instead of “Page 41 Smith”
-there is in the upper right (?) corner “1690,” a reference to the page.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The W. S. of the first part is the rev. William Simmonds, D.D. of Magd. Coll.
-Oxford, for some time a resident in Virginia, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 142, while
-the publisher of both parts was Thomas Abbay. The whole of the first part with
-trifling changes is reprinted in Smith’s <cite>Generall Historie of Virginia</cite> (London. 1624,
-fol.) bk. 2, p. 21: in <cite>Purchas his Pilgrimes</cite> (Lond. 1625, fol.) Lib. ix, ch. 3, p. 1691:
-and the second part, slightly abridged, in the same books, bk. 3, p. 41, where the
-glossary and map occur, but the 12th chap. is considerably altered: and ch. 4, p. 1705,
-respectively. The whole is carefully reprinted from the 1612 ed. by Edw. Arber in
-his <cite>English Scholar’s Library. Capt. John Smith ... Works.</cite> (Birmingham, 1884),
-from whose notes the following words are taken:—</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c025'>
- <div>[Preface to part 1].</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>“The first part of this Work is evidently an expanded and revised text of that “Mappe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>of the Bay and Rivers, with an annexed Relation of the Countries and Nations that
-inhabit them” (p. 444), which President <span class='sc'>John Smith</span> sent home, about November
-1608, to the Council in London, as the result of his explorations in Chesapeake Bay in
-the previous summer.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>That this book of travels &amp;c. should have been printed at the Oxford University
-Press is a most singular fact....</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The hand printing presses in England were jealously registered, and locked up every
-night, to prevent surrepti[ti]ous printing; all through the lifetime of our Author: and
-the Company of Stationers of London especially watched with a keen jealousy the
-printing operations of the two Universities of Cambridge and Oxford, who each possessed
-a single hand press. See <span class='sc'>W. Herbert’s</span> edition of <span class='sc'>J. Ames’s</span> <cite>Typographical
-Antiquities</cite>, iii, 1398, Ed. 1790, 4to.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This solitary hand printing press at Oxford, usually produced sermons, theological
-and learned Works, &amp;c.; in the midst of which, this book of travels crops up in a
-startling manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Why could not, or would not <span class='sc'>Smith</span> get it printed in London? Had the revision of
-its second Part by the Rev. <span class='sc'>Dr. Simmonds</span> anything to do with the printing at Oxford?
-These nuts we must leave for others to crack.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Of course, being printed at Oxford, this book was not registered at Stationer’s Hall,
-London ...</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is sometimes misnamed the Oxford <i>tract</i>; but it is rather a book than a tract.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c025'>
- <div>[Preface to part 2].</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='sc'>T. Abbay</span> states, ... [in his preface] respecting this second Part,</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>Neither am I the author, for they are many, whose particular discourses are signed
-by their names. This solid treatise, first was compiled by</i> Richard Pots, <i>since passing
-the hands of many to pervse, chancing into my hands, (for that I know them honest
-men, and can partly well witnesse their relations true) I could do no lesse in charity to
-the world then reveale; nor in conscience, but approve.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This Part is therefore the Vindication or Manifesto of the thirty or forty Gentlemen
-and Soldiers, who, under <span class='sc'>Smith</span>, saved the Colony ...</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This second Part of the <cite>Map of Virginia</cite>, compiled, and perhaps added to, by
-<span class='sc'>Richard Pots</span>, ... tested and revised by the Rev. <span class='sc'>William Simmonds</span>, <span class='fss'>D. D.</span>, ...
-and published by <span class='sc'>T. Abbay</span>; is a condensed summary of the sayings and writings of
-the following seven Virginian Colonists:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c025'>
- <div><i><span class='sc'>Gentlemen.</span></i></div>
- <div class='c000'><i>Original Planters</i>, 1607.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Nathaniel Powell</span> (killed in the Massacre, 22 March 1622) ...</div>
- <div><span class='sc'>Thomas Studley</span>, Cape Merchant or Colonial Storekeeper (who died 28 August 1607) ...</div>
- <div class='c004'><cite>First Supply</cite>, 1608.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>William Phettiplace</span>, ...</div>
- <div>Dr. <span class='sc'>Walter Russell</span>, ...</div>
- <div><span class='sc'>Richard Wiffin</span>, ...</div>
- <div class='c004'><cite>Second Supply</cite>, 1609.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Thomas Abbay</span> ...</div>
- <div class='c004'><i><span class='sc'>Soldier.</span></i></div>
- <div class='c000'><i>Original Planter</i>, 1607.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>Anas Todkill</span> ...</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>In the revision of this text in the <cite>General History</cite>, Lib. 3, in 1624; the testimonies
-of eight other Gentlemen were incorporated (not <i>invented</i> as some would think) ...</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is to be especially noted that, while he would endorse it all, Captain <span class='sc'>Smith</span> is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>not named as an author of <i>any portion</i> of this Second Part, either in the title in the
-previous page or in the text itself: therefore no allusion to the <span class='sc'>Pocahontas</span> deliverance
-should be expected in it; and there is none.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Smith</b>, capt. John, of Virginia. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PROCEEDINGS OF</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE ENGLISH COLONIE IN</span> | Virginia since their first beginning from |
-England in the yeare of our Lord 1606, | <i>till this present</i> 1612, <i>with all
-their</i> | <i>accidents that befell them in their</i> | <i>Iournies and Discoveries</i>. |
-Also the Salvages discourses, orations and relations | of the Bordering
-neighbours, and how they be-|came subiect to the English. | <i>Vnfolding
-even the fundamentall causes from whence haue sprang so many mise-</i>|<i>ries
-to the vndertakers, and scandals to the businesse: taken faith-</i>|<i>fully as
-they were written out of the writings of Thomas</i> | <i>Studley the first
-provant maister, Anas Todkill, Walter</i> | <i>Russell Doctor of Phisicke,
-Nathaniell Powell</i>, | <i>William Phettyplace, Richard Wyffin, Tho-</i>|<i>mas
-Abbay, Tho: Hope, Rich. Polts and</i> | <i>the labours of divers other dili-</i>|<i>gent
-observers, that were</i> | <i>residents in Virginia.</i> | <i>And pervsed and confirmed
-by diverse now resident in</i> | <i>England that were actors in this busines.</i> | By
-W. S. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: strictly speaking part of the preceding art., which see.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Smyth</b>, rev. Richard, of Barnstaple. <span class='fss'>MVNITION A-</span>|<span class='fss'>GAINST
-MANS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>MISERY AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>MORTALITY</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>TREATICE CONTAI-</span>|ning the
-most effectuall remedies | against the miserable state of | man in this
-life, selected | out of the chiefest | both humane | and divine | authors; |
-<span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Smyth</span> <i>preacher of</i> | <i>Gods word in Barstaple in</i> | <i>Devonshire</i>.
-| The second Edition. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[18] + 136 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>ved with the</i>,
-111 <i>ry bosomes</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–10) Epistle
-dedicatorie to lady Elizabeth Basset,
-dated from Barnstaple, 1 Jan. “1609”:
-(11–13) “The contents of the severall
-chapters”: (14–17) “The sinners counsell
-to his soule. A Sonnet of the Authors,”
-18 quatrains, beg. “Awake ô
-Soule, and looke abroad”: 1–136, the
-treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Nothing seems to be known of the author, nor can I find mention of the 1st edition,
-presumably issued in 1609 or 1610. See 1634 <span class='fss'>S</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Rawlinson</b>, rev. John. <span class='fss'>MERCY TO A BEAST.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PREACHED AT SAINT</span> | <span class='fss'>MARIES SPITTLE IN</span> | London on Tuseday in |
-<i>Easter weeke</i>. 1612. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>IOHN RAWLINSON DOCTOR</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OF DIVINITI</i></span><span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ϵ</span>. |
-[<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 52
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>sort, that of</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-epistle dedicatorie to Thomas lord Ellesmere,
-chancellor of the University of
-Oxford: 1–52, the sermon, on Prov. xii.
-10.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 506 (where 1612 is misprinted 1602). The author was
-chaplain to lord Ellesmere.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Reinolds</b>, John. (Antony Wood asserts, in his <cite>Ath.
-Oxon.</cite>, ii. 149, that the second part of John Reinolds’ Epigrammata (in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>Episcopos) was printed at Oxford in 1612 in 8<sup>o</sup>. No copy appears now
-to be known.)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Travers</b>, Walter. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SVPPLICATI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ON MADE TO
-THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PRIVY COVNSEL</span> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Walter Travers.</span> | [<i>University arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 25
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>there were</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–25,
-the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is an appeal made by Travers, who was afternoon preacher at the Temple in
-London when Hooker was Master (about 1585–91), against the inhibition from
-preaching issued against him by the Privy Council. Travers was ordained at Antwerp,
-and had imbibed Genevan doctrine with which he opposed Hooker. See Hooker’s
-<cite>Answer</cite> above. Both treatises have been frequently reprinted, in Hooker’s <cite>Works</cite>, &amp;c.
-This issue does not seem to have been published by Travers himself, but only in order
-to accompany Hooker’s posthumously printed <cite>Answer</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Twofold treatise.</b> [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>TVVO-FOLD</span> | <span class='fss'>TREATISE</span>, |
-<span class='fss'>THE ONE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>DECYPHERING THE</i></span> | <i>worth of</i> <span class='fss'>SPECVLATION</span>, | <i>and of a retired
-life</i>. | <span class='fss'>THE OTHER</span> | <span class='fss'>CONTAINING A</span> | discoverie of <span class='sc'>Youth</span> | and <span class='fss'>OLD AGE</span>. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1612: twelves 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2]
-+ 45 + [1] + 35 + [1]: pp. 11 beg. <i>vnwilling
-to</i>, and <i><sup>h</sup>er behalfe</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–45, the first
-treatise: 1–35, the second treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>26. <b>Wakeman</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'>PRACTISE.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | Sermon
-preached on the Act-Sun-|<i>day in S. Maries Church in</i> | <i>Oxford. Iul.
-8. 1604</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Rob. Wakeman</span> Bachelor | <i>of Divinity &amp; fellow of
-Balliol</i> | <i>Colledge in Oxford</i>. |<a id='t86'></a> [<i>motto.</i>] | The second Impression. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. 92
-+ [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>ple, but served</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 2,
-“Points handled in this Sermon”: 3–92,
-the sermon, on Acts ii. 46.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1605 <span class='fss'>W</span>, of which this is a verbatim reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>27. <b>Wakeman</b>, Robert. “Jonah’s Sermon and Ninivehs repentance
-(<i>J. Barnes</i>) 1612 ... 16<i>mo</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the <cite>Catalogue of the Second ... portion of the ... library formed by ... Philip
-Bliss</cite>, Lond. (1858), p. 6, corroborated by a MS. note in a Bodleian copy (once the
-editor’s) of Bliss’s Wood’s <cite>Athenæ</cite>, which states that this is a third edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>28. <b>Wyclif</b>, John. <span class='fss'>WICKLIFFES WICKET,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A LEARNED AND</span> |
-<span class='fss'>GODLY TREATISE OF</span> | <span class='fss'><i>THE SACRAMENT</i></span>, | <i>made by</i> | <span class='sc'>John Wickliffe</span>. |
-<i>Set forth according to an ancient</i> | <i>Printed Copie.</i> | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>University
-arms.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1612: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 18
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>comprehend either</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) preface “To the Christian Reader”
-about Wyclif: dated “from Corpus
-Christi College in Oxford, Iuly 6.
-<span class='fss'>MDCXII</span>,” signed “Henry Iackson”:
-1–18, the sermon, on Rom. xv. 30.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the editor see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 577. The “ancient printed copie” was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>neither of the two issues dated Nuremberg 1546, but the undated one (probably 1546)
-“overseen” by M[iles] C[overdale], though Coverdale’s preface is omitted. This was
-reprinted at Cambr. in 1851, and one of the others at Oxford in 1828.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1613.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Answer.</b> <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>BRIEFE AN-</span>|<span class='fss'>SWERE VNTO</span> | Certaine Obiections |
-and Reasons against the Descen<small>/</small>|tion of Christ into Hell, late<small>/</small>|ly sent
-in writing vnto a | Gentleman in the | Countrey. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 32: 1613: the rest precisely as 1604 <span class='fss'>A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reissue of the sheets of 1604 <span class='fss'>A</span>, with a new titlepage not printed at Oxford, the
-woodcut on title being unknown there.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Basse</b>, William. <span class='fss'>GREAT BRITTAINES</span> | <span class='fss'>SVNNES-SET,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BEWAILED
-WITH A SHOW-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>ER OF TEARES</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>William Basse.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7 (not at foot of page, but, with
-date, close to rest of title): 1613: (eight
-&amp; four) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 22: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-short dedication “to his honourable master
-S<sup>r</sup> Richard Wenman Knight”: 1–19,
-the poem in 8-line stanzas, one on each
-page, ending with “finis.”: 21–22, “A
-morning after mourning,” 2 more stanzas,
-ending with “finis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Extremely rare. This book has never been found except in fragments, and usually
-in the bindings of books. The Bodleian copy is complete: Merton college, Oxford,
-has nearly a complete one from its bindings: the British Museum copy was dr.
-Bandinel’s (Sale Catal., Aug. 1861, no. 44), and contains the first 16 (?) pages. Other
-fragments are known to exist, chiefly in Oxford college library bindings. The poem
-was reproduced in facsimile in 1872 by W. H. Allnutt (100 copies).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It seems on the whole probable that this William Basse, who was a retainer in sir
-R. Wenman’s house (Thame Park), is identical with the William Bas who wrote <cite>Sword
-and Buckler</cite> (Lond. 1602, 4<sup>o</sup>), which is a poetical defence of Serving-men against the
-scorn of their superiors. In Stanza 2 of the present poem is a clear reference to
-Bas’s <cite>Three Pastoral Elegies</cite> (Lond. 1602, 4<sup>o</sup>) in the following terms:—“Not (like
-as when some triviall discontents | First taught my raw and lucklesse youth to rue |
-Doe I to Flockes, now vtter my laments ...”. On the other hand the author of
-the <cite>Sword and Buckler</cite> had two sons, whereas here he speaks of his “young Muse.”
-Other poems by “William Basse” (Bas) prepared for the press in 1653 were printed
-by J. P. Collier in 1870; and contributions to the <cite>Annalia Dubrensia</cite> (1636) and
-Walton’s <cite>Angler</cite>, as well as an “Epitaph upon Shakespeare” are mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See J. Payne Collier’s <cite>Bibliographical account</cite> (1865) p. 54, W. C. Hazlitt’s <cite>Handbook</cite>
-(1867) and <cite>(Bibliographical) Collections</cite>, 1st series (1876). The author is mentioned
-as living at Moreton near Thame, in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iv. 222.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The subject of the first poem is Prince Henry’s death, and of the “Morning” the
-wedding of the princess Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Benefield</b>, Sebastian. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>COMMENTARIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> |
-<span class='fss'>EXPOSITION VPON THE FIRST</span> | Chapter of the Prophecy of <span class='sc'>Amos</span>, delivered |
-in xxi. Sermons in the Parish Church of | <span class='sc'>Meisey Hampton</span> <i>in
-the Di-</i>|<i>ocesse of Gloucester</i>, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD DOCTOR</span> | of
-Divinity and fellow of Corpus Christi | <i>College in Oxford</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>HEREVNTO
-IS ADDED A SERMON</i></span> | <i>vpon</i> 1. <i>Cor.</i> 9. 19. <i>wherein is touched the law-</i>|full
-vse of things indifferent. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>Impr. 29<i>a</i>: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-280 + [8]: p. 11 beg. <i>the<sup>r</sup> numbring</i>, 111
-<i>Which truth</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to bp. King,
-dated “from my study in Corpus Christi
-College in Oxford, Iuly 5. 1613”: (5–7)
-“The Preface to the Christian Reader”:
-1–264, the 21 “lectures”: 265, a title:—“[<i>woodcut</i>]
-| <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED
-AT WOTTON</span> | <span class='sc'>Vnder Edge</span> in the Diocesse
-of | <i>Gloucester before the Clergy
-there assem-</i>|<i>bled at the Episcopall Visitation
-of</i> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Ravis</span>, <i>late Bishop</i> | <i>of
-Gloucester</i>. 1605. | <span class='sc'>By</span> <span class='fss'>SEBASTIAN BENEFIELD</span>. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>],” impr.
-7<i>a</i>, 1613: 267–280, the sermon, on
-1 Cor. ix. 19, with the head title “The
-Christians Libertie”: 280, Errata, corrected
-in many copies: (1–7) “A Table
-of such particulars as are contained in
-this Commentarie,” alphabetical.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 488. A Latin translation of the lectures (without the
-sermon) was made by Benefield’s pupil Henry Jackson (<i>ibid.</i> iii. 578) and published
-at Oppenheim in 1615, the preface being dated 21 May 1614 and addressed to
-Abraham Scultetus who had visited Oxford and made a friendship with Benefield.
-Benefield printed a commentary in 21 sermons on Amos chap. 2 at London in 1620,
-and in 17 sermons on Amos chap. 3 (together with a separate reprint of the present
-commentary) at London in 1629.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Benefield</b>, Sebastian. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>HAVEN OF THE AFFLICTED.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SRRMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CATHEDRAL CHVRCH</span> | <span class='fss'>OF GLOVCESTER</span> |
-<i>Aug.</i> 10. 1613. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Sebastian Benefield</span> Doctor of Divinity | and
-fellow of C.&nbsp;C.&nbsp;C. | <i>in Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 20
-+ [2] : p. 11 beg. <i>wife, rebellious</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–5) Epistle dedicatorie to bp. Miles
-Smyth, dated “from my study in Corpus
-Christi College in Oxford, August 27,
-1613”: (6) A quotation from Augustine
-with English translation: 1–20, the sermon,
-on Amos iii. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 488.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Bible</b>, Psalms. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>MEDITATI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ON ON PART OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE
-SEAVENTH</span> | <span class='fss'>PSALME.</span> | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 31
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>not Henry</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3)
-dedication “to the worshipfull his loving
-Cousen M<sup>r</sup> E. N. and his virtuous wife
-Mistris K. N. ...”, dated “from Cote,”
-7 Nov. 1605: 1–31, the meditation, on
-Ps. vii. 9.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Bunny</b>, Edmund. <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>DIVORCE</span> | For Adulterie, and | Marrying
-againe: that there | is no sufficient warrant | so to doe. | With a
-note in the end, that <i>R. P.</i> many | yeares since was answered. | By
-<i>Edm. Bunny</i> Batchelour of Deuinitie. | [<i>woodcut.</i>] [The whole title is
-within a border of woodcut ornaments.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 32: 1613: &amp;c. precisely as 1610 <span class='fss'>B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a rare reissue of 1610 <span class='fss'>B</span> with a new titlepage printed (not at Oxford, for the
-woodcut in the title is unknown there, but) at London, perhaps by W. Stansby. The
-old titlepage was simply cut off, and the new one pasted in.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Burhill</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>DE POTESTATE</span> | <span class='fss'>REGIA, ET VSVR-</span>|<i>patione
-Papali</i>, | <span class='sc'>Pro Tortvra Torti</span>, | Contra Parallelum <span class='sc'>Andre</span>æ <span class='sc'>Evd</span>æ-|
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span><span class='fss'>MONIOANNIS</span> Cydonij Iesuitæ, | <i>Responsio</i> | <span class='sc'>Roberti Bvrhilli</span> | <span class='sc'>Angli</span>. |
-[<i>motto</i>: then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 291 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>piscopi Romani</i>,
-111 <i>quod contra vos</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) Latin poem to
-prince Charles: (5) “Summa Tractatuum”:
-(6–8) “Index Responsionum
-iuxta ordinem apud Adversarium”: 1–280,
-the treatise, in three “tractatus”:
-280, “Lectori”, a note: 281–291, “Appendix,
-ubi Auctoris ante biennium edita
-Responsio, ad Martini Becani Refutationem
-(quam vocat) Torturæ Torti defenditur ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 18. The bibliography of the controversy excited by
-the fresh oath of Allegiance imposed after the Gunpowder Plot is too intricate to be
-here treated. It was begun by card. Bellarmine (“Matthaeus Tortus”) and James I,
-and followed by bp. Andrewes’ <cite>Tortura Torti</cite>, Andreas Eudaemon-johannes (André
-L’Heureux’s) <cite>Parallelus Torti ac Tortoris</cite> (Colon. 1611), Martinus Becanus’s <cite>Refutatio
-Torturae Torti</cite> (Mogunt. 1610), and many others. See <i>Du Moulin</i>, below.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Byrd</b>, Josias. <span class='fss'>LOVES PEERELES PARAGON,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'><i>THE ATTRIBVTES,
-AND PROGRESSE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE CHVRCH.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN
-S</span><sup>t</sup>. <span class='fss'>MARIES IN</span> | Oxford, and at <span class='sc'>Harfield</span> in Middle-|sex. 1613. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Josias Byrd.</span> | [Latin <i>motto</i>, and <i>translation</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 27
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>The Church is</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-dedication to Alice “dowager of Derby,
-wife to the ... Baron of Elsemere”, dated
-from “Oxford, Alsoules. September the
-3. 1613”: 1–27, the sermon, on Cant. ii.
-10: (1) “Faults escaped”, at end “Delay
-is dangerous | and hast erroneous”,
-all between woodcuts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author took his B.A. degree at Cambridge, and incorporated at All Souls on
-4 May 1609; M.A., 1610.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Colmore</b>, Matthew. <span class='fss'><i>ORATIO FVNEBRIS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IN OBITVM</span> | clarissimi
-viri et mvni⸗|<span class='sc'>ficentissimi Collegii Cor-</span>|<span class='sc'>poris Christi</span> Oxon. benefactoris
-| <span class='sc'>Georgii Sanctpavl</span> Equitis | Aurati, habita in medijs epulis |
-Decembris 9. 1613. | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Matth</span>æ<span class='sc'>o Colmore</span> | Somatochristiano. | [<i>motto</i>,
-then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>mentis luxuriȩ</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, Latin preface to the
-reader: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. Little seems to be known of the subject of this Oration. Sir George St.
-Paul of Snarford never matriculated or took a degree, though according to the oration
-a commoner of Corpus for two years. His work at Lincoln and Stamford is described,
-and his munificence to the College and the new Schools at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Du Moulin</b>, Pierre. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ACCOMPLIS</span><span class='small'>H</span><span class='fss'>MENT</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE PROPHECIES;</span>
-| <span class='fss'>OR THE THIRD BOOKE IN</span> | defense of the Catholicke faith,
-con-|tained in the booke of the high | &amp; mighty <span class='sc'>King Iames . I.</span> | by
-the grace of God King | of Great Brittaine | and Ireland. | <span class='fss'><i>AGAINST
-THE ALLEGATIONS</i></span> | <i>of</i> R. Bellarmine; <i>and</i> F. N. Coëffeteau <i>&amp;</i> | <i>other
-Doctors of the Romish Church</i>: | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Peter Dv Movlin</span> Minister of
-the | <i>word of God in the Church of Paris.</i> | <i>Translated out of French by</i>
-<span class='sc'>I. Heath</span>, <i>Fellow of</i> | <i>New College in Oxford.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>Impr. 29<i>a</i>: 1613: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[18] + 484 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Innocent in
-his</i>, 111 <i>of this, but this</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–16) “The
-preface to the Reader”: (17–18) “A
-table of the matters contained in this
-third booke.”: 1–484, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 169. The title of the complete work is “Defense de la
-foy catholique contenue au livre de ... Iaques I Roy de la grād’ Bretagne ... contenue
-en trois liures. Contre la Response de F. N. Coeffeteau ... Par Pierre du
-Moulin ... 1612.” The 3rd book was subsequently printed separately in French also,
-with the title “Accomplissement des propheties ... Par Pierre du Moulin ...”. The
-original work by King James I is “Triplici nodo, triplex cuneus. Or an apologie for
-the oath of allegiance ...” (anon., Lond. 1607, and with author’s name Lond. 1609
-&amp;c.: in Latin <cite>Apologia pro iuramento fidelitatis</cite>, Lond. 1609, &amp;c.). Coeffeteau’s book
-was “Responce a l’Advertissement ... par le ... Roy de la grande Bretagne ...”
-(Par. 1610). See <i>Burhill</i>, above.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Gamage</b>, William. <span class='fss'>LINSI-WOOLSIE.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>TWO CENTVRIES OF</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>EPIGRAMMES</span></i>. | <i>Written by</i> <span class='sc'>William Gamage</span> <i>Batche-</i>|<i>lour in the Artes</i>. |
-[<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1613: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[80], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Which
-vpward’s</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to
-Katherine lady Mansell, daughter of lord
-Lisle: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>, complimentary verses to
-the author: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>v</sup>, “The Author to the
-Praisers of his booke”, a short poem:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 6<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 8<sup>v</sup>, the 200 epigrams.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare: see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 350. This author escaped Wood’s notice
-altogether, and his claim to be an Oxford man eluded even dr. Bliss when he edited
-Wood in 1815: but he subsequently writes in a MS. note, “I have now no doubt
-but that the author of <cite>Linsi-Woolsie</cite> was of Jesus, matriculated May 18. 1604, a
-native of Glamorgan, pleb. fil., æt. 20: B.A. Dec. 17. 1607.” The verses are extremely
-poor. The only copy at present known is that in the British Museum, which
-was the Heber copy (Heber sale, 1834, pt. 1, p. 141, no. 2734.)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Glanville</b>, John. <span class='fss'>ARTICVLI</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIANÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>FIDEI, QVAM EC-</span>|<span class='fss'>CLESIA
-PROFITETVR</span> | <span class='fss'>ANGLICANA,</span> | <span class='fss'>VERSV</span> | (<i><span class='fss'>QVOAD EIVS FIERI POTVIT</span></i>) |
-<i><span class='fss'>EXPRESSI FACILLIMO</span></i>. | [<i>device</i>, then two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 39
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Articulus</i> 13: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to John King, bp. of London,
-signed “Johannes Glanvillus”: (5) “Ad
-Carmen meum”, a poem in Latin: (6)
-“Ad lectorem benevolum”, a distich:
-1–39, the 40 Articles, in elegiac verse, the
-40th being “De Articulorum ratificatione”:
-(1–2) “De numero &amp; nominibus
-Articulorum”, a list: (2) “Ad lectorem”,
-a Latin poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 343. The verses are a paraphrase, with short additional
-poems of a meditative kind, written during an illness.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. Godwin, Thomas. “<cite>Romanæ Historiæ Anthologia. An
-English Exposition of the Roman Antiquities ...</cite> Oxon. 1613 ... &amp;c.
-qu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 52, but probably a misprint for 1614, which see,
-though Wood’s apparent error is copied by Watt, Bohn’s Lowndes, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Hinde</b>, William. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <i><span class='fss'>PATH TO PIETIE</span></i>, | <span class='fss'>LEADING TO THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>WAY, THE TRVTH,</span> | <span class='fss'>AND THE LIFE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRIST IESVS</span>. | <i><span class='fss'>DRAWNE VPON THE</span></i> |
-Ground <i>and according to</i> | <i>the</i> Rule <i>of Faith</i>, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>William Hinde</span> |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Sometimes Fellow of Queenes | College in Oxford, and now | Preacher
-of Gods word | at <span class='sc'>Bvnbvry</span> in | Cheshire. | <i>Published for the benefit of
-his owne</i> | <i>Flocke and Family.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1613: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>?: pp. [8]
-+ 56: p. 11 beg. <i>Q. VVhat learne</i>: Pica
-Roman &amp; Italic. Contents:—(1) title:
-(3–7) dedication to sir Thomas Lowe,
-Master, and to the 4 Wardens, of the
-Haberdashers’ Company in London, dated
-Bunbury, 19 July 1613: 1–56, the treatise,
-in question and answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 461, where <i>Banbury</i> is twice a
-misprint for <i>Bunbury</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Holyoke</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>A</span> | Sermon of Obedience. | Especially
-vnto Authoritie Ecclesiasticall, | wherein the principall controuersies of
-our | <i>Church are handled, and many of their</i> | Obiections which are
-refractorie to | <i>the gouernment established, answered</i>, | though briefly as
-time and | place could permit: | Being preached at a Visitation of the
-right | Worshipfull M.D. <i>Hinton</i>, in <i>Couentry</i>. | <i>By</i> | <span class='fss'>FRAN: HOLYOKE</span>. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1613: (rest as 1610 <span class='fss'>H</span>.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reissue of the sheets of 1610 <span class='fss'>H</span>, with a new titlepage printed in London, within
-a border of woodcuts. The woodcut on the titlepage is unknown at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Hooker</b>, dr. Richard. (A learned discourse of Iustification,
-&amp;c., a reprint of the title of 1612 <span class='fss'>H</span>, adding after the word “Oxford
-<span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span>”:—<i>The second edition, corrected, and amended.</i> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 68:
-p. 11 beg. <i>should make vs</i>, 61 <i>man should
-hope</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) “To the Christian
-Reader”, signed as before, but dated
-“from Corpus Christi College in Oxford
-the 6. of Iuly. 1612.”: 1–68, the discourse,
-on Hab. i. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A second edition of 1612 <span class='fss'>H</span>: the alterations are chiefly literal and verbal.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Kilbie</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN SAINT MA-</span>|<span class='fss'>RIES
-CHVRCH IN</span> <span class='sc'>Oxford</span> | March 26. 1612. at the funerall of | <span class='sc'>Thomas
-Holland</span>, Do·|ctor of the Chaire in Divini-|tie, and Rector of Exce-|ter
-College, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Kilbie</span> <i>Doctor of Divinity, Rector</i> | <i>of Lincolne
-College</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29<i>a</i>: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-20 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>ken away even</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-1–20, the sermon, on 1 Cor. xv. 55–57.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 287 &amp; 112. There is some little biographical matter
-about dr. Holland.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Oxford</b>, Exeter College. <i><span class='fss'>THRENI EXONIENSIVM</span></i> | <span class='fss'>IN OBITVM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ILLVSTRISSIMI VIRI D.</span> <span class='sc'>Io=</span>|<span class='sc'>hannis Petrei</span>, <span class='fss'>BARONIS DE</span> | Writtle, Filij
-honoratissimi viri D. | <span class='sc'>Gvilielmi Petrei</span> ordinis au-|reȩ Periscelidis
-Equitis clarissimi, | &amp; quatuor Principibus à con-|silijs secretioribus. |
-<i>Qui Exoniense Collegium octo Socijs, amplis reditibus</i>, | <i>plurimis privilegijs,
-auxerunt liberaliter &amp; ornâ-</i>|<i>runt, Benefactores, Mecænates, &amp;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>Patroni</i> | <i>munificentissimi.</i> | Per ejusdem Collegij Alumnos &amp; ceteros
-studiosos. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 48:
-p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Δεύτερος</span>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication,
-partly in Latin verse, to lord William
-Petrie son of lord Petre of Writtle: 1–48,
-the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Most of the poems are Latin, but 4 Greek, 2 Hebrew, and one French. John lord
-Petre died on 11 Oct. 1613.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. —— Merton College. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>BODLEIO-</span>|<span class='fss'>MNEMA.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 84
-+ [20]: p. 11 beg. <i>Ad sanam</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3)
-Latin dedication to the memory of sir
-Thomas Bodley, by Merton college: (4)
-Latin poem by the editor: 1–84, the
-poems, chiefly Latin: (1–18) “Oratio
-funebris habita in Collegio Mertonensi à
-Johanne Halesio ... anno 1613 Martij
-29<sup>o</sup>; quo die Clarissimo Equiti D.
-Thomæ Bodleio funus ducebatur.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This book consists of about 80 poems (four in Greek, the rest in Latin) in memory
-of sir Thomas Bodley by members of Merton college, of which society Bodley was a
-fellow. The editor’s name does not appear. Bodley died in London on Jan. 28.
-1612/3, but both the dedication of this volume and p. 117 of the <cite>Justa Funebria</cite> (see
-below) state that it was on Jan. 29: see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 126.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Oxford</b>, University. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>EPITHALAMIA.</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>LVSVS
-PALA-</span>|tini in nvptias celsissi-|mi principis domini fride-|rici comitis palatini
-ad | <span class='sc'><i>RHENVM,<span class='small'>&amp;</span>C.ET SERENISSI-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>MÆ ELISABETHÆ IACOBI</span> | <span class='fss'><i>POTENTISSIMI
-BRI-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>TANNI</i>Æ <i>REGIS</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>FILI</i>Æ PRIMO-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>GENIT</i>Æ</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 31: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [128],
-signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>P</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>Q</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Cur<sup>c</sup>
-Atalanta</i>, <span class='fss'>M</span> 1<sup>r</sup> Impar nulla: English
-Roman. Contents:—sign. (&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup> title:
-(&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup> “Oxonia Heydelbergæ”, a short
-poem: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>Q</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, the verses.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems by Oxford men on the marriage of Frederick v, elector Palatine, with the
-princess Elizabeth of England on 14 Feb. 161<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>. All are Latin except five Greek,
-two Italian and one Hebrew (unpointed, Pica and Brevier).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. —— University. <span class='fss'>IVSTA FVNEBRIA</span> | <span class='fss'>PTOLEMÆI</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONIENSIS
-THO-</span>|<span class='fss'>MÆ BODLEII EQVITIS</span> | <span class='fss'>AVRATI CELEBRATA</span> | in Academiâ
-Oxoniensi | <i>Mensis Martij</i> 29.| 1613. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 31: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 134
-+ [14]: p. 11 beg. <i>Sed calcanda</i>, 111 <i>Non
-famam</i>. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) short
-Latin poems as by the University: 1–134,
-the poems: (1) a titlepage:—“<span class='fss'>ORATIO
-FVNEBRIS</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA IN</span> | <span class='fss'>SCHOLA THEOLOGICA
-AB</span> | <span class='fss'>ORATORE PVBLICO, IN OBI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TV
-CLARISSIMI EQVITIS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>THOMÆ BODLEII</i>.</span> |
-<span class='asterism'>*&#8196;*&#8196;*&#8196;*<br />*&#8196;*&#8196;*</span> | [<i>device</i>]”, impr. 11: (3) “Ad
-lectorem” a preface by the orator (Isaac
-Wake): (5–12) the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>About 270 poems, chiefly Latin, but two Hebrew (unpointed, Pica), four Greek,
-two Italian, one English: in memory of sir Thomas Bodley, see preceding art. The
-oration by Wake (see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 540) was reprinted in W. Bates’s <cite>Vitæ
-selectorum virorum</cite> (1681), p. 416. The British Museum printed Catalogue, and the
-Catalogue of English Books in the Museum up to 1640, attribute this speech to
-Richard Corbet, by error.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Petrucci</b>, Lodovico. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>RACCOLTA,</span> | <span class='fss'>D’ ALCVNE
-RIME, DEL CAVA-</span>|liere <span class='sc'>Lodovico Petrvcci</span>, Nobile Toscano, in | più
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>luoghi, e tempi composte, &amp; à diversi Pren-|cipi dedicate; con la selua
-delle sue | Persecutioni. | <i><span class='fss'>FARRAGO POEMATVM, EQVITIS LVDO-</span></i>|<i><span class='fss'>VICI
-PETRVCCI</span>, Nobilis Tuscani, diversis lo-</i>|<i>cis et temporibus conscriptorum, &amp;
-ad diversos</i> | <i>Principes dedicatorum; vnà cum syluâ, sua-</i>|<i>rum Persecutionum.</i>
-| *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* | *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [130],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>P</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>Q</span> 1–3, one leaf, <span class='fss'>Q</span> 4: sign.
-<span class='fss'>H</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Quod signis</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>,
-Italian dedication to James i signed
-“L’infelice Lodovico Petrucci Cavaliere”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, the same in Latin: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>Q</span> 3<sup>v</sup>,
-the poems in Italian and Latin: (one
-leaf)<sup>v</sup> “I principali errori commessi nell’
-Italiano di questo libro”, a long list,
-beginning with the titlepage (“Cavalliere”),
-followed by some Errata in the
-Latin: the references oddly are to <i>pages</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 293. This is a singular and uncommon book. The
-author was a soldier of fortune, who was admitted as a reader in the Bodleian as from
-St. Edmund hall on 27 Apr. 1611, but did not matriculate till 5 Sept. 1612. The
-verso of each leaf is in general Italian poems, and the recto of the next leaf a Latin
-version of them. On signn. <span class='fss'>F</span> 2<sup>v</sup> and <span class='fss'>L</span> 3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>M</span> 2<sup>v</sup> are letters and testimonials about him:
-at <span class='fss'>H</span> 1<sup>v</sup> is a poem in Italian and Latin on sir Thomas Bodley’s death: at <span class='fss'>H</span> 2<sup>v</sup> begins
-his <cite>Selua</cite> or <cite>Sylva</cite> in two parts, and at <span class='fss'>N</span> 4<sup>v</sup> a long and curious account in Italian and
-Latin verse of his stay in England and particularly Oxford and New College, which
-he was forced to leave (in 1614?) by the puritanical party. On <span class='fss'>M</span> 3<sup>v</sup> is an oration
-delivered in Italy, and on <span class='fss'>Q</span> 2<sup>v</sup> is a poem in both languages on the death of dr. Rives,
-which is repeated on <span class='fss'>Q</span> 3<sup>r</sup>. The whole book was intended to be produced at the
-wedding of Frederick elector Palatine with the princess Elizabeth (14 Feb. 161<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>),
-but by the printer’s delay was too late.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Potter</b>, bp. Barnabas. <span class='fss'><i>THE BARONETS BVRIALL</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A
-FVNERALL</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED</span> | at the solemnitie of that honou-|rable
-Baronet S<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Edvvard</span> | <span class='sc'>Seymours</span> buriall. | *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Barnaby Potter</span> |
-<i>Bachelor in Divinitie, Fellow of Queenes Col-</i>|<i>lege in Oxford, and
-Preacher to the</i> | <i>Towne of Tottnes in Devon</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 37
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>the divell</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-dedication to sir Edw. and lady Mary
-Giles, dated “from your house at Bowdon,
-Aug. 24. 1613.”: 1–37, the sermon,
-on Deut. xxxiv. 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 22. The author seems to have been private chaplain
-to sir E. Giles. He quotes against himself in the dedication a thesis disputed at the
-Act in Oxford 1613 “Doctior quisque fuit in scribendo parcissimus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Powell</b>, Thomas, of Brasenose college, Oxford. [<i>woodcut</i>] |
-<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN SAINT MA-</span>|<span class='fss'>RIES IN OXFORD,</span> | <span class='sc'>by Thomas
-Powell.</span> | 1613. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 17 +
-[3]: p. 11 beg. <i>vpon the text</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-Latin dedication to dr. Thomas Singleton,
-principal of Brasenose: 1–17, the sermon,
-on Ex. xxviii. 34.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Price</b>, Daniel. <span class='fss'>DAVID HIS OATH OF</span> | <span class='fss'>ALLEGEANCE TO</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IERVSALEM.</span> | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED ON ACT</span> | <span class='fss'>SVNDAY LAST IN THE
-MORNING,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>IN S</i></span><sup>t</sup>. <span class='fss'><i>MARIES IN OXFORD</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Daniel Price</span> <i>Doctor in
-Divinity</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 40:
-p. 11 beg. <i>the blood of Ahab</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to Charles i, dated from Exeter
-college Oxford, July 27 (1613): 1–40,
-the sermon, on Ps. cxxxvii. 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 512. Every printed page has lines bounding the text,
-head-line and margin.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>26. ——. <span class='fss'>PRINCE HENRY</span> | <span class='sc'>His</span> | <span class='fss'>FIRST ANNIVERSARY</span>. | [<i>motto.</i>] | <span class='sc'>By</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Daniel Price</span> <i>Doctor in Divinity, one of</i> | <i>his Highnesse Chaplaines</i>. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 32:
-p. 11 beg. <i>himselfe with</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
-to Will. Cotton bp. of Exeter: 1–32, the
-“meditation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 512, and 1614 <span class='fss'>P</span>. The essay, which contains some
-personal matter about prince Henry of historical interest, was written for 6 Nov. 1613.
-The text, head-line and margin of each printed page are within bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>27. ——. <span class='fss'>SPIRITVALL</span> | <span class='sc'>ODOVRS TO T<span class='small'>H</span>E</span> | <span class='fss'>MEMORY OF PRINCE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>HENRY</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'>IN FOVRE OF THE LAST SER-</span>|mons preached in S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>James</span> after his
-High-|nesse death, the last being the Sermon be-|fore the body, the day
-before | the Funerall. | <span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>Daniel Price</span> <i>then Chaplaine in Attendance</i>. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 52
-+ [4] + 29 + [5] + 26: p. 11 beg. (1) <i>the
-Manna</i>, (2) <i>ces, the furies</i>, (3) <i>Lastly to
-close</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3) short dedication to Charles
-i: 1–26, sermon on Ps. xc. 15: 27–52,
-sermon on 2 Sam. xii. 23, with running
-title to both “Meditations of Consolation
-in our Lamentations”: (1) a title:—“<span class='fss'>SORROVV</span>
-| <span class='fss'>FOR THE SINNES OF</span> | <span class='fss'><i>THE
-TIME</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT S</span><sup>t</sup>. |
-<span class='sc'>James</span> on the third Sunday after | <i>the</i>
-<span class='sc'>Prince</span> <i>his death</i>. | <span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>Daniel Price</span>
-<i>then Chaplaine in Attendance</i>. | [<i>motto</i>,
-then <i>device</i>, then <i>impr.</i> 29, 1613.]”:
-(3–4) dedication to lady (Robert) Carey:
-1–29, the sermon, on Ezek. ix. 4: (2)
-title:—“<span class='fss'>TEARES</span> | <span class='fss'>SHED OVER ABNER.</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED ON THE</span> | Sunday
-before the <span class='sc'>Prince</span> his fu-|nerall in
-S<sup>t</sup>. <span class='sc'>James</span> Chappell | <i>before the body</i>. |
-<span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>Daniell Price</span> <i>then Chaplaine in
-Attendance</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>, then
-<i>impr.</i> 29, 1613.]”: (4–5) dedication to
-sir David Murray: the sermon, on 2 Sam.
-iii. 31.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 511. Every printed page is within lines bounding the
-text, head-line and margin. The signatures are continuous, (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup> A-O<sup>4</sup> P<sup>2</sup>. There is
-very little of historical interest in the sermons.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>28. <b>Rainolds</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>D. IOHANNIS</span> | <span class='fss'>RAINOLDI</span> | <span class='fss'>OLIM GRÆCÆ
-LIN-</span>|guæ Prælectoris in Col-|legio <span class='sc'>Corporis</span> | <span class='sc'>Christi</span> apud | <i>Oxonienses</i>,
-| <span class='fss'><i>ORATIONES</i></span> 5. <span class='fss'><i>CVM</i></span> | <i>aliis quibusdam opusculis</i>. | <span class='fss'>OMNIA NVNC PRI-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>MVM
-EDITA</i>.</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1613: 16<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>At present this book is only known to me from a titlepage at the end of the 1614
-edition of Rainolds’s <cite>Orationes</cite> (which see), and notices in Thomas Bowman’s
-<cite>Catalogus librorum</cite> (Oxf. 1687) [sign. I1<sup>r</sup>:—“146. Rainoldi (Joan) Orationes. Oxon.
-1613”] and Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 70 (Bagford). But the book is not likely
-to be really rare, unless the 1614 edition caused its recall or destruction.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>29. ——. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PROPHECIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF OBADIAH</span> | <span class='fss'>OPENED AND APPLYED IN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SVNDRY LEARNED AND GRA-</span>|<span class='fss'>CIOVS SERMONS PREACHED</span> | at <span class='sc'>All-Hallowes</span>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>and S<sup>t</sup> | <span class='sc'>Maries</span> in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, | <span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='fss'>THAT FAMOVS AND IVDICI-</span>|ous Divine
-<span class='sc'>Iohn Rainolds</span> D. | of Divinity and late President of | Corp. Chr. Coll. |
-Published for the honour and vse of that famous Vni-|versity, and for
-the benefit of the Churches of | Christ abroad in the Country, | <span class='fss'>BY W. H.</span> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 136
-+ [4] + 20: p. 11 beg. (1) <i>promised to
-consume</i>, (2) <i>hād of the Philistines</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–8) epistle dedicatory to D. Airay provost
-of Queen’s college, Oxford, dated
-“Bunbury in Cheshire, July 19. 1613”,
-signed “W. Hinde”: 1–136, the commentary:
-(1) a title:—“<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> |
-<span class='fss'>VPON PART OF THE</span> | eighteenth Psalme. |
-<span class='fss'>PREACHED TO THE PVBLIKE</span> | assembly
-of Scholers in the Vniversity of | Oxford
-the last day of August, 1586. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>John
-Rainoldes</span> | <i>Vpon occasion of their meeting
-to giue thankes to God</i> | <i>for the detection
-and apprehension of Trai-</i>|<i>tours, who
-wickedly conspired against</i> | <i>the</i> Queenes
-<i>Maiestie and</i> | the state of the Realme. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>]”, impr. 7<i>a</i>, 1613:
-(3–4) “Iohn Rainolds, to the Reader
-...”, dated “At Corpus Christi College
-in Oxford, Octob. 24. 1586.”: 1–20, the
-sermon, on Ps. xviii. 47–51.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 16 &amp; 15, and 1586 <span class='fss'>R</span>. The commentary has special
-reference to the 1st Epistle of St. Peter, and is in 10 divisions or sermons. The editor,
-William Hinde of Queen’s college, seems to have long possessed the MS. of the
-lectures. The sermon is a reprint of 1586 <span class='fss'>R</span>, and an integral part of the whole
-volume, as the signatures show, which for the sermon begin at <span class='fss'>T</span> 1. Every printed
-page has bounding lines to the text, margin and head-line.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>30. S[mith], S[amuel]. Aditus ad logicam. In usum eorum qui
-primò Academiam salutant. Autore S. S. Artium Magistro. Imprint:—“Anno
-Domini 1613”, (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This book is attributed to the Oxford Press by Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 283), but was
-not printed there, the woodcuts being unknown in Oxford. See 1684 <span class='fss'>S</span>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1614.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Andrewes</b>, John. “Christ his Crosse, or the most comfortable
-Doctrine of Christ Crucified &amp; joyfull Tidings of his Passion,
-teaching us to Love &amp; Embrace his Crosse, as the most Sweete &amp;
-Celestiall Doctrine unto the Soule, and how We should behave ourselves
-therein according to the Word of God. Newly Published by
-John Andrewes, Minister &amp; Preacher of the Word of God at Barricke
-Basset in the County of Wiltes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in manuscript in the Bagford collections (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 71):
-see Wood’s <cite>Ath Oxon.</cite>, ii. 493, where the book is described as quarto in two parts.
-The existence of a copy does not seem to be at present known, nor is one noticed in
-the ordinary bibliographical works.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Benefield</b>, Sebastian. <span class='fss'>EIGHT SER-</span>|<span class='fss'>MONS PVBLIKELY</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED
-IN THE V-</span>|<span class='sc'>niversity of Oxford</span>, | the second at <i>S</i><sup>t</sup> <i>Peters</i> in the <i>East</i>, |
-the rest at <i>S</i><sup>t</sup> <i>Maries</i> Church . Be-|gunne in the yeare 1595. | <i>Decemb.
-XIII.</i> | <span class='fss'><i>NOW FIRST PVBLISHED BY SEBAS-</i></span>|<span class='sc'>tian Benefield</span> Doctor, and
-Professour of | Divinity for the Lady <span class='sc'>Margaret</span>. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>Impr. 7: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 153
-+ [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>It may be</i>, 111 <i>what they
-thinke</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) dedication to lord Ellesmere,
-Chancellor of the University of Oxford,
-dated “from my Study in Corpus Christi
-College in Oxford, Iuly 2. 1614”: 1–57,
-three sermons on Luke ix. 23: 58–153,
-five sermons on James iv. 10: (2–6)
-“The table containing in alphabeticall
-order the particulars of this booke.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 488.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Dawes</b>, Lancelot. “<cite>Two Sermons preached at the Assize
-holden at Carlisle, touching sundry Corruptions of these times.</cite> Oxon.
-1614. oct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. —: 1614?: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 146 + [2?]: p. 11 beg. <i>turall disposition</i>,
-111 <i>his brother, and</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7) dedication
-to dr. Robinson bp. of Carlisle, signed
-“Lancelot Dawes”: 1–75, a sermon, on
-Matt. xxvi. 15: 77–146, a sermon, on Ps.
-lxxxii. 6–7: (1–2) (<i>not seen.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 349, where the above title is given. The only
-copy readily traceable is that in the Bodleian which has lost the title and following
-leaf, beginning on ¶ 3, as well as a blank leaf there must have been after p. 146
-(sign. <span class='fss'>K</span> 1.) The sermons and dedication, but not title, were reprinted in <cite>Sermons ...
-by Lancelot Dawes ...</cite> (Lond., 1653), pp. 49, 105. At present the date (1614)
-depends on Wood’s accuracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Day</b>, John. <span class='fss'>DAY’S DYALL</span> | <span class='fss'>OR,</span> | <span class='fss'>HIS TWELVE HOWRES</span> | <span class='fss'>THAT
-IS,</span> | <span class='fss'>TWELVE SEVERALL LECTVRES</span> | <span class='fss'>BY WAY OF CATECHISME, AS</span> | they were
-delivered by him in the Chappel of | <span class='sc'>Oriell Colledge</span> in <i>Ox-</i>|<i>ford</i>, in
-the yeeres of our Lord | <i>God</i> 1612, and 1613. | [<i>device</i>, then two
-<i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 329
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>which our Master</i>, 111
-<i><sup>y</sup> speakes: The</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) dedication to
-Oriel college, Oxford, dated “from my
-Study in that Colledge ... Octob. 17.
-1614”, signed “Iohn Day”: (8) “The
-severall arguments with the severall Texts
-of Scripture, of every severall Lecture in
-this Booke”, with a quotation: 1–329,
-the twelve lectures, with a page occasionally
-blank: (1–2) “To the Reader”:
-including a few errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 412. The author in the Preface says that he was
-appointed “Catechisme Reader” in Oriel for a year in 1612, when these lectures were
-delivered. In a footnote he alludes to his father John Day the printer. The general
-subjects are those of the Catechism, but carried further.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='sc'>Roman</span>æ <span class='sc'>Histori</span>æ <span class='sc'>Anthologia.</span> | <span class='fss'>AN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ENGLISH EX-</span>|<span class='fss'>POSITION OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE ROMANE AN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TIQVITIES, WHEREIN</span> | many
-Romane and English | offices are paralleld and di-|vers obscure phrases |
-<i>explained</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Godwyn</span> <i>Master of Arts</i>. | For the vse of
-<span class='sc'>Abingdon</span> <i>Schoole</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 193
-+ [19]: p. 11 beg. <i>ved in the treasury</i>,
-111 <i>cense the people</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication in
-Latin to dr. Francis James, dated “Abingdoniæ
-decimo calend. Aprilis. Anno 1613.”
-[i. e. 23 Mar. 161<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>], signed “Thomas
-Godwinus”: (5–6) “Benevolo Lectori”:
-(7) Latin poems on the book by dr. Laurence
-Humphrey and John Sanford: (8)
-“A short table shewing the argument of
-every Booke and Section”: 1–193, the
-work: (2–18) “Index rerum et verborum
-maxime insignium.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 52. This was a popular work, see 1616 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1620 <span class='fss'>G</span>,
-1623 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1625 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1628 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1631 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1633 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1638 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1642 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1655 <span class='fss'>G</span>, 1658 <span class='fss'>G</span>.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>Other edd. were printed at London in 1661, 1668, 1674, 1680, 1685 (14th), 1689
-(15th), 1696 (16th). For the supposed 1613 ed., see 1613 G. Godwin’s <cite>Synopsis
-Antiquitatum Hebraicarum</cite> (see 1616 G) and Francis Rous’s <cite>Archæologia Attica</cite>
-(see 1637 R) may be regarded as companion works to the present volume, and are
-often found bound with it. The author apologizes for an English treatise on such a
-subject, and states that one of his main objects was to illustrate Cicero.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Goodwin</b>, dr. William. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED BEFORE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE KINGS MOST</span> | <span class='fss'>EXCELLENT MAIES-</span>|<span class='sc'>tie At Woodstocke,</span> | <span class='sc'>Avg. 28.
-1614.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>William Goodwin</span>, <i>Deane . of Christ’s</i> | <i>Church and Vice-Chancellor
-of the Vni-</i>|<i>versity of Oxon.</i> | Published by Commandement. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 38:
-p. 11 beg. <i>à Peccato; delicta</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–38,
-the sermon, on Jer. i. 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 297. The sermon is directed against the jurisdiction of
-the Roman Church over temporal sovereigns.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Hooker</b>, dr. Richard. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>TVVO</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON
-PART OF</span> | <span class='fss'>S. JVDES EPISTLE,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Hooker</span> <i>sometimes Fellow of</i> |
-<i>Corpus Christi College in Oxford</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-56: p. 11 beg. <i>Iesus with</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-dedication to George Summaster, principal
-of “Broad-Gates Hall in Oxford,”
-by “Henry Iackson,” dated “Oxon.
-from Corp. Christ. College, this 13. of
-Ianuary, 1613” (161<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>): 1–29, the first
-sermon: 31–56, the second, both on Jude
-17–21.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 698, and for the editor iii. 577. This and other
-Sermons of Hooker were reprinted with editions of the <cite>Ecclesiastical Polity</cite>, in 1622,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Jewell</b>, bp. John. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΑΠΟΛΟΓΙΑ ΤΗΣ ΑΓΓΛΩΝ | Εκκλησίας
-Ελληνιστὶ μετα-</span>|<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">φρασθεῖσα.</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIA ECCLE-</span>|siæ Anglicanæ Græcè versa. |
-<i>Interprete</i> I. S. <i>Bacc. in Art.</i> | <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πρωτοπείρῳ συγγνώμη.</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1614: (twelves) 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 214 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ὁ Ιερώνυμος</span>),
-111 <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">θολικῆς πίστεως</span>: Pica Greek. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5–13) dedication to
-dr. William Langton, pres. of Magdalen
-college, Oxford, dated 22 July 1613,
-signed “Joh. Smith”: (15–20) “Lectori
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">φιλέλληνι</span>”: 1–214, the Apologia:
-(1) “Errata sic corrigenda.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 393, and 1639 J, 1671 J. The original edition of this
-celebrated <cite>Apologia</cite> was published in 1562, an English translation in the same
-year, and a German in 1589. This is the first Greek edition, as 1671 J is the first
-Welsh one. The translator, John Smith of Magdalen, explains that the task was
-meant as a College exercise merely, at first: and apologizes for using such words as
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἰουβιλαῖα</span>, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Βούλλαι</span>, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἰνδουλγεντίαι</span>, for <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">νὴ Δία</span> in a Christian work, and for having only
-a month and a half to spare for the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>N.</b>, S. “<cite>Papistogelastes, or Apologues by which are pleasantly
-discovered the Abuses, Follies, Superstitions, Idolatries, and Impieties, of
-the Synagogue of the Pope, and especially of the Priests and Monks
-thereof</cite>, written first in Ital. by N. S. and thence translated into French
-by S. J. and now out of French into English by R. W. ut supr. Oxon,
-1614, in tw[elves].”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>So in an account of Rowland Willet in Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 362: but I find no
-other reference to a copy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Price</b>, dr. Daniel. <span class='fss'>PRINCE HENRY</span> | <span class='fss'>HIS</span> | <span class='fss'>SECOND</span> | <span class='fss'>ANNIVERSARY.</span>
-| [<i>motto.</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Daniel Price</span> Doctor in Divinity, one of | his
-Highnesse chaplaines. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 33: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-44: p. 11 beg. <i>wherein they might</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to king Charles i, dated
-“Ex. Coll. Novemb. 6. [1614] the fatall
-day of Prince Henries decease”: 1–44,
-the discourse.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1613 P, and for the author Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 511: there is some historical
-matter in the essay. Every printed page has its text, margin and headline within
-bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Price</b>, Sampson. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>HEAVENLY</span> | <span class='fss'>PROCLAMATION TO</span> | <span class='fss'>FLY
-ROMISH BABYLON.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT OX-</span>|ford in S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maries</span>
-<i>Nov. 21. 1613.</i> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Sampson Price</span> <i>Master of Arts of Exe-</i>|<i>ter Colledge
-and Preacher to the Citty</i> | <i>of Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 34
-+ [2]: p 11 beg. <i>ing, drunkennesse</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:-p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to sir Roger Owen, dated
-“from my study at Exeter Colledge, Oct.
-28. 1614.”: 1–34, the sermon, on Rev.
-xviii. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 489, where it is related that Price earned the name of
-“the Mawle of Heretics” for his violence against Roman Catholicism. The preface
-gives some biographical details of Price, incidentally.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Prideaux</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>CASTIGATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>CVIVSDAM CIR-</span>|<span class='fss'>CVLATORIS,
-QVI R. P.</span> | <span class='fss'>ANDREAM EVDÆMON-</span>|<span class='fss'>IOHANNEM CYDONI-</span>|<span class='fss'>VM E SOCIETATE IE-</span>|su
-seipsum nuncupat. | <i><span class='fss'>OPPOSITA IPSIVS CA-</span></i>|<i>lumnijs in Epistolam</i> <span class='sc'>Isaaci</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Casavboni</span> <i>ad Fronto-</i>|<i>nem Ducæum</i>. | Per <span class='sc'>Iohannem Prideaux</span> SS. The-|ologiæ
-Doctorem &amp; Collegij | <i>Exoniensis Rectorem</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1614: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 242: p. 11 beg. <i>apud regiam</i>, 111
-<i>us, qui opus</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) dedication to archbp.
-Abbot, dated “Oxon. è Collegio Exoniensi
-9. Cal. Ianuarij”: (9–13) “Ad
-Lectorem”: (14–15) “Index capitum
-...”: 1–242, the work, p. 20 being
-blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267. The circumstances of this book will be found in
-Mark Pattison’s <cite>Isaac Casaubon</cite> (Lond., 1875: a work without an index), pp. 332,
-347, 353, 410, esp. 438–443. Briefly, Casaubon’s “... ad Frontonem Ducæum
-[Fronto Le Duc] ... Epistola ... (Lond. 1611) was a defence of the execution of
-Henry Garnett in 1606, against some Jesuit books; a reply was published at Cologne
-in 1613 by Andreas Eudaemon-Johannes (L’Heureux) “... Epistola ad Amicum
-Gallum ... item Responsio ad Epistolam Isaaci Casauboni”, the Responsio being dated
-1612 on a separate titlepage. Then Prideaux was selected to answer the <cite>Responsio</cite>,
-in order to relieve Casaubon of the task: at p. 224 he quotes Casaubon’s account of
-his father’s last days. There is no real ground for Pattison’s remark that “few copies
-of Prideaux’s pamphlet survive” (<i>ut supra</i>, p. 443).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. ——. <span class='fss'>EPHESVS BACKSLIDING</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSIDE-</span>|<span class='fss'>RED AND APPLY-</span>|<span class='fss'>ED TO
-THESE</span> | times, in a Sermon preached at | Oxford, in S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maries</span>, the |
-tenth of Iuly, being the Act | <i>Sunday</i>. 1614. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Prideaux</span>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>Doctor of Divinity, | and Rector of Exceter College. | [<i>motto</i>, then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 37
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>worthie comming</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) dedication to dr. Bodley, “canon
-of Exeter, and parson of Shobrooke in
-Devon,” dated “from Exceter College in
-Oxford, August 5.”, 1614: 1–37, the
-sermon, on Rev. ii. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 265. This sermon was reprinted in
-1621 (London) and 1636, see 1636 <span class='fss'>P</span>. The dedication mentions dr. Bodley’s favours
-towards Prideaux, and mr. (sir William?) Periam’s to one Orford of Exeter Coll.,
-Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>R[ainolds]</b>, I[ohn]. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVERY</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE MAN OF
-SINNE:</span> | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN IS SET FORTH THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHANGES OF GODS CHURCH</span>, |
-<i>In her</i>
-<span class='overunder'>{ <i>Afflictions by his Raigne</i>.<br />{ <i>Consolations by his Raine</i>.</span> |
-First preached in divers Sermons
-to the Vniver-|sitie and Cittie of Oxon, by a Reverend &amp; Iu-|dicious
-Divine IR. D. of Divinity and some-|times of Queenes College. | <i>And
-now published for the farther vse of both, and</i> | <i>comfort of all that hate
-Antichrist and loue</i> | <i>the Lord Iesus Christ wheresoever:</i> | <i>By W. H.</i> |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1614: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 50:
-p. 11 beg. <i>gather that seeing</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to dr. Airay provost of Queen’s
-college, Oxford, dated “Bunbury in
-Cheshire, Iuly 8. 1614” signed “W.
-Hinde”: (5–6) “Advertisement to the
-Reader,” dated as before, with “William
-Hinde”: 1–50, one sermon, on 2 Thess.
-ii. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 16, 462. Dr. John Raynolds was Scholar, Fellow, and
-President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, but at one time or another was connected
-with Queen’s, Merton, New College, University, and Oriel (<cite>Register of the Univ. of
-Oxford</cite>, vol 2, ed. A. Clark, pt. 1, p. 4). There is no clear reference to the author
-being dr. Raynolds anywhere in the volume, but the fact is undoubted. The “Advertisement,”
-as a matter of printing, follows the Sermon, but was probably intended to
-be torn off at that place and pasted in where it is described above.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Rainolds</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'><i>V. CL.</i></span> | <span class='fss'>D. IOANNIS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>RAINOLDI</i>,</span>| <span class='fss'>OLIM
-GRÆCÆ LIN-</span>|guæ Prælectoris in <i>Collegio</i> | <i>Corporis Christi</i> apud |
-Oxonienses, | <i>Orationes Duodecim; cum alijs</i> | quibusdam opusculis. |
-<span class='fss'>ADIECTA EST ORATIO</span> | Funebris, in obitu eiusdem habi-|ta à M. <span class='sc'>Isaaco
-Wake</span> | Oratore Publico. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1614: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[6] + 77 + [17] + 201 + [111]: p. 11 beg.
-(1) <i>mi sint Antonii</i>, (2) <i>ponant laborioso</i>,
-111 <i>speramus . Veruntamen</i>: Pica English.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-“Iohannes Rainoldus Academicis Oxoniensibus ...”,
-the Latin preface of 1587.
-R reprinted, date and all, “è Colleg.
-Corp. Christ. Februar. 2.”: 1–36 (i)
-“Oratio post vacationem Natalitiam.
-1576.”, beg. <i>Epaminondam</i>: 37–77 (ii)
-“Oratio post vacationem Paschalem,
-Anno. 1576.”, beg. <i>Etsi Vestros</i>: (2) (iii)
-a titlepage:—“<span class='fss'>ORATIO FV-</span>|<span class='fss'>NEBRIS
-HABI-</span>|ta in Templo beatæ | <i>Mariæ
-Oxon.</i> | Ab <span class='sc'>Isaaco Wake</span>, | <span class='fss'>PVBLICO
-ACADE-</span>|miȩ Oratore, <i>Maij</i> 25. <i>An.</i> | 1607.
-quum mœsti | <i>Oxonienses, pijs mani-</i>|<i>bus</i>
-<span class='sc'>Iohannis</span> | <span class='sc'>Rainoldi</span> | <i>parentarent</i>. |”,
-woodcuts, then impr. 11: 4–12, the oration,
-beg. <i>Quam fragilis</i>: 1–45 (iv)
-“Oratio post festum Paschatis. 1574.”,
-beg. <i>Pythagoram</i>: 46–66 (v) “Oratio
-post festum Nat. Chr. 1575. ...”, beg.
-<i>Cicero cum</i>: 67–111 (vi) “Oratio post
-festum Paschatis, 1576.”, beg. <i>Consideranti</i>:
-112–142 (vii) “Oratio post festum
-Michael. 1575.”, beg. <i>Non modò</i>: 143–164
-(viii) “Oratio post festum Michael.
-1576.”, beg. <i>Frequentia</i>: 165–196 (ix)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>“D. Iohannes Rainoldus Gulielmo Rainoldo
-fratri suo ...”, a Latin epistle on
-the Church, beg. <i>Neque meus</i>, dated
-“Oxoniæ 4. Non. Septemb.”: 197–199
-(x) “D. Iohannes Rainoldus D. Gulielmo
-VVhitakero ...”, an epistle urging Whitaker
-to answer Possevinus, dated “Oxon.
-14 Kalend. Novemb.”, beg. “Facit amor”:
-200–201 (xi) the dedication to the Queen
-of Rainolds’s <cite>De Romanæ Ecclesiæ Idololatria</cite>,
-dated “Iul. vii. <span class='fss'>MDXCVI</span>,” beg.
-<i>Quod olim</i>: (2) (xii) a titlepage:—“<span class='fss'>PLVTARCHI</span>
-| <span class='fss'>CHÆRONENSIS</span> | <span class='sc'>Lib. II.</span> |
-1 <i>De vtilitate ex hostibus</i> | <i>capienda.</i> | 2
-<i>De morbis animi &amp; cor-</i>|<i>poris.</i> | <span class='sc'>D.
-Iohanne Rainoldo</span> | Interprete. |”,
-woodcuts, then impr. 11: (4–12) Dedication
-in Latin to Queen Elizabeth, dated
-“Oxon. è Coll. Corp. Christi.”, (13–41,
-42–50) the two treatises: (52) (xiii) a
-titlepage:—“<span class='fss'>MAXIMI TYRII</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHI</span>
-| <span class='fss'>PLATONICI</span> | Disputationes Tres, |
-1 <i>Vitam activam contem-</i>|<i>plativâ</i>, | 2
-<i>Contemplativam activâ</i> | <i>meliorem esse.</i> |
-3 <i>Qui morbi graviores, ani-</i>|<i>mi, an corporis.</i>
-| <span class='sc'>D. Iohanne Rainoldo</span> | Interprete.
-|,” woodcuts, then impr. 11: (54–60)
-Latin dedication to Thomas Wilson
-“Regiæ Majestati à libellis supplicibus”:
-(61–78, 79–94, 95–109) the three disputations:
-(110) (xiv) the titlepage noticed
-in 1613. <span class='fss'>R</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 16, where he mentions that Henry Jackson was editor of
-all the Orations except the first two which had been published before, see 1587 <span class='fss'>R</span>. The
-funeral oration was first printed in 1607, see 1607 (Wake, 2nd ed.). From a bibliographical
-point of view there is great confusion in this and the two subsequent editions
-of Rainolds’s Orations (<i>Lond.</i> 1610, and <i>Lond.</i> 1628). For instance Wood himself in
-his remarks about Henry Jackson has confused the London edd. (B. C.) with the
-Oxford one (A).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In A (the present volume) it is impossible to reckon twelve Orations, and the book
-falls into three parts (<i>a</i>) pp. [6] + 77 + [17], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>12</sup>, sectt. i-iii. above: (<i>b</i>) pp.
-201 + [1], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>H</span><sup>12</sup>, <span class='fss'>I</span> 1–5, sectt. iv-xi.: (<i>c</i>) pp. [110], signn. <span class='fss'>I</span> 6–12, <span class='fss'>K</span>-<span class='fss'>N</span><sup>12</sup>, sectt.
-xii-xiv. In B (Lond. 1619) <i>a</i> is as before occupying pp. [12] + 1–106: then follows
-“... Rainoldi ... Orationes quinque ...” with a separate titlepage and preface by
-H. Jackson, occupying pp. 107–348 [the Orations beg. <cite>Si quis</cite> (1573), <cite>Redit agricolis</cite>
-(1574), <cite>Si quantum vel, cum in isto</cite> (1577), <i>Si quantum ad</i> (1573)]: then <i>b</i>, pp. 349–528:
-then <i>c</i>, the Plutarch and Maximus Tyrius, with separate titlepages, occupying
-pp. 529–624: there is no extra titlepage at end. In C (Lond. 1628) the same four
-sections occupy pp. [6] + 1–92, 93–302, 303–460, 461–548, corresponding closely with
-B in contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>St. Paul</b>, sir George. “2591. Oxford. Carmina Funebria
-in Obitum Clarissimi Viri Georgii de Sancto Paulo Equitis Aurati C.C.C.
-Oxon. olim Convictoris et <i>ejusdem Benefactoris munifici</i>, &#8196;&#8196; <i>Oxoniæ</i>, Jos.
-Barnesius, 1614” quarto.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the <cite>Bibliotheca Heberiana</cite> (Auction catalogue of Richard Heber’s Library),
-part 6 (Lond. 1835), p. 185: the book sold for 9<i>s.</i> See 1613 C.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. Smith, Samuel. “262. Smith (Sam.) &amp; Brerewoodi Logica—Oxon.
-1614.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in “Catalogi Librorum Richardi Davis bibliopolæ. Pars secunda” (Lond. 1686),
-p. 77. No Oxford edition of Smith’s <cite>Aditus ad Logicam</cite> is at present known, see
-1613. <span class='fss'>S</span>, 1617. <span class='fss'>S</span> (reff. there), but as the latter is a 3rd edition, there may well have
-been one printed at Oxford in this year, of which no copy has yet found its way into
-bibliography. Of Brerewood’s <cite>Logica</cite> there is a London 1614 ed., probably alluded
-to in Davis’s Catalogue above.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1615.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Anyan</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT SAINT</span> | <span class='fss'>MARIE
-SPITTLE</span> | <i>April. 10. 1615.</i> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Anyan</span> Doctour of Divinity,
-and | <i>President of Corpus Christi College</i> | <i>in Oxon</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>Impr. 2: (1615): sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-42 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>like Vessels</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) dedication to Thomas Egerton lord
-Ellesmere, chancellor of the University:
-1–42, the sermon, on Acts x. 34–35.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 359.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Benefield</b>, Sebastian. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SINNE</span> | <span class='fss'>AGAINST THE HOLY</span> |
-<span class='fss'>GHOST DISCOVERED</span>: | <span class='fss'>AND OTHER CHRISTI-</span>|an doctrines delivered: | <span class='fss'>IN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>TWELVE SERMONS VPON PART</span> | of the tenth Chapter of the Epistle to | the
-Hebrewes. | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Sebastian Benefield</span> <i>Doctor of Divinity</i> | <i>and Professour
-for the Lady Margaret</i>, | <i>in the Vniversitie of</i> <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>motto</i>,
-then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 181
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>hold on their</i>, 111 <i>The
-writer of</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to William
-lord Paget, “From my Study in Corpus
-Christi College in Oxford, March 25.
-1615”: 1–181, the 12 sermons, on Heb.
-x. 26–31: (1–3), “The Table containing
-the particulers of this booke,” an alphabetical
-index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 488. The dedication states that the Sermons were
-written “many years” before, and existed in several MS. copies, and thanks lord
-Paget for benefactions to the Margaret Professor. The Sin is discovered to be a
-malicious denial of Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Brasbridge</b>, Thomas. “<cite>Questiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis,
-compendiariam totius opusculi Epitomen continentes.</cite> Oxon. 1615, oct.
-Dedicated to Dr. Laur. Humphrey president of Magd. coll. an. 1586.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 526, cf. Wood’s <cite>Historia et Antiquitates Universitatis
-Oxoniensis</cite> (Oxon. 1674) lib. 2, p. 197. See 1592 <span class='fss'>B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. Case, John. “292 Casus (Joan.) de Sphæra Civitatis — —
-Oxon. 1615”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A doubtful entry in Tho. Bowman’s <cite>Catalogus librorum</cite> (Oxf. 1687) sign. <span class='fss'>H</span> 1<sup>r</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Day</b>, John. <span class='fss'>CONCIO AD CLERVM</span> | <span class='fss'>IN SECVNDI, VEL QVARTI,
-RE-</span>|<i><span class='fss'>GVM, CAPITIS SEXTI, VER-</span></i>|<span class='fss'>SVM PRIMVM, SECVNDVM</span>, | <i><span class='fss'>TERTIVM, ET
-QVARTVM</span></i>. | Habita in Templo <i>B. Mariæ</i> Oxon. | Iunij 25<sup>o</sup>. <i>Ann. Dom.</i>
-1612. | <span class='sc'>per Ioannem Dayvm baccalav-</span>|reum in Theologia, et Collegij
-<span class='sc'>Orielen-</span>|<span class='fss'>SIS</span> apud Oxonienses Socium. | <i><span class='fss'>EDITIO SECVNDA.</span></i> [<i>device</i>, then
-<i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 26
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>dimento minimè</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) Latin dedication, nearly as 1st ed.:
-(4) “Thema,” the text: 1–26, the sermon:
-(1–2) letter, as 1st ed.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 412. This is a reprint with a few changes of 1612 <span class='fss'>D</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. ——. <span class='fss'>DAVID’S DESIRE</span> | <span class='fss'>TO GOE TO CHVRCH: AS IT</span> | was published
-in two Sermons | in <i>S</i><sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maries</span> in | <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | The <i>One</i>, the <i>Fift</i> of
-<i>November</i>, in the Afternoone | to the Vniversitie, in the Yeare of our
-Lord | God 1609. the <i>Other</i>, on <i>Christmas</i> | <i>Day</i> next following, to the
-Pa-|rishioners of that | place. | [<i>device</i>, then 2 <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-48: p. 11 beg. <i>waies but often</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
-epistle dedicatory to Oriel college and St.
-Mary’s parish, Oxford, signed “Iohn
-Day”: 1–25, the first sermon: 26, quotation
-from Camden’s Annales about
-queen Elizabeth: 27–48, the second
-sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 411. This is a reprint of 1612 <span class='fss'>D</span>, but neither is that fact
-mentioned, nor is the author’s name on the title.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. ——. <span class='fss'>DAY’S FESTIVALS</span> | <i><span class='fss'>OR,</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>TWELVE OF HIS SERMONS</span></i>: | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED
-BY HIM AT SEVERAL</span> | times to the <span class='sc'>Parishioners</span> of S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maryes</span> |
-in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, on the three Chiefe <span class='sc'>Festi-</span>|<span class='fss'>VALS</span> of the Yeere, <span class='sc'>Christmas</span>, |
-<span class='sc'>Easter</span>, and <span class='sc'>Whit-sontide</span>. | <i><span class='fss'>THREE OF VVHICH SERMONS</span></i>, | <i>are touching
-our</i> <span class='sc'>Saviour</span>; <span class='sc'>One</span>, <i>the</i> <span class='sc'>Ho-</span>|<span class='sc'>ly Ghost</span>; <span class='sc'>Two</span>, <i>the</i> <span class='sc'>Two Sa-</span>|<span class='fss'>CRAMENTS</span>;
-<i>The other</i> <span class='sc'>Six</span>, <i>such</i> | <i>severall</i> <span class='sc'>Dvties</span> <i>as belong to</i> | <i>the severall sorts of
-all</i> | <span class='sc'>Christians</span>. | [<i>device</i>, then two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7<i>a</i>: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-352: p. 11 beg. <i>the Nations of</i>, 111 <i>selfe
-same Steps</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) dedication to Oriel
-college, Oxford: (8) “The Severall Arguments,
-with Severall Texts ...”,
-with a note: 1–160, six sermons: 161–188
-short pieces on the Lord’s Supper,
-containing a letter to “Ea.” of St. Mary’s
-parish dated “Oriel. Coll. March. 2.”,
-“Sacred Fragments” (on both Sacraments)
-and prayers: 189–352, the six
-last sermons.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 411. The dedication alludes to the circumstances of
-preaching “David’s Desire to go to Church,” see 1612 D, and foreg. art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Evans</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>VERBA DIERVM</span>, | <span class='fss'>OR</span>, | <i><span class='fss'>THE DAYES REPORT</span></i>, |
-<span class='fss'>OF GODS GLORY</span>. | <i>As it hath beene delivered some yeeres since, at Foure
-Ser-</i>|<i>mons, or Lectures vpon one Text, in the Famous V-</i>|<i>niversity of</i>
-<span class='sc'>Oxford</span>; <i>And since that time</i> | <i>somewhat Augmented; And is now com-</i>|<i>mended
-vnto All Times to be Aug-</i>|<i>mented and Amended.</i> | <i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Edward
-Evans</span>, Preacher and Minister | <i>of Gods word</i>. | [3 <i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 181
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>tie? And</i>, 111 <i>to come.
-By</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3) dedication to the honour of
-God: (4) “Faults of Omission and Commission ...”
-beg. “Pag. 5. for <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ὁλὴν</span>
-Read, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ὅλην</span>”: 1–181, the four sermons,
-on Ps. xix. 2: (1) 3 mottos.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 168, where a MS. note by Bliss in his own copy shows
-that the author <i>was</i> the Fellow of New College, and that Wood was in error in supposing
-otherwise. See next art.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. ——. <span class='fss'>VERBA DIERVM</span>, | [&amp;c. precisely as foreg. art.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 7: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 181
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>tie? And</i>, 111 <i>to come.
-By</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (2–3) dedication to the honour of
-God, with words in italic inserted between
-the two parts of the original dedication:
-(4) “Faults of Omission and Commission,”
-beg. “Pag. 31. lin. 1 For <i>tations</i>”:
-rest as foreg. art., except 4 mottos, not 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a second issue with some of the text reset, with additions and alterations,
-as for instance on p. 144 in which the paginal misprint “134” is corrected, and which
-begins “newes of His Glory,” instead of “of Speech more warrantable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Hakewill</b>, George. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>VANITIE OF</span> | <i><span class='fss'>THE EYE</span></i>, | First
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>beganne [&amp;c. exactly as 1608 <span class='fss'>H</span>, second edition, except “<i>third</i>” for
-“<i>second</i>,” “<i>Author</i>” for “<i>Authour</i>,” and different woodcuts on title.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1615: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 170 + [24]: p. 11 beg. <i>and by consequence</i>,
-111 <i>maker; I</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (3) title: 5–8, “The Contents
-...”: 1–170, the work: (1–18)
-additional quotations and notes for the
-third edition, preceded by an explanatory
-paragraph.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1608 <span class='fss'>H</span>. This is a reprint throughout, with the addition of some quotes on
-an extra sheet.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. Haven. “The hauen of the afflicted / <i>Oxon.</i> 1615.”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A doubtful entry in the <cite>Bibliotheca classica ... authore M. Georgio Draudio</cite>
-(Francof. 1625), 2nd part, p. 269: probably referring to Sebastian Benefield’s
-Sermon, 1613, which see.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Mornay</b>, Philippe de, seigneur Du Plessis. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>HOMILY
-VPON</span> | <span class='fss'>THESE WORDS</span> | of Saint Matthew, | Chap. 16, v. 18. | <i>Tu es
-Petrus.</i> | <span class='fss'>WRITTEN FIRST</span> | in French by that Hono-|<i>rable and learned
-perso-</i>|nage, Monsieur Du <span class='sc'>Ples-</span>|<span class='sc'>sis Mornay</span>. | <span class='fss'>AND TRANSLATED</span> | into
-English by I. V. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1615: (twelve &amp; six) 16<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [8] + 28: p. 11 beg. <i>ceaued of God</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
-title: (5–7) epistle dedicatory to D<sup>r</sup>
-Prideaux rector of Exeter college Oxford
-“my most respected good Master,” signed
-“I. V”: 1–28, the homily.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The “I. V.” is supposed to be John Verneuil sublibrarian of the Bodleian, who was
-a Frenchman by birth: but he was of Magdalen and so not very likely to dedicate
-his first work to the head of another college. The collocation of this work and
-another translation of Mornay (1612 <span class='fss'>M</span>) in a Bodleian volume suggest the possibility
-of the same person being translator of both.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. Powell, Gabriel. “<cite>Prodromus. A Logical Resolution of the
-first Chapter of the Epist. of St. Paul to the Rom.</cite> Lond. 1600. Ox. 1602.
-oc.... Printed there again in Lat. 1615. oct. <cite>Theological and Scholastical
-Positions concerning Usury.</cite>—Pr. with <cite>Prodromus</cite>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 25, perhaps dubious.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Prayer</b>, book of Common. <span class='fss'>LIBER</span> | <span class='fss'>PRECVM</span> | <span class='fss'>PVBLICARVM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IN VSVM ECCLE-</span>|siæ Chathedralis Chri-|<i>sti Oxon</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1615: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[40] + 240 + [16]: p. 11 beg. <i>filiæ Sion</i>,
-111 <i>12. Nam liberabit</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–40) Matutinæ:
-preces, Vespertinæ preces, Letania, not
-in full: 1–240, the Psalms, in Latin:
-(1–6) Special prayers, “Pro officio totius
-Ecclesiæ in Communi,” “Pro Rege,”
-“Tempore Pestilentiæ,” “Pro docilitate,”
-“Gratiæ. Ante cibum” and “Post
-cibum”: (7) the versicle and response
-still used at Ch. Ch. after the Anthem, a
-prayer for the King and a commemoration
-of Henry viii, founder of Ch. Ch.,
-all in Latin: (9–16) Psalms 43, 114, 117,
-119 (part), 133, 150, in Latin rhyming
-verse, perhaps a separate piece of printing.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1639 <span class='fss'>P</span>, 1660, 1676, 1689, 1726, all which editions differ in the details of
-contents, and the 1639 ed. is entitled “Liber Psalmorum et precum ...” It may be
-noted that the signatures and paging constitute the Psalms a separate book, whereas
-the Stationers’ Company had obtained in 1603 a monopoly of printing the Psalms,
-confirmed in 1615.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>15. <b>Prideaux</b>, dr. John. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>CHRISTS</span> | <span class='fss'>COVNSELL FOR
-EN-</span>|<span class='fss'>DING LAW CASES.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AS IT HATH BEENE DELIVE-</i></span>|red in two Sermons
-vpon the 25<sup>th</sup> | Verse of the 5<sup>th</sup> of Matthew. | <span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>John Prideaux</span>
-<i>Doctor of Divinity and</i> | <i>Rector</i> of Exceter Colledge. | [<i>motto</i>, then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 58:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Tremelius notes</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–26,
-27–58, the sermons.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1636 <span class='fss'>P</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. [<b>Sanderson</b>, Robert]. <span class='fss'>LOGICÆ AR-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>TIS COMPENDIVM</i>.</span> | <i>In
-quo</i> | Vniversæ artis Synopsis, methodo ac for-|mâ ad Scholarum vsum,
-quàm fieri | potuit, accommodatissi-|mâ breviter pro-|ponitur. | <i>In privatam
-nonnullorum gratiam</i> | <i>&amp; vtilitatem tantisper edi-</i>|<i>tum, dùm ad
-pleniora</i> | <i>maturuerint.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1615: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 230 + [Appendixes, see below] 124 +
-[4]: p. 11 beg. <i>possunt. Individua</i>: 111
-<i>tur auferendo</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) “Elenchus
-capitum”: (7–8) “Admonitio ad Lectorem”:
-1–230, the Compendium, in
-three parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 626. See 1618 <span class='fss'>S</span> (2nd. ed., reprinted in
-Sanderson’s Works, vol. 6), 1631 <span class='fss'>S</span> (3rd), 1640 <span class='fss'>S</span> (4th), 1657 (5th), 1664 (6th),
-(7th), 1672 (8th), 1680 (9th), <i>no date</i> (10th, according to dr. Jacobson, Sanderson’s
-editor), and 1707, 1741, 1841, 1854 (in Sanderson’s works, Oxf. 1854, vol. 6). Cf.
-1602 <span class='fss'>S</span>. The <cite>Admonitio</cite> declares that the Appendixes are not ready and must be
-omitted. There is no clue to the author in the book. The only copy I have seen (in
-Queen’s College Library, Oxford) has the Appendixes of the second edition bound
-with it, so possibly they were printed in time to be issued with some copies.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Sharpe</b>, Lionel, archdeacon of Berkshire. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES MINISTRED
-IN</span> | the Visitation of the Right Worshipfull | M<sup>r</sup>. <span class='sc'>Doctor Sharpe</span>
-Arch-|<i>deacon of Barkeshire, in the yeare</i> | <i>of our Lord God. 1615.</i> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 4: 1615: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>at morning</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, 51 articles: <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, “The
-oath of the Church-wardens.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Wake</b>, Isaac. <span class='sc'>Rex Platonicvs</span>: | [&amp;c. exactly as 1607 <span class='fss'>W</span>,
-2nd ed., except “Aug.” for “Aug”, “An.” for “Anno.”, “<span class='fss'><i>NARRATIO</i></span>,”
-“<span class='sc'>AB Isaaco Wake</span>”, “<i>e-</i>|<i>mendatior</i>,” and “Tertia” for “Secunda.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 13<i>c</i>: 1615: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 224 + [20]: p. 11 beg. <i>minum memoriam</i>,
-111 <i>cumano irruunt</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—as 1607 <span class='fss'>W.</span>,
-2nd ed., except “13 Cal. Jul.” in dedication,
-and in 2nd titlepage “<span class='fss'>HABI-</span>|ta,”
-“beatæ | ,” “<span class='fss'>ACADE-</span>|miæ,” “<i>piis</i>,” “<i>parenta-</i>|rent.”,
-and the Oration is (6–19),
-and dated 1615.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reprint verbatim but not literatim. Cf. 1607 <span class='fss'>W.</span>, 2nd ed.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1616.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Advice.</b> [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ADVISE OF</span> | <span class='fss'>A SONNE, NOVV PRO-</span>|<span class='fss'>FESSING
-THE RELIGI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ON ESTABLISHED IN</span> | the present Church of England, |
-<i>to his deare Mother, yet a Ro-</i>|man Catholike. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>Impr. 2: 1616: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 38:
-p. 11 beg. <i>answere, that</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–38, the
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A controversial discourse against Roman Catholicism.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bailey</b>, Walter. <i><span class='fss'>TWO</span></i> | <span class='fss'>TREATISES</span> | <span class='fss'>CONCERNING</span> | the Preseruation
-of | <span class='sc'>Eie<small>/</small>sight</span>. | The first written by Do-|ctor <span class='sc'>Baily</span> sometimes
-of Ox-|ford: the other collected | <i>out of those two famous</i> | Physicions
-<span class='sc'>Fernelivs</span> | and <span class='sc'>Riolanvs</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 34: 1616: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 64: p. 11 beg. <i>yeeld into</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–7) “To the
-Reader,” a preface by I[ohn] B[arnes]:
-1–24, “A breefe Treatise concerning the
-preseruation of the eye sight”: 25–62,
-“A Treatise of the principall diseases of
-the eyes, gathered <i>out of</i> Fernelius <i>and</i>
-Iohn Riolamus <i>Doctors of Phisicke</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 586 and 1602 <span class='fss'>B</span>, for the first treatise. Johannes Fernelius
-and Johannes Riolanus the elder, both French physicians, died in 1558 and 1609 respectively,
-but neither wrote a special treatise on eyesight. The preface is no doubt
-by John Barnes and alludes to the worth and undeserved obscurity of Bailey’s work.
-The whole book with the possible exception of the titlepage, was printed in London,
-the woodcuts being quite unknown at Oxford. Even the arms of the University on
-the titlepage are re-cut on wood. The first treatise is only a reprint, Dr. Bailey
-having died in 1592, and the whole book, preface and all, was reprinted at London in
-1626.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Fuller</b>, Nicholas. <i><span class='fss'>MISCELLANEORVM</span></i> | <i>Theologicorum</i>, | <span class='fss'>QVIBVS
-NON</span> | <span class='fss'>MODO SCRIPTVRÆ DIVINÆ</span>, | <span class='fss'>SED ET ALIORVM CLASSICO-</span>|rum Auctorum
-plurima monumenta explican-|tur atque illustrantur; | <span class='fss'>LIBRI TRES</span>, | <i>Plurimarum
-observationum, in hac Editione, insigni</i> | auctario Locupletati: |
-<i>His insuper accessit, consimilis argumenti</i>, Liber | item Quartus, <i>antehac
-nunquam pervulgatus</i>. | <i><span class='fss'>AVCTORE</span></i> | <span class='sc'>Nicolao Fullero</span> antiquæ &amp; | inclytæ
-Ecclesiæ Cathedralis | <span class='sc'>Sarisbvriensis</span> | <i>Canonico</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1616: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-“452” (440–443 are omitted in the numbers
-of pages) + [8] + “453”-“645” +
-[3]: p. 11 beg. <i>mi, quibus ait</i>, 111 <i>Astrologum</i>,
-501 <i>sum est illud</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
-Epistola dedicatoria to sir Henry Wallop,
-dated “Ex Musæo nostro Aldingtonæ”
-25 Jan. 1615 i. e. 161<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>: (9–10) “Ad lectorem”:
-(11–16) list of chapters in books
-1–3: 1–452, the work, bks. 1–3: (1–5)
-dedication of bk. 4 to dr. Arthur Lake
-warden of New College, Oxford, dated
-“Ex Musæo nostro Aldingtonȩ 1 Feb.
-1615” i. e. 161<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>: (6–8) list of chapters
-in bk. 4: 453–645, the work, bk. 4: (1)
-“Errata ... &amp; prætermissa ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 327, the biography in which appears to be largely founded
-on the preface to this book. The first edition of bks. 1–3 is <i>Heidelberg</i> 1612, the preface
-dated 1609. There is a reissue of the sheets of the present edition (Errata and all)
-“Londini, apud Johannem Billium. Anno 1617,” the titlepage alone being newly
-printed and the old one torn off. The 4th and 5th books were published at Leyden
-in 1622, and all reprinted in the 9th volume of the <cite>Critici Sacri</cite> (Lond. 1660).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ROMANÆ HISTORIÆ ANTHOLOGIA</span> | [&amp;c.
-exactly as 1614 <span class='fss'>G</span>, except “Eng-|lish,” “and | divers,” “For the use of”
-(not italic): and after “Schoole” is added | “Editio Secunda.” |]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1616: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 193
-+ [19]: p. 11 beg. <i>ved in the treasurie</i>,
-111 <i>cense the people</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly
-as 1614 <span class='fss'>G</span>, except “Calend.”
-and “Godvvinus.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>See 1614 <span class='fss'>G.</span>, of which this is a verbatim and almost paginatim, but not literatim,
-reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>SYNOPSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTIQVITATVM HE-</span>|braicarum,
-ad explicationem vtri-|usque Testamenti valde | necessaria. | <span class='fss'><i>AD FACILIOREM
-INTELLE-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>CTVM, PLVRIMA SVNT COL-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>LATA CVM REBVS HO-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>DIE IN
-VSV.</span> | <i>Authore</i> | <span class='sc'>Thoma Godwino</span> | in <i>Art. Magistro</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1616: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 190
-+ [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>illîc loci</i>, 111 <i>&amp; inter
-semen</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to James Montague
-bp. of Bath &amp; Wells, dated “Oxon.
-pridie Iduum Januarij”: (5–6) “Lectori
-...”: (7) a table of divisions: 1–190,
-the work: (1) Comparative table of Hebrew
-and English Coins: (3–9) “Index
-rerum et verborum maxime insignium.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 52, and 1613 <span class='fss'>G</span> note. The author was chaplain to the
-bp. of Bath and Wells. The <cite>Moses et Aaron</cite> of the same author (Lond. 1625 and
-often) covers some of the same ground, but is a distinct work and in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. [<b>Nixon</b>, Anthony.] <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>DIGNITIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF MAN</span>, | Both | <span class='fss'>IN THE
-PERFECTIONS</span> | <span class='fss'>OF HIS SOVLE AND BODIE</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>SHEWING AS WELL THE</i></span> |
-faculties in the disposition of the one: as the | Senses and Organs, in
-the composi-|tion of the other. | By <span class='fss'><i>N. A</i></span> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>device</i> with <i>woodcuts</i>,
-then <i>line</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 35: 1616: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-125 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Q. How are</i>, 111 <i>Q.
-What is the</i>: English Roman. Contents:—pp.
-(1–2), [not seen]: (3) title:
-(5–7): dedication to William Redman of
-Great Shelford, signed N. A.: 1–125, the
-work: (1–3) [not seen.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. This book is questions and answers on almost every subject concerned
-with man’s body and mind. Not a line of it was printed at Oxford, the woodcuts and
-type differ from Oxford ones, and even the device, which is like the smaller Oxford
-Arms of the University, is from a different block. The British Museum catalogue
-supplies the author’s name.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Persius.</b> <span class='fss'>AVLVS PERSIVS FLACCVS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>HIS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SATIRES TRANSLA-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>TED
-INTO ENGLISH</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> |<span class='sc'>Barten Holyday</span> M<sup>r</sup> of Arts, | and Student
-of Christ-Church | <i>in Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>] | The second Impression. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 2: 1616: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [72],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Dissolu’d
-vnto</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>, “To the
-Reader”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, Complimentary letter
-from John Ley, and verses by John Wall
-and others: <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the translation,
-with a few notes: <span class='fss'>E</span> 2<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, “An apostrophe
-of the translatour to his Authour
-<i>Persius</i>,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 523. The first edition seems to be unrecorded. There
-are London editions of 1617, 1635, and 1650: and Oxf. 1673. Some edition of this
-book was entered at Stationers’ Hall by John Barnes on 14 Nov. 1616, and another by
-William Arundel, by John Barnes’s consent on 29 Mar. 1617.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Robinson</b>, Hugh. “<cite>Preces.</cite> Written for the use of the
-children of Winchester school in Lat. and Engl. <cite>Grammaticalia quædam</cite>,
-in Lat. and Engl. <cite>Antiquæ Historiæ Synopsis</cite>. All which were printed at
-Oxon. 1616. in a large oct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 395.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1617.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Angelus</b>, Christophorus. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πόνησις Χριστοφόρου τοῦ
-Ἀγγέλου, Ἕλληνος τοῦ πολλῶν πλη-</span>|<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">γῶν, καὶ Μαστίγων γευσαμένου ἀδίκως παρὰ
-τῶν | Τουρκῶν διὰ τὴν εἰς Χριστὸν Πίστιν.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">σφόδρα· καὶ
-ὅτι</span>: Pica Greek. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, dedication to English people
-in Greek: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the work: <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, a
-woodcut, see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 633, and the next art. Two very rude wood
-engravings illustrate the text, one on sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> depicting the tortures inflicted on
-Angelus by the Turks, the other (sig. <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>) possibly an emblematic figure representing
-England.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. ——. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>CHRISTOPHER ANGELL</span>,—a Grecian, who
-tasted of many | stripes and torments inflicted by the | Turkes for
-the faith which he | had in Christ Iesus. | <span class='asterism'>*&#8196;*&#8196;*<br />*&#8196;*</span> | [<i>line</i>] | [<i>woodcut</i>] |
-[<i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>much in debt</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> dedication to England: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>r</sup>,
-the work: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, a woodcut, see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 633, 1618 <span class='fss'>A</span>, and preceding art., of which this
-is a translation, in good English. The same two engravings occur as in the Greek
-text, on sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup> and <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Duck</b>, Arthur. [<i>woodcut.</i>] | <span class='fss'>VITA</span> | <span class='fss'>HENRICI</span> | <span class='fss'>CHICHELE</span> | <span class='fss'>ARCHIEPISCOPI</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>CANTVARIENSIS</span></i> | <span class='fss'>SVB REGIBVS HENRIC: V. ET VI.</span> | <span class='sc'>descripta ab
-Arthvro Duck</span>: | <i><span class='fss'>LL. D.</span></i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-108 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>licentur etiam</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-1–180, the Life: (1) account of the
-sources of the Life: (3) “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 258. The Life was reprinted in [Bates’s] <cite>Vitæ Selectorum
-... virorum</cite>, Lond. 1681, p. 1: and an English translation was published at
-London in 1699. This Life of the founder of All Souls contains some solid historical
-matter, with a few documents. Some copies want the Errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Hales</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT S</span><sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>MA-</span>|<span class='fss'>RIES IN OXFORD
-VPON</span> | <span class='fss'>TVESDAY IN EASTER</span> | <i><span class='fss'>VVEEKE</span></i>, 1617. | <i><span class='fss'>CONCERNING THE ABVSES</span></i> |
-<i>of obscure and difficult places of holy</i> | <i>Scripture, and remedies a-</i>|<i>gainst
-them</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Hales</span>, | <span class='fss'>FELLOW OF ETON COLLEDGE</span>, | and <i>Regius Professour</i>
-of the Greeke | tongue in the Vniversitie | of Oxford. | [<i>line</i>:
-then <i>device</i>: then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 41
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>monly they</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–41,
-the sermon, on 2 Pet. iii. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 409. This sermon was reprinted in
-Hale’s <cite>Golden Remains</cite> (Lond. 1659 &amp;c.), with others. The text, outer margin and
-headlines of every page are within bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Hutchins</b>, Robert. Stationers’ Register, ed. Arber, iii. 654
-“7<sup>o</sup> Augusti 1619. John Barnes. Entred for his copie by order of a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>Court <i>A short Catechisme</i> made by <span class='sc'>Robert Hutchins</span> which was the
-copie of <b>Joseph Barnes</b> his ffathers ... vj<sup>d</sup>,” assigned to John Wright
-the same day. This Catechism cannot be later than 1617, in which year
-Joseph Barnes ceased printing, nor before 1605 when John Wright began
-to publish: but I find no other notice of the book or author.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Jackson</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>NAZARETH AND BETHLEHEM,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR,</span> | <span class='fss'>ISRAEL’S</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PORTION IN THE SONNE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF IESSE.</span> | <span class='fss'>AND,</span> | <span class='fss'>MANKINDS COMFORT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>FROM THE
-WEAKER SEXE.</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>TVVO SERMONS PREACHED IN</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>S</i></span><sup>t</sup> Maryes Church in
-Oxford. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Iackson</span>, Bachelour of Divinitie, and | Fellow of
-Corpus Christi College | <i>in Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 38: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 75
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>returne to</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to James Montague bp. of
-Winchester, dated “from my study in
-Corpus Christi College ... Septemb. 6.
-1617”: 1–37, the first sermon, on Jer.
-xxxi. 21–22: 38–75, the second, on Gal.
-iv. 4–5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 668. The text, outer margins and headlines are within
-bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>M[orrice?]</b>, T[homas?] <span class='fss'>DIGESTA</span> | <span class='sc'>Scholastica,</span> | <span class='fss'>IN GRATIAM
-PVE-</span>|<span class='fss'>RORVM EDITA:</span> | <span class='fss'>IN DVAS DIVISA PAR-</span>|<i>tes: quarum prior Prosaica</i>, |
-<i>posterior Metrica</i> | <i>continet</i>. | Per T. M. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 37: 1617: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 52 + 127 + [1]: pp. 11 beg. <i>impetu</i>
-and <i>Ipse Perillæo</i>, 111 <i>Vt plus</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) “ad lectorem”: (4) the contents:
-1–52, the first part: 1–127, the second
-part.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 272. The book consists of adages and extracts suitable
-for school use.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>IACOBI ARA</span> | [<i>engraving</i>] | <span class='fss'>CEV, IN IACOBI
-MAG-</span>|<span class='fss'>NÆ BRITANNIÆ FRANCIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ET HIBERNIÆ REGIS SERENIS-</span>|<span class='sc'>SIMI, &amp;C:
-AVSPICATISSIMVM</span> | <span class='fss'>REDITVM E SCOTIA IN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANGLIAM, ACADEMIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OXONIENSIS
-GRA-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>TVLATORIA.</span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 37: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [80],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>K</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Vis restituta</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>
-title: A 1<sup>v</sup> “Iacobi patriarchæ cum Iacobo
-rege ... comparatio,” a poem: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>K</span> 4<sup>r</sup>,
-the poems: <span class='fss'>K</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, “Conclusio,” a poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Congratulatory poems by members of the University of Oxford, on the occasion of
-the return of James i from a short visit to Scotland. All are in Latin except two
-Greek and two French: one is acrostic and one in the shape of an altar. On the
-title is a rough wood engraving of an altar with fire, bearing the words <span class='fss'>DEO REDVCI:</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Smith</b>, Samuel. <span class='fss'>ADITVS</span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>LOGICAM.</span> | In vsum eorum qui
-pri-|mò <span class='sc'>Academiam</span> | Salutant. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Autore</i> <span class='sc'>Samvele Smith</span> | <i>Artium
-Magistro</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Editio Tertia. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 13<i>c</i>: 1617: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: [2]
-+ 204 + [2] + 2 unpaged tables, see below:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Tertio Ge-</i>, 111 <i>ctivam
-habet</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: 1–204, the work, in
-3 books, with two sm. 4<sup>o</sup> leaves unpaged
-inserted at pp. 32–3 and 42–3, printed on
-one side only with logical divisions of
-Substantia and Qualitas respectively: (1)
-“Lectoribus ...”, a deprecation of
-criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 283. This is the first known Oxford
-edition: see 1613 <span class='fss'>S.</span>, 1614 <span class='fss'>S.</span>, 1618 <span class='fss'>S.</span>, 1627 <span class='fss'>S.</span>, 1633 <span class='fss'>S.</span>, 1639 <span class='fss'>S.</span>, 1684. There is also
-a London ed. of 1621.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Terry</b>, John. <span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>REASONA-</span>|<span class='fss'>BLENESSE OF WISE AND</span> | holy
-truth: and the absurditie | <i>of foolish and wicked</i> | <i>Errour</i>. | [<i>two texts</i>,
-then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 36: 1617: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 38
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>able so</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
-to Arthur Lake, bp. of Bath and Wells:
-1–38, the sermon, on John xvii. 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 410.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>W.</b>, R., of Hart Hall, Oxford. “<cite>Merry Jests concerning Popes,
-Monkes and ffryers</cite> translated out of Ffrench by R. W. Bachelour of Arts
-of H[arts]. H[all]. in Oxon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Arber’s <cite>Transcript of the Stationers’ Register</cite>, as a book of Joseph Barnes’s,
-entered at Stationers’ Hall 26 Feb. 162<span class='fraction'>0<br /><span class='ov'>1</span></span> by John Barnes. It must have been printed
-between 1585 and 1617 inclusive, probably after 1610.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1618.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Angelus</b>, Christophorus. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>CHRISTO-</span>|<span class='fss'>PHER ANGELL,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>A GRECIAN, WHO TA-</span>|sted of many stripes and tor-|ments inflicted by the |
-<i>Turkes for the faith</i> | <i>which he had in</i> | <i>Christ Iesus</i>.| <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>device</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1618: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>much in debt</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, dedication to England: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>r</sup>,
-the work: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, a woodcut, see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare: for the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 633. Dr. Bliss in his copy of
-Angelus, now in the Bodleian, suggests that this edition was worked off without the
-Greek when Angelus betook himself to travel about the country. It is a reprint
-almost literatim of 1617 <span class='fss'>A</span>. Angelus was in Oxford, according to Dr. Bliss, from
-Whitsuntide 1610 to about Easter 1618, and died 1 Feb. 163<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>. The second woodcut
-is a new and rather more elaborate one than in the 1617 issue, but not more intelligible,
-and is enclosed in an oval frame: the first (on sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>) is unchanged.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2.*† ——. [Letters testimonial to the good behaviour of Christopher
-Angell, (1) &amp; (3) from the University of Oxford, 10 May 1610 and
-20 Mar. 1617 (161<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span>), and (2) from the bp. of Salisbury 15 Aug. 1616,
-all in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Probably printed at Oxford in 1618:
-(one) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2]: p. 1 beg. “[woodcuts]
-<i>The bearer hereof, Christopher Angell</i>”:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-the testimonials.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. “<cite>Rhetoricæ Libri duo, ‘quorum prior de
-Tropis &amp; Figuris, posterior de Voce &amp; Gestu præcipit</cite>, &amp;c.’ Oxon. 1618,
-the 4th edit. ... qu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 210: see Supplement 1598 <span class='fss'>B</span>: and 1600 <span class='fss'>B</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>4. <b>Farrear</b>, Robert. “‘<i>A brief Direction to the French Tongue</i>,
-&amp;c.’ Oxon 1618. oct. in the title of which book he wrote himself M.A.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 278.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Panke</b>, John. <i><span class='fss'>COLLECTANEA.</span></i> | <span class='sc'>Ovt Of</span> | <span class='fss'>S</span><sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>GREGORY</span> | <span class='fss'>THE
-GREAT</span>, | <span class='sc'>And</span> | <i><span class='fss'>S</span></i><sup>t</sup> <i><span class='fss'>BERNARD THE</span></i> | <i>Devout, against the Papists who ad-</i>|<i>here
-to the doctrine of the present</i> | <i>Church of Rome, in the most</i> | <i>fundamentall
-points</i> | <i>betweene them</i> | <i>and vs</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1618: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[22] + 113 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>which by
-Sathans</i>, 111 <i>quod accepistis</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–21)
-Epistle&thinsp;dedicatorie to George Churchowse,
-mayor of “New Sarum” and the corporation,
-dated “from the Close at
-Sarum this 24 <i>Iunij. 1618</i>,” signed “John
-Panke.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 274. This tract was reprinted at Salisbury in 1835, in
-8vo, with the title “Romanism condemned by the Church of Rome, or Popery convicted
-... By the Rev. John Panke ...,” with the spelling modernized.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Sanderson</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>LOGICÆ</span> | . <span class='fss'>ARTIS COMPEN-</span>|<i><span class='fss'>DIVM</span></i>. | <span class='fss'>SECVNDA
-HAC EDI-</span>|tione recognitum, duplici | <i>Appendice auctum, &amp; pub-</i>|<i>lici iuris
-factum</i> | à <span class='sc'>Rob. Sanderson</span> Col-|legij Lincolniensis in al-|<i>mâ Oxoniensi
-Socio</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 40: 1618: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 232 + 124 + [4]: pp. 11 beg. <i>possunt.
-Individua</i> and <i>sed ij ferè</i>: 111 <i>tur auferendo</i>
-and <i>margine peculiari</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-“Elenchus capitum”: 1–232, the work,
-in three parts: 1–87, the first Appendix,
-De usu Logicæ: 89–124, the second Appendix,
-Miscella: (1) Errata typographica.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 626, and 1615 <span class='fss'>S</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Smith</b>, Samuel. <span class='fss'>ADITVS AD</span> | <span class='fss'>LOGICAM</span>. | In vsum eorum qui
-pri=|mo <span class='sc'>Academiam</span> | Salutant. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Autore</i> <span class='sc'>Samvele Smith</span> | <i>Artium
-Magistro</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Edito quarta à multis mendis | quæ per incuriam
-Typo-|graphi irrepserunt, | repurgata. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 41: 1618: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[2] + 205 + [1] + 2 unpaged tables, see
-below: p. 11 beg. <i>Tertiò Ge-</i>, 111 <i>ctivam
-habet</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: 1–205, the work, with two
-sm. 4<sup>o</sup> leaves, as in the 3rd ed.: (1)
-“Lectoribus...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1617 <span class='fss'>S</span> of which this is a slightly corrected reprint.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1619.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bedé</b>, Jean. <i><span class='fss'>THE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>MASSE DIS-</span>|<span class='fss'>PLAYED.</span> | <span class='fss'>VVRITTEN IN FRENCH</span> |
-by M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>John Bede</span>, advocate to | <i>the Parliament of</i> Paris, <i>and</i> | <i>now
-translated into</i> | <i>English</i>.| [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1619: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-112: p. 11 beg. <i>signifieth to</i>, 111 <i>bin no
-small</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
-title: (5–16) “The Preface to the
-Reader”, signed “E. C.”: 1–112, the
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>This is a translation of “La Messe en François, exposée par M. Iean Bedé Angevin
-...”, Geneva, 1610, 8<sup>o</sup>. The translator may be Edward Chaloner, as suggested in the
-Bliss Sale Catalogue, for whom see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 377.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bernard</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>FABVLOVS</span> | <span class='fss'>FOVNDATION OF</span> | <span class='sc'>the
-Popedome:</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A FAMILIAR CONFERENCE BE-</span>|tween two friends to the
-truth <span class='sc'>Philalethes</span>, | and <span class='sc'>Orthologvs</span>, shewing that it can-|not be
-proued, <i>That Peter was</i> | <i>ever at Rome</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>VVHEREVNTO IS ADDED A</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>CHRONOGRAPHICALL DESCRIP-</i></span>|<i>tion of</i> Pauls <i>peregrination with</i> Peters
-<i>travells</i>, | <i>and the reasons why he could not be at</i> | <i>Rome, that so the truth
-in one</i> | <i>view may be more fully and ea-</i>|<i>sily be seene of e-</i>|<i>very one</i>. | [two
-<i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 43: 1619: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [10] +
-68 + 1 unpaged sheet, see below + [2]: p.
-11 beg. <i>Christs Vicar</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–6) dedication
-to drs. Goodwin, Prideaux and Benefield,
-dated “Batcombe April 1. 1619,” signed
-“Richard Bernard”: (7–8) “To the
-Reader”, same date signed
-<span class='overunderc'>“R.<br />B. B”:</span>
-(9–10) “A summarie of the reasons,
-prouing Peter neuer to haue beene at
-Rome”: 1–68, the work: after p. 68 a
-large folded folio printed sheet, printed on
-one side only, “A short chronographicall
-description ...”, signed
-<span class='overunderc'>R.<br />B. B,</span>
-and with
-impr. 43. Pp. (1–2) (7–8) are an addition,
-wanting in some copies.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Crakanthorp</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'><i>INTRODVCTIO</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IN</span> | <span class='fss'>METAPHYSICAM.</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>AVTHORE</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Ri. Crakanthorp</span> | olim Collegij Reginæ | Oxon. Socio. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 40: 1619: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 96: p. 11 beg. <i>di modum</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title,
-within a border: (5–8) “Ad studiosos
-Academiæ Oxoniensis alumnos,” dated
-“Oxon. è Collegio Reginæ. Decemb. 7.
-1619”, signed “Guiliel. Richardson”:
-(9–12) “Lectori benevolo,” signed “R.
-C[rakanthorp]”: (13–16) “Index capitum
-et rerum ...”: 1–96, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 362. The author seems to have allowed Richardson to
-take the book through the press, but to have revised and prepared it himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Flavel</b>, John. <span class='fss'>TRACTA-</span>|<span class='fss'>TVS DE DE-</span>|<span class='fss'>MONSTRATIONE</span> | <span class='sc'>METHODICVS
-&amp;</span> | <span class='fss'>POLEMICVS</span>, quatuor | libris absolutus: | <i>antehæc in usum Iuventutis</i>
-| in Collegio <span class='sc'>Wadhami</span> | apud Oxonienses privatis | prælectionibus
-traditus, | à | <span class='sc'>Ioanne Flavel</span> | Art. Mag. &amp; ejusdem | Collegii Socio. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42: 1619: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 1 unpaged sheet + 144 + [12]: p.
-11 beg. <i>Tractatus de</i>, 111 <i>rantiæ suæ</i>:
-Long Primer English. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to bp. Arthur
-Lake, dated “Oxonij è Coll. Wad. Kal.
-Martij. 1618 [1 Mar. 161<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>]”, signed
-“Alexander Huish”: (5–6) “Lectori ...”
-by Huish: (7–10) “Index capitum ...”:
-after p. (12) is a folded obl. sm. 4<sup>o</sup> sheet
-containing a conspectus of the work,
-printed on one side only: 1 “Prooemium”:
-2–144, the work, in 4 bks.:
-(1–12) “Index rerum et verborum.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 207, and 1624 <span class='fss'>F</span>, 1651 <span class='fss'>F</span>. Flavel died in Nov. 1617, a
-Huish a co-collegian issued this volume from notes of Flavel’s pupils, preparing and
-editing them as he thought best.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Howson</b>, bp. John. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>TO BE ENQVIRED</span> | <span class='fss'>OF VVITHIN
-THE DIO-</span>|ces of Oxford, in the first Visitation | of the Right Reverend
-Father | in God, <i>Iohn</i> Bishop | of <i>Oxford</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>HELD</i></span> | In the yeare of our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>Lord God 1619. in the seuen-|teenth yeare of the Raigne of our most
-gratious Sove-|raigne Lord, <i>Iames</i>, by the grace of God, King | of Great
-<i>Brittaine</i>, <i>France</i>, and <i>Ireland</i>, Defender of the | Faith: &amp;c. and of
-<i>Scotland</i> | the three &amp; fiftieth. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 44: 1619: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Parents
-dwell</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, “The ... Oath ministred
-to the Churchwardens ...”, and “The
-Charge of the Churchwardens ...”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, the articles: <span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, a further
-charge.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Mandevill</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>TIMOTHIES</span> | <span class='fss'>TASKE:</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>A CHRISTIAN
-SEA-CARD</i></span>, | <i>guiding through the coastes of a peaceable con-</i>|<i>science to a peace
-constant, and a</i> | <i>Crowne immortall</i>. | Wherein I. Pastors are put in minde
-of their | double dutie, and how to discharge it. 1. Personall, | as
-watchful men. 2. Pastorall, as faithful watch-|men. II. True doctrine is
-advanced. III. Tradi-|tions discountenanced, &amp; their rancour discovered. |
-<i>In two Synodoll assemblies at</i> Carliell, <i>out of two seuerall, but</i> | <i>sutable
-Scriptures. This of</i> 1 Timoth. 4. 16. <i>and</i> | <i>that of Actes</i> 20. 28. | Since
-concorporate, and couched with augmentation | vnder their prime Head: |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Robert Mandevill</span>, <i>sometimes of Queenes Colledge</i> | <i>in Oxford, and
-Preacher of Gods word at</i> | <i>Abbey-holme in Cumberland</i>. | [<i>text</i>, then
-<i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 45: 1619: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 64:
-p. 11 beg. <i>but Nusquam</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to
-the University, signed “Rob. Magnadevilla”:
-(5–7) dedicatory Epistle to dr.
-William Goodwin, dated “In Coll:
-Regin: ... 8 Idus Julij ... <span class='fss'>MDCXIX</span>,”
-signed “Tho: Vicars”: (8) two laudatory
-Latin poems: 1–64, the discourse, on
-1 Tim. iv. 16, ending with a chronogram.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 251. Vicars published the book, the author having died
-in 1618.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <i>Academiæ Oxoniensis</i> | <span class='fss'>FVNEBRIA</span> | <span class='fss'>SACRA</span>. |
-<span class='fss'>ÆTERNÆ MEMORIÆ SERENISSIMÆ REGINÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ANNÆ</span> | <span class='fss'><i>POTENTISSIMI MONARCHÆ</i></span>
-| <span class='fss'>IACOBI</span> Magnæ Britanniæ, Fran-|ciæ, &amp; Hiberniæ Regis &amp;c.
-De-|sideratissimæ Sponsæ, | <span class='sc'>Dicata</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42: 1619: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [144],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>S</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Quæ solita</i>,
-<span class='fss'>R</span> 1<sup>r</sup> <i>Et obruemus</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, dedicatory
-Latin poem to King James i: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>S</span>
-1<sup>v</sup>, the poems: <span class='fss'>S</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>S</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, “Ad ... regem
-... conclusio”, a poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems on the death of queen Anne of Denmark, 1 Mar. 161<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>: all in Latin except
-8 Greek and 3 Hebrew: there are also chronograms, anagrams and an acrostic.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. Rainolds, John. “The sum of a conference” &amp;c. Oxon.
-1619, fol. So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 193, 1619 being an error for
-1610.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>9. <b>Rawlinson</b>, John. <span class='fss'>VIVAT REX.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED</span> | <span class='sc'>at
-Pauls Crosse on the</span> | day of his Maiesties happie inau-|guration,
-<i>March</i> 24<sup>o</sup>. | <i>1614.</i> | <i>And now newly published, by occasion of His</i> | <i>late</i>
-(<i>no lesse happy</i>) <i>recovery.</i> | By | <span class='sc'>John Rawlinson</span> D<sup>r</sup> of Divinity, and | one
-of his Maiesties Chaplaines | in Ordinary. | [<i>line, motto, line, woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>Impr. 39: 1619: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 40
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>But let him</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-dedication to the King: (6) University
-arms: 1–40, the sermon, on 1 Sam. x.
-24.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 506. Page 1 shows that the ordinary length of a Paul’s
-Cross sermon was two hours.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1620.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Day</b>, John. <span class='fss'>DAY’S DESCANT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ON</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Davids Psalmes:</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | A
-<i>Commentary</i> vpon the <i>Psalter</i>, as it is vsually | read throughout the
-Yeere, at <i>Mor-</i>|<i>ning</i>, and <i>Euening</i> Prayer. | And First, | Of the First
-<i>Eight Psalmes</i>, appointed to be read, | the <i>First</i> Day of the <i>Moneth</i>. |
-[<i>device</i>, then 3 <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1620: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [40] +
-222: p. 11 beg. <i>not in these</i>, 111 <span class='fss'>II</span> <i>Destroy
-thou</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–8) Epistle dedicatory to
-archbp. Abbot, signed “John Day”:
-(9–40) “To the reader”: 1–220, the
-work, on Ps. 1–8: 221–222, “To the
-reader”, on the author’s orthography,
-with Errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 412. The introduction contains some autobiographical
-matter, and treats of “Our Lady’s Psalter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Du Moulin</b>, Pierre. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> | <span class='fss'>BEFORE THE
-KINGS</span> | <span class='sc'>Maiesty</span> at <i>Greenwich</i> the | 15. of Iune. 1615. | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | Master
-<span class='sc'>Peter</span> du <span class='sc'>Movlin</span>, one of the Preachers | of Gods Word in the Church
-of Paris, and | newly translated out of French into | English, by I. V. |
-<i>According to the Copy printed at</i> Charenton | <i>by</i> Paris. 1620. | [<i>device</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 46: 1620: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 35
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>to certaine fishes</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) dedication to the Curators of the
-Bodleian, signed “Iohannes Vernulius,
-Bodleianæ Bibliothecæ hypobibliothecarius”
-the translator: 1–35, the sermon,
-on Rom. i. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 221. The text, margin and headline of each page are
-within bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ROMANÆ HISTORIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ANTHOLOGIA</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>AN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ENGLISH EXPO-</span>|<span class='fss'>SITION OF THE RO-</span>|<span class='fss'>MANE ANTIQVITIES,</span> | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN MANY RO-</span>|<span class='fss'>MANE
-AND ENGLISH</span> | Offices are parallel’d, and | divers obscure Phrases |
-Explained. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Godwin</span> <i>Master of Arts</i>. | For the vse of
-<span class='sc'>Abingdon</span> Schoole. | Editio Tertia. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 48: 1620: 12<sup>o</sup>?</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 51: see 1614 <span class='fss'>G</span>. Only known at
-present from references in 17th cent. catalogues and from a titlepage in the Bagford
-Collections at the British Museum (463. h. 3, no. 546), but it is not likely to be really
-rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Goffe</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>FVNEBRIS</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA IN ECCLESIA</span> |
-Cathedrali Christi Oxon | in Obitum viri omni ævo dig-|<i>nissimi</i> |
-<span class='sc'>Gvlielmi</span> | <span class='sc'>Goodvvin</span> <i>istius</i> | <i>Ecclesiæ Decani, S.</i> | Theol. Doctoris. | A
-<span class='sc'>Tho. Goffe</span> <i>Artium Ma-</i>|<i>gistro ex Æde Christi</i>. | [<i>device</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>Impr. 40: 1620: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: beg. <i>fecit operationes</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> “Ad Lectorem”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>v</sup> the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 463. Goodwin died 11 June 1620. A second edition of
-this year is simply a reissue of the sheets with an identical titlepage adding only
-“Editio Secunda,” in a separate line after “Æde Christi.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>James</b>, Thomas. <span class='sc'>Catalogus</span> | <span class='fss'>VNIVERSALIS LIBRO-</span>|<span class='fss'>RVM IN
-BIBLIOTHECA</span> | <span class='sc'>Bodleiana</span> omnium Librorum, | Linguarum &amp; Scientiarum
-genere | refertissimâ, sic compositus; | Vt | <i>Non solum Publicis per
-Europam Vniversam Bibliothe-</i>|<i>cis, sed etiam Privatis Musæis, aliisq</i><span class='small'>ue</span>
-<i>ad Catalogum</i> | <i>Librorum conficiendum vsui esse possit</i>. | Accessit Appendix
-Librorum, qui vel ex munificentiâ aliorum, | vel ex censibus Bibliothecæ
-recens allati sunt, | Auctore <span class='sc'>Thoma Iames</span> S. Th. | Doctore, ac nuper
-Proto-|Bibliothecario | <i>Oxoniensi</i>. | <i>Operis vsum ac vtilitatem, Præfatio</i> |
-<i>ad Lectorem indicabit.</i> | [<i>device</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42, adding “Impensis Bodleianis”:
-1620: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16]
-+ 539 + [1] + 36: p. 11 beg. <i>Albertus
-Dux</i>, 111 <i>Somnium magni</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to the King, prince Charles,
-&amp;c.: (5–14), “Prooemium ...,” dated
-30 June 1620: 1–539, the catalogue in
-alphabetical order: 1–36, “Appendix ad
-catalogum priorem.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a new edition of 1605 <span class='fss'>J</span>, arranged in one alphabetical order of authors’
-names. The <i>Proeomium</i> contains much information about the Library. The MSS.
-and printed books are treated alike in this catalogue, each with its pressmark. Dr.
-James had resigned the office of Librarian in May 1620 from illness. The Hebrew
-MSS. are not all entered in the Catalogue, and “propter typorum defectum” are described
-in Latin, not Hebrew type. A second edition of the Appendix was issued in
-1635. The expense of printing the volume was £112 10<i>s.</i>, (Reg. Convoc. N. 23, fol. 93,
-quoted by Macray <cite>Annals of the Bodleian</cite>, 2nd ed. p. 58 <i>n.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Twyne</b>, Brian. <span class='fss'>ANTIQVI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TATIS ACADEMIÆ OXO-</span>|<span class='fss'>NIENSIS APOLOGIA.</span> |
-<i>In tres Libros divisa.</i> | <span class='fss'>AVTHORE</span> | <span class='sc'>Briano Twyno</span> <i>in facultate
-Artium Ma-</i>|<i>gistro &amp; Collegij Corporis Christi in eâdem</i> | <i>Academia
-Socio</i>. | Vltima Editio. | [<i>device</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 47: 1620: the rest as 1608 <span class='fss'>T</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a simple reissue of the sheets of the 1608 edition, with a new titlepage, but
-is extremely rare.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1621.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Broad</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>THREE</span> | <span class='fss'>QVESTIONS</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERED.</span> | <span class='sc'>I. Qvestion.</span> |
-<i>What should our meaning be, when after the reading of</i> | <i>the fourth
-Commandement, we pray; Lord incline our</i> | <i>hearts to keepe this law?</i> |
-<span class='sc'>II. Qvestion.</span> | <i>How shall the fourth Commandement, being deliuered in</i> |
-<i>such forme of words, binde vs to sanctifie any day, but onely</i> | <i>the seauenth,
-the day wherein God rested, &amp; which the Iewes</i> | <i>sanctified?</i> | <span class='sc'>III. Qvestion.</span>
-| <i>How shall it appeare to be the Law of Nature to sancti-</i>|<i>fie one day
-in every weeke?</i> | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1621: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 38
-+ [2]: p. 11 (“10”) beg. <i>which is the</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) “To the Reader”, signed “Th.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>Broad”: 1–26, the work: 27–33 “<span class='fss'>A
-DIALOGVE</span> | <span class='sc'>betvveene a Ievv</span> and a
-<span class='sc'>Christi-</span>|<span class='fss'>AN</span> of the Common | Opinion.”
-33–38, “<i>A note touching the Lords Day</i>”:
-(1) “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 594. A treatise against too strict observance of Sunday,
-answered by George Abbot, M.P. for Guildford, in his <cite>Vindiciæ Sabbathi</cite>, Lond.
-1641.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. [<b>Burton</b>, Robert.] <span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ANATOMY OF</span> | <span class='fss'>MELANCHOLY⸴</span> | <span class='fss'><i>VVHAT
-IT IS</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>VVITH ALL THE KINDES,</span> | <span class='fss'>CAVSES, SYMPTOMES, PROG-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>NOSTICKES, AND
-SEVE-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>RALL CVRES OF IT</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>IN THREE MAINE PARTITIONS</span> | with their seuerall
-<span class='sc'>Sections</span>, <span class='sc'>Mem-</span>|<span class='fss'>BERS</span>, and <span class='sc'>Svbsec-</span>|<span class='fss'>TIONS</span>. | <span class='fss'><i>PHILOSOPHICALLY, MEDICI-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>NALLY,
-HISTORICALLY, OPE-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>NED AND CVT VP.</i></span> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Democritvs</span> <i>Iunior</i>. |
-With a Satyricall <span class='sc'>Preface</span>, conducing to | <i>the following Discourse</i>. |
-[<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 48: 1621: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 72 + [8] + 783 + [9]: pp. 11 beg. <i>sed
-and busied</i> and <i>Lethargye</i>, 111 <i>Mutavere
-viros</i>, 611 <i><sup>u</sup> Mille habet</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication to
-lord Berkeley: 1–72, “Democritus Iunior
-to the Reader”: (1–8) “The Synopsis
-of the first partition”: 1–783, the work:
-(1) 3 mottos: (2–7) “The Conclusion of
-the Author to the Reader”, signed “Robert
-Burton. From my Studie in <i>Christchurch
-Oxon.</i> Decemb. 5. 1620”: (8) “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 653. For subsequent Oxford editions see 1624 <span class='fss'>B</span>,
-1628 <span class='fss'>B</span>, 1632 <span class='fss'>B</span>, 1638 <span class='fss'>B</span>, 1651. Other editions are Lond. 1660 (7th), 1676 (8th),
-1800 (9th), &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; (10th), 1806 (11th), 1845, 188-, as well as epitomes. This celebrated
-work is replete with erudition, humour, and acuteness. The recondite sources
-of the numberless quotations are perhaps only to be found in the Bodleian, to which
-Burton bequeathed his printed books, of which a catalogue is among the Bodleian
-MSS. This first edition, which is anonymous except for one signature on p. (7) of the
-Conclusion, is accounted rare, but copies not infrequently appear for sale. Each successive
-edition during the author’s lifetime (he died in Jan. 16<span class='fraction'>39<br /><span class='ov'>40</span></span>) shows alterations.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Denison</b>, John. <span class='fss'>DE</span> | <span class='fss'>CONFESSIONIS</span> | <span class='fss'>AVRICVLARIS</span> | <span class='fss'>VANITATE,
-AD-</span>|<span class='sc'>versvs Cardinalis</span> | <span class='sc'>Bellarmini</span> | <i>Sophismata</i>, | <span class='fss'>ET DE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIGILLI CONFESSIONIS
-IMPIE-</i></span>|<i>tate, contra Scholasticorum, &amp; Neoterico-</i>|<i>rum quorundam
-dogmata</i> | <i>Disputatio</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>AVTHORE</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Ioanne Denisono</span> Oxoniensi | Sacræ
-Theologiæ Doctore. |<a id='t115'></a> [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1621: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [10] +
-126: p. 11 beg. <i>catione, tum</i>, 111 <i>Cap. 2.
-Argumenta</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) dedicatory epistle to
-the king: (7–8) “Ad Lectorem”: (9–10)
-“Elenchus Capitum ...”: 1–126, the
-work, in two parts: 126 “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 439.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span class='fss'>MICROCOSMVS,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A LITTLE DE-</span>|<span class='fss'>SCRIPTION
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE GREAT WORLD.</span> | A Treatise Historicall, Geographicall, | Politicall,
-Theologicall. | [<i>line</i>] | By P. H. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1621: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-417 (“317”) + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>pearance
-of diuers</i>, 111 <i>of Florence</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) Epistle
-dedicatory to prince Charles, signed “Pet.
-Heylyn”: (7–11) “The Preface”: (12–13)
-“To my brother the Author” an
-English poem by Edw. Heylyn: (14–15)
-“The Table” of contents, in alphabetical
-order: (16) “A computation of the forraine
-Coynes herein mentioned with ours”:
-1–417, (1–2) the work: (3) “Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 557, where 1622 is a misprint for 1621 and 1624 for
-1625. For other Oxford editions of this well-known and popular manual of Geography
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>see 1625 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1627 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1629 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1631 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1633 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1636 <span class='fss'>H</span>, 1639 <span class='fss'>H</span>: there are also
-London editions (entitled <cite>Cosmographie</cite>) of 1652, 1657, 1664?, 1666, 1670, 1674?,
-1677, 1682, 1703.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Savile</b>, sir Henry. [two <i>lines</i>] | <span class='fss'>PRAELE-</span>|<span class='fss'>CTIONES TRES-</span>|<span class='fss'>DECIM
-IN PRIN-</span>|<span class='fss'>CIPIVM ELEMENTO_</span>|<span class='fss'>RVM EVCLIDIS,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OXONII HABITÆ</i>.</span>| <span class='fss'>M.DC.XX.</span> |
-[<i>device</i>, see below.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 40: 1621: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-260: p. 11 beg. <i>ma. Quid</i>, 111 <i>trag; à
-centro</i>: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “Errata ...”:
-(3) “Henricus Savilius lectori”: 1–260,
-the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 314. This was Savile’s last publication, for he died
-19 Feb 162<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>2</span></span>. There are many woodcuts of figures of propositions. Most copies
-have a device on the titlepage, but a presentation copy from the author to the Bodleian
-and the copy in the Savile Library omit it. The absence of a dedication is unusual.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Thornborough</b>, bp. John. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΛΙΘΟΘΕΩΡΙΚΟΣ</span>, | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>NIHIL,
-ALIQVID, OMNIA</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTIQVORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>SAPIENTVM VI-</span>|vis coloribus depicta,
-Philo-|<i>sophico=theologicè</i>, | In gratiam eorum qui Artem auriferam Physico-chymicè
-&amp; piè profitentur. | <span class='fss'><i>AVTHORE</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Iohanne Thornbvrgh, episcopo</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>VVIGORNIENSI</i></span>. | [2 <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 40: 1621: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-plate + 152: p. 11 beg. <i>tur potiùs</i>, 111
-<i>lestium corporum</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) dedication to
-the duke of Lennox: (7–11) “Ad Lectorem
-benevolum”: (12) “<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Παραρυάδες</span>
-sic restituantur ...”: folded quarto leaf,
-see below: 1–152, the work in three
-divisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 5. The Episcopal Alchemist endeavours to find the
-Philosopher’s stone through Sulphurous Magnesia (Nil), water (Aliquid) and gold
-(Omnia). Vitriol is regarded as of vital importance. Much Theology is introduced.
-The woodcut plate represents the concord and discord of the four elements in various
-relations, in a circular table.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1622.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Abbot</b>, George. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE COPPIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF A LETTER SENT</span> |
-from my Lords Grace of Can-|terburie shewing the graue and | <i>weighty
-reasons which induced</i> | <i>the Kings Maiestie to pre-</i>|<i>scribe those former</i> |
-<i>directions for</i> | <i>Preachers</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 45: 1622: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>, *<sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>damentall
-grounds</i>, * 3<sup>r</sup> <i>or of the Vniversalitie</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-3<sup>v</sup>, the letter, to the bp. of
-Oxford: dated “from Croydon Sept. 4th
-<i>1622</i>”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4 [not seen, probably blank]:
-* 1<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>r</sup>, “To the minister, churchwardens
-and parishioners of &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; in the Diocesse
-of Oxon.”, 31 Aug. 1622, as under <i>Howson</i>,
-John, below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 564. The latter part of this piece seems to have been
-issued separately, see <b>Howson</b>, John, below.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathanael. <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIA</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBERA,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>TRIPLICI
-EXERCITA-</i></span>|<i>tionum Decade proposita</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>IN QVA</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>ADVERSVS HVIVS TEM-</span>|poris
-Philosophos, dogmata | quædam noua discu-|tiuntur. | <span class='fss'>AVTHORE</span> | <span class='sc'>Nathanaele
-Carpnetario</span>, | <i>Exoniensis Collegij, in florentissimâ</i> | <i>Academiâ
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>Oxoniensi, Socio</i>. | <span class='fss'>EDITIO SECVNDA, VNA</span> | Decade auctior, &amp; emendatior. |
-[<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42<i>a</i>: 1622: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 395 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>tute ab alio</i>,
-111 <i>ali: At nullam</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5–14) dedication to
-James Hamilton duke of Hamilton (<i>d.</i>
-1649): (15–21) “Ad florentissimam Oxoniensis
-Academiæ Iuventutem Præfatio”:
-(22–23) “Elenchus Exercitationum ...”:
-1–395, the work: (2) “Errata Typographica.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 421, where <i>Lond.</i> is a misprint for <i>Oxon.</i> The first
-edition was issued at Frankfort in 1621 “authore N. C. Cosmopolitano,” with different
-prefatory matter, only two Decads, and variations in text and arrangement. See
-1636 <span class='fss'>C</span>, 1637 <span class='fss'>C</span>, 1675. Some woodcuts of diagrams occur in the text.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Clinton</b>, Elizabeth, countess of Lincoln. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>COVNTESSE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF LINCOLNES</span> | <span class='fss'>NVRSERIE·</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1622: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 21
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>own natural</i>: Great
-Primer English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–5) dedication to lady Briget countesse
-of Lincolne, signed “Elizabeth Lincolne”:
-(7–8) “To the ... Reader,” signed “T.
-L.”, i. e. Thomas Lodge: 1–21, the work:
-(2–3) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. The object of this small treatise, “the first worke of” the authoress
-“that ever came in Print,” is to persuade mothers to nurse their own children. The
-author appears to dedicate it to her daughter-in-law, not mother-in-law as Bliss states
-(Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 384 <i>n.</i>). The authorship has been ascribed to Thomas Lodge
-(Wood, as above), but there is every internal mark that he only wrote the address to
-the Reader, and possibly revised the whole.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Gardiner</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT</span> | S<sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>MARIES
-IN OX-</span>|<span class='fss'>FORD ON ACT SVN-</span>|<i><span class='fss'>DAY LAST IN THE AF-</span></i>|<span class='fss'>TER-NOONE</span> 1622. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Richard Gardiner</span> Student | <i>of Christ-Church</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 49: 1622: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 30
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>and crabbed</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–8)
-dedication to Richard earl of Dorset:
-1–30, the sermon, on Gen. xlv. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 921.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. Heylyn, Peter. Microcosmus: see 1621 <span class='fss'>H</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. *†<b>Howson</b>, John, bp. of Oxford. [<i>woodcut</i>.] | <span class='fss'>TO THE MINISTER</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CHVRCHWARDENS</span> | and parishioners of &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; | <i>in the Diocesse of Oxon.</i> |
-[text begins on same page.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No impr. or date, but 1622: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [8], sign. *<sup>4</sup>: sign. * 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>By this
-you see</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-* 1<sup>r</sup>, heading as above: * 1<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>*r</sup>,
-the directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are Directions to preachers in the Diocese of Oxford, to restrict their choice
-of subjects and treatment of them within the bounds of the XXXIX Articles. The
-Directions are dated 31 Aug. 1622, and quote mandates from the King (4 Aug. 1622)
-and the archbp. of Canterbury (12 Aug. 1622). It is perhaps doubtful whether this is
-genuinely a separate book from <i>Abbot’s</i> Letter, above.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>DECRETVM</span> | <span class='fss'>VNIVERSITATIS</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONIENSIS
-DAMNANS</span> | <span class='fss'>PROPOSITIONES NEOTERI-</span>|<span class='fss'>CORVM INFRA-SCRIPTAS,</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE <i>IESVITARVM</i>,</span>
-| <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PVRITANORVM</i>, SIVE</span> | aliorum cuiuscunq<span class='small'>ue</span> gene-|<i>ris Scriptorum</i>.
-| [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>Impr. 40: 1622: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Vniversitas</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the propositions.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 3 and <cite>Hist. and Antiqq. of the University of Oxford</cite>,
-sub anno 1622. The propositions condemned were those delivered by William Knight
-of Broadgates Hall in a University sermon on Apr. 15, 1622, founded on principles of
-David Pareus, to the effect that subjects may take up arms against their sovereign.
-The propositions and censures were considered in a Convocation 25 June 1622. The
-form of oath to be taken by all future graduates is appended, and a note that Pareus’s
-book was burnt on 6 June 1622.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Oxford</b>, University. [<i>woodcut</i>.] | <span class='fss'>VLTIMA LINEA</span> | <span class='fss'>SAVILII</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE
-IN OBITVM CLARISSI-</span>|mi Domini <span class='sc'>Henrici Savilii</span> E-|quitis Aurati, Mathematicorum
-facilè Principis, nuperri-|mè Collegij <span class='sc'>Mertonensis</span> Custodis
-Vigi-|<i>lantissimi</i>, <span class='sc'>Etonensis</span> <i>iuxta Windsore Præ-</i>|<i>positi dignissimi, &amp;</i>
-<span class='sc'>Benefactoris</span> | <i>de Vniversitate Oxoniensi</i> | <i>optimè meriti</i>. | <i>Iusta Academica.</i>
-| [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 40: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [58] signn. (&nbsp;),
-*<sup>4</sup>, **<sup>1</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Heroum
-vulgus</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-(&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup> title: (&nbsp;) 3<sup>r</sup> “Munificentia
-Savilii in celeberrimam Vniversitatem
-Oxoniensem”: (&nbsp;) 4<sup>r</sup>, dedication to
-the Earl of Pembroke by the “Genius
-Scholarum”: (&nbsp;) 4<sup>v</sup>, see below: * 1<sup>r</sup>-**
-1<sup>v</sup> “Oratio funebris habita in scholâ
-Theologiæ Oxon. in obitum celeberrimi
-viri, Henrici Savilii, Equitis Aurati. A
-Tho. Goffe ... publico Academiæ Oratore
-tunc temporis deputato”: (&nbsp;) 4<sup>v</sup>,
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 3<sup>v</sup>, the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 315, 463. The poems are nearly all in Latin, but 5 are
-Greek, 2 Hebrew, one French, and one English: there is one chronogram. The
-“Oratio funebris” is clearly an added piece.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Rawlinson</b>, John. “<cite>The Bridegroom and Bride</cite>: On Cant.
-4. 8. Ib. [i. e. Oxon.] 1622, &amp;c. qu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s list of Rawlinson’s sermons (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 506). It was preached
-in 1662 and re-printed at Oxford in 1625, but Wood’s statement is explicit, and there
-may have been a separate issue in 1622, though I have not met with a copy or other
-reference to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Spark.</b> <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SPARKE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRISTS</span> | <span class='fss'>BEAVTY.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 44<i>a</i>: 1622: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-39 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>wrought our</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1–2) [not
-seen]: (3) title: (4–7) “To the Reader
-...”: 1–39, the work, a discourse on
-Is. ix. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1623.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Cotta</b>, John. <span class='fss'>COTTA</span> | <span class='fss'>CONTRA</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTONIVM</span>: | <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>AN ANT-ANTONY</span>:
-| <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>AN ANT-APOLOGY</span>, | manifesting Doctor <i>Antony</i> his Apo-|logie
-for <i>Aurum potabile</i>, in true and e-|quall ballance of right Reason,
-to | be false and counterfait. | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Iohn Cotta</span> Doctor in Physicke. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 48: 1623: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-108: p. 11 beg. <i>may be one</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) Advertisement
-to the reader about the prefaces:
-(3–7) Epistle dedicatory to the resident
-Doctors in Physic in the University of
-Oxford: (8) “Errata ...”: (9–12) “To
-the Reader”: 1–108, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>This is a reply by a Cambridge man to Francis Anthony’s supposed discovery of a
-medicine called Aurum Potabile, in his <cite>Apologia veritatis illucescentis, pro auro potabili</cite>,
-Lond. 1616. For the controversy see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 416. This work
-was sent to press at Oxford in 1616, but recalled before printing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>France.</b> <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>AGREED ON</span> | <span class='fss'>IN THE</span> | <span class='fss'>NATIONALL SYNODE</span> |
-of the Reformed Churches of | <span class='sc'>France</span>, | Held at <i>Charenton</i> neere <i>Paris</i>,
-in the Moneth | <i>of September</i>, 1623. | Which the same ordaineth to be
-inuiolably kept | in all the <span class='sc'>Chvrches</span> and <span class='sc'>Vniversi-</span>|<span class='fss'>TIES</span> of that <span class='sc'>Realme</span>. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39: 1623: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-34: p. 11 beg. <i>Who teach, That</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: 1–34,
-the Articles in 4 chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1624, <span class='fss'>F</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ROMANAE</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTHOLOGIA</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RECOGNITA ET</span> | <span class='fss'>AVCTA.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AN</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH EXPOSITION OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE ROMANE ANTIQVITIES</span>,
-| wherein many Romane and English | offices are paralleld, and
-divers | obscure Phrases | <i>explained</i>. | <i>For the vse of</i> <span class='sc'>Abingdon</span> <i>Schoole</i>. |
-[<i>line</i>] | Revised and enlarged by the Author | [<i>line</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 47: 1623: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-277 + [17]: p. 11 beg. <i>a malefactor</i>, 111
-<i>ther, sometimes</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) dedication to
-dr. John Young dean of Winchester,
-dated “Abindoniæ 14. Calend. Decemb.
-... 1622,” signed “Tho. Godwyn”: (5)
-“Benevolo lectori” : (7) “A short Table
-...” of contents: 1–277, the work: (2–24)
-“Index Rerum et Verborum ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 <span class='fss'>G</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. *†<b>Oxford</b>, Merton College. Merton Colledge Case. | [the
-text follows.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No place or date, but probably printed
-at Oxford in about 1623: folio: pp. [4],
-sign. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup>: sign. (&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup> beg. 3 <i>What
-Baron Althams</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—pp.
-(2–3) the Case.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Merton College let the manor of Maldon to the Queen in 21 Eliz. (1578–79), for
-5000 years. The lease was disputed by the College in 1621 (“about two yeares
-since”), and again in this Case, which sets out the reasons for annulling the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>CAROLVS</span> | <span class='fss'>REDVX.</span> | [<i>device</i> with AC. on
-one side and OX. on the other.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42: 1623: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [92],
-signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup> ¶<sup>4</sup> ¶¶<sup>2</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>I</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>K</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>
-beg. <i>Pierides nuper</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-(&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup> title; 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, dedications
-to king James and prince Charles,
-Latin poems by the vice-chancellor: ¶ 1<sup>r</sup>-¶¶
-2<sup>v</sup> “<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΠΑΝΑΚΑΔΗΜΙΚΟΣ</span>. sive, gratulatio
-pro Carolo reduce, Oxoniensium
-nomine recitata, à Iohanne King publico
-Acad. Oratore”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>K</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, the poems:
-<span class='fss'>K</span> 2<sup>r</sup> “Epilogus typographorum ad Principem,”
-two short Latin poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems by members of the University of Oxford to congratulate prince Charles on
-his return from Madrid to England 5 Oct. 1623. Most are in Latin, but 4 in Greek
-and 2 in Hebrew: there are also 4 chronograms, 1 acrostich and 1 anagram. For
-King’s speech see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 632.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. Panke, John. See 1613 <span class='fss'>P</span>.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1624.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. A, J. The younger brother his apologie: see 1634 <span class='fss'>A</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. †A[yton, sir] R[obert]. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>IN</span> | <span class='fss'>OBITVM</span> | <span class='fss'>THOMÆ RHÆDI,</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>VIRI VNDEQVAQVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>MERITISSIMI</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SERENISSIMO REGI</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>AB</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>EPISTOLIS
-LATINIS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>EPICEDIVM.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No imprint: 1624: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]:
-(&nbsp;) 3<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Consilium extorsit</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—(&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup>, title:
-2<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>r</sup>, the Latin poem, at end “<i>Faciebat
-R.A.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A Latin hexameter poem on the death of sir Thomas Reid, of whom I do not
-readily find any account. No part of this was printed in Oxford, the woodcuts and
-type being unknown there: even the small device of the Arms of the University on the
-titlepage (which has caused this work to be ascribed to the Oxford Press) differs from
-the genuine one. No doubt the book was printed in London.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. [<b>Burton</b>, Robert]. <span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ANATOMY OF</span> | <span class='fss'>MELANCHOLY:</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>VVHAT IT IS</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>WITH ALL THE KINDES, CAV-</span>|<span class='fss'>SES, SYMPTOMES, PROGNOSTICKS,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>AND SEVERALL CVRES OF IT.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>IN THREE MAINE PARTITIONS</i></span>, | with their
-seuerall <span class='sc'>Sections, Mem-</span>|<span class='sc'>bers, and Svbsections</span>. | <span class='fss'><i>PHILOSOPHICALLY,
-MEDICI-</i></span>|<span class='fss'><i>NALLY, HISTORICALLY</i></span> | <i>opened and cut vp</i>, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Democritvs</span>
-<i>Iunior</i>. | With a Satyricall <span class='sc'>Preface</span>, conducing to | the following Discourse.
-| <i>The second Edition, corrected and aug-</i>|<i>mented by the Author.</i> |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 48: 1624: (fours) folio: pp.
-[4] + 64 + [4] + “1”-“188” + [4] +
-“189”-“332” + [2] + “333”-“557” +
-[7]: pp. 11 beg. <i>make sport</i>, and <i>uing borne
-in</i>, 401 <i>Da mihi basia</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) dedication
-to George lord Berkeley: 1–64, “Democritus
-Iunior to the Reader”: 64, Errata:
-(1–4) “The Synopsis of the first partition”:
-1–188, the first part: (1–4)
-“The Synopsis of the second partition”:
-189–332, the second part: (1–2) “Analysis
-of the third partition”: 333–557, the
-third part: (1–7) “the table.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See “Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 653, and 1621 <span class='fss'>B</span>. The author’s name does not seem to
-occur anywhere in the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>C[arleton]</b>, G[eorge], bishop of Chichester. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΑΣΤΡΟΛΟΓΟΜΑΝΙΑ</span>:
-| The Madnesse of <span class='sc'>Astrologers</span>. | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | An Examination of Sir |
-Christopher Heydons | Booke, | <span class='fss'><i>JNTITULED</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A DEFENCE OF</span> | Iudiciarie
-Astrologie. | <i>Written neere vpon twenty yeares ago, by</i> G. C. <i>And</i> | by
-permission of the Author set forth for the Vse of | <i>such as might happily
-be misled by the</i> | <i>Knights booke</i>. | Published by T. V. B. of D. | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 51: 1624: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] +
-123 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>neither can they</i>,
-111 <i>them: which</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) “A”: (3) title: (5–15)
-Epistle dedicatory to Thomas Carleton,
-signed “Tho: Vicars”: (17) “In Authorem
-&amp; eius opera. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Προσφώνησις</span>”, a
-Latin poem: (19–22) “<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἀνακεφαλαίωσις</span>:
-or Recapitulation of the Chiefe Passages
-in this Treatise”, a list of Contents: (23)
-quotation from Ennius: 1–123, the work:
-123, a chronogram, 1624.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 424. The book was entered at Stationers’ Hall to
-Will. Turner, 18 July 1623. The author, whose initials only occur in the book, was
-at this time bishop of Chichester: the editor Vicars had married the bishop’s daughter.
-Sir Chr. Heydon’s book was published in 1603 at Cambridge, and a second book by
-him on Astrology published in 1650 was followed by a reprint of the present work in 1651.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>5. <b>Flavel</b>, John. <span class='fss'>TRACTA-</span>|<span class='fss'>TVS DE DE-</span>|<span class='fss'>MONSTRATI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ONE METHO-</span>|<span class='sc'>DICVS
-&amp; PO-</span>|<span class='fss'>LEMICVS</span>, <i>quatuor</i> | <i>libris absolutus:</i> | <i>Antehæc in usum Iuventutis</i>
-| <i>in Collegio</i> <span class='sc'>Wadhami</span> | <i>apud Oxonienses privatis</i> | <i>prælectionibus
-traditus</i>, | à | <span class='sc'>Iohanne Flavel</span> | Art. Mag. &amp; ejusdem | Colleg;j Socio. |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42: 1624: 16<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author and book see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 207, and 1619 <span class='fss'>F</span>. Only
-known at present from a titlepage in the Bagford collections at the British Museum
-(463. h. 3), but it is not likely to be rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>France.</b> <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | [&amp;c. precisely as 1623 <span class='fss'>F</span> adding after
-<span class='fss'>REALME.</span>:—] <i>Wherein, their iudgement touching the principall Contro-</i>|<i>versies
-now on foote betwixt the Remonstrantes</i> | <i>and Contra-remonstrantes,
-is briefly declared.</i> | [then <i>woodcuts</i>, not device].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 39, &amp;c. exactly as 1623 <span class='fss'>F</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reissue of the sheets of 1623 <span class='fss'>F</span> with part of the titlepage altered. There is
-another issue of this reissue, *undated, with impr. 49<i>a</i>, but no other change from the
-present edition of any kind.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Hayes</b>, William. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PARAGON</span> | <span class='fss'>OF PERSIA</span>; | <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>THE
-LAVVYERS</span> | <i><span class='fss'>LOOKING-GLASSE</span></i>. | Opened in a sermon at <span class='fss'>S. MARIES</span> | in
-Oxford, at the Assises, the | 7 day of Iuly, 1624. | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>William Hayes</span>,
-<i>Master of Arts of</i> Magdalen Hall. | [two <i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 45: 1624: 16<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Only known at present from a titlepage in the Bagford collections in the British
-Museum (463. h. 3), but it is not likely to be rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. Heylyn, Peter. Microcosmus: the reference in Wood’s <cite>Ath.
-Oxon.</cite>, iii. 557 to an edition of this year, is probably an error for 1625.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>CAMDENI</span> | <span class='fss'>INSIGNIA·</span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 42: 1624: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [76],
-signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup> ¶, ¶¶<sup>4</sup>, ¶¶¶<sup>2</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>G</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>
-beg. <i>In Camdenum</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—(
-) 1<sup>r</sup> title: 1<sup>v</sup> “Donum Camdenianum”,
-his benefaction to the University:
-(&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, the poems:
-¶ 1<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>v</sup> “Oratio in memoriam ... Gulielmi
-Camdeni ... prolata per Zoucheum
-Townley ex Æde Christi, Oratorem publicum
-tunc temporis deputatum”: ¶¶ 1<sup>r</sup>-¶¶¶
-1<sup>v</sup>, “Parentatio historica: sive Commemoratio
-vitæ et mortis V. C. Gulielmi
-Camdeni Clarentii, facta Oxoniæ in
-Scholâ Historicâ per Degoreum Whear
-Historiarum Prælectorem, ab eodem
-Camdeno ibidem constitutum”, 2 Dec.
-1623: ¶¶¶ 1<sup>v</sup>-2<sup>v</sup> “Nuncius chronogrammaticus”,
-3 Latin poems on Camden by
-Whear, introducing chronograms: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span>
-2<sup>v</sup>, see above.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 348, <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 398. Poems by members of the
-University of Oxford on the death of William Camden, which took place on 9 Nov.
-1623. Most are in Latin, but there are 10 Greek, with 5 anagrams, and 2 chronograms.
-Whear’s Oration contains many biographical details about Camden.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. ——. <span class='fss'>SCHOLA</span> | <span class='fss'>MORALIS</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIAE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>OXON.</span></i> | In funere
-<span class='sc'>Whiti</span> pullata. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>Impr. 40: 1624: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 6
-+ [8]: p. 3 beg. <i>VVhite dato</i>: Pica &amp;
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (2) “Annua Whiti munificentia”,
-his bequests to the University, &amp;c.: 1–6
-poems: (1–8) “Oratio funebris habita
-Oxoniae, Aprilis 22<sup>o</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>o</sup> 1624, in laudem
-Doctoris White ... per Guil. Price ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 352. Dr. Thomas White, founder of a Professorship of
-Moral Philosophy, died 1 Mar. 162<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>. The poems are all in Latin, except two in
-Greek.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. *†<b>P[rideaux]</b>, I[ohn]. <span class='fss'>ALLOQVIVM SERE-</span>|<span class='sc'>nissimo regi Iacobo</span> |
-<span class='fss'>WOODSTOCHIÆ HABITVM</span> | 24. <i>Augusti. Anno</i> 1624. | [the text follows.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>[Oxford, 1624?] sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8], sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>turbat quid dicam</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the speech, signed
-“I. P. V. Ox.” i. e. J. Prideaux, Vicecancellarius
-Oxon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267. The speech describes, among other things, the
-recent architectural and public works in Oxford: and is reprinted in Prideaux’s Perez-Vzzah
-(1625 <span class='fss'>P</span>).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Randol</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHT AT</span> | S<sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>MARIES IN</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, the 5. of August: | 1624. Concerning the | <i>Kingdomes Peace</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Randol</span> B: in D: of | <i>Brasen-nose</i> Colledge. | [two <i>mottos</i>:
-then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 50: 1624: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 33
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>especially if</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to lord “Davers” (i.e. Danvers):
-1–33, the sermon, on Mark iii. 24:
-(2) “To the most criticall Reader” (altered
-by the use of smaller type to “To
-other most criticall Readers”), an apology
-for Errata, giving two examples.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 415.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1625.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bedingfield</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT</span> | <span class='fss'>PAVLS
-CROSSE</span> | <span class='fss'>THE 24. OF OCTO_</span>|<span class='fss'>BER. 1624.</span> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Robert Bedingfield</span> Master |
-of Arts, and Student of | <i>Christ-Church</i> in | Oxford. | [device: the
-whole title is within lines.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 52: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 43
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>ent euidence</i>: English
-Roman. Contents: p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to Sir Thomas Richardson, the
-author’s uncle, dated “From my study
-in Christ-Church in Oxford. Nouemb.
-24.” 1624: 1–43 the sermon, on Rom.
-vi. 23: 43, “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 457. The title and each page are within bounding lines.
-The author gives as one of his reasons for printing the sermon, that it was very wet
-when he delivered it, so that his auditors were few.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΣΥΓΓΕ´ΝΕΙΑ.</span> | <span class='fss'>DE PROPINQVITATE</span> | Matrimonium
-impediente, | <span class='sc'>Regvla</span>. | <i>Quæ vna omnes quæstionis huius</i> | <i>difficultates
-facilè</i> | <i>expediat.</i> | [line] | Authore <span class='sc'>Carolo Bvtler</span>, Magd. | [<i>line</i>,
-then <i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 60: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 71
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>linea recta</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) “Ad Lectorem”: 1–71 the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 210.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>3. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathanael. <span class='fss'>GEOGRAPHY</span> | <span class='fss'>DELINEATED</span> | <span class='fss'>FORTH IN
-TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKES.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>CONTAINING THE SPHÆRICALL</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>AND TOPICALL PARTS</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>THEREOF.</i></span> | By <span class='sc'>Nathanael Carpenter</span> | Fellow of <i>Exceter Colledge</i> |
-in Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 61: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [18] +
-274 + [18] + 286 + [4] + 4 folded leaves,
-see below: pp. 11 beg. <i>Earth &amp;</i> W<i>ater</i>,
-111 <i>VVorld may be</i>, also 11 <i>teration next</i>,
-111 <i>monstrated in</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—(3)
-title: (5–7) dedication to the
-earl of Pembroke: (9–15) “... contents
-of each chapter of the first booke ...”:
-(17–18) “To my Booke”, a poem: 1–274
-the first book: (5) a titlepage:—“<span class='fss'>GEOGRAPHY</span>
-| <span class='fss'>THE SECOND</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKE.</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>CONTAINING THE GENERALL</span></i> | <i>Topicall
-part thereof.</i> | By ... [&amp;c. exactly as
-first title, imprint and all, but different
-motto]: (7–9) dedication to the earl of
-Montgomery: (11–18) “A table of the
-... contents of the second booke ...”:
-1–286, the second book: (1) Apology
-for erratas and an omitted diagram: (2)
-“Errors ...”. There should be four
-diagrams on folded leaves, after pp. (8)
-“The Analysis of the first Booke”: 252
-“A Table ...”: (18) “The Analysis
-of the seconde Booke”: 228 “A Table
-of the Climates ...”. The omitted diagram
-would have followed p. 62 of the second part.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 422, and 1635 <span class='fss'>C</span>. The treatise is of the theory and
-principles of Geography, not of details like Heylyn’s <cite>Microcosmus</cite>. The author maintains
-that the earth is the centre of the universe, the sun and planets revolving round
-it! There are many woodcut diagrams in the text.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>G.</b>, T. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSWER</span> | <span class='fss'>TO</span> | <span class='fss'>VVITHERS</span> | <span class='fss'>MOTTO.</span> | <i>Without a
-Frontispice.</i> | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN</span>, | Nec <span class='sc'>Habeo</span>, Nec <span class='sc'>Careo</span>, Nec <span class='sc'>Cvro</span>, | are
-neither approued, nor confuted: | but modestly controuled, | or qualified.
-| [<i>mottos</i>, a quaestio and responsio] | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 50: 1625: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[96], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>whom
-Princes</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, “The Booke to the
-Reader”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, “Virgilius de litera
-<i>Pythagorea</i>”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup> “To Master
-<i>Wither</i> himselfe”, signed “<i>T. G.
-Esquire</i>”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 6<sup>v</sup> “To the Reader”,
-signed as before: <span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, “The Introduction”,
-in verse: <span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span> 6<sup>v</sup>, The
-Answer, in three parts: <span class='fss'>F</span> 7–8 [not seen].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very scarce. George Wither’s <cite>Withers Motto, Nec habeo, nec Careo, nec Curo</cite>, was
-published in 1621 and consists of reflexions on human affairs: this book is a poetical
-satire on those reflexions, and on the character of Wither. The author is unknown.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ROMANAE</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIAE AN-</span>|<span class='fss'>THOLOGIA RECOG-</span>|<span class='fss'>NITA
-ET AVCTA.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AN</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH EXPOSI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TION OF THE ROMANE</span> | Antiquities,
-wherein many Romane | and English Offices are paralleld, | <i>and
-divers obscure Phrases</i> | explained. | For the vse of <span class='sc'>Abingdon</span> Schoole. |
-[<i>line</i>] | <i>Reuised and enlarged by the Author.</i> | [<i>line</i>: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-276 + [28]: p. 11 beg. <i>malefactor, but</i>,
-111 <i>ther, sometimes</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: 5–6, dedication to
-dr. John Young, dated “Abindoniae 14.
-Calend. Decemb. ... 1622 ... Tho:
-Godwyn”: (7) “Benevolo lectori”: (8)
-“A short Table ... of every Booke and
-Section”: 1–276, the work: (1–26)
-“Index rerum et verborum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 <span class='fss'>G</span>. This edition was printed in London, though published in Oxford: it
-was not entered at Stationer’s Hall in 1624 or 1625.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LITTLE DESCRIP-</span>|<span class='fss'>TION
-OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>GREAT WORLD.</span> | <i>Augmented and reuised.</i> | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Peter
-Heylyn</span>. | [<i>line</i>: then <i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>Impr. 55: 1625: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 812 + [2] + one leaf, see below:
-p. 11 beg. 1. <i>First then</i>, 711 <i>Captain obseruing</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2–3) dedication to King
-Charles: (5–6) “To the Reader”: (7–8)
-“To my brother the Author”, a poem
-by Edw. Heylyn: (9–11) “A Table of
-the principall countries, ...”: (12–16)
-“A Table of the principall things”:
-(16) “A computation of ... forraine
-coynes ...”: 1–812, (1) the work: (2)
-a correction of p. 148 and “Errata”.
-Before p. 7 should come a narrow folded
-leaf, probably about 10 in. high by 5 in.
-wide, with “The Table of Climes”,
-printed on one side only.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1621 <span class='fss'>H</span>: Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 557 (“1624”).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>James</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>ANTI-POSSEVINVS,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CONCIO</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA
-AD</span> | Clerum in Academiâ Ox-|<i>oniensi Ann. Domini</i> | 1625. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<i>Authore</i> | <span class='sc'>Richardo Iamesio</span> Socio | <i>C. C. C. Vectensi</i>. | [<a id='t124'></a><i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>,
-then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 60: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 25
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>præsertim cùm</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
-(5) “Ad librum suum”, a Latin poem:
-1–25 the Sermon, on 2 Tim. iv. 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 629. A singular sermon, more learned than theological.
-The title seems to be explained by pp. 20–21, where Antonio Possevino (<i>d.</i> 1611) is
-cited as planning a purgatio bibliothecarum in the interests of the Roman Catholic
-Church: to this James opposes his plea for freedom of research.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>James</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>EXPLANATION</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ENLARGING OF</span> | the
-ten Articles in the Supplication of | Doctor <span class='sc'>Iames</span>, lately exhibi-|ted to
-the Clergy of | <i>England</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | A manifest proofe that they are both
-reas-|onable and faisible within the time mentioned. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 58: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 36
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Dowists doe make</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents: p. (1) title:
-1–36, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. This is a reprint of the text of the <cite>Humble ...
-Request</cite> below (except the last paragraph beginning “For the raising of the charges,”
-which James probably saw to be unpractical), with the addition of comments, written
-in senile style but obviously by dr. James, and of great interest both for the biography
-of the author and the principles of criticism as applied to editing a text from MSS.
-These 26 “Theses or Rules concerning the Art Criticke” are, at p. 23, followed by
-examples. Dr. James paid two Dutchmen for transcription abroad at the rate of 20<i>s.</i>
-per quire, each quire taking them a week, and the hundred quires per year sufficing to
-keep two presses at work (p. 17). At p. 26 he explains that a critical remark by
-bp. Bilson first set him about compiling the <cite>Ecloga Oxonio-Cantabrigiensis</cite> (Lond.
-1600).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. *†<b>James</b>, dr. Thomas. [woodcuts] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>HVMBLE</span> | <span class='fss'>AND
-EARNEST</span> | <span class='sc'>reqvest of Thomas</span> | <span class='sc'>Iames</span>, D<sup>r</sup> <span class='fss'>OF DIVINI-</span>|<span class='fss'>TY, AND SVBDEANE</span> |
-of the Cathedrall Church | of <i>Welles</i>, to the <i>Church</i> | <i>of England</i>; for,
-and | in the behalfe of | Bookes touching Re-|ligion. | [the text of the
-work follows.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>No imprint or date, but Oxford, 1625
-(perhaps 1624) (eight) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. 15 +
-[1]: Great Primer English. Contents:—p.
-1 title as above: 1–15, the request,
-signed “T. I. S. T. P. B. P. N.” (i. e.
-Thomas James, Sanctae Theologiae Professor:
-for B. P. N. see note to 1599 <span class='fss'>R.</span>:
-but the occurrence of the letters here
-without any text or motto favours the
-interpretation “Bono Publico Natus”):
-(1) a form<a id='t124b'></a> of approbation of the scheme,
-signed by 17 leading men in Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. This (and still more the <cite>Explanation</cite>
-above, which see) is an interesting plea for the application of criticism to aid in restoring
-the texts of Fathers and Schoolmen which had been corrupted by Roman Catholic
-theologians. The date cannot be precisely ascertained: the titles of the approvers
-only confine it to 1624, 1625, or 1626: the <cite>Explanation</cite> alludes to it as “lately”
-issued: so that it is difficult to say whether 1624 or 1625 is the year of issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. ——. <span class='fss'>A MANVDV-</span>|<span class='fss'>CTION, OR INTRO-</span>|<span class='fss'>DVCTION VNTO</span> | <span class='fss'>DIVINITIE:</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>CONTAINING</span></i> | A Confutation of Papists by Pa-|pists, throughout the
-important Articles | <i>of our Religion; their testimonies taken</i> | either out
-of the <i>Indices Expurgatorii</i>, | or out of the <i>Fathers</i>, and ancient |
-<i>Records</i>; | But especially the Manuscripts. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Tho. Iames</span>,
-<i>Doctor of Diuinitie, late</i> | Fellow of <i>New Colledge</i> in <i>Oxford</i>, and Sub-Deane |
-of the Cathedrall Church of Welles. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>note</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 62: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 136
-+ [8]: p. 11 beg. <i>The first Corollary</i>, 111
-<i>onely titular</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) dedication to the bp.
-of Lincoln, dated “Lond. 26 April,
-1625”: (7) “The points that are briefly
-handled in this Booke”: (8) “Errata”:
-1–136, (1), the work: (2–3) “A Table
-of the Manuscript bookes vrged in this
-Booke”: (4–8) “An Alphabeticall note
-of the Printed Bookes ... here cited”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. The whole of this book was printed in London,
-not Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>King</b>, Henry, and John King. <span class='fss'>TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS.</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON THE
-ACT</span> | <span class='fss'>SVNDAY, BEING</span> | the 10<sup>th</sup> of Iuly. | 1625. | Deliuered at S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maries</span> |
-in Oxford. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 56: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 33
-+ [3] + 43 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>doe not your</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) a half-title “David’s Enlargement.
-The morning sermon on the Act Sunday:
-Preached by Henry King ...”: 1–33,
-the sermon, on Ps. xxxii. 5, (2) a half-title
-“David’s Strait. The after-noones
-sermon ... Deliuered by Iohn King ...”:
-1–43, the sermon, on 2 Sam.
-xxiv. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 632, iii. 840 respectively. Every page, including the
-title, is included within bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>King</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>CENOTAPHIVM</span> | <span class='fss'>IACOBI.</span> | <i>Sive</i> | <i><span class='fss'>LAVDATIO
-FVNEBRIS</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>PIÆ ET FOELICI MEMORIÆ</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>SERENISSIMI POTENTISSIMIQVE</span></i> |
-<span class='fss'>IACOBI</span> | Magnæ Britanniæ, Franciæ, <i>&amp;</i> Hiberniæ | <i>Monarchæ
-dedicata, &amp; pub-</i>|<i>licè recitata</i> | à <span class='sc'>Iohanne King</span> Academiæ | Oxoniensis
-Oratore. | [chronogrammatical <i>motto</i>: then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>; pp. [40],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>lire, quæ
-alioquin</i>: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 3<sup>r</sup>, the
-oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 632. At sign. <span class='fss'>D</span> 2<sup>r</sup> begins a list of the late king’s literary
-works.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Leslie</b>, Henry. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> | <span class='fss'>BEFORE HIS</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Maiesty</span> at <i>Windsore</i>, | the 19. of <i>Iuly.</i> 1625. | By <span class='sc'>Henrie Leslie</span>, one
-of his | <span class='sc'>Maiesties</span> Chaplaines | in Ordinary | [<a id='t125'></a><i>line</i>, then 2 <i>mottos</i> with <i>line</i>
-between, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>Impr. 56: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] +
-34: p. 11 beg. <i>in the Parable</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to James earl of Carlisle: (5)
-“A Table of the Contents”: (6) “...
-Errours in the Print”: 1–34, the sermon,
-on Heb. iii. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Nettles</b>, Stephen. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSWER TO</span> | <span class='fss'>THE IEVVISH</span> | <span class='fss'>PART OF</span>
-M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Selden’s</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORY OF TITHES.</span> | By <span class='sc'>Stephen Nettles</span>, | B. of
-Divinity | [<i>line</i>: then motto in Hebrew and English: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 58<i>a</i>: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-189 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>giue him</i>, 111 <i>diuiding
-these</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–5) dedication to dr. John
-Prideaux, dated “Lexden, May 4. 1625”:
-(7–11) “The Præface”: 1–189, the
-work: (2) “... faults ...” due to absence
-of author and difficulty of the
-written copy.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Woods <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 416. Selden’s <cite>History of Tithes</cite> was published in 1618.
-This treatise is a vindication of a public sermon on the subject which gave some
-offence. Hebrew Pica (unpointed) type is freely used in the book, for the first time.
-The title and every page are within bounding lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>EPITHALAMIA</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONIENSIA.</span> | <span class='fss'>IN AVSPICATISSIMVM,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>POTENTISSIMI MONARCHÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>CAROLI,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>MAGNÆ BRITANNIÆ</i>,</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>FRANCIÆ, ET HIBERNIÆ</i></span> | <i>Regis &amp;c. cum</i> <span class='sc'>Henretta Maria</span>, | <i>æternæ
-memoriæ</i> <span class='sc'>Henrici</span> | <i>Magni Gallorum Regis</i> | <i>Filia, Connubium</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [100],
-signn. ¶, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>L</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>M</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Virtutis
-qui</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-¶ 1<sup>r</sup> title: ¶ 2<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>v</sup> 5 special Latin
-poems: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>M</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, the poems: <span class='fss'>M</span> 2<sup>r</sup> “Ad
-Lectorem”, a final poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The marriage of king Charles with Henrietta Maria was on 1 May 1625 at Paris
-and on 14 June at Canterbury. The poems are Latin, except 1 Hebrew and 7 Greek:
-not one is French. There are five anagrams and two chronograms.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. ——. <span class='fss'>OXONIENSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ACADEMIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>PARENTALIA.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SACRATISSIMÆ
-MEMORIÆ</i></span> | potentissimi Monarchæ <span class='sc'>Iacobi</span>, Magnæ | <span class='sc'>Britanniae,
-Franciae</span> &amp; | <span class='sc'>Hiberniae</span> Regis, Fidei Orthodoxæ | defensoris celeberrimi,
-&amp;c. Dicata. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [96],
-signn. ¶<sup>4</sup>, ¶¶<sup>2</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>K</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>L</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>Sacrificûm</i>: English (except sign. <span class='fss'>G</span>
-which is Great primer) Roman. Contents:—sign.
-¶ 2<sup>r</sup> title, ¶ 3<sup>r</sup>, poetical
-Latin dedication to king Charles: ¶ 3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>L</span>
-1<sup>v</sup>, the poems: <span class='fss'>L</span> 2<sup>r</sup> “Conclusio ad
-Lectorem”, a Latin poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Latin poems by members of the University on the death of king James i, which took
-place on 27 Mar. 1625: all in Latin except 3 Hebrew and 2 Greek: there are
-5 chronograms, an anagram, and one poem printed in a peculiar shape.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Pemble</b>, William. Vindiciae fidei, or a treatise of iustification
-by faith, wherein that point is fully cleared, and vindicated from
-the cauils of its aduersaries. Deliuered in certaine Lectures at Magdalen
-Hall in Oxford, By William Pemble ... and now published since his
-death for the publique benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 59: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 239 + [3].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 331. The above title and details are from
-notes of a copy belonging to lord Robartes, seen by me 18 Nov. 1881.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>18. <b>Prideaux</b>, dr. John. Lectiones novem de totidem religionis
-capitibus ...</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A private copy was seen by me in 1881.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. ——. <span class='fss'>PEREZ-VZZAH:</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | The Breach of <span class='sc'>Vzzah</span>: | As it
-was deliuered in a Sermon before His | <span class='sc'>Maiesty</span> at <i>Woodstocke</i>, August |
-the 24. <i>Anno</i> 1624. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Prideaux</span>, <i>Rector of Exceter Colledge</i>, |
-<i>His</i> <span class='sc'>Maiestie’s</span> <i>Professor in Divinity</i>, | <i>and at that time Vice-Chancellor
-of</i> | <i>the Vniversity of</i> Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 50: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 23
-+ [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>so often</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to James earl of Arran, dated
-“Oxford, Exceter Colledge, Octob. 22.
-1624.”: 1–23, the sermon, on 2 Sam. vi.
-6–7: (2–7) “Alloquium serenissimo regi
-Jacobo Woodstochiæ habitum 24 Augusti.
-Anno 1624.”, signed “I. P.&#8196; V.
-<i>Oxon.</i>”: (8–9) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267, 1636 <span class='fss'>P</span>, (<i>alloquium</i>) 1624 <span class='fss'>P</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. ——. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED ON</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FIFTH OF OC-</span>|<span class='fss'>TOBER
-1624: AT THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSECRATION OF</span> | S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Iames</span> <span class='fss'>CHAPPEL</span> | <span class='fss'>IN</span> <i>Exceter Colledge</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Prideaux</span>, <i>Rector of</i> Exceter Col-|ledge, <i>His</i> <span class='sc'>Maiesties</span>
-<i>Professor in</i> | <i>Diuinity, and at that time Vice-</i>|<i>Chancellour of the Vniuer-</i>|<i>sity
-of</i> Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 50: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [36],
-signn. ¶, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>D</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>uell
-whether</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>v</sup>, Epistle dedicatory
-to dr. Geo. Hakewill, dated
-“Exceter Colledge. Novemb. 15”.
-(1624): <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, the sermon, on Luke
-xix. 46: <span class='fss'>D</span> 2, not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267. The Chapel of Exeter here concerned
-(which is not now standing) was built entirely at dr. Hakewill’s expense, at a cost of
-about £1200. The preface to the sermon mentions many Exeter men of the time and,
-incidentally, that dr. Hakewill was a kinsman of sir Thomas Bodley. The sermon
-was reprinted at Oxford in 1636.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Rawlinson</b>, John. <span class='fss'>QVADRIGA</span> | <span class='fss'>SALVTIS.</span> | <span class='fss'>FOVRE</span> | <span class='fss'>QUADRA-GESIMAL</span>, |
-<span class='sc'>or Lent-Sermons, preached</span> | at <span class='fss'><i>WHITEHALL</i></span>: | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Io.
-Rawlinson</span> Doctor of Diuinity, | Principal of <i>Edmund-Hall</i> in <i>Oxford</i>, |
-and one of his <span class='sc'>Maiesties</span> | Chaplaines in Ordinary. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 57: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 26
-+ [4] + 29 + [3] + 29 + [3] + 28 + [2]: pp.
-11 beg. <i>after, if at: Adonibezek, it: So,
-in like</i>, and <i>she wilbee</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication
-to Charles i, as Prince Charles: (7) half-title
-“The Dove-like Soule ... Feb. 19.
-1618. By I. R. ...”: 1–26, the sermon,
-on Ps. lv. 6: (3) half-title “Lex Talionis.
-... March 17. 1620. By I. R. ...”:
-1–29, the sermon, on Judges i. 7: (2)
-half-title “The Surprising of Heaven.... March
-29. 1621. By I. R. ...”:
-1–29, the sermon, on Matt. xi. 12: (2)
-half-title “The Bridegrome, and his Bride.
-... March 19. 1622 ... By I. R. ...”:
-1–28, the sermon, on Song of Solomon
-iv. 8: (1) “Faults escaped in some of
-the printed Copies ...” beginning with
-“<i>Ser.</i> 1. P. 10. <i>Of the soule, as wings
-do the nakednes.</i> (omitted) lin. 1”. (in
-the copy seen these are corrected).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 506, and 1622 <span class='fss'>R</span>. The title and every page have bounding
-lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>22. <b>Taylor</b>, John, the Water-poet. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>FEAREFVLL</span> | <span class='fss'>SVMMER</span><i>:</i> |
-<i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>LONDONS</span> | <span class='fss'>CALAMITY</span>, | the countries courtesy, | and both their
-misery. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Taylor</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 58: 1625: eights” 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32], signn. <span class='fss'>AB</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Although
-my pangs</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, dedication to sir
-John Millissent, in verse: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup> “To the
-Printer”, signed “Io. Taylor. Or. Coll.”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>v</sup> “The Præface”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, the
-poem: <span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 6<sup>v</sup> “Against Swearing”,
-in prose and verse: <span class='fss'>B</span> 7<sup>r</sup>-7<sup>v</sup> “My fare-well
-to the famous Vniuersity of Oxford”,
-in prose.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. A poem on the plague at London in the summer of 1625. There are
-allusions to the author’s stay in Oxford for some weeks and the small mortality there.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Terry</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THEOLOGICALL</span> | <span class='fss'>LOGICKE</span>: | <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>THE THIRD
-PART OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>TRYALL OF TRVTH</span>: | Wherein is declared the excellency
-and æquity of the | Christian Faith, and that it is not withstood and
-resi-|sted; but assisted and fortified by all the forces of right | reason,
-and by all the aide that artificiall Logicke can | yeeld. | <i>Against the
-heathenish Atheist, and the Romish Catholick</i>, | <i>whereof the one taketh
-exception against the Faith of</i> | <i>Christ in generall; and the other against
-the doctrine</i> | <i>thereof, as it is professed in the Reformed Churches, as</i> | <i>being
-in their opinions absurd, and contrary to the eui-</i>|<i>dent and vndeniable
-grounds of reason.</i> | <i><span class='fss'>BY</span></i> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Terry</span> Minister of the Word of | God at
-<i>Stocton</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 50: 1625: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-229 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>O Lord, and</i>, 111
-<i>party to whom</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) 2 mottos: 1–4,
-dedication to the bp. of Bath and Wells:
-5–11 “To the Christian Reader”: 12–23
-“The Quæstions that are handled in ...
-this Treatise”: 25–229, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 410, and 1600 <span class='fss'>T</span>, 1602 <span class='fss'>T</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Wall</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>VVATERING</span> | <span class='sc'>of Apollos</span>. | Deliuered
-in a Sermon at | S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maries</span> in <i>Oxford</i> | the 8. of August | 1624. | <i>By</i>
-<span class='sc'>Iohn Wall</span> <i>Do-</i>|<i>ctor in Divinity of</i> | Christ-Church. | [<i>motto</i>, then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 59: 1625: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[64], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>and
-art mightie</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, dedication
-to the bp. of Lincoln: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 6<sup>v</sup> the
-Epistle dedicatory to the same: <span class='fss'>A</span> 7<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span>
-6<sup>v</sup>, the sermon, on Acts xviii. 28.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 736. The author was chaplain to the bishop of
-Lincoln. Hebrew pointed type seems to be used for the first time at Oxford in this
-sermon, at sign. <span class='fss'>C</span> 6<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Whear</b>, Degory. <span class='fss'>DE</span> | <span class='fss'>RATIONE</span> | <span class='fss'>ET METHODO</span> | Legendi
-Historias | <i>Dissertatio</i>. | Authore <span class='sc'>Degoreo Whear</span> | Pri. Hist. Præl.
-Pub. <span class='sc'>Cam-</span>|<span class='fss'>DENIANO</span> apud | <i>Oxonienses</i>. | <i>Huic præmittitur eiusdem Authoris</i> |
-<i>Oratio Auspicalis habita, vbi Ca-</i>|<i>thedram Historicam primum
-ad-</i>|<i>scendit.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1625: (fours) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 24 + [8] + 79 + [1]: pp. 11 beg. <i>horremus,
-domi</i> and <i>quam immensum</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) dedication to the earl of Pembroke,
-dated “Scrib. Oxoniæ 8 Kal. vii<sup>bris</sup>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>1625”: 1–24 “Oratio auspicalis habita
-in Scholis publicis cùm primùm L.
-Annæi Flori interpretationem aggrederer”:
-(1–3) “Rerum per dissertationis
-totius partes tractatarum indigitamenta”,
-a conspectus: 1–79, (1), the work, in
-3 parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 217. The first edition was published in London in
-1623, with a similar title, giving 12 July 1623 as the date of the Dissertation: the preface
-is dated 29 Sept. 1623 and the dedication is to William Camden, then alive, but
-the Oratio is not prefixed. For other edd. see 1637 <span class='fss'>W</span>, 1662.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1626.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. Attonitus, Richardus, pseudonym. <span class='fss'>VERITAS ODIOSA.</span> | <span class='fss'>FRAGMENTA
-VARIA</span> | <span class='fss'>COLLOQVII</span> | <span class='fss'>MACHIAVELLI ET MERCVRII.</span> | 1626. | Ex
-Schedis M. S. Richardi Attoniti Eboracensis Pro-|to-Cancellarij nuper
-Classis | Anglicanæ. | [<i>two lines.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 67: [1626?]: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 30
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Chrestienté</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1 title: 3–30,
-the work: (1–2) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. This is a curious production of a Dutch press, and appears to be a
-vigorous defence of Barneveldt (<i>d.</i> 1619) and the Arminians against Maurice prince
-of Orange and the Gomarists. Latin, French, Dutch and Italian are used, and the
-whole piece abounds with lacunae. “Walter Map” in the imprint is of course the well-known
-archdeacon of Oxford in the 12th cent., whose satires are still appreciated.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Barnes</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT</span> | <span class='fss'>HENLY AT THE
-VISI-</span>|tation on the 27. of Aprill, | 1626. | <i><span class='fss'>VPON THOSE WORDS OF</span></i> | <i>the</i>
-9. <i>Psalme, Vers.</i> 16. | <i>The Lord is knowne to execute judgement.</i> |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 63: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 30
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>of Yorke</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8)
-Epistle dedicatorie to sir Richard Blunt,
-signed “Rob. Barnes”, “from my study
-at Greys this 4th of May, 1626”: 1–30,
-the sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 339. The author was the son of Joseph Barnes the
-printer, and a Fellow of Magdalen College: the dedication contains some biographical
-matter, and the sermon some Henley affairs, such as ploughing on Easter Tuesday,
-which the preacher laments.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Bayley</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>THOMÆ BAYLÆI</span> | <span class='fss'>MANINGFORDIENSIS</span> | <i>Ecclesiæ
-Pastoris</i>. | <span class='fss'>DE</span> | <span class='fss'>MERITO MORTIS CHRISTI</span>, | <span class='sc'>Et Modo Conversionis</span>. |
-<span class='fss'>DIATRIBÆ DVÆ.</span> | <i><span class='fss'>PROVT AB IPSO IN SCHOLA</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>THEOLOGICA APVD OXONIEN-</span></i>|<i>ses
-publicê ad disputandum</i> | <i>propositæ fuerunt Maij.</i> 8. | <i>An. Dom.</i>
-1621. | <i>Nec non Concio ejusdem ad</i> | <i>Clerum.</i> | <span class='fss'>APVD</span> | <i>Eosdem habita in
-templo</i> B<i>eatæ</i> Mariæ, | <i>Iulij</i> 5. <i>An. D.</i> 1622. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 65: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-63 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>per se quidem</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
-(5–8) Epistola dedicatoria to sir Thomas
-Coventry: (9–11) “Praefatio ad lectorem
-christianum”: (12) the two quaestiones
-debated in the Diatribae, with answers in
-Latin verse: 1–25 the two diatribae;
-27–63, the concio, on Jud. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 633. The preface explains that the discourses were
-printed in order to confute a charge of Arminianism.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>4. <b>Cameron</b>, John. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>EXAMINATION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THOSE PLAVSI-</span>|ble
-Appearances which seeme | most to commend the Romish | Church,
-and to preiudice | the Reformed. | <i><span class='fss'>DISCOVERING THEM</span></i> | <i>to be but meere
-shifts, purposely in-</i>|<i>vented, to hinder an exact triall of do-</i>|<i>ctrine by the
-Scriptures.</i> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Iohn Cameron</span>. | <i>Englished out of French.</i> |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 59: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-173 + [3]: P. 11 beg. <i>superiours. These</i>,
-111. <i>Chap. xxvii</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) “To the
-Reader,” unsigned, but by William Pinke
-the translator, see below: (5–8) “A
-Table of the Chapters”: 1–173 The
-Examination, in 41 chapters and a Conclusion:
-(2) “Faults escaped in some
-copies,” 6¼ lines of Errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 476, where Bliss adds a note from White Kennett’s
-copy of the 1<sup>st</sup> ed. of the Athenæ (at i. 463) “William Pinke. He translated and
-published An Examination ... 1626. 4<sup>to</sup>. Ded. to the Master Wardens and Assistants
-of the Skinners Company. by W. P. [William Pinke] acknowledging his Engagements
-to the whole Company, and reverencing the Memory of that worthy Knight Sir
-James Lancaster.” Neither the British Museum copy nor the two Bodleian copies
-contain the above dedication, the signatures of the preliminary matter being, on each
-leaf:—(blank), *2, **, (blank), forming one gathering of 4 leaves of a natural kind,
-though the double asterisk is odd. The original French bore the title “Traicté
-auquel sont examinez les preiugez de ceux de l’Eglise Romaine. Contre la Religion
-Reformee” (La Rochelle, 1617.) Cameron was a Scotchman, minister at Bordeaux
-and Professor of Theology at Saumur. The address to the reader apologises for using
-the word <i>prejudice</i> as a translation of the French <i>Preiugé</i>, which means a preconceit
-either good or bad: and says “I have not construed but translated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>H[akewell]</b>, G[eorge]. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>COMPARISON</span> | <span class='fss'>BETVVEENE THE</span> |
-<span class='sc'>dayes of Purim</span> | and that of the <i>Powder treason</i> | for the better Continuance
-of | the memory of it, and the | stirring vp of mens affe-|ctions
-to a more Zea-|lous observati-|on there of. | [<i>line</i>]| <i>Written by G. H.</i>
-D. D.| [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 58: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 36:
-p. 11 beg. <i>more diuelish</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within
-arched border: 2, the text, Deut. xxxii.
-26–28: 3–36, the sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 255.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Prideaux</b>, John. <span class='fss'>CONCIO</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA OXONIÆ</span> | ad Artium <i>Baccalaureos</i>
-in | Die Cinerum Feb. 22<sup>o</sup>. | 1626. | <span class='fss'><i>PER</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Iohannem Prideavx</span>
-S. S. Th. | <i>Professorem Regium, &amp;</i> P. T. <i>ejusdem</i> | <i>Academiæ Vicecancellarium</i>.
-| [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 60 (with “Excubebant”): 1626:
-sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. viii + 40: p. 11 beg. <i>latet ad</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3)
-title: (5–7) Latin dedication to Robert
-lord Dormer, dated “Exon: Coll: ex
-Musæo meo d. 8. Martij ... 1626” i.e.
-1625/6: 1–44 (“40”), the sermon, on
-1 Sam. xiv. 26.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 273. The “P. T.” of the title seems to be <i>Pro Tempore</i>:
-the use of 1626 for 1625 or 162<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span> is noticeable.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. ——. <span class='fss'>LECTIONES</span> | <span class='fss'>DECEM.</span> | <span class='fss'>DE TOTIDEM RELIGIONIS</span> | Capitibus
-præcipuè hoc tempore con-|<i>troversis prout publicè habebantur</i> | <i>Oxoniæ
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>in Vesperijs</i>. | <span class='fss'>PER</span> | <span class='sc'>Iohannem Prideavx</span> Exoniensis Collegij | Rectorem,
-&amp; S. Th. Professorem Regium. | <i>Editio secunda, priori emaculatior, &amp;
-auctior.</i> | [two <i>mottos</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 60: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [14] +
-366: p. 11 beg. <i>&amp; ult.</i>, 111 <i>mitia celebramus</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) Latin dedication
-to Charles prince of Wales: (9–11)
-“Ad Lectorem”: (12–14) “Rerum
-Capita ... Quæstiones ...”, 10 of each:
-1–366, the 10 lectiones delivered in successive
-Comitia 1616–1625.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267. I have not seen even any notice of the first
-edition. These Lectiones are quite distinct from the Orationes below. See 1627 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. ——. <span class='fss'>ORATIONES</span> | <span class='fss'>NOVEM INAVGV-</span>|<span class='fss'>RALES, DE TOTIDEM</span> | <span class='fss'>THEOLOGIÆ
-APICIBVS</span>, | scitu non indignis, prout in promo-|tione Doctorum,
-Oxoniæ | publicè proponebantur. | in Comitijs. | <i>Accedit ad Arti</i>u<i>m
-Baccalaureos, de</i> Mosis | <i>Institutione Concio, pro more habita</i> | <i>in die
-Cinerum, An.</i> 1616. | <span class='fss'>PER</span> | <span class='sc'>Iohannem Prideavx</span>, | Exoniensis Collegij
-Recto-|rem, &amp; SS. Th. Professo-|rem Regium. | [two <i>mottos</i>, one in
-Hebrew: then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 64: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-196 + 28: pp. 11 beg. <i>lia est terebrans</i>,
-and <i>de vita Mosis</i>, 111 <i>randum. Verum</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) Latin dedication to the earl of
-Pembroke: (9–10) “Ad lectorem”: (11)
-“Rerum Capita”: 1–196, the nine orations,
-delivered at successive Comitia
-1616–22, 1624–5: 1–28, the Concio, on
-Acts vii. 22.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267. The names of the doctors are given for each
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Reuter</b>, Adam. <span class='fss'>DE</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSILIO</span> | <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>QVEM</i></span> | <span class='sc'>nobilissimo
-Svffolciæ</span> | <i>Comiti consecrat</i> | <span class='sc'>Adam Revter</span> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1626: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-220 [“221”, 129 being omitted] + [2]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>sapientis principis</i>, 111 <i>Quo
-jure?</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) Latin dedication to the duke
-of Suffolk: 1-“221” the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 421.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Wall</b>, John. <span class='fss'>IACOBS</span> | <span class='fss'>LADDER</span>, | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <i>Christian advancement</i>. |
-Deliuered in a Sermon at | <i>Newparke</i> in Glocester-|shire, the seat of the
-right | Honourable the Lord | <i>Berkley</i>, this late heauy | visitation. | <i>By</i>
-<span class='sc'>Iohn Wall</span> D<i>octour</i> in | <i>Divinity of Christ-Church</i> | <i>in Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>,
-then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 66: 1626: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>not mount as</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5) dedication to lady Eliz.
-Berkley: (7–13) Epistle dedicatory to the
-same: 1–55, the sermon, on 1 Pet. v. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 734.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Wower</b>, Jan. “Joan. Wouveri ... pietas erga <i>B</i>enefactores—Oxon.
-1626.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the sale catalogue of the <cite>Bibliotheca Gulstoniana</cite> (bp. William Gulston’s
-books), Lond. 1688, 4<sup>o</sup>, p. 35, no. 290. But see 1628 W.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1627.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Felix</b>, Marcus Minucius. <span class='fss'>M. MINVCII</span> | <span class='fss'>FELICIS</span> | <span class='fss'>OCTAVIVS.</span> |
-[<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 74: 1627: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[6] + 129 + [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>bere, quàm in</i>,
-111 <i>dicimus; non</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–5) “Typographus
-lectori”: (6) quotation from Lactantius
-about Minucius Felix: 1–129, the work:
-(2) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1631 F, 1636 F, 1662, 1678. The printer says that he has cleared this edition
-from the errors of Froben’s. I have seen a copy in which the type of pages 12 and
-13 has changed places. The work is an apology for Christianity.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Fell</b>, dr. Samuel. <span class='fss'><i>PRIMITIÆ</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>H<sup>A</sup>BI<sup>TA</sup> OXON<sup>I</sup>AE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IN SCHOLA THEOLOGICA</span> | <span class='fss'><i>NONO NOVEMBRIS</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'><i>CONCIO LATINA AD</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>BACCALAVREOS DIE</i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>CINERVM</i>.</span> | Per <span class='sc'>Samvelem Fell</span> Præbendarium
-Ecclesiæ | Christi, &amp; Publicum Professorem in Theo-|logiâ, pro Dominâ
-<span class='sc'>Margareta</span> | <i>Comitissâ Richmondiæ</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1627: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 17
-+ [1] + 18 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>quantulùm
-theologicæ</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: 1–17, the oration: (1) half
-title to the Concio: 1–18, the sermon on
-Col. ii. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 243. The (inaugural) oration contains some details
-about Fell’s predecessor in the professorship, dr. Seb. Benefield: the two pieces would
-seem to have been delivered in 1626 and 162<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>H[akewill]</b>, G[eorge]. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE POWER AND</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PROVIDENCE OF GOD</span> | <span class='fss'>IN THE GOVERNMENT</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE WORLD.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>AN
-EXAMINATION</span> | <span class='fss'>AND CENSVRE OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>COMMON ERROUR TOVCHING</span> | <span class='fss'>NATVRES
-PERPETVALL AND</span> | <span class='fss'>VNIVERSALL DECAY, DIVI-</span>|<span class='fss'>DED INTO FOVRE BOOKES:</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>WHEREOF</i></span> | <i>The first treates of this pretended decay in generall, together
-with some prepa-</i>|<i>ratiues thereunto.</i> | <i>The second of the pretended decay of
-the Heauens and Elements, together with</i> | <i>that of the Elementary bodies,
-man only excepted.</i> | <i>The third of the pretended decay of mankinde in regard
-of age and duration, of</i> | <i>strength and stature, of arts and wits.</i> | <i>The
-fourth of this pretended decay in matter of manners, together with a large</i> |
-<i>proofe of the future consummation of the World from the testimony of the</i> |
-<i>Gentiles, and the vses which we are to draw from the consideration thereof.</i> |
-By <i>G. H.</i> D. D. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 58: 1627: (fours) fol.: pp.
-[36] + 473 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>Yet Phillip</i>,
-111 <i>rable to their</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) dedication to
-the University of Oxford, signed “G. H.”:
-(9–19) “the Preface”: (20) “Errata”:
-(21–34) “The Contents ...”: (35) “of
-the value of the Roman sesterce ...”:
-(36) quotation from Boethius, with
-English translation: 1–473, the work:
-(2–5) “A Revise,” corrections of a few
-passages, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author was George Hakewill. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 256, where “Lond.”
-is a mistake for “Oxford”: for other edd. see 1630 H, 1635 H.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>4. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>LITTLE DE-</span>|<span class='fss'>SCRIPTION
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE GREAT WORLD.</span> | The third Edition. Revised. | [<i>line</i>] | By
-<span class='sc'>Peter Heylyn</span>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 71: 1627: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[20] + folded leaf + 807 + [5]: p. 11 beg.
-1. <i>First then</i>, 501 <i>Scotland is by</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-an arched border; (3–4) dedication to
-prince Charles: (5–6) “To the Reader”
-from the second ed.: (7–8) “To my brother
-the Author”, a poem by Edw. Heylyn:
-(9–12) “A Table of the principall Countries ...”:
-(13–14) “A table of the
-antient ... nations ...”: (15–19) “A
-table of the most principall things ...”:
-(19) “... Forraine coynes ...”: 1–807,
-(1–2), the work: (3) “Errata”. Before
-p. 7 should come a folded leaf, as in the
-2nd ed. (1625).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1621 H, Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 557. In the copy seen on p. (2) at the end of
-the book, in the original printing of the English lines beginning “But whither goeth”,
-l. 6 (beg. “Into safe”) is before l. 4, making nonsense: and a corrected reprint of the
-whole 12 lines is pasted over the faulty original.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Holyoke</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>DICTIONARIVM ETYMO-</span>|<span class='fss'>LOGICVM LATINVM,
-ANTIQVIS-</span>|simum &amp; novissimum nunc demum infinitis | penè laboribus &amp;
-continuis vigilijs com-|positum &amp; absolutum à <span class='sc'>Francisco</span> | de Sacra
-Quercu. | That is, | <i>A Dictionarie declaring the originall and derivations
-of all words vsed</i> | in any Latine Authors, with the reason of their
-derivations and appella-|tions; neuer any in this kinde extant before:
-the quantities of syllables, as | also the differences of those words, whose
-affinitie in signification | or otherwise, might cause a promiscuous and
-improper | vse: the pure and improper words gathered | into one
-Dictionarie, and distingui-|shed by this marke: †. | Wherevnto besides
-the hard and most vsefull words in Divinitie, Philosophie, | Physicke,
-and Logicke, are added many thousand other words out of | approved
-authours old and new, with their Greeke in more exactnesse then | ever
-was in <i>Calepine</i>, <i>Morelius</i>, or any other: and also the coines, | measures,
-weights, and Greeke Rootes, none of which | are extant in any Edition
-formerly | published. | <i>Herevnto is also annexed the proper names adorned
-with their Etymologies, illustrated</i>, | and explained, with Histories, Proverbes,
-Mythologies, &amp;c. together with the Chronologie of | the persons,
-and the beginning of noted Citties, and plantation of sundry Coun-|tries,
-the Geography, and the names both ancient and new | of the most remarkable
-places, | <span class='fss'><i>LASTLY RIDERS DICTIONARIE I THE ENGLISH</i></span> | before
-the latine compiled by <span class='sc'>Rider</span>, is augmented | with many hundreds of
-words, both out of the Law, | and out of the Latine, French, and other
-languages, | such as were and are with vs in common vse, | but never
-printed vntill now to the | perfecting of that worke. | Also the Romane |
-Calender. | <i>By the great industrie and paines of</i> | <span class='sc'>Francis Holyoke</span>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1627: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[1736], signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Z</span>, <span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>Z</span>z, <span class='fss'>A</span>aa-<span class='fss'>Z</span>zz,
-<span class='fss'>A</span>aaa-<span class='fss'>E</span>eee<sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>F</span>fff-<span class='fss'>L</span>lll<sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>M</span>mmm<sup>2</sup>, (&nbsp;)<sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Z</span>,
-<span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>F</span>f<sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>G</span>g-<span class='fss'>I</span>i<sup>4</sup>: signn. <span class='fss'>B</span>b 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Plin. l.</i>
-4. 45, <span class='fss'>B</span>bb 1<sup>r</sup> <i>Præcĭpuè, adu.</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> <i>A crafts
-mans</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span>b 1<sup>r</sup> <i>Taken or drawne out</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—sign. (&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup>
-title within lines, 2<sup>r</sup> “Ad Lectorem”
-signed “T. S. C. R.”: 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, seven Latin
-poems on the book, one by Robert
-Burton: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>S</span>ss 1<sup>r</sup>, the Latin-English
-lexicon: <span class='fss'>S</span>ss 1<sup>v</sup>, Holyoke’s Latin dedication
-to Clement Throckmorton “20 [!]
-Cal. Mart. 1611”: <span class='fss'>S</span>ss 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>fff 4<sup>v</sup>, “Dictionarium
-etymologicum propriorum nominum”:
-<span class='fss'>G</span>ggg 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>M</span>mmm 1<sup>r</sup>, “Radices
-Græcæ linguæ ... collectæ &amp; compositæ.
-Opera &amp; studio T. W.”, a short
-Greek-Latin lexicon: (&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup> a title within
-lines:—“<span class='fss'><i>RIDERS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>DICTIONARIE</span> | <span class='fss'>CORRECTED
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>AND</span> | <span class='fss'>AVGMENTED WITH THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ADDITION OF MANY HVN-</span>|<span class='fss'>DRED WORDS
-NOT EXTANT</span> | <span class='fss'>IN ANY FORMER EDITION.</span>
-| <span class='fss'>HEREVNTO ARE ANNEXED</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Riders calender, and cer-</span>|<span class='fss'>TAINE
-TABLES EXPLAINING</span> | <i>the names, weights
-and valuations of</i> | auncient and modern
-coynes, as | <i>also a table of the Hebrew,
-Greeke</i> | <i>&amp; Latine measures reduced
-to our</i> | <i>English standard &amp; assise</i>. |
-<span class='fss'><i>WHEREVNTO IS JOINED A</i></span> d<span class='fss'><i>ICTIO-</i></span>|<span class='fss'>NARY
-ETYMOLOGICALL, DERIVING</span> | <i>each word
-from his proper fountaine, the first</i> | that
-ever was extant in that kind, with | many
-worthy castigations and addi-|<i>tions, as
-will appeare in the title and epistle before
-it</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Francis Holioke</span> |
-[<i>line</i>]”, then impr. 58: (&nbsp;) 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, dedication
-to lady Dudley by Holyoke: (&nbsp;)
-3<sup>r</sup>, Latin dedication to sir F. Walsingham,
-dated, “Oxoniæ, Calend. Octob.” by John
-Rider: (&nbsp;) 3<sup>v</sup> “To the Reader” dated
-“From Oxon. the xxx of September” by
-Rider: (&nbsp;) 4<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>v</sup>, poems &amp;c. by Rider,
-John Case (30 Sept. 1589) &amp;c.: <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span>e 8<sup>v</sup>,
-“Bibliotheca Rideri scholastica”, an
-English-Latin lexicon: Ff1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span>h 3<sup>r</sup> “Certaine
-generall heads of Birds, Colours,
-&amp;c.”, English-Latin: <span class='fss'>H</span>h 3<sup>v</sup>-4<sup>r</sup>, a short
-English-Latin geographical dictionary:
-<span class='fss'>H</span>h 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>I</span>i 4<sup>v</sup>, “Johannis Rideri Calendarium
-Romanum ...”, followed by lists
-of weights, measures, &amp;c. and foreign
-coins, the last, signed “W. T. P.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare, see 1589 R. Of bp. Rider’s double lexicon the first part at least (English-Latin)
-was published at Oxford in 1589. In 1606 Francis Holyoke supplied a Latin-English
-part (based on Rider’s Index) and published both at London. Subsequent
-edd. of the two parts together are Lond. 1617, Lond. 1626 (ed. N. Gray), the present
-one Oxf. 1627, Lond. 1633 (called the 4th), Lond. 1640 (called the 5th), Lond. 1649,
-Lond. 1659, (acc. to Bohn’s Lowndes, s.v. Rider, where however since 1637 is an error
-for 1627, this 1659 may be one for 1649), and, edited by Thomas Holyoke son of
-Francis, Lond. 1677.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>James</b>, dr. Thomas. <span class='fss'><i>INDEX</i></span> | <span class='fss'>GENERALIS</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRORVM PROHI-</span>|<span class='fss'>BITORVM</span>
-à <span class='fss'>PONTIFI-</span>|ciis, unà cum Editionibus | <i>expurgatis vel expur-</i>|gandis
-juxta seriem Li-|terarum &amp; tripli-|cem classem. | <i>In usum Bibliothecæ
-Bodleia-</i>|<i>anæ, &amp; Curatoribus eiusdem</i> | specialiter designatus | <span class='fss'>PER</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Tho. Iames</span> S. Theol. | D. Coll. B. Mariæ Winton | in Oxon. Vulgò
-Novi dicti | quondam Socium. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1627: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[144], signn. *, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>L</span><sup>12</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>In
-Biblia</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—* 1<sup>r</sup>,
-“[*]”: 2<sup>r</sup>, title: 3<sup>r</sup>, Latin dedication to
-the Curators of the Bodleian, followed
-(4<sup>r</sup>-6<sup>v</sup>) by an Epistola dedicatoria to
-them: 7<sup>r</sup>-10<sup>v</sup>, Ad Lectorem: 11<sup>r</sup>, Errata:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1-<span class='fss'>K</span>5<sup>v</sup>, the work: <span class='fss'>K</span>6<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>L</span>10<sup>v</sup>, “Tabula”,
-an index of authors: <span class='fss'>L</span>11<sup>r</sup> “Cautio”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 467. The intention of the book is the reverse of the
-aim of the <cite>Indices Expurgatorii</cite>, namely to give a select list of recommended books.
-Those which were in the Bodleian are marked with a star.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Pasor</b>, Matthias. <span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PRO</i></span> | <span class='fss'>LINGVÆ ARABICÆ</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PROFES</i>S<i>IONE,
-PVBLICE</i></span> | ad Academicos habita in | schola Theologica <i>Vni-</i>|<i>versitatis
-Oxoniensis</i> | xxv. Octob. | 1626. | à | <span class='sc'>Matthia Pasore</span>, <i>Artium
-Magi-</i>|<i>stro &amp; non ita pridem Mathematum Pro-</i>|<i>fessore in Vniversitate</i>
-Haidelbergensi. | [two <i>mottos</i>, one Hebrew.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 60: 1627: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [34],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>8</sup><span class='fss'>C</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>mentariorum
-Rabbinnicorum</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>, “decretum
-Concilii Viennensis”, see below,
-then device: 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to the
-University of Oxford, in Latin, dated
-5 Dec. 1626: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 445. The oration is of considerable interest for the
-history of Oriental studies at Oxford. It claims to be the first on the subject at
-Oxford, quotes the decree of the Council of Vienne 1311–12 that there ought to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>instruction in Hebrew, Arabic and Chaldee at Oxford, and urges the fitness of the
-study in Oxford. Pasor was lecturer on Arabic only from 1626 to 1629. Some
-Arabic MSS. in the Bodleian are mentioned on sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>7<sup>r</sup> and <span class='fss'>B</span>7<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Prideaux</b>, dr. John. In the <cite>Catalogus ... librorum ...
-Richardi Davis bibliopolæ, pars quarta</cite> (Lond. 1692, 4<sup>o</sup>) p. 10, no. 183
-is “Joan. Prideaux Lectiones novem, Oxon. 1627.” See 1626 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Richardson</b>, Gabriel. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE STATE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF
-EVROPE.</span> | <i>XIIII. Bookes.</i> | <span class='fss'>CONTAINING THE HISTO-</span>|<span class='fss'>RIE, AND RELATION OF
-THE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>MANY PROVINCES</i></span> | <span class='fss'>HEREOF.</span> | <i>Continued out of approved Authours.</i> |
-<span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='fss'>GABRIEL RICHARDSON BATCHELOVR</span> | in Divinitie, and <span class='sc'>Fellow</span> of
-<span class='sc'>Brasen-</span>|<span class='sc'>Nose</span> <i>College in Oxford</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 70: 1627: (fours) fol.: pp. [4]
-+ 18 + 67 + 37 + [1] + 14 + 13 + [1] + 50 +
-23 + [1] + 11 + [1] + 74 + 26 + [2] + 11 +
-[1] + 68 + 29 + [1] + 64 + [2]: pp. 11
-[bk. 1] beg. <i>Di ocesse with</i>, (bk. 6) <i>Arcobriga</i>,
-(bk. 10) <i>Berry. Bounded</i>, (bk. 11)
-<i>Vindomana</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title; (3–4) dedication to
-the bp. of Lincoln: 1– ... 64, the treatise
-in 14 books separately paged.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 38. The first four books contain Great Britain. The
-signatures begin again with the 10th and with the 11th book, but every book is separately
-paged. The matter is a mixture of history and geography.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Smith</b>, Samuel. Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 283) mentions an
-edition of the Aditus ad Logicam of this year: see 1617 S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Vicars</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>PVSILLVS GREX.</span> | <span lang="el" xml:lang="el"><span class='large'>E</span>Λ<span class='large'>E</span>ΓΧΟΣ.</span> | <span class='fss'>REFVTATIO</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CVIVSDAM LIBELLI DE AM-</span>|<span class='fss'>PLITVDINE REGNI COELESTIS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SVB EMENTITO
-CAELII SECVNDI</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CVRIONIS NOMINE IN LV-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>CEM EMISSI</i>.</span> | <i>Qua docetur
-ex Scripturis beatorum numerum ma</i>j<i>orem</i> | <i>non esse numero damnatorum,
-sed potius minorem.</i> | <i>Ad excutiendum securitatis veternum nostris hominibus</i> |
-<i>potissimùm conscripta.</i> | <i>Authore</i> <span class='sc'>Thoma</span> <i>de</i> <span class='sc'>Vicariis</span> <i>S. T. Bac.
-Pastore</i> | <i>Cockfieldiensi in agro quondam Australium Saxonum.</i> | [two
-<i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72: 1627: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 32: p.
-11 beg. <i>argumentaque</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. 1, title: 2, “Ad Lectores
-Candidos”: 3–6, Latin letters between
-“Thom. Vicarsius” (“Gallager”, = of
-Cockfield) and John Goldsmith (“Gallinager” =
-of Henfield), and William Cox,
-canon of Chichester, one dated 7 Jan.
-1622 or 1623: 7–32, the discourse, on
-Luke xii. 32.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 443. The original treatise of Coelius Secundus Curio
-(an Italian, <i>d.</i> 1569) entitled “... De amplitudine beati regni Dei dialogi sive libri
-duo” was first published in 1554, and his contention that the number of the saved is
-greater than that of the lost is here refuted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Wake</b>, Isaac. <span class='sc'>Rex Platonicvs</span><i>:</i> | [&amp;c. exactly as 1615 W,
-except that the colon in the first line is italic, not Roman, and “Quarta”
-for “Tertia”.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>Impr. 73: 1627: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 238 + [18]: p. 11 beg. <i>mentum demississimo</i>,
-111 <i>neri, vt quum</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) dedication to prince Henry, as in 1st
-ed.; 1–236, the work: 237–238, (1), the
-Chancellor’s letter with preface: (3) title
-“<span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>FVNEBRIS</span> | habita in Tem-|<a id='t136'></a><i>plo
-beatæ Ma-</i>|<i>riæ Oxon.</i> | Ab <span class='sc'>Isaaco
-Wake</span>, | <span class='fss'><i>PVBLICO ACA-</i></span>|<i>demiæ Oratore,
-Maij</i> | 25. An. 1607. quum | <i>mæsti Oxonienses</i>,
-| <i>pijs manibus</i> <span class='sc'>Io-</span>|<span class='sc'>hannis Rai-</span>|<span class='fss'>NOLDI</span>
-<i>paren-</i>|<i>tarent</i>. |” [woodcuts, then
-impr. 73]: (5–17) the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1607 W. This fourth edition is a verbatim but not literatim reprint of the
-3<sup>rd</sup> ed. (1615).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Wall</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'>CHRIST IN</span> | <span class='fss'>PROGRESSE.</span> | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED IN A
-SER-</span>|mon at <i>Shelford</i> i<i>n Nottingham-</i>|<i>shire</i>, the seate of the right Honou-|rable
-the Lord <span class='sc'>Stanhope</span>. | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Iohn Wall</span> <i>Doctour in Divini-</i>|<i>ty of
-Christ-Church in Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 58: 1627: eights 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 50 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>where the
-Lord</i>: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1–2) not seen: (3) title: (5) dedication
-to sir Henry Stanhope, son of lord Stanhope:
-(7–13) “The Epistle dedicatory”:
-(15–16) not seen: 1–50, the sermon, on
-Matth. xxi. 9.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 735.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1628.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. [<b>Airay</b>, Christopher]. <span class='fss'>FASCICVLVS</span> | <span class='fss'>PRÆCEPTORVM</span> | <span class='fss'><i>LOGICORVM
-IN</i></span> | <i>gratiam juventutis</i> A-|<span class='fss'>CADEMICÆ</span> <i>compositus</i> | <i>&amp; nunc primùm typis</i> |
-<i>donatus</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72: 1628: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 224: p. 11 beg. <i>eo: vt, si</i>, 111 <span class='fss'>I.</span>
-<i>Necessaria, cui</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–6) “Typographus
-benevolo Lectori ...”: (7)
-“Sphalmata ...”, errata: (8) “<i>Arbor
-Porphyriana</i>”: 1–224, the work comprising
-an “Introductio generalis ...”
-and six books.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition of Airay’s Logic, see 1633 A, 1660. The preface explains that
-the author’s name is omitted from modesty, and that several MSS. of the first three
-books have been compared and something added, as well as three more books.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. Bodleian Library. The entry in the “Catalogi ... librorum
-... Richardi Davis ... pars quarta,” Lond. 1692, p. 29:—“108.
-Catalogus Librorum in Bibliotheca Bodleiana—Oxon. 1628” must be an
-error for 1620.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Brerewood</b>, Edward <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS</span> | <span class='fss'>QVIDAM</span> | <span class='fss'>LOGICI</span> | <span class='fss'>DE</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>PRÆDICABILIBUS</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PRÆDICAMENTIS</i>.</span> | <i>Ab eruditissimo Viro</i> <span class='sc'>Edvardo
-Brerewood</span> | Artium Magistro, è Collegio <i>Ænei-Nasi</i>, olim conscripti:
-| nunc verò ab erroribus (qui frequenti transcriptione irrepserant)
-vindicati, ad pristinum nitorem, na-|tivamq; puritatem diligentissimâ
-manuscripto-|rum collatione restituti, &amp; in lucem editi, | <i>Per</i> T. S. <i>Art.
-Mag. &amp; Collegij Ænei-Nasi Socium</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>Impr. 72 <i>b</i>: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32] +
-single leaf + 472: p. 11 beg. <i>genus &amp;
-species</i>, 401 <i>tes sit sanus</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) epistola
-dedicatoria to sir Rich. Brook of Norton,
-signed “Thomas Sixesmith”, “Oxonij, è
-Musæo meo, in Collegio Ænea-Nasensi,
-13. Calend. Octob. 1628”: (9–12) “Erudito
-Lectori ...”: (13–31) “Index sectionum
-quæstionumque ...”: a folded
-sm. folio leaf “Pag. 1” bearing an
-“Analysis” of logic, printed on one side
-only, perhaps not by Brerewood: 1–472,
-the ten treatises (pp. 63–64 are another
-folded leaf, printed in style similar to the
-former one, but “Sect. 17”).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 140. Brerewood died in 1613.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Burton</b>, Robert. [Engraved title:—] <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='sc'>Anatomy of</span> |
-<span class='fss'>MELANCHOLY</span>. | <i>What it is, with all the kinds causes</i>, | <i>symptomes, prognostickes,
-&amp; seuerall cures of it.</i> | In three Partitions, with their severall |
-Sections, members &amp; subsections, | Philosophically, Medicinally, | Historically,
-opened &amp; cut up. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <i>Democritus Junior</i>. | <i>With a Satyricall
-Preface, conducing</i> | <i>to the following Discourse.</i> | <i>The thirde Edition,
-corrected and</i> | <i>augmented by the Author.</i> | [<a id='t137'></a><i>motto</i>: see below.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 70: 1628: (fours) folio: pp.
-[8?] + 77 + [11] + 646 (after 208 are two
-unnumbered leaves, and after 374 one) +
-[12]: p. 11 beg. <i>atq; auidè</i>, 501 <i>so they
-must</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) engraved title: [(3–6) not seen, two
-leaves of verses?] (7) dedication to George
-lord Berkeley: 1–77 “Democritus Iunior
-to the reader”: (2) “Lectori malè feriato”:
-(4–7) “the Synopsis of the first
-partition”: (8–9) “Democritus Iunior
-ad librum suum”, elegiacs: (10–11) “The
-Authors Abstract of Melancholy, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">διαλογικῶς</span>”,
-verses: 1–208, the first partition:
-(1–4) “The Synopsis of the second partition”:
-209–374, the second partition:
-(1–2) “Analysis of the third partition”:
-375–646, the third partition: (1–8) “The
-Table”, an index: (9) “Errata sic corrigas”:
-(11) Impr. 75, between woodcuts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 653, and 1621 B. The author’s name does not occur in
-the book. The engraved title is divided into 12 parts, arranged in horizontal rows of
-three, but the rows are not of equal height: no. 1 (left top corner) is “Zelotipia,”
-birds with river and trees: 2. “Democritus Abderites” by his garden, under a tree:
-3. Solitudo,” deer &amp;c. in a glade: 4. (second row) “Inamorato” a love-sick youth
-with suitable surroundings: 5. title, as above: 6. “Hypocondriacus” a king, sitting:
-7. “Superstitiosus,” a monk on his knees, telling his beads: 8. “Democritus Junior,”
-half length, with arms, book, sphere and ladder (?): 9. “Maniacus,” chained: 10.
-“Borago,” the plant: 11. Imprint, with “C: le ... Blon. fe:” the engraver: 12.
-“Helleborus,” the plant. This title is found in later editions, but in a comparatively
-worn state.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Cameron</b>, John. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>TRACT OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SOVERAIGNE IVDGE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF
-CONTROVERSIES</span> | <span class='fss'>IN MATTERS OF</span> | <span class='fss'>RELIGION.</span> | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Cameron</span>
-Minister of the | Word of God, and Divinity Professour | in the
-Academie of <i>Montauban</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Translated into English by</i> <span class='sc'>Iohn</span> |
-Vernevil. <i>M.A.</i> | [<i>motto</i>, and translation.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 80: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 48: p.
-11 beg. <i>constrayned first of all</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–4,
-dedication to sir Thomas Leigh, dated
-“from the publique Library in Oxford
-this 30 of Aug. 1628”: 5–6, “To the
-Reader”: 7–48, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 222. The author states that when he first came into
-England he “belonged unto” Sir Tho. Leigh and his grandfather of the same names.
-The “sovereign judge” of the treatise is declared to be “God speaking in the
-Scriptures.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>6. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathaniel. <cite>Achitophel: or, the Picture of a wicked
-Politician</cite>, in 3 parts. Dubl. 1627, oct. Ox. 1628, qu.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 422, where Wood relates that the Lond. 1629 ed. (and
-presumably all subsequent editions) is expurgated of passages supposed to reflect on
-Arminianism. See 1640 C. The British Museum, Bodleian, Advocates’ Library at
-Edinburgh and the Library of Trinity College, Dublin, do not seem to possess a copy
-of either of the two first editions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>C[asa]</b>, J[=Giovanni della]. <span class='fss'>ETHICA</span> | <span class='fss'>IVVENILIS</span> | <i><span class='fss'>J. C.</span></i>| <span class='fss'>GALATEVS</span>
-| Seu | De Morum Honestate &amp; E-|legantia; Liber ex Italico |
-Latinus; | [<i>line</i>] | Ejusdem <i>J. W.</i> de Umbra | Variæ. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 87: 1628: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 129 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>mo nobis bene</i>,
-111 <i>prehendere, vel</i>: Pica Roman. Contents.—pp.
-(1–2), not seen: (3) title,
-within a double line: (4) second title
-“Ethica Iuvenilis, seu Manuductorium ad
-laudabilem morum Concinnitatem ...”,
-and preface signed “G. W.”: 1–129, the
-treatise: (2–3) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1630 C. The author was Giovanni della Casa, and the translator Nathan
-Chytraeus, whose initials occur on p. 1: but the copy seen had no trace of “J. W. de
-Umbra variæ,” though the binding was original. There are many editions of the
-Italian and Latin forms of this treatise (see 1630 C and 1665), and some of an English
-translation. Pp. 1–128 of this edition were reissued as part of the 1665 edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>D[ickinson]</b>, W[illiam]. <i><span class='fss'>MILKE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>FOR BABES</span>. | <i><span class='fss'>THE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH
-CATECHISME</span>, | <span class='fss'>SET DOWNE IN THE</span> | Common-Prayer Booke, breifly ex-|planed
-for the private vse of the | <i>Younger and more vnlearned sort of</i> |
-<i>his Parishioners of</i> Apleton, <i>in</i> | the County of Berks. | <span class='asterism'>*&#8196;*&#8196;*<br />*&#8196;*</span> | By
-W. D. | [two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 85: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-39 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>sible resemblance</i>:
-Pica English and Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, (2) four “Errata”: 3–8 “To
-his parishioners ...” of Appleton, a
-dedication and preface: 1–39 the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 389.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Doughty</b>, John. <i><span class='fss'>A DISCOVRSE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>CONCERNING</span> | <span class='fss'>THE ABSTRUSENESSE</span>
-| of Divine Mysteries, together | <i>with our knowledge of them</i> | <span class='sc'>May</span>
-1. 1627. | <span class='fss'>ANOTHER</span> | <i><span class='fss'>TOVCHING CHVRCH-</span></i>|Schismes but the Vnanimity |
-of Orthodox Professours | <span class='sc'>Feb.</span> 17. 1628. | [<i>line</i>] | By <i>I. D.</i> M<sup>r</sup> of Arts
-and Fellow of | <i>Merton Colledge in Oxford</i>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 84: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-26 + 26: pp. 11 beg. <i>for mans delight</i>,
-and <i>by discountenance</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line:
-(3–4) dedication to Dr. Brent, warden of
-Merton, signed “Iohn Doughty”: 1–26
-the first sermon, on Rom. xii. 16: 1–26
-the second, on Rom. xvi. 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 977. The signatures run through the whole volume.
-All the pages of text are within a bounding line doubled at the top and outer side.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Field</b>, dr. Richard. <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE CHVRCH,</span> | <span class='fss'>FIVE BOOKES.</span> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Richard Field doctor</span> | <span class='fss'>OF DIVINITY</span> | <span class='fss'>AND SOME=</span>|<span class='fss'>TIMES DEANE OF</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>GLOCESTER</span></i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i><span class='fss'>THE SECOND EDITION VERY MVCH AVG=</span></i>|<i>mented,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>in the thirde booke, and the Appendix to the same.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>device</i>, then
-<i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68<i>a</i>: 1628: (sixes) fol.: pp.
-[16] + 906 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>tation of
-daungerous</i>, 701 <i>wrongs of the Court</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) Epistle dedicatory to the duke of
-Buckingham, signed “Nathaniel Field”,
-the author’s son. (5–7) Epistle dedicatory
-to the archbp. of Canterbury, by Rich.
-Field: (9–15) “what things are handled
-in the bookes following”: (15) “Errata”:
-1–28, the work, bk 1: 29–46, bk 2: 47–182,
-bk 3: 183–342, “an Appendix ...”:
-343–402, bk 4: 403, a title to book 5,
-and its appendix, with impr. 68: 403–746,
-bk 5: 747–906, the appendix: (1–2)
-not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 184, 1635 F. The first ed. (two different issues) was
-Lond. 1606 (5th book, Lond. 1610). The author died in 1616. Three edd. or parts
-of edd. have been issued even in the 19th century. The signatures run completely
-through the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'><i>ROMANÆ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTHOLOGIA</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RECOGNITA ET</span> | <span class='fss'>AVCTA.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AN</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH EXPOSITION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE ROMAN ANTI-</span>|quities,
-wherein many Roman | &amp; English offices are paralleld | <i>and
-divers obscure phrases</i> | <i>explained</i> | <i>For the vse of</i> <span class='sc'>Abingdon</span> <i>Schoole</i>. |
-[<i>line</i>] | Newly revised and inlarged by the | <i>Author</i>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 70: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-277 + [23]: p. 11 beg. <i>malefactor, but</i>,
-201 <i>Cap. 8. De rupe</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within an arched
-border: (3–4) dedication to dr. Young,
-14 Cal. Dec. 1622: (5) “Benevolo lectori
-...”: (7) “A short table ...” of
-contents: 1–277 the work: (1–23) “Index
-rerum et verborum”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 G.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Gumbleden</b>, John. <span class='fss'><i>GODS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>GREAT MERCY</span> | <span class='fss'>TO MANKINDE IN</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>JESVS CHRIST</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT</span> | Pauls Crosse, March 18:
-being | <i>Palme Sunday</i>. 1626. | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Gvmbleden</span> M<sup>r</sup> of Artes. |<a id='t139'></a> [two
-<i>mottos</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 81: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-34 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>off) he comes</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-“To the Reader”, dated “From my
-Study at Longworth in Berkshiere. Octob.
-14. 1627”: 1–34, the sermon, on Is. liii. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 436.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Howson</b>, John, bp. of Oxford. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIASTICALL</span> |
-to be enquired of by the Church-wardens &amp; | Sidesmen within the
-Dioces of Oxon: set forth | <i>by the authority of the Right Reverend
-Father</i> | <i>in God</i> <span class='fss'>IOHN</span> by the Divine providence | <i>of God Lord Bishop of</i>
-Oxon<i>: Anno</i> | 1628. <i>Being the third yeare</i> | <i>from his Lordships</i> | <i>Visitation.</i>
-| [<i>woodcut.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 82: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>spected to
-conceale</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup> title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup> “The Oath”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>
-2<sup>r</sup> “Articles concerning the Clergie”,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Parre</b>, bp. Richard. <span class='fss'>CONCIO AD</span> | <span class='fss'>CLERVM HABI=</span>|<span class='fss'>TA OXONIÆ IN</span> |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span><i>Comitijs Iul.</i> 12. 1625. | <i><span class='fss'>PER</span></i> | <span class='fss'>RICH<i>:</i> PARRE. S.S.</span> | <i>Theol. Bac. Coll.
-Aenei</i>⸗|<i>nasi Socium</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72<i>a</i>: 1628: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 46 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>demùm sunt
-hæc</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–7) epistola dedicatoria to Thomas
-earl of Southampton: (8) “Errata”:
-1–46, the sermon on Rev. iii. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 345. The dedication states that Parre was chaplain to
-his patron the earl of Southampton.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Parre</b>, bp. Richard. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>END OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PERFECT MAN.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>SERMON PREACHED AT</span></i> | <i>the Buriall of the right Honourable Sir</i> | <span class='fss'>ROBERT
-SPENCER</span> Knight | Baron <span class='sc'>Spencer</span> of <i>Wormeleighton</i>, | <i>Novemb.</i> 6. 1627.
-in <i>Braynton</i> | <i>Church in Nor-</i>|<i>thamptonshire</i>, | <i><span class='fss'>BY</span></i> | <span class='fss'>RICHARD PARRE</span>
-Bachelour in | Divinity, and late Fellow of Brasen-nose Col-|ledge in
-Oxford, now Rector of | <i>Ladbrook</i> in Warwickshire. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-29 + [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>hortation. As long</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) epistle dedicator to William lord
-Spencer of Wormleighton: (7–8) “The
-Preface”: 1–29, the sermon on Ps. xxxvii.
-37: (2–6) seven poems, in English, Greek
-(one) and Latin (one) on lord Spencer’s
-death, no doubt by Parre.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 345.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Pemble</b>, William. <i><span class='fss'>FIVE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>GODLY, AND PRO-</span>|fitable Sermons
-concerning | 1 <i>The slaverie of sinne.</i> | 2 The mischiefe of ignorance. |
-3 The roote of Apostasie. | 4 The benefit of Gods service. | 5 The
-Christians loue. | <i>Preached in his life time in sundry places.</i> | By that
-late faithfull Minister of | <i>Christ</i> M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>William</span> | <span class='sc'>Pemble</span> <i>of Mag-</i>|<i>dalen
-Hall in the Vni-</i>|<i>versity of Oxford</i>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 84: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-24 + 72 + “31”-“38” + [4?]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>and cast themselues</i>, and <i>tence 2. Thess</i>:
-pp. 33 beg. <i>as those Children</i>, and <i>his
-happyness</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within arched border: (3–4)
-“To the Reader”, signed by the editor
-“Iohn Tombes”: 1–24 the first sermon,
-on John viii. 34: 1–25, the second, on
-Hos. iv. 6: 27–43, the third, on Heb. iii.
-12–13: 44–66, the fourth on Ex. xxxiv.
-23–24: 67–71, “31”-“38”, 1, the fifth,
-on Cant. ii. 16: (3–4) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 331 (where “Lond.” is an error for “Oxf.”) and 1629
-P. Pemble died in 1623. The editor was a pupil of Pemble (Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii.
-1062), and succeeded him in his lectureship at Magdalen hall. There is something
-curious about the printing of this volume: the pagination is peculiar, and sign. K 1<sup>r</sup>
-(p. “31”) has the running title of sermon 4 instead of 5: also the catchword on
-p. “38” is <i>have</i> instead of <i>having</i>, and the next page differs in style of printing. The
-second edition shows each sermon with a separate pagination, but appears otherwise
-to be a verbatim reprint. The signatures of this first ed. begin again with the second
-sermon, and the first at least of the last two leaves bears no signature, though beginning
-a new sheet.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Rudyerd</b>, sir Benjamin. <i><span class='fss'>BENIAMIN RVDIERD</span></i> | <span class='fss'>HIS SPEECH
-IN BEHALFE</span> | <span class='sc'>of the Clergie, and of</span> | <i>Parishes</i> miserably destitute of
-In-|struction, through want of | <i>Maintenance</i>. | <span class='fss'>CONFIRMED BY THE</span> |
-Testimonies of Bishop <span class='sc'>Iewel</span>, | Master <span class='sc'>Perkins</span>, and Sir | <span class='sc'>Henry
-Spelman</span>. | [<i>line, motto, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>Impr. 76: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-14 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>taine vnto him</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-1–14, the speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 456. This tract is generally found without any title
-page (signn. A—B<sup>4</sup> only): the London booksellers seem to have printed one for their
-own purposes, not deeming the title as it heads p. 1 (“Sir Beniamin Ruddierd’s
-speach in behalfe of the Cleargy.”) sufficient. Some early copies have the number of
-the first page central over the author’s name, enclosed in brackets; but it was doubtless
-soon moved to the upper right hand corner, because in its original place it seemed
-to indicate a first <i>part</i> of the tract rather than simply the first page. This speech was
-reprinted at London in 1641.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Sparke</b>, William. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>MYSTERY</span> | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>GODLINESSE:</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> |
-<span class='fss'>GENERALL DISCOVRSE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE REASON THAT IS</span> | <span class='fss'>IN CHRISTIAN RELIGION.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>William Sparke</span> Divinity Rea⸗|der at <i>Magd: Coll:</i> in <i>Oxford</i>
-and Par⸗|son of <i>Blechly</i> in <i>Buckingham-shire</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then 2 <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 77: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-78 + [2] + 78 + [2]: pp. 11 beg. <i>All the
-glory</i>, and <i>children, yee cannot</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-dedication to George duke of Buckingham:
-(7–12) “The Preface to the
-Reader”: (13–15) “The Contents”:
-1–78 “Booke I”, in 3 chapters: 1–78
-“Booke II”, in 3 chapters: 78, imprint
-78.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 495. The second book, which is distinct in pagination,
-signatures and colophon, seems to have been printed separately and even issued by
-itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Tozer</b>, Henry. <span class='fss'>DIRECTIONS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>FOR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A GODLY LIFE</span>: | Especially
-for Communi-|cating at the Lord’s Table. | <i>Intended first for private
-vse;</i> | <i>now publish’d for the good of</i> | <i>those who desire the safty of</i> | <i>their
-owne soules, and</i> | <i>shall bee pleased to</i> | <i>make vse thereof.</i> | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>H. Tozer</span>
-M<sup>r</sup> of Arts, and | Fellow of <i>Exceter</i> Col-|ledge in <i>Oxford</i>. | [<i>motto</i>: then
-<i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1628: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-198 + [6]: p. 11 beg. <i>this I now</i>, 101 <i>Redeemer
-liueth</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-1, title: 3–11, Epistle dedicatory to
-Lorenzo Cary son of viscount Falkland:
-13–198, the directions: (1–3) “The Contents
-of each Chapter”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 274, and 1640 T. There were also Oxford edd. in
-1671 (8th), 1680 (10th), but all editions seem to be uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Vossius</b>, Gerardus Johannes. <span class='fss'>GERARDI IOH. VOSSII</span> | <span class='sc'><i>v. Cl.</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'>THESES THEOLOGICÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORICÆ</span>, | <i>De varijs doctrinæ Christianæ
-Capitibus</i>; | Quas, aliquot abhinc annis, dispu-|tandas proposuit in |
-<span class='fss'>ACADEMIA LEIDENSI</span>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 83: 1628: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 680: p. 11 beg. <i>illius de chao</i>, 501
-<i>Nec meliorem</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: [pp. 3–4 are perhaps always
-torn out, as blank]: (5) Errata: (6–7)
-“Syllabus &amp; Ordo Disputationum”:
-1–680, the forty deputations, each divided
-into theses.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1631 V. These Disputations were printed at Leiden in 1615, and the Hague
-in 1658. In the title the 1st, 2nd, 4th, 6th and 9th, as well as the first line of the
-Imprint “Bellositi Dobunorum,” are in red ink. There are large paper copies of this
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>21. <b>Wall</b>, John. <i><span class='fss'>THE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>LION IN THE</span> | <span class='fss'>LAMBE.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR STRENGTH IN</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>WEAKENES</span></i>. | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED IN A SER-</span>|mon at <i>Shelford</i> in <i>Nottingham-</i>|<i>shire</i>,
-the seate of the right Ho-|nourable the Lord | <span class='sc'>Stanhope</span>. | By <span class='sc'>Iohn
-Wall</span> <i>Doctour in Divini-</i>|<i>ty of Christ-Church in</i> Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>, then
-<i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 86: 1628: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 55 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>was sinne
-wrought</i>: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5, 7–15) dedication
-and epistle dedicatory to lady Katharine
-Stanhope: 1–55, the sermon, on Rev.
-vii. 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 735.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Whear</b>, Degory. <span class='fss'>DEGOREI</span> | <span class='fss'>WHEARI</span> | <i><span class='fss'>PRAEL. HIST.</span></i> | <span class='fss'>CAMDENIANI.</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>PIETAS</span> erga <span class='fss'>BE-</span></i>|<i><span class='fss'>NEFACTORES</span></i> | continens, | <i>Parentationem Historicam</i> |
-<i>Manibus Camdeni oblatam.</i> | <i><sub>D</sub>edicationem Imaginis Camde-</i>|<i>nianæ
-in Scholâ Historica.</i> | <i>Necnon</i> | <i>Epistolarum Eucharisticarum
-fascicu-</i>|<i>lum.</i> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72 <i>a</i>: 1628: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 48 + 133 + [3]: pp. 11 beg. <i>tutes
-tam charè</i>, and <i>incolumem. dabam</i>, 111
-<i>Prædocto Guil. Smitho</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) two mottos:
-(3–7) dedication to the University of
-Oxford: 1–19, “Parentatio historica . sive
-Commemoratio vitæ et mortis V.C. Gulielmi
-Camdeni Clarentii, facta Oxoniæ in
-Scholâ Historicâ statim à funere, Ann.
-1623”, a speech: 20–22, “Nuncius
-Chronogrammaticus, de obitu ... Camdeni ...”,
-a poem with chronograms:
-23–48, “Dedicatio imaginis Camdenianæ
-in Schola Historica, 12 Novemb. 1626,”
-a speech, with more chronograms: 1, a
-half title “Epistolarum eucharisticharum
-fasciculus”: 2, a motto: 3–5 dedication
-to dr. Benj. Rudierd, dated “Oxoniæ
-6 Idus Apr. 1628”, in Latin: 6–93, 56
-letters from dr. Whear to friends, 1601–26;
-in Latin: 95, a title “[<i>woodcuts</i>] |
-<span class='fss'>DEGOREI</span> | <span class='fss'>WHEARI</span> | <span class='fss'>PRAELEC.</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTOR.</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>CAMDEN.</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>CHARISTERIA</span></i> | [<i>woodcuts</i>]” |
-impr. 69: 96, motto: 97–103, dedication
-to John Pym, dated “Oxon. . a.d. 5 Kal.
-Mai. 1628”: 104–133, the Charisteria,
-letters by Whear to accompany presentation
-copies of his <i>Methodus historica</i>
-(1625 W): 134 “Errata sic corrigenda ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 219. The title of this work appears to explain an
-extraordinary entry in the <cite>Bibliotheca Gulstoniana</cite> (1688) p. 35 “Joan. Wouveri pietas
-erga Benefactores, Oxon. 1626”!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>White</b>, Antony. <span class='fss'>TRVTH</span> | <span class='fss'>AND ERROR</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVERED</span> | <span class='fss'>IN TWO
-SER-</span>|<span class='fss'>MONS IN</span> S<sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'>MA-</span>|ries in <i>Oxford</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Antony White</span> <i>Master
-of Arts</i> | <i>of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 79: 1628: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 59
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>in the superstitious</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to sir Henry Neville:
-1–30, the first sermon, on Prov. xxiii. 23,
-“Truth purchast”: 31–59, the second,
-on James i. 16, “Error abandon’d”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 347. Every printed page is within bounding lines, on
-the top and outer side double.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1629.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Ames</b>, William. <span class='fss'>BELLARMINVS</span> | <span class='fss'>ENERVATVS</span>, | à | <span class='sc'>Gvilielmo
-Amesio</span> | <i>S. S. Theologiæ Doctore in</i> | Academia Franekerana. | <i>In quatuor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>Tomos divisus:</i> | <i>Ab Auctore recognitus, &amp; multis</i> | <i>in locis auctus.</i> |
-Editio tertia. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 88: 1629: 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] + 283
-+ [5] + 288 + 299 + [5] + 230: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>Canonem retulerunt</i>, and <i>Argumenta
-Bellarmini</i>, and <i>Bona opera</i>, and <i>nullam.
-Protest.</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–5) dedication to
-the Belgian states: (6) “Ad Lectorem”:
-(7–12) “Index Controversiarum quæ hoc
-opere tractantur”: (13–23) “Index locorum
-Scripturæ ...”: 1–283, tome 1:
-(2) a title “Bellarminus enervatus, sive
-disputationes antibellarminianæ, in Illustri
-Frisiorum Academia, quæ est Franekeræ,
-publicè habitæ; a Guilielmo Amesio
-Theologiæ Doctore. Tomus secundus.
-Ab Auctore recognitus &amp; auctus”, with
-impr. 72 <i>a</i>: (4–5) dedication to Ernest
-Casimir count of Nassau, 20 Nov. 1625,
-in Latin: 1–288, tome 2: 1, title, exactly
-as in vol. 2, with <i>tertius</i> for <i>secundus</i>:
-3–4, dedication to senators of Friesland,
-4 Kal. Apr. 1626: 5–299, tome 3: (2)
-title, exactly as in vol. 2 with <i>quartus</i>
-for <i>secundus</i>: (4–5) dedication to four
-curators of the University of Franeker,
-3 Kal. Oct. 1626: 1–230, tome 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a long controversial treatise against Bellarmine on the Calvinist side, and
-covers nearly the whole ground of theology. There are editions issued at Amsterdam
-in 1625–6, 1628 and 1638, and at London in 1632–33.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Burges</b>, Cornelius. <span class='fss'>BAPTISMALL</span> | <i><span class='fss'>REGENERATION</span></i> | of Elect
-Infants, | Professed by the Church of | <i>England, according to the Scriptures</i>, |
-<i>the Primitiue Church, the pre-</i>|<i>sent Reformed Churches, and</i> |
-<i>many particular Di-</i>|<i>vines apart</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Cor: Bvrges</span>, D<sup>r</sup> of Divinity, and |
-one of his Maiesties Chaplaines | in Ordinary. | [two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 91: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-347 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>world with such</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title, within arched border: (3–8) Epistle
-dedicatory to Francis earl of Bedford:
-(9–13) “To the Readers”: (14–15) “A
-Table of the severall Chapters ...”: (16)
-“The principall Authors quoted ...”.
-1–347, the work: 347 “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 684. The address “to the Reader” states that the
-book is “the summe of sundry Lectures deliuered in mine owne Charge” St. Magnus,
-London, and that some had accused him of altering what he had preached before
-publishing it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Burton</b>, Samuel, archdeacon of Gloucester. <i><span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span></i> | <span class='fss'>TO
-BE ENQVIRED OF</span> | in the Generall Visitation of the | <i>Archdeacon</i> of the
-Diocesse of | <span class='sc'>Glocester</span>, | <span class='fss'>HOLDEN IN THE YEARE OF OVR</span> | Lord God,
-1629. In the fift yeare of the Reigne | of our most gracious Soueraigne
-Lord, | <span class='sc'>Charles</span>, by the grace of | God, King of great Brit-|taine,
-France, and | <i>Ireland, Defender of</i> | <i>the Faith, &amp;c.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 93: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Articles
-concerning Schoolmasters</i>: Pica English.
-Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup> “The
-Tenor of the Oath to be ministred to the
-Churchwardens and Sworne-men”, with
-a text: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the Articles: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, note
-about Recusants and Communicants.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>ORATORIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI DVO.</span> | <span class='sc'>Qvorvm</span> | <i>Alter
-ejus Definitionem</i>, | <i>Alter Partitionem</i> | <span class='sc'>Explicat:</span> | <i><span class='fss'>IN VSVM SCHOLARVM</span></i> |
-<i>recèns editi</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Authore <span class='sc'>Carolo Bvtlero</span>, Magd. | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>Impr. 98: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [132],
-signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Q</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>clarant:
-vt cum</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-(&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup>, title: 2<sup>r</sup> “Lectori
-Benevolo ...”, dated “Wotton. 8. <i>Cal.
-Iul.</i> 1629”, signed “C. B. M.”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>Q</span>
-4<sup>v</sup>, the work: <span class='fss'>Q</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, “Monitio ad Lectorem”,
-errata and corrigenda.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1633 B. For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 209–10. The reference
-there to a <cite>Rhetoricæ Libri duo</cite> of this year is probably an error for <cite>Oratoriæ Libri
-duo</cite>. At sign. A4<sup>2</sup> is a description of the various type in use, giving a series of
-Nonpareil, Breuier, (Long) Primier, Pique, English, Great Primier, Double Pique,
-Canon, with specimens of each.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Catechism.</b> Catechesis | <span class='fss'>RELIGIONIS</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIANÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>QVÆ
-TRADITVR</span> | in Ecclesijs &amp; Scholis Ele⸗|ctoralis Palatinatus. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72: 1629: (twelves) 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[6] + 63 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>est, Vnctus</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (2) woodcuts and a text: (3–6)
-edict of Frederick Elector of the Rhine
-about the Catechism, 19 Jan. 156<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>, in
-Latin: 1–49, the catechism: 50–63 “Precationes
-aliquot privatæ &amp; publicæ”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>An edition of the Heidelberg catechism.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Chaloner</b>, dr. Edward. <span class='fss'>SIX</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS</span> | <span class='fss'>NOW FIRST</span> | <span class='fss'>PVBLISHED</span>, |
-<i>Preached by that learned and</i> | <i>worthy Divine</i> Edward |
-Chaloner <i>lately deceas’d</i>, D<sup>r</sup> in | Divinity, sometimes Cha-|plaine in
-Ordinary to our | Soveraigne K. <i>Iames</i>, | and to his <span class='sc'>Maiesty</span> | that now
-is; and late | Principall of <i>Al-</i>|<i>ban Hall</i> in | <i>Oxford</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Printed
-according to the Author’s</i> | <i>coppies, written with his owne hand.</i> | [<i>line</i>,
-then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 94: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-150 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>arrow drawne</i>, 111
-<i>and selfe-conceited</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within arched border:
-(3–5) Epistle dedicatory to the Earl
-of Pembroke, signed “Ab. Sherman”:
-(7–8) “The Titles and severall Texts ...”:
-1–150, the six sermons, on Tit. i. 13,
-Matt xx. 6, Rom. i. 21, Acts xxi. 14,
-Luke viii. 21, Gal. ii. 5: (1) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 378. This is a second set of six sermons: one set
-having been issued by Chaloner himself (who died in 1625) at London in 1623, when
-a Fellow of All Souls.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Corbet</b>, Richard, bp. of Oxford. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>TO BE ENQVIRED</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF WITHIN THE DIOCES</span> | Of <i>Oxford</i>, in the first Visitation of | the Right
-Reverend Father in <span class='sc'>God</span>, | <i>Richard</i>, Lord Bishop of | <i>Oxford</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>HELD</i></span> |
-In the yeare of our Lord God 1629. in the fift yeare | of the Raigne of
-our most gratious Soveraigne Lord, | <i>Charles</i>, by the grace of God
-King of Great | <i>Brittaine</i>, <i>France</i>, and <i>Ireland</i>, | Defendor of the Faith
-&amp;c: | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 85 <i>a</i>: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>3. Whether
-any hath</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>, Directions,
-Oath &amp;c.: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, the Articles: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>v</sup>,
-note about Recusants and Communicants.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>LITTLE DE=</span>|<span class='fss'>SCRIPTION
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE GREAT WORLD.</span> | The fourth Edition. Revised. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i>
-<span class='sc'>Peter Heylyn</span>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>Impr. 100: 1629: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [20] + 807 + folded leaf between pp.
-6 and 7 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>1. First then
-there</i>, 711 <i>The chiefe riuers</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within an
-arched border: (3–4) dedication to prince
-Charles: (5–6) “To the Reader”: (7–8)
-“To my brother the Author”: a poem
-signed “Edw. Heylyn”: (9–12) “A table
-of the principall Countries, Provinces
-and Seas ...”: (13–14) “A table of
-the antient Tribes and Nations ...”:
-(15–19) “A table of the most principall
-things ...”: (20) “A computation of the
-forraine coynes herein mentioned ...”:
-1–807, (1–2) the work: between pp. 6
-and 7 is a tall narrow strip, about 14 × 5
-in., bearing on one side “The table of
-climes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A note in the All Souls copy shows that the book was on sale on 18 Aug. 1629.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Oxford</b>, University. [<i>woodcuts</i>] | <span class='fss'>STATVTA.</span> | [and] <span class='sc'>Carolvs
-R.</span> | <i>Ordo sive series electionis Procuratorum</i> ... | ... | ... <i>quotannis
-faciendæ.</i> | [and] <span class='fss'>STATVTA.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 96: 1629: (one) obl. folio: pp.
-[2]: Pica Italic. Contents:—p. (1) in
-centre a title “Carolus R. ...” as above,
-below a metal engraving showing the
-cycle of Proctors: on left and right
-two strips of printed Statutes concerning
-Proctors, each headed “Statuta” and
-pasted to the central cycle: the imprint
-is at the lower right hand corner.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The central part of this broadsheet is entirely occupied with a steel or copper
-engraving representing ingeniously the Colleges which elect Proctors from 1629 to
-1720: in the centre are some general notes. This Caroline cycle is repeated after
-23 years, commencing with 1629. The two strips of “Statuta” occur also separately,
-printed on a single sheet in two columns.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Pemble</b>, William. <span class='fss'><i>DE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>SENSIBVS</span> | <span class='fss'>INTERNIS.</span> | <span class='sc'>Tractatvs</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Gvlielmi Pembeli</span>, | Aulæ Magdalensis in Aca-|demia Oxoniensi nuper |
-<i>alumni dignissimi</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Editio Posthuma.</i> | [<i>line</i>] | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 101: 1629: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 74 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>te, quâ sensus</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–4) “Lectori ...”: 1–74 the
-work: (1–2) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Probably edited by Richard Capel who issued two of Pemble’s treatises often
-bound up with this one (<cite>De formarum (et Animæ) origine</cite>, Lond. 1629, and <cite>De
-(creatione et) providentia Dei</cite>, Lond. 1631).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. ——. <span class='fss'><i>FIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>GODLY, AND PRO-</span>|fi<sup>table</sup> Sermons concerni<sup>ng</sup>. |
-1 <i>The slaverie of sinne.</i> | 2 <i>The mischeife of ignorance.</i> | 3 <i>The roote of
-Apostasie.</i> | 4 <i>The benefit of Gods service.</i> | <i>The Christians loue.</i> | <i>Preached
-in his life time in sundry places.</i> | By that late faithfull Minister of Christ |
-M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>William Pemble</span> | <i>of Magdalen Hall in the</i> | <i>Vniversitie of</i> | <i>Oxford</i>. |
-The second Edition. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 97<i>a</i>: 1629: (fours) 8<sup>o</sup>: [4] +
-24 + 25 + [1] + 17 + [1] + 22 + 15 + [3]:
-pp. 11 beg. <i>and cast</i> and <i>tence 2. Thess.</i>
-and <i>ready to</i> and <i>Votaries vse</i> and <i>in
-praier</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title within an arched border: (3–4) “To
-the Reader”, signed by the editor “Iohn
-Tombes”: 1–24 (&amp;c. as above, the unnumbered
-pages being blank, and the
-title of each part appearing only in the
-headline: the signatures run through
-the entire work) the Sermons, on John
-viii. 34, Hos. iv. 6, Heb. iii. 12, 23,
-Ex. xxxiv. 23–4, Song of Sol. ii. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1628 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. ——. <span class='fss'>VINDICIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'><i>FIDEI</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A TREATISE</span> | of Iustification by
-Faith, | <i>wherein the truth of that point</i> | <i>is fully cleared, and vindicated</i> |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span><i>from the cauills of it’s</i> | <i>Adversaries</i> | Deliuered at Magdalen Hall | in
-Oxford; by <span class='sc'>William</span> | <span class='sc'>Pemble</span>, M<sup>r</sup> of Arts. | The second Edition. |
-[<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 97: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-248: p. 11 beg. <i>plainely. He</i>, 111 <i>some
-time failes</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within arched border: (3–6)
-dedication to Magdalen hall, Oxford,
-dated “From Tewkeisbury this 9 of Iuly
-1629”, signed “Iohn Geree”: (7–8)
-“To the Christian Reader,” signed
-“Rich. Capel”: 1–248, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 330, and 1625 P. The dedication contains some
-account of the author by the editor. The preface is by the author’s tutor, to whom
-Pemble left these lectures, and gives the anecdote which Wood relates of Pemble’s
-death bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Prideaux</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'><i>TABVLÆ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMATICA</span> | Græca
-Introductoriæ. | <span class='fss'>IN QVIBVS</span> | <i>Succinctè compingitur, brevissima, sed tamen
-ex-</i>|<i>pedita, singularum partium orationis decli-</i>|<i>nabilium, Variandi ratio</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>ACCESSIT</span> | Vestibuli vice, ad eandem linguam <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">παραίνεσις</span> in gratiam |
-tyronum, quibus vt convenit explicatiora evol-|vere, ita necesse est hæc
-ipsa | ad vnguem tenere. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 92: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [34],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>1</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>profero
-clarâ</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span><a id='t146'></a> 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to dr.
-Tho. Holland, dated “Exon. Colleg.
-Ian. 1. 1607 ... Io. Prideaux”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span> 3<sup>v</sup>
-“... Præfatio”: <span class='fss'>B</span> 4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span> 4<sup>v</sup>, the tables:
-<span class='fss'>E</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, “Conclusio ad Lectorem”, and short
-Latin poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267; and 1607 P, of which this is a reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. ——. <span class='fss'>TYROCINIVM</span> | <span class='sc'>ad Syllogismvm</span> | Legitimum contexendum,
-&amp; | <i>captiosum dissuendum, ex-</i>|<i>peditissimum</i>. | <span class='fss'>IN QVO</span> | <i>Ad formam expensa
-Syllogisticam perstringuntur</i> | <i>punctìm Sophismata, nec minus solidè,
-quàm</i> | <i>vulgò fit, ratione materiæ</i>; | Excerptis ex optimis Authoribus
-exemplis Græcolatinis, | vt majori cum voluptate &amp; fructu, ex vtriusq;
-lin-|guæ candidatis &amp; legantur, &amp; | intelligantur. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 92: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [18],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>2</sup>, (&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>C</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>Sectio prima de</i>: Pica and Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title:
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-(&nbsp;)<sup>r</sup>, dedication to Christianus son
-of Hermannus Julius a Dane, and Gregorius
-and Erricus sons of Petrus Julius,
-signed “Johannes Prideaux”, “e Musȩo
-Oxonii ... pridiè Solstitium Brumale
-Exod 22. 21. <i>ADVenaM</i>, non <i>ContrIstabIs</i>.”
-= 1607: (&nbsp;)<sup>r</sup> 2 Latin poems:
-<span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 267. This piece though apparently separate is really
-an integral part of the preceding piece, sign. E of the latter (two leaves) forming the
-last leaf of that piece and the 3rd leaf of this! The dedication tells an anecdote of the
-last moments of Offenius the tutor of the three dedicatees.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Rainolds</b>, dr. John. <span class='fss'><i>THE OVERTHROW</i></span> | <span class='fss'>OF STAGE-PLAYES</span>, |
-By the way of controversie betwixt | <i>D. Gager</i> and <i>D. Rainoldes</i>,
-wherein all the | reasons that can be made for them are notably refu-|<i>ted;
-the obiections answered, and the case so cleared</i> | <i>and resolved, as that the
-iudgement of any man</i>, | <i>that is not froward and perverse, may</i> | <i>easilie bee
-satisfied</i>. | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN IS MANIFESTLY PRO-</span>|ved, that it is not onely vnlawfull
-to be an Actor, | <i>but a beholder of those vanities</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>WHEREVNTO ARE
-ADDED ALSO</i></span> | and annexed in the end certaine Latine Letters betwixt |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>the said <i>Maister Rainoldes</i>, and <i>Doct, Gentiles</i>, | Reader of the Civill
-Law in <i>Oxford</i>, con-|cerning the same matter. | <i>The second Edition.</i> |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 89: 1629: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-190 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>ture witnesseth it</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–7) “The Printer to the Reader”, from
-the first ed.: 1–27, Rainolds’ Answer to
-Gager, 10 July 1592: 29–164, Rainolds’
-second answer, 30 May 1593: 164 (misprinted
-“264”)-190, four letters between
-Rainolds and Albericus Gentilis,
-1593, in Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 15 and 88 for this controversy. The first ed. of this
-work was issued in 1599, and included the letters: but the printer is not at present
-known. There are mentions of the connexion of the University of Oxford with play
-acting on pp. 143, 149.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Salvianus</b>, st. <span class='fss'>SANCTI</span> | <span class='fss'>SALVIANI</span> | <span class='fss'>MASSILIENSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>PRESBYTERI</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>DE GVBERNATIONE</i></span> | <i>Dei, et de iusto præsentiq;</i> | ejus judicio ad <span class='sc'>S. Salo-</span>|<span class='sc'>nivm
-Episcopvm</span>, | libri <span class='fss'>VIII.</span> | <i>Eiusdem Epistolarum</i> l<i>ib.</i> <span class='fss'>I.</span> | <span class='fss'>TIMOTHEI NOMINE</span>
-| <i>ad Ecclesiam Catholic. lib.</i> <span class='fss'>IV.</span> | Cum duplici indice | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 90: 1629: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 512: p. 11 beg. <i>consulari, illis</i>,
-401 <i>tamen quæ emant</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–6)
-account of Salvianus, from Trithemius:
-(7–13) “Index rerum et verborum ...”:
-(14–15) “Index locorum Scripturæ ...”:
-1–297, Salvianus de gubernatione Dei:
-298–324, ejusdem Epistolae: 325–488,
-ejusdem ad Ecclesiam Catholicam: 489–512
-“Annotationes aliquot in Salvian(um)
-... Autore Ioanne Alexandro
-Brassicano”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1633 S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>T.</b>, B. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>PRESERVATIVE,</span> | <span class='fss'>TO KEEPE A PRO-</span>|<span class='fss'>TESTANT FROM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>BECOMMING</span> | <i>a Papist</i>. | <i>Herein these two sayings following</i> | <i>are expounded.</i>
-| Thou art Peter, and vpon this rocke (or stone) | I will build
-my Church; <i>Mat. 16.</i> 18. | But I haue prayed for thee that thy faith
-faile | not; <i>Luk. 2</i>2. 3<i>2</i>. | <i>Herevnto is adioyned an admonition to</i> | English
-<i>Papists, that deny the</i> | <i>Popes Supremacy in</i> | <i>part or in whole.</i> | <i>By
-T. B.</i> | [<i>motto.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 78: 1629: (eighths) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 53 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>something
-doubtfull</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) dedication to sir
-Thomas Roe, signed “<i>T. B.</i>”, dated 12
-Mar. 162<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span>: (7–8) “To the Reader”,
-signed “<i>T. B.</i>”: 1–53, the exposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The dedication states the author’s obligations to sir T. Roe, and especially to sir
-William Killygrew.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Truman</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN</span> | <i>Memorandum</i>, | <span class='fss'>OR</span> |
-<i>Advertisement wherein is</i> | handled the Doctrine | of Reproofe. | <span class='fss'>WHAT
-IT IS, HOW WE MVST RE-</span>|proue, How necessary it is: With Exhortations |
-and Arguments moving vs to the right | performance of that duty, and |
-Reproofe for neglecting | <i>Reproofe</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Richard Trvman</span> <i>M</i><sup>r</sup> <i>of Arts
-and</i> | <i>Minister of Gods word at</i> Dallington | <i>neere</i> Northampton. |
-[<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 99: 1629: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 125 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>the Prophet</i>,
-111 <i>iect malice</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–10) Epistle dedicatory
-to William lord Spencer: (11–15)
-“To the Reader”: 1–125, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>19. <b>Z[ouche]</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>ELEMENTA</span> | Iurisprudentiæ, | <i><span class='fss'>DEFINITIONIBVS</span></i>,
-| <span class='fss'>REGVLIS, ET SENTEN-</span>|tijs Selectioribus Iuris Ci-|vilis Illustrata. |
-[<i>line</i>] | Autore <i>R. Z.</i> P. R. Oxon. | [<i>line</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 95: 1629: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 277 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>runt, personæ</i>,
-111 <i>ministratione offerunt</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1–2) not seen:
-(3) title, “cum Privilegio”: (5) dedication
-to lord Pembroke, signed “R. Z.”:
-(7–9) “Iuventuti Magnæ Britanniæ Iuris
-Studiosæ”, an epistle dedicatory, dated
-“ex Aulâ Alban: pridie Cal: Iun. 1629,”
-but not signed: (11–16) a list of parts
-and sections: 1–277, the work, in 7 parts:
-277, note by the author of a possible
-future volume completing this one.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 511, and 1636 Z. There are editions of Leyden, 1652
-and (acc. to Wood) Amst. 1681. The “P. R.” on the title of this and the 1636
-edition is <i>Professor Regius</i>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1630.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Aleman</b>, Mateo. <span class='sc'>The Rogve:</span> | <span class='fss'>OR,</span> | <span class='fss'>THE LIFE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF GVZMAN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>DE <i>ALFARACHE</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>WRITTEN IN SPANISH</span> | by <span class='sc'>Matheo Aleman</span>, | <i>Seruant
-to his Catholike Majestie</i>, | <i>and borne in <span class='fss'>SEVILL</span></i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 102: 1630: sixes (la. 8<sup>o</sup>): pp.
-[36] + 267 + [17] + 357 + [3]: pp. 11 begg.
-<i>out reason</i>, and (<i>in punishment</i>, 111 <i>Chapter
-ii</i> and <i>great deale of</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within two bounding
-lines: (3–6) dedication to sir John
-Strangwayes, in Spanish, signed “Don
-Diego Puede-Ser; de Santa Maria Magdalena”,
-i. e. James May-be or Mabbe,
-Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford, the
-translator: (7–8) dedication by “Matheo
-Aleman” to “Don Francisco de Roias
-marquesse de Poza” in English: (9–13)
-three prefaces: (14–20) laudatory pieces
-on the book, chiefly in poetry, including
-one poem by Ben Johnson: (21–24) “A
-table of the Chapters and matter ...”:
-(25–36) three lists of indexes: 1–267, the
-first book: (2) a titlepage “<span class='sc'>The Rogve:</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>OR,</span> | <span class='fss'>THE SECOND</span> | <span class='fss'>PART OF THE
-LIFE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF <i>GVZMAN</i> DE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ALFARACHE</i></span>. |
-<span class='fss'>WRITTEN IN SPANISH</span> | by <span class='sc'>Matheo
-Aleman</span> | <i>Seruant to his Catholike Majestie,
-and</i> | <i>borne in</i> <span class='sc'>Sevill</span>. | [<i>woodcuts</i>]”
-with impr. 103: (4–7) the author’s
-Preface to part 2, in English: (8–15)
-laudatory pieces, chiefly in verse: (16–17)
-“The Contents of the Second Part”:
-1–357, the second part: (2–3) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the translator see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 53. This is a reprint, even to many
-of the misprints, of the London ed. of 1622 (also “1623”) printed for Edw. Blount,
-who assigned his edition to R. Allot, for whom the Oxford edition was printed, on
-1 Dec. 1628. The only omission is the two lists of errata in the London issue. The
-demand for this entertaining book was such that a third corrected edition was published
-by Allot in 1634. The translator was secretary to sir John Digby when Ambassador
-in Spain, and the first edition of the original Spanish is dated 1599 (1st part) and 1602
-or 1603 (2nd part). Each page (and margin) is enclosed within lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>B.</b>, E. <i><span class='fss'>THE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>CVRSE OF SACRILEDGE.</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN A PRIVATE
-PA-</span>|rish Church, the Sunday before | Michaelmas last. | <i><span class='fss'>TO WHICH ARE
-ANNEXED</span></i> | <i>some certain Quære’s, which are pertinent</i> | <i>to the vnmasking
-of our homebred</i> | <i>Church-Robbers.</i> | [<i>motto</i>, then “D. E. B.”, then
-<i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 85<i>b</i>: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. (8) +
-38 + [6]: p. 11 beg. <i>the learned, That</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—(1–2) not
-seen: (3) title: (5–7) Preface signed “E.
-B.”, p. 5 marked ¶ 2: 1–38, the sermon
-on Mal. iii. 9: (1) “A Post-script” signed
-“D. E. B.”: (3–5) “A catalogue of ...
-Quæres ... submitted by the Author ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A sermon on tithes, in defence of the system.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>3. <b>Bayly</b>, rev. John. <span class='fss'>TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS</span> | <span class='fss'>THE ANGELL</span> | <span class='fss'><i>GVARDIAN</i>.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE LIGHT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ENLIGHTNING</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> | <span class='sc'>by Iohn Bayly one of</span> | <span class='fss'>HIS
-MAIESTIES CHAP-</span>|<span class='fss'>LAINES, <i>GVARDIAN</i></span> | of Chrrists Hospitall in | <i>Ruthyn</i>,
-and sometimes | Fellow of <i>Exeter</i> | <i>Coll. Oxon.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 85: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 17
-+ [3] + 14 + [2]: pp. 11 begg. <i>graunt
-that</i>, and <i>other; the</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4) dedication
-to his father Lewes Bayly bp. of Bangor,
-dated “<i>From my Chamber in Exon Coll.
-Novemb.</i> 6 ... 1630”: 1–17, the first
-sermon, on Ps. xxxiv. 7: (2) a titlepage
-“<span class='fss'>THE LIGHT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ENLIGHTNING</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span>
-| <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> |” [&amp;c., precisely as first
-title, except “Christs”], with device and
-impr. 85: 1, dedication to John Prideaux
-rector of Exeter college: 3–14, the second
-sermon, on John i. 9.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 499 (where <i>Lond.</i> is an error for <i>Oxf.</i>). The second
-sermon is independent, in paging and title (not signatures), of the rest of the book.
-The author says these are his first printed works.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Brerewood</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED</span> | <span class='fss'>TREATISE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>OF THE</span></i> |
-<span class='fss'>SABAOTH,</span> | <span class='fss'>WRITTEN</span> | By M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Edward Brerewood</span>, | Professor in <i>Gresham
-Colledge</i>, | <span class='sc'>London</span>· | <span class='fss'>TO</span> M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Nicolas Byfield</span>, | <i>Preacher in Chester</i>. |
-With M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Byfields</span> answere and | M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Brerewoods</span> | <i><span class='fss'>REPLY</span></i>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 108: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-101 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>by Moses</i>, 65
-<i>heare, or see</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1), title: (3) 3 texts: (4)
-“Faults” of the press: 1–55, the work,
-dated at end “May 16. 1611. At Gresham
-house in London”: 57, a title “Mr. |
-<span class='fss'>BYFIELDS</span> | <span class='fss'>ANSVVERE,</span> | <span class='fss'>WITH</span> M<sup>r</sup> |
-<span class='fss'>BREREVVOODS</span> | <span class='fss'>REPLY.</span> | [device, then
-impr. 108]: 59–60, “The Preface to M<sup>r</sup>.
-Brerewoods reply”, signed “M<sup>r</sup>. Brermwoods”!:
-61–101, the Answer and Reply,
-in parallel columns, as far as possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 140, 325, and 1631 B, 1632 B. The author died in Nov.
-1613. Richard Byfield, brother of Nicholas, who received Brerewood’s treatise
-“a little before November” 1640, wrote a special confutation of it (Lond. 1631), and
-the controversy became general.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Casa</b>, Giovanni della. <span class='fss'>IO. CASÆ V. CL.</span> | <span class='fss'>GALATEVS</span> | <span class='fss'>SEV DE
-MORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>HONESTATE, ET ELE-</span>|<span class='fss'>GANTIA; LIBER EX</span> | Italico Latinus, | <i>Interprete</i>
-| <span class='sc'>Nathane Chytræo,</span> | cum ejusdem Notis, nuper additis. |
-<i><span class='fss'>EIUSDEM CASÆ LIBEL-</span></i>|<i>lus de officijs inter potentiores</i>, | <i>&amp; tenuiores
-amicos.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73<i>a</i>: 1630: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[18] + 213 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>negotij dedit</i>,
-111 <i>liq; philosopho?</i>): Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “Lectori ...
-Chytræus”: (3–5) dedication to Nicolaüs
-Casa by Chytraeus, “Rostochio Idib.
-Septemb. ... 1577”: (6–9) “Prooemium”
-to Nic. Casius by “Joannes Caselius”,
-“Rostochio iv Non. Maias ... 1578”:
-(9–13) a recommendation of the book,
-dated “Rostochij Idibus ... sextilis ...
-1578”: (14–18) “De tribus virtutibus
-cognatis ...” signed “Ioannes Caselius”:
-1–103, the Galateus: 104–141, “Ioannis
-Casæ de Officiis inter potentiores et
-tenuiores amicos Liber”: 142–213, “Nathanis
-Chytræi Notæ in Galateum ...”
-with a Prooemium to “Caspar von der
-Wenge”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1628 C. Even in 1892 an edition of Peterson’s English translation of the
-<cite>Galateo</cite> (1576) was privately printed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Hakewill</b>, George. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>DECLARATION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF
-THE POWER AND</span> | <span class='fss'>PROVIDENCE OF GOD IN THE</span> | <span class='fss'>GOVERNMENT OF THE
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>WORLD.</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSISTING IN</span> | <span class='fss'>AN EXAMINATION AND</span> | <span class='fss'>CENSVRE OF THE COMMON</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ERROVR TOVCHING NATVRES PER=</span>|<span class='fss'>PETVALL AND VNIVERSALL DECAY,</span> | <span class='fss'>DIVIDED
-INTO FOVRE BOOKES.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>WHEREOF</i></span> | <i>The first treates</i> [&amp;c. as 1627 H, dividing
-lines at <i>there-</i>|<i>vnto.</i> | <i>that of the</i> | <i>excepted.</i> | <i>strength and</i> | <i>wits.</i> |
-<i>proofe of the</i> | <i>vse which</i> | <i>thereof.</i> |: also “Heavens,” “onely”] | [<i>line</i>] |
-By <span class='sc'>George Hakewill</span> Doctor of | Divinity and Archdeacon of <i>Surrey</i>. |
-[<i>line</i>] | <i>The second Edition revised, and in sundry passages augmented by
-the Authour;</i> | <i>with advertisements and tables newly annexed in the end of
-the booke</i>, | <i>an Index whereof is presented in the next page.</i> | [<i>motto.</i>]
-[There is also a London title, see below.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1630: (sixes) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[40] + 523 + [69]: p. 11 beg. <i>you to
-Lucians</i>, 501 <i>some bodies which</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—(2) “The argument
-of the Front[ispiece] and of the worke”,
-printed in London: (3) engraved title, see
-below: (5) title: (6) “An index of the
-advertisements and tables newly annexed
-...”: (7–11) dedication to the University
-of Oxford: (13–23) “The Preface”:
-(25–38) “The Contents ...”: (39) quotation
-from Boethius, with translation: 1–523,
-the work in 4 books: (2–42) “Advertisements
-to the learned reader occasioned
-by this second impression”: (43)
-“... the value of the Roman Sesterce”:
-(44–45) bp. Godwin’s calculations of
-large numbers of sesterces: (46–60) “An
-alphabeticall table ...” (60–63) “A table
-of the authours quoted ...”: (64–67)
-“A table of the texts of scripture quoted
-...”: (69) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii.<a id='t150'></a> 256 and 1627 H. The chief additions in this new edition
-are to be found in the “Advertisements”, the fifth of which contains some complimentary
-letters about the first edition by archbp. Ussher and others. The engraved title
-measures 10<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 6⅛ in. and bears a London imprint, “London. Printed for Robert
-Allott, at the | Beare in Paules Churchyard. 1630”, and six allegorical scenes surrounding
-a short title, beneath which are the arms and crest of the author. “T. Cecill
-sculp”, probably in London.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Hommius</b>, Festus. LXX. | <span class='fss'>DISPVTATIO-</span>|<span class='fss'>NES THEOLOGICÆ</span>; |
-adversus | <span class='fss'>PONTIFICIOS</span>: | Quibus omnes inter Evangelicos &amp; | Pontificios
-Controversiæ continentur, &amp; | excutiuntur: In gratiam SS. Theologiæ
-Stu-|diosorum in Academiâ <span class='sc'>Leydensi</span> pri-|<i>vatim institutæ, in</i> | <i>Collegio
-Anti=Bellarminiano</i>, | <span class='fss'>PRÆSIDE</span> | <span class='fss'>FESTO HOMMIO</span>, | Eccl. Lugdun. Pastore. |
-<i>Editio secunda; ad</i>j<i>ectionibus in</i> | <i>margine locupletior.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 104: 1630: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 428 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>Mosen quidem</i>,
-111 <i>stitutus est</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) the author’s
-dedication to Princes Maurice of Orange
-and Louis of Nassau, dated Leiden, 24
-Aug. 1614: (9–10) “Lectori Benevolo
-...”: (11–12) two complimentary poems:
-(13–16) “Index Disputationum”: 1–428,
-the work: (1–4) “Leges Collegii hujus
-Anti-Bellarminiani”, with the names of the
-students. All in Latin: every printed
-page and margin are within bounding
-lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was issued at Leiden in 1614: see 1639 H.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Oxford</b>, University. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>BRITANNIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>NATALIS.</span> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73<i>a</i>: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-78: p. 11 beg. <i>Crescito pacifici</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3)
-dedication to King Charles by the University
-of Oxford: (4), 1–78, the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>148 poems (4 Greek, 3 French, the rest Latin) addressed to the King by members
-of the University of Oxford on the birth of Charles ii on 29 May 1630: a chronogram
-is on p. 43.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>9. <b>Pemble</b>, William. <span class='fss'>A BRIEFE IN-</span>|<span class='fss'>TRODVCTION</span> | <span class='fss'>TO GEOGRAPHY</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CONTAINING A</span> | <span class='fss'>DESCRIPTION OF THE GROVNDS, AND GENERALL</span> | <span class='fss'>PART
-THEREOF, VERY NE-</span>|<i>cessary for young students in</i> | <i>that science</i>. | <span class='fss'>WRITTEN
-BY THAT LEARNED</span> | <i>man</i>, M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>William Pemble</span>, <i>Master</i> | <i>of Arts, of
-Magdalen Hall in Oxford</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 84<i>a</i>: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-64 + [2]: p. 12 beg. <i>The third rule</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) “To the Reader” by the editor: 1–64
-the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 331. Pemble died in 1623: but the treatise was reissued
-in 1669 (according to Cole in Bliss’s Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>) and in 1685, both times at
-Oxford, as well as in the collected editions of Pemble’s works (3rd ed. 1635 &amp;c.) at London.
-There are several woodcut diagrams, but the whole book is occupied solely
-with what the author calls the general part of Geography, that is to say with the
-“nature, qualities, measure, with other general properties of the earth”, and not with
-a description of separate countries.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. ——. “<cite>A Sum of moral Philosophy.</cite> Oxon. 1630 qu[arto].”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 331, where 1630 may be an error for 1632.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Pinke</b>, William. [two <i>lines</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE TRYALL OF</span> | <span class='fss'>OVR SINCERE
-LOVE</span> | <span class='fss'>TO CHRIST</span>: | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>W. Pinke</span>, <i>late Fellow of Mag-</i>|<i>dalen
-Colledge in</i> <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 106: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-30 + [2] + 28: pp. 11 begg. <i>custome or</i>,
-and <i>God, and while</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title (every page has a
-double headline): 1–30, a Sermon, on
-Eph. vi. 24: 1–28 a second sermon on the
-same text.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 475, where the 1631 edition with four sermons is confused
-with this in which there seem to be only two. The 3rd ed. (Oxf. 1636) and 5th
-(Oxf. 1659) contain also four. Probably William Lyford, whose preface dated 7 July
-1630 is prefixed to all other editions, edited this tentative issue also. The pagination
-and signatures are separate for the two sermons. Pinke died in 1629.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Piscator</b>, Johannes. <span class='fss'>APHORISMI</span> | <span class='fss'>DOCTRINÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIANÆ</span> |
-maximam partem ex In-|stitutione Calvini | <i>excerpti</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Loci commvnes
-Theolo-</span>|gici, brevibus sententijs expositi. | <i>Per <span class='fss'>JOHAN: PISCATOREM</span>·</i>
-| <span class='sc'>Editio vndecima.</span> | <i>Superioribus tum limatior, tum</i> | <i>locupletior.</i> |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 105: 1630: (twelves) 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[10] + 203 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>veteris testamenti</i>,
-111 <i>tarit a in filio</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-“Ad Lectorem”, a preface to a new
-edition signed “Philip: Ludovicus Piscator”,
-the author’s son, 1 May 1629: (3–9)
-the author’s preface to Beza: 1–203, the
-treatise: (1–2) “Index [28] locorum communium”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Piscator (Fischer?) died in 1626, and the first edition of the <cite>Aphorismi</cite> appears to
-have been issued in 1592. This edition is often found bound with the Catechismus
-Oxf. 1629.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Thornborough</b>, bp. John. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>LAST WILL AND</span> | <span class='fss'>TESTAMENT
-OF IESVS</span> | Christ, touching the blessed Sacrament | <i>of his body,
-and bloud, Signed, Sealed and</i> | <i>Delivered</i> to the vse of all faithfull
-Christi-|ans in the presence of many Witnesses, and | <i>proved in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>Prerogatiue of the Church of</i> | Christ, by Reverend Bishops, Learned
-Doctors, | <i>and Ancient Fathers of the same Church</i>. | Exemplified, copied
-out, and explaned by the | <i>Reverend Father in God</i>, <span class='sc'>Iohn Thornburgh</span>, |
-<i>Bishop of Worcester</i>. | [<i>motto</i>: then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1630: (fours) 8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] +
-118 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>are to be</i>, 111 <i>would
-not haue</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–5) dedication to (William)
-earl of Pembroke: 1–118, the work, a
-treatise on the Lord’s Supper: (1–4) not
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 5: the dedication gives some biographical details of
-the author.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Widdowes</b>, Giles. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SCHISMATICAL</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PVRITAN</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> |
-<span class='sc'>sermon preached at Wit-</span>|<span class='fss'>NEY</span> concerning the lawfulnesse of Church-|<i>Authority,
-for ordaining, and comman-</i>|<i>ding of Rites, and Ceremonies, to</i> |
-<i>beautifie the Church</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Giles Widdowes</span> Rector of S<sup>t</sup> | Martins Church
-in Oxford. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 107: 1630: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [48],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>wee Confesse</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to Katharine
-duchess of Buckingham: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>3<sup>v</sup> “To
-the Puritan”: <span class='fss'>C</span>4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>3<sup>v</sup>, the sermon, on
-1 Cor. xiv. 40.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 179, and 1631 P &amp; W (2nd ed. of this Sermon), and
-also an answer to Prynne. The long preface contains an account of Puritans, in their
-ten subdivisions of Perfectists, Sermonists, Separatists, Anabaptists, Brownists, Loves-familists,
-Precisians, Sabbatarians, Anti-disciplinarians, Predestinatists.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1631.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Acontius</b>, Jacobus. <span class='fss'>STRATAGEMATVM</span> | <span class='fss'>SATANÆ</span> | <i>Libri Octo</i> |
-<i>Quos</i> | <i><span class='fss'>IACOBUS ACONTIUS</span></i> | <i>Vir Summi iudicij nec mino</i>|<i>ris pietatis, annis
-abhinc penè<sub>:</sub></i> | <i>primum edidit &amp; Sereniss<span class='vr'>æ</span><span class='vl'>:</span></i> | <i>Reginæ <span class='fss'>ELIZABETHÆ</span></i> | <i>inscripsit</i>
-| <i>Editio iterata &amp; emendata</i> | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 87: 1631: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 426 + [32]: p. 11 beg. <i>tur cupiditate</i>,
-301 <i>nominis vir</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, engraved: (3)
-dedication to qu. Elizabeth by the author,
-in Latin: (5–16) “... Præfatio”: 1–426,
-the work in 8 books: (1–26) “Iacobus
-Acontius Iohanni Wolfio Tigurino ...”
-a letter on the method of preparing books,
-dated “Londini xii Kal. Decembr.
-<span class='fss'>MD.LXII</span>”: (27–32) “Index rerum præcipuarum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was published at Bâle in 1565 and there are English translations
-(1648, &amp;c.): the sheets of this Oxford edition were reissued at Oxford in 1650 with a
-printed titlepage. The engraved title (4<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 2<span class='fraction'>13<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in.) contains the title in the centre,
-and on each side figures of “Veritas” with a book, and “Charitas” with a bird:
-above is a figure “Religionis” (<i>sic</i>). Below are six figures of Sins and in their midst
-Satan rising from hell. The imprint is also engraved on the plate. From Brit. Mus.
-MS. Harl. 5901 fol. 73<sup>v</sup> it would seem that Bagford saw some <i>printed</i> title stating that
-Turner was the printer: the engraved title only is in the copies seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bible</b>, Old Testament, Psalms. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PSALMES</span> | of | <span class='fss'>KING</span> |
-<span class='fss'>DAVID</span> | <span class='fss'>TRANSLATED</span> | by | <span class='fss'>KING IAMES</span> | <i>Cum Privilegio Regiæ</i> | <i>Maiestatis</i>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>Impr. (as colophon) 68: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [4] + 319 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>But
-whil’st</i>, 111 <i>19 My God</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (2) engraved plate
-of the royal Arms, supporters &amp;c., and a
-proclamation of Charles i allowing the
-printing of the work, “Will: Marshall.
-sculpsit.”: (3) engraved title, see below:
-1–319, the work: (1) arms of the University
-and colophon imprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The titlepage shows the Book of Psalms sent down from heaven and received by
-David and James i. It is on one plate with the royal arms and proclamation, and is
-printed from metal.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Bolton</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>HELPES</span> | <span class='fss'>TO</span> | <span class='fss'>HVMILIATION.</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By R.
-B.</i> | [<i>line, motto, line, woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 115: 1631: (twelves) 16mo:
-pp. [12] + 164 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>Some
-measure</i>, 111 <i>of nature</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title: (5–12)
-“To the Reader”, by the editor, giving
-the author’s full name: 1–164, the work,
-a discourse on Acts ii. 37: (1) Michael
-Sparke’s business mark.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 515. The preface states that this publication is by
-leave of the author though not undertaken by him, so it preceded his death on 17 Dec.
-1631. Every page has double bounding lines at top and outer side margin. Spark
-must have sent his engraved business mark, chiefly a monogram of the letters of his
-names, to Oxford to be printed: see below, F.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Brerewood</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LEARNED TREATISE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>OF THE</span></i> |
-<span class='fss'>SABBATH</span>, | [&amp;c. exactly as 1630 B, except no comma after “Brerewood”
-and “Byfield”, and “Reply.” After “Reply.”:—] <i>The second Edition
-diligently corrected.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 108: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-101 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>by Moses</i>, 65 beg.
-<i>heare, or see</i>: English Roman. Contents:—exactly
-as 1680 B, except p. (4) is
-blank, and “At Gresham ... London” is
-omitted, as well as “M<sup>r</sup>. Brermwoods”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1630 B, of which this is a corrected reprint: the editor in the interval discovered
-the difference between <i>Sabaoth</i> and <i>Sabbath</i>, and uses the latter only, in the first edition
-using the former only!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. ——. <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS</span> | <span class='fss'>QUIDAM LOGICI</span> | <span class='sc'>De</span> | <span class='fss'>PRÆDICABILIBVS</span>, |
-<span class='sc'>Et</span> | <span class='fss'>PRÆDICAMENTIS</span> | <i>Ab eruditissime Viro</i> <span class='sc'>Edvardo</span> | <span class='sc'>Brerewood</span>,
-Artium Magistro, è Col-|legio <i>Ænei-Nasi</i>, olim conscripti: nunc verò |
-ab erroribus (qui frequenti transcriptione | irrepserant) vindicati, ad
-pristinum nitorem, nati-|vamque puritatem diligentissimâ manuscripto-|rum
-collatione restituti, &amp; in lucem editi: | <i>Per</i> T. S. <i>Art. Mag. &amp;
-Collegij</i> Ænei-Nasi <i>Socium</i>. | <i>Editio altera</i>, | In quâ accessêrunt duo
-ejusdem Authoris insignes | <i>Tractatus</i>; prior de <i>Meteoris</i>, posterior de |
-<i>Oculo</i>: limâ, luceque donati: | <i>Per eundem</i> T. S. |<a id='t153'></a> [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 109: 1631: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32] + folded sheet + 431 + [3] + [next
-article, which see]: p. 11 beg. <i>Sol. Prædicabilia</i>,
-401, <i>1 Respectu communis</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title: (3–8) Epistola dedicatoria to lord
-Rich. Brooke of Norton, signed by the
-editor “Oxonij, e Musæo meo, in Collegio
-Ænea-Nasensi, 13 Calend. Oct. 1628 ...
-Thomas Sixesmith”: (9–13) “Erudito
-lectori ...” signed “T. S.”: (14–31)
-“Index sectionum quæstionumque ...”:
-1–431, the work, pp. 58–59 being a folded
-leaf: (1–3) blank: for the rest see the
-next art.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1628 B, of which this is a reprint, with the two additional treatises. The next
-article is strictly part of the present work, but the signatures, pagination &amp;c. being
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>quite distinct (the only sign of its secondary character is the omission of the name of
-the <i>place</i> in the imprint), it is here for convenience’ sake treated separately: it is also
-more common to find it separate than to meet with the entire work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. —† ——. <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS DVO</span> | <i>Quorum primus est</i> | <span class='fss'>DE METEORIS</span>. |
-<i>Secundus</i> | <span class='fss'>DE OCVLO</span>. | Quos scripsit olim eximius ille Philosophus |
-<span class='sc'>Edvardvs Briervvoodvs:</span> | <i>Restituit tandem, ab erroribus mendisq; Vin</i>⸗|<i>dicavit,
-&amp; publici iuris fecit.</i> | T. S. | Art. Mag. &amp; Colleg. <i>Ænea-Nasensis</i>
-| Socius. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 109: 1631: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 104 + [4] + 39 (p. 39 misprinted 63)
-+ [1]: pp. 11 begg. <i>Sect. 11. In qua,
-Obliquæ, quibus</i>: Long Primer and (2nd
-part) Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3) dedication by Thomas Sixesmith
-the editor to Brasenose college,
-Oxford: 1–83 De Meteoris, in 2 books
-<i>De Meteorologicus</i> and <i>De Cometis</i>: 84–104
-“De Mari”: (1) “A”: (2–3) woodcut
-diagrams of the eye: (4) “Index
-...” to the following treatise: 1–63, De
-Oculo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See preceding article, of which this is a part. Some woodcuts occur in the text.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Burgersdicius</b>, Franco. <span class='fss'>IDEA</span> | <i><span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ</span></i> | <span class='sc'>Tvm</span> | <span class='fss'>NATVRALIS,</span>
-| <span class='sc'>Tvm</span> | <span class='fss'>MOR<sup>A</sup>LIS,</span> | <i><span class='fss'>SIVE</span></i> | Epitome compendiosa vtrivsq; ex |
-Aristotele excerpta &amp; Me-|thodicè disposita; | <i><span class='fss'>A</span></i> | <span class='sc'>M. Franc: Bvrgersdicio</span>
-| in Academia Lugduno-Batavâ, <i>Lo-</i>|<i>gices &amp; Ethices Professore
-ordinario.</i> | <i>Editio tertia prioribus emendatior.</i> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 105<i>a</i>: 1631: (twelves) 16mo:
-pp. [6] + 103 + [1] + (next article): p. 11
-beg. <i>2 Natura est</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) “Philosophiæ
-studiosis”, signed “Franco Burgersdicius”:
-(5–6) “Tituli et ordo disputationum
-...” Ideae Naturalis: 1–103, the
-Idea Philosophiae Naturalis: (1) blank:
-for the rest see next article.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition of the Natural Philosophy was in 1622, and of the Moral in 1623,
-both at Leiden: both were again issued at the same place in 1626 and the Moral
-Philosophy again in 1629. The 4th ed. was in 1637 (Oxford), the next 1641 (Oxford),
-and others followed, but not at Oxford. The next art. is strictly part of this book, but
-is in form quite independent. Burgersdijck died in Feb. 1635 or 1636.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. — ——. <span class='fss'>IDEA</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>MORALIS,</span> | <span class='sc'>Ex</span> | <span class='sc'>Aristotele</span>
-maxima parte | excerpta, &amp; methodice | <i>disposita</i>. | <i><span class='fss'>A</span></i> | <span class='sc'>M. Francone
-Bvrgersdicio</span>, in | Academiâ Lugduno Batavâ, | <i>Logices &amp; Ethices Pro-</i>|<i>fessore
-Ordinario</i>. | Editio tertia. | <i>Plurimùm emendata &amp; magnâ accessione</i>
-| <i>Locupletata.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 105: 1631: (twelves) 16mo:
-pp. [4] + 342: p. 11 beg. <i>natur; altera</i>,
-211 <i>dorem quærunt</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) “Index Capitum
-&amp; titulorum ...”: 1–342 the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See preceding article.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Davenant</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>MINISTRED IN</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FIRST
-VISITA-</span>|<span class='fss'>TION OF THE RIGHT</span> | Worshipfull M<sup>r</sup> Doctor <i>Dave-</i>|<i>nant</i> Archdeacon
-of Barke shire | in the yeare of our Lord | God 1631. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 82: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 16:
-p. 11 beg. <i>the Church, and</i>: Pica English.
-Contents:—(1) title: (2) “The Oath of
-the Church-wardens”: (3–4) “The
-Charge of the Church-wardens ...”:
-1–15, the 70 articles of enquiry.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>10. <b>F.</b>, A. <i>The Saints Legacies</i>: | <span class='sc'>Or,</span> | <span class='fss'>A COLLECTION</span> | of certaine
-<span class='sc'>Promises</span> | out of the word of God. | <i>Collected for private vse, but
-pub-</i>|<i>lished for the comfort of Gods people.</i> | <span class='sc'>By</span> <i>A. F.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 116: 1631: (twelves) 16mo:
-pp. [24] + 203 + [21]: p. 11 beg. <i>thee
-with many</i>, 111 <i>steps shall not</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—(1) title:
-(3–6) “The Author to the Printer”, dated
-4 Aug. 1630: (7–18) “To the Reader”:
-(19–23) “Rules to be observed in reading
-the Promises”: 1–203, the 105 Legacies:
-(2–4) a short conclusion: (6–17) “A table
-...” or index; (18) Michael Sparke’s
-business mark.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author complains of a pirated and imperfect edition, probably under another
-title, issued by Robert Swayne “now deceased” (printer at London, 1621–29). In
-C. S. Palmer’s Catalogue of Books, pt. 10 (June 1878), no. 256, this book is attributed
-to Anthony Farindon, for whom see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 457. Every page is within
-double lines at top and outside margin. The original title was probably “Promises”,
-for the compositor of one side of the first sheet of the text placed that as part of the
-headline, while the compositor of the other side and of the rest of the work has, as the
-author suggests, the new title “Saints Legacies” or “Legacies”.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Felix</b>, Marcus Minucius. <span class='fss'>M. MINVCII</span> | <span class='fss'>FELICIS</span> | <span class='fss'>OCTAVIVS.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 110: 1631: (twelves) 24mo:
-pp. [8] + 129 + [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>bere;
-quàm</i>, 111 <i>dicimus; non</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—(3) title: (5–7) “Typographus
-lectori”: (8) passage from Lactantius:
-1–129, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1627 F, of which this is a reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Florus</b>, Lucius Annaeus. <span class='fss'>L. IVLII FLORI</span> | rerum à | <span class='fss'>ROMANIS</span> |
-<span class='fss'>GESTARVM</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI IV.</span> | A <span class='sc'>Iohanne Stadio</span> <i>emendati</i>. | <i>Editio nova singulis
-Neotericis purgatior &amp;</i> | <i>emendatior.</i> | <span class='fss'><i>SEORSVM EXCVSVS</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IN EOS COMMENTARIVS</span>
-| <span class='sc'>Ioan. Stadii</span>, Historiæ &amp; Ma-|theseos Lovanij Professoris
-primi: in | quo obscura in lucem proferuntur, omissa sup-|plentur, inversa
-restituuntur, breviter denique, | quicquid in Romana Historia
-dignum est | observatione annotatur; vnà cum va-|riarum lectionum &amp;
-castiga-|tionum rationibus. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 117: 1631: (twelves) 16mo:
-pp. 137 + [1] + 319 + [35]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>immortalium docuit</i> and <i>rum pleb.</i>, 301
-<i>non potuit (petebat</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–5, 2 complimentary
-Latin pieces: 7–137, the text of
-Florus: 1, a title:—“<span class='sc'>I. Stadii</span> | <span class='fss'>IN L.
-IVLII FLORI</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIA-</span>|<span class='fss'>RVM LIBROS
-IV</span> | <span class='fss'>COMMENTARII.</span> | <i>Editio nova singulis
-Neotericis</i> | <i>purgatior &amp; emendatior.</i> |
-[<i>device</i>, then impr. 69]: 3–16, “Ioannis
-Stadii ... Præfatio”: 17–319, the commentary:
-(2–4) “Index capitum ...”:
-(6–23) “Index nominum ...”: (24–31)
-“Index posterior rerum ...”: (31) two
-errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition of Stadius’s commentary was in 1567 at Antwerp: other Oxford
-ones were issued in 1638, 1661 and 1669.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Gardyner</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>CONCIO</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AD</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CLERVM</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA</span> | <span class='fss'>IN
-TEMPLO BEATÆ</span> | <span class='sc'>Mari</span>æ <i>Oxon: Feb.</i> 1<span class='large'>4</span>. | <span class='fss'>PER</span> | <span class='sc'>Richardvm Gardyner</span>
-Sa: | Theol: Doct: &amp; Eccles. Cath: | Christi Canonicum. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>Impr. 118: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-24: p. 11 beg. <i>mit, &amp; vadosa</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—(1–2) not
-seen: (3) title: (5–8) dedication to Laud,
-bp. of London, chancellor of the University:
-1–24, the sermon, on 1 Tim. iv. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 922: the dedication is of some autobiographical interest.
-One of the Bodleian copies of this sermon bears an autograph note of the author
-which shows that this book was issued not later than 16 March 163<span class='fraction'>0<br /><span class='ov'>1</span></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Godwin</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'><i>ROMANÆ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTHOLOGIA</span> |
-[&amp;c. exactly as 1628 G, and within a similar border.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 75<i>a</i>: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 277 + [23]: [&amp;c. exactly as 1628 G.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 G: this is almost an exact reprint of the 1628 edition, with different imprint
-and date.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LITTLE</span> | <span class='fss'>DE-</span>|<span class='fss'>SCRIPTION
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE GREAT WORLD.</span> | The fifth Edition. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Peter Heylyn</span>. |
-[<i>line, motto, device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1631: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[20] + 807 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>1. First then
-there</i>, 701 <i>dales, or Vindelici</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-arched border: (3–4) dedication to “Prince
-Charles” as in 1621: (5–6) “To the
-Reader”: (7–8) Poem “To my brother
-the Author” by Edw. Heylyn: (9–12)
-“A Table of the principal Countries ...”:
-(13–14) “A Table of the ancient Tribes
-...”: (15–19) “A Table of the most
-principall things ...”: (20) “A computation
-of ... forraine coyne ...”: 1–807,
-(1–2) the work: (4–5) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1621 H.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>AD</span> | magnificvm | Et Spectatissimum
-Virum Domi-|num <span class='sc'>Iohannem Cirenbergivm</span> | <span class='fss'>PROCONSVLEM CIVITATIS</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>GEDANENSIS</i></span>. | Ob acceptum Synodalium Epistolarum | <i>Concilij Basileensis</i>
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Αυτόγραφον</span> <i>sigillo eiusdem in</i> | <i>plumbum impresso obsignatum, quod
-nobilissimus</i> | <i>Dominus</i> <span class='sc'>Thomas Roe</span> <i>Eques Auratus</i>, | <i>Serenissimi Magnæ
-Britanniæ Regis Legatus</i> | <i>ab eo sibi priùs officiosè oblatum, Oxoniensi
-Bib-</i>|<i>liothecæ transmisit ac dono dedit</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>CARMEN</i></span> | <span class='fss'>HONORARIVM.</span> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73<i>a</i>: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] +
-17 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>Nec calamus</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–5)
-Latin preface to Johannes Cirenbergius
-by J. Rous: 1–17, complimentary poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Eight Latin poems by members of the University of Oxford to thank the proximate
-and immediate donors of MS. Roe 20, presented by Johann Cirenberg of Dantzig
-(Gedanum) to sir Thomas Roe on 28 Mar. 1630, and by him to the University as an
-addition to the Roe MSS. in Aug. 1630.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Page</b>, William. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>TREATISE</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>IVSTIFICATION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF BOWING
-AT</span> | <span class='fss'>THE NAME OF</span> | <span class='fss'><i>IESVS</i>.</span> | By way of Answere to an Appendix |
-<i>against it</i>. | <span class='fss'>TOGETHER WITH AN EXAMI-</span>|nation of such considerable
-reasons as are | made by M<sup>r</sup> <i>Prinne</i> in a reply to | M<sup>r</sup> <i>Widdowes</i> concerning
-| <i>the same argument</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>William Page</span> <i>Bac. of
-Divinity</i> | <i>and Fellow of</i> All-Soules <i>Colledge</i> | <i>in</i> Oxford. | [<i>line</i>, then
-2 <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Impr. 85<i>a</i>: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-206: p. 11 beg. <i>since the omission</i>, 101
-<i>lookes forward</i>: English Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title: (3–15) dedication to
-the University of Oxford: (16) Errata:
-1–126, the treatise or “Answere”: 129,
-a title:—“<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>FVRTHER</span> | <span class='fss'>IVSTIFICATION</span>
-| <span class='fss'>OF BOWING AT</span> | <span class='fss'>THE NAME OF</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>IESUS</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>AN EXAMINATION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF SVCH
-CONSIDERA-</span>|<span class='fss'>BLE REASONS AS ARE</span> | made
-by Mr. <i>Prinne</i> [&amp;c., exactly as in the
-main title, imprint and all, except that
-the two mottos are different]”: 130–132
-(misprinted 140–142) “To the Reader”:
-133–206, the further answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 654, where Wood quotes two letters about this book,
-one against it from the Archbishop of Canterbury’s Secretary, one for it by Laud, which
-show that the book was in course of printing in May-June 1631, but not yet published
-on June 22. The error of pagination on pp. 130–32 (“140–42”) was due to the prefatory
-matter of the second part being supposed by the compositor to follow the 3rd
-leaf of what is now sheet <span class='fss'>S</span>, instead of the 3rd leaf of sheet <span class='fss'>Q</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Pareus</b>, David. <span class='fss'><span class='under'>DAVIDIS PAREI</span></span> | <i>Theologi Archipalatini</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>IN</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>S. MATTHÆI</span></span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>EVANGELIVM</span></span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>COMMENTARIVS</span></span> | Quo præter accuratam
-textus Sacri Analysin, &amp; Harmoniæ Evangelicæ collatio-|nem Orthodoxa
-Fidei Christianæ capita à depravationibus <span class='sc'>Iohannis</span> | <span class='sc'>Maldonati</span> Iesuitæ,
-&amp; aliorum, Perspicue &amp; solide vindicantur. | <span class='under'>Cui subiungitur . in duas S.
-<i>Petri</i> Epistolas</span>: | <i>Nec non</i> | <span class='sc'><span class='under'>In</span></span>
-<span class='overunder'>{ <span class='sc'><span class='under'>Ioel</span></span>,<br />{ <span class='sc'><span class='under'>Amos</span></span>,<br />{ <span class='sc'><span class='under'>Haggai</span></span>:</span>
-<i>Commentarius, tum eruditione
-tum perspicuitate celeberrimus.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 113: 1631: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [12] + 800 + 120: pp. 11 begg. <i>voluit,
-Christi</i> and <i>eo: vnde patet</i>, 701 <i>catorum
-nostrorum</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3) “Ad Lectorem” by the
-editor: (4–12), 1–800, Pareus on St.
-Matthew: 1–48, on St. Peter: 49–78,
-on Joel: 79–91, on Haggai: 92–120, on
-Amos.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In 1622 the year of Pareus’s death several of his treatises were publicly burnt at
-Oxford, as opposed to the King’s authority, including his commentary on the Romans.
-Underlined words in the title are printed in red. The last 120 pages seem to have
-been printed in London, not Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Parsons</b>, Bartholomew. <span class='fss'>DORCAS:</span> | <span class='fss'>OR,</span> | <span class='fss'>A PERFECT</span> | <span class='fss'>PATTERNE
-OF A</span> | <span class='fss'>TRUE DISCIPLE.</span> | A Sermon Preached by | <i>Bartholomew Parsons</i>
-B. of Di-|vinity and Rector of <i>Ludger-</i>|<i>shall</i> in the County of <i>Wilts</i>. |
-[<i>line</i>, then 2 <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 36:
-p. 11 beg. <i>ing out of</i>; Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—(1) title, within
-arched border: (3–7) dedication to sir
-Francis Pile, dated “From my house at
-Collingborne April 1. 1631”: 1–36, the
-sermon, on Acts ix. 36.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 26. The title and outer margin of each page are within
-double lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Pinke</b>, William. <span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>TRYALL</span> | of a Christians syncere |
-<i>loue vnto Christ</i>: | [<i>line</i>] | By M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>William Pinke</span>, Master | of Arts late
-Fellow of Mag.|<i>dalen Colledge in</i> | <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line, motto, woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>Impr. 84<i>a</i>: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-29 + [3] + 30 + [2] + 28 + [2] + 25 + [1]:
-pp. 11 beg. <i>choisest mercies</i>, and <i>custome
-or</i>, and <i>God, and while</i>, and <i>yet doth not</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within arched border; (3–8) dedication
-to lord George Digby, dated “Shirburn.
-Iul. 7. 1630”, signed by the editor,
-William Lyford: 1–29, sermon on Luke
-xiv. 26: 1–30, sermon on Eph. vi. 24,
-beg. <i>Not to mispend</i>: 1–28, sermon on
-Eph. vi. 24, beg. <i>I will not discourage</i>:
-(1–2) “To the Reader” signed “W.
-Lyford”: 1–25, pieces of a sermon on
-1 Cor. xvi. 22.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1630 P, of which the 2nd and 3rd sermons here are reissues of the sheets; the
-preface to the fourth explains that it is fragmentary. Every page has a double headline,
-but the four sermons are separate in pagination and signatures. Pinke was one of
-lord Digby’s “Readers” when the latter was at Magdalen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Powel</b>, Griffith. “Powel (G.) De Demonstratione . Oxon.
-1631”: “Analysis Aristot. lib. de Demonstratione a G. Powell . Oxon.
-1631.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in <cite>Catalogus librorum Richardi Davis</cite>, 1686, p. 94, no. 92: and in <cite>Catalogus
-librorum ... in ædibus Thomæ Bowman</cite>, 168<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, sign. D1<sup>v</sup>, no. 15. The book is no
-doubt a reprint of 1594 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Preston</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THREE</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS</span> | <span class='fss'>VPON THE SA=</span>|<span class='fss'>CRAMENT
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE LORDS</span> | <i><span class='fss'>SVPPER</span></i>. | <i>By the late Faithfull</i> | <i>and VVorthy Minister</i> |
-<i>of Iesus Christ</i> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Preston,</span> | D<sup>r</sup> in Divinity, Chaplaine in | Ordinary
-to his <span class='sc'>Maiesty</span>, Master of <i>Emanuel</i> Colledge | in Cambridge, and some-|times
-Preacher of | Lincolnes Inne. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 120: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 91
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>onely to be</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-arched border: 1–91, the sermons, on
-1 John v. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author, see Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 333.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Primerose</b>, James. <span class='fss'><i>ACADEMIA</i></span> | <span class='fss'>MONSPELIENSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>A <i>IACOBO
-PRI-</i></span>|<i><span class='fss'>MIROSIO</span> Monspe-</i>|<i>liensi</i> &amp; <i>Oxoniensi</i> | Doctore descripta. | <span class='fss'>EIVSDEM
-LAVRVS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>MONSPELIACA</i>.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 111: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 38
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>tuenda, venam</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title
-within arched border: (3–8), 1–2, dedication
-to dr. Thomas Clayton regius professor
-of Medicine at Oxford: 3–38 the
-work: (1–2) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 450. The work contains the Quaestiones and Theses by
-which Primerose obtained his doctor’s degree in medicine at Montpellier 2 May 1617,
-beginning on 21 Jan. 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>: also the first medical quaestio defended after his degree, on
-21 Dec. 1617. The “Laurus” must refer to the dedication in which an interesting
-account of the University of Montpellier is given. The occasion of publishing this
-medical work so long after the time at which it was written, was no doubt the incorporation
-of dr. Primerose at Oxford in March 162<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>. In the Bliss sale (1858) a copy of
-this book was sold “with duplicate title-page containing a variation” which I have
-not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Sanderson</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>LOGICÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ARTIS COM-</span>|<span class='fss'>PENDIVM.</span> | <span class='fss'>TERTIA
-HAC EDITI-</span>|one recognitum, duplici | <i>Appendice auctum, &amp; pub-</i>|<i>lici iuris
-factum.</i> | à <span class='sc'>Rob. Sanderson</span> Collegij | Lincolniensis in almâ | <i>Oxoniensi
-Socio</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>Impr. 96: 1631: (eights) 16mo: pp.
-[8] + 239 + [1] + 124 + [4]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>possint esse</i>, and <i>sed ij ferè</i>, pp. 111 <i>mutatis
-terminis</i>, and <i>margine peculiari</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-“Elenchus capitum ...”: (7) “Ad Lectorem”:
-(8) “Errata ...”: 1–239 the
-work: 1–124, two appendixes, one “De
-usu Logicæ”, one “Miscella”: (1–4) not
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1615 S. There is a woodcut diagram at p. 149.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Scheiblerus</b>, Christophorus. <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIA COMPENDIOSA</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SEV</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIA</span> | <i>Exhibens</i> | <span class='sc'>Logicæ</span>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class='sc'>Metaphysicæ</span>, | <span class='sc'>Physicæ</span>,
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class='sc'>Geometriæ</span>, | <span class='sc'>Astronomiæ</span>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class='sc'>Opticæ</span>, | <span class='sc'>Ethicæ</span>, &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class='sc'>Politicæ</span>,
-| <span class='sc'>et Oeconomicæ</span> | <span class='fss'>COMPENDIVM METHODICVM</span>, | <i>Cui</i> | <i>Addita est
-etiam</i> <span class='sc'>Heizonis Bvscheri</span> | <i>Arithmetica, in vsum Pedagogij Gisseni</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>AVTORE</span> | <span class='sc'>Christophoro Scheiblero</span>, Logicæ ac | Metaphysicæ Professore.
-| <i>Editio quinta recognita, &amp; multis mendis liberata.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 121: 1631: 16mo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>At present I only know this book from a titlepage in the Bagford collections at the
-British Museum (463. h. 4, no. 981): but it is not likely to be really uncommon.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>26. <b>Strada</b>, Firmianus. <span class='fss'>FAMIANI</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>STRADÆ</span></span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>ROMANI</span></span> | <span class='fss'>E SOCIETA-</span>|<span class='fss'>TE
-IESV.</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'><i>PROLVSIONES</i></span></span> | <span class='fss'><i>ACADEMICÆ</i>.</span> | <span class='under'>Iuxta exemplar <span class='sc'>Avthoris</span> recognitæ</span>,
-| <i>atque suis</i> Indicibus <i>illustratæ</i>. | [<i>device.</i>] [the name of place
-and date are in red ink, as are also the words underlined in the above
-title.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72 <i>c</i>: 1631: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 331 + [29]: p. 11 beg. <i>bus, tam opportuna</i>,
-301 <i>Volo tnqu am</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-dedication to Alexander card. Ursino:
-1–331, the Prolusiones, in 3 books: (2–27)
-“Index rerum et verborum ...”: (28–29)
-“Index Prolusionum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was in 1617. The subjects are oratorical, poetical and historical.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>27. <b>Vincentius</b>, Lirinensis. <span class='fss'><span class='under'>PEREGRINI</span>,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ID EST, VT VVLGO</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>PERHIBETVR</i>,</span> | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>VINCE<i>N</i>TII LI=</span>|<span class='fss'>RINENSIS, <i>AD</i></span></span>-|<span class='fss'>VERSUS PROPHA-</span>|<i><span class='sc'>NAS H<span class='large'>Æ</span>RESES</span></i>,
-| <span class='under'>Commonitoria duo</span>. | <i>Editio repurgata, cæteris pu</i>|<i>rior &amp; emendatior.</i>
-| <i>Huic adijcitur</i> <span class='sc'><span class='under'>Avgvstini</span></span> | <i>liber</i> de Hæresibus. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 112: 1631: (twelves) 24mo:
-pp. [12] + 274 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>nat.
-Quid si</i>: 201 <i>tibus quamlibet</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A”: (5)
-title: (7–11) “Lectori ...”, a preface:
-1–150, Vincentius’s work: 151–269,
-Augustinus’s work: 270–274, “Appendix
-trium hæresium”, i. e. of Papists, Mohammedans,
-Anabaptists: (1) “Errata ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Underlined words in the title above are printed in red, and also “Oxoniæ”, and
-“1631.” in the imprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>28. <b>Vossius</b>, Gerardus Johannes. <span class='sc'>Gerardi Ioannis VossI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RHETORICES</span> | <span class='fss'>CONTRACTÆ,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>PARTITIONVM</span> | <span class='fss'>ORATORIARUM</span>· | Libri
-V· | <i>Ex decreto Illustr. ac Pot.</i> <span class='sc'>Hollandiæ</span>, <i>&amp;</i> | <span class='sc'>West-Frisiæ DD.
-Ordinvm</span> <i>in</i> | <i>vsum Scholarum e</i>j<i>usdem Pro-</i>|<i>vinciæ excusi</i>. | Editio
-altera castigatior. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>Impr. 114: 1631: (twelves) 16mo: pp.
-[16] + 559 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>vel probatur</i>,
-401 <i>Hoc est, somnum</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–10) dedication
-to Beniaminus Auberius Maurerius Fontidangaeus,
-dated “Lugduni Bat. ∞ IↃ
-<span class='sc'>c xxi. xII</span> Kal. vii.<sup>bris</sup>”: (11–15) “Series
-Capitum”: (16) Complimentary Latin
-poem by Daniel Heinsius: 1–559, the
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was presumably in 1621, but the ordinary bibliographies do not
-give the date, except one which gives 1606. Other Oxford editions were issued in
-1655 and 1672, and several others in London and abroad.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>29. ——. <span class='fss'>GERARDI IOH. VOSSII.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>V. CL.</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THESES THEOLOGICÆ</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORICÆ</span>, | <i>De varijs doctrinæ Christianæ Capitibus</i>; | Quas, aliquot
-abhinc annis, dispu-|tandas proposuit in | <span class='fss'>ACADEMIA LEIDENSI</span>. | <i>Editio
-Iterata &amp; Emendata.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 87 <i>a</i>: 1631: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [8] + 680: p. 11 beg. <i>illius de chao</i>,
-501 <i>Nec meliorem</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, (3–4) “Typographus
-Lectori ...”: (5–6) “Syllabus &amp; Ordo
-Disputationum”: (8) a Latin 6-line complimentary
-poem signed “Philalethes”:
-1–680, the forty dissertations.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1628 V: the printer confesses that this is an unauthorized reprint of the original
-edition, in consequence of the daily complaint of the rarity of the book: and says
-“Nactus itaque tandem amicorum ope istarum Thesium fasciculum (integrum vti
-spero,) ... sumpsi mihi fiduciam eum iterùm typis meis exprimendi”. There is
-nothing in this to indicate that this is a reissue of the sheets of 1628 V, without even
-correction of the misprints: on the contrary the list of errata given in 1628 is omitted.
-The first eight pages only are printing of 1631. This edition appears to be quite rare,
-but perhaps only accidentally so, because copies have not found their way into public
-libraries; or possibly Vossius may have succeeded in stopping a pirated issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>30. *<b>W[alkington]</b>, T[homas]. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>OPTICK ... GLASSE</span> | <span class='sc'>of
-Hv...mors</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | The touchstone of a golden | <i>temperature, or the
-Philosophers</i> | <i>stone to make a golden temper</i>. | Wherein the foure complections
-| <i>Sanguine, Cholericke, Phligmaticke, Mel</i>|<i>ancholicke are succinctly
-painted forth</i> | <i>and their externall intimates laid open</i> | <i>to the
-purblindeye of ignorance itselfe</i>, | <i>by which euery one may iudge</i>, | <i>of what
-complection he is, and</i> | <i>answerably learn what is</i> | <i>most sutable to his</i> |
-<i>nature</i>. | <i>by</i> T. W. <i>Master</i> | <i>of Artes</i> | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 122: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [26] +
-168 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>damagement both</i>,
-111 <i>temperatures, this</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (2) engraving, see below:
-(3) engraved title, see below: (5–13),
-Epistle dedicatory to sir Justinian Lewin,
-dated “from my study in Saint <i>Iohns</i>
-(Camb.) x Calend March. T. W.”: 15–25
-“To the Reader”, signed “T. W.”:
-(25–26) “The Titles and Contents of the
-severall Chapters ...”: 1–162, the work:
-163–167, “The Close”, a poem: 168,
-“Catastrophe Lectori”, an English poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author, see Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 350. The proof of authorship is not
-clear, but the fact seems generally accepted, and Walkington was certainly a Fellow of
-St. John’s College, Cambridge. The book has also been attributed to Tho. Wilbie
-and T. Wombwell, according to Bohn’s Lowndes. This is a reprint of the 1607 London
-edition, re-printed at London in 1639 and 1663. Hitherto this Oxford edition has
-been generally regarded as the first, and the British Museum catalogue assigns it
-doubtfully to 1605. But it cannot be earlier than 1627 from the woodcuts used, and
-in that year first William Turner printed books by himself. And it cannot be later
-than 2 Aug. 1638 when Michael Sparke assigned this book to John Dawson with one
-of 1631 and one not earlier than 1631. Again, a comparison of 20 imprints of Michael
-Sparke between 1627 and 1638 raises a presumption that he did not use the expression
-“are to be sold by Michael Sparke at (or, dwelling at) the Blue Bible in Green
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>Arbour” (nor was he connected with Oxford printers) until 1632, and he uses no local
-description of the kind at all in his imprints till 1629. On the whole 1631 is a probable
-year for the issue of this book, and 1631–33 more likely than any earlier or later
-date.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The engraved title on steel (size of plate 5½ × 3½ in.) does not occur in the 1607 ed.
-and was doubtless made for this occasion: it was altered in the imprint and then used
-again in 1639 and 1663. On either side of the title is a graduate in cap and gown
-representing “<span class='sc'>Cambridge</span>” and “<span class='sc'>Oxford</span>”: together they hold upright what seems
-intended for an optic glass or touchstone, but presents the exact appearance of a half-closed
-umbrella. Facing the title and part of the plate is another engraving (plate
-5½ × 3½ in., as the title) which a reference to pag. 77 l. 2 shows to represent the Temperaments
-or complexions, with concentric rings: at top are two small wholly fanciful
-engravings of “Oxford” and “Cambridge”, each 5/16 × 1<span class='fraction'>11<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>31. <b>Widdowes</b>, Giles. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>LAWLESSE</span> | <span class='fss'>KNEELESSE</span> | <span class='fss'>SCHISMATICALL</span>
-| <span class='fss'><i>PVRITAN</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A CONFVTATION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE AVTHOR</span> | <span class='fss'>OF AN
-<i>APPENDIX</i>,</span> | concerning bowing at the | name of <i>Iesus</i>. | <span class='fss'>WRITTEN</span> | by
-<span class='sc'>Giles Widdowes</span> Rector of S<sup>t</sup> | <span class='sc'>Martins</span> Church in Oxford, | and late
-fellow of | <i>Oriell Colledge</i>. | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 107: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 90
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>must bow, now</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to Endymion Porter: 1–11,
-“To the true Protestant Reader”: 13–90,
-the treatise, in defence of bowing at the
-name of Jesus: 91, “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 179, and 1630 W. This is a reply to Prynne’s attack
-on the latter work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>32. ——. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SCHISMATICAL</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PVRITAN</i>.</span> | [&amp;c., exactly as
-1630 W, except <i>Ceremoines</i> for <i>Ceremonies</i>, and after “Oxford”]<a id='t161'></a> | <i>The
-second edition, Augmented.</i> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 137: 1631: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [48],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>2</sup> beg. <i>wee confesse</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1:
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>, dedication, as in 1st ed.:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>4<sup>r</sup> “To the Puritan”: <span class='fss'>D</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>4<sup>v</sup>, the
-sermon, on 1 Cor. xiv. 40.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1630 W: the augmentation appears to be only in the Preface.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1632.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bancroft</b>, John, bp. of Oxford. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES TO</span> | <span class='fss'>BE ENQVIRED
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>WITHIN THE DIOCES</span> | Of <i>O</i>x<i>ford</i>, in the first Visitati-|on of the Right
-Reverend Fa-|ther in <span class='sc'>God</span>, <i>Iohn</i> Lord | Bishop of <i>Oxford</i>. | <span class='fss'>HELD</span> | In
-the yeare of our Lord God 1632. in the eighth | yeare of the Raigne of
-our most gracious Soveraigne | Lord, <i>Charles</i>, by the grace of God King
-of | Great <i>Brittaine</i>, <i>France</i>, and <i>Ireland</i> | Defender of the Faith &amp;c. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 93: 1632: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. 15 <i>Whether</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <i>A</i>1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <i>A</i>2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, Oath and Charge of the
-Churchwardens, &amp;c.: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup> “Directions for
-making bills of Presentments for the
-Dioces ...”: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>r</sup>, the Articles:
-<span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>r</sup>-3<sup>v</sup>, directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Brerewood</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SECOND TREATISE</span> | <i>Of The</i> |
-<span class='fss'>SABBATH</span>, | <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>AN EXPLICATION OF</span> | the Fourth <i>Commandement</i>. |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span><i>Written</i>, | By M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Edward Brerewood</span> | professor in <i>Gresham Colledge</i> |
-in <span class='sc'>London</span>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 124: 1632: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 50 + [2]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>cation; so</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–40, the treatise:
-41–50 “Quæstio” about servants’ Sunday
-work, in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1630 B, Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 141.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Burton</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANATOMY OF</span> | <span class='fss'>MELANCHOLY</span> | [&amp;c.,
-exactly as 1628 B, being from the same plate with “thirde” altered to
-“fourth.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 70: 1632: (fours) folio: pp.
-[10] + 78 + [6] + 722 (after 218 are two
-unnumbered leaves) + [10]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>Iudgement</i>, 601 <i>graphers, would</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—(2) “The Argument
-of the Frontispeice”: (3) engraved title,
-inserted: (5) dedication to lord Berkeley:
-(7–10) “Democritus Iunior ad Librum
-suum”, English verse: 1–78, “Democritus
-Iunior to the Reader”: (1) “Lectori
-malè feriato”: (2) a Latin poem: (3–6)
-“The Synopsis of the first partition”:
-1–218, the first partition: (1–4) “The
-Synopsis of the second partition”: 219–407,
-the second partition: 408–10, “Analysis
-of the third partition”: 411–722,
-the third partition: (1–9) “The Table”:
-(9) “Errata ...”: (10) Impr. 75, between
-woodcuts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 653 and 1621 B. Ten of the divisions of the titlepage
-have now small numbers attached to them, arranged thus:—2, 1, 3 (top row): 4, title,
-5: 6, 10, 7: 8, imprint, 9 (lowest row). This plate is described in the <cite>Catalogue of
-Prints in the British Museum</cite>. <i>Div.</i> 1. <i>Satires</i>, vol. 1 (Lond. 1870), p. 79.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Clement</b>, st., of Rome. “Clementis ad Corinthios Epistola
-prior, Gr. et Lat. cum Notis P. Junii. 4<i>to</i>. <i>J. Lichfield</i>, 1632.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the <cite>Catalogue of the second ... portion</cite> of dr Philip Bliss’s library, sold in Aug.
-1858, p. 13, no. 150: but it is probably an error for 1633, although possibly some
-copies may have borne this date.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Daye</b>, Lionel. <span class='fss'>CONCIO</span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>CLERVM</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONII DIE</span> |
-Martis post Comitia | <i>An: Dom:</i> 1609. | <span class='sc'>avthore Lionello Daye</span> | tunc
-temporis Collegij | <i>Bailiolensis Socio</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73<i>a</i>: 1632: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-33 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>quium oris</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-“Amicis meis Oxoniensibus”, dated “Ex
-ædibus meis Whichfordiensibus. Ian. 23.
-1631”: 1–33, the sermon, on Luke xxii.
-31, in Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 326. The author says he now prints his old sermon,
-because it had been a great consolation to him, he having just lost his eldest son, a B.A.
-of Christ Church, by illness.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Downinge</b>, Calybute. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVRSE</span> | <span class='sc'>Of The</span> | <span class='fss'>STATE
-ECCLESIA-</span>|<span class='fss'>STICALL OF THIS</span> | <i>Kingdome, in relation to the Civill</i>. | <i>Considered
-vnder three</i> <span class='sc'>Concl</span>u<span class='fss'>SIONS</span>. | With a <span class='sc'>Digression</span> discussing | <i>some
-ordinary Exceptions against</i> | Ecclesiasticall Officers. | [line] | <i>By</i> C. D. |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1632: [the rest <i>absolutely</i> as 1633 D.: for that issue the title of this
-edition was torn off, and a new one substituted.]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>7. <b>Ovid.</b> <span class='fss'>OVID’S</span> | <span class='fss'>METAMORPHOSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISHED,</span> | <span class='fss'>MYTHOLOGIZ’D</span>, |
-<i>And</i> | Represented in Figures. | An Essay to the Translation | of
-<span class='sc'>Virgil’s Æneis</span>. | <i>By G. S.</i> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 82<i>a</i>: 1632: (fours) folio: pp.
-[20?] + 549 + 1, not counting 16 engravings:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Who o’re so</i>, 401 (<i><sup>a</sup> For
-Ioue</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “The minde of the frontispeece ...”:
-(3) an engraved titlepage,
-see description below: (5) dedication to
-prince Charles, signed “George Sandys”:
-(6–9) two panegyrics: (10–12) “to the
-Reader”: (13–16) “The Life of Ovid”:
-(17–19) “Ovid defended”: (20) Latin
-poem: 1–531, the work, with notes: 532,
-“To the Reader”: 533–49, the first
-Aeneid of Virgil in English verse: (1)
-“Errata”. Each of the 15 bks. and the
-Life are preceded by a full-page engraving.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 100. The first and second editions were issued at
-London in 1626 and 1628: this is the third, and others followed but were not published
-at Oxford. The first five books had been issued by Sandys at least twice
-(2nd ed., Lond. 1621). The large engraved titlepage (9⅝ × 5⅛ in.) is similar to the
-title of the 1626 London folio edition in general design, but different in detail. In
-the 1632 engraving the title (nearly as on the printed leaf, as far as “G. S.”, with
-date only and no imprint) is on a sheet held by and between two figures of Amor
-and Sapientia, and on the lower edge of the sheet is “<i>Francisco Clein Inv: Salamon
-Sauery sculp:</i>”. Other emblematic figures and some Latin sentences fill the page.
-The British Museum copy has the engraved title, but the copy presented by the
-translator in 1636 to the Bodleian has not. The book is singular in having no small
-woodcut ornaments.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Pemble</b>, William. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SVMME OF</span> | <span class='fss'>MORALL</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHY</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SVCCINCTLY</span> | <span class='fss'>GATHERED, ELE-</span>|gantly Composed, | and Methodically |
-<i>handled</i>, | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='fss'>THAT LEARNED SCHOLLER</span> | <span class='fss'>AND WORTHY DIVINE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>WILLIAM
-PEMBLE</i></span> M<sup>r</sup> of | Arts and late Commoner | of <i>Mag. Hall</i>. | [two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 84<i>a</i>: 1632: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-“82” (“56” occurs twice in the pagination)
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>selues, that</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3) “To
-the Reader”: (4) a logical division of Disciplines:
-1-“82”, the work: (1) “Index”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 331, and 1630 P. The book is an analysis, rather than
-a readable treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Sennertus</b>, Daniel. <span class='fss'>DANIELIS</span> | <span class='fss'>SENNERTI</span> | Vratislaviensis |
-<span class='fss'><i>EPITOME</i></span> | <span class='fss'>NATURALIS</span> | <span class='fss'>SCIENTIÆ</span> | [<i>device</i>] | <span class='sc'>Editio Tertia</span>. | Auctior &amp;
-Correctior. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 123: 1632: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 632 + [22]: p. 11 beg. <i>Actiones
-voluntati</i>, 611 <i>suam sedem</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–9) Epistola
-dedicatoria to Severinus Schattenus à
-Schattenhall, dated “Calend. April.... 1618”:
-(11–13) “Lectori candido ...”:
-(15–16) “Index librorum et capitum”:
-1–632, the work, in 8 books: (1–2) “Conclusio”:
-(3–20) index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was presumably issued in 1618, the second at Wittenberg in 1624:
-other Oxford editions came out in 1653 and 1664.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1633.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>A[iray]</b>, C[hristopher]. <span class='fss'>FASCICULUS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PRAECEPTORVM</i></span> | <span class='fss'>LOGICORUM</span>:
-| <span class='sc'>In</span> | <i>Gratiam</i> j<i>uventutis</i> | Academicæ <i>compo-</i>|<i>situs &amp; typis
-donatus</i>. | <i>Editio altera limatior</i> | <i>operâ secundâ</i> | C. A. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>Impr. 69: 1633: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 224: p. 11 beg. <i>nec genere</i> 111, <i>1.
-Necessaria, cui</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—(3) title, within an arched
-border: (5–6) “Typographus Benevolo
-Lectori ...”: (7) “Sphalmata ...”,
-errata: (8) “<i>Arbor Porphyriana</i>”:
-1–224, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reprint of 1628 A, and appears to be rare, for Wood believed the 1660
-edition to be the second.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. *<b>Articles.</b> <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | Given by &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; | &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; and delivered to
-the Church=wardens | to be considered and answered in his visitation |
-holden in the yeare of our Lord God &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; | <span class='fss'>WHEREVNTO THE SAID</span> |
-Church-wardens and sidemen are | vpon their oathes to answere | truly
-and particularly. | [<i>device.</i>]. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68<i>b</i>: n. d.: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Lords Prayer</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>, instructions and Oath: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>4<sup>r</sup>,
-the articles.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a general undated form of Articles of Visitation apparently for a Bishop’s or
-Archdeacon’s use. The occurrence of a particular woodcut shows that this is the
-earliest year to which the printing can be assigned.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Bacon</b>, sir Francis, Lord Verulam. <span class='fss'>THE TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKES OF</span> |
-<span class='fss'>S</span><sup>r</sup> <span class='fss'>FRANCIS BACON,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OF</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE PROFICIENCE</span> | and Advancement of
-Learning, | <span class='sc'>Divine</span> and <span class='sc'>Hvmane</span>. | [<i>line.</i>] | <i>To the</i> <span class='fss'>KING</span>. | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>woodcut</i>.] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 138: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-335 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>he spoiled</i>, 201 <i>tage
-in the race</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: 1–335, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is the 3rd edition, the previous ones being Lond. 1605, Lond. 1629 (from
-which latter the present edition is an almost lineatim reprint); no separate one in
-English was subsequently issued till this century: see 1640 B.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Bartholinus</b>, Caspar. <span class='fss'><i>CASP. BARTHOLINI</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ENCHIRIDION</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ETHICVM:</span> | <span class='sc'>Seu</span> | <span class='fss'><i>EPITOME</i></span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ</span> | <span class='sc'>Moralis.</span> | <i>Præcepta breviter
-&amp; dilucidè me-</i>|<i>thodóque novâ &amp; facili expli-</i>|<i>cata exhibens</i> | Pro angustâ
-tyronum me-|moriâ | [<i>woodcut.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 137: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[72], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>12</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>tudinis;
-ut</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>v</sup>, dedication to prince
-Hulderic: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>10<sup>v</sup>, the work: <span class='fss'>C</span>11<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>11<sup>v</sup>,
-“Index capitum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This was reprinted at Oxford in 1665 with Casa’s Galateus.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. ——. <span class='fss'><i>CASPARI BARTHOLINI</i></span> | <i>Philosophi &amp; Medici</i> | <span class='fss'>ANATOMICÆ</span>
-| <span class='fss'>INSTITVTIONES</span> | <span class='fss'>CORPORIS HVMANI</span> | Vtriusque sexùs | <span class='sc'>Historiam
-&amp; Declaratio-</span>|nem exhibentes, | Cum plurimis novis observationibus
-| &amp; opinionibus, | Nec non | <i>Illustriorum, quæ in</i> <span class='fss'>ANTHROPO-</span>|<span class='fss'>LOGIA</span>
-<i>occurrunt controver-</i>|<i>siarum decisionibus</i>. | Cum indice Capitum &amp; Rerum
-locupletissimo. | [<i>woodcut.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 417 + [51]: p. 11 beg. <i>nisi in</i>, 301
-<i>ramos intercostales</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) contents of
-the work: (3–7) dedication to Oligerus
-Rosaecranzius, dated 18 Dec. 1610, in
-Latin: (8–17) “Ad Benevolum Lectorem
-meum ...”, dated as above: (18–24)
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>“Index capitum ...”: 1–417, the work
-consisting of a Proœmium, 4 libri and
-4 libelli: (1–44) the index: (45–47)
-“Admonitio Autoris ad Lectorem qui
-benignus” about a charge of plagiarism,
-dated “Hafniæ”, 1 Sept. 1622.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was issued in 1611: this new one appears to be reprinted from the
-edition Goslariæ et Rostochii 1632.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. Browne, Thomas. [The British Museum Catalogue by an
-error states that there is a copy of Browne’s <cite>Copie of a Sermon</cite> dated
-1633: see 1634 B.]</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Burton</b>, William. “<cite>Laudatio funebris in Obitum Viri excellentiss.
-D. Thomæ Alleni.</cite> Lond. 1632. Ox. 1633. qu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 439: the London edition of 1632 is known,
-but at present not the Oxford issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Butler, Charles. The reference to a 1633 edition of the <cite>Feminine
-Monarchie</cite>, made in 1609 B, is an error.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>ORATORIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI DVO:</span> | <span class='sc'>Qvorvm</span> | <i>Alter
-ejus Definitionem</i>, | <i>Alter Partitionem</i> | <span class='sc'>Explicat:</span> | <span class='fss'>IN USUM SCHOLARUM</span> |
-<i>recèns editi</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Authore <span class='sc'>Carolo Bvtlero</span>, <i>Magd.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [136],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Q</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>clarant; vt
-cùm</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to Thomas
-lord Coventry, dated “Wotton, 5. <i>Idus
-Martii</i>, Ann. Dom. 1633....”: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>, two
-complimentary Latin poems to the author
-by I. H. and S. W.: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>v</sup>-4<sup>v</sup>, “Lectori
-Benevolo ...” as in 1629: <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>Q</span>4<sup>v</sup>, the
-work: <span class='fss'>Q</span>4<sup>v</sup>, “Monitio ...”, errata and
-corrigenda.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 210, 1629 B. This is a reprint of the 1629 edition,
-but the new dedication states that Butler’s Rhetoric (see 1600 B) was used in the chief
-schools of the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. ——. <span class='sc'>The</span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH</span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMAR,</span> | <span class='sc'>Or</span> | The Institution
-of Letters, Syl-|lables, and Words, in the En-|glish tongue. | <i>Whereunto
-is annexed</i> | An Index of Words Like and Unlike. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> |
-<span class='sc'>Charls Butler</span> Magd. <i>Master of Arts</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 125: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-63 + [29]: p. 11 beg. <i>larg‘ sarg‘</i>: Pica
-Roman and English. Contents:—p. (1)
-title within double lines: (3–8) “To the
-Reader”, signed “Wotton Sept. 11. An. D.
-1633. C. B. M.”: (8) “Ad Authorem”
-a Latin poem by S. W.: 1–63, the grammar:
-(2–29) the index: (29) “The Printer
-to the Reader”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 210 (where this edition is not mentioned), and 1634 B.
-This book, as well as the same author’s <cite>Feminine Monarchie or history of Bees</cite> (see
-1634 B), are printed in a peculiar phonetic manner. The system is of considerable
-interest for the history of phonetic reforms of spelling and of English pronunciation,
-but made no way in practical use. The preface asserts the superiority of English in
-generality, by which he means wide geographical extent of usage, but laments the
-uncertain correspondence of sound and spelling, and the labour of learning the language,
-these two defects being due both to the want of alphabetical characters for certain
-sounds, and to historical changes of pronunciation, to which some persons adapt the old
-spelling and some do not. The author supplies the characters wanted, and counsels
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>strictly phonetic spelling with certain exceptions where letters not strictly sounded
-indicate idiom or derivation. Generally an aspirated letter is represented by a line
-drawn through the letter (đ, w̶, ǥ, but ʇ), and mute vowels by a substituted comma (as
-strang‘, tru‘, nam‘ly) when not omitted (as qestion). Also conjoined double e and
-double o are used, but the exceptions to the phonetic spelling would be, among others,
-a serious objection to this system of compromise. In 1585 W. Bullokar published an
-edition of Æsop’s Fables in English, in a somewhat similar style of orthography.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Clemens</b>, Romanus. <span class='under'><span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΚΛΗΜΕΝΤΟΣ</span></span> | <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΠΡΟΣ ΚΟΡΙΝΘΙΟΥΣ |
-ΕΠΙΣΤΟΛΗ ΠΡΩΤΗ.</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>CLEMENTIS</span></span> | <span class='fss'>AD CORINTHIOS</span> | <span class='fss'>EPISTOLA PRIOR.</span> | Ex
-laceris reliquijs vetustissimi exemplaris Biblio-|thecæ Regiæ eruit, lacunas
-explevit, Latinè ver-|tit, &amp; notis brevioribus illustravit. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'><span class='under'>Patricivs
-Ivnivs</span></span> <i>Pet. F. Scotobritannus</i>, | <i>Sere<sup>mo</sup> Britanniarum Fr. &amp; Hib. Regi</i> |
-<span class='sc'><span class='under'>Carolo</span></span> <i>à Bibliothecis</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] +
-76 + [48]: p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">τῶν ἁπάντων</span>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
-(5–8) dedication to the king: (9–19)
-“Veterum testimonia de Clemente ...”:
-(21–23) “Benevolo Lectori”, dated
-“Oxonij pridie Cal: Nov. 1632”: 1–76,
-the Epistle: (1–40) Latin notes: (41–47)
-“Fragmentum Epistolæ secundæ ex eodem
-MS.”: (48) “<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">παροράματα</span>”, errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 308. Patrick Young was Library Keeper to
-the King’s Library at St. James’s Palace (now the Old Royal Library at the British
-Museum), and edited this book from the Alexandrine MS. of the Greek Bible. Red
-ink is used in the words underlined above, and for “Oxonii,” and “Academiæ” in the
-imprint, and for all words in the text which are supplied by the editor, who calls it
-“Novum et inusitatum imprimendi genus”. Some copies are on large paper, and
-some have an inserted leaf containing “Summa Privilegii”, reserving rights of translation,
-reproduction and sale for ten years. This leaf is found before or after the
-dedication.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Combachius</b>, Johannes. <span class='fss'><i>IOH. COMBACHII</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>METAPHY-</span>|<span class='fss'>SICORVM,</span>
-| <span class='sc'>Libri dvo</span> | <i><span class='fss'>VNIVERSAM PRIMÆ</span></i> | <i>Philosophiæ doctrinam
-theoremati-</i>|<i>bus brevissimis comprehendentes, &amp;</i> | <i>Commentariis necessariis
-illustrantes: stu-</i>|<i>diosis ejus disciplinæ per quam</i> | <i>utiles &amp; fructuosi</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>EDITIO TERTIA</span> | Prioribus editionibus auctior &amp; | castigatior. | <i>Additus
-est cuilibet libro in fine Index</i> | <i>rerum &amp; verborum locuples.</i> | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1633: 16mo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>At present only known from a titlepage in the Bagford Collections at the British
-Museum (463. h. 4, no. 1110), but it is not likely to be really rare. The 2nd edition
-seems to have been issued abroad in 1620, and a “3rd” in 1630, of which this is
-probably a reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Cyprianus</b>, S. <span class='fss'>S. CYPRIANVS</span> | <i><span class='fss'>DE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>BONO PATIENTIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>COL
-LATVS CVM</span> | <i><span class='fss'>MS. OXONIENSIBVS,</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>EDITVS</span></i> | <span class='sc'>A Ierem. Stephano,</span> | SS.
-Theol. Bac. cum | <i>spicilegio notarum</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 129<i>a</i>: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [16] + 87 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>daret &amp;
-divina</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within line, double at top and
-bottom: (3–9) dedication to William
-Noye attorney general: (11–16) “...
-Argumentum libri ...”: 1–57, the work:
-59–87, “Annotationes in libellum S. Cypriani
-...”, with collations of four MSS.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 671. In 1632 Stephens had issued a similar
-edition of Cyprian De unitate ecclesiae.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>13. <b>Downe</b>, rev. John. <i><span class='fss'>CERTAINE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>TREATISES</span> | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE LATE
-REVEREND</span> | and Learned Divine, M<sup>r</sup> <i>Iohn</i> | <i>Downe</i>, Rector of the Church
-of <i>Instow</i> | in <i>Devonshire</i>, Bachelour of Divi-|nity, and sometimes Fellow
-of <i>Ema-</i>|<i>nuell</i> Colledge in <i>Cambridge</i>. | <i>Published at the instance of his
-friends.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 126: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] +
-57 + [1] + 185 + [3] + 34 + [2] + 26 + [2]
-+ 34 + [2] + 24 + [2] + 26 + [2] + 51 + [3]
-+ 125 + [3] + 68: incipits, see below in
-Contents: English Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title, within arched border: (3) dedication
-by the publisher (dr. G. Hakewill)
-to the bp. and clergy of the diocese of
-Exeter: (4) “The Contents of these treatises”,
-a list of titles: (5) a title “The
-funerall sermon on behalfe of the author
-of these ensuing workes, preached by
-George Hakewill ...” with impr. 128:
-1–54, the sermon, on Dan. xii. 3: 55–57,
-letter from bp. Joseph Hall, dated “Exon
-Palace Mar. 22. 1631”, to Hakewill
-about the book: p. 11 beg. <i>Some there</i>:
-(1) a title “... Two treatises 1 Concerning
-the force and efficacy of reading—2
-Christs prayer for his Church”, with impr.
-128: 1–51, 1st treatise, on Acts xv. 21:
-53–185, 2nd treatise, on John xvii. 1 &amp;c.:
-p. 11 beg. <i>ever bee a</i>, 101 <i>are communicated</i>:
-(2) a title “A godlie discourse of
-Selfe-deniall”, with impr. 128: 1–34, the
-sermon, on Luke ix. 23: p. 11 beg. <i>The
-Counsell</i>: (1) a title “An apologie of the
-iustice of God”, with impr. 128: 1–26,
-the sermon, on Gen. xviii. 25: p. 11 beg.
-<i>divine actions</i>: (1) a title “An amulet
-or preservative against the contempt of
-the ministry”, with impr. 128; 1–34,
-the sermon, on Tit. ii. 15: p. 11 beg.
-<i>Ghost were</i>: (1) a title “The dove-like
-serpent”, with impr. 128: 1–24, the sermon,
-on Matt. x. 16: p. 11 beg. <i>The deafe
-eare</i>: (1) a title “Subiection To the
-higher powers”, with impr. 128: 1–26
-(“27”), the sermon on Rom. xiii. 5: p. 11
-beg. <i>Simply considered</i>: (1) a title “A
-defence of the lavvfulnesse of lots in
-gaming against the Arguments of N. N.”,
-with impr. 128: 1–51, the work: p. 11
-beg. “shall haue these”: (2) a title
-“The Reall Presence of Transubstantiation
-vnknowne to the Ancient Fathers”,
-with impr. 128: p. 11 beg. <i>grace of God</i>:
-(2) “A defence of the former Answer
-against the Reply of N. N.”, with impr.
-128: 1–68, the work: 68, a note to be
-added to the first sermon: p. 11 beg.
-<i>stantiation? Nothing</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 286, Dict. of Nat. Biogr., and 1635 D (for Hakewill see
-<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 255). Downe was a nephew of bp. Jewel: educated at Emmanuel
-college Cambridge, and incorporated at Oxford in 1600. He died in about 1631. The
-signatures run through the entire work, with one break.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Downinge</b>, Calybute. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVRSE</span> | <span class='sc'>Of The</span> | <span class='fss'>STATE
-ECCLESIA-</span>|<span class='fss'>STICALL OF THIS</span> | Kingdome, in relation to the Civill. | <i>Considered
-vnder three</i> <span class='sc'>Concl</span>u<span class='fss'>SIONS</span>. | With a <span class='sc'>Digression</span>, discussing | <i>some
-ordinary Exceptions against</i> | Ecclesiasticall Officers. | [<i>line</i>] | <i><span class='fss'>BY</span></i> C. D. |
-[<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>; pp. [4] +
-98 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>distinguished by</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—(1) title: (3)
-dedication to William earl of Salisbury,
-signed “Calybute Downinge”: (4)
-“Errata”: 1–98, the work, in three
-parts: the digression is on pp. 30–42:
-(1–2) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 107 and 1632 D, 1634 D. Wood throws doubt on this
-really being by Downinge. Downinge was chaplain to the earl of Salisbury.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. Erasmus, Desiderius. The Oxford 1663 edition of the
-<cite>Moriae Encomium</cite> bears on its first titlepage the erroneous date 1633.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Evans</b>, William. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>TRANSLATION</span> | of the Booke of |
-<span class='sc'>Nature</span>, | into the Vse of | <span class='fss'>GRACE</span>. | <span class='fss'>PERFORMED AND PRINCIPALLY</span> | intended
-for the benefit of those who | plead ignorance, or that they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>not Book-|<i>learned, or that they want teachers and</i> | <i>so thinke to excuse
-themselues</i> | <i>in their sinnes</i>. | [<i>line.</i>] | By <span class='sc'>William Evans</span>, M<sup>r</sup> of Arts of |
-S<sup>t</sup> <i>Mary Hall in Oxford</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 127; 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-95 + [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>consumed away</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to Thomas 2nd lord Coventry:
-(5–8) “To the Reader”: 1–95, the work:
-(1) “Errata”: (2–7) 76 “... heads of
-certaine doctrines ...” by way of index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, i. 479. The dedication states that this is the author’s first
-(and, as it seems, last) publication.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Gerhardus</b>, Johannes. <span class='fss'>IOH: GERHARDI</span> | <span class='fss'>MEDITATIONES</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>SACRÆ</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>EDITIO POSTREMA</span>, | <i>prioribus emendatior</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 129: 1633: twelves (16<sup>o</sup>): pp.
-[2] + 238 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>tis ex templo</i>,
-201 <i>hoc interpretare</i>: Long Primer English.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within lines:
-1–238 (“235”), the Meditations: (2–3)
-“Index”, a list of the 51 meditations.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition was apparently in 1606 with 50 Meditations, and editions were
-issued in Latin in 1621, 1627, 1629, Lond. 1672, and later, and English translations
-in 1629 (by R. Winterton, printed at Cambridge), and later, even in 1840 (at Oxford).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Godwyn</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ROMANÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTHOLOGIA</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RECOGNITA ET</span> | <span class='fss'>AVCTA.</span> | <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH EXPOSITION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE ROMAN ANTI-</span>|quities,
-wherein many Roman and | English offices are paralleld | <i>and
-divers obscure phra-</i>|<i>ses explained.</i> | <i>For the vse of</i> <span class='sc'>Abingdon</span> <i>Schoole.</i> |
-[<i>line</i>] | Newly revised and inlarged by the | <i>Author</i> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 141: 1633: (fours) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 277 + [23]: p. 11 beg. <i>malefactor,
-but</i>, 111 <i>gainst another</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within an arched
-border: (3–4) Latin dedication to dr.
-John Young, signed “Tho. Godwyn”,
-dated “Abindoniæ 14 Calend. Decemb. ...
-1622”: (5) “Benevolo Lectori ...”:
-(7) “A short table shewing the Argument
-of every Booke and Section”: 1–277, the
-work, in four books: (1–23) “Index rerum
-et verborum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 G.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. †<b>Grave</b>, Jean de. [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>PATH_WAY TO</span> | <span class='fss'>THE GATE
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'><i>TONGVES</i>:</span> | <span class='sc'>Being,</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FIRST INSTRV-</span>|<span class='fss'>CTION FOR LITTLE</span> | <span class='sc'>Children.</span>
-| With | A short manner to conjugue | the French Verbes. |
-<i>Ordered and made Latine, French and</i> | <i>English by</i> <span class='sc'>Iean</span> de <span class='sc'>Gra</span>u<span class='fss'>E</span>, |
-<i>Professour of the French Tongue</i> | <i>in the City of</i> | <span class='sc'>London</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 136: 1633: pp. [48], signn.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>discas oportet</i>: Long
-Primer Roman and English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup> title, within line: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>. introduction
-in Latin, English and French:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>6<sup>v</sup>, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. The book consists of the names of the numbers, the Church Catechism,
-and the conjugation of French verbs, all in parallel Latin, English and French
-columns: and serves as an introduction to the English editions by John Anchoran
-(1631, 1633, 1637, 1639 or 1640, &amp;c.) of J. A. Comenius’s celebrated <cite>Janua linguarum</cite>.
-See 1634 S. The book is interesting as showing a connexion between William
-Turner the Oxford printer (1624–40) and the London printer of the same name (1623–35).
-The Stationers’ Register (ed. Arber, iv. 334) records the transfer of all the London
-Turner’s rights in this book and the <cite>Clavis ad portam</cite> (which was certainly printed
-by the Oxford Turner in 1634, see 1634 S) to Michael Sparke on 17 Mar. 163<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>.
-Neither of these books was registered at Stationers’ Hall, and so probably this book as
-well as the <cite>Clavis</cite> was printed at Oxford, though the imprint, type and woodcuts are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>not by themselves decisive. Probably the two Turners are in fact identical, and the
-Oxford printing establishment, though founded a year later than the other (but as
-a bookseller’s business not later than 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>), was the chief one. It is curious that under
-these circumstances Turner was allowed to be a member of the Stationers’ Company,
-which was particularly jealous of provincial presses.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Gregorius</b>, monk. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LETTER,</span> | <span class='fss'>RELATING THE</span> | Martyrdome
-of <span class='sc'>Ketab<span class='large'>A</span>n</span>, Mother | of <span class='sc'>Teimvrases</span> Prince of the | <i><span class='fss'>GEORGIANS</span>,
-&amp; withall</i> | A notable Imposture of the Iesuites | vpon that occasion<i>:</i> |
-<span class='fss'><i>SENT</i></span> | From <span class='fss'>GREGORIVS</span> Monke and | Priest, Agent for the Patriarke
-of | <span class='sc'>Antioch</span> <i>vnto the most</i> | <i>holy and learned</i> Abbot | <span class='fss'>SOPHRONIVS</span>. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<i>Written first in Greeke, and now</i> | <i>done in English</i> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 82: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 23
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Iberia: and</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–6) “To the Reader”, about the
-Georgians, probably by the translator:
-1–23, the letter, dated “Trapezunt May 16.
-<i>Ann.</i> 1626”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A rare tract. See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 479. The incident related
-belongs to the year 1614, when the King of Persia put Ketaban to death for refusing
-to forsake Christianity. Some Jesuits are said to have dressed up a carcase as Ketaban’s,
-to have carried it to her son, and to have enjoyed much honour by the miracles
-which it wrought. Ultimately the real body arrived and the Jesuits were banished.
-The translator was Thomas Crosfield of Queen’s College, Oxford: and the Letter
-was published in Greek and Latin (at London?) in 1632.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Hakewill</b>, George. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>VANITIE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='sc'>The Eye.</span> | First
-begun for the Com-|fort of a Gentlewoman berea-|ved of her sight, and
-since | upon occasion inlarged | and published for the | Common good. |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>George Hakevvill</span> Ma-|ster of Arts, and Fellow of Exe-|ter Coll. in
-Oxford. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>The second Edition.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>.] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 142: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[6] + 173 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>ripping up</i>,
-111 <i>as much of</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double bounding lines:
-(3–6) “The Contents of the severall
-Chapters ...”: 1–173, the work in 31
-chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1608 H. This is really the 4th ed., not the 2nd.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ</span> | (&amp;c., precisely as 1631 H,
-except “sixth” for “fifth”.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 140: 1633: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>; pp.
-[20] + 808 (the last misprinted 807)
-+ [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>1 First then there</i>, 701
-<i>dales, or Vindelici</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly
-as 1631 H, except “Forraine
-Coynes”, and the necessary change
-of reference (only) to the last five pages.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1621 H: this edition is apparently an almost lineatim reprint of the 5th
-edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Holyday</b>, Barten. <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>POLITO-</span>|<span class='fss'>BARBARÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>SPECIMEN,</span>
-| <span class='sc'>In</span> Quo | <i>De</i> <span class='sc'>Anima</span> &amp; <i>e</i>j<i>us</i> | <span class='sc'>Habitib</span>u<span class='sc'>s Intel-</span>|<span class='fss'>LECT</span>u<span class='fss'>ALIB</span>u<span class='fss'>S</span>, |
-<i>Quæstiones aliquot</i>, | <span class='fss'>LIBRIS DVOBVS</span>, | Illustrantur à |<a id='t169'></a> [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>Bartenio
-Holyday</span> | [<i>line.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>Impr. 69: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-189 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>piniones diversas</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. 1,
-title, within arched border: (3–8) “Præfatio”:
-(9–11) “Series rerum ...”, a
-list of contents: 1–189, two books and an
-oration: (1) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 522. These are exercises and speeches composed by
-Holyday in about 1617–21, when prælector of Rhetoric and Philosophy at Christ
-Church, Oxford, and concern the De Anima, Ethics and Rhetoric of Aristotle. What
-is considered to be the barbarous element in the Philosophy, is not clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>James</b>, dr. Richard. <span class='fss'>CONCIO</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA AD</span> | <span class='fss'><i>CLERVM</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>OXONIENSEM</i></span> | <i>de Ecclesia</i>. | <span class='fss'>AVTHORE <i>RICHARDO</i></span> | <i><span class='fss'>IAMESIO</span> Vectensi</i>,
-Baccalaureo | Sacræ Th. Socio <i>CCC.</i> | [<i>line, motto, line, woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 130: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [36],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>cum omnes</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, dedication to sir Kenelm
-Digby: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span>1<sup>v</sup>, the sermon, on Matth.
-xvi. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 630. Some copies of this book have the remains of
-a torn titlepage, apparently a cancel leaf following the ordinary title.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>More</b>, sir Thomas. <span class='fss'>EPISTOLA</span> | <span class='fss'>THOMÆ MORI AD</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ACADEMIAM</i></span>
-| <span class='fss'><i>OXON.</i></span> | Adjecta sunt quædam Poemata | in mortem |
-<span class='fss'>CLARISSIMI VIRI</span> | <span class='sc'>Roberti Cottoni</span> | <i>&amp;</i> | <span class='sc'>Thomæ Alleni</span>. | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>.] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 113<i>a</i>: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-18 + [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>ei periti</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) dedication to sir Kenelm Digby,
-signed “Rich. Iamesius”, the editor:
-1–17, the Letter, dated “Abingdoniæ ...
-4<sup>o</sup> Kal. Aprilis”: 18, “Nota magistri
-Briani Twyne” about the occasion of the
-letter: (1–7) three Latin poems and a
-Latin note by James on Cotton and
-Allen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, i. 85, ii. 630. This is a rather uncommon book, containing
-a persuasive to the study of Greek, written in 1518, probably at the king’s instigation.
-The opponents of the New Learning called themselves Trojans in opposition to
-the Grecians. The letter is reprinted by Hearne in his edition of Roper’s Life
-of More (Oxf. 1716, 8<sup>o</sup>). Sir Robert Cotton died in 1631, and Thomas Allen of
-Gloucester hall in Oxford in 1632.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>26. <b>Oxford</b>, University. [two <i>lines</i>] | <i>Musarum Oxoniensium</i> |
-<span class='fss'>PRO</span> | <span class='fss'>REGE SVO</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SOTERIA</i></span>. | [<i>Anagram</i>, &amp;c., then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 131: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [72],
-signn. §, §§<sup>4</sup>, §§§<sup>2</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>, “<span class='fss'>BC</span>”, <span class='fss'>D</span>-<span class='fss'>G</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>H</span><sup>2</sup>:
-sign. <span class='fss'>BC</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Nec morbos</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—sign. §1<sup>r</sup>, title:
-§2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span>2<sup>r</sup>, the poems: <span class='fss'>H</span>2<sup>v</sup>, device and
-impr. 132.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The occasion of these verses seems to have been an illness of the King late in 1632.
-Most of the poems are Latin, but four are English and one Greek. One of the printers
-(W. Turner) contributes some Latin verses. An anagram occurs in the title, and
-a chronogram (1632) on <span class='fss'>E</span>1<sup>v</sup>. There are curious variations in issues, and marks (see the
-register of signatures) of the difficulty of obtaining and marshalling in order these collections
-of separate poems. The early issues of sheet <span class='fss'>A</span> on <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup> print “<span class='sc'>R. Nevvlin</span>
-<i>S. T. B.</i>”, the later and common ones insert <i>C. C. C.</i> after the name, as also in <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>v</sup>,
-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup> (twice): so “<i>Nov. C.</i>” is inserted on <span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>v</sup>, cf. <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>. An interesting copy is in the
-British Museum, being the one specially printed for the King’s personal acceptance.
-The differences are that the book is on larger paper (the size even as bound and cut
-down being 7⅞ × 6 in.), and the title entirely reprinted. Every line of the title is in
-larger type and spread out laterally, except the anagram itself and imprint: also ll. 1
-and 4 are roman, not italic, and ll. 3, 4, 6, 7 are printed <i>in gold</i>. In l. 6 the two Vs
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>are lower case Us, and in l. 7 Rex appears as <span class='sc'>Rex</span>. So too the device is altered, and
-it is amusing to see that the imprint, for fear of royal vengeance, is altered from the
-English “W. T.” (William Turner) to the Latin “G. T.”! This fact shows also that
-the <i>last</i> and not the first copy was struck off for the King, sheet <span class='fss'>A</span> agreeing with this
-in being the later issue (see above).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>27. ——. <span class='fss'>SOLIS</span> | <span class='fss'>BRITANNICI</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PERIGÆUM</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>ITINERANTIS</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CAROLI</span> | <span class='fss'>AVSPICATISSIMA</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PERIODVS</i>.</span> | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [100],
-signn. § <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span>, <span class='fss'>DE</span>, <span class='fss'>F</span>-<span class='fss'>M</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>N</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εἴς ἄλοχον</span>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-§1<sup>r</sup> title: §2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>N</span>2<sup>r</sup>, the
-poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems by members of the University congratulating the King on his return from
-Scotland in Aug. 1633. The perigee of the sun or a planet is when it is nearest to the
-earth. Most of the poems are Latin, but six are Greek, sixteen at the end English,
-and one French. Three chronograms occur. One English poem is by John Lichfield
-the printer. There are some signs of an arrangement of the poems, those by great
-persons coming first, and the English last. Some copies of a later issue have an
-extra sheet after <span class='fss'>I</span> (ii, four leaves) inserted, with more poems, which necessitated a rearrangement
-of sheet <span class='fss'>K</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>28. ——. <span class='fss'>VITIS</span> | <span class='fss'>CAROLINÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>GEMMA ALTERA</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>AVSPICATISSIMA</span>
-| <span class='sc'>Dvcis Eboracensis</span> | <span class='fss'>GENETHLIACA</span> | <i>Decantata ad</i> | <span class='fss'><i>VADA
-ISIDIS</i></span> | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 53: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [88],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>L</span><sup>4</sup>, see below: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Te
-pariter</i>: English Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>L</span>3<sup>v</sup>, the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These poems celebrate the birth of James ii on 15 Oct. 1633, and are as usual
-chiefly in Latin, but six in Greek, eighteen in English (an innovation) and one in French.
-There is a second issue, perhaps commoner than the first described above, with the
-following changes. In sheet <span class='fss'>H</span>, sign. <span class='fss'>H</span>1<sup>v</sup> l. 9 has <i>Conjugis alvus</i>, not <i>uxorius alvus</i>:
-<span class='fss'>H</span>3<sup>r</sup> begins with a <i>Greek</i> poem, the rest of sheet <span class='fss'>H</span> is re-arranged and a new sheet h of
-four leaves is inserted. Also in sheet <span class='fss'>L</span> a new poem by W. Dutton is inserted. The
-sheets not specified above are identical in the two issues.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>29. <b>Parsons</b>, Bartholomew. <span class='fss'>BOAZ</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'>RUTH</span> | <span class='fss'>BLESSED<i>:</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>A SACRED CON-</span>|<span class='fss'>TRACT HONOV-</span>|red with a Solemne | <i>Benediction</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Bartholomew Parsons</span> B. of Divinity | and Rector of <i>Ludgershall</i>
-in the | County of <i>Wiltes.</i> | [two <i>mottos</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 134: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 40:
-p. 11 beg. <i>ever are blessed</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-Epistle Dedicatorie to Peregrine Thistlethwaite
-and Dorothy his wife: 1–40, the
-sermon, on Ruth iv. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 26. This sermon was to have been delivered
-at the wedding of Mr. Thistlethwaite, but some accident interposed, and it is here in
-an enlarged form.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>30. <b>Pavonius</b>, Franciscus. <span class='fss'>SUMMA</span> | <span class='fss'>ETHICAE:</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>INTRODVCTIO</span>
-| <span class='fss'>IN ARISTOTELIS,</span> | <span class='fss'>ET THEOLOGORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>DOCTRINAM</span> | Moralem. |
-<i><span class='fss'>CVM QVATVOR INDICIBVS</span></i>, | <i>Vno Propositionum in libri initio;</i> | <i>alio
-Aristotelico, tertio Tho-</i>|<i>mistico, quarto Rerum</i>, | in fine. | Auctore <span class='sc'>Francisco
-Pavonio</span> | Catacensi Theologo Societatis <span class='sc'>Jesu</span>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Impr. 139: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 381 + [51]: p. 11 beg. <i>maximè</i>, 301
-<i>justum debitum</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title within double lines:
-(3–4) dedication to Mutius Vitellescus,
-dated 29 Sept. 1617: (5–12) “Index propositionum”:
-1–381, the work: (1–2)
-“Epilogus”: (4–51) The four indexes.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author was an Italian Jesuit, who died in 1637. The first edition of this work
-seems to have been issued at Lyons in 1620.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>31. <b>Pemble</b>, William. ‘<cite>Enchiridion Oratorium.</cite> Ox. 1633
-“qu.” &amp;c.’</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 331. There seems to be some mistake, since
-no such treatise was printed among Pemble’s Collected Works: possibly Butler’s work
-on Oratory above has been confused by Wood: but Watt mentions the work under
-<i>Pembelo</i> as well as <i>Pemble</i>, as if he had been independent of Wood.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>32. <b>Potter</b>, Christopher. <span class='fss'>WANT OF</span> | <span class='fss'>CHARITIE</span>, | Iustly charged, |
-<span class='fss'>ON ALL SVCH <i>ROMA-</i></span>|<i>nists</i>, as dare (without truth or | modesty affirme,
-that <i>Prote-</i>|<i>stancie destroyeth Salvation</i>. | In Answer to a late Po-|pish
-Pamphlet intituled | <i>Charity Mistaken &amp;c.</i> | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Christopher Potter</span>
-D.D. | Chaplaine to his Ma<sup>ty</sup> in Ordina-|rie, and Provost of <i>Queenes</i> |
-<i>Colledge</i> in Oxford. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 133: 1633: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 128 + 120: pp. 11 beg. <i>forbids to</i>
-and <i>struct her children</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
-lines: (3–6) “The Epistle Dedicatory”:
-(7–8) to the reader: (9–24) analysis
-of <i>Charity mistaken</i> and the answer, as
-a list of contents: 1–128, 1–120, “Answer
-to Charity mistaken”, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The work against which this was directed was written by a Jesuit named Matthias
-Wilson, who also employed the names of Nicholas Smith and, as in this case, Edward
-Knott, and was published in 1630. By Oct. 1634 this first edition was nearly sold
-out, and the author submitted a copy to archbp. Laud for his approval or correction,
-with a view to a second edition. Laud suggested the alteration of a few passages,
-and this was made part of the accusations against him at his trial (see Prynne’s
-<cite>Canterburies Doom</cite>, Lond. 1646, p. 251). The second edition thus altered was printed
-at London in 1634.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>33. <b>Reusner</b>, Nicolas. <span class='sc'>Nicolai Revsneri Leorini</span> | IC. Comitis
-Palat. Cæs. | <span class='fss'>SYMBOLORVM</span> | <span class='sc'>Imperatorior</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span> | Classis Prima. | <i><span class='sc'>Qva symbola
-continentvr</span></i> | <i>Impp. ac Cæsarum Romanorum Italico-</i>|<i>rum, à
-C. Iulio Cæsare, usque ad</i> | <i>Constantinum Magnum.</i> | <span class='fss'>OPVS PHILOLOGICVM
-ET</span> | Politicum, veréque Regium ac Impera-|torium: omnibus omnium
-ordinum, &amp; cum | primis civilis sapientiæ studiosis lectu | futurum utile;
-ac jucundum. | <span class='fss'><i>QVINTA EDITIO.</i></span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 137: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 173 + [37] + 209 + [39] + 198 + [34]:
-pp. 11 beg. <i>Quod exemplo</i> and <i>honestam
-rem</i> and <i>Nam &amp; secundum</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–8) preface to Maximilian grand duke
-of Austria, dated 1 Oct. 1587: (9–11)
-poems on the work: 1–173 the Classis
-Prima: (1–23) indexes: (24) a title:—<span class='sc'>Nicolai
-Re</span>u<span class='sc'>sneri Leorini</span> | <i>Silesii</i>, |
-<span class='fss'>SYMBOLORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>IMPERATORIOR</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span> |
-Classis Secunda. | <i><span class='sc'>Qva continentvr symbola</span></i>
-| <i>Impp. Cæsarúmque Romanorum-Græco-</i>|<i>rum,
-à Fl. Constantino Magno,
-usque</i> | <i>ad Carolum Magnum, pri-</i>|<i>mum
-Cæsarem Germanicum.</i> | <span class='fss'>OP</span>u<span class='fss'>S A</span>u<span class='fss'>RE</span>u<span class='fss'>M
-ET VERE</span> | Politicum, ac Regium. | [<i>device</i>,
-then impr. 137]: (26–33) preface to
-Ernest grand duke of Austria, dated
-7 Oct. 1587: (33–36) poems on the work:
-1–209, the Classis secunda: (1–24) indexes:
-(26) a title:—<span class='sc'>Nicolai Re</span>u<span class='sc'>sneri
-Leorini</span> | IC. Comitis Palat. Cæs. |
-<span class='fss'>SYMBOLORVM</span> | <span class='sc'>Imperatorior</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span> |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>Classis Tertia. | <i><span class='sc'>Qva symbola continentvr</span></i>
-| <i>Impp. Cæsarúmque Romanorum-Ger-</i>|<i>manicorum:
-à Carolo Magno,
-pri-</i>|<i>mo Cæs. Germanico, usque ad</i> | <i>Ferdinandum
-II. Cæs.</i> | <i>Austriacum</i> | <span class='fss'>OP</span>u<span class='fss'>S
-J</span>u<span class='fss'>C</span>u<span class='fss'>NDISSIMÆ</span> | Et utilissimæ lectionis. |
-[<i>device</i>: then impr. 137]: (28–32) preface
-to Matthias grand duke of Austria, dated
-15 Oct. 1587: (33–39) poems on the work:
-1–224 (224 misprinted 198), the Classis
-Tertia: (1–28) indexes: (29–34) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1638 R. This is a curious example of three parts of a volume being entirely
-independent of each other, there being no general titlepage, but yet being indissolubly
-welded together by the signatures, so that no part could be issued separately. The
-first edition seems to have been issued in 1587, the 4th at London in 1619. The plan
-of the work is to assign a motto to every emperor, and then to discuss the motto and
-character of the person together: so that in effect the book is largely a discussion of
-proverbs of the nature of Erasmus’s <cite>Adagia</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>34. <b>Salvianus</b>, S. <span class='fss'>SANCTI</span> | <span class='fss'>SALVIANI</span> | <span class='fss'>MASSILIENSIS</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PRESBYTERI</i>,</span>
-| <span class='fss'>DE</span> | <span class='fss'>GVBERNATIONE</span> | Dei, &amp; de justo præsentiq; | ejus judicio ad
-<i>S. Salonium</i> | Episcopum, <i>Lib.</i> VIII. | <i>Eiusdem Epistolarum Lib. I.</i> |
-<span class='fss'>TIMOTHEI NOMINE AD</span> | <i>Ecclesiam Catholic.</i> Lib. IV. | Cum duplici
-indice. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 129 <i>b</i>: 1633: 12mo: pp. [16] +
-512: p. 11 beg. <i>consulari</i>, 401 <i>tamen quæ</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title
-within line, double at top and bottom:
-(5–6) Extract from Joh. Trithemius:
-(7–13) “Index rerum et verborum ...”:
-(14–15) “Index locorum Scripturæ ...”:
-1–297, De gubernatione Dei: 298–324,
-Epistolæ: 325–488, Ad ecclesiam catholicam:
-489–512, “Annotationes aliquot
-... autore Ioanne Alexandro Brassicano”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1629 S, of which this is an almost exact reprint in larger type.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>35. <b>Sclater</b>, William. [<i>line</i>] | Vtriusque Epistolæ | <span class='fss'>AD CORINTHIOS</span>
-| <span class='fss'>EXPLICATIO</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ANALYTICA</i>.</span> | <span class='sc'>Vnà</span> | <span class='fss'>CVM SCHOLIIS</span>: | Authore <i>Gul.
-Sclatero</i> SS. Theol. Doctore, | Nunc tandem à Filio suo <i>Coll. Regalis</i> |
-in <i>Academia Cantabr.</i> Socio | in lucem edita. | [<i>line, motto, line, motto,
-woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-260: p. 11 beg. <i>testimonio</i>, 201 <i>operam
-nostram</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a line: (2–7) Epistola
-dedicatoria to dr. Edw. Kellett and mr.
-George Goade, signed “Gulielmus
-Sclater”: (9–10) “Lectori ...”: (11)
-“Sphalmata ...”: 1–2, title repeated,
-see below: 3–154, the explanation of
-1 Cor.: 155–260, do. of 2 Cor.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 228, but this author is not to be confused, as Wood
-points out, with William Slatyer the writer of <cite>Palæ-Albion</cite>. The dedication gives
-some autobiographical notes about the editor, whose tutor at Cambridge was mr.
-Goade. Strictly, it appears that there should be two titles as above (to be distinguished
-by the first title having <span class='fss'><i>ANALYTICA.</i></span> and <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἂρτιος</span>, the second <span class='fss'><i>ANALYTICA</i>;</span> and
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἄρτιος</span>): the second was printed as pp. 1–2, when no dedication or preface was
-intended; and when the usual prefatory matter with the first title was printed, no
-doubt the second would be generally removed by the binder.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>36. <b>Sermonetta</b>, cardinal, i.e. Enrico Gaetani. <span class='fss'>INSTRVCTIONS</span> | <span class='fss'>FOR
-YOVNG</span> | <span class='sc'>Gentlemen;</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | The instructions of | <i>Cardinall Sermonetta</i>,
-to | his Cousen <span class='sc'>Petro</span> | <span class='sc'>Caetano</span>, | <span class='fss'>AT</span> | <span class='fss'><i>HIS FIRST GOING</i></span> | into
-Flanders to the Duke | of <i>Parma</i>, to serue | <span class='sc'>Philip</span>, King | <i>of Spaine</i>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>Impr. 135: 1633: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 122 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Keepe letters</i>,
-101 <i>dissimulatiõ</i>: Great Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line
-double except at bottom: (3–7) “The
-Printer to the Reader”, with postscript:
-1–122, the work: (1) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The sheets of this were reissued with a new titlepage at Oxford in 1644, and republished
-with other treatises in 1772, and perhaps oftener. The head-line throughout
-is “Instructions for young Noblemen”: every page has double lines on the upper and
-outer margins.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>37. <b>Smith</b>, Samuel. Aditus ad Logicam.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Wood in his <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss (ii. 283) mentions an edition of this year, which
-would be the 7th: see 1617 S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>38. <b>T[ipping]</b>, W[illiam]. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVRSE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>OF</span></i> | <span class='fss'>ETERNITIE</span> |
-Collected and Composed for | <i>the Common good</i>, | [<i>line</i>] | By W. T. |
-[<i>line</i>, then <i>device</i>.] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 134: 1633: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-71 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>and everlasting</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title:
-(5–7) “To the Christian Reader”, signed
-“VV. T.”: (8) “The Contents ...”:
-1–71, the work, in two books: 71, a
-prayer, and errata “in some copies”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 244. There was another (anonymous) edition Lond.
-1646: the author was known after this book was issued as “Eternity Tipping”.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>39. <b>Tozer</b>, Henry. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'>AMENDMENT</span> | Delivered in
-a Sermon on New-|yeares day 1631. in S<sup>t</sup> <i>Martines</i> | Church in <i>Oxford</i>,
-and | <i>now published</i>: | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>H. Tozer</span> M<sup>r</sup> of Arts and Fellow of |
-<i>Exceter</i> Colledge in <i>Oxford</i>. | [<i>line</i>, two <i>mottos</i>, <i>woodcuts</i>.] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 85 <i>a</i>: 1633: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 80 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>And these</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title: (3–11) Epistle dedicatory to sir
-Walter Pye, kt.: 1–80, the sermon, on
-2 Cor. v. 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 274. Sir Walter Pye jun. had been Tozer’s pupil when
-at Exeter college.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1634.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>A[llen?]</b>, J[ohn]. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>YOVNGER</span> | <span class='fss'>BROTHER HIS</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIE,</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>A FATHERS FREE POWER</span></i> | disputed, for the disposition of his
-Lands, | or other his Fortunes to his Sonne, Sonnes, | <i>or any one of
-them: as right Reason, the</i> | <i>Lawes of God and Nature, the Civill</i>, |
-<i>Canon, and Municipall Laws</i> | <i>of this Kingdome doe</i> | <i>command</i>. | [<i>motto</i>,
-then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 126: 1634 [on title, 1624!]:
-sm. 4to: pp. [10] + 56 + [2]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>verse, with all</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) The Epistle to
-the Reader, signed “J. A.”: (8–10) “The
-principall contents”: 1–56, the work:
-(1) “Mantissa”, a quotation from Salvianus,
-about anonymity: (2) a colophon,
-consisting of a motto, large device of the
-Arms of the University, and impr. 73 <i>b</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a rare book, arguing against exclusive privileges of primogeniture, and for
-the right and in some cases duty of parents to disinherit the eldest son. Other editions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>were issued at Oxford in 1641 and 1671, but I do not find information about John
-Allen, nor the ground for ascribing the book to one of that name. On the page preceding
-the colophon is this figure:—</p>
-<div class='c020'>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>*</td>
- <td class='c014'>I</td>
- <td class='c014'>*</td>
- <td class='c014'>M</td>
- <td class='c021'>*</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>*</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c014'>F</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c021'>*</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>*</td>
- <td class='c014'>A</td>
- <td class='c014'>*</td>
- <td class='c014'>M</td>
- <td class='c021'>*</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>There is an account of the book
-in Oldys’s <cite>British Librarian</cite> (1737), p. 210.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Barclay</b>, John. <span class='fss'>EVPHORMIONIS</span> | <span class='fss'>LVSININI</span>, | <i>Sive</i>, | <span class='fss'>IOANNIS</span> |
-<span class='fss'>BARCLAII</span> | <i>Partes quinq;</i>. | Satyricon bipartitum. L. 1 &amp; 2. | Apologia
-pro se. L. 3 | Icon Animo<sub>r</sub>um. L. 4. | Veritatis Lachrymæ. L. 5. | <i>Cum
-Clavi præfixa.</i> | [<i>line.</i>] | <i>Accessit</i> | Conspiratio Anglicana. | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 143: 1634: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[10] + 782 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>tibus allatus</i>,
-501 <i>Illis autem</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication
-by “Euphormio” to James i: (6–10)
-“Clavis, nomina ignota ... exponens”:
-1–156, part 1, as above: 157–310, part 2,
-dedicated to lord Salisbury: 311–357,
-part 3, dedicated to Charles Emmanuel I
-duke of Savoy, dated London, 1 Sept.
-1610: 358–553, part 4, dedicated to
-Louis xiii: 554–767, part 5, “Alitophili
-Veritatis Lachrymæ, sive Euphormionis
-Lusinini Continuatio”, dedicated to
-Henry of Bourbon the Dauphin: 769–782,
-“Series patefacti divinitus parricidii, ...
-in ... Regem regnumque Britanniæ cogitati ...
-Nonis ixbribus <span class='fss'>MDCV.</span> Illo ipso
-Novembri scripta, nunc demum edita,”
-the head-line is “Conspiratio Anglicana”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For John Barclay (<i>d.</i> 1621) see the Dict. of National Biography, and for the bibliography
-of this work Jules Dukas’s book. Part 1 was first issued in 1603, part 2 in 1607,
-part 3 in 1611, part 4 in 1614, part 5 in 1625. The author is satirical on Jesuits and
-Puritans alike, as well as on individuals.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. ——. <span class='fss'>IOANNIS</span> | <span class='fss'>BARCLAII</span> | <span class='fss'>ARGENIS.</span> | <i>Editio Novissima.</i> | <span class='fss'>CVM
-CLAVE, HOC</span> | est: nominum propriorum eluci-|tione hactenus nondum |
-edita. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 144: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [30] +
-705 + [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>sæva consilia</i>, 601
-<i>sedente, regiam</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–8) Epistola
-dedicatoria to Louis xiii, dated Rome
-1 July 1621: (9) a sentence: (10–29)
-“Discursus de autore Scripti, &amp; judicium
-de nominibus Argenidæis”, head line
-“Discursus in Argenidem”: 1–676, the
-work in five books: 677–705, “Discursus ...
-[headline “Clavis”] in Argenidem ...”:
-(1–2) “Tabula nominum
-fictorum ...”: (3–9) “Index ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See last item. The Argenis, which like the Satyricon is a political satire, was
-written and first published in 1621. The first discursus must have been rather out of
-date in this edition, for it suggests that the satire was written by William Barclay,
-father of the author. Argenis is a female character in the book, apparently representing
-the hope of the house of Valois.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Blaxton</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH</span> | <span class='fss'>VSVRER;</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>VSVRY CONDEMNED,</span>
-| <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | The most learned and famous Di-|uines of the Church of
-<i>England</i>, and Dedi-|cated to all his Maiesties Subiects, for | the stay of
-further increase | of the same. | [<i>line</i>] | Collected | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Blaxton</span>,
-Preacher of | God’s Word at <i>Osmington</i>, in <i>Dorcet-shire</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>Impr. 148: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [20] +
-84: p. 11 beg. <i>Chap.</i> 3. <i>The Testimony</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (2) “The
-Illustration” a poem on the frontispiece:
-(3) “The English Vsurer”, the frontispiece,
-a picture with title and motto: (7)
-title: (9–12) “To the Reader”: (13)
-“A Table of the Contents”: (14) a list
-of authorities: (15–17) complimentary
-English poems by Josua Sylvester, Francis
-Quarles and (in Latin) John Garbrand of
-Oxford: (18–19) “To the Vsurer”:
-1–82, the work: 83–84, poem by George
-Withers.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This book was printed in London by John Norton jun. (1633–39) for Francis Bowman
-in Oxford, and does not appear to have been entered in the Stationers’ Hall
-Register. The frontispiece contains a woodcut representing a Usurer seated at his
-table, a small fiend behind his head, and on a label “I say I will haue all | both Vse
-&amp; principall.” On the reader’s right are two pigs, one alive, one dead, with suitable
-labels. The size of the woodcut is 4<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 5¼ in. See next entry.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. ——. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH</span> | <span class='fss'><i>USURER</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR,</span> | <span class='fss'>USURY CONDEMNED,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> |
-The most Learned, and famous | Divines of the Church of <i>England</i>,
-and | Dedicated to all his <i>Ma</i>j<i>esties</i> Subiects, | for the stay of further
-increase | <i>of the same</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Collected | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Blaxton</span>, Preacher
-of | Gods Word at <i>Osmington</i>, in <i>Dorcetshire</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>The second Impression,
-Corrected by the Authour</i> | [<i>line</i>, then the same motto as before,
-but no line following.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 148: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-80: p. 11 beg. <i>vaine, if it</i>; Pica Roman.
-Contents (see above):—p. (2) frontispiece:
-(3) “The Illustration”: (5) title:
-(7–10) “To the Reader”: (11) Table:
-(12) authorities: (13–14) three poems, as
-above: (15–16) “To the usurer”: 1–78,
-the work: 79–80, Withers’ poem.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See last entry.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Browne</b>, Thomas. [<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>COPIE OF THE</span> | Sermon
-preached before the | <i>Vniversitie at S. Maries in</i> | <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, | <i>on Tuesday
-the</i> | XXIV. of Decem. 1633. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Tho. Browne</span>, <i>One of the</i>
-Students <i>of Christ-Church</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 146: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 53 + [3]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Edward the Sixt</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title: 3–53,
-the sermon, on Ps. cxxx. 4: 53, impr.
-85 <i>d</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 1003. The Bidding Prayer, in an informal
-style, is intercalated at pp. 9–14, between the introductory part and the body of the
-sermon. See 1633 B: the British Museum “1633” copy is absolutely identical with
-the above issue except that instead of Impr. 146 with the date in Roman numerals,
-it has Impr. 82 <i>b</i> and “Anno 1634”, the woodcut having been slightly shifted downwards
-in this issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Butler</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH</span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMAR,</span> | <span class='sc'>Or</span> | The Institution
-of Letters, Syl<small>/</small>|lables, and Wꝏrds in the En=|glish tung. |
-<i>Wher’unto is annexed</i> | An Index of wꝏrds Lik‘ and Unlik‘ | [<i>line</i>] |
-<i>By</i> | <span class='sc'>Charls B</span>u<span class='fss'>TLER</span>, Magd. <i>Master of Arts</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 125: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-63 + [29]: p. 11 beg. <i>larg‘, sarg‘</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-double lines: (3–4) dedication to prince
-Charles: (5–11) “To the Reader”, dated
-“Wotton Sept. 1. An. D. 1633. C. B. M.”:
-(12) “Ad Authorem” a Latin poem by
-S. W.: 1–63, the grammar: (2–29) the
-Index: (29) The Printer to the Reader.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 210, and 1633 B. The body of the work is
-a reissue of the sheets of the 1633 edition, but the title is reset, and the prefatory matter
-enlarged.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. ——. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <i>Feminin‘ Monarchi‘</i>, | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>THE HISTORI</span> | <span class='fss'>OF</span>
-B<span class='ligature'>EE</span>‘S | <span class='fss'>SHEWING</span> | <i>Their admirable Natur‘, and Propertis;</i> | <i>Their
-Generation and Colonis;</i> | <i>Their Government, Loyalti, Art, Industri;</i> |
-<i>Enimi‘s, VVars, Magnanimiti, &amp;c.</i> | <span class='sc'>Together</span> | With the right Ordering
-of them from tim‘ to tim‘: | and the sw<span class='ligature'>ee</span>t Profit arising ther‘of. |
-[<i>line</i>] | <i>Written out of Experienc‘</i> | By | <span class='sc'>Charls Butler</span>, <i>Magd.</i> | [<i>line</i>,
-then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 126: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-182: p. 11 beg. <i>her, animamque</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) engraving
-of a hive, with verses: (3–4)
-dedication to the queen: (5–8) The preface,
-dated “Wotton. Mai 11. 1623”:
-(8) The Printer to the leader, referring to
-Butler’s English Grammar for the phonetic
-spelling used: (9–11) commendatory
-verses by George Wither (Latin and English),
-and others: (12–16) The contents
-of the book: 1–182, the work in 10
-chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 209, and 1609 B, of which this is an enlarged
-edition: the preface is that of the 1623 edition. The peculiar spelling and type are
-part of Butler’s system as elaborated in his English Grammar (see 1633 B). There are
-a few woodcuts, and music at pp. 78–81.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Cosin</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'><span class='under'>ECCLESIÆ ANGLICANAE</span></span> | <span class='fss'>POLITEIA IN TABVLAS
-DIGESTA.</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>AVTHORE <i>RICHARDO COSIN</i> LEGVM</span></span> | Doctore, olim Decano
-<span class='vl'>C</span>uriæ de <span class='sc'>Arcvbvs</span>, &amp; | <span class='under'><i>Cancellario, seu Vicario Generali Reverendiss.</i></span> | Patris
-<span class='fss'>IOANNIS</span> Archiepiscopi | <span class='fss'><span class='under'><i>CANTVARIENSIS</i></span></span>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73: 1634: (twos) obl. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[64], signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup>, (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>O</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>TAB. I. B</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-(&nbsp;)1<sup>r</sup>, title: (&nbsp;)2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, Epistola
-dedicatoria to king James by “Tho.
-Crompton”: (&nbsp;)1<sup>r</sup> “Ad Lectorum Monitorium”:
-(&nbsp;)1<sup>r</sup>-1<sup>v</sup> “Capita tabularum”:
-(&nbsp;)2, not seen: <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>O</span>2<sup>r</sup>, the tabulae.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the editor (<i>d.</i> 1608) see Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 249. The author,
-a lawyer educated at Cambridge, died in 1597. The first edition, of which this is
-a reprint slightly different in arrangement, was published at London in 1604, fol.: the
-3rd at the Hague in 1661: the 4th at Oxford in 1684, fol. These tables exhibit the
-whole status and administration of the Church of England in a synoptic form. The
-words underlined in the above title are in red ink, as well as <i>Oxoniæ</i>, and <i>anno salutis
-M.DC.XXIV.</i> in the imprint. The book is peculiar in form. The 1604 and 1684
-editions may be called ordinary folios in shape: this one is made up of folio sheets
-(each containing two folio leaves) folded once and bound oblong, the intention being
-that the binder should cut through the line of folding at foot and bind the book as if
-of quarto size, each oblong leaf thus bound being again awkwardly folded once so as
-to lie within an ordinary quarto binding. In the present edition the original 16 tables
-are arranged to form 28, and are printed on one side of the leaf only.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Downinge</b>, Calybute. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>DISCOVRSE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>STATE
-ECCLESIA-</span>|<span class='fss'>STICALL OF THIS</span> | <i>Kingdome in relation to the Civill.</i> | <i>Considered
-under three</i> <span class='sc'>Concl</span>u<span class='fss'>SIONS</span>. | With a <span class='sc'>Digre<i>ss</i>ion</span> discussing | <i>some
-ordinary Exceptions concer-</i>|ning Ecclesiasticall Officers. | <i>By</i> C. D. | <i>The
-second Edition, revised and enlarged.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>Impr. 147: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-112: p. 11 beg. <i>into factions</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
-lines: (3) dedication to lord Salisbury,
-signed “Calybute Downinge”: 1–112,
-the work, the digression occupying pp.
-31–44: 112, “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 107, and 1633 D.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Du Moulin</b>, Pierre, <i>d.</i> 1658.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See <i>Smith</i>, Richard, below.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Fitz-Geffry</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>THE BLESSED</span> | <span class='fss'>BIRTH-DAY</span> | <span class='fss'>CELEBRATED</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>IN</span></i> | Some Pious Meditations, on the | <span class='sc'>Angels Anthem</span>. | <i>Luke</i> 2. 14. |
-<span class='fss'>ALSO HOLY RAPTVRES</span> | In contemplating of the most obserue-|able
-Adjuncts about our Saviours | <span class='sc'>Nativitie</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Charles Fitz-Geffry</span>.
-| [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 84 <i>b</i>: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 55
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>For such a</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4),
-35–6, Complimentary poems by Henry
-Beesley: 1–34, the Blessed Birthday:
-37–55, the Raptures.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 607, and 1636 F. Grosart’s edition of
-Fitz-Geffrey’s poems reprints the 2nd edition (1636) with the passages different from
-it which occur in this 1st edition, and mentions a faulty 3rd edition of 1654.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Lucian.</b> <span class='fss'>CERTAINE SELECT</span> | <span class='fss'>DIALOGVES</span> | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>LVCIAN:</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>TOGETHER WJTH</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>HIS TRVE HISTORIE</span></i>, | <i>Translated from the Greeke into
-English</i> | [<i>line</i>] | By M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Francis Hicks</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | Whereunto is added
-the life of Lu<span class='fss'>CIAN</span> | gathered out of his owne Writings, with briefe |
-Notes and Illustrations upon each Dia-|logue and Booke, by <i>T. H.</i> M<sup>r</sup>
-of Arts of | <i>Christ-Church</i> in <i>Oxford</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-196 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Menippus. Thus</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within double lines: (3–4) dedication to
-dr. Brian Duppa signed “Th. Hickes”:
-(5–6) “To the honest and judicious
-reader” by ‘T. H.’: (7) Lucian’s epigram
-on his own book, with English translation
-by ‘T. H.’: (9–15) Life of Lucian: 1–196,
-the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 491, 584. Francis Hickes died in 163<span class='fraction'>0<br /><span class='ov'>1</span></span>, and
-the Dialogues are edited by his son. They are Lucian’s <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Περὶ τοῦ Ἐνυπνίου ἤτοι βίος
-Λουκιανοῦ, Ἰκαρομένιππος, Μένιππος, Ὄνειρος, Κατάπλους, Χάρων, Ἀληθὴς Ἱστορία, Τίμων,
-Συμπόσιον</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Mason</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>AVTHORITY</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE CHVRCH</span> | in
-making Canons and | Constitutions concerning | <i>things indifferent</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>AND</span> | <span class='fss'>THE OBEDIENCE</span> | <span class='fss'>THERETO REQVIRED</span>; | with particular application |
-to the present estate of the | <i>Church of England</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Fran. Mason</span>
-Batchelor of Diuinity, | and sometime fellow of <i>Merton</i> | Colledge in
-<i>Oxford</i>. | The second edition Revised. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 85 <i>c</i>: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 72
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>remooued: for</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-Epistle dedicatory to Richard archbp. of
-Canterbury, from the first edition: 1–72,
-the work, on 1 Cor. xiv. 40.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 306. The first edition was issued at London
-in 1607, being then enlarged from a sermon at Norwich delivered in 1605. The present
-edition was reprinted in 1705.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>15. Mercurius Davidicus. “Mercurius Davidicus, or a patterne
-of Loyall Devotion” bears the date of 1634, but is clearly of 1643.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Oxford</b>, University. [<i>device</i>] | <span class='fss'>A PROCLAMATION</span>, | ¶ For the
-well ordering of the Market in the Cittie of <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, and for the | redresse
-of Abuses, in Weights and Measures, within the Precincts | of the
-<span class='sc'>Vniversitie</span> of <span class='fss'><i>OXFORD</i></span>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. (as colophon) 85<i>e</i>: 1634: la. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [6]: p. (3) beg. <i>Said Victualls for</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—pp.
-(1, 3, 5), the proclamation.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. This is a proclamation by the Chancellor of the University (archbp. Laud),
-see O. Ogle’s History of the Oxford Market in the Oxford Historical Society’s <cite>Collectanea</cite>,
-vol. 2. The three leaves are separate, and printed on one side only.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. ——. <span class='fss'>CORPVS</span> | <span class='fss'>STATUTORUM</span> | <span class='fss'>VNIVERSITATIS</span> | <span class='fss'>OXON.</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PANDECTES CONSTITVTIONVM</span> | <span class='fss'>ACADEMICARVM, E LIBRIS PVBLICIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ET
-REGESTIS VNIVERSITATIS</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSARCINATVS.</span> | [two <i>lines</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 60<i>a</i>: 1634: fol: pp. [264],
-signn. (&nbsp;), §, ¶, ¶¶, ¶¶¶, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>Z</span>, <span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>K</span>k, a-z,
-aa-ee<sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. § 4. <i>De officio</i>, b1<sup>r</sup>
-<i>eisdem terminis</i>: Double (Small) Pica
-Roman. Contents:—sign. (&nbsp;)2<sup>r</sup>, title:
-§1<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>r</sup> “Præfatio ad Lectorem”: §2<sup>v</sup>
-“Admonitio ad Lectorem de veteri Calendario
-omisso”: §2<sup>v</sup>, “Errata ...”:
-¶1<sup>r</sup>-¶¶¶2<sup>v</sup>, “Elenchus Titulorum ...”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>-p1<sup>v</sup>, the Corpus, in 21 Tituli: p2<sup>r</sup>-aa2<sup>v</sup>,
-“Appendix Statutorum ...”: bb1<sup>r</sup>-ee2<sup>v</sup>,
-“Statuta Aularia”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is the early form of the Laudian Statutes. Its history may be read in Wood’s
-History of the University or in Griffith’s and Shadwell’s edition of the later (1636) form,
-published in 1888. Briefly, certain Delegates, especially dr. Zouch and Bryan Twyne
-(who wrote the preface), completed their work, and the University sent up the Corpus
-to the Chancellor, archbp. Laud. in Aug. 1633. He altered it and had it printed, and
-in July 1634 declared that the Corpus thus printed (the present work) should be the
-statutes under which the University should be governed for a year, Mich. 1634–Mich.
-1635. Finally in June 1636 the full and authentic code was formally approved, and
-additions from it were entered in the copies of the 1634 edition, the code not being
-printed as a whole or precisely until 1888. In 1768 a new edition was printed with
-certain changes and additions, and the 1768 edition is still in progress, the successive
-statutes being still connected by paging with that issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A large part of the edition is on parchment, being presented in that form to the King,
-the chancellor of the University, each College, the Halls, and the Proctors. Blank
-spaces are left in many places for additions. Large paper copies are also found. For
-Synopsises of the statutes, see 1635 O, 1638 O.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Pinke</b>, William. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>TRYALL</span> | of a Christians syncere |
-<i>loue vnto Christ</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | By M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>William Pinke</span>, Master | of Arts late
-Fellow of Mag-|<i>dalen Colledge in</i> | <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>] | The
-second Edition. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 97<i>a</i>: 1634: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 51 + [1] + 60 + 56 + 66 [“2” misprinted
-“46”!]: pp. 11 beg. <i>whosoever
-he</i>, and <i>separated from</i>, and <i>head and
-eares</i>, and <i>those reasons I</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–11) Epistle
-dedicatory to lord George Digby, signed
-“William Lyford”, the editor, “Shirburn.
-Iul. 7. 1630.”: (12–16) “To the Reader”:
-1–51, The discourse part 1, on 1 Cor. xvi.
-22: (1), 1–60, part 2 on Eph. vi. 24 (beg.
-“Not to mispend”): 1–56, part 3 on the
-same text (beg. “I will not discourage”):
-1–66, part 4, on Luke xiv. 26.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 475, and 1630 P, where
-a reference to this, the 2nd ed., is accidentally omitted. This issue has four sermons and
-a slightly altered title.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>19. <b>Puteanus</b>, Erycius. <span class='sc'>ErycI</span> | Pu<span class='fss'>TEANI</span> | <span class='fss'>COMVS,</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PHAGESIPOSIA</span> | <span class='fss'>CIMMERIA.</span> | <span class='fss'>SOMNIVM.</span> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 121<i>a</i>: 1634: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[14] + 190: p. 11 beg. <i>accepto signo</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-double lines: (3–9) Præfatio, to Christophorus
-Ettenius: (11–14) Latin poem by
-Daniel Heinsius on the book: 1–185, the
-work: 186–190, Latin elegy by Nic. Burgundus
-addressed to Puteanus.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A satire on the gluttony and other luxurious vices of the age, in the guise of a dream
-of what takes place among the utopian Cimmerii. The first edition was issued at
-Louvain in 1611: this may be the second in Latin. Puteanus died in 1646, having
-lived during most of his life at Louvain.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. ——. <span class='sc'>ErycI P</span>u<span class='fss'>TEANI</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>INSVBRICÆ</span> | libri VI. |
-Qui <span class='sc'>Irr</span>u<span class='sc'>ptiones Barba-</span>|<span class='fss'>ROR</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span> in <span class='sc'>Italiam</span> continent: | <i>Rerum ab
-Origine gentis ad O-</i>|<i>thonem M.</i> <span class='sc'>Epitome</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1634: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [28]
-+ 192 + [32]: p 11 beg. <i>dinis venirent</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within double lines: (3) dedication to
-Philip prince of Orange: (4–19) preface
-to the same, dated “Lovanii, in Arce,
-viii Kal. Septem. <span class='fss'>M.DC.XIV</span>”: (20–23)
-“Animaduersio”, including some errata:
-(24–27) complimentary pieces: (28)
-a quotation: 1–143, the work, consisting
-of a “Præfatiuncula” and 6 books: 144,
-explanation introducing the following
-piece: 145–150, “Irruptio Cimbrorum in
-Italiam, descripta a Floro lib. iii.”: 151,
-note introducing the following piece:
-152–170, “Additiuncula ex And. Alciati
-De formula R. Imperii libello”: 171–2,
-dedication of the Chronology to Floritius:
-173–192, “Chronologia Insubrica”:
-(1–31) “Index rerum”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This work describes the irruptions of the Barbarians into Italy till the year 973: the
-Insubrians lived in the district round Milan. The history seems to have been first
-issued in 1614, but Puteanus was Professor at Milan only from 1601 to 1606.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Ridley</b>, sir Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>VIEW OF</span></span> | <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CIVILE AND</span> |
-<span class='fss'><span class='under'>ECCLESIASTI</span>-</span>|<span class='fss'>CALL LAW</span>: | <span class='under'>And wherein the Practice of them</span> | <i>is streitned,
-and may be releeved</i> | within this Land. | <span class='under'><i>VVritten by</i> S<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Thomas</span> Ridley
-Knight</span>, | and Doctor of the Civile Law. | <span class='under'><i>The second Edition, by</i> I. G.
-<i>M<sup>r</sup> of Arts</i>.</span> | [<i>device.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68<i>c</i>: 1634: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-277 + [27]: p. 11 beg. <i>also mad persons</i>,
-201 <i>wrought by</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines:
-(3–6) “To the Reader”, signed “I. G.”:
-(7–10) Epistle dedicatory to King James,
-signed by the author: (11–12) “To the
-Reader” by the author: 1–277, the work:
-(2–25) “an index of the principall Matters
-and Words ...”: (25) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 205, for the editor and book. The first edition was
-issued at London in 1607: the present one was edited by dr. John Gregory, who has
-added many notes and the index, the author having died in 162<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span> or 16<span class='fraction'>29<br /><span class='ov'>30</span></span>. The title
-in the copies seen (one on large paper given by the author) has been sewn or pasted in
-separately, an original titlepage having been torn out. Perhaps this was in order to
-secure proper printing in red ink, for the words underlined in the title above are in red
-ink, as are also in the imprint the words <i>Oxford, University: 1634.</i>, and <i>Cum Privilegio</i>.
-The next editions were issued at Oxford in 1662 and 1675 or 1676. This is
-the first Oxford book in which I have noticed Anglo-Saxon type (Pica, pp. 184, 193,
-in the notes).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Saltonstall</b>, Wye. <span class='fss'>CLAVIS</span> | <span class='fss'>AD PORTAM,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A KEY FITTED</span> |
-to open the Gate of | Tongues. | <span class='fss'>WHEREIN YOV MAY</span> | readily finde the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>Latine and French for | any English word necessary for | all young
-Schollers. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1634: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[96], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>8</sup>: sign <span class='fss'>B</span>2<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>annals</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>r</sup>-5<sup>r</sup>, dedication to the
-schoolmasters of Great Britain, signed
-“Wye Saltonstall”: <span class='fss'>A</span>6<sup>r</sup>-6<sup>v</sup>, “Discipulis
-... de usu huius Clavis ... præfatiuncula”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>7<sup>r</sup>-8<sup>v</sup>, five Latin and one English
-poem about the work, by Saltonstall:
-<span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>7<sup>v</sup>, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 676. This is an alphabetical index of
-English words and phrases occurring in the 1058 sections found in Comenius’s <cite>Gate of
-Tongues</cite>, as edited for the second time in Latin, English and French, by John
-Anchoran in 1633 (London). Earlier editions of Comenius’s celebrated work were
-published at Leutschau in 1631 (first edition), then at Leipzig (2nd edition) in 1632
-(both as <cite>Janua linguarum</cite>), and (as <cite>Porta linguarum trilinguis</cite>) Anchoran’s editions,
-Lond. 1631, and 1632: the 3rd and 4th London Anchoran editions 1637 and 1639 or
-1640 reprint Saltonstall’s index, but it is noticeable that Saltonstall’s five short Latin
-introductory poems contain at least 18 false quantities, and that he was a commoner
-of Queen’s college without ever matriculating or taking his degree. See 1633 G.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Smiglecius</b>, Martinus. <span class='fss'>LOGICA</span> | <span class='fss'>MARTINI</span> | <span class='fss'>SMIGLECII SO-</span>|<span class='fss'>CIETATIS
-IESV,</span> | <span class='fss'>S. THEOLOGIÆ</span> | Doctoris, | <i><span class='fss'>SELECTIS DISPUTATIONI-</span></i>|<i>bus
-&amp; quæstionibus illustrata</i>, | Et in duos Tomos distributa: | <i>In qua</i> |
-<span class='fss'>QVICQVID IN ARISTOTELICO</span> | <span class='fss'>ORGANO VEL COGNITV NECESSARI-</span>|um, vel
-obscuritate perplexum, tam clarè &amp; per-|spicuè, quam solidè ac nervosè |
-pertractatur. | <i>Cum Indice Rerum copioso.</i> | <span class='fss'><i>AD</i></span> | Perillustrem ac Magnificum
-Dominum, | D<sup>m</sup> <span class='sc'>Thomam Zamoyscivm</span>, &amp;c. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 145: 1634: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [16] + 761 + [35]: p. 11 beg. <i>Dico
-igitur</i>, 501 <i>lis, posterior</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–6)
-epistle dedicatory to Thomas Zamoyscius,
-dated “Calissii [Kalisch] ... 15 Augusti
-1616”: (6) an imprimatur dated 24 June
-1616: (7–16) “Index disputationum et
-quæstionum ...”: 1–761, the work in
-two parts (the second part has a bastard
-title, with no imprint, but date only):
-(2–35) “Index rerum præcipuarum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Reissued at Oxford in 1658. The first edition appeared in two volumes at Ingolstadt
-in 1618, the year of the death of the author, who was a Pole by birth. The
-subject is treated in scholastic style by <i>quaestiones</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Smith</b>, rev. Richard, of Barnstaple. <span class='fss'>MVNITION</span> | <span class='fss'>AGAINST</span> |
-<span class='fss'>MANS MISERIE</span> | <span class='fss'>AND</span> | <span class='fss'>MORTALITIE.</span> | A Treatise containing the | most
-effectuall remedies a-|gainst the miserable state of | man in this life,
-selected | out of the chiefest both | Humane and Divine | Authors. |
-<span class='fss'><i>BY</i></span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Smith</span> <i>Prea-</i>|<i>cher of Gods Word in</i> Bar-|staple <i>in</i> Devonshire.
-| [<i>line</i>] | <i>The third Edition.</i> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 142: 1634: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[20] + 194 + [14] + 93 + [3]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>kind<sup>e</sup>. A third</i>, and <i>unto fresh Rivers</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within double lines: (3–14) Epistle dedicatory
-to lady Elizabeth Basset, dated
-“Barstable ... 1609. Januarie 1 ...”,
-signed “Ricard Smyth”: (15–16) “The
-Contents ...”: (17–20) “The sinners
-counsell to his Soule”, a poem: 1–194,
-the work: (3) a title, within double
-lines:—“<span class='fss'>HERACLITVS:</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>MEDITATIONS</span>
-| <i>Vpon the vanitie and mi</i>⸗|<i>serie of
-humane life</i>; | First written in French by |
-that excellent Scholler and | admirable
-divine <i>Peter Du</i> | <i>Moulin</i> Minister of the
-sa-|cred Word in the reformed | Church
-of Paris<i>:</i> | <i>And translated into English</i> |
-<i>by</i> R. S. <i>Gentleman</i> | [two <i>lines</i>]”, impr.
-142: (5–8) Epistle dedicatory by the
-translator to his father “S. F. S.”: (9–14)
-“The author’s Epistle dedicatory to the
-Lady Anne of Rohan, ...”, signed “Peter
-Du Moulin”: 1–93, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>For the first work see 1612 S, of which this is a simple reprint. Twenty-seven
-Richard Smiths took their degree at Oxford between 1550 and 1609, and the author of
-this book has not yet been identified among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The second work, which is necessarily linked to the first by the signatures, though
-not covered by the titlepage, is a reprint of 1609 D. No doubt the reprinter of these
-works thought the two R. S.s identical, but they are in all probability not, the translator
-of Molinaeus being Robert Stafford.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Tozer</b>, Henry. <span class='fss'>CHRISTVS:</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='sc'><i>DICTA &amp; FACTA</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTI</span>: |
-Prout à quatuor Evangelistis | sparsim recitantur. | Collecta &amp; Ordine
-disposita | ab | <span class='sc'>Henrico Tozer</span>, <i>A. M. &amp;</i> | Exoniensis <i>Collegij in
-Academiâ</i> | Oxoniensi <i>Socio</i>.| [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72<i>a</i>: 1634: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 67 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>1. Excommunicationem</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title, within double lines: (3–7) Epistola
-dedicatoria to Charles and Philip sons of
-the earl of Pembroke: 1–67, the work:
-(1) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 274. The matter is arranged in a kind of
-logical order and disposed in divisions and subdivisions. Both the dedicatees matriculated
-at Exeter College in 1632.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>26. <b>Zouche</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> | <span class='fss'>IVRIS ET IVDICII</span> | <span class='fss'>FEVDALIS,
-SE-</span>|cundum Consuetudi-|nes <i>Mediolani</i> &amp; | <i>Normanniæ</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>PRO</i></span> | <span class='fss'>INTRODVCTIONE</span>
-| <span class='fss'>AD STVDIUM</span> | <span class='fss'><i>IVRISPRVDENTI</i>Æ</span> | <i>Anglicanæ</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Autore
-R. Z. I. C. P. R. | <i><span class='fss'>OXONI</span>Æ.</i> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 95<i>a</i>: 1634: eights 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 79 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>bes vel habebis</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) dedication to archbp. Laud: (5–6)
-“Iuventuti academicæ Iurisprudentiæ
-studiosæ”, “Dat. ex Aulâ Alban. Pridie
-Cal. Iunij 1634.”: (7–8) list of divisions
-of the work: 1–79, the work: (1) note of
-a natural continuation of the book, in
-Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 511: the author was principal of St. Alban hall and, as
-the title indicates, Juris Civilis Professor Regius. Wood’s reference to a 1636 8<sup>o</sup>
-edition of this book may be due to a confusion between it and the <cite>Elementa Jurisprudentiae</cite>
-by the same author.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1635.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bancroft</b>, John, bp. of Oxford. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>TO</span> | <span class='fss'>BE ENQVIRED</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF WITHIN THE</span> | Dioces of <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, in the | second <i>Visitation</i> of the
-Right Re-|verend Father in God Iohn | Lord Bishop of <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | <span class='fss'>HELD</span> |
-In the yeare of our <span class='sc'>Lord God</span> 1635. in the | eleauenth yeare of the
-Raigne of our most gra-|cious Soveraigne Lord, <span class='sc'>Charles</span>, by the grace |
-of <span class='sc'>God</span> King of great <i>Brittaine</i>, <i>France</i>, and | <i>Ireland</i>, Defender of the
-Faith &amp;c., | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. 15 <i>Whether
-hath</i>: Pica English. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>, the oath: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>, the charge:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>, directions: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>r</sup>, the articles, in
-three divisions: <span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>v</sup>, directions about
-Recusants, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathanael. <span class='fss'>GEOGRAPHIE</span> | <span class='fss'>DELINEATED FORTH</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IN TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKES.</span> | <span class='fss'>CONTAINING</span> | The Sphericall and Topicall parts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>thereof, | By <span class='sc'>Nathanael Carpenter</span>, Fellow of | Exceter Colledge in
-Oxford. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE SECOND EDITION CORRECTED.</span> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>,
-then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 149: 1635: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 272 + [16] + 286 + [2] + 4 folded
-leaves, see below: pp. 11 beg. <i>Eearth
-&amp; Water</i>, and <i>teration next</i>, 111 2. <i>The
-position</i>, and <i>monstrated in</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5) dedication,
-as in 1625: (6–13) “... Contents of each
-Chapter of the first Booke ...”: (15–16)
-“To my Booke”, a poem: 1–272, the
-first book: (1–2) not seen: (3) a title:—<span class='fss'>GEOGRAPHIE</span>
-| <span class='fss'>THE SECOND</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKE.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CONTAINING</span> | the generall Topicall |
-part thereof, | By <span class='sc'>Nathanael Carpenter</span>,
-Fellow of | Exceter Colledge in
-Oxford. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>, then woodcut,
-and Impr. 149]”: (5–7) dedication, as in
-1625: (9–16) “A table of the ... Contents
-of the second Booke ...”: 1–286,
-the second book: (1–2) not seen. There
-should be four tables as in the 1625
-edition, and there are numerous woodcut
-diagrams in the text.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 422, and 1625 C. The signatures of the two
-parts are in a certain sense independent, but indicate essential connexion.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Chaucer</b>, Geoffrey. <span class='fss'>AMORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>TROILI</span> | <i><span class='fss'>ET</span></i> | <span class='fss'>CRESEIDÆ</span> | Libri
-duo priores | <i>Anglico-Latini</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 95 <i>a</i>: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [28] +
-105 + [8] + 160 [“159”] + [1]: p. 11 beg.
-13. <i>Great rumor</i>, and 15. <i>With that they</i>:
-English Roman italic and Pica English.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within arched
-border: (3–6) dedication to Patricius
-Junius (Patrick Young) the King’s librarian,
-by sir Francis Kinaston: (7–8) not
-seen, probably blank: (9–12) “Candido
-Lectori Franciscus Kinaston ...”, dated
-“Ex Aulâ Albâ Regiâ [Whitehall] xiii
-Calendarum Decembris, ... <span class='fss'>CIↃ D</span>
-cxxxiiii”: (13–28) complimentary Latin
-and English poems: 2–105, the first book,
-Latin on the verso of each leaf, English
-on the recto: (2–7) dedication to John
-Rouse, Bodley’s librarian, by Kinaston:
-1–159 (“21” repeated after “24”), the
-second book.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 38. The Latin translation is in a singular rhythmical
-rhyming metre, essentially decasyllabic iambics, but with an extra unaccented syllable
-at end, and with certain licences in revolving a long syllable into two short. The
-rhymes are <i>ababbcc</i>. The first two lines for example are “Dolorem Troili duplicem
-narrare | Qui Priami Regis Trojæ fuit gnatus.” This appears to be by far the earliest
-translation of any part of Chaucer into another language. Part of a commentary on
-the piece by sir F. Kinaston was printed in 1796. The English part is in black-letter,
-the Latin in italic Roman. One of the complimentary poems is in would-be Chaucerian
-style. The collation of this book is difficult: but probably it is this:—signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>, †,
-*<sup>4</sup>, **<sup>2</sup>, (&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span>-<span class='fss'>Z</span>, <span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>N</span>n<sup>4</sup>: †1-**<sup>2</sup> is matter foisted in, which prevented the true fourth
-leaf of sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> from forming, as it should, the first leaf of the Latin translation (pp. 1–2
-of the 1st book). Accordingly one of two plans was adopted: either the 4th leaf of
-sign. <span class='fss'>A</span> was torn off, and a new 4th leaf inserted where the translation begins (which
-seems to have been usually done, and which gives the collation above, assuming the
-existence at one time of an <span class='fss'>A</span>4): or the torn-off fourth leaf was itself awkwardly
-pasted on to sign. 2**.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Downe</b>, John. <i><span class='fss'>A</span></i> | <span class='fss'>TREATISE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE TRVE</span> | <span class='fss'>NATVRE AND</span> |
-<i><span class='fss'>DEFINITION</span></i> | <i>of justifying faith</i>; | <span class='fss'>TOGETHER WITH A DEFENCE</span> | of the
-same, against the Answere of | <i>N. Baxter</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Downe</span> B. in
-Divinity, and some-|time <i>Fellow of</i> <span class='sc'>Emanvel</span> <i>C. in Cambridge</i>. | [<i>motto</i>,
-with translation.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 126: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-404: p. 11 beg. <i>the Prince of</i>, 301 <i>that it
-was</i>: English Roman. Contents:—(p. 1)
-title: (3–16) “To the Reader”: 1–15,
-the treatise on justifying faith: 17–189,
-“A defence of the former treatise ...
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>against the answer of N. B.”: 191, a
-title:—[two <i>lines</i>] | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FAITH</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>INFANTS,</span> | <span class='fss'>AND HOW THEY ARE</span> |
-Iustified and Saued. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By the late
-Reuerend and Learned Diuine</i> | <i>Master</i>
-Iohn Downe, <i>Bachelour of</i> | <i>Diuinity,
-and sometimes Fellow</i> | <i>of Emanuell Colledge</i>
-| <i>in Cambridge.</i> | [<i>woodcut</i>, then
-impr. 126]: 193–210, the treatise: 211,
-a title:—[<i>line</i>] | 211 | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>NOT CONSENT</span>
-| <span class='fss'>OF FATHERS</span> | <span class='fss'>BVT</span> | <span class='fss'>SCRIPTVRE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE GROVND OF FAITH.</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Written
-by the occasion of a conference had</i> |
-<i>with</i> M. Bayly, <i>by the late Reuerend</i> | <i>and
-Learned Diuine, Master</i> Iohn | Downe,
-<i>Bachelour of Diuinity</i>, | <i>and sometimes
-Fellow of</i> | <i>Emanuell Colledge</i> | <i>in
-Cambridge.</i> | [<i>woodcut</i>, then impr. 126.]:
-213–272, the treatise: 263–290, “Of
-sitting and kneeling at the Communion”:
-291–296, “How S. Paul and S. Iames are
-to bee reconciled in the matter of Iustification”:
-297–309, “... of the Creed
-...”: 310–315, “A short Catechisme”:
-316–320, “Peccatum formaliter &amp; propriè
-non esse infinitum, exercitatio aduersus
-N.”: 321–325, “Of choice of meats and
-Abstinence”: 326–355, “An answer unto
-certaine reasons for Separation”: 356–365,
-“Of vowes and specially that of virginity”:
-366–369, “A letter” of consolation:
-371–376, “The blessed Virgin Mary
-is truly Deipara, the Mother of God”:
-377–404, religious poems and translations
-in verse, including a translation of Muretus’s
-Institution for Children.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 287, where London is probably an error for
-Oxford: and 1633 D. This is a new set of treatises by Downe. The introduction to
-the first piece gives an amusing account of the controversy with Baxter.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Downeham</b>, George. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>CHRISTIANS</span></span> | <span class='fss'>FREEDOME</span>, | Wherein
-is fully expressed the | Doctrine of <span class='under'><span class='sc'>Christian</span> | <span class='sc'>Libertie</span></span>. | <i>By the R<sup>t.</sup>
-Reuerend Father in God</i>, | <span class='sc'><span class='under'>George Downeham</span></span>, | <i>Doctor of Diuinity and</i> |
-<i>L<sup>d</sup>. B<sup>p</sup>. of Derry</i>. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 154: 1635: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 156 + [4] + 80, and one folded leaf:
-pp. 11 begg. <i>of righteousnesse</i>, and <i>In the
-new</i>, 101 <i>euen by</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines:
-(3–7) “To the ... Reader ...”: 1–156,
-the work, in 26 sections: 1–23, 7 additional
-sections: 25–76, “The necessity of
-handling the question concerning Christian
-Libertie”: 76–80, “A Prayer”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author see Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 255: see 1636 D. The words
-underlined in the above title are in red ink, as well as “Oxford,” and “William Webb.”
-in the imprint. A folded leaf should follow the introductory matter containing “The
-Table” of the 26 sections. The signatures show that pp. 1–24, 25–76 in the second
-part are genuine additions, but genuinely part of the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. ——. <span class='fss'>THE <span class='under'>CHRISTIAN</span>S FREEDOME</span> | [&amp;c., precisely as the preceding
-article, except that “<span class='fss'>THE SECOND EDITION</span>” is added as a new line
-after “<i>Derry</i>.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. &amp;c., precisely as the preceding article.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A simple reissue of the sheets of the first edition, room for the additional words on
-the title being found by slightly depressing the woodcuts. Perhaps the folded “table”
-was not issued with the second edition. Some copies have the date 1636.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Fawkner</b>, Antony. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>WIDDOWES</span> | <span class='fss'>PETITION</span>, | Delivered
-in a Sermon before the | Iudges at the Assises held at <i>Northampton</i>, |
-Iuly 25. 1633. by <span class='sc'>Antony</span> | <span class='sc'>Fawkner</span>, Parson of <i>Saltry</i> | <i>All-Saints,
-alias Moygne</i> | in Huntingtonshire. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>Impr. 150: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] +
-28 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>demand</i>, <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πρυτανεῖα</span>:
-English Roman. Contents: p. (1) title:
-(3–5) Epistle dedicatory to sir Lewis Watson,
-dated “Saltry All-Saints ... Iuly
-30. 1633”: 1–28, the Sermon, on Luke
-xviii. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 611. Sir L. Watson was the author’s patron.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Field</b>, dr. Richard. <span class='fss'>OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CHURCH,</span> | <span class='fss'>FIVE BOOKES.</span> | [<i>line</i>] |
-<span class='sc'>By</span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Field, doctor of</span> | <span class='fss'>DIVINITY, AND SOMETIMES</span> | <i>Deane of</i>
-<span class='sc'>Glocester</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'><i>THE THIRD EDITION.</i></span> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1635: (sixes) folio: pp. [16]
-+ 906 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>tation of dangerous</i>,
-701 <i>wrongs of the Court</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—<i>precisely</i> as 1628 F, omitting
-the Errata on p. (15).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1628 F, of which this appears to be a verbatim reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Hakewill</b>, George. <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>APOLOGIE</span> [&amp;c., precisely as 1630 H,
-except in l. 11 of this 3rd edition, <span class='fss'>PER-</span>, not <span class='fss'>PER=</span>, in l. 12 <span class='fss'>PETUALL AND
-UNIVERSALL</span>, in l. 13 <span class='fss'>SIX</span>, not <span class='fss'>FOVRE</span>: in l. 1 of the italic type, <i>preparatives</i>,
-and the line ends with <i>thereunto</i>: in l. 7 <i>testimonie</i>, <i>use</i>, and the line ends
-at <i>which we</i>. After l. 8 (<i>consideration thereof</i>) follows:—] <i>The fifth and
-sixth are spent in answering Objections made since the second impression.</i> |
-[<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>George Hakewill</span> Doctour of | Divinitie and Archdeacon of
-<i>Surrey</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>The third Edition revised, and in sundry passages and
-whole Sections augmented by</i> | <i>the Authour; besides the addition of two
-entire bookes not formerly published.</i> | [<i>motto.</i>] [There is also a London
-title, see below.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68: 1635: (sixes) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[52] + 606 + [10] + 378 + [42]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>dan, and Scaliger</i> and <i>dence doth worke</i>,
-501 <i>of right</i>: English Roman. Contents:—(1–11),
-as 1630 H, except that
-p. (6) is blank: (13–22) “the preface”:
-(23) “An Advertisement to the Reader
-occasioned by this third impression”:
-(24–30) testimonies to the book and
-author: (31–45) “The contents ...”:
-(46–49) about sesterces: (50) extract from
-Boethius, with translation: (51) “An
-index of the tables added ...”: 1–606,
-the work, bks. 1–4: (3–6) controversial
-letters of bp. G(odfrey) G(oodman) and
-dr. Hakewill: (7–8) two encouragements
-to the author: 1–378, the works, bks.
-5–6: (1–24) index to bks. 1–4: (25–30)
-index to bks. 5–6: (31–35) authors
-quoted: (36–42) texts quoted: (42)
-“Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 256, and 1627 H. The engraved title is identical
-with that of 1630 H, with the date altered. Books 5–6 appear in this edition for the
-first time, the former being chiefly directed against bp. Goodman’s <cite>Fall of man</cite> (Lond.
-1616) as reasserted at greater length in about 1630 by the author, whose arguments are
-printed in the course of this book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Laurence</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>TWO</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS·</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FIRST</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED
-AT S</span><sup>t</sup> <span class='fss'><i>MARIES</i></span> | in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span> Iuly 13. 1634. | being Act-Sunday. | <span class='fss'>THE
-SECOND,</span> | <span class='fss'>IN THE CATHEDRALL</span> | <span class='fss'>CHVRCH OF <i>SARVM</i>, AT THE</span> | Visitation of
-the most Reverend | Father in God <span class='sc'>William</span> | Arch-Bishop of <i>Canterbury</i>,
-| <i>May</i> 23. 1634. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Thomas Lavrence</span> D<sup>r</sup> of Divinity, |
-and late Fellow of <i>Allsoules</i> Colledge, | and Chaplaine to his <span class='sc'>Maiesty</span> |
-<i>in</i> <span class='sc'>Ordinary</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Impr. 82: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 40
-+ 34 + [2]: pp. 11 begg. <i>condition of</i>, and
-<i>hast given them</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title, within double lines:
-1–34, the first sermon, on Ex. xx. 21:
-1–40, the second sermon on 1 Cor. i. 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 438. The signatures would suggest that the
-Sermon on 1 Cor. i. 12 was the Act-Sermon, but all copies seem to be bound as
-above, and the prefixing of the Act Sermon may have been an after-thought. There
-is nothing in the sermons themselves to settle the point!</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Legh</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'><span class='under'>SELECTED</span></span> | <span class='fss'><i>AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>CHOICE</span></span> | <span class='fss'>OBSERVATIONS</span> |
-concerning the | <span class='fss'>TWELVE FIRST</span> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>CÆSARS</span></span> | <span class='fss'>EMPEROVRS</span> of | <span class='fss'><i><span class='under'>ROME</span></i>.</span> | [<i>line</i>] |
-<span class='under'>By <span class='sc'>Edward Legh</span></span> Master | of Arts of <i>Magdalen Hall</i> | in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. |
-[<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 154: 1635: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 209 + [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>shew, as</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (9) title:
-(11–24) author’s Epistle dedicatory to his
-father Henry: 1–208, the observations:
-209, “An aduertisement to the Reader”,
-not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 927, where other editions are mentioned, some
-with extended range of subject. The words underlined in the above title are printed in
-red, as well as “Oxford” and “William Webb.” in the imprint. The signatures of
-the prefatory matter are peculiar: as four blank leaves precede the title, these were
-neglected and the leaf following the title bears *2 instead of *6, no others having any
-printed signature.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Montague</b>, bp. Richard. <span class='fss'><span class='under'>APPARATVS</span></span> | <span class='fss'>AD ORIGINES</span> |
-<span class='fss'><span class='under'>ECCLESIASTICAS</span>·</span> | <span class='fss'>COLLECTORE</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'><span class='under'>R. Montacvtio</span>.</span> | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151: 1635: (fours) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[30] + 393 + [11]: p. 11 beg. <i>sponsum est</i>,
-301 <i>vetus Anna</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within border and
-double lines: (3) dedication to the memory
-of James i: (5–29) “Præfatio”: 1–393,
-the work, in 11 Apparatuses: (1) “Errata”,
-a long list: (2–11) “Index”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author, a Cambridge man, though at this time bp. of Chichester (1628–38),
-signs the dedication as “R. M. humillimus Ecclesiæ Cicestrensis Minister”. This
-work discusses pre-Christian antiquities, as preparations (apparatus) to the Life of
-Christ which is the subject of the same author’s <cite>Origines Ecclesiasticæ</cite> (tom. i, 2 parts,
-Lond. 1636, 1640). The underlined words in the above title are printed in red, as
-well as “Oxoniæ,” in the imprint. A copy was presented by the author to Henry
-Spelman on 4 Sept. 1635.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. *†<b>Oxford</b>, University. ... <span class='sc'>Encyclopædia</span></p>
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>{ Seu <span class='fss'>ORBIS LITERA⸗</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c026'><span class='fss'>RVM</span> provt in florentissimâ iam et omnium planè celeberrimâ</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c014'>[<i>device</i>]</td>
- <td class='c026'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'>{ <span class='fss'>ACADEMIA OXONI⸗</span></td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c026'><span class='fss'>ENSI</span> singulis Terminis publicè in Scholis auditoribus proponuntur</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c010'>No imprint, but Oxford (?), 1635 (?): (one) la. 4<sup>o</sup>. Contents:—p. (1) the Encyclopædia.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a fine sheet, engraved by “T. Cecill” on metal, 16<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 16<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. In the upper
-part there is a dedication of “hæc Encyclopædia et Synopsis Statutorum” to archbp.
-Laud. A large series of concentric circular spaces fill the centre, each divided into
-a left hand and right hand half:—counting from the centre (a sun), (1) days of the
-week, (2) hours of the day, (3) subjects, (4) explanation of the next circle, (5) List of
-proper audience and books for each lecture: (6) explanation of the next circle, (7) lists
-of fines for absent professors and absent audience: in the four corners are notes, one
-of which supplies another title for the sheet, namely “Cyclus Prælectorum ... ex
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>Corpore Statutorum depromptus et delineatus ...”. Some copies (issued in 1638, see
-below) have a small printed label “Iovis” pasted over “Martis”, or else the plate
-itself altered to “Iovis”, in the note that Easter Term ends on the <i>Tuesday</i> before
-Pentecost, and a longer slip pasted at the foot containing a note about the teaching of
-Arabic and Medicine.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The chart is usually found folded and pasted in the 1638 edition of the abridged
-Statutes: but a copy in the University Archives is pasted <i>between</i> the two columns of
-the 1635 <cite>Synopsis Statutorum</cite>, which in combination with the dedication quoted above
-suggests that it was first issued in 1635, a natural year for it, when the interest in the
-new Code of Statutes was fresh. There is nothing to suggest that it was printed away
-from Oxford. The device in the title is a well-made representation of the University
-arms with the motto “Sapientiæ et felicitatis”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Thomas Crossfield of Queen’s certainly edited the 1638 <cite>Statuta selecta</cite>, and may
-have issued the <cite>Synopsis</cite> (which is in his style), and possibly therefore the <cite>Encyclopædia</cite>.
-At any rate he took the plate of the <cite>Encyclopædia</cite> and used it in 1638. It is in his
-own copy of the <cite>Statuta selecta</cite> that the altered plate is found (see above); and the
-note about Arabic and Medicine is there in his own handwriting preceded by a ☛, just
-as in the printed slip.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. ——. <i><span class='fss'>SYNOPSIS SEV EPITOME STATVTORVM</span></i>, | <i>Eorum præsertim,
-quæ Iuventuti Academ.</i> Oxon: <i>maximè</i> | <i>expedit pro Doctrinâ &amp;
-Moribus habere cognita.</i> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 153: 1635: (one) folio: pp [2]:
-2nd col. beg. <i>Tempus ad Gradus</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) the
-Synopsis, in two columns.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are extracts from the newly printed Corpus Statutorum, for the use of junior
-members of the University, but the fuller edition in book form first issued in 1638 (which
-see,) was taken as the model for all succeeding issues. The title heads the first
-column, and the colophon ends the 2nd. See the preceding article, for possible
-authorship.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Persius. The statement by Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss,
-iii. 523) that there is a 1635 <i>Oxford</i> edition of Barten Holyday’s
-translation of Persius, which deceived Brüggemann, is erroneous: the
-edition referred to was printed at London.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Rives</b>, John, archdeacon of Berks. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>MINISTRED
-IN</span> | <span class='fss'>THE FIRST VISITA-</span>|tion of the right worshipfull M<sup>r</sup> | <span class='sc'>Iohn Rives</span>
-Batchelour of Law | Arch-deacon of the Arch-dea-|conry of <i>Berks</i>, in the
-yeare | of our Lord God | 1635. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152 <i>a</i>: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-18 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Parishioners in</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) the oath: (4) the charge: 1–18, the
-77 articles: 18, a direction: (1–2) not
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Rouse</b>, John. <span class='fss'>APPENDIX</span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>CATALOGVM</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRORVM IN</span> |
-<span class='fss'>BIBLIOTHECA</span> | <span class='fss'>BODLEIANA,</span> | <span class='fss'>QVI PRODIIT</span> | Anno Domini 1620. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<span class='fss'>EDITIO SECVNDA</span> | [<i>line</i>] | Recognita, &amp; Authoribus plus minus <span class='fss'>CIↃCIↃCIↃ</span>
-locupletata. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 208:
-p. 11 beg. <i>App. Appianus Alexand.</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–4) “Bibliothecarius lectori”: 1–208,
-the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1620 J. This is Rouse’s new edition of the little Appendix to the 1620 edition
-of the Catalogue. The MSS. are still mixed with the printed books. The preface
-shows that Verneuil’s book, see below in this year, could be regarded as a part of this
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>work, though formally distinct. Rouse’s name does not occur, but is necessarily
-inferred from the preface.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. [<b>Verneuil</b>, John]. <span class='fss'>CATALOGVS</span> | <span class='fss'>INTERPRETVM</span> | <span class='fss'>S. SCRIPTVRÆ,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IVXTA NVMERORVM ORDINEM,</span> | <span class='fss'>QVO EXTANT IN</span> | <span class='fss'>BIBLIOTHECA</span> | <span class='fss'>BODLEIANA</span><i>:</i> |
-<span class='fss'>OLIM A D. IAMESIO</span> | <i>Jn vsum Theologorum concinnatus, nunc verò</i> | <i>alterâ ferè
-parte auctior redditus</i>. | Accessit elenchus Authorum, tam recentium
-quam Antiquorum, qui | in quatuor libros Sententiarum &amp; <i>Th. Aquinatis</i>
-Summas, Item | in Euangelia Dominicalia totius anni, &amp; de Casibus |
-conscientiæ; nec non in Orationem Domi-|nicam, Symbolum Apostolorum,
-| &amp; Decalogum scripserunt. | <i>Editio correcta, diu multùmq; desiderata.</i>
-| [<i>device.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 73: 1635: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 55 + [1]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Rab. Maurus</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. 3, title: 4, a
-preface: 5–55, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 222. This is an anonymous and much
-enlarged edition of pp. 163–179 of James’s Bodleian Catalogue (Oxf. 1605): made by
-John Verneuil sublibrarian. The preface mentions a pirated edition of this book,
-made without the knowledge of the authorities of the Library, but no copy seems to be
-known. See <i>Rouse</i>, above in this year.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Wake</b>, Isaac. <span class='fss'>REX</span> | <i><span class='fss'>PLATONICVS:</span></i> | <span class='fss'>SIVE,</span> | <span class='fss'>DE POTENTISSIMI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PRINCIPIS</span> | <span class='fss'>IACOBI</span> | <span class='fss'>BRITANNIARVM REGIS</span>, | ad Illustrissimam Academiam |
-Oxoniensem, aduentu, | Aug. 27. Anno | M.DC.V. | <i><span class='fss'>NARRATIO</span></i> | <i>Ab</i> <span class='sc'>Isaaco
-Wake</span> <i>Publico</i> | <i>Academiæ ejusdem Oratore, tunc</i> | <i>temporis conscripta,
-nunc ite-</i>|<i>rum in lucem edita, mul-</i>|<i>tis in locis auctior &amp;</i> | <i>emendatior.</i> |
-<span class='fss'>EDITIO QVINTA.</span> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151: 1635: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 239 + [17]: p. 11 beg. <i>tur. Ipsoque</i>,
-201 <i>sed istæ</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents—p.
-(1) title: (3–7) dedication as in
-1st edition: 1–236, the work: 237–239,
-the Chancellor’s letter with preface: (2)
-title:—<span class='fss'>ORATIO</span> | <span class='fss'>FVNEBRIS</span> | <span class='fss'>HABITA IN</span> |
-Templo Beatæ | M<i>ariæ Oxon.</i> | Ab
-<span class='sc'>Isaaco Wake</span>, | Publico Academiæ Ora<small>/</small>|<i>tore;
-Maij</i> 25. <i>An.</i> 1607. | quum mœsti
-Oxonienses, | piis manibus <span class='sc'>Iohannis</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Rainoldi</span> <i>parentarent</i>. | [<i>woodcut</i>, then
-Impr. 151.]: (4–16) the oration.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1607 W. This appears to be a reprint of the 4th edition.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1636.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Articles.</b> <span class='fss'>ARTICVLI</span> | <span class='fss'>DE QVIBVS CONVENIT INTER</span> | <span class='fss'>ARCHIEPISCOPOS,</span>
-| <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'>EPISCOPOS VTRIVSQVE PROVINCIÆ, ET</span> | Clerum vniversum
-in Synodo, Londini. An. | 1562. secundum computationem Ecclesiæ |
-Anglicanæ, ad tollendam opinionum dissentio-|<i>nem, &amp; consensum in vera
-Reli-</i>|<i>gione firmandum.</i> | <i>Æditi authoritate serenissimæ</i> <span class='sc'>Reginæ.</span> | <span class='fss'>ITEM</span> |
-Liber quorundam Canonum | <span class='fss'>DISCIPLINÆ ECCLESIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ANGLICANÆ</span>. <span class='sc'>Anno</span>
-1571. | 3. De Episcopis. | 5. De Decanis Ecclesiarum. | 8. De Archi-diaconis.
-| 9. De Cancellariis. &amp;c. | 14 De Ædituis Ecclesiarum. | 19. De
-Concionatoribus. | 20. De Residentia. | 21. De Pluralitatibus. | 21. De
-Ludimagistris. | 22. De Patronis. &amp;c. [the last five lines are printed in a
-parallel line with the first five, a line separating the two columns] |
-[<i>woodcuts</i> between two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>Impr. 151: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 24 + 23
-+ [1]: pp. 11 begg. <i>De prædestinatione</i>,
-and <i>gendis sacris</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-1, title: 3–24, the Articles:
-24, “Confirmatio Articulorum”: 1, half-title:
-2, list of Canons: 3–23, the Canons:
-(1) “¶ Forma sententiæ excommunicationis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Barclay</b>, John. <span class='sc'>Ioannis</span> | <span class='fss'>BARCLAII</span> | <span class='fss'>POEMATVM</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI DVO.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | <i>Editio postrema aucta.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 153: 1636: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[14] + 100 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Fregit, &amp;
-Auroræ</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines:
-(3–6) dedication to prince (afterwards
-king) Charles, from the 1615 ed.: (7–12)
-a Latin poem in Charles’s honour, <i>beg.</i>
-“Fama per attonitas”: 1–33, the poems,
-bk. 1: 34, “Ad benevolum Lectorem”:
-35, a title:—“<span class='sc'>Ioannis</span> | <span class='fss'>BARCLAII</span> |
-<span class='fss'>POEMATVM</span> | <span class='sc'>liber II.</span> | [<i>two lines</i>, then
-<i>woodcut</i>, then <i>two lines</i>]”, with impr.
-87<i>a</i>: 37–66, the poems, bk. 2: 67–97
-“Tumulus ... Gustavi Adolphi ...” a
-poem, by C. B.: 98–100, five short Latin
-poems, signed at end “H. G.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This appears to be a reprint of the 1615 (London) edition, with the addition of the
-poem on pp. 64–100. The signatures indicate that pp. 67-end are an addition to the
-original book, but a catchword on p. 66 shows that the two parts are not independent.
-Only these two (separate) editions of Barclay’s Poems were published: the author
-died in 1621.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Bushell</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SEVERALL</span> | <span class='fss'>SPEECHES AND</span> | Songs,
-at the presentment of | M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Bvshells Rock</span> | <span class='fss'>TO THE</span> | <span class='fss'>QVEENES</span> | Most
-Excellent Majesty. | <i>Aug.</i> 23. 1636. | <span class='fss'>HER HIGHNESSE</span> | being Gratiously
-Pleased to | Honour the said <span class='sc'>Rock</span>, not | only with <span class='sc'>Her</span> | <span class='sc'>Royall</span>
-<i>Presence</i>; | <span class='fss'>BVT</span> | <span class='fss'>COMMANDED THE SAME</span> | to be called after her owne |
-<i>Princely name</i> | <span class='fss'>HENRETTA</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>2</sup> beg. <i>And returne</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title,
-within double lines and woodcuts: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>2<sup>r</sup>,
-the speeches and songs.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 1010, where will be found an interesting
-account of Bushell’s discovery of a peculiar rock at Enstone near Oxford, and of
-the ceremonies with which it was presented to the Queen. The speeches and songs,
-presented by a hermit, the author himself, Echo, &amp;c., were set to music by Simon Ive
-(see sign. B2<sup>r</sup>).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathanael. <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIA</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBERA</span>, | [&amp;c., exactly
-as 1622 C, omitting a comma in ll. 5, 7, and with “nova”, “Carpentario”,
-“Collegii”, and “| Editio tertia, correctior |”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 159: 1636: [&amp;c., precisely as
-1622 C, except that the first leaf and the
-last two leaves have not been seen, p. 111
-beg. <i>substantiali. At nullam</i>, and the title
-is within a line.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 421, and 1622 C, of which this is an almost
-exact reprint. Some copies bear the date 1637.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Downeham, George. See 1635 D.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Felix</b>, Marcus Minucius. <span class='fss'>M. MINVCII</span> | <span class='fss'>FELICIS</span> | <span class='fss'>OCTAVIVS.</span> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1636: (twelves) 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 129 + [7]: p. 11 beg. <i>bere, quàm</i>, 111
-<i>dicimus, non</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title within two bounding lines, [&amp;c.
-precisely as 1631 F.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1627 F: this seems to be a reprint of 1631 F.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>6. ——. <span class='fss'>MINVCIVS</span> | <span class='fss'>FELIX</span> | His dialogne called | <i><span class='fss'>OCTAVIVS</span></i>. |
-Containing a defence | of Christian | <i>religion</i>. | Translated by | <span class='sc'>Richard
-Iames</span> | of C.C.C. <span class='fss'>OXON.</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 155: 1636: twelves 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 165 + [19]: p. 11 beg. <i>to heare both</i>,
-111 <i>reputed Gods</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–6) epistle dedicatory
-to lady Cotton: (7–8) “To the
-Reader”: 1–165, the work: (2–12) three
-religious poems, “A Good Friday
-thought”, “A Christmasse Caroll” (<i>beg.</i>
-“Since now the jolly season’s by”), “A
-Hymn on Christs ascension”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Scarce. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 630.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Fitz-Geffry</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>THE BLESSED</span> | <span class='fss'>BIRTH-DAY,</span> | <span class='fss'>CELEBRATED
-IN</span> | some religious meditations | on the Angels Anthem. |
-<span class='sc'>Luc.</span> 2. 14. | <span class='fss'>ALSO HOLY</span> | <span class='fss'>TRANSPORTATIONS</span> | in contemplating some
-of the | most obserueable adiuncts about | <i>our Saviours Nativity</i>. |</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027' rowspan='3'>Extracted for the most<br />part out of the</td>
- <td class='c028'>{ Sacred Scriptures, }</td>
- <td class='c029' rowspan='3'>And some moderne</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c028'>{ Ancient Fathers, &#8196; }</td>
-
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
- <td class='c028'>{ Christian Poets.&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;}</td>
-
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c001'>Approved Authors. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Charles Fitz-Geffry</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | The
-second Edition with Additions. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 156: 1636: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 80: p. 11 beg. <i>If he in time</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-(3–5) “To the Devote Author ...” a
-poem signed “Hen. Beesely <i>A.M. A.A.</i>”:
-(7) Complimentary poem to the author
-by Steph. Haxby of Cambridge: 1–47,
-the Blessed Birthday, a poem: 48 “Votum
-Authoris ad Iesum ...”: 49–80, the
-Transportations, 16 poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 607. This is a reprint of the first edition, see
-1634 F, with some additions and the omission of the poem before the second part.
-It is this second issue which Dr. Grosart reprinted in 1881 in Fitz-Geffrey’s <cite>Poems</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Florus</b>, Lucius Annaeus. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ROMAN</span> | Histories of <span class='sc'>Luci=</span>|<span class='sc'>us
-Iulius Florus</span> | <i>from the foundation</i> | <i>of</i> <span class='sc'>Rome</span>, <i>till Cæsar</i> | <span class='sc'>Augustus</span>,
-<i>for aboue</i> | DCC. <i>yeares, &amp; from then</i>⸗|<i>ce to</i> <span class='sc'>Traian</span> <i>near</i> CC. | <i>yeares,
-divided by</i> Flor’ | <i>into</i> IV <i>ages.</i> | <i>Translated into</i> | <span class='fss'>ENGLISH</span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 161: 1636: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[26] + 336: p. 11 beg. <i>wore, being</i>, 301
-<i>more luckie</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1–2)
-not seen: (3) engraved title, inserted:
-(5–10) Epistle dedicatory to
-George marquis of Buckingham, signed
-“Philanactophil”: (11–19), “To the
-Reader”: (20–24) “The preface of Lucius
-Florus”: (25–26) not seen: 1–336, the
-Histories: 336 “The end of the foure
-Bookes of the Roman Histories ... translated
-into English by E.M.B. Soli Deo
-gloria”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The translator of this work, which first appeared in English at London in 1618, was
-Edmund (Maria) Bolton. The present edition was printed in London but published at
-Oxford, and the title is the engraved one of 1618, by Simon Pass, displaying in the
-upper centre a Roman, in the lower centre the title, an eagle at top, and symbols and
-letterpress about, and altered in the imprint only. The collation assumes that a sheet of
-ten leaves could not be printed and that a blank leaf is needed before and after the
-prefatory matter: the title is on an inserted leaf. This edition was issued after the translator’s
-death, and seems not to be entered in the London Stationers Company’s Registers.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Grotius</b>, Hugo. <span class='fss'>DEFENSIO</span> | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>FIDEI CATHOLICÆ</span></span> | <span class='sc'>De</span> | <span class='fss'>SATISFACTIONE</span>
-| <span class='under'><span class='fss'>CHRISTI</span>,</span> | <i>Adversus</i> | <span class='under'><span class='sc'>Favstvm Socinvm</span></span> | Senensem: | <i>Scripta
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>ab</i> | <span class='under'><span class='sc'>Hvgone Grotio</span></span>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'><i>Cum</i> Gerardi Iohannis Vossii</span> | <i>ad
-judicium</i> Hermanni <span class='fss'>RA-</span>|venspergeri <i>de hoc</i> | <span class='sc'>Libro.</span> | <span class='sc'>Responsione.</span> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 153: 1636: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 256 + [40] + 136: pp. 11 begg <i>Cruciatus</i>,
-and <i>hæc nostra</i>, 111 <i>Cap. vi</i>, and
-<i>tur. Paulus</i>: Pica and (2nd part) Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3–10) “Veritatis evangelicæ studiosis
-...”, dated “<i>Lug. Batav.</i> in Collegio
-Theolog. Ill. DD. Ord. <i>Holl</i> &amp; <i>Westf.</i>
-8. <i>Kal. Sept.</i> An. Chri. <span class='fss'>C</span>I<span class='fss'>Ↄ</span> I<span class='fss'>Ↄ</span> cxviı. Ger.
-Ioannides Vossius, <i>Coll. Regens</i>”: (11–12)
-“Lectori” by the unnamed editor:
-1–219, the Defensio: 220–256 Testimonia
-veterum: (1–16) an index in order
-of contents: (17) a bastard title to the
-second part, with impr. 87 <i>a</i>, and date:
-(19–35) “Præfatio”, signed “Ger. Ioannides
-Vossiun ...”: (37–40) “Lectori”
-by the editor: 1–136, the Responsio.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The two previous editions of Grotius’s work were issued at Leyden in 1617, while
-Vossius’s <cite>Responsio</cite> was published at the same place in 1618. Words underlined in
-the above title are in red ink, as are also “Oxoniæ,” and “<span class='fss'>MDCXXXVI</span>” in the imprint.
-N is omitted in the series of signatures.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟΚΟΣΜΟΣ</span><i>:</i> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LITTLE</span> | <span class='fss'>DESCRIPTION</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF THE GREAT</span> | <span class='fss'>WORLD</span>. | <i>The seventh Edition.</i> | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Peter
-Heylyn</span>. | [<i>line, motto, woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 158: 1636: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[20] + 808 + [4]: p. 11 beg. 1. <i>First then</i>,
-701 <i>dates, or Vindelici</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—(precisely as 1633 H, except
-that the title is within double lines, instead
-of an arched border, and that every
-leaf has been seen.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1621 H. This is a reprint, almost line for line, of 1633 H. The copy seen had
-a folded table of climes as in the 1625 edition, after p. 228.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. [<b>Lily</b>, William]. <span class='fss'>A</span> | Short Introduction | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMAR</span> |
-<span class='fss'>GENERALLY</span> | <span class='fss'>TO BE USED</span><i>:</i> | <i>Compiled and set forth for the bring-</i>|ing up
-of all those that intend to at-|taine to the knowledge of the | <i>Latine
-tongue</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68 <i>d</i>: 1636: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[74] + 130 + [36]: p. 11 beg. <i>comprehenderunt</i>,
-111 <i>Sic Ovid</i>: Long Primer
-Roman and English. Contents:—p. (1),
-title: (2) royal arms, with “C.R.”: (3–8)
-“¶ To the Reader, &amp;c.”: (9) about
-letters: (10) two prayers: (11–70) a Latin
-grammar in English: (71–2) Latin poem
-by Will. Lily: (73) a title within a line
-and border:—“Brevissima | institutio, |
-<i>Seu</i> | Ratio Grammatices | cognoscendæ,
-ad omni-|um puerorum utilita-|tem præscripta:
-<i>Quam solam Regia Majestas</i> |
-<i>in omnibus Scholis do-</i>|<i>cendam præcipit</i>. |
-[<i>line, woodcut, line</i>]”, with impr. 72 <i>c</i>:
-(74) arms of the University, &amp;c.: 1–130,
-a Latin grammar, syntax and prosody, in
-Latin: (1–30) “Omnium nominum ...
-ac verborum interpretatio ...”: (31–3)
-four Latin poems, including graces: (34)
-woodcut picture of the tree of knowledge,
-and students gathering the fruit.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is the first Latin grammar printed at Oxford since 1518, and is issued “Cum
-Privilegio.” The grammar itself was already, in its Latin form, more than a hundred
-years old, and many editions of it had been printed. Other Oxford editions were issued
-at least in 1651, 1672–3, 1675, 1679, 1687, 1692, 1699, 1709, 1714, 1733. For William
-Lily see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 32. The signatures connect the two parts of
-the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The importance of this issue is considerable. In consequence of disputes between
-John Lichfield and Turner, archbp. Laud’s attention had been called to the state of
-printing at Oxford, and the absence of any such printing privileges as were possessed
-by Cambridge. A charter of privileges was accordingly obtained, dated 12 Nov. 1632,
-confirmed and amplified by another dated 13 March 163<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>. These allowed the
-University to print Bibles, Prayerbooks, Grammars, Almanacs, &amp;c., which had till then
-been the monopolies of the London Stationers’ Company and the University Press at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>Cambridge. No Bibles or Prayerbooks were issued at Oxford till 1675, but this
-Grammar and three Almanacs (see 1637 B, C, and W.) raised the standard of revolt
-against monopoly. On 20 March 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> the Stationers’ Company agreed to pay the
-University £200 a year, if it would agree not to issue the classes of books in question,
-and no further difficulties arose till after the Restoration.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Longinus</b>, Dionysius. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΔΙΟΝΥΣΙΟΥ | ΛΟΓΓΙΝΟΥ | ΡΗΤΟΡΟΣ
-ΠΕΡΙ | ὕψους λόγου βιβλίον</span> | <span class='fss'>DIONYSII LONGINI</span> | Rhetoris | <i>Præstantissimi</i> |
-Liber | <i>De grandiloquentia sive</i> | <i>sublimi dicendi genere</i> | Latine redditus |
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ὑποθέσεσι συνοπτικαῖς</span> | <i>et ad oram notationibus</i> | <i>aliquot illustratus</i> | [<i>line</i>] |
-<i>Edendum curavit et notarum</i> | <i>insuper auctarium adjunxit. G.</i> L. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 112<i>a</i>: 1636: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[42] + 176 + [2] + 117 + [1] and one folded
-plate: pp. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἐκ τοῦ φοβεροῦ</span>, and <i>qui
-Geometriæ</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) engraved title, see below: (5–10)
-“Iuventuti Academicæ”, signed “Gerardus
-Langbaine”, the editor: (11–24)
-complimentary Latin pieces by Gabriel
-de Petra, the author of the Latin translation
-and notes, 1610, and others: (24–42)
-three Latin prefatory pieces, about
-Longinus: a folded oblong 16mo sheet
-bearing a Diagramma or synopsis of the
-subject: 1, extract from Suidas about
-Longinus: 2–161, the treatise in Greek
-and (on the verso of each leaf) Latin, with
-marginal notes: 162–176, (1–2) <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Συνόψεις</span>,
-further notes: 1–117, (1) “Notarum
-auctarium” with a critical preface, and
-(on p. 20) an engraving: ending with a
-Latin poem on the death of Thomas
-“Wethereld” (Wetherell) of Queen’s
-college Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 446, and 1638 L. The first part of this
-volume to the end of the <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Συνόψεις</span> except Langbaine’s preface, is a reprint of the 1612
-(Geneva) edition by Gabriel de Petra: the notes are Langbaine’s first published work.
-The engraved title by William Marshall is from a metal plate, displaying Hermes,
-an eagle, Phaethon, &amp;c., round the title: and is an inserted leaf. Signatures <span class='fss'>O</span> and <span class='fss'>P</span>
-are run into one. The date on the title appears to be that of the engraving, but as it
-was altered in the 2nd edition, though the plate is practically identical, it may be
-taken as the date of the book also.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Masque.</b> <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>KING</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'>QVEENES</span> | Entertainement at |
-<span class='fss'><i>RICHMOND</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>AFTER</span> | <span class='fss'>THEIR DEPARTVRE</span> | from <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>: In a Masque, |
-presented by the most Illustrious | <span class='sc'>Prince,</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PRINCE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>CHARLES</span> | Sept. 12.
-1636. | [<a id='t192'></a><i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. 31 + [1]:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Tom. Vellow</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title, within a
-border of woodcuts between lines: 3,
-dedication to the queen: 5–30, the
-masque.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. The introduction explains that the Masque was almost impromptu as
-concerns the speaking, the dances in which Prince Charles took a share being the
-important part. They were composed by Simon Hopper and the music by Charles
-Coleman. Most of the written part is in the Wiltshire dialect “because most of the
-interlocutors were <i>Wilshire</i> men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Oxford</b> University. <span class='fss'>CORONAE</span> | <span class='fss'>CAROLINÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>QVADRATVRA.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>PERPETRANDI</span> | <i><span class='fss'>IMPERII</span></i> | <span class='fss'>CAROLINI</span> | <span class='fss'>EX QVARTO PIGNORE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>FELICITER
-SVSCEPTO</span></i> | <i>Captatum Augurium</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151 <i>a</i>: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [92],
-signn. a, aa<sup>4</sup>, aaa<sup>2</sup>, aaaa, a-d<sup>4</sup>, e<sup>2</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>4</sup>,
-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>2</sup>, and a folded leaf: sign. b1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Diva
-paris</i>, <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> <i>From the wombs</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—sign. a1<sup>r</sup>, title:
-a2<sup>r</sup>-e2<sup>v</sup>, Latin poems: <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>D</span>1<sup>v</sup>, English
-poems to the queen: <span class='fss'>D</span>2<sup>r</sup> “The Printers
-vote”, an English poem by Leonard
-Lichfield.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Poems by members of the University of Oxford on the birth of Princess Elizabeth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>28 Dec. 1635: in number about 142, of which 31 are English, 8 Greek, 2 Hebrew and
-1 French. The number of English, and their separation from the rest is a mark of
-change. Most copies want the folded sheet (about 11 × 6 in.), which contains an
-engraved picture of a crown on a board supported at the four corners by a prince, two
-princesses and an infant in a cradle, all upon a large pedestal. Beneath are six Latin
-verses, beginning “Quam stabilis Quadrata,” and then “Ita augustissimo Domino suo
-vovet humillima ancilla Acad. Oxon.” Curiously the engraving cannot possibly be
-correct, since the place of prince James is taken by a female figure! Perhaps for this
-reason the plate was soon suppressed: it is certainly now very rarely found.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. ——. <span class='fss'>FLOS</span> | <span class='fss'>BRITANNICVS</span> | <span class='fss'>VERIS NOVISSIMI</span> | <span class='fss'>FILIOLA</span> |
-<span class='sc'>CAROLO &amp; MARJÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>NATA</span> | XVII <span class='fss'>MARTII</span> Anno. | M.DC.XXXVI. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151<i>b</i>: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [100],
-see below: p. (11) beg. <i>Non habeo</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within a border of woodcuts: (3–100) the
-poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are poems by members of the University of Oxford to celebrate the birth of
-the princess Anne, born 17 Mar. 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (died Dec. 1640). About two-thirds of the
-verses are to the king, chiefly in Latin (nine in Greek, one in Hebrew), the rest to the
-queen in English (two in French): there is one chronogram. The make-up of ordinary
-copies of the volume is extraordinary: there are no pages or signatures, but if <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>O</span>
-represent the sections the collation would be as follows, the figures in brackets indicating
-the mark affixed to the first page of some sections in the place where the pagination
-would naturally have been printed:—A<sup>1</sup>, B<sup>4</sup>, C<sup>4</sup> (1), D<sup>4</sup> (2), E<sup>4</sup> (3), F<sup>4</sup> (4), G<sup>4</sup> (6),
-H<sup>4</sup> (66: on 2nd leaf, 8). I<sup>4</sup> (5), K<sup>1</sup>, L<sup>4</sup> (2), M<sup>4</sup>, N<sup>4</sup> (1), O<sup>4</sup> (3)! The last page contains
-a poem by the printer, Leonard Lichfield. I have seen a copy in which a leaf following
-the title bore a printed Latin poem beginning “Quæ Te Mascula” referring to an
-emblem in diamond form displaying three lilies and two small and one large lion;
-which emblem occurs in a pen-and-ink drawing in the above copy on an inserted leaf
-preceding the title.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Parsons</b>, Bartholomew. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> | <span class='fss'>AT</span> | <span class='fss'>THE
-FVNERALL OF</span> | S<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>Francis Pile</span> Baronet, at | <i>Collingborne Kingstone</i> in
-the | County of <i>Wiltes</i>, on the 8. day of | <i>December</i>. 1635. | <span class='fss'>BY</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Bartholomew Parsons</span> | <i>B.D.</i> and <i>Vicar</i> there. | [two <i>mottos</i>, then
-<i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 154: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-39 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>there is a</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-dedication to sir Francis Pile, “From
-Ludgershall. Dec. 17. 1635”: 1–39, the
-sermon, on Is. lvii. 1–2.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 26. The dedication to the son shows that
-Parsons had known the father for 20 years.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Pinke</b>, William. <span class='fss'>THE TRIALL OF</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>CHRISTIANS</span> | <span class='fss'>SINCERE
-.LOVE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>VNTO CHRIST</i>.</span> | By M<sup>r</sup> <span class='sc'>William Pinke</span>, | M<sup>r</sup> of Arts late Fellow
-of | Magdalen Colledge | in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>The third
-Edition.</span> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 160: 1636: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 54 + 127 + [1] + 62 + [4]: pp. 11
-beg. <i>lat.</i> 3. 13, and <i>shrewd grudgings</i>,
-and <i>vnto you what</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(14) title: 3–11 Epistle dedicatory
-to lord Digby, dated “Shirburn.
-Iul. 7. 1630”, by the editor William
-Lyford: (12–16) “To the reader” by W.
-Lyford: 1–54, sermon on 1 Cor. xvi. 22:
-1–66, 67–127, two sermons on Eph. vi.
-24: (1), 1–62, (1), sermon on Luke
-xiv. 26.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 475, and 1630 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>18. <b>Prideaux</b>, John. “<cite>Twenty Sermons.</cite> Oxon 1636 qu.” [Bodl.
-4to. P. 50. Th.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 268. There may have been a collected
-edition with some such title issued in 1636: but probably Wood refers to a collection
-without a general title, as contained in 40<sup>o</sup> P. 50 Th. (a reference added however to
-Wood’s <cite>Athenæ</cite> by dr. Bliss). For a real titlepage to the collection of twenty sermons
-and for details of the separate sermons, all of which are dated 1636, see 1637 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Wouwerus</b>, Joannes. <span class='sc'>Ioannis Wo</span>u<span class='fss'>WERI</span> | <span class='fss'>DIES ÆSTIVA,</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Sive</span> | <span class='fss'>DE VMBRA</span> | <span class='fss'>PÆGNION.</span> | Unà cum | <span class='sc'>lani Do</span>u<span class='sc'>sæ F.</span> <i>in ean-</i>|<i>dem
-Declamatione</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Editio postrema castigatior</i>, | <i>&amp; adjectionibus in
-fine</i> | <i>locupletior.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 153<i>a</i>: 1636: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [24] + 156 + [24]: p. 11 beg. <i>interpositionem</i>,
-111 <i>riosos interemit</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-double lines: (3–12) dedication to Hieronymus
-Voeglerus, dated “Ex arce
-Gottorpiana V. Kal. Augusti <span class='fss'>CIↃ IↃ CX.</span>
-T. Ioan. VVouwerus”: (13–23) “...
-Prolegomena”: 24 “Errata”: 1–124,
-the work in 28 chapters: 124–154, Dousa’s
-Declamatio: 154–156, Dousa’s “In eandem
-rem Carmen”: (1–4) “Index auctorum”:
-(5–22) “Rerum memorabilium
-Index.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This appears to be a reprint of the first (1610) edition omitting the Elenchus Capitum
-and adding Dousa’s Essay. The work is a fanciful treatment of the subject of
-shadow.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Zouche</b>, Richard. <span class='fss'>ELEMENTA</span> | <span class='fss'>IVRISPRVDENTIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>DEFINITIONIBVS</span>,
-| Regulis, &amp; sententiis selectioribus | <i>Iuris Civilis illustrata.</i> | <i>Quibus
-accessit</i> | <span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> | <span class='sc'>IVRIS &amp; IVDICII</span> | <span class='fss'>TEMPORALIS</span> | Secundum Consuetudines
-| <i>Feudales &amp; Normannicas</i>. | <i>Nec non</i> | <span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> | <span class='sc'>IVRIS &amp;
-IVDICII</span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIASTICI</span> | <span class='fss'>SECVNDVM CANONES</span> | &amp; Constitutiones Anglicanas.
-| [<i>line</i>] | Autore R.Z. P.R. <i>Oxoniæ</i>. |[<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 157: 1636: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-145 + [7] + 51 + [7] + 60 + [2]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>pars secunda, pars secunda</i>, and <i>riæ ex
-fructibus</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines separated
-by woodcuts: (3–4) dedication to archbp.
-Laud, signed “Ric. Zouchæus”: (5–7)
-“Iuventuti iurisprudentiæ studiosæ”, dated
-“ex Aulâ Alban. Pridie Calend. Aug.
-1636”: (9–12) list of parts and sections of
-the book: 1–145 the work: (2) a title,
-within lines:—“<span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> | <span class='sc'>IVRIS &amp;
-IVDICII</span> | <span class='fss'>TEMPORALIS</span> | <span class='fss'>SECVNDVM CON-</span>|<span class='fss'>SVETUDINES
-FEV-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>DALES ET</i></span> | <i>Normannicas</i>”.
-| [<i>line</i>, <i>device</i>, <i>line</i>, and impr. 157]:
-(4–6) list of parts &amp;c.: 1–51, the work:
-(2) a title, within lines:—<span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> |
-<span class='sc'><i>JVRIS</i> &amp; <i>JVDICII</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIASTICI</span> | <span class='fss'>SECVNDVM
-CANONES</span> | <i>&amp; <span class='fss'>CONSTITUTIONES</span></i> |
-<i>Anglicanas</i>. [<i>line</i>, <i>device</i>, <i>line</i>, and impr.
-157]: (4–7) list of parts, &amp;c.: 1–60, the
-work: (1) note of parts still wanting to
-the complete treatise, and “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 511. This is a reissue and enlargement of
-1629 Z and 1634 Z, carrying the scheme further: it was completed in 1640 and 1650,
-and several parts have been reprinted. The signatures weld the three parts of the
-present volume into one.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> The Almanacs by Booker and Wyberd, which bear 1637 on the
-titlepage, and are treated under that year, may have been issued late in
-1636.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1637.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Barlow</b>, bp. Thomas. <span class='fss'><i>PIETAS IN PATREM</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A FEW
-TEARES VPON</span> | <span class='fss'>THE LAMENTED DEATH OF</span> | <span class='fss'>HIS MOST DEARE, AND LOVING</span> |
-Father <span class='sc'>Richard Barlow</span>, late of | <i>Langill</i> in <i>VVestmooreland</i>, who dyed |
-<i>December</i> 29 Ann. 1636. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Thomas Barlow</span> <i>Master of Arts</i>, |
-<i>Fellow of</i> Queenes Coll. <i>in</i> Oxon: <i>and</i> | <i>eldest sonne of his deceased
-father</i>. | [<i>line, motto, woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 16
-+ [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>To the sad</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: (2) <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Τοῦ Παλλαδᾶ
-εἰς Θάνατον</span>, a four-line Greek epigram,
-beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Σῶμα πάθος ψυχῆς</span>: 1–16, English
-poems, five by T. Barlow, seven by relations
-and friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. Barlow’s second poem describes his dream of his father’s death at the very
-time of its occurrence, though he did not know of the illness. The impression was
-strong enough to wake him.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bense</b>, Petrus. <span class='fss'>ANALOGO-DIAPHORA,</span> | <span class='sc'>Se</span>u | Concordantia
-Discrepans, | &amp; Discrepantia Concordans | trium Linguarum, | <i>Gallicæ,
-Italicæ, &amp; Hispanicæ</i>. | Unde innotescat, quantum quæque à <i>Romanæ</i>
-lin-|guæ, unde ortum duxere, idiomate deflexerit; | earum quoque ratio
-&amp; natura dilucidè &amp; suc-|cinctè delineantur. | [<i>line</i>] | Operâ &amp; studio |
-<span class='sc'>Petri Bense</span> <i>Parisini</i> apud | <span class='sc'>Oxon:</span> <i>has linguas profitentis</i>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 98: 1637: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 72: p. 11 beg. <i>quibuscumque</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) not seen:
-(3) title: (5–8) dedication to the University
-of Oxford: 1–72, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 624. This is not a formal grammar, but rather
-a discussion of the resemblances and differences of the languages treated in points of
-grammar and syntax.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Booker</b>, John. <span class='under'><span class='fss'>ALMANACK</span></span>: | <i>Sivè</i> | <span class='under'>Prognosticon Astrologicum</span>,
-| &amp; Diarium Meteorologicum, | <i>Vel</i> | Spec<span class='under'>ulum Anni</span> |
-<i>M. DC. XXXVII.</i> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'><i>Being the first after leap yeare</i></span>. | [<i>line</i>] |
-Calculated for the Meridian of the | <span class='under'>Honourable Citie of London.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'><i>Autore</i> Johanne Bookero <i>Astroph.</i></span> | [<i>line, motto, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 171: 1637: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-(48), signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Saturne
-doth</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup> title, within border: <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>r</sup>,
-preliminary notes: <span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>8<sup>r</sup>, the Almanac:
-<span class='fss'>B</span>8<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>8<sup>v</sup>, astrological notes and prognostications,
-with a chronogram.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>John Booker was a prolific Almanac maker: his <cite>Almanac and Prognostication</cite> was
-issued from 1631 to 1649: his <cite>Celestial Observations</cite> from 1651 to 1662, and the
-<cite>Telescopium</cite> from 1659 to 1676, but the dates may be capable of extension, and as
-Booker died in 1667, the <cite>Telescopium</cite> must have been carried on by a successor under
-his name. Only this one issue was printed at Oxford, since the Stationers’ Company
-bought out the University’s right of printing this and certain other kinds of book in
-March 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, see 1636 L, and <i>Booker</i>, <i>Wyberd</i> below. The underlined words in the
-title are printed in red, as well as much of the woodcut border (which bears the signs
-of the zodiac, the royal arms, and an open book), the words “Oxford,” “to the famous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>Universitie. 1637.” in the imprint, and many words in the text. The same astrological
-woodcut occurs as in the Wyberd, but in a more injured state, showing that Wyberd had
-precedence in point of date. Booker’s Almanac for 1636 was printed at Cambridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Brerewood</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS</span> | <span class='fss'>QVIDAM LOGICI</span> | <span class='fss'>DE</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>PRÆDICABILIBVS</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'>PRÆDICAMENTIS</span> | <i>Ab eruditissimo</i> <span class='sc'>Edvardo
-Brerewood</span>, | Artium Magistro, è Collegio <i>Ænei-Nasi</i>, olim | conscripti:
-nunc verò ab erroribus (qui frequenti | transcriptione irrepserant) vindicati,
-ad pristinum nito-|rem, nativámque puritatem diligentissimâ manu-|scriptorum
-collatione restituti, &amp; in lucem editi: | <i>Per</i> T. S. <i>Art. Mag.
-&amp; Collegij</i> Ænei-Nasi <i>Socium . Editio tertia</i>, | In quâ accesserunt duo
-ejusdem Authoris insignes | <i>Tractatus</i>; prior de <i>Meteoris</i>, posterior de |
-<i>Oculo:</i> limâ, lucéque donati: | <i>Per eundem</i> T. S. |<a id='t196'></a> [<i>line, motto, woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 162: 1637: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[32] + folded sheet + 431 + [5] + 105 + [3]
-+ 26: pp. 11 begg. <i>Sol. Prædicabilia</i>, and
-<i>Sect.</i> 11. <i>In qua</i> and 2. <i>In quo devehuntur</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—[exactly
-as 1631 B to p. 431, except “ê”
-for “e”, “Cal.” for “Calend.”: then:—]
-p. (2) a title:—“<span class='fss'>TRACTATVS DVO</span>, | <i>Quorum
-primus est</i> | <span class='fss'>DE METEORIS</span>. | <i>Secundus</i>,
-<span class='fss'>DE OCVLO</span>. | Quos scripsit olim
-eximius ille philosophus | <span class='sc'>Edvard</span>u<span class='sc'>s
-Brerewood</span>u<span class='fss'>S</span>: | <i>Restituit tandem, ab
-erroribus mendisque</i> | <i>vindicavit, &amp; publici
-juris fecit</i> | T.S. | Art. Mag. &amp; Colleg.
-<i>Ænea=Nasensis</i> | Socius | [<i>woodcut</i>] |”
-with impr. 109, but no name of place: (4)
-dedication as 1631 B: 1–83, De Meteoris:
-84–105, De Mari: (1–2) woodcut diagrams
-of the eye: (3) Index: 1–26, De
-Oculo.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1628 B, 1631 B (of which this is a reprint), Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 140.
-The signatures connect the two divisions of this work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Burgersdicius</b>, Francon. <span class='fss'>IDEA</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ</span> | Tu<span class='fss'>M</span> | <span class='fss'>MORALIS,</span>
-| Tu<span class='fss'>M</span> | <span class='fss'>NATURALIS:</span> | <span class='sc'>Sive</span> | <span class='fss'>EPITOME COMPENDIOSA</span> | utriusque ex
-<i>Aristotele</i> excerpta, | <i>&amp; methodicè disposita</i>: | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | M. <span class='sc'>Franc. B</span>u<span class='fss'>RGERSDICIO</span>
-in | Academia <i>Lugduno-Batavâ</i>, Logices &amp; | Ethices Professore ordinario.
-| <i>Editio quarta prioribus castigatior.</i> | [<i>line.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 121: 1637: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 332 + [6] + 101 + [1]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>strictiore quâdam</i> and 2. <i>Natura est</i>, 211
-<i>rem quærunt</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) “Index Capitum &amp;
-titulorum ...” to the Idea Phil. Mor.:
-1–332, the Idea Philosophiae Moralis:
-(1) title:—“<span class='sc'>Franconis B</span>u<span class='fss'>RGERSDICI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IDEA</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>NATVRALIS:</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Sive</span> | Methodus definitionum &amp; con<small>/</small>|troversiarum
-Physicarum. | <i>Editio postrema.</i>”
-[<i>woodcut</i>, then Impr. 121]: (3–4)
-“Philosophiæ Studiosis”, signed “Franco
-Burgersdicius”: (5–6) “Tituli et Ordo
-disputationum”: 1–101, the Idea Philosophiae
-Naturalis.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1631 B, of which this is almost a reprint, the order of the two parts being
-reversed.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Buridanus</b>, Johannes. <span class='fss'>IOHANNIS</span> | <span class='fss'>BVRIDANI</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>TRECENTIS RETRO</span> | annis celeberrimi | <span class='fss'>QVÆSTIONES IN</span> | <span class='fss'>DECEM LIBROS</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>ETHICORVM</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ARISTOTELIS</span> | <span class='fss'>AD NICOMACHVM</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 168: 1637: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [12] + 889 + [1]: p. 13 beg. <i>ad ea
-quæ</i>, 701 <i>alii prodesse</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-double lines: (3–11) “Index quæstionum”:
-(12) “Typographus ad Lectores”
-and “Errata”: 1–889, the work in four
-books: 889, impr. 151.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is perhaps the last separate edition of this work. Buridan, who lived in the
-fourteenth century, was a disciple of the English philosopher Occam.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>7. <b>Bythner</b>, Victorinus. <span class='under'><span class='fss'>TABVLA DIRECTORIA.</span></span> | <span class='sc'>In qva</span> | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>TOTVM</span>
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΤΟ ΤΕΧΝΙΚΟΝ</span> <span class='fss'>LINGVÆ</span></span> | Sanctæ, ad amussim delineatur. | Qu<span class='fss'>AM</span> | ...
-[2 lines] | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>D. HENRICO WOTTON</span></span> | ... [2 lines] | <i>inscribit Author</i> |
-<span class='under'><span class='sc'>Victorinus Bythner</span>. <i>P.</i></span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 98<i>a</i>: 1637: la. 4<sup>o</sup>, see below:
-pp. [6], see below: col. 1 beg. 1 <i>Verba
-vel Nomina</i>: English Roman. Contents,
-see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 675. These are three rare sheets printed on
-the recto only and intended to be pasted together, the two lower about 14 in. high by
-18½ in. wide, the upper one about 7 × 18½ in. The two lower ones contain in five
-columns a Hebrew grammar in nine divisions, the upper one “Chaldaismi &amp; Syriacismi,”
-between which is the title, and below them the preface “Lectori benevolo.”
-The colophon is at the end of the last column. The underlined words in the above
-title are in red, as well as a few other words, including a chronogram.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathanael. <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHIA</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBERA</span>, | [&amp;c.]: see
-1636 C.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Clement of Rome. References to a supposed edition of Clemens
-Romanus in 1637, a reprint of the edition of 1633, are due to a confusion:
-the 1633 edition alone exists.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Comenius</b>, Johannes Amos (Komensky). <span class='fss'>CONATVVM</span> | <span class='fss'>COMENIANORVM</span>
-| <span class='fss'>PRAELVDIA</span> | <span class='fss'>EX BIBLIOTHECA</span> <i>S. H.</i> | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [6] + 52
-+ [6]: p. 11 beg. <i>Tertiò, portento</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-“Ad lectorem”, signed “Samuel Hartlibius”:
-(5) title:—“<span class='fss'>PORTA SAPIENTIAE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>RESERATA</span><i>:</i> | <span class='sc'>Sive</span> | <span class='fss'>PANSOPHIÆ CHRISTIANÆ</span>
-| <span class='fss'>SEMINARIVM.</span> | Hoc est, | Nova,
-compendiosa, &amp; solida omnes Sci-|entias
-&amp; Artes, &amp; quicquid manifesti vel occulti
-| est, quod ingenio humano penetrare,
-solertiæ imitari, | linguae eloqui
-datur, breviùs, veriùs, meliùs, quàm | hactenus,
-addiscendi Methodus. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<i>Auctore</i> | Reverendo Clarissimóque Viro |
-Domino <i>Iohanne Amoso Comenio</i>. | [<i>line</i>,
-2 <i>mottos</i>, <i>woodcut.</i>]”, with impr. 72<i>d</i>: (6)
-a motto: 1–52, the work: (1–6) “Præcipua
-Capita Didacticæ Magnæ, à Domino
-Comenio elaboratæ ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a kind of prospectus of the encyclopædic work on education which Comenius
-was at the time contemplating, and although issued by Hartlib without the permission
-of the author, partly in order to gather the opinions of scholars on the scheme, it was
-not displeasing to Comenius, especially since some of his critics suggested a <i>Collegium
-Pansophicum</i> to work out the details. This we learn from an appendix by Comenius
-to the reprint of this Oxford edition in vol. i. of his <cite>Opera didactica omnia</cite> (Amst. 1657),
-vol i. col. 403, cf. 454.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. <b>Cowper</b>, Thomas. <span class='under'><span class='sc'>Cowper</span></span> 1637. | <span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>ALMANACK</span></span> | for the
-yeare of our | <span class='under'>Lord 1637</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'>Being the first after leap-yeare.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'>Together with some astrologicall rules</span> | for the prediction of
-weather for each | day in the yeare: with the principall High-wayes in
-<i>England</i> and | <i>Wales</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'>Referred to the famous Universitie and</span> |
-<span class='under'>Citie of Oxford;</span> but may indiffe-|rently serve for any other place within |
-this Kingdome. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='under'><i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Thomas Cowper</span>.</span> | [<i>line, motto, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68<i>d</i>: 12<sup>o</sup>: Pica Roman: title within a border of lines and woodcuts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>Very rare. Only known from a titlepage in Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5937, no. 140.
-See note under <i>Booker</i> above. The underlined words in the title above are printed in
-red ink, as well as “Oxford,” and “the famous Universitie. 1637” in the imprint, and
-some words in the “Vulgar Notes” on the back of the title.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Deliciae deliciarum.</b> <span class='fss'>DELITIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>DELITIARVM</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'>EPIGRAMMATVM</span>
-| optimis quibusq; hujus &amp; no-|vissimi seculi poetis in
-amplissimâ | illâ Bibliothecâ | <span class='sc'>Bodleiana</span>, | Et penè omninò alibi extantibus
-| <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἀνθολογία</span>, in unam corollam connexa | [<i>line</i>] | Operâ <span class='sc'>Ab.
-Wright</span> Art. Bac. | <i>&amp; S. Ioan. Bapt. Coll. Socii</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>motto</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 166: 1637: 12<sup>o</sup>: [16] + 247 +
-[1]: p. 11 beg. <i>Tale tamen</i>, 201 <i>De Virgilio</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title: (5–8) dedication to dr.
-Will. Haywood, the editor’s tutor: (9–11)
-“Lectori”: (13–15) “Catalogus Auctorum”:
-1–247, the epigrams: 247,
-Errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iv. 276. Wright took his M.A. degree on April 22,
-1637. Unfortunately there is no indication of the source of each epigram, and almost
-all the authors are continental poets.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Fitz-Geffry</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>COMPASSION</span> | <span class='fss'>TOWARDS CAPTIVES,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>CHIEFLY</span> | Toward our Brethren and Country-men | who are in miserable
-bondage | in <span class='fss'>BARBARIE</span>. | <i>Vrged and pressed in three Sermons</i> | On <span class='sc'>Heb.</span>
-13. 3. | [<i>line</i>] | Preached in <span class='fss'>PLYMOVTH</span>, in <i>October</i> 1636. | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Charles
-Fitz-Geffry</span>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Whereunto are anexed</i> | An Epistle of S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Cyprian</span>
-concerning the Redemption | of the Bretheren from the bondage of
-<i>Barbarians</i>; | <span class='fss'>AND</span> | <i>A passage concerning the benefits of Compassion,
-extracted</i> | out of S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Ambrose</span> <i>his second booke of</i> Offices, Cap. 28. |
-[<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 160 <i>a</i>: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12]
-+ 50 + [10]: p. 11 beg. <i>heaven, but</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–5)
-dedication to John Cause mayor of Plymouth,
-&amp;c.: (7–12) “To the compassionate,
-that is, to the truly Christian
-Reader”: 1–19, 21–35, 37–50, the three
-sermons: (1–4) the Cyprian: (5–7) the
-Ambrose.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 607.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Ironside</b>, dr. Gilbert. <span class='fss'>SEVEN</span> | <span class='fss'>QVESTIONS</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SABBATH</span> |
-<span class='fss'>BRIEFLY DISPVTED</span>, | after the m<span class='vr'>a</span>nner of the | <span class='fss'>SCHOOLES</span>. | Wherein such
-cases, and scruples, as are | <i>incident to this subject, are cleared, and
-resolved</i>, | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Gilbert Ironside</span> B.D. | [<i>line</i>, two <i>mottos</i>,
-<i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 156 <i>a</i>: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24]
-+ 297 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>may see</i>, 201
-<i>speaks, were</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a line: (3–12) Epistle
-dedicatory to archbp. Laud: (13–18) “To
-the Reader”: (19–23) “The severall
-Chapters with their Contents”: 1–297,
-the work, in 31 chapters: (2) Note and
-“Errata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 939. The note before the Errata shows that the
-author saw no proofs of his book for “the Authors coppy being not so legible as we
-could have wished, we were forc’d to transcribe it in his absence, and by this means
-these grosser escapes hapned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Jackson</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>DIVERSE</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS,</span> | <span class='fss'>WITH A SHORT</span> |
-<span class='fss'>TREATISE</span> | <span class='fss'>BEFITTING THESE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>PRESENT TIMES</span></i>, | Now first published |
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span><span class='fss'>BY</span> | Thomas Iackson, D<sup>r</sup> <i>in Divinity</i>, | <i>Chaplaine in ordinary</i> to his
-Majestie, | and President of <i>Corpus Christi Col-</i>|<i>ledge</i> in Oxford. | [<i>note</i>,
-then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-51 + [3] + 70 + [2] + 96 (but 29–34 are
-numbered 1–6) + [2]: pp. 11 begg. <i>as no
-souldier</i>, and <i>whatsoever afflictions</i>, and <i>of
-his owne</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title, within double lines: (5–6)
-dedication to prince Charles: (7–8) “Errata”,
-with sub-titles: 1–25, 27–51, 2
-sermons on 2 Chron. vi. 39–40: (2) a title:—“<span class='fss'>THREE</span>
-| <span class='fss'>SERMONS</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> |
-<span class='fss'>BEFORE THE</span> | <span class='fss'>KING</span>, | Vpon <span class='sc'>Ier.</span> 26. 19 |
-... [4 lines, then device and impr. 152]”:
-1–70, the sermons: (1) a title:—“<span class='fss'>A</span> |
-<span class='fss'>TREATISE</span> | <span class='fss'>CONCERNING</span> | <span class='fss'>THE SIGNES
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE TIME, OR GODS</span> | <span class='fss'>FOREWARNINGS.</span>
-| <span class='fss'>CONTAINING</span> | The summe of
-some few Sermons delive-|red partly
-before the Kings Majesty partly | in the
-Towne of <i>New-Castle</i> | upon <i>Tine</i>. | [<i>woodcut</i>,
-then impr. 152]”: 1–70, three discourses:
-71, a title:—“<span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> |
-<span class='fss'>POSTILL</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN <i>NEWE<small>/</small></i></span> | <span class='fss'><i>CASTLE</i>
-VPON <i>TINE</i></span> | The second <i>S</i>unday in |
-<i>Advent</i> 1630. | [woodcut, then impr.
-152]”: 73–93, the sermon, on Luke xxi.
-25: 94–96, “A briefe Appendix ...”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 668. The signatures connect all the parts of
-this volume together. Every printed page is surrounded by double lines on the upper
-and outer margin, and a single line elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Parsons</b>, Bartholomew. <span class='fss'>HONOS</span> | &amp; <span class='fss'>ONVS</span> Levitarum. | <span class='fss'>OR</span>, |
-Tithes vindicated to the | Presbyters of the Gospel: | In a Sermon
-preached at an Archidiaco<small>/</small>|nall Visitation at <i>Marlebrough</i>, in the Diocese |
-of <i>Sarum</i>, on the 10. of October. 1636. | [<i>line</i>] | By <i>B. P.</i> | [<i>line,</i>
-3 <i>mottos, line, device, line</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 169: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>deny, but he</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–7)
-Epistle dedicatory to Sir William Doddington
-“from the Rectory of <i>Ludgershall</i>,
-in the county of <i>Wiltes</i>, June 7,
-1637.”: 1–31, the sermon, on Deut.
-xxxiii. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 26. In the copy seen the title is an inserted
-leaf, the first leaf having been torn out: perhaps this is accounted for by the title given
-by Wood “History of Tithes: or Tithes vindicated ...”, and the running head line,
-which is still “The history of Tithes.” Early copies may have this older title.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. ——. “Sermon on Ephes. 6. 12, 13. Oxon. 1637. qu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 26: but I have not met with a copy.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Prideaux</b>, John. <span class='fss'>CERTAINE</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMONS</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED</span> | By <span class='sc'>Iohn
-Prideavx</span>, Rector of | <i>Exeter Colledge, his</i> <span class='sc'>Maiestie’s</span> <i>Pro-</i>|<i>fessor in
-Divinity in</i> <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, <i>and</i> | Chaplaine <i>in Ordinary</i>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1637: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [632], see below, signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup><span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>X</span><sup>8</sup>, <span class='fss'>Y</span><sup>1</sup>, <span class='fss'>Z</span>, <span class='fss'>A</span>a-<span class='fss'>R</span>r<sup>8</sup>,
-<span class='fss'>S</span>s<sup>2</sup>: pp. 11 begg. as below: English Roman. Contents:—sign. (&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup>, title: <b>i.</b> p.
-1, a title, within double lines, as are all the succeeding titles:—“<span class='fss'>CHRISTS</span> | <span class='fss'>COVNSELL
-FOR</span> | <span class='fss'>ENDING LAVV</span> | <span class='fss'><i>CASES</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>AS IT HATH BEENE DELI-</span>|<span class='fss'>VERED IN TWO SERMONS</span> |
-vpon the fiue and twentieth verse of | <i>the fifth of Matthew</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Iohn Prideavx</span>,
-Doctor of | Divinity, <i>Regius Professor</i>, and Rector | of <i>Exeter Colledge</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, <i>woodcut</i>,
-and impr. 152 <i>b</i>, dated 1636]”: 3–4, dedication to Edmund Prideaux and his wife,
-dated “From Exeter Colledge in Oxford. October 12.”: 5–31, 33–65, the sermons:
-then a blank page: p. 11 beg. <i>Fall not</i>: <b>ii.</b> (pp. [6] + 39 + [1], p. 11 beg. <i>it is reserued</i>)
-p. (1) a title “Ephesus backsliding: considered and applied to these times ...”, with
-impr. 152 <i>b</i>, 1636, an Act sermon at St. Mary’s, July 10, on Rev. ii. 4: (3–6) dedication
-to dr. Laurence Bodley, Aug. 5: 1–39, the sermon: <b>iii.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11
-beg. <i>in this point</i>) p. (1) a title “A Christians free-will offering ...”, with impr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>152<i>b</i>, 1636, a Christmas sermon at Christ Church, on Ps. cx. 3: 1–27, the sermon: <b>iv.</b>
-(pp. [2] + 31 + [1], p. 11 beg. <i>with Pilate</i>) p. (1) a title “The first fruits of the Resurrection
-...” with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636, an Easter sermon at St. Peter’s in the East, Oxford,
-on 1 Cor. xv. 20: 1–31, the sermon: <b>v.</b> (pp. [2] + 26, p. 11 beg. <i>abiects came</i>) p. (1)
-a title “Gowries Conspiracie ...” with impr. 152<i>b</i>, a sermon at St. Mary’s, Aug. 5:
-1–26, the sermon, of some slight value for the history of the Gowrie plot, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 1600:
-<b>vi.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. <i>Saint Augustine</i>), p. (1) a title “Higgaion &amp; Selah:
-for the discovery of the powder-plot ...” with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636, a sermon at St. Mary’s
-on Nov. 5, on Ps. ix. 16: 1–27, the sermon: <b>vii.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg.
-<i>murmured</i>) p. (1) a title “Hezekiah’s sicknesse and recovery ...,” with impr. 152<i>b</i>,
-1636, a sermon before the King at Woodstock, on 2 Chron. xxxii. 24: 1–27, the
-sermon: <b>viii.</b> (pp. [4]+ 24 + [8], p. 11 beg. <i>springs, Schismatickes</i>) p. (1) a title
-“Perez-Vzzah, or The Breach of Vzzah ...,” with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636, a sermon before
-the King at Woodstock, 24 Aug. 1624, on 2 Sam. vi. 6–7: (3–4) dedication to James
-earl of Arran, dated 22 Oct. 1624: 1–24 (1), the sermon: (3–8) “Alloquium serenissimo
-regi Iacobo Woodstochiæ habitum 24. Augusti. Anno 1624”: <b>ix.</b> (pp. [8] + 29
-+ [1], p. 11 beg. <i>acknowledge</i>) p. (1) a title “A sermon preached on the fift of October
-1624. at the consecration of S<sup>t</sup> Iames Chappell in Exceter Colledge ...”, with impr.
-152<i>b</i>, 1636: (3–7) epistle dedicatory to dr. George Hakewill, dated Nov. 15: 1–29,
-the sermon on Luke xix. 46: <b>x.</b> (pp. 28, p. 11 beg. <i>which Iesus</i>) 1–28, a sermon on
-John vi. 14, without title, see below, but head line “The great Prophet’s Advent”:
-<b>xi.</b> (pp. [2] + 29+ [1], p. 11 beg. <i>Elenches</i>) p. (1) a title “Reverence to Rulers. A
-sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–29, the sermon, on
-Acts xxiii. 5: <b>xii.</b> (pp. [2] + 22, p. 11 beg. <i>third a comfort</i>) p. (1) a title “The draught
-of the brooke. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–22,
-the sermon, on Ps. cx. 7: <b>xiii.</b> (pp. [2] + 32, p. 11 beg. <i>a bit is</i>) p. (1) a title “Davids
-rejoycing for Christs Resurrection ...”, an Easter sermon at St. Peter’s in the East, on
-Ps. xvi. 10–11, with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–32, the sermon: <b>xiv.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg.
-<i>ther. There</i>) p. (1) a title “The Christians Expectation. A sermon preached at the Court ...”,
-with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–27, the sermon, on 2 Pet. iii. 13: <b>xv.</b> (pp. [2] + 26,
-p. 11 beg. <i>beyond wisdome</i>), p. (1) a title “Wisedomes Iustification. A sermon
-preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–26, the sermon, on Luke vii.
-35: <b>xvi.</b> (pp. [2] + 24, p. 11 beg. <i>Gods appoyntment</i>) p. (1) a title “Heresies progresse.
-A sermon preached before the Court ...”, with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–24, the sermon,
-on 1 Cor. xi. 19: <b>xvii.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. <i>the world</i>) p. (1), a title “A Plot
-for preferment. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–27,
-the sermon, on 1 Pet. v. 6: <b>xviii.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. <i>den lost</i>) p. (1) a title
-“The patronage of Angels. A sermon preached at the Court ...”, with impr. 152<i>b</i>,
-1636: 1–27, the sermon, on Matth. xviii. 10: <b>xix.</b> (pp. [2] + 27 + [1], p. 11 beg. <i>Iohns
-conclusion</i>) p. (1) a title “Idolatrous Feasting. A sermon preached at the Court ...”,
-with impr. 152<i>b</i>, 1636: 1–27, the sermon, on 1 Cor. x. 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 265 for the author, and 1636 P. This is
-a collection of twenty sermons by dr. Prideaux from 1614, several preached before the
-king or court, and several preached at Oxford: those delivered at the consecration of
-Exeter College Chapel and about Gowrie’s conspiracy being of considerable interest.
-All, except the second (which is grouped with the first) and the eleventh, have separate
-titlepages, and are often cited as separate editions, but the signatures run throughout
-the volume. Sign. Y consists of one leaf only, the other three having been obviously
-intended for a one-leaf title and two-leaf dedication of the sermon following (no. x in
-the above divisions, really the eleventh sermon), but apparently they were accidentally
-omitted. Some were already printed, those before printed at Oxford being nos. i (see
-1615 P), ii (see 1614 P), and ix (see 1625 P): and nos. i-vii at least, were printed
-separately at London in 1621. Collections of these sermons are often found without
-the general title and in a confused order.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Rous</b>, Francis. <span class='fss'><i>ARCHÆOLOGJÆ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ATTICÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI TRES.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THREE BOOKES OF THE</span> | <span class='sc'>Attick</span> Antiquities. | <span class='fss'>CONTAINING</span> | The description
-of the Citties glory, govern-|ment, division of the People, and
-Townes with-|in the <i>Athenian</i> Territories, their Religi-|on, Superstition,
-Sacrifices, account of | their Yeare, as also a full relation | of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>Iudicatories. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Francis Ro</span>u<span class='fss'>S</span> Scholler of <i>Merton</i> | Colledge in
-<i>Oxon</i>. | [<i>line</i>: then <i>motto</i> from Aristides, in Greek and English.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 160<i>a</i>: 1637: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-149 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>in height</i>, 101 <i>which
-standing</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title within a line: (3–6) Epistle dedicatory
-to Sir Nathaniel Brent, warden of
-Merton College, Oxford, dated “From
-my study in Merton College, Iun. 9. 1637”:
-(7) “To the Reader”: (8) “Errata &amp; inserenda”:
-1–149, the work in 3 bks.:
-(2–3) not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 104. This book, which passed through
-several editions at Oxford (1649, 1654, 1651, 1662, 1670, and 1675) and London
-(2nd ed. 1645, 9th ed. 1685), became a companion volume for school use to Godwin’s
-<cite>Roman Antiquities</cite> (see 1614 G) and <cite>Moses and Aaron</cite> (Lond. 1625, &amp;c.).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Scheibler</b>, Christophorus. <span class='fss'>CHRISTOPHORI</span> | <span class='fss'>SCHEIBLERI,</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ANTEHAC IN ACADE-</span>|<span class='sc'>mia Gissena professoris, et</span> | <span class='fss'>PÆDAGOGIARCHÆ, NUNC</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Tremoniæ</span> | in Ecclesia Superinten-|dentis, &amp; in Gymnasio <span class='sc'>Rectoris</span> |
-<span class='fss'>METAPHYSICA,</span> | <span class='fss'>DUOBUS LIBRIS</span> | <i>Vniversum hujus scientiæ Systema comprehendens:</i>
-| <span class='fss'>OPUS TUM OMNIUM FACUL-</span>|tatum: tum inprimis Philosophiæ
-&amp; Theolo-|giæ Studiosis utile &amp; necessarium. | <span class='fss'>PRÆMISSA EST SUMMARIA
-METHO-</span>|dus, sive dispositio totius Scientiæ. | Et accessit Proœmium de
-usu Philosophiæ in Theolo-|gia, &amp; prætensa ejus ad Theologiam contrarietate.
-| <i>Additi sunt singulis Libris</i> <span class='sc'>Indices</span> <i>duo</i>: alter <i>Capitum
-generalium</i> | <i>Titulorum, &amp; Articulorum in initio</i>: alter <i>rerum in fine</i>. |
-Quibus omnibus accessit Exercitationum auctarium, de selectis aliquibus
-Meta<span class='vr'>-</span>|physicæ Capitibus. Per <i>T. B. Art. Mag.</i> &amp; <i>Coll Reg.</i> <span class='sc'>Oxon</span>
-Socium. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>EDITIO ULTIMA.</span> | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 167: 1637: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 21 + [3] + 472 + [48] + 456 + [34] +
-186 + [2]: pp. 11 begg. <i>absolutè</i>, and <i>Pererius</i>,
-and <i>voco. Æquivocum</i>, and <i>linquatur</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title within double lines: (3–6) Epistola
-dedicatoria to Ludwig, landgrave of Hesse,
-by Scheibler, dated Dec. 1616: (7–11)
-“Lectori Philo-Metaphysico ...”, signed
-“Thomas Barlow ...”, the editor: (12–13)
-“Summaria Methodus ...”: (14–24)
-“Index ad Librum primum ...”, in
-order of the chapters: 1–21 “Prooenium”:
-(2) a titlepage to book one: 1–472,
-bk. 1: (1–30) “Index rerum alphabeticus”:
-(31) a titlepage to book two:
-(33–36) Epistola dedicatoria to Philip,
-landgrave of Hesse, by Scheibler, dated
-March “1617”: (37–48) “Index ...”,
-in order of the chapters: 1–456, book
-two: (1–26) “Index rerum alphabeticus
-...”: (27) a titlepage “Exercitationes
-aliquot metaphysicæ, de Deo ... per
-Thomam Barlow ...” with impr. 69:
-(29–31) “Lectori”: (33–34) “Exercitationum
-... Syllabus”: 1–186, six exercises:
-(1) errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Scheibler’s <cite>Metaphysica</cite> was first issued in 1617, and reissued at Oxford in 1665, as
-well as often elsewhere. Bp. Barlow edited it, and added the Exercitationes de Deo
-(see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iv. 336), which were reissued in 1658. The edition
-of 1638 is simply a reissue of the sheets of the 1637 edition, with different imprint and
-date on the first titlepage, and “Meta<span class='vr'>-</span>” on the first titlepage altered to “Meta-.” Some
-woodcut diagrams occur in the Exercitationes: in which also the sections change from
-eights to fours.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. ——. “157. Scheibleri (Chr.) Liber Commentariorum Topicorum—Oxon.
-1637.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in “Catalogi ... librorum Richardi Davis bibliopolæ pars secunda” (1686),
-p. 75 among octavos. Bagford (Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 9501, fol 76<sup>v</sup>) also describes
-a copy: and it is probably not really rare, but has escaped the nets of the larger
-libraries.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>21. <b>Stinton</b>, George. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN</span> | <span class='fss'>THE CATHEDRALL</span> |
-Church of <i>Worcester</i> vp-|on Sunday Morning, | <i>Novemb.</i> 27. 1636. | <span class='fss'>IN</span> |
-The time of <span class='sc'>Pestilence</span> in o-|ther places of this Land, and now | in the
-time of the Visita-|tion of that <i>Citie</i>, with that | greivous Sicknesse; and |
-by reason of it. | By <span class='fss'>GEO. STINTON</span>, | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 170: 1637: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-35 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>this consideration</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. 1, title,
-within a border of woodcuts: 3, dedication
-to Worcester: 4, the text, 1 Kings
-viii. 37–39: 1–35, the sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 406.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Thesaurus</b>, Emmanuel. <span class='fss'>REVERENDI PATRIS</span> | <span class='fss'>EMANVELIS
-THESAVRI</span> | <span class='fss'>E SOCIETATE IESV,</span> | <span class='fss'>CÆSARES</span>; | Et ejusdem varia carmina<i>:</i> |
-<i>Quibus accesserunt</i> | Nobilissimorum <span class='sc'>Orientis</span> | &amp; <span class='sc'>Occidentis</span> | Pontificum
-elogia, &amp; | <i>varia opera Poëtica</i>. | Editio secunda emendatior, cum
-auctariolo. | [<i>woodcuts</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 163: 1637: [4] + 151 + [1]: p. 11
-beg. <i>Caligula. Nascitur</i>: 101 *<i>Illius
-Panis</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines: (3)
-Latin poem by George Herbert on Francis
-Bacon lord Verulam: (4) Latin epitaph
-on Gustavus Adolphus by Dan. Heinsius,
-with a chronogram: 1–38, the Cæsares:
-39–151, “Ejusdem Carmina.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition of this work by Emanuele Tesauro (<i>b.</i> 1581) was published in 1619
-at Milan, and a third at the same place in 1643. Backer mentions doubts whether the
-author of this work is identical with the Jesuit who bore the same names. The book
-contains Latin epigrams on the Cæsars, and miscellaneous poems. The occurrence of
-Herbert’s poem in the volume is singular. I have seen a copy in which the first line
-of the title contained “R. P.” only, which probably indicates an early issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>V[erneuil]</b>, I[ohn]. A | Nomenclator | of such Tracts and |
-Sermons as have beene | printed or translated into | English upon any
-place | of holy Scripture | [<i>woodcuts</i>, then <i>line</i>] | <i>Operâ, studio &amp; impensis</i> |
-I. V. | [<i>line, woodcut, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1637: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[156], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>12</sup> <span class='fss'>G</span><sup>6</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Ruth.
-Cap.</i> 4: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-3<sup>v</sup> “To the courteous
-and judicoius Reader,” unsigned:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span>5<sup>r</sup>, the work; <span class='fss'>G</span><sup>6</sup>, not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 222. The second edition of this work was
-issued, doubled in size, in 1642. The author was under-librarian at the Bodleian,
-and had compiled this list for private use: nearly all the books referred to in the work
-have their Bodleian references affixed, the arrangement being in the order of the books
-of the Bible, the Apocrypha being excluded. The fact that some of the books were
-not in the library “stirred up some well-wishers ... who deprived themselves to
-furnish this Place with some bookes that were wanting” (<i>Preface of</i> 2<i>nd edition</i>), among
-whom was Robert Burton.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Whear</b>, Degory. <span class='fss'>RELECTIONES</span> | <span class='fss'>HYEMALES,</span> | <span class='fss'>DE RATIONE</span> |
-&amp; Methodo legendi | <i>utrasq</i>; <i>Historias</i>, | <span class='fss'>CIVILES ET</span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIASTICAS</span>. |
-Quibus Historici probatissimi, non solùm | ordine quo sunt legendi
-catenatim recensentur, | sed doctorum etiam virorum de singulis judicia |
-subnectuntur. | <i>Nec non</i> | Vndè sig ulorum in Historia vel brevitas |
-dilatari, vel defectus suppleri, vel perplexitas | expediri; vel mutilationes
-deniq; temporum | injuriâ factæ resarciri possint, indicatur | [<i>line</i>] | à
-D. W. prælect. <span class='sc'>Camdeniano</span>. | [<i>line</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>Impr. 164: 1637: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32]
-+ 285 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>dignos pronunciaret</i>,
-201 <i>tiam minus</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within a line:
-(3–10) dedication to the Vice-chancellor
-and Heads of Houses in the University of
-Oxford, dated “Ab aula Glocestrensi Kal.
-Iul. 1637”, and signed “Degoreus
-Whear”: (11–32) “Relectionum Conspectus”:
-1–20 “Antelogium,” delivered
-17 Oct. 1635: 21–285, the work, in three
-parts (45 + 5 + 7 sections).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 217 and 1625 W. This is really the 3rd
-edition. Some copies have impr. 165, instead of 164, omitting Forest’s name.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Wyberd</b>, John. <span class='under'><span class='fss'>SYNOPSIS</span></span> | Anni Christi 1637. | <i>Sivè</i> |
-<span class='under'><i>Diarium Astronomicum, &amp; Prog=</i></span>|<i>nosticon Astrologicum, &amp; Me</i>-|<i>teorologicum,
-ad annum primum</i> | <i>ab Intercalari.</i> 1637. | <span class='under'>Contriving, besides the
-generall state of</span> | the yeare, the daily disposition and inclination | of the
-aire, according to the severall positions | and configurations of the
-celestiall bodies. Also | the times of Conjunctions, greater and lesse; |
-and Aspects Lunar and mutuall. | <span class='under'>Faithfully supputated according to
-Art, for the use</span> | of those that are residing towards the end of the | 8
-climate of the world; situate in the North-tem-|perate Zone: The Pole
-Artique surmounting the | Horizon 51 degrees 34 minutes. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<span class='under'><i>Per</i> <span class='sc'>Joannem Wyberd</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span></span>, | Philophysicum, Astronomophilon. | [<i>line,
-motto, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 68 <i>d</i>: 1637: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48], signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>C</span><sup>8</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>The
-Moone hath</i>: Long Primer Roman and
-English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title, within
-a line and a border of woodcuts: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-4<sup>r</sup>
-prefatory notes, chronological and astrological:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>8<sup>r</sup>, the Calendar: <span class='fss'>B</span>8<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>C</span>8<sup>r</sup>,
-“A Prognostication” for each month.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. This appears to be the first and last Almanac issued by Wyberd. See the
-note under <i>Booker</i>, above in this year. Besides the words underlined in the above title,
-the words “Oxford,” and “famous Universitie. 1637.” in the imprint, are printed in
-red: as well as other words in the text of the book. There is an astrological woodcut
-of a man on sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>r</sup>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1638.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Achilles</b> Tatius. The Loves | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>CLITOPHON</span> | <span class='fss'>AND</span> | <span class='fss'>LEVCIPPE</span>.
-| A most elegant History, written in | Greeke by <span class='sc'>Achilles
-Tati</span>u<span class='fss'>S</span>: | And now Englished. | [<i>line, motto, line, woodcut, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 172: 1638: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 255 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>affaires, distraction</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) verses “On the Frontispiece.”:
-(3) an engraved title, see below:
-(5–6) “The Translator to the Reader”:
-(7–24) complimentary verses by friends
-of the translator, whose initials and Christian
-name are incidentally mentioned: 1–255,
-the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 301. The translator of the <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Τὰ κατὰ Λευκίππην
-καὶ Κλειτοφῶντα</span> was Anthony Hodges, of New College. Wood refers to an impression
-of this book in 1638 without the commendatory verses: this would be no doubt
-an early issue. The engraved title is a fine one by W. Marshall, in which the words
-of the ordinary title, with impr. 173, are on a shell held by two mermaids; behind
-is a storm-tossed ship with the two lovers on board and Cupid in the stern, with
-the city of “Alexandria” in the background. This title was probably intended to be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>printed on the second leaf of the first section: but as it is, the frontispiece is on an
-inserted leaf, and the true second leaf is torn out. This book seems to be still the only
-English translation of the romance, except that in Bohn’s library.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bancroft</b>, John, bp. of Oxford. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES</span> | <span class='fss'>TO BE</span> | <span class='fss'>ENQVIRED
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>WITHIN THE DIOCES OF</span> | <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, in the trienniall <i>Visi-</i>|<i>tation</i> of the
-Right Reverend Fa-|ther in God Iohn Lord Bi-|shop of <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | <span class='fss'>HELD</span> |
-In the yeare of our <span class='sc'>Lord God</span> 1638. in the | fourteenth yeare of the
-Reigne of our most | gracious Soveraign Lord, <span class='sc'>Charles</span> | by the grace
-of <span class='sc'>God</span> King of | great, <i>Brittaine</i> <i>France</i>, &amp; | <i>Ireland</i>, Defender of | the
-Faith &amp;c. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1638: sm 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>buried any</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—p. sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>,
-title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>, Oath, Charge and Directions:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>r</sup>, the Articles in two divisions:
-<span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>v</sup>, directions: <span class='fss'>B</span>4, not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Burton</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | Anatomy of | melancholy | [&amp;c.,
-exactly as 1628 B, being from the same plate with “fift” instead of
-“thirde,” and different date.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 70: 1638: (fours) folio: pp.
-[14] + 78 + [2] + 723 (after 218 are two
-unnumbered leaves) + [9]: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>judgement</i> and <i><span class='vr'>i</span>n Germany</i>, 601 <i>sate up
-late</i>: English Roman. Contents:—exactly
-as in the 1632 edition, except that
-the “Synopsis of the first partition” precedes
-the poem “ad librum suum”, the
-“analysis of the third partition” occupies
-pp. 399–401, and the partition extends to
-p. 723: while there is no colophon, there
-being no p. (10) at end.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 653 and 1621 B. There is a note before the
-<i>Errata</i> in which the author says that the book was begun to be printed not long before
-at Edinburgh “sed à typographis nostris illicò suppressa, Londini mox illorum cum
-venia protelata, Oxoniæ demum perfecta.” Accordingly signn. A-X&thinsp;x are not Oxford
-printing, but presumably from Edinburgh type: at p. 347 begins Oxford printing, the
-prefatory matter being also Oxford work. It would appear that some Edinburgh printers
-began a reprint, that the Oxford printers interfered and suppressed it, that with their
-consent the part printed in Scotland was not destroyed but <i>protelata</i>, prolonged, given
-a further lease of life, at London, and finally brought to Oxford and completed. The
-woodcuts and details of printing point to the division being before p. 347. The
-signatures of the first sheet are <i>nil</i>, § 2, §, § 2, § 3, <i>nil</i> (!), not counting the engraved
-title which should occur between the first and second leaf.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Bythner</b>, Victorinus. [<i>line</i>] | <span lang="IW" xml:lang="IW">לְשׁוֹן לִמּוּרִים</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>Ling</span>u<span class='sc'>a
-Er</span>u<span class='fss'>DITOR</span>u<span class='fss'>M.</span> | <i>Hoc est</i>, | <span class='sc'>Nova Et Methodica</span> | <span class='fss'>INSTITVTIO</span> | Linguæ
-Sanctæ, | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Usui eorum</i> | Quibus <i>Fontes Israëlis</i> plenè | intelligere,
-&amp; ex illis limpidissimas | aquas haurire, curæ cordique est, | accommodata:
-| <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Studio &amp; Operâ</i> | <span class='sc'>Victorini Bythner</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 183: 1638: (fours) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8]
-+ 224 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>discerpi</i>, 201
-<i>locum ubi</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (2) “Approbatio” by the
-Oxford Professor of Hebrew, and Imprimatur
-by the Vice-Chancellor: (3–4)
-Latin dedication to the dean and canons
-of Christ Church: (5) two Greek poems
-on the book by Edw. Wirley, rector of St.
-Ebbe’s, Oxford: (7) “Sceleton ...” of
-the book, a plan of contents: (8) “Admonitio
-ad Lectorem”: 1–224, the work
-in 11 chapters (120 rules), with an “Appendix
-de Aramæismo ...”: (1) “Nomina
-authorum ... ex quibus hæc Institutio est
-concinnata.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 675. This is the first edition, the
-second being published at Cambridge in 1645 (the author having moved thither when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>the Civil War broke out) and afterwards several times, separately or with the <cite>Lyra
-Prophetica</cite>, in London. This is an advance on 1631 B.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>C[aussin]</b>, N[icolas]. <span class='fss'><i>THE</i></span> | u<span class='fss'>NFORT</span>u<span class='fss'>NATE</span> | <span class='fss'>POLITIQUE</span>, | First
-written in French | By C. N. | <i>Englished by</i> | G. P. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 185: 1638: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 218 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>rule, by</i>, 201
-<i>selfe so</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a border of woodcut
-ornaments: (3–7) “To the courteous and
-ingenious reader”: 1–218, the work,
-bearing as a second title “The Life of
-Herod.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a translation of the 4th book of the well-known <cite>Cour Sainte</cite> of Nicolas
-Caussin the Jesuit (<i>d.</i> 1651), entitled “De l’Impieté des Cours” or “Le Politique malheureux”,
-omitting the first few words: and is in fact a biography of Herod the
-Great, with reflections on his conduct. The translator gives no clue to his own name,
-but mentions the author as “the judicious and eloquent Causinus.” The <cite>Cour Sainte</cite>
-(first issued in 1624) was translated as a whole into English in 1631 and into Italian,
-German, Spanish, and other languages, but this 4th part seems never to have been
-issued separately in French (in Italian 1634, &amp;c.): and this Oxford volume though not
-rare has escaped even the eye of Backer and his editor Sommervogel (1891), probably
-because concealed under initials. Some copies have 1639 on the titlepage.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. <b>Chillingworth</b>, William. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>RELIGION OF</span> | <span class='fss'>PROTESTANTS</span> |
-<span class='fss'>A SAFE VVAY</span> | <span class='fss'>TO SALVATION.</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>AN ANSVVER TO A</span> | <span class='fss'>BOOKE ENTITLED</span> |
-<span class='fss'>MERCY AND TRVTH</span>, | Or, Charity maintain’d by | Catholiques, which
-pre-|tends to prove the | Contrary. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>William Chillingworth</span>
-Master | <i>of Arts of the University of</i> <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line, motto, woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180 or 181: 1638: (fours) la.
-8<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32] + 413 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>vinced
-that they</i>, 411 <i>which remain</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-double lines: (3–7) epistle dedicatory to
-the king: (8) imprimaturs by the Vicechancellor
-and the two Theological Professors
-at Oxford, one dated 14 Oct. 1637:
-(9–31) “The Preface to the author of
-Charity maintained [M. Wilson] with an
-answer to his pamphlet entituled a Direction
-to N. N.”: 1–413, the book, which
-incorporates most of the text of the book
-answered: (1) Errata.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 91. This book (which Wood erroneously
-states was issued in 1636, and which was republished in 1664, 1674, 1684, 1687, 1704,
-1719, 1727, 1742, 1752, 1820, 1838, 1845, 1846), was the effect and cause of considerable
-controversy, Chillingworth having recently reverted from Roman Catholicism to
-Protestantism, and the form of the book being that of an answer to part 1 of M. Wilson’s
-<cite>Mercy and truth or Charity maintayn’d</cite> (1634), itself an answer to Potter’s <cite>Want of
-Charity</cite> (see 1633 P). The controversy is well described in the Dict. of National
-Biography. There was a suspicion that Wilson obtained advance copies of the sheets
-of this book as it went through the press, see Laud’s History of the Chancellorship
-under the year, where are also given the archbishop’s views about the advisability of
-Chillingworth answering the second part also of Wilson’s book. The present volume
-is headed “Part i.” throughout. The issue of this volume with an imprint showing
-that it was published in London is said to have some slight changes, but they are not
-easily to be found, and in general the two issues appear to be identical. The description
-of the Errata and their cause shows that it was the custom, at least at Oxford, for
-authors to revise their proofs—which has been recently denied.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>C[roke]</b>, dr. Ch[arles]. <span class='fss'>A SAD</span> | <span class='fss'>MEMORIALL</span> | <span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>HENRY
-CURWEN</span> | <span class='sc'>Esq</span>u<span class='fss'>IRE, THE MOST</span> | <span class='fss'>WORTHY AND ONELY</span> | <span class='fss'>CHILD OF S</span><sup>r</sup>
-<span class='sc'>Patrici</span>u<span class='fss'>S</span> | Cu<span class='fss'>RWEN</span> Baronet of <i>War-</i>|<i>kington</i> in <i>Cum</i>|<i>berland</i>, | <span class='fss'>WHO
-WITH INFI-</span>|<span class='fss'>NITE SORROW OF</span> | all that knew him depar-|ted this life
-<i>August:</i> 21. | being Sunday: | 1636. | <span class='fss'>IN THE FOURTEENTH</span> | yeare of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>his age; and lyes in|terred in the Church of | <i>Amersham</i> in <i>Buc-</i>|<i>kinghamshire</i>.
-| [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-32: p. 11 beg. <i>leeve that</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-arched border: (3–4) dedication to sir
-Patricius and lady Curwen, signed “Ch.
-C.”: (5) “The Author to the Reader”:
-(7–8) not seen: 1–23, the sermon, on
-Job xiv. 2: 24–32, description of the
-funeral and copies of the verses upon the
-hearse.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 424. Sir Patricius Curwen’s son had been
-sent for tuition to the Rector of Amersham, dr. Croke, in whose house he died. The
-monument still exists at Amersham, and is described in Lipscomb’s <cite>Buckinghamshire</cite>,
-iii. 169: the burial was on 23 Aug. 1636. The preface explains that “these papers
-have lien two years in Cumberland in a Manuscript, which privacie not satisfying the
-great affection of Noble Parents towards their deceased Son, they are now come to ...
-view”. The ten copies of verses are in Latin and English, the most considerable
-being “a Dialogue” in verse by Paul Solomeaux a Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Florus</b>, Lucius Julius. <span class='fss'>L. JULII FLORI</span> | rerum à | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>ROMANIS</span></span> |
-<span class='under'><span class='fss'>GESTARVM</span></span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI IV,</span> | <span class='under'>A <span class='sc'>Johanne Stadio</span> <i>emendati</i>.</span> | <i>Editio nova
-singulis Neotericis purgatior</i> | <i>&amp; emendatior.</i> | <i><span class='fss'>SEORSUM EXCUSUS</span></i> | <span class='under'><span class='sc'>IN
-EOS Commentari</span>u<span class='fss'>S</span></span> | <span class='under'><span class='sc'>Johan: Stadii</span>, Historiæ &amp; Ma-</span>|theseos Lovanii
-Professoris primi, | elaboratissimus: | <span class='under'>Cui accesserunt Chronologicæ
-Doctiss:</span> | <span class='sc'>Cla</span>u<span class='sc'>d: Salmasii</span> excerptiones. | Unà cum variis lectionibus
-ex notis <i>Gruteri</i>, | <i>Salmasii</i>, <i>Vineti</i>, &amp; editionibus, colle-|ctis; &amp; cum
-hâc nostrâ collatis: | <span class='under'><i>Sub calce prodit</i> L. Ampelii <i>Liber Memorialis ex</i></span> |
-<i>Clariss: Salmasii bibliotheca petitus</i>. | Cum Indice Rerum &amp; Verborum |
-uberrimo. | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 121: 1638: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[4] + 137 + [1] + 319 + [123] + 31 + [1]:
-pp. 11 begg. <i>immortalium, rum pleb.,
-quem Carthaginienses</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (3–4)
-“Typographus Lectori”: 1, a title precisely
-as 1631 F, except that all V’s are
-now U’s, I’s consonantal are J’s, and ij’s
-are ii’s, and in ll. 7–8 “<i>purgatior</i> | <i>&amp;
-emendatior</i>”, with impr. 72 <i>a</i>: 3–137,
-(1), 1–319, (1–35) are also precisely as
-in 1631 F, the titlepage on p. 2 differing
-slightly in minute points: (36–67) the
-Excerptiones, with Epilogus: (68–115)
-“Ad Florum variarum lectionum libellus”:
-(116–123), 1–31 “Lucius Ampelius
-ex bibliotheca Cl. Salmasii”, with preface.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reprint of 1631 F, with additions shown on the titlepage. The underlined
-words are in red, as well as “Oxoniæ,” in the imprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Gardyner</b>, dr. Richard. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACH’D IN</span> | <span class='fss'>THE
-CATHEDRALL</span> | <span class='fss'>CHVRCH OF CHRIST</span> | <i><span class='fss'>IN OXFORD</span></i>, | On <span class='sc'>Christmas</span> Day<i>:</i> |
-Wherein is defended the Catholique | Doctrine that Christ is True |
-God Truely Incarnate. | <i><span class='fss'>AGAINST THE OLDE DE-</span></i>|<i>cay’d Heresies newely
-Reviu’d in</i> | <i>these later Dayes.</i> | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Gardyner</span>, D.D.
-And | <i>Canon</i> of the same <i>Church</i>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 175: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>pable to save</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title,
-within a line: (5–8) dedication to dr.
-Duppa dean of Ch. Ch.: 1–31, the sermon,
-on John i. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 921.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>10. ——. <span class='fss'><i>A SERMON</i></span> | <span class='fss'>PREACH’D</span> | <span class='fss'>ON EASTER-DAY</span> | <span class='fss'>AT OXFORD,
-IN SAINT</span> | <span class='fss'>PETERS CHVRCH IN THE</span> | <span class='sc'>East</span>, the Accustomed place for the |
-<span class='sc'>Rehearsall Sermon</span> on | <span class='fss'>THAT DAY</span>: | Wherein is prov’d the <span class='sc'>Sonne’s</span> |
-Equality with the <span class='sc'>Father</span>, the | <i>Deity of the Holy <span class='sc'>Ghost</span></i>, | <span class='fss'>AND</span> | The
-Resurrection of the same Numericall Body, | <i>Against the old, and Recent
-Oppugners of</i> | <i>these</i> Sacred Verities. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Richard Gardyner</span>, D.D.
-and Canon of | the Cathedrall Church of Christ in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 174: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 31
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>the vertue</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-a line: (3–7) Epistle dedicatory to dr.
-Richard Baylie: 1–31, the sermon, on
-Rom. viii. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 921.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Godwyn</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>ROMANÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>HISTORIAE</span> | <span class='fss'>ANTHOLOGIA</span> |
-[&amp;c., exactly as 1633 G, except in line 9 “&amp;” for “and,” “use,” and
-“inlarged by | <i>the Author</i>.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 182: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: [collation,
-contents &amp;c. precisely as 1633 G, except
-signature of dedication “Tho:” not
-“Tho.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 G. This appears to be an absolute reprint of the 1633 edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Jackson</b>, dr. Thomas. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>TREATISE</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE CONSECRATION</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF THE SONNE OF</span> | God to his everlasting | <span class='sc'>Priesthood.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'>THE
-ACCOMPLISHMENT</span> | of it by his glorious Resurrection | <i>and Ascension</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>BEING THE NINTH BOOK</span> | of Commentaries upon the | Apostles <span class='sc'>Creed</span>. |
-<span class='fss'>CONTINVED BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Thomas Iackson</span> Doctor in | Divinity, Chaplaine in
-ordinary to | his <span class='sc'>Maiesty</span>, and President of | C.&thinsp;C.&thinsp;C. in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180<i>a</i>: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24]
-+ 352 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>the wages</i>, 301
-<i>10.36. This</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines: (3–7)
-Epistle dedicatory to the King: (9–11)
-“To the Christian Reader”: (13–22)
-“A table of the principall Arguments
-...”, a list of contents: (23) “Errata”:
-1–352, (1–3), the treatise, in 43 chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 667. Ten books of Jackson’s Commentary on the
-Creed were published in 1613–1654, this being the 9th and the last issued in the
-author’s lifetime, he dying in 1640. This part was published (according to Wood)
-in 1628 and 1633 in London, and now in Oxford. Every page is within lines.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Longinus</b>, Dionysius. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΔΙΟΝΥΣΙΟΥ | ΛΟΓΓΙΝΟΥ</span> | [&amp;c., from
-the same plate as 1636 L, except that a new line is added at end “Cum
-Indice”, the imprint and date are altered, and at the foot outside the
-bounding line is “<i>editio Postrema</i>.”]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 87 <i>a</i>: 1638: [&amp;c. precisely as
-1636 L, except that the page following
-117 bears in addition “Errata ...”, and
-a new “Index rerum et verborum” is appended
-on 14 pages (the last of which
-adds “Imprimatur. <i>Ric. Baylie Vice-canc.
-Oxon.</i>”), and 4 blank pages follow:
-so that the collation is pp. [42] + 176 +
-[2] + 117 + [19] and one folded plate.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 446. This is a reissue of the sheets of 1636 L
-with the changes noted above. Some copies omit the preface by Langbaine and with
-it the blank sheet before the inserted (engraved) title. Conversely there are copies of
-this edition with the 1636 title and no ornament at the back of the folded plate.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>14. <b>Matthew</b>, archbp. Tobias. <span class='fss'>PIISSIMI</span> | <span class='fss'>ET</span> | <span class='fss'>EMINENTISSIMI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>VIRI, D. TOBIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>MATTHÆI</span> <i>Archiepis-</i>|<i>copi</i> olim <i>Eboracensis</i> | <span class='fss'>CONCIO APO-</span>|logetica
-adversus | Campianum. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 176: 1638: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[10] + 86: p. 11 beg. <i>ducens qui</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-a line doubled at the sides: (3) “Campiani
-Calumnia ... quam D. Tobias Matthæus
-hac suâ Concione depellit”: (4–9) Testimonia
-about the sermon and author: 1–86,
-the sermon, on Deut. xxxii. 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 871, but the incident which was the occasion
-of the sermon is related on col. 870. Matthew died on 29 Mar. 1628, and this sermon
-was intended to disprove Campian’s statement that Matthew practically confessed that
-if one read and believed the fathers he would become a Papist. The sermon was
-originally delivered at Oxford on 9 Oct. 1581, but this is certainly the first printed
-edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Oxford</b>, Christ Church. <span class='fss'>DEATH REPEAL’D</span> | <span class='fss'>BY A</span> | <span class='fss'>THANKFVLL
-MEMORIALL</span> | Sent from <span class='sc'>Christ-Ch</span>u<span class='fss'>RCH</span> | in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, | <span class='fss'><i>CELEBRATING</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE NOBLE DESERTS OF</span> | the Right Honourable, | <span class='fss'>PAVLE</span>, | Late Lord
-<span class='sc'>Vis-Co</span>u<span class='fss'>NT</span> | <span class='fss'>BAYNING</span> | of Su<span class='fss'>DB</span>u<span class='fss'>RY</span>. | Who changed his Earthly Honours |
-<i>Iune the</i> 11. 1638. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 174: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-50 (“42”) + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>We may
-believe</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines: (3–4)
-dedication to lady Penelope widow of
-viscount Bayning: 1-“42”, the poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 468. These poems on lord Bayning’s death
-at Bentley hall in Essex are all by Christ Church men, 19 in English, 11 in Latin.
-William Cartwright, Robert Burton, John Fell, Martin Llewellin and Jasper Mayne
-are among the writers. Lord Bayning took his degree from Christ Church in 1633, but
-was only 24 years old at his death, when the title became extinct.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <i>Musarum Oxoniensium</i> | <span class='fss'>CHARISTERIA</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PRO</span> | <span class='fss'>SERENISSIMA</span> | <span class='fss'><i>REGINA</i></span> | <span class='fss'>MARIA,</span> | <span class='fss'>RECENS</span> | <span class='fss'>E NIXVS LABORIOSI</span> |
-discrimine receptâ. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151 <i>b</i>: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [88],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span>, <span class='fss'>DD</span>, <span class='fss'>E</span>, a-b, bb, c-d<sup>4</sup>: sign.
-<span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Qui primos</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup> title, within double
-lines: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-d4<sup>v</sup>, poems.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are verses to congratulate the Queen on her safe delivery and condole with
-her for the loss of the infant princess, who seems to have lived only a few hours. The
-reference is apparently to the birth of the princess Catherine (<i>b.</i> and <i>d.</i> 29 Jan. 163<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>),
-but the ordinary pedigrees and histories seem not to notice this event. The poems are
-in Latin and English, except three Greek and two French. The printer (Lichfield)
-contributes a poem at the end. The signatures show the hasty method of printing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. ——. <span class='fss'><span class='under'>STATVTA</span></span> | <i>Selecta è Corpore</i> | <i>Statutorum</i> | <span class='fss'><span class='under'>VNIVERSITATIS</span></span>
-| <span class='sc'>Oxon</span>, | <i><span class='under'>Vt in promptu &amp; ad ma</span>-</i>|num sint, quæ magis ad usum, |
-(<i>præcipuè Iuniorum</i>) | facere videntur: | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>, then <i>line</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 179: 1638: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 213 + [15], and two folding plates:
-p. 11 beg. <i>libros de Cœlo</i>, 201 <i>non priùs</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title,
-within a border: (5–7) “Admonitio ad
-lectorem de veteri Calendario omisso”,
-with a table of “Non Dis.” days: (8)
-Explanation of symbols used: 1–197, the
-statutes: 198–205, “Statuta Bibliothecæ
-Bodleianæ ... 1620”: 207–213, “<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Επινομις</span>:
-seu explanatio Iuramenti ...”:
-(2–3), not seen: (4–12) “Elenchus Materiarum”:
-(14) “Errata ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>This is the first edition of the selected Statutes, the beginning of a long series, and
-was compiled by Thomas Crossfield of Queen’s College. Other editions were issued
-in 1661, and with the title “Parecbolæ” in 1671, 1674, 1682, 1693, 1705, 1710,
-1721, 1729, 1740, 1756, 1771, 1784, 1794, 1808, 1815, 1820, 1828, 1830, 1835, 1838,
-1840, 1841, 1842, 1843, 1845, 1846, and no doubt in some other years, especially after
-1830: the book was in fact reprinted whenever the stock in hand was exhausted.
-Wharton’s <cite>Second Volume of the Remains of ... William Laud ...</cite>, under the date,
-proves that it was issued in Jan. 163<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span>. A small folded sheet “Indiculus Statutorum”,
-a plan of them arranged by subjects and bearing the signature <span class='fss'>A</span>2, should follow the
-titlepage, and in some copies the large <cite>Encyclopædia</cite>, described in 1635 O, is inserted
-to face p. 16 or 20: but the book can hardly be pronounced imperfect, if this plate is
-wanting. The signatures of the prefatory matter are peculiar: the first two leaves
-(blank, and title) form a section of themselves, and also the next two, not counting the
-folded leaf, and this even in large paper copies. So too sign. <span class='fss'>Q</span><sup>6</sup> is divided into two
-sets of two and four leaves respectively! The 4th leaf of <span class='fss'>P</span><sup>4</sup> is presumably blank and
-perhaps always torn off. The underlined words in the above title are printed in red,
-as well as “Excusa cum Licentiâ,” and “pro Guil: Webb,” in the imprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Ranchinus</b>, Gulielmus. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>REVIEW</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>COVNCELL</span> |
-<span class='fss'>OF</span> | <span class='fss'>TRENT.</span> | VVherein are contained the severall | nullities of it: With
-the many grievan<small>/</small>|ces and prejudices done by it to Christian | Kings and
-Princes: | As also to all Catholique Churches in the | World; and more
-particularly to the | <span class='sc'>Gallicane</span> Church. | [two <i>lines</i>] | First writ in
-<i>French</i> by a learned <i>Roman</i>-Catholique. | Now | <i>Translated into</i> English
-<i>by</i> G. L. | [two <i>lines</i> before, between and after a <i>motto</i> and <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 177: 1638: (fours) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[28] + 388: p. 11 beg. <i>sider these</i>, 301 <i>to
-determine</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title, within double line: (3–4) dedication
-to dr. Christopher Potter, by Gerard
-Langbaine the translator, dated “Queenes
-Colledge in Oxford April 12. 1638”: (5–10)
-“To the Reader” by the translator:
-(11–12) “An Advertisement to the
-Reader...” by the anonymous author:
-(13–26) “A summary of the Chapters”:
-(27) “Faults escaped”: 1–388, the work,
-in seven books.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 448. The author’s name occurs in
-Langbaine’s Preface. Ranchin’s <cite>Revision du Concil de Trente</cite> was published
-anonymously in 1600.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Randolph</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>POEMS</span> | <span class='fss'>WITH THE</span> | <span class='fss'>MVSES</span> | <span class='fss'>LOOKING<small>/</small>GLASSE<i>:</i></span>
-| <span class='fss'><i>AND</i></span> | <span class='fss'>AMYNTAS·</span> | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Thomas Randolph</span> Master of
-Arts, | and late Fellow of <i>Trinity</i> Colledge in | <i>Cambridge</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then
-<i>device</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 174: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [24] +
-128 + [2] + 93 + [7] + 114: pp. 11 beg.
-<i>Went forth, shall see</i> and <i>For to be</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-a line double at the sides: (3–24) poems
-on the author and book: 1–128, the poems:
-(1) a title:—“[<i>woodcut</i>] | <span class='fss'>THE MVSES</span> |
-<span class='fss'>LOOKING<small>/</small>GLASSE.</span> | [<i>line</i>] | By T. R. |
-[<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>]”, with impr. 184:
-1–93, the play, in five acts: (2) a title:—“[two
-<i>lines</i>] | <span class='fss'>AMYNTAS</span> | <span class='fss'>OR THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>IMPOSSIBLE DOVVRY.</span> | <span class='fss'>A PASTORALL
-ACTED</span> | before the <span class='sc'>King</span> &amp; Qu<span class='fss'>EENE</span> | at
-<i>White-Hall</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Written by <span class='sc'>Thomas
-Randolph</span>. | [<i>line, motto, woodcut</i>]”,
-with impr. 184: (4) “Drammatis Personæ”:
-(6–7), 1–114, the play in five
-acts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 565, and the <cite>Retrospective Review</cite> vi. 61.
-The volume was posthumous (the author having died in March 163<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>) and was edited
-by his brother Robert Randolph of Christ Church, Oxford. There are twelve sets of
-complimentary verses, in Latin and English, by the editor, Owen Feltham, and others.
-Editions of the poems and plays were published in 1640 (Oxford), 1643 (London),
-1652 (London), 1664 (London) and 1668 (Oxford): both the last call themselves the
-5th edition. The signatures run through the entire work.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>20. <b>Reusner</b>, Nicolas. <span class='sc'>Nicolai Re</span>u<span class='sc'>sneri Leorini</span> | IC. Comitis
-Palat. Cæs. | <span class='fss'>SYMBOLORVM</span> | <span class='sc'>Imperatorior</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span> | Classis Prima. | [&amp;c.,
-exactly as 1633 R, except “Impp:”, “<i>Julio</i>”, “<span class='fss'>OP</span>u<span class='fss'>S PHILOLOGIC</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span>,”
-“utile,” and “<span class='fss'><i>SEXTA</i></span>” for “<span class='fss'><i>QUINTA</i></span>”].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 137: 1638: [&amp;c. exactly as 1633
-R, contents and all, except that the 3rd
-part contains 224 numbered pages, the
-last <i>not</i> being misprinted “198” as it is in
-the 5th edition: also the 3rd p. 11 begins
-“<i>Nam &amp; secundùm</i>”: the second and
-third titles differ slightly in small details.
-The number of unnumbered pages at the
-end of the 3rd part are 36, and the “34”
-in the collation of 1633 R is an error for
-36: the four last leaves in each edition
-are blank.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is simply a verbatim reprint of 1633 R.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Scheiblerus</b>, Christophorus. ... | <span class='sc'>Metaphysica</span> | [precisely
-as 1637 S, except as there noted].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 178: 1638 [&amp;c. exactly as 1637 S, except as there noted].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reissue of 1637 S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Smiglecius</b>, Martinus. <span class='fss'>LOGICA</span> | <span class='fss'>MARTINI</span> | <span class='fss'>SMIGLECII</span> | <span class='fss'>SOCIETATIS
-IESV</span> | <span class='fss'>S: THEOLOGIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>DOCTORIS,</span> | <span class='fss'>SELECTIS DISPVTATIO<small>/</small></span>|nibus &amp;
-quæstionibus illustrata, | <span class='fss'>ET IN DUOS TOMOS DISTRIBUTA</span>: | In qua | Quicquid
-in <i>Aristotelico</i> organo vel | cognitu necessarium, vel obscuritate
-perple-|xum, tam clarè &amp; perspicuè, quàm so-|lidè ac nervosè pertractatur. |
-[<i>line</i>] | <i>Cum</i> <span class='sc'>Indice</span> <i>Rerum copioso</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <span class='sc'>Ad</span> Perillustrem ac Magnificum
-Dominum, | D<sup>m</sup> <span class='sc'>Thomam Zamoysci</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span>, &amp;c. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 162<i>a</i>: 1638: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [16] + 435 + [3] + “435”-“761” +
-[35]: p. 11 beg. <i>Dico igitur</i>, 701 <i>Non
-tamen</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines: (3–6)
-Epistola dedicatoria to Thomas Zamoyscius,
-dated “Calissii in Collegio Carnecoviano
-Societatis Jesu, 15. Augusti 1616”:
-(6) “Approbatio R. P. Provincialis,” 24
-June 1616: (7–11) “Index disputationum
-et quæstionum prima parte Contentarum”,
-a list: (12–16) “Index ... partis secundæ”:
-1–435, “Pars prima logicæ
-...”, disputations 1–11: (2) a bastard
-title:—“Logicæ ... pars altera ...”:
-435–761, the second part, dispp. 12–18:
-(2–35) “Index rerum præcipuarum ...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1634 S: this is a verbatim reprint of that edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>23. <b>Taylor</b>, bp. Jeremy. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED IN</span> | <span class='fss'>SAINT
-MARIES</span> | Church in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | Vpon the Anniversary of the | Gu<span class='sc'>npowder-Treason</span>.
-| [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Ieremy Taylor</span>, Fellow of | <i>Allsoules Colledge in</i>
-<span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line, motto, woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [10] +
-64: p. 11 beg. <i>third time</i>: English Roman.
-Contents: p. (1) title, within double lines:
-(3–10) dedication to archbp. Laud: 1–64,
-the sermon, on Luke ix. 54.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 787. This sermon, which seems to have been
-delivered on Nov. 5, 1638, dashed the hopes which the Roman Catholics seem to have
-entertained of the conversion of Taylor to their faith. Wood asserts (<i>ut supra</i>, 782)
-that “several things were put in[to the sermon] against the Papists by the then vice-chanc.”,
-dr. Accepted Frewen. The sheets of this work were reissued as part of
-Taylor’s <cite>Treatises</cite> (Lond. 1648).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. *<b>Thornburgh</b>, Edward, archdeacon of Worcester. <span class='fss'>ARTICLES
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>TO BE ENQVIRED</span> | <span class='fss'>OF AND ANSWERED</span> | unto by the Church-wardens and |
-Sworne-men within the <i>Arch-Dea-</i>|conrie of <i>Worcester</i> in the Visitation |
-of the Right worshipfull <i>Edward</i> | <i>Thornburgh</i> D<sup>r</sup> of Divini-|ty Arch-Deacon
-of | <i>Worcester</i>. | <i>Anno Domini</i> | [<i>line, woodcut, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: no date: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>B</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. 16. <i>Hath your</i>:
-Pica English. Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, a
-form of summons to appear: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>, the title:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>-3<sup>r</sup>, Directions and Oath: <span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>4<sup>v</sup>,
-the 86 articles.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is not dated, but the copy seen bore a summons to Stratford-on-Avon officials,
-filled up with the date 11 Apr. 1638. It could not be earlier than 1635 from the
-woodcut ornaments used and the printer, and is probably of the year 1638.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Valdés</b>, Juan de. <span class='fss'>THE HUNDRED AND TEN</span> | <span class='fss'>CONSIDERATIONS</span> |
-of <span class='fss'><i>S</i>I<i>GNIOR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>IOHN VALDESSO</span><i>:</i> | <span class='fss'>TREATING OF THOSE</span> | things which are
-most profitable, most | necessary, and most perfect in our | Christian
-Profession. | <span class='fss'>WRITTEN IN SPANISH</span>, | Brought out of Italy by <i>Vergerius</i>,
-and | first set forth in Italian at <i>Basil</i> by | <i>Cælius Secundus Curio</i>, |
-<span class='sc'>Anno</span> 1550. | Afterward translated into French, and Printed | at <i>Lions</i>
-1563. and again at Paris 1565. | And now translated out of the Italian |
-Copy into English, with notes. | Whereunto is added an Epistle of the
-Authors, | or a Preface to his Divine Commentary | <i>upon the Romans</i>. |
-[<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180: 1638: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [32] +
-311 + [13]: p. 11 beg. <i>Consid. V</i>, 301 <i>the
-Heavens</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a line: (3–4) “The Publisher
-to the Reader”: (5–13) “Brief
-notes relating to the dubious and offensive
-places ...”: (14–19) the preface of Curio
-(Basil, 1 May 1550): (20–28) “A Table
-of the ... Considerations”: (30) A “censure”
-of the book, or imprimatur, by
-Thomas Jackson president of Corpus
-Christi College, Oxford: (31–2) “A copy
-of a letter written by Mr. George Herbert
-to his friend the Translator of this Book”
-dated “Bemmorton Sept. 29”, 1637: 1–311,
-the Considerations: (1–11) the Epistle:
-(12) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This translation of Juan de Valdés’ work from the Italian is by Nicholas Ferrar of
-Little Gidding (<i>d.</i> 4 Dec. 1637), and it is interesting to find that there is a copy of this
-book in Little Gidding binding (Quaritch’s General Catalogue of Books, vol. i. (1887),
-no. 5929: £4). There was an edition issued at Cambridge in 1646.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1639.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Bacon, sir Francis. Of the advancement and proficience of
-learning: see 1640 B.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>1. <b>Balzac</b>, Jean Louis Guez de. <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>COLLECTION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF SOME
-MODERN</span> | <span class='fss'>EPISTLES</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OF MONSIEVR</i></span> | <span class='fss'>DE BALZAC.</span> | <span class='fss'>CAREFVLLY</span> | <span class='fss'>TRANSLATED
-O</span>u<span class='fss'>T</span> | <span class='fss'><i>OF FRENCH</i>.</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Being the Fourth and last Volume.</i> | [<i>line,
-motto, woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 184: 1639: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[48] + 249 + [9]: p. 11 beg. <i>Let. III</i>, 201
-<i>there is no</i>: Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) engraved title, see below:
-(3) title, within double lines: (5–11) “To
-the Reader”, signed “F. B.”, the printer
-F. Bowman: (13–15) “An advertisement
-of Mons. the King”: (17–47) letters, a
-poem &amp;c., see below: 1–249, the letters:
-(2–5) “A table of the letters”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>The first three parts of Balzac’s Letters were printed at London in 1634 (part 1,
-translated by William Tyrwhitt) and 1638 (parts 2 and 3, translated by sir Richard
-Baker). The present volume is a venture by the printer, who has prefixed some letters,
-papers, and a Latin poem all connected with the quarrel between Balzac and the Jesuit
-Franciscus Garassus, in which Louis xiii intervened as a conciliator. There is an
-engraved title by W. Marshall, in which kings and theologians do honour to Balzac,
-the title being “A new collection of Epistles of Mons: de Balzac, being the fourth and
-last volume. Newly translated”, with impr. 192. The range of Balzac’s letters is
-from 1631 to 1637.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Bird</b>, John. <span class='fss'>GRO</span>u<span class='fss'>NDS OF</span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMER</span> | <span class='fss'>PENNED AND</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PVBLISHED</i>.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | By | <span class='sc'>iohn Bird</span> Schoolemaster | <i>in the Citty of Glocester</i>. | [<i>line</i>,
-Greek <i>motto</i>, <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180: 1639: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 184: p. 11 beg. <i>being the</i>, 101 <i>Adjectivall</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double lines: (3–5)
-dedication to archbp. Laud: (6–8) “To
-the Reader”: 1–184, the work.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 411; but nothing seems to be known of the
-author at present. The book is a Latin grammar in English, for the use of which latter
-language the author excuses himself. The sheets of this work, omitting the prefatory
-matter and with a different style of title and imprint, were reissued at Oxford in 1641.
-The author divides grammar into Rudiment (grammar proper, divided into Elementary
-and Accidentary) and Regiment (syntax).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. [<b>Cartwright</b>, William]. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ROYALL</span> | <span class='fss'>SLAVE.</span> | <i><span class='fss'>A</span></i> | Tragi<small>/</small>Comedy.
-| Presented to the King and Queene | by the Students of
-<i>Christ-Church</i> | in Oxford. <i>August</i> 30. 1636. | Presented since to both
-their Ma<small>/</small>|jesties at <i>Hampton<small>/</small>Court</i> by the | Kings Servants. | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 189: 1639: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [68],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>H</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>I</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>C</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>The grand
-contrivance</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>, “The Prologue to
-the King and Queene”: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>-3<sup>r</sup>, “The
-Prologue to the Vniversity”: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>v</sup>, “The
-Prologue to their Majesties at Hampton-Court”:
-<span class='fss'>A</span>4<sup>r</sup>, “The Persons of the Play”:
-<span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span>4<sup>v</sup>, the play: <span class='fss'>I</span>1<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>r</sup>, three epilogues
-corresponding to the prologues.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 69, and 1640 C. Cartwright’s poems and
-plays were published together in 1651, the author having died in 1643. The scene of
-this play is laid at Sardis. An account of the performance at Christ Church, at which
-the scenic arrangements seem to have been very elaborate, will be found in Wood’s
-<cite>Annals</cite> under the year 1636.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>C[aussin]</b>, N[icolas]. The unfortunate politique: see 1638 C.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. <b>Dugres</b>, Gabriel. <span class='fss'>DIALOGI</span> | <span class='fss'>GALLICO-ANGLICO-LATINI.</span> | <span class='fss'>PER</span> |
-<span class='fss'>GABRIELEM DVGRES</span> | <span class='fss'>LING</span>u<span class='fss'>AM GALLICAM IN</span> | <i><span class='fss'>JLLVSTRISSIMA ET</span></i> | <span class='sc'>famosissima,
-Oxoniensi</span> | <span class='fss'>ACADEMIA</span> Edocentem. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 186: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] + 195
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>Commençons</i>, 101 <i>P. Il
-fera</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title, within a line: (5–7) French
-dedication to Charles prince of Wales:
-1–195, the 22 dialogues in French, English
-(central in the page) and Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 184. Dugres or Du Gres had already issued
-a French grammar at Cambridge in 1636, and new editions of his Dialogues, with
-rules of pronunciation and tables of verbs, were published at Oxford in 1652 and
-1660.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>6. <b>Foxle</b>, George. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>GROANES</span> | <span class='fss'>OF THE</span> | <span class='sc'>Spirit,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>THE
-TRIALL</span> | of the Truth of | <span class='sc'>Prayer</span>. | [<i>motto, line, motto, line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 187 or 188: 1639: (twelves)
-16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] + 228 + [6]: p. 11 beg.
-<i>mired, but</i>, 101 <i>the sight</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within border of
-woodcuts: (3–9) Epistle dedicatory
-“to the noble and much honoured Company
-of Hierusalem’s Artillery”, signed
-“George Foxle”: (10–14) “To the
-Reader”, also signed: (15) “The contents
-...”: 1–228, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A (George?) Foxley is mentioned in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iv. 137, as
-preaching in London in Jan. 164<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>. Copies of this treatise differ in the imprint,
-showing that it was published both at Leicester and Bristol. Each page is within
-lines, doubled at the top and outer side.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. <b>Fromondus</b>, Libertus. <span class='sc'>Liberti Fromondi</span> | <span class='fss'>S. TH. L.</span> | <i>Collegii
-Falconis in Academia</i> | <i>Lovaniensi Philosophiæ Profes-</i>|<i>soris Primarii</i>
-| <span class='fss'>METEOROLOGICORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI SEX</span>. | [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 190: 1639: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 505 + [23]: p. 11 beg. <i>nubem è
-Zona</i>, 401 <i>Multa generosa</i>: Long Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A”: (3)
-title: (5–10) dedication to Maximilian de
-Rassenghem, Lovanii, 1 Jan. 1627: (11–15)
-“Ad Lectorem”: 1–505, the work,
-in 6 books: (2–8) “Index capitum et
-articulorum” in the order of the book:
-(10–22) “Index rerum memorabilium”,
-alphabetical.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a reprint of the 1627 or 1631 Antwerp edition, being itself the third. The
-scope of the work may be gathered from the definition of “Meteora” as being
-phenomena produced by vapour (rain, &amp;c.), or by exhalation (fiery, as lightning and
-falling stars: or non-fiery, as winds), or by both (clouds). Fromondus lived from
-1587 to 1654, chiefly at Louvain.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Gardyner</b>, dr. Richard. <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>SERMON</span> | <span class='fss'>CONCERNING</span> | <span class='fss'>THE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>EPIPHANY,</span> | <span class='fss'>PREACHED AT THE</span> | Cathedrall Church of Christ | in <i>Oxford</i>. |
-By <span class='sc'>Richard Gardyner</span>, D.D. | and <i>Canon</i> of the same | <i>Church</i>. |
-[<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 193: 1639: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-31 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>What right</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2),
-not seen: p. (3) title, within a border of
-woodcuts: (5–8) dedication to bp. John
-Bancroft: 1–31, the sermon, on Matth. ii. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 921. The dedication mentions that the
-bishop had built the old palace at Cuddesdon, reformed the altars throughout his
-diocese, and suitably inscribed the Cathedral communion plate. Sign. A4<sup>2</sup> is paged
-28 by error.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Greaves</b>, Thomas (Gravius). <span class='fss'><i>DE LINGVÆ</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ARABICÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>VTILITATE</span>
-| <span class='fss'>ET PRÆSTANTIA</span> | <i>Oratio</i> <span class='sc'>Oxonii</span> <i>habita</i> | Iul. 19. 1637. | <span class='fss'>A</span> |
-<span class='sc'>Thoma Greaves</span> Coll. Corp. | <i>Christi Socio</i>. | Cum | Arabicam Lecturam
-à Reverendissimo | <i>Patre ac Domino <span class='fss'>GVLIELMO</span></i> | Archiepiscopo
-Cantuariensi &amp; Academiæ | <span class='sc'>Cancellario</span> <i>Oxonij institutam</i> | loco absentis
-Professoris auspicaretur. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151: 1639: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 21
-+ [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>brarint. Innumera</i>:
-Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1)
-title, within a line: (3) “Lectori ...”:
-1–21, the speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 1061. The speech mentions Laud’s benefactions
-to the Bodleian. The absent professor was dr. Edward Pococke. Some
-copies have imprint 176.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>10. <b>Grotius</b>, Hugo. De veritate religionis Christianæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Both in the 3<sup>rd</sup> and 4<sup>th</sup> part of Richard Davis’s auction sale catalogue (3<sup>rd</sup> part
-(1688), p. 12, no. 550: 4<sup>th</sup> part (1692), p. 18, no. 323) an Oxford edition of 1639 is
-mentioned; as well as in Ersch and Gruber’s Encyclopædia: but the edition itself
-is not in the greater libraries and ordinary bibliographies. The first edition was in
-Dutch in 1722, the Latin editions before 1639 were all published at Leyden in 1624,
-1627, 1629, 1633 and 1637. There are Oxford editions of 1660 and 1662, as well
-as later.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>Heylyn</b>, Peter. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΜΙΚΡΟ´ΚΟΣΜΟΣ</span> | <span class='fss'>A</span> | <span class='fss'>LITTLE DE<small>/</small></span>|<span class='fss'>SCRIPTION
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>THE GREAT WORLD.</span> | [<i>line</i>] | <i>By</i> <span class='sc'>Peter Heylyn</span>. | [<i>line, motto,
-device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Imp. 119: 1639: (eights) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[20] + 808 + [4]: p. 11 beg. <i>1. First then</i>,
-701 <i>dals, or Vindelici</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—[as 1631 H, with a few minute
-differences of spelling or use of capitals,
-and a slight change of reference (only) to
-the last five pages.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author and book see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 557: see also
-1621 H. Some copies of this work have “1939” on the titlepage. There should
-be a folded leaf after p. 228 as in former editions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>12. <b>Hommius</b>, Festus. LXX. | dispvtatio<small>/</small>|nes theologicæ; |
-[&amp;c., precisely as 1630 H, with “<i>tertia</i>” for “<i>secunda</i>”, and the j in
-<i>adjectionibus</i> rightly italic.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 72 <i>a</i>: 1639: [&amp;c. exactly as 1630 H.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a verbatim reprint of the 1630 edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Hungerford</b>, sir Anthony. <i><span class='fss'>THE</span></i> | <span class='fss'>ADVISE OF</span> | <span class='fss'>A SONNE PRO<small>/</small></span>|<span class='fss'>FESSING
-THE RELI<small>/</small></span>|<span class='fss'>GION ESTABLISHED</span> | in the present Church of Eng-|<i>land
-to his deare Mother a</i> | Roman Catholike. | <span class='fss'>VVHEREVNTO IS ADDED</span> |
-<span class='fss'>THE MEMORIAL OF A FATHER</span> | to his deare children, containing an |
-acknowledgement of God his great mercy, in | bringing him to the
-<i>Profession</i> of the true | <i>Religion, at this present established</i> | <i>in the Church
-of England</i>. | [<i>line</i>] |<a id='t214'></a> <span class='fss'>BY</span> | <span class='sc'>Anth. Hvngerford</span> of Blackbourton | in <i>Com.
-Oxon.</i> <i><span class='fss'>KNIGHT</span></i>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 182: 1639: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] + 62:
-p. 11 beg. <i>answer, that he</i>: English Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within a border
-of woodcuts: 1–38, the Advice: 39–40,
-a preface to the following piece, dated
-“From my house at Blackbourton this
-7th of Aprill 1627”: 41–62, the Memorial.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 411, where Wood says that the first part was
-written in about 1607, and that the writer died in June 1627: that Laud refused to
-license it for printing in 1635, because it was so strongly worded against Roman
-Catholicism, and that after this failure the son, sir Edward Hungerford, “got it to be
-printed at Oxon”, with the Memorial.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Jewell</b>, bp. John. <span class='fss'>APOLOGIA</span> | <span class='fss'>ECCLESIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>ANGLICANÆ.</span> |
-[<i>line</i>] | Auctore <span class='sc'>Joanne J</span>u<span class='fss'>ELLO</span>, | olim Episcopo Sarisburiensi. | [<i>line</i>]
-| Cum Versione Græca <i>J. S.</i> Bacc. in Art. | Coll. Mag. quondam
-Socii. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>Impr. 153: 1639: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 331 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">τῳ ἐξαιτεῖσθαι</span>,
-301 <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Θεῖος λόγος</span>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: (3–4) Epistola P. Martyris, to
-Jewel: (5–11) the translator’s dedication
-to dr. William Langton, president of
-Magdalen, signed “Joh. Smith”: (1) a
-poor Greek epigram on this edition, signed
-“H. H.”: 2–331, the work, Latin on the
-verso of each leaf, Greek on the recto.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1614 J: the first English and Latin editions were in 1562. It is odd that in
-the <cite>Catalogus ... librorum Richardi Davis ... pars tertia</cite> (1688) on p. 13 the date
-of this book is twice misprinted 1637.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. <b>Kempis</b>, Thomas a. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>IMITATION</span> | <span class='fss'>OF CHRIST</span>, | <i>Divided
-into four Books</i>. | Written in Latin by | <span class='fss'>THOMAS</span> à <span class='sc'>Kempis</span>, | And the
-Translations of it | <i>Corrected &amp; amended</i> | by W. P. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 156 <i>b</i>: 1639: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[60] + 381 + [15]: p. 11 beg <i>26. In their
-life</i>, 301 <i>not to be discussed</i>: Long
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within double lines: (3–8) Epistle dedicatory
-to Walter Curle, bp. of Winchester,
-signed “William Page”: (9–60) “To
-the Christian reader” signed “W. P.”:
-1–381, the Imitation, in 4 books: (2–11)
-“A Table of the chapters...”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 655. This is the first Oxford edition of the
-<cite>Imitation</cite> and the only edition of dr. Page’s revision. The reviser, who was the
-bp. of Winchester’s chaplain, has removed such passages as would offend a Protestant.
-The preface is largely an exhortation to unity among the churches.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. [<b>Mayne</b>, Jasper]. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>CITYE MATCH.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>A</i></span> | <span class='fss'>COMOEDYE·</span> |
-<span class='fss'>PRESENTED TO THE</span> | <span class='fss'>KING</span> and <span class='fss'>QVEENE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>AT WHITE-HALL</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>ACTED SINCE</span> |
-<span class='fss'>AT BLACK<small>/</small>FRIERS BY HIS</span> | <span class='sc'>Maiesties</span> <i>Servants</i>. | [<i>motto</i>, then 2 <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180: 1639: (twos) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[6] + 64 + [2]: p. 11 beg. <i>Scena II</i>: Great
-Primer Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title,
-within double lines: (3) “To the reader”:
-(4–5) two prologues: (6) “The Persons
-of the Play” &amp;c.: 1–64, the play: (1–2)
-two epilogues.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 972. There are subsequent editions of the
-play in 1658 (Oxford) and 1659 (Oxford). The preface is depreciatory of the work,
-stating that it was at first written “out of obedience,” and that it was only published
-in self-defence to avoid a threatened unauthorized issue in London.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>Prayer</b>, book of Common. <span class='fss'>LIBER</span> | <span class='fss'>PSALMORUM</span> | <span class='fss'>ET PRECVM</span> |
-in usum Ecclesiæ | <i>Cath. Christi</i> | <span class='sc'>Oxon</span>. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151: 1639: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-295 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>Cesset quæso</i>, 201 <i>Ac
-tradidit</i>: Long Primer Roman. Contents:—1,
-title, within double lines: 3–283,
-the Psalter: 285–295, special prayers,
-as in 1615 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1615 P. It is noticeable that the University no longer prints the book of
-Common Prayer as a whole, but only the Psalter as found in that book, separately.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Prideaux</b>, John. <span class='fss'>TABVLÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>GRAMMATICA</span> | <span class='sc'>Græca Introductoriæ.</span>
-| <span class='fss'>IN QVIBVS</span> | Succinctè compingitur, brevissima, sed | <i>tamen
-expedita, singularum partium orationis</i> | <i>declinabilium, Variandi ratio</i>. |
-<span class='fss'>ACCESSIT</span> | Vestibuli vice, ad eandem linguam <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">παραίνεσις</span> in | gratiam
-tyronum, quibus ut convenit explica-|tiora evolvere, ita necesse est hæc
-ipsa | <i>ad unguem tenere</i>. | [<i>motto</i>] | <span class='fss'>EDITIO TERTIA.</span> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>Impr. 191: 1639: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [68],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>4</sup>, <span class='fss'>G</span><sup>2</sup>, <span class='fss'>H</span>-<span class='fss'>I</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>profero
-clarâ</i>, <span class='fss'>F</span>2<sup>r</sup> <i>15. Asserit A</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—sign. <span class='fss'>A</span>1<sup>r</sup>, title: <span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>A</span>2<sup>v</sup>,
-dedication to dr. Tho. Holland, dated
-“Exon. Colleg. Ian. 1. 1607”, and signed
-“Io. Prideaux”: <span class='fss'>A</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>B</span>3<sup>v</sup>, preface as in
-the 1607 edition: <span class='fss'>B</span>4<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span>1<sup>r</sup>, the work,
-“Conclusio”, &amp;c., as before: <span class='fss'>E</span>2<sup>r</sup>, a title:—“<span class='fss'>TYROCINIVM</span>
-| <span class='fss'>AD SYLLOGISMVM</span> |
-Legitimum contexendum, &amp; | <i>captiosum
-dissuendum, e</i>x-|<i>peditissimum</i>. | <span class='fss'>IN QVO</span> |
-<i>Ad formam e</i>x<i>pensa Syllogisticam perstrin-</i>|<i>guntur
-punctìm Sophismata, nec
-minus solidè</i>, | <i>quàm vulgò fit, ratione
-materiæ</i>; | Excerptis ex optimis Authoribus
-exemplis Græco-latinis, | ut majori
-cum voluptate &amp; fructu, ex utriusq; lin-|guæ
-candidatis &amp; legantur, &amp; | intelligantur.
-| [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>]” with impr.
-157: <span class='fss'>E</span>3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span>4<sup>r</sup>, the dedication, as in the
-1629 edition: <span class='fss'>E</span>4<sup>r</sup>, two Latin poems: <span class='fss'>F</span>1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span>2<sup>v</sup>,
-the treatise: <span class='fss'>H</span>1<sup>r</sup>, a title:—“<span class='fss'>HEPTADES</span>
-| <span class='fss'>LOGICAE·</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>MONITA AD
-AMPLIORES</span> | Tractatus Introductoria. |
-[<i>motto</i>, then <i>device</i>]”, with impr. 191 <i>a</i>:
-<span class='fss'>H</span>2<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>I</span>4<sup>v</sup>, the treatise.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1607 P, 1629 P, and Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 267. The <cite>Heptades</cite>
-(seven divisions of Logic) seem to be here printed for the first time.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Smith</b>, Samuel. <span class='fss'>ADITVS</span> | <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>LOGICAM·</span> | <span class='fss'>IN VSVM EORVM</span> |
-qui primò <span class='sc'>Academi-</span>|<span class='fss'>AM</span> Salutant. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Autore</i> <span class='sc'>Sam</span>u<span class='sc'>ele Smith</span>, |
-<i>Artium Magistro</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Editio quinta.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 109 <i>a</i>: 1639: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>:
-pp. [14] + 204 + [2] + 2 folded leaves:
-p. 11 beg. <i>Proximum est</i>, 111 <i>non autem</i>:
-Long Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-(5) title: (7–11) “De nupera Londinensi
-editione ad Lectorem <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Προτρεπτικός</span>.”:
-1–204, the work in 3 books: (1)
-“Lectoribus ...”: before pp. 33 and 43
-should be folded tables of Substantia and
-Qualitas.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1617 S. The undated preface complains of a pirated London edition, which
-may be that of 1621.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. <b>Tozer</b>, rev. Henry. <span class='fss'>CHRISTIAN</span> | <span class='fss'><i>WISDOME</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>THE EXCELLENCY</span>
-| <span class='fss'>FAME AND RIGHT</span> | <span class='fss'>MEANES OF</span> | <span class='sc'>Trve</span> | <span class='fss'>WISDOME.</span> | As it was
-briefly delivered in | a Sermon in S<sup>t</sup> <span class='sc'>Maries</span> | Church in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>, |
-<i>Novemb:</i> 11. 1638. | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>H. Tozer</span> B.D. Fellow | of Exeter
-Colledge. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 152: 1639: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 107 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>The se-</i>|<i>cond
-Ge</i> | : Great Primer Roman. Contents:—p.
-1, title, within double lines: 3–8,
-Epistle dedicatory to Robert (Kerr) earl
-of Ancrum: 1–107, the sermon, on
-1 Kings x. 24.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 274.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Wescombe</b>, Martin. <span class='fss'>FAB</span>u<span class='fss'>LÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>PONTIFICIÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>EVANGELICÆ</span> |
-Veritatis radiis | <i>dissipatæ</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Autore</i> | <span class='sc'>Martino Wescombe</span> | Artium
-Magistro in | <i>Academia celeberrima</i> | <i>Oxoniensi</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 157: 1639: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[34] + 85 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>it, nec alicui</i>:
-English Roman. Contents:—p. (3) title,
-within double lines: (5–23) dedication to
-archbp. Laud: (25–33) “Ad candidum
-lectorem præfatio”: 1–85, the work, in
-five parts.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 675: the author, according to the dedication,
-was a Franciscan at Toulouse, converted to Protestantism by Stephanus de Cursol,
-settled at Exeter and patronized by bp. Hall. In 163<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span> he became a member of
-Exeter College, and in 1639 incorporated at Cambridge: after which he is lost sight
-of, except that he is said to have been reconverted to Roman Catholicism, and to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>have gone abroad. The five “fabulæ” are “De universali Episcopo,” “de infallibilitate
-papæ,” “de Purgatorio,” “de Transubstantiatione eucharistica,” and “de
-invocatione Sanctorum.” Wescombe is a Somerset and Devon name.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1640.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>1. <b>Bacon</b>, sir Francis, Viscount St. Alban’s. <span class='fss'>OF THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ADVANCEMENT
-AND</span> | <span class='fss'>PROFICIENCE OF LEARNING</span> | or the | <span class='fss'><i>PARTITIONS OF SCIENCES</i></span> | <span class='fss'>I̅X̅</span>
-Bookes | <i>Written in Latin by the Most Eminent</i> | <i>Illustrious &amp; Famous
-<span class='sc'>Lord</span></i> | <i><span class='sc'>Francis Bacon</span></i> | <i>Baron̄ of Verulam Vicont S<sup>t</sup> Alban</i> | <i>Counsilour
-of Estate and Lord</i> | <i>Chancellor of England.</i> | [<i>line</i>] | Interpreted |
-<i>by</i> <span class='sc'>Gilbert Wats</span>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 194: 1640: (fours) la. 8<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[36] + 60 + [14] + 479 (“477”) + [21]:
-pp. 11 beg. <i>Nature, but</i>, and <i>on between</i>,
-401 <i>hard and severe</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) engraved
-title, see below: (3–4) dedication to the
-king and the two universities, in Latin, by
-Wats: (5–8) dedication to prince Charles,
-signed “Gilbert Wats”: (9–16) preface
-to the reader, by Wats: (17–22) “Testimonies
-consecrate to ... S<sup>r</sup> Francis
-Bacon ...”: (23–24) Latin poem on the
-<i>Instauratio Magna</i> by George Herbert:
-(25–33) “Manes Verulamiani sive in
-obitum incomparabilis Francisci de Verulamio,
-&amp;c. epicedia,” 6 Latin poems,
-one by Thomas Randolph, &amp;c.: (35–36)
-address by Bacon to each university, in
-parallel columns: 1–39, the author’s preface:
-(41–42) “The generall argument
-of the IX. books”: (43–60) “The argument
-of the chapters ...”: (1–11) the
-general design of the <i>Instauratio Magna</i>:
-(13) a table of “the Emanation of
-sciences ...”: 1-“477”, the work in 9
-books: (2–5) “A new world of sciences,
-or the Deficients”, headings: (6–8) “The
-Index of Sacred Scriptures ...”: (10–11)
-“The index of humane authors”: (12)
-“Errata”, marginal corrections only:
-(13) “Lectori Academico ...”, introducing
-what follows: (14–18) “Catalogus
-historiarum particularum . secundùm
-capita”: (19) Typographus Lectori”
-about what follows: (20) a Latin letter
-from the author to Trinity college Cambridge,
-<i>beg.</i> “Res omnes”: (21) impr. 195,
-as a colophon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1633 B. This is part 1 of the <cite>Instauratio Magna</cite>, and is an expansion of the
-two books of the <cite>Advancement of Learning</cite> first printed in 1605, which were enlarged
-in Latin to nine books, and published in 1623 (and 1635) by W. Rawley: here they
-are translated by G. Wats. Some copies have 1639 in the colophon. At pp. 266–69
-are some woodcut facsimiles of cipher-alphabets, &amp;c. The engraved titlepage by
-W. Marshall (9⅝ × 5¾ in.) bears the title on a sheet suspended between two obelisks
-representing Oxford and Cambridge: above it are two globes and “<span class='fss'>INSTAVR.MAG.P.I.</span>”:
-below, a ship in full sail and the imprint: the whole is fully described in the British
-Museum <cite>Catalogue of Prints and Drawings</cite>, Div. 1, vol. 1 (1870), p. 116 (no. 153).
-Three out of the four British Museum copies have a portrait of Bacon, but the translator’s
-own copy in the Bodleian has not. The collation, being elaborate, is here
-appended:—(&nbsp;)<sup>1</sup>, ¶<sup>4</sup>, ¶¶<sup>2</sup>, ¶¶¶<sup>1</sup>, A<sup>2</sup>B-C<sup>4</sup>: aa-gg<sup>4</sup> hh<sup>2</sup>: †<sup>4</sup>, ††<sup>2</sup>, †<sup>1</sup>: A-Z, Aa-Zz,
-Aaa-Qqq<sup>4</sup> Rrr<sup>2</sup>: pp. 351–2 are repeated in the numeration.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>2. <b>Brerewood</b>, Edward. <span class='fss'>TRACTATVS</span> | <span class='fss'>ETHICI:</span> | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>COMMENTARII</span>
-| <span class='sc'>in aliqvot Ari<small>/</small></span>|<span class='fss'>STOTELIS LIBROS</span> | ad <span class='sc'>Nichomach</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span>, | <i>De
-Moribus</i>: | A Celeberrimo Philosopho | <span class='sc'>Edvardo Brerewood</span> | Art. Mag.
-è Colleg. Ænea-|nasensi, olim conscripti: | Iam primùm ex authoris
-ipsius Autogra-|pho, summâ fide, nec minori curâ casti-|gati, &amp; publici
-juris facti: | Per T. S. S. S. Theolog. Bacchalaureum, &amp; | Colleg. Ænea-nasens.
-apud <i>Oxon</i> Socium. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>Impr. 200: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16] +
-245 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>De modo Doctrinæ</i>,
-201 <i>tasia aliquando</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title within double
-lines: (3–11) Epistola dedicatoria to
-James lord Strange, dated “Oxonii è
-Musæo meo in Collegio Ænea-nasensi,
-Nono Cal. Januarii 1639.”, and signed
-“Thomas Sixesmith”: (13–16) “Index
-tractatuum, capitum, et quæstionum ...”:
-1–245, the four treatises, on the first four
-books of the Ethics.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 141. The original MS. (finished 27 Oct. 1586)
-is now part of MS. (Queen’s coll. Oxford no. 218). The method of this commentary
-or rather analysis is scholastic and formal. The editor says that he rescued the
-original MS. from a “rurale musæum,” when it was “pulvere situque squalidum, &amp;
-tantum non sepultum.” The author died in 1613. It is curious that in Moss’s <cite>Manual
-of classical bibliography</cite> (Lond., 1825, vol. i, p. 157) this book is called “Westerman,
-Commentaria in Ethica Aristotelis. Oxon. 4to. 1640,” with a reference to Wood’s <cite>Ath.
-Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 141. The explanation is that <i>Westerman</i> heads the column in
-Wood’s work, because the account of William Westerman follows Brerewood on that
-column: but the ascription deceived even so acute a bibliographer as the late professor
-Chandler in his List of editions of the Nicomachean Ethics (Oxf. 1878).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>3. <b>Buridanus</b>, Johannes. <span class='fss'>IOHANNIS</span> | <span class='fss'>BVRIDANI</span> | <span class='fss'>PHILOSOPHI</span> |
-<span class='fss'>TRECENTIS RETRO</span> | annis celeberrimi | <span class='fss'>QUÆSTIONES IN OCTO</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBROS
-POLITICORVM</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ARISTOTELIS</i>.</span> | u<span class='fss'>NA</span> | <span class='fss'>CVM INDICE QUÆSTIONVM</span> | Dubiorúm-que
-eisdem annexorum | locupletissimo. | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 69: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 431
-+ [16]: p. 11 beg. <i>quia unus homo</i>, 401
-<i>crimini vitæ</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
-lines: two epigrams, one by, and one to,
-Guillermus Baterel, the original editor:
-1–431, the work: (1–15) index.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Baterel’s annotated edition of Buridanus on the Politics was printed at least twice in
-the sixteenth century (1506 and 1526).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>4. <b>Carpenter</b>, Nathaniel. <span class='fss'><i>ACHITOPHEL</i>,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | The Picture of
-a Wicked | <span class='sc'>Polititian</span>. | <i>Divided into three Parts.</i> | <span class='fss'>A TREATISE</span> |
-Presented heretofore in three | Sermons to the Vniversity | of <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>
-and | <i>now Published</i>. | By <span class='sc'>Nath. Carpenter</span> | B. D. &amp; Fellow of <i>Excet.
-Coll.</i> | in <span class='sc'>Oxford</span>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 193 <i>a</i>: 1640: (twelves) 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 177 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>common equity</i>,
-101 <i>next place</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a line: (3–8) dedication
-to archbp. Ussher: 1–60, 61–125,
-127–177, the three sermons, on 2 Sam.
-xvii. 23.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For an account of the earlier editions, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ii. 422, and 1628 C.
-The present edition closely resembles the London ones of 1633 and 1638. Probably
-the “N. H.” who edited the next article below, edited this also, Carpenter having
-died in 1628. The work is evidently intended to be read with a view to the political
-circumstances of the time, under the disguise of dealing with “a sacred tragedy” from
-Old Testament history.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>5. ——. <span class='fss'>CHORAZIN</span> | <span class='fss'>AND</span> | <span class='fss'>BETHSAIDA’S</span> | VVoe, or warning<small>/</small>|Peece.
-| A judicious and learned Sermon | On <span class='sc'>Math. 11.</span> V. 21. |
-Preached at S<sup>t</sup> <i>Maries</i> in <i>Oxford</i>, by | that renowned and famous
-Divine, M<sup>r</sup> | <i>Nathanael Carpenter</i>, Bachellor in | Divinity, sometime
-Fellow of | <i>Exeter</i> Colledge; late Chap-|laine to my Lords Grace | of
-<i>Ardmagh</i> in | <i>Ireland</i>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>Impr. 193 <i>b</i>: 1640: (twelves) 24<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 95 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>were the Secretaries</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—(1)
-title: (3–8) Epistle dedicatory to dr.
-Thomas Winniffe, dean of St. Paul’s, by
-“N.H.” the editor: 1–95, the sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, ii. 422. This is a reprint of the Lond. 1633
-edition. The preface gives some valuable biographical notes about Carpenter, who
-died in 1628, and was the editor’s tutor and “neere Affine” at Exeter college. It
-states with reference to the present book that “had not a kinsman’s (Io. Ca.) friendly
-hand given it safe conduct over the Surges of the Ocean, in all likelyhood it had
-perished on the Netherland shores.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>6. [<b>Cartwright</b>, William]. <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>ROYALL</span> | <span class='fss'>SLAVE.</span> | [&amp;c., exactly
-as 1639 C, except that the hyphen in l. 7 is horizontal, that “<i>The
-second Edition</i>” is inserted between the two <i>lines</i>, and that after them is
-a <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 189: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [64],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>H</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>C</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Atos. I hope</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—exactly as in
-1639 C, except that the play only extends
-to <span class='fss'>H</span>3<sup>r</sup>, the three epilogues occupying
-<span class='fss'>H</span>3<sup>v</sup>-<span class='fss'>H</span>4<sup>r</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 69, and 1639 C, of which this is a reprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>7. [<b>Clain</b>, Johann Theodor]. <span class='sc'>Historia Britannica</span> | <i>Hoc est</i>, |
-<span class='sc'>De Rebus Gestis</span> | <span class='fss'>BRITANNIÆ</span> | <span class='sc'>Se</span>u | <span class='fss'>ANGLIÆ</span>. | <span class='sc'>Commentarioli</span> | <span class='sc'>Tres</span>: |
-Nunc denuò excusi. | <i><span class='sc'>Qvibvs accesservnt</span></i> | <i>præter generalem Angliæ
-descripti-</i>|<i>onem: Marginalia &amp; Index</i> | <i>rerum copiosus.</i> | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 197: 1640: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[12] + 220 + [44]: p. 11 beg. <i>fuisset.
-Brutus</i>, 201 <i>quam cogitatione</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) “A” between
-woodcuts: (5) title, within a line: (7–12)
-“Lectori ...”, signed “M.H.”: 1–7
-“Angliæ descriptio generalis, ex Geographico
-Opusculo Johan. Büssenmecheri”:
-9–61, 62–81, 82–220, the commentarioli:
-(1–44) “Index rerum et
-nominum memorabilium.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is an anonymous history of Britain from the earliest times. The editor,
-M(atthew) H(unt), does not mention the fact, that an undated edition was printed at
-London by Henry Bynneman (who published from 1566 to 1587), with the title “De
-rebus gestis Britanniæ commentarioli tres. Ad Ornatissimum Virum M. Henricum
-Broncarem Armigerum E.S.”, from which it has been conjectured that the author’s
-initials were “E.S.” The first words of the text are “Britannia est Insula natura
-triquetra.” The name of Clain is given in the British Museum catalogue as the author
-of an Amberg edition of 1603, and in Thomas Thorpe’s Catalogue of books (1851)
-p. 51 an edition printed at Hamburg in 1598 is mentioned under the same name, but
-I can find no account of the author, who probably lived at Amberg. Some have
-ascribed the book to John Clapham, who published an English <cite>History of England</cite>
-till the coming of the Saxons, in 1602 and 1606.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>8. <b>Ferrand</b>, Jacques. <span class='under'><span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΕΡΩΤΟΜΑΝΙΑ</span></span> | <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>A TREATISE</span> | Discoursing
-of the Essence, | Causes, Symptomes, Prog-|nosticks, and
-Cure of | <span class='under'><span class='fss'>LOVE,</span></span> | <i><span class='fss'>OR</span></i> | <i><span class='fss'>EROTIQVE</span></i> | <span class='under'><i><span class='fss'>MELANCHOLY</span></i></span> | [<i>line</i>] | <i>Written by</i> |
-<span class='under'><span class='fss'>IAMES FERRAND</span></span> | D<sup>r</sup> <i>of Physick</i>. | [<i>line</i>].</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 160 <i>b</i>: 1640: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[40] + 363 + [5]: p. 11 beg. <i>Poetesse was</i>,
-301 <i>purpose, and</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a border between
-lines: (3–7) “The Author to the Reader”:
-(9–34) 8 English poems to the author and
-book by Oxford men, one by Martin
-Llewellin: (35–39) “A table of the
-chapters”: (39) “Errata”: 1–363, the
-work, in 39 chapters.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 350, where the translator from the French
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>into English is stated to be Edmund Chilmead. The original French edition was
-published at Toulouse in 1612, under the title <i>Traité de l’essence et guérison de l’amour</i>,
-and at Paris in 1623 as <i>De la maladie d’amour, ou melancholie erotique</i>. If Robert
-Burton was acquainted with the first edition of this book, as he well may have been,
-there can be little doubt that he has taken or imitated the general method and treatment
-of the subject, in his <i>Anatomy of Melancholy</i>: but the French author is surpassed
-on his own ground. The research is greater and the felicities of language more
-numerous and striking in Burton, while the plan is also further and distinctively
-elaborated. There is no mention of Burton’s book in the poems prefixed to this
-translation. The words underlined in the above title are printed in red, as well as
-“Oxford,” and “sold by Edward Forrest . 1640.” in the imprint.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>9. <b>Fletcher</b>, John. <span class='fss'>RVLE A WIFE</span> | And have a Wife. | a comœdy |
-<span class='fss'>ACTED BY HIS</span> | <i>Majesties Servants</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Written by | <span class='sc'>John Fletcher</span> |
-<i>Gent.</i> | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-67 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>Only for present use</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title:
-(3) “Prologue”: 1–67, the play; (1)
-“Epilogue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This was Fletcher’s unaided composition, before the close of 1624, when it was
-twice performed at court. The underplot is said to be based on one of Cervantes’
-“Novelas Exemplares.” See the <cite>Dict. of Nat. Biogr.</cite> under Fletcher, p. 307, col. 1.
-The present is the first edition, and the only quarto one.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>10. ——. The Tragœdy of | <span class='fss'>ROLLO</span> | Du<span class='fss'>KE</span> of Normandy. | <span class='fss'>ACTED
-BY HIS</span> | <i>Majesties Servants</i>. | [<i>line</i>] | Written by | <span class='sc'>John Fletcher</span> | <i>Gent.</i> |
-[<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 180: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-73 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>But for you</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title: (2)
-“The Names of the Actors”: 1–73, the
-play.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The authorship of this play is doubtful. The first edition (Lond. 1639) was
-entitled “The Bloody Brother. A Tragedy. By <i>B. J. F.</i>” i. e. Ben Johnson and
-Fletcher?, and it was entered in the Stationers’ Register on 4 Oct. 1639 as by “J. B.”
-Massinger is also supposed to have had some share in it. See the <cite>Dict. of Nat. Biogr.</cite>
-under Fletcher, p. 308, col. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>11. <b>H[arding]</b>, S[amuel], of Exeter college, Oxford. <span class='fss'>SICILY</span> |
-<span class='fss'>AND</span> | <span class='fss'>NAPLES,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR, THE</span> | <span class='fss'>FATALL VNION</span>· | A Tragœdy. | <i>By</i> | S. H. <i>A. B.
-è C. Ex:</i> [<i>line</i>, <i>motto</i>, two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 119: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [12] +
-96: p. 11 beg. <i>Cass. If the varlets</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents—p. (1) title: (2)
-“Dramatis Personæ”: (3) “To the
-Reader”, signed “P.P.”, the editor: (4–11)
-seven complimentary poems to the
-author, alluding to Shakespeare’s, Ben
-Johnson’s and Randolph’s deaths: (12)
-Errata: 1–96, the play, with epilogue.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 31. The author died before 1650, not, as
-Foster’s <cite>Alumni Oxonienses</cite> asserts, as late as 1699. The editor, who is known to be
-Philip Papillon of Exeter college, declares that the play is here printed without the
-author’s knowledge and against his modesty. The lines relating to Shakespeare, which
-have perhaps only been reprinted in Pickering and Chatto’s Catalogue of books,
-nos. 70–72 (June 1893), p. 15, are:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“But sad Melpomene ...</div>
- <div class='line'>Hyes to pale Shakespeares urne, and from his tombe</div>
- <div class='line'>Takes up the bayes, and hither she is come.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>12. <b>Jeanes</b>, Henry, of Hart hall, Oxford. <span class='fss'>A TREATISE</span> | Concerning
-| <span class='fss'>A CHRISTIANS</span> | <span class='fss'>CAREFULL AB-</span>|stinence from all ap-|pearance of
-Evill: | Gathered | <span class='fss'>FOR THE MOST</span> | part out of the Schoole-|men, and
-Casuists: | <i>Wherein</i> | <i>The Questions and Cases of</i> | <i>Conscience belonging
-unto the</i> | <i>difficult matter of Scandall</i> | <i>are briefly resolved:</i> | By <span class='sc'>Henry
-Jeanes</span>, | M<sup>r</sup> of Arts, lately of <i>Hart-</i>|<i>Hall</i> in <span class='sc'>Oxon</span>, and Rector of |
-<sup>he</sup> Church of <i>Beere-Cro-</i>|<i>combe</i> in <i>Somerset-shire</i>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 94<i>a</i>: 1640: 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] + 151
-+ [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>onely from</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title, within double
-lines: (3–4) dedication to Philip earl of
-Pembroke: 1–145, the discourse on
-“1 Thess. [v] 22”: 147–151, “The Postscript
-to the Reader”: (1) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 591. This book appears to be rare, and was reprinted
-at Oxford in 1660.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>13. <b>Oxford</b>, University. <span class='fss'>HORTI</span> | <span class='fss'>CAROLINI</span> | <span class='fss'><i>ROSA ALTERA</i>.</span> |
-[<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 151: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [108],
-signn. (&nbsp;)<sup>2</sup>, *, **, <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>E</span><sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>F</span><sup>2</sup>, <i>a</i>-<i>c</i><sup>4</sup>, <i>cc</i><sup>2</sup>, <i>d</i>-<i>e</i><sup>4</sup>:
-sign. <span class='fss'>B</span>1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Iam meritò</i>, b1<sup>r</sup> <i>Prethee
-forbeare</i>: English Roman &amp; Italic. Contents:—(&nbsp;)1<sup>r</sup>,
-title, within double lines:
-(&nbsp;)2<sup>r</sup>, poem dedicatory to the king, signed
-“Acad. Oxon.”, in Latin: *1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>F</span>2<sup>v</sup>, Latin
-poems: <i>a</i>1<sup>r</sup>-<i>e</i>4<sup>r</sup>, English poems: <i>e</i>4<sup>v</sup>
-“The Printer to their Maiesties”, an
-English poem, signed “Leonard Lichfield.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are verses to celebrate the birth of prince Henry, 8 July 1640 (<i>d.</i> 1660).
-Most are in Latin and English, but three in Greek, two in French, one in Hebrew.
-The signatures as usual show the difficulty of getting the poems sent in in time and
-arranged in proper order.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>14. <b>Puteanus</b>, Erycius. <span class='sc'>ErycI P</span>u<span class='fss'>TEANI</span> | <span class='fss'>AMOENITATVM</span> | <span class='fss'>H</span>u<span class='fss'>MANAR</span>u<span class='fss'>M</span>
-| <span class='fss'>DIATRIBÆ D</span>u<span class='fss'>Æ.</span> | <span class='fss'><i>PRIOR</i></span> | <span class='sc'>De Laconismo</span>: | Ad Illustriss: &amp;
-Excellentiss: | <i>Ducem Arschotanum</i>. | <span class='fss'><i>ALTERA</i>,</span> | <span class='sc'>Thyrsi</span> | <span class='sc'>Philotesii,</span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | Amor Laconissans: | Ad V. Nobilem &amp; Prudentem, | Maxim.
-Plouvierium. | <i>Utraque elegantiis &amp; acumini-</i>|<i>bus referta</i>. | [two <i>lines</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 198: 1640: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 200 + [8]: p. 11 beg. <i>factus ita</i>, 101
-<i>Laconismum</i>: English Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within a line: (3–7)
-“Lectori benevolo ...”, signed “J. W”
-(estall): 1–116, 117 (misprinted 711)-195,
-the two diatribae: 196–200 “Sententiæ
-aliquot aculeatæ, è Seneca”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>These are reprints of Diatribae 7 and 8 out of the entire set of twelve which form
-the <cite>Amœnitates</cite>. The Thyrsi are short essays on <i>aculei</i>, which are pointed sentences
-on friendship and love. The editor (and printer) mentions the <cite>Suada Attica</cite> as “nuper
-excusa”: see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>15. ——. <span class='sc'>ErycI P</span>u<span class='fss'>TEANI</span> | svada attica, | <span class='fss'><i>SIVE</i></span> | <span class='fss'>ORATIONVM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>SELECTARVM</span> | <span class='fss'>SYNTAGMA</span>. | <i>Item</i> <span class='sc'>Palæstra</span> <i>Bonæ Mentis</i>, | <i>prorsus innovata</i>.
-| [<i>device.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 205: 1640: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 534 + [2 + ?]: p. 11 beg. <i>ego didicerim</i>,
-501 <i>munerúmque</i>: Pica Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) title: 3–10, dedication
-“Tribus ordinibus Brabantiæ”, dated
-“Lovanii, in Arce, Kalendis Martiis
-<span class='fss'>M.DC.XV</span>”: 11–12, two quotations: 13
-“Syllabus Orationum”: (14) “Character
-harum orationum”: (15) a quotation:
-1–419, the 22 orations: 419–421, two
-passages from Aulus Gellius: 421 “Typographo
-lectori”: 422–424, “ErycI
-Puteani paucula de morte”: 425, a
-bastard title to the Palæstra: 427–429,
-“Ad lectorem”, dated “Lovanii”, <span class='fss'>XI.</span>
-Kalend. Octobr. <span class='fss'>M.DC.XI.</span>”: 430–512,
-the Palæstra, 20 exercitationes &amp;c.: 513–534,
-“Syllabus exercitationum” and short
-pieces, ending with “... Puteanus Lectori ...”:
-(1–2) blank, the rest (if any)
-not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>There is no bibliography of the numerous works of Erycius Puteanus, but the <cite>Suada
-Attica</cite> was first published at Louvain in 1615, and the <cite>Palæstra</cite> in 1611. They
-contain orations and exercises delivered at Milan and Louvain. The <i>Palæstra Bonæ
-Mentis</i> is properly a hall at Louvain, where some of these were delivered, and in
-another sense a literary club which met there for debate, recitations and the like. See
-preceding article.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>16. <b>Randolph</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>POEMS</span>, | With the Mu<span class='fss'>SES</span> | <span class='fss'>LOOKING-GLASSE,</span>
-| <i><span class='fss'>AND</span></i> | <span class='fss'>AMYNTAS</span>· | [<i>line</i>] | By <span class='sc'>Tho. Randolph</span> M.A. and late |
-Fellow of <i>Trinity</i> Col. in | <i>Cambridge</i>. | [<i>line.</i>] |<a id='t222'></a> The second Edition
-Enlarged. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 174: 1640: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[28] + 134 + [2] + 87 + [7] + 101 + [1]: pp.
-11 beg. <i>Africk he loaths, High as the men</i>,
-and <i>For Mopsus</i>: Long Primer Roman.
-Contents:—p. (1) an engraved title, see
-below: (3) title, as above, within double
-lines: (5–26) twelve poems on the author
-and book: 1–134, the poems: (1) title of the
-Muses Looking-glass, almost as in 1638
-R, with impr. 174: 1–87, (1), the play:
-(2) title of Amyntas, nearly as in 1638 R,
-but “By T.R.”, with impr. 174: (4)
-“Dramatis Personæ”: (6–7), 1–101, the
-play.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 565, and 1638 R. The “enlargement” in this
-edition is not evident. The engraved title bears a bust of Randolph on a pedestal,
-with Philosophia and Poesis doing him honour, and a celestial sphere and Pegasus
-above. On the pedestal are the words “Poems by Tho : Randolph. The 2<sup>d</sup> Edition
-much Enlarged.”, and below is impr. 196. Each of the three parts is separately
-paged, but the two plays are linked by the signatures, while the title alone connects
-the plays with the poems. The Cambridge 1640 edition of “The Jealous Lovers”,
-a comedy by Randolph, is not infrequently found bound with this volume, but has no
-necessary connexion with it.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>17. <b>R[ogers]</b>, H[ugh]. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ΓΑΜΗΛΙΑ</span> | On the happy marriage of
-the most | <i>accomplished paire</i>, | H. R. <i>Esq.</i> | And the vertuous <i>A. B.</i> |
-[<i>device.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 202: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [2] +
-43 + [1]: p. 11 beg. <i>What beauty on</i>:
-Great Primer Italic and Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within double bounding
-lines except at foot (single line): 1–43,
-19 poems, of which four are in Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. The only copy I have seen of this privately printed book is in the British
-Museum. The marriage (in 1640) was between Anne daughter of sir Edward
-Baynton, of Bromham (<i>d.</i> 1657), and Hugh Rogers esq. of Cannington. The poems
-are clearly by friends and relations of both parties, but are signed only with initials.
-A copy of the book was in the Heber sale (pt. viii, p. 49).</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>18. <b>Saints’ Legacies.</b> <span class='fss'>THE</span> | <span class='fss'>SAINTS</span> | <span class='fss'>LEGACIES,</span> | <span class='fss'>OR</span> | <span class='fss'>A COLLECTION
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>CERTAINE PROMISES</span> | <span class='fss'>OVT OF THE WORD</span> | <span class='fss'>OF GOD.</span> | Collected
-for private use, but | published for the comfort of | Gods people. |
-<i>Whereunto is now added the Saints</i> | <i>Support in times of trouble.</i> | <span class='fss'>THE</span> 6.
-<span class='fss'>EDITION.</span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 203: 1640: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[36] + 157 + [5] + 31 + [23]: pp. 11 begg.
-<i>Though your</i>, and <i>soule, that</i>: English
-Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–4) not seen:
-(5) title, with border within lines: (7–24)
-dedication to all true Believers, by the
-editor: (25–32) “To the Reader”: (33–35)
-“Rules to be observed in reading of
-promises”: 1–157, the 105 legacies: (1–2)
-“A postscript sent from the Authour”:
-(4) a title within a line:—“<span class='fss'>AN</span> | <span class='fss'>EPITOME
-OF</span> | <span class='fss'>PROMISES</span> | <span class='fss'>FOR THE</span> | <i><span class='fss'>SAINTS SUPPORT</span></i>
-| <span class='fss'>IN TIME OF</span> | <span class='fss'>TROVBLE.</span> | [<i>line</i>] |
-<i>The sixth Edition.</i> | [<i>line, motto, line</i>]”.
-with impr. 204: 1–31, 31 promises: (1–4)
-texts: (6–9) “A Postscript, to all true
-Beleevers”: (10–18, 20–22) “Five Tables
-...” or indexes.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a rare and curious book: rare, inasmuch as no ordinary library catalogue
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>or bibliography contains any mention of any edition or copy of it; and curious, as
-having its two parts—which are indissolubly joined by the signatures and sections—printed
-by the same printer for two different London publishers, R. Royston and
-S. Enderby. We must suppose these two to have ventured proportionate parts in the
-book.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>19. <b>Sanderson</b>, Robert. <span class='fss'>LOGICÆ</span> | <i><span class='fss'>ARTIS</span></i> | <span class='fss'>COMPENDIVM.</span> | Editio
-Quarta. | [<i>line</i>] | Authore <span class='sc'>Rob. Sanderson</span>, | Coll. <i>Lincolniensis</i> in almâ |
-<i>Oxoniensi, quondam</i> | <i>Socio</i>. | [<i>line</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 201: 1640: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[8] + 239 + [1] + ...: p. 11 beg. <i>possint
-esse</i>, 201 <i>Cap. 21.</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—pp.
-(1–2) not seen: (3) title,
-within a line: (5–8) “Elenchus capitum”:
-1–239 the work, in three books: (the two
-Appendixes contain over 120 pages.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Rare. See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 626, and 1615 S. The only copy
-I have seen, in Queen’s College (Oxford) Library, is interleaved, and wants the two
-appendixes, which probably occupied the same number of pages as in the 1631
-edition.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>20. [<b>Snelling</b>, Thomas]. <span class='fss'>THIBALDVS</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE</span> | <span class='fss'><i>VINDICTÆ</i></span> |
-<span class='fss'><i>INGENIVM</i>.</span> | <span class='fss'>TRAGOEDIA.</span> | [<i>line, motto, line, woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 157: 1640: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[24] + 80: p. 11 beg. <i>Pro morte</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, with
-border between lines: (3–4) “Lectori”:
-(5–16) six complimentary Latin poems by
-St. John’s College men: (17) “Dramatis
-Personæ”: (119–21) “Argumentum”:
-(23) “Errata ...”: 1–80, the play.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 275. The sheets of this work
-were reissued in 1650 at London, with a new title <cite>Pharamus, sive Libido vindex,
-Hispanica tragædia</cite>, but neither Wood nor his editors have been aware of this earlier
-edition. Both were anonymous, and the direct evidence for the authorship (which
-need not be doubted) is difficult to find. Bp. Barlow wrote the author’s name on the
-title of his copy of <cite>Pharamus</cite>. The poems imply that the play had been written some
-years before 1640: the author matriculated at St John’s College, Oxford, in June 1634.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>21. <b>Tipping</b>, William. “<cite>A Return of Thankfulness for the unexpected
-Recovery out of a dangerous Sickness.</cite> Oxon. 1640. Oct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 244.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>22. <b>Tozer</b>, Henry. <span class='fss'>DIRECTIONS</span> | <i><span class='fss'>FOR</span></i> | <span class='fss'>A GODLY LIFE:</span> | <span class='fss'>ESPECIALLY
-FOR</span> | Communicating at the | Lords Table. | <i><span class='fss'>INTENDED FIRST FOR</span></i> |
-<i>private use; now published for the</i> | <i>good of those who desire the safty</i> | <i>of
-their owne soules, and</i> | <i>shall be pleased to make</i> | <i>use thereof.</i> | By <span class='sc'>H. Tozer</span>
-Mr of Arts, and | Fellow of <i>Exceter</i> Col-|ledge in <i>Oxford</i>. | <i>The fifth
-Edition.</i> | [<i>motto.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 199: (twelves) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp. [10] +
-195 + [11]: p. 11 beg. <i>Minister. 2</i>, 101
-<i>was due</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title, within line and border: (3–9)
-Epistle dedicatory, as in 1628 T: 1–195,
-the directions: (2–4) “The contents of
-each Chapter”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For the author and book, but not this edition, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss,
-iii. 274 (and 1628 T). Each page is within a line, doubled at upper and outer
-margins.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>23. ——. “<i>Sermon on Joh.</i> 18. 3. Ox. 1640.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 274.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>24. <b>Twittee</b>, Thomas. <span class='fss'>AD</span> | <span class='fss'>CLERVM</span> | <span class='fss'>PRO</span> | <span class='fss'>FORMA CONCIO</span> |
-<span class='fss'>HABITA IN TEMPLO</span> | <span class='fss'>BEATÆ MARIÆ <i>OXON</i>:</span> | <span class='fss'>MARTIJ</span> 13. 1634. | [<i>line</i>] |
-<span class='sc'>per Tho<i>:</i> Twittee sanctæ</span> | Theologiæ <i>Bac. è Coll. Oriell.</i> | [<i>line,
-motto.</i>] |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 157: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [4] +
-24: p. 11 beg. <i>men hî verè</i>: Great Primer
-Roman. Contents:—p. (1) title, within
-double lines: (3) dedication to dr. John
-Tolson provost of Oriel: 1–24, the sermon,
-on 1 Pet. iii. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Fasti Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 469. The dedication is of the modern kind,
-not an epistle dedicatory, and the printing is unusual, the first words of a paragraph
-being generally projections to the left, instead of indented.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>25. <b>Z[ouche]</b>, R[ichard]. <span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> | <span class='fss'>J</span>u<span class='sc'>RIS &amp; J</span>u<span class='fss'>DICII</span> | <span class='fss'>MILITARIS</span>
-| <span class='fss'><i>AD QVAM LEGES QUÆ</i></span> | Rem Militarem, &amp; Ordinem | <i>Personarum</i>.
-| <span class='fss'>NEC NON</span> | <span class='fss'>J</span>u<span class='sc'>RIS &amp; J</span>u<span class='fss'>DICII</span> | <span class='fss'>MARITIMI</span> | <span class='fss'>AD Q</span>u<span class='fss'>AM Q</span>u<span class='fss'>Æ NAVI-</span>|<span class='fss'><i>GATIONEM
-ET</i></span> | Negotiationem Maritimam | <i>respiciunt, referuntur</i>. | [<i>line</i>] |
-Autore R. Z. &nbsp; P. R. <i>Oxoniæ</i>. | [<i>line.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 157: 1640: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [8] +
-36 + [4] + 40 + [4]: pp. 11 beg. <i>meris sunt</i>,
-and <i>quæsitum est</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—p.
-(3) title, within double lines:
-(5–6) “Ad Lectorem”, unsigned, but
-“Datum ex Aula Alb. Prid. Calend. April.
-1640”: (7–8) heads of chapters in division
-1: 1–36, the military division, in two
-parts: (1) a title, within double lines:
-“<span class='fss'>DESCRIPTIO</span> | <span class='fss'>J</span>u<span class='sc'>RIS &amp; J</span>u<span class='fss'>DICII</span> | <span class='fss'>MARITIMI</span>
-| [&amp;c., exactly as the main title, to
-its end, with woodcut and impr. 157: (3–4)
-heads of chapters in division 2: 1–40,
-“De jure maritimo &amp; de jure nautico” in
-two parts: (1) “Errata”.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 511. The signatures establish a connexion
-between the two divisions.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>26. ——. “<i>Descr. Juris &amp; Judicii sacri; ad quam Leges, quæ
-ad Religionem &amp; piam Causam respiciunt, referuntur.</i> Oxon. 1640. qu.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, iii. 511, where it is stated that the De Jure
-Sacro, Militari and Maritimo, were issued together. In the Leyden reprint of 1652
-the De jure sacro is rather shorter than the other two. It does not seem to have found
-its way into the Oxford or London libraries which have published their catalogues.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>Periodical.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The <cite>Quaestiones in Vesperiis</cite> and <cite>Quaestiones in Comitiis</cite> (see Andrew
-Clark’s <cite>Register of the University of Oxford</cite>, vol. ii. pt. i. [1887], p. 169)
-were often printed.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>1602. The earliest I have seen are the theological “Quæstiones (Christo propitio) in
-Vesperijs discutiendæ, <i>Iul.</i> 10. 1602,” followed by some belonging to the Comitia, and
-some Law <i>quaestiones</i> belonging to both, and by a specimen of dr. John King’s treatment
-of his three <i>quaestiones</i>, in Latin verse: the whole forming a small sheet of 16
-pages, with the last five blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>1605. The <cite>Quaestiones ... in Comitiis ... coram ... Rege ... Aug.... 1605</cite> were
-printed in folio sheet form, as was invariably the case in later years, occupying in this
-year four pages. Whether this issue was exceptional or not, is not clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>1608. In this year at latest begins the series of ordinary folio sheets of <i>quaestiones</i>:
-of which examples have been seen for the years 1608, 1614, 1618, 1619, 1622, 1627,
-1628, 1629, 1632, 1634, 1635, 1639, 1640, and intermittently until at least 1693.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>SUPPLEMENT.<br /> <span class='large'>ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c008'>“1468”–8<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Pp. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>–4. See pp. <a href='#Page_237'>237</a>–62. (App. A).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1483.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>. For the <b>Augustine</b> see p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</p>
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>. <i>For</i> 3. *<b>Logic</b> <i>read</i> 3. *†<b>Logic</b>.</p>
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>. <i>For</i> 4. *<b>Lyndewoode</b> <i>read</i> 4. *†<b>Lyndewoode</b>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1485.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>. <b>Alexander</b>, l. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> c<sup>2</sup>-c<sup>3</sup> <i>read</i> c2, c3.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1486.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>. <b>Mirk</b>, last line.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first two leaves are in the Lambeth copy.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1517–19.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Pp. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>–7. See pp. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>–65. (App. B).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1518.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>. <b>Whittington</b>, l. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> protouatis <i>read</i> prothouatis. Eleven copies are now known.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>–9. <b>Pliny and Lystrius.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Something can be added to the account. The two original books in dispute are
-in the John Rylands (Spencer) Library at Manchester, and the <i>locus classicus</i> for their
-history is naturally in Dibdin’s <cite>Bibliotheca Spenceriana</cite> (1814), ii. 271, iii. 411:
-where will be found a reproduction (in type) of the two titles and colophons. Of the
-Pliny Dibdin states that one George Smith passed it on to Van Damme, from whom
-Askew bought it for fifteen guineas. With respect to the Lystrius, it appears that the
-“Mr. Dent” who purchased it at the Askew sale was an agent or pseudonym of
-Mr. Alchorne. The volume bears a manuscript note pretending to be from
-“i. Korsellis” at Haarlem in 1471, stating that the book came to him from his
-brother Frederick.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>About 1513.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>. <i>Add</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><b>Syrretus</b>, Antonius. [Antonii Syrreti Formalitates de mente
-magistri Johannis Duns?] | Scoti ordinis fratrum minor<span class='small'>um</span> doctoris sub⸗|<a id='t227'></a>tilissimi
-cum nouis additionibus et con⸗|cordantijs magistri Mauritij de
-por⸗|tu hybernie in margine decora⸗|te et nouiter impresse: | [two Latin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>verses, then a woodcut of the Trinity with “Henricus Iacobi” and
-printer’s mark at foot, then two more Latin verses] | ¶Uenu<span class='small'>m</span>dantur in
-vniuersitate Oxonien<span class='small'>si</span>. Sub | intersignio sanctissime Trinitatis ab Hen⸗|rico
-Jacobi bibliopole Londonien<span class='small'>sis</span>. |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This interesting title is found on a fragment of two leaves discovered by Mr. R. G. C.
-Procter in New College Library at Oxford, in Aug. 1891, and now marked “Auct. V. 16,”
-fol. 3. The verso of the title is occupied with a woodcut of the arms of Henry VIII,
-with supporters, two angels with scroll, &amp;c. The second leaf is marked <span class='fss'>A</span> 2, and contains
-a dedication and certain definitions, all part of the Additiones Mauritii. The
-book was no doubt printed in London, but sold in Oxford by Henricus Jacobi, who
-died in the latter city towards the end of 1514, intestate, see p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>. From an interesting
-account of Jacobi in <cite>Bibliographica</cite>, pt. I (1894), by Mr. E. G. Duff, it appears that
-Jacobi, after publishing in London from 1505 to 1512, came to Oxford in 1512 or 1513
-(see pp. <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>, 112 of the account).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This entry and that of 1506 should strictly be in a list by themselves, being neither
-“lost” nor “fictitious.”</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1585.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>. <b>Bilson</b>, Thomas. <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A curious account of an abortive effort on the part of Edmund Bollifant and three
-partners to produce a reprint of this book, will be found in Arber’s <cite>Transcript of the
-Stationers’ Registers</cite> II (1875), p. 793.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>. <b>Parsons</b>, Robert, (2nd entry, no. 6). <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>An explanation of this reprint will be found in Arber’s <cite>Transcript of the Stationers’
-Registers</cite> II (1875), p. 793 (a petition from N. Newton, E. Bollifant, and others, in
-the winter of 158<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>6</span></span>), from which it appears that John Wight, printer, of London, who
-had entered a copy of his edition of the book at Stationers’ Hall on 28 Aug. 1584, sent
-his son to Oxford to buy up the whole of Barnes’s reprint: which was done. But
-Barnes promptly printed “two ympressions more,” of which the present volume is no
-doubt one. Possibly the preceding art. is the other re-impression, and Wight effectually
-suppressed the whole first edition.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1586.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>. <i>Insert</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Brasbridge</b>, Thomas, of Magdalen college, Oxford. <span class='fss'>QVÆESTI-</span>|<span class='fss'>ONES
-IN OF-</span>|<span class='fss'>FICIA M. T.</span> | <span class='fss'>CICERONIS</span>: | Compendiariam totius | <i>Opusculi
-Epitomen</i> | continentes. | [<i>woodcuts.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 5: 1586: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp. [68],
-signn. <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>D</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>E</span><sup>2</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>rum alterum</i>:
-Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>, title within a border, <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup>-2<sup>v</sup>, dedication
-to Laurence Humphrey, signed
-“Thomas Brasbrigius,” “Banburiæ, Idibus
-Nouembris, 1586”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 3<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>E</span> 2 (printed
-<span class='fss'>E</span> 3)<sup>v</sup>, the questions and answers: <span class='fss'>E</span> 2<sup>v</sup>,
-two Latin lines signed “I. P. Iohannensis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare. For the author, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 526. The preface
-contains some autobiographical details. There appear to be at least three editions
-of this work, 1586, 1592 (q. v.) and 1615 (q. v.), all printed at Oxford.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1589.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>. <b>Skelton</b>, John.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Lord Spencer’s copy is of course now in the John Rylands Library at Manchester.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1591.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>. <b>Tacitus.</b> <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>On 25 May 1591 a patent was issued to Richard Wright of Oxford and his assigns
-to print Tacitus’s <cite>History</cite> in English, during his lifetime (Patent Rolls, 33 Eliz. pt. 17,
-mentioned in Arber’s <cite>Transcript of the Stationers’ Registers</cite> II (1875), p. 16). The
-metal engraving of a Roman Camp reappears in R. Grenewey’s translation of the
-<cite>Annals</cite> of Tacitus (Lond. 1598, 1604, 1622).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1592.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>. <b>Barlaamus</b>, last line but one.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> author <i>read</i> editor. Another presentation copy has been seen, also without
-device.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>. <b>Brasbridge.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1586 in this Supplement.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>. <b>Elizabeth.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>There is a perfect copy of this rare pamphlet in the great Gloucestershire collections
-at Chestal, Dursley, in the possession of the Phelps family, kindly pointed out to
-me by F. A. Hyett, Esq. The title is:—<span class='fss'>SPEECHES</span> | <span class='fss'>DELIVERED TO</span> | <span class='fss'>HER MAIESTIE
-THIS</span> | <span class='fss'>LAST PROGRESSE, AT THE</span> | Right Honorable the Lady <span class='sc'>Rvssels</span>, at | Bissam,
-the Right Honorable the Lorde | <span class='sc'>Chandos</span> at Sudley, at the Right | Honorable the
-Lord <span class='sc'>Norris</span>, at | Ricorte. | [<i>device.</i>] On the verso of the title is a preface “To the
-Reader” signed by “I. B.” the printer.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>. <b>Gager</b> (no. 7).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The author of the <cite>Bellum Grammaticale</cite> was Andreas Guarna.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_34'>34</a>. <b>Gager</b> (no. 8). l. 4 (not l. 3).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>For</i> 1591 <i>read</i> 1592.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1593.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_35'>35</a>. After no. 4 <i>add</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Oxford</b>, New College. Ex donatione Magistri Fran-|cisci
-Bettes LL. D: Socij huius Col-|<i>legij</i>. <i>Anno Domini. 1593.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is a book label, found in Spiegelius’s <cite>Lexicon Juris Civilis</cite>, 1549 (Oo. xii. 5),
-and perhaps in other volumes in New College Library at Oxford. The words are
-within a border of woodcuts, the outside measurement of the printed border being
-1<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 3<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1594.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>. <b>Beacon.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>P. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a> bears “¶j”, and is therefore not wholly blank.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>. <b>Powel</b> (no. 5). <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1631 P.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1597.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>. <b>Agatharchides.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Professor Bywater has pointed out that the extracts from Agatharchides and
-Memnon are from an earlier printed edition of them, and not directly from Photius’s
-<cite>Bibliotheca</cite>, which was first printed in 1601. Had the matter been taken from a MS.
-of Photius, the editor would no doubt have claimed the honour, whereas he claims
-credit only for the new translation into Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>P. <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>. <i>After</i> <b>Agatharchides</b> <i>add</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Brett</b>, Richard, of Lincoln College. Theses M<sup>ri</sup> <span class='sc'>Bret</span> respondentis
-in Comitiis. | Oxon. 1597. | [text follows, as below.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A single sheet, 8½ in. high by 6 broad, printed on both sides, containing three theses.
-The first is <i>Politia Ecclesiæ Anglicanæ cum iure divino non pugnat</i>, followed by short
-Latin, Greek, and Hebrew poems. The second is followed by Latin, “Caldaica,” and
-“Syrica” poems, the last being written in MS. The third is followed by Latin, Arabic,
-and Æthiopic poems, the last two being filled in in MS. The Hebrew is in Pica type.
-For Brett, see Wood’s <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 611: he took the degree of Bachelor of Divinity
-on 6 June, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>. <i>After</i> <b>King</b> <i>add</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Oxford</b>, University. “Qvaestiones sex, totidem praelectionibvs,
-in schola Theologica, Oxoniae, pro Forma, Habitis, Discvssae, Et Disceptatae
-Anno 1597.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>So in the Catalogue of W. H. Holyoak, 75 Humberstone Gate, Leicester, “March
-1888,” no. 10: the copy was sold on Jan. 3, 1890 to the rev. Shaw Urmstone of Manchester.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1598.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>. <i>After</i> <b>Butler</b> <i>add</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Butler</b>, Charles. <span class='fss'>RHETORICÆ</span> | <span class='fss'>LIBRI DVO.</span> | <span class='sc'>Qvorvm</span> | <i>Prior de
-Tropis &amp; Figuris</i>, | <i>Posterior de Voce &amp; Gestu</i> | <span class='sc'>Praecipit</span>. | <span class='fss'>IN VSVM
-SCHOLA-</span>|rum accuratiùs editi. | <span class='asterism'>*&#8196;*&#8196;*&#8196;*<br />*&#8196;&#8196;&#8196;*</span> | <span class='asterism'>* *<br />*</span> | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcuts</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 11: 1598: (eights) 16<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[112], signn. ¶<sup>4</sup> <span class='fss'>A</span>-<span class='fss'>F</span><sup>8</sup> <span class='fss'>G</span><sup>4</sup>: sign. <span class='fss'>B</span> 1<sup>r</sup> beg.
-<i>sus, vivus</i>: Pica Roman. Contents:—sign.
-¶1<sup>v</sup>, title: ¶2<sup>r</sup>-3<sup>r</sup> Epistola dedicatoria
-to lord Thomas Egerton, dated
-“Oxon. 16. Calend. Decemb. [16 Nov.],
-1598”: ¶3<sup>v</sup>-4<sup>v</sup>, “Ad Lectorem”: <span class='fss'>A</span> 1<sup>r</sup>-<span class='fss'>G</span>
-3<sup>r</sup>, the work: <span class='fss'>G</span> 4 I have not seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Very rare: the only copy at present known is in Corpus Christi Library at Oxford.
-Even Wood (<cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 210) had not seen this first edition, since he implies that
-the date is 1600. See 1600 B, 1618 B, 1629 B.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1598 and 1599.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Pp. <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The article <b>Lomazzo</b> has been inserted under 1599 instead of 1598, the proper
-year.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1599.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>. <b>Richard.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>With respect to the letters “B. P. N.”, see also 1625 J.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1603.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>. <b>Davies.</b> <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Ingleby, in his <cite>Shakespeare’s Centurie of Prayse</cite> (2nd ed., 1879), points out a
-Shakespearean allusion on p. 215 of this work.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1606.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_65'>65</a>. <b>Oxford</b>, l. 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> .4 <i>read</i> 4.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1608.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>. <b>Panke.</b> <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1613 P, in this Supplement.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1610.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_78'>78</a>. <b>Rainolds</b>, top line of page.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 15 <i>read</i> <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite> ii. 15 and 193.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1612.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Pp. <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The articles <b>Rawlinson</b> and <b>Reinolds</b> are out of their place at the latter reference,
-and should be on p. <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>. <b>Smyth</b>, Richard. <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The third edition was issued in 1634; see 1634 S.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1613.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>. <b>Answer.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This is of course by Richard Parkes, as is noted in the first edition (p. 59; 1604,
-no. 7). “1604 A” is twice an error for “1604 P.”</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>. <b>Colmore</b>, l. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> <span class='sc'>Saactpavl</span> <i>read</i> <span class='sc'>Sanctpavl</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>. <b>Oxford</b>, Univ. (Justa Funebria), l. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The type is English Roman.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>. Ibid. l. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> preceding art. <i>read</i> art. no. 19.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>. <i>After</i> <b>Oxford</b>, no. 21, <i>insert</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Panke</b>, John. <span class='fss'>THE FALL OF BABEL.</span> | By the confusion of
-Tongues, directly proouing against the | Papistes of this, and former
-ages; that a view of their writings | and Bookes, being taken, it cannot
-be discerned by any | man liuing, what they would say, or how be
-vnder-|stood, in the question of the sacrifice of the Masse, | the Reall
-presence or Transubstantiation; | but in explaning their mindes, they
-fall | vpon such tearmes, as the Prote-|stants vse and allow. | <span class='fss'>FVRTHER.</span> |
-In the question of the Popes Supremacie is shewed, how they | <i>abuse an
-authoritie of the auncient Father S. Cyprian, a Canon of</i> | the 1. Niceene
-counsell, and the Ecclesiasticall historie of Socrates, and Sozomen: And
-lastly is set downe a briefe of the succession | of Popes in the sea of
-Rome, for these 1600. yeares togea-|ther: what diuersitie there is in their
-accompt, what | heresies, schismes, and intrusions there hath been in |
-that sea, deliuered in opposition against their | Tables, wherewith now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>adayes they are | very busie, and other thinges dis-|couered against
-them. | <i>By</i> <span class='fss'>IOHN PANKE</span>. | [<i>motto</i>, then <i>woodcut</i>.]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 29 <i>a</i>: 1613: sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: the rest as 1608 P.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The titlepage was not printed at Oxford, the woodcut being unknown there: the
-rest is a reissue of the sheets of 1608 P. This edition has been erroneously dated 1623
-in the British Museum <cite>Catalogue of books ... to the year 1640</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>. <b>Smith</b>, l. 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> 1684. S. <i>read</i> 1617 S.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1614.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_95'>95</a>. <b>Benefield.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of the imprint should be 1614, not 1613.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>Pp. <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>. <b>N.</b>, S. (no. 9).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This article should be headed <b>S.</b>, N., and should follow no. 15 on p. <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>. <b>Rainolds</b>, l. 8.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Pica English <i>read</i> Pica Roman.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1615.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>. <b>Brasbridge.</b> <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1586 in this Supplement.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1618.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>. <b>Sanderson</b>, last line.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> ii. 626 <i>read</i> iii. 626.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1619.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>. <b>Flavel</b>, l. 9.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Long Primer English <i>read</i> Long Primer Roman.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1620.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>. <b>James</b>, l. 16.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Proeomium <i>read</i> Prooemium.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1621.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_115'>115</a>. <b>Burton.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>An edition of the <cite>Anatomy of Melancholy</cite> has been issued in 1893, in which the
-editor claims to have verified most of Burton’s quotations. See also 1640 F (Ferrand).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1622.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_116'>116</a>. <b>Carpenter</b>, last line of page.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><i>For</i> <span class='fss'>CARPNETARIO</span> <i>read</i> <span class='fss'>CARPENTARIO</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>. <b>Oxford.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of the book (1622) has been accidentally omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>. <b>Rawlinson</b>, l. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> 1662 <i>read</i> 162<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>2</span></span>.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1623.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>. <b>Panke.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The words “See 1613 P” are a reference to 1613 in this Supplement.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1625.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_123'>123</a>. <b>Carpenter</b>, l. 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> W<i>ater</i> <i>read</i> <i>Water</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>. <b>Pemble.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A reference to the 2nd edition, 1629, should have been inserted.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1628.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>. <b>Casa.</b> The J. W. (de Umbra) is no doubt J. Wouverus.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1629.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_144'>144</a>. <b>Butler</b>, ll. 5–7.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For the sentence</i> The reference ... <cite>Oratoriæ Libri duo</cite>, <i>read</i> The reference to a
-<cite>Rhetorica</cite> of this year is to a London edition of the <cite>Rhetorica</cite> and <cite>Oratoria</cite> together.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1630.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>. <b>Hakewill</b>, l. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> <span class='fss'>PER=</span>|<span class='fss'>PETVALL</span> <i>read</i> <span class='fss'>PER=</span>|<span class='fss'>PETUALL</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>. Ibid. l. 22.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>For <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, 256 read <cite>Ath. Oxon.</cite>, iii. 256.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>. <b>Pemble</b>, l. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Impr. 84 <i>b</i> <i>read</i> Impr. 84 <i>a</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>. <b>Pinke.</b> <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1634 P (2nd ed.)</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>. <i>Insert</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Stanley</b>, Henry. [<i>device</i>] | <span class='fss'>APPENDIX</span> | <span class='fss'>AD LIBROS OMNES TAM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>VETERIS QVAM NOVI TESTAMENTI.</span> | <span class='fss'>HENRICUS</span> [<i>device</i>] <span class='fss'>STANLEY</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONIÆ.</span> |
-<span class='fss'>M.DC.XXX.</span> |</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. as above: 1630: folio: pp. [2
-+ “529”-“540”]: pp. 529–40 begg.
-<i>Appendix</i>: Pica (?) Roman. Contents:—p.
-(1) title: 529–40, tables, see below.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This set of seven leaves is apparently an experiment to be used for indexing
-sermons or comments under the verse of the Bible to which they refer. They are
-blank tables in the form “Versus 1 [2, 3, &amp;c. to 18] <i>Vid.</i> L.&#8196; P.&#8196; L.&#8196; ” six times
-and then “<i>Vid.</i>&#8196; P.&#8196; L.&#8196; ” Eighteen verses are on each page, and references to
-L(iber) P(agina) L(inea) were intended to be filled in. No Latin Bible of folio size
-of 1629, ‘30 or ‘31 seems to exist, so probably this was intended to be bound up with
-some earlier edition. The only copy known is in the British Museum in MS. Harl.
-5932, fol. 45 (Bagford’s collections), and no doubt the intended publication was
-abandoned.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1631.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>. <b>Bible</b>, top line.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of imprint (1631) has been accidentally omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>. <b>F.</b>, A. (Saints Legacies). <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See 1640 S.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>P. <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>. <b>Felix</b>, l. 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Felıx <i>read</i> Felix.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>. Ibid. ll. 4–5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>bere; quam <i>should be italic</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_158'>158</a>. <b>Powel.</b> A copy of the work has now been seen, as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>Powel</b>, Griffin. <span class='fss'>ANALYSIS</span> | <span class='fss'>ANALYTICO-</span>|<span class='fss'>RVM POSTERIORVM</span> | <span class='fss'>SIVE
-LIBRORVM ARISTO-</span>|telis de Demonstratione, | in qua singula capita per |
-quæstiones &amp; responsi-|nes perspicuè ex-|ponuntur: | <i>adhibitis</i> | <span class='fss'>QVIBVSDAM
-SCHOLIIS</span>, | ex optimis quibusq; interpreti-|bus desumptis, opera &amp; studio
-<i>G.</i> | <span class='sc'>Powel</span> <i>Oxoniensis confecta</i> | <i>&amp; edita in vsum iuniorum</i>. | <i>Editio
-secunda.</i> | [<i>woodcut.</i>]</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Impr. 143 <i>a</i>: 1631: (eights) 12<sup>o</sup>: pp.
-[16] + 241 + [3]: p. 11 beg. <i>Analysis
-cap.</i> 2, 201 <i>strationis Medium</i>: Pica
-Roman. Contents:—pp. (1–2) not seen:
-(3) title: (5–7) dedication to the earl of
-Essex, dated “Ex Collegio Iesu oxoniæ
-Tertio Calend: Martij ... Griffinus
-Powel”: (8–14) “Ad Lectorem Academicum”,
-and “Prolegomena”: (15–16)
-not seen: 1–241, the Analysis: (2–3) not
-seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>See in body of text (1631 P).</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1632.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>. <b>Widdowes</b>, no. 32, l. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Impr. 137 <i>read</i> Impr. 107.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1633.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_168'>168</a>. <b>Gerhardus</b>, l. 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> Long Primer English <i>read</i> Long Primer Roman.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>. <b>Reusner</b>, l. 9 (only).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In the collation <i>for</i> 198 <i>read</i> 224, with the last page misprinted 198: and <i>for</i>
-34 <i>read</i> 36, making the necessary correction in the List of Contents.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1634.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>. <b>Allen</b>, 2nd line of page.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>It is the Bodleian Catalogue which ascribes the book to John Allen.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>. <b>Barclay</b>, no. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of the imprint (1634) has been accidentally omitted.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1635.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>. <b>Chaucer</b>, l. 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>In</i> English Roman Italic <i>the word</i> Roman <i>is superfluous</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>. Ibid, last line.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> sign. 2** <i>read</i> sign. **2.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1636.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>. <b>Carpenter.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>At the end of the technical description a ] should be added.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_194'>194</a>. <b>Prideaux</b>, l. 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> 40<sup>o</sup> P. 50 Th. <i>read</i> 4<sup>o</sup> P. 50 Th.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1637.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_197'>197</a>. <b>Cowper.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of the imprint (1637) is accidentally omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_200'>200</a>. <b>Prideaux</b>, halfway down.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>After</i> Christ’s Resurrection ...” <i>add</i> with impr. 152 <i>b</i>.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1638.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>. <b>Burton</b>, l. 5 from end.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Perhaps <i>protelata</i> is rather “continued,” although there is no sign of London
-printing.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>. <b>Oxford</b>—Statuta. <i>Add</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A copy of the Statuta Selecta has been seen in which opposite p. 20, instead of
-the <cite>Encyclopædia</cite> is found an undated folio folded broadside entitled:—<span class='fss'>SPECULUM</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ACADEMICUM</span>: | Quadratura Circuli, | Sive | <i>Cyclus Prælectorum</i> in Schema redactus....
-This table gives a note of the day of the week, hour, professor, audience and
-fines, and bears at the foot “Pag. 20.”, showing that it was intended for (at least some
-part of) this edition of the Statuta. In the last line copies vary between “Vesp.” (as
-it should be) and “vesp.”</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1639.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>. <b>Dugres.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of the imprint (1639) is accidentally omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_214'>214</a>. <b>Grotius</b>, 3rd line from end.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>For</i> 1722 <i>read</i> 1622.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1640.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>P. <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>. <b>Saints Legacies.</b> <i>Add at end</i>:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The first edition of this book is described in 1631 F, so the note of its rarity must
-be modified.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>In Arber’s <cite>Transcript of the Stationers’ Registers</cite> there is a record that this book
-under the title “A Collection of Certaine Promisis out of the Word of God” was
-entered by Robert Swayne on 21 June 1629, and that Swayne’s widow (?) Martha
-transferred her rights in “the Promises or Saintes legacy” to Richard Royston on
-6 Feb. 163<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>2</span></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c006'>P. <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>. <b>Tozer.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>The date of the imprint (1640) is accidentally omitted.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>LIST OF UNDATED BOOKS<br /> <span class='large'>(WITH A REFERENCE TO THE YEAR UNDER WHICH THEY ARE CATALOGUED).</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c030'>Alexander: see 1485.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Angelus, Christophorus: see 1618.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Articles: see 1633.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Augustine: see 1483.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cicero: see 1480.</li>
- <li class='c030'>France—Articles: see 1624.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Godwin, F., bp. of Llandaff: see 1603.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hampole: see 1483.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Howson, John, bp. of Oxford: see 1622.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hutchins, Robert: see 1617.</li>
- <li class='c030'>James, Thomas: Humble Request: see 1625.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jesuits Pater Noster: see 1611.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Laet, Jaspar: see 1518.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Latin Grammar: see 1481, 1483.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Logic: see 1483.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lyndewoode, Will.: see 1483.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Oxford, Merton College: see 1623.</li>
- <li class='c030'>—— University: Encyclopædia: see 1635.</li>
- <li class='c030'>—— —— Orders for the Market: see 1602, 1606.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philosophy: de Philosophia: see 1586.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Shepery, John: see 1586.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Terence: see 1483.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thornborough, John, bp. of Bristol: see 1605.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thornburgh, Edw.: see 1639.</li>
- <li class='c030'>W., R.: Merry jests: see 1617.</li>
- <li class='c030'>W(alkington), T(homas): see 1631.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX A.<br /> <span class='large'>The Fifteenth Century Press.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>(Supplementary to, and corrective of, pp. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>–4.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The Oxford Press of the fifteenth century is a peculiarly interesting
-one. At present fifteen works are known to belong to it, ranging in date
-from “1468” (1478?) to 1486 (148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>?). Not only is its origin quite
-independent, so far as is known, of Caxton’s printing, not only are new
-products of the press still from time to time discovered, but the battle
-which has been waged about the date of its establishment has made the
-“1468” book a veritable typographical battleground, and in Henry
-Bradshaw’s opinion a touchstone of intellectual acumen.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the first place some details of the various books will be given: then
-an account of the type and presswork: and lastly a description of each
-book supplementary to, and corrective of, that contained on pp. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>–4.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span><span class='sc'>Details of the Early Oxford Press.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='details'>
-
-<table class='table2' summary='Details of the Early Oxford Press.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>No.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Date.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Place Named.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Printer Named.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Type Used.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brm c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Short Title.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brm c031' colspan='4'><span class='sc'>Paper and Make-up.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Composition.</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
-
-
-
-
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Size by folding.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Size by make-up.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Size by appearance.</th>
- <th class='bbt brm c031'>Copies on vellum known.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Signatures.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>No. of pages.<a id='r6' /><a href='#f6' class='c007'><sup>[6]</sup></a></th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Size of printed page.<a id='r7' /><a href='#f7' class='c007'><sup>[7]</sup></a></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>“1468,” Dec. 17</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>Oxonia</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Jerome</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>84</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4¾ × 2¾</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1479</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>Oxonia (or -ae, plural)</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Aretinus</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>348</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4¾ × 2¾</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c032'>3</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>14<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span> (?), Mar. 14.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>Oxonia</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'><b>Ægidius</b></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>48</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>4¾ × 2¾</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1480?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Cicero</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sixes</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>60</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>5⅛ × 3½</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1481?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Latin Grammar</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>5<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 3<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1481, Oct. 11</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>Alma universitas Oxon̄.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>Theodoricus Rood de Colonia</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2, 3</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Ales</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>single</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>folio</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.;<br /><span class='fss'>A</span>, <span class='fss'>B</span>, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>480</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>7½ × 4¾</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c032'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>1482, July 31</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>2, 3</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'><b>Latteburius</b></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>single</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>folio</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.;<br /><span class='fss'>A</span>, <span class='fss'>B</span>, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>584</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>7⅞ × 4⅞</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>8</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1483?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4, 5, 6</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Anwykyll</b>, with <b>Vulgaria</b> (two editions)</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>244</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4⅝ – 5<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 3½ – 4<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>9</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1483?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4, 5, 6</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Augustine</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eight</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>16</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4½ × 2<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>10</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1483?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4, 6</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Hampole</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sixes</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>128</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>5<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 3⅜</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>11</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1483?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4, 6</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Logic</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sixes</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><span class='fss'>A</span>, <span class='fss'>B</span>, &amp;c.; <span class='fss'>A</span>&thinsp;a, <span class='fss'>B</span>&thinsp;b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>328</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>5⅜ × 3⅜</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1483?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>3, 4, 5, 6</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Lyndewoode</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>single</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eights &amp; sixes</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>folio</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.; <span class='fss'>A</span>, <span class='fss'>B</span>, &amp;c.; aa, bb, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>732</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>10½ × 6¼ – ⅜</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>13</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1485</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>Alma universitas Oxoniae</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>Teodoricus Rood de Colonia, and Thomas Hunte Anglicus</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>3, 5</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Phalaris</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>double</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>eights</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>136</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4⅞ × 2⅞</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>14</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>[1485?]</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4, 5, 7</td>
- <td class='brm c031'><b>Textus Alexandri</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>sm. 4<sup>o</sup></td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>5<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 3<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c032'>15</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> [?]</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>5, 7</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'><b>Festial</b></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>single</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>eights &amp; sixes</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>folio</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>a, b, &amp;c.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>348</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>7<span class='fraction'>9<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 4<span class='fraction'>11<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-<div><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span></div>
-<div class='details'>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Details of the Early Oxford Press.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>No.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' rowspan='2'><span class='sc'>Short Title.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brm c031' colspan='10'><span class='sc'>Composition</span> (<i>continued</i>).</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brm c031' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Printing.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c031' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Illustrations.</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
-
-
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Columns in a page.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Lines in a column.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Printing begins on signature.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Page even at side.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Headlines.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Marginal printing.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Paragraphs set back.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Space left for caps.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Directors.</th>
- <th class='bbt brm c031'>Punctuation.<br />.&#8196;:&#8196;,&#8196;?&#8196;()</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Pages at a time.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Spaced.</th>
- <th class='bbt brm c031'>Red ink used.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Borders.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Woodcuts in text.</th>
- <th class='bbt brt c031'>Woodcut caps.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Jerome</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>25</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>usually</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>once</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Aretinus</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>25</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>once, in one copy</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c032'>3</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><b>Ægidius</b></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>25</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>+ + ⨀ + ⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Cicero</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>19</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ + (/) + +</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Latin Grammar</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>27</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ? ?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Ales</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>38</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c032'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><b>Latteburius</b></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>40</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>8</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Anwykyll</b>, with <b>Vulgaria</b> (two editions)</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>22?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>once</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>9</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Augustine</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>26–7</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ + ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>10</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Hampole</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>31</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>11</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Logic</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>31</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>4?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Lyndewoode</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>46 or 60</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 2 (a 1<sup>v</sup>)</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>13</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Phalaris</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>21</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>a 1<sup>v</sup></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c032'>14</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><b>Textus Alexandri</b></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c031'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c031'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c032'>15</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'><b>Festial</b></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>33</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>a 1<sup>v</sup></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>+ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀ ⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>?</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brm c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c031'>+</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span><span class='sc'>Owners of Copies.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='owners'>
-
-<table class='table2' summary='Owners of Copies.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>No.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c034'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>British Museum.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>Bodleian.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>Cambridge University Library.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>John Rylands Library.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>Oxford Colleges, &amp;c.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>Cambridge Colleges.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>Other owners of copies.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'>Total of copies.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Jerome</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a id='r8' /><a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Huth Library, Earl of Pembroke, Sir H. Dryden, Paris, America.</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Aretinus</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀[A]</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Norwich Cathedral, Earl of Pembroke, Chetham Library, Lord Ashburnham.</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Ægidius</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Cicero</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Latin Grammar</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Ales</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>8<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Durham and Lincoln Cathedrals, Dulwich College.</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Latteburius</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Lambeth, Westminster, Stonyhurst, Brussels, T. E. Cooke, Esq.</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>8</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Anwykyll, with Vulgaria</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>(3)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>9</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Hampole</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>10</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Logic</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>11</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Lyndewoode</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Edinburgh (Advocates’ Library), Durham Cathedral, Glasgow, Paris, E. G. Duff, Esq., Lord Crawford.</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>20</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Augustine</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>13</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Phalaris</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>14</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Textus Alexandri</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>15</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c034'>Festial</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>⨀<a href='#f8' class='c007'><sup>[8]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c034'>Lambeth.</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>3½</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Totals</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>8½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>9½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>9½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>22</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>24</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>88½</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c034'>Different books</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>6½</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>8</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>5½</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>9½</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The finest set is undoubtedly possessed by the John Rylands Library at Manchester.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>THE TYPE AND PRESS-WORK.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Seven kinds of type were used, the use of which can be seen on p. <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>.
-Facsimiles of all of them are given in plates II-V.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These obviously divide the books into three groups. In the first
-group of three (“1468”–14<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span>) only type no. 1 is used. In the second
-group of four (1480–82, Theodoric Rood) only types 2–3 are found. In
-the last group consisting of eight (1483–148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, T. Rood and Thomas
-Hunte) only types 4–7 are used, except that the peculiar black initial
-type (no. 3) is occasionally still used.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The press was of course a wooden hand-screw one, which was at first
-employed to print one page at a time (Jerome), but after the first book
-two pages and perhaps later four were struck off together. The earliest
-printing press of which we have an engraving is as late as 1<span class='fraction'>499<br /><span class='ov'>500</span></span> (see an
-article in <cite>Bibliographica</cite>, 1894, no. 2), but there was great conservatism
-in detail, and from the early engravings and such researches as those
-which Blades, De Vinne, Talbot Reed, and others have made, we know
-many of the details of working in the earliest days.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 1. “1468”—14<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span>.</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Cologne black.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—English, nearly (10 lines = 1<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. In modern English 10
-lines = 1⅞ in.).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Used in the Jerome, Aretinus and Aegidius, with no other.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The “upper case” (to use a modern expression) consisted of at
-least 16 divisions, G, J, K, L, T, U, W, X, Y, Z not being used, and P
-seldom in the Jerome, H being there used for both H and P. This misuse
-is not found in the other two books. On the other hand there are two
-forms of C, E, N, and Q, both probably mixed in the same division. Q
-is in the Jerome almost always <img src='images/q.png' alt='reversed Q' height='16' /> (a peculiarity found in some ornamental
-MSS., from the convenience of extending the tail into the margin),
-in the Aretinus and Aegidius always Q: the letter is however identical
-in all three books, but being on a square body it is in the Jerome turned
-one quarter round.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The “lower case” consisted of at least 121 divisions. Of the simple
-unmodified letters k and z are wanting, and except in the Jerome j (but ij
-is found in all, colligated). There are two forms of p, r, and three of s, the
-two p’s and r’s being used indiscriminately, but the two s’s (final) and the
-ſ (initial and medial) having their proper use. Of colligated or modified
-letters there are at least eighty-three, and of other symbols eleven (for -et,
-&amp;, con-, -us [two], id est, full stop, colon, ?). Of these 121 about 95 are
-common to all three. The signs of progress are as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the Jerome, contrasted with the other two, Q is except in two places
-<img src='images/q.png' alt='reversed Q' height='16' />, H is generally used as P, and I have not elsewhere noticed ̓b, or j used
-by itself. On the other hand in the two others, and not in the Jerome,
-are found an extra short t in which the perpendicular stroke hardly appears
-at all above the horizontal line, and eleven new forms, including fe, ff,
-and pp in colligation. The Q and P are rightly used, always.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>So too in the Jerome and Aretinus compared with the Aegidius we find
-that q is printed too high up, being in fact an inverted b, or, more accurately,
-an inverted broken h occasionally used for b. In the Jerome
-this is almost always the case, in the Aretinus as often as not, in the
-Aegidius hardly ever. It may be accidental that B and H and three
-minor modified letters are not found in the short Aegidius, that w (in wlt
-= vult) is only found in the Jerome, <span class='ligature'>·|·</span> (= id est) only in the Aretinus: but
-the occurrence of ؟ (= ?) and of printing in red ink <i>only</i> in the Aegidius, is
-not insignificant.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The relative order of the three may therefore be assumed to be as
-above indicated.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Origin of the type.</i></h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>It may be taken as certain that as Caxton’s type is based on Bruges
-models, so the first Oxford type is ultimately derived from Cologne. Ulric
-Zel began printing there at least as early as 1466, and the general
-resemblance to his letters is clear. The likeness is still nearer when we
-follow Zel’s influence on Arnold ther Hoernen (Cologne, from 1470),
-Richard Paffroet of Cologne (Deventer, from 1477), and especially
-a little-known Cologne printer named Gerard ten Raem de Bercka, whose
-only dated book is of 1478. John of Westphalia (Alost and Louvain,
-from 1473) and Jacobus de Breda, a successor of Paffroet at Deventer, also
-supply similarities. In the case of Gerard we actually find, besides
-a close general similarity, the same misuse of H as P. Unfortunately no
-works printed by him, except the dated <cite>Modus Confitendi</cite> and an undated
-<cite>Aesopus</cite>, are at present known, so that it must not be assumed that 1478
-is his earliest or only date.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is at present also unsafe to assume that Theodoricus Rood of
-Cologne who printed at Oxford in 1481–85 was the first Oxford printer,
-or ever used type no. 1.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 2 (1480?-1482).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Narrow Dutch Black.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—English, nearly (10 lines = just less than 2 in.).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Used in the Cicero (1480?: by itself), Latin Grammar (1481?: by
-itself), Ales (1481: chiefly, but with no. 3), and Latteburius (1482: chiefly,
-but with no. 3).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The “upper case” consisted of 22 letters (J, K, U, W omitted).</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The “lower case” consisted of at least 131 divisions. Of the simple
-letters j only occurs in colligation with i (as ij), and there are two forms
-of r, s (s, ſ) and y. There are about 93 colligated or modified letters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Unfortunately it is very difficult to institute a close comparison of the
-use of letters, so as to establish a proper order of the books, in consequence
-of the fragmentary state of the Milo and the Latin Grammar.
-The Milo can be clearly separated from the rest: the type is <i>spaced</i>, so
-that 10 lines = between 2<span class='fraction'>9<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> and 2¾ in., and (&nbsp;), ؟ (= ?), | (= comma) are
-found in it alone. In fact, but for the closest resemblance of actual type,
-the Milo would have to be regarded as printed elsewhere: and it cannot
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>yet be said to be quite certainly printed at Oxford. The Ales and Latteburius
-are hardly to be distinguished in the use of type, but I have
-observed w only in the Latteburius and Grammar.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The origin of the type is probably to be looked for near Cologne, from
-whence came Theodoricus Rood, the avowed printer of the Ales, and
-where a Theodoricus, who may probably be identified with Rood, printed
-in 1485–6 in a type smaller than, but similar to, the present one. The
-narrow stilted look of the letters and the semicircular sweep in front of
-the A are noticeable features. Henry Bradshaw detected a similarity
-between this type and that of Arnold ther Hoernen at Cologne.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 3 (1481–1485).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Heading and initial Black, a large special type.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—2-line English, nearly (10 lines = 4 in. -, 10 lines of 2-line
-English = 3¾ in. +).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Used only in the Ales (1481) and Latteburius (1482) (for the beginnings
-of chapters), in the Lyndewoode (1483?: head lines) and the Phalaris
-(1485: one line).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The type is too sparsely used to enable us to describe the extent of the
-fount: but F, G, J, j, K, k, v, W, w, X, Y, Z, z are not found: I and g
-have two forms each; s, ſ are found; V is only used for the number five;
-and nine modified or conjoined letters occur. The peculiarity of the
-letters is a slipped or detached upper corner in B, L, N, which is found in
-1506 in Quentell’s printing at Cologne, and may be compared with
-a smaller form used by Jean Veldener at Culenburg in 1484.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 4 (1483?-1485?).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Small Dutch Black.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—Pica, nearly (10 lines = 1<span class='fraction'>11<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> + in., 10 lines in Pica = 1<span class='fraction'>11<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> – in.).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This is the small type of the Anwykyll and Lyndewoode (both 1483?),
-the ordinary type of the Hampole, Logic, and Augustine (all 1483?), and
-the small type of the Lyndewoode (1483?), and is used in the Textus
-Alexandri (1485?). It is in many details similar to type 2, but may be
-readily distinguished by the o being broad and round in type 4, instead of
-narrow and oval as in type 2. There are two forms of S in type 4, and
-only one in type 2. The capitals are identical with those of type 6.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fount consisted of 25 capitals (J, V, W wanting, but two forms of
-D, S), 27 small letters (z wanting, but r, s double) and at least 95 modified
-or conjoined letters, in all not less than 147 types. Seven of the last
-class appear to be peculiar to the Logic, which may therefore be the
-latest of the group.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 5 (1483–148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Small Caxtonian Black.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—Great Primer, nearly (10 lines = 2<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in., 10 lines of Great
-Primer = 2⅜ in.).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>This is the larger type of the Anwykyll, the largest but one (ordinary
-large) of the Lyndewoode, the largest of the Augustine (all 1483?), the
-ordinary one of the Phalaris (1485), is used in the Textus Alexandri
-(1485?), and is the small type of the Festial (1486). The capitals are
-identical with those of type 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There are 19 capitals (J, K, V, W, X, Y, Z wanting) and 28 small
-letters (j, z wanting, but d, g, r, s double), and at least 44 modified or conjoined
-letters, five of which seem to be peculiar to the Festial, as is also
-the use of k. In all there were not less than 91 types.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 6 (1483?).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Large Dutch Black, a Church type going with no. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—Pica, nearly (as no. 4).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This is the larger type of the Hampole, the larger type (two half lines
-only) of the Logic, the larger type imbedded in the small type of the
-Lyndewoode, the intermediate type (one line) in the Augustine, and
-occurs in the Anwykyll (all 1483?). The capitals are identical with
-those of type 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There are 22 capitals (J, K, V, W, Z wanting, but S double), 24 small
-letters (j, k, w, z wanting, but r, s double), and at least 16 modified or
-conjoined letters, in all not less than 62 types. Eight of the modified
-letters appear to be peculiar to the Hampole.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'><i>Type</i> 7 (1485?–148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Character:—Large Caxtonian Black, a Church type going with no. 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Body:—Great Primer, nearly (as no. 5).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This is used in the Textus Alexandri (1485?) and is the large type of
-the Festial (148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>). The capitals are identical with those of type 5.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To judge from the Festial, there are 18 capitals (J, K, R, V, W, X, Y,
-Z not being used), 24 small letters (k, w, y, z not found, but r, s double),
-and at least 9 modified letters, 51 in all.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>WATERMARKS.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>At present the study of watermarks has not reached a stage at which
-they are able to contribute scientific proofs of high importance, nor will
-any proof be ever deducible from them except the earliest possible
-occurrence of an undated issue, although probabilities of concurrent printing
-may be arrived at. Only some plain facts, therefore, will be stated
-with respect to their occurrence in the early Oxford books.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If we take the first group (the Jerome, Aretinus and Aegidius), we find
-no less than 26, out of a total of 50. The Rufinus has seven (two shared
-with the others, one shared with the Aretinus only, one shared with the
-Latteburius, and three peculiar to itself). The Aretinus has 22, most of
-which are found in the later groups, but eight are peculiar to itself. The
-Aegidius has two only, common to the group.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>In the second group (Cicero, Ales, Latteburius, Latin Grammar) there
-appear to be 28, of which four are common to all the groups, one is shared
-only with group one, seven only with group three, and sixteen are
-peculiar.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the third group 38 occur, four of which are common to all the
-groups, nine are shared with the first alone, seven with the second alone,
-and eighteen are peculiar.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>SEPARATE BOOKS.</h3>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>1. <b>Jerome</b> (“1468,” see p. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>The treatise of Tyrannius Rufinus on the Apostles’ Creed, here
-ascribed to St. Jerome, was undoubtedly the first product of the Oxford
-press. It bears the date of 17 December, 1468, as the day on which the
-printing was finished. The colophon is clearly printed and bears no
-mark of haste, nor does it show the smallest trace of alteration in any of
-the copies seen by the present writer. Saturday is a reasonable day on
-which to conclude a work. A facsimile of the colophon is given in
-plate II.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Unfortunately for the peace of the bibliographer two spectres have
-haunted this book, one of which “pulveris exigui jactu” has been laid,
-but the other is not yet gone, although there is a prospect of ultimate
-eviction.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c036'>I. <span class='sc'>The Corsellis forgery.</span></h5>
-
-<p class='c019'>In 1664 Richard Atkyns, a Gloucestershire gentleman of some position,
-and educated at Balliol, issued a book, the title of which sets forth
-with unusual clearness the object of the volume:—“The Original and
-Growth of Printing: Collected Out of History, and the <i>Records</i> of this
-Kingdome. Wherein is also Demonstrated, That Printing appertaineth to
-the <i>Prerogative Royal</i>; and is a Flower of the <i>Crown</i> of <i>England</i>. By
-Richard Atkyns, <i>Esq</i>:” (London, printed by John Streater, for the Author,
-<span class='fss'>MDCLXIV</span>: quarto: pp. [12] + 24). Atkyns’s object was to recommend
-himself to Charles II’s attention by proving that printing was a royal
-privilege: and for this it was very desirable that there should be evidence
-of the introduction of the art into England under royal protection. The
-testimony of Stowe—corroborated by Howell—that “William Caxton of
-London, Mercer,” introduced it in 1471, was unsuitable. Atkyns, however,
-came upon a copy of the “1468” Oxford book, and “the same
-most worthy Person who trusted me with the aforesaid Book, did also
-present me with the Copy of a Record and Manuscript in <i>Lambeth</i>-House,
-heretofore in his Custody, belonging to the See (and not to any
-particular Arch-Bishop of <i>Canterbury</i>); the substance whereof was this
-(though I hope, for publique satisfaction, the Record it self, in its due time,
-will appear).” Then ensues the following story:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><i>Thomas Bourchier</i>, Arch-Biſhop of <i>Canterbury</i>, moved the then King
-(<i>Hen.</i> the 6th) to uſe all poſſible means for procuring a
-Printing-Mold (for ſo ’twas there called) to be brought into this
-Kingdom; the King (a good Man, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>much given to Works of this Nature)
-readily hearkned to the Motion; and taking private Advice, how to
-effect His Deſign, concluded it could not be brought about without
-great Secrecy, and a conſiderable Sum of Money given to ſuch Perſon or
-Perſons, as would draw off ſome of the Workmen from <i>Harlein</i> in
-<i>Holland</i>, where <i>John Cuthenberg</i> had newly invented it, and was
-himſelf perſonally at Work: ’Twas reſolv’d, that leſs then one
-Thouſand Marks would not produce the deſir’d Effect: Towards which
-Sum, the ſaid Arch-Biſhop preſented the King with Three Hundred Marks.
-The Money being now prepared, the Management of the Deſign was
-committed to Mr. <i>Robert Turnour</i>, who then was of the Roabs to the
-King, and a Perſon moſt in Favour with Him, of any of his Condition:
-Mr. <i>Turnour</i> took to his Aſſiſtance Mr. <i>Caxton</i>, a Citizen of good
-Abilities, who Trading much into <i>Holland</i>, might be a Creditable
-Pretence, as well for his going, as ſtay in the <i>Low Countries</i>: Mr.
-<i>Turnour</i> was in Diſguiſe (his Beard and Hair ſhaven quite off) but
-Mr. <i>Caxton</i> appeared known and publique. They having received the
-ſaid Sum of One Thouſand Marks, went firſt to <i>Amſterdam</i>, then to
-<i>Leyden</i>, not daring to enter <i>Harlein</i> it ſelf; for the Town was very
-jealous, having impriſoned and apprehended divers Perſons, who came
-from other Parts for the ſame purpoſe: They ſtaid till they had ſpent
-the whole One Thouſand Marks in Gifts and Expences: So as the King was
-fain to ſend Five Hundred Marks more, Mr. <i>Turnour</i> having written to
-the King, that he had almoſt done his Work; a Bargain (as he ſaid)
-being ſtruck betwixt him and two <i>Hollanders</i>, for bringing off one of
-the Work men, who ſhould ſufficiently diſcover and teach this New Art:
-At laſt, with much ado, they got off one of the Under-Workmen, whoſe
-Name was <i>Frederick Corſells</i> (or rather <i>Corſellis</i>), who late one
-Night ſtole from his Fellows in Diſguiſe, into a Veſſel prepared
-before for that purpoſe; and ſo the Wind (favouring the Deſign)
-brought him ſafe to <i>London</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>’Twas not thought ſo prudent, to ſet him on Work at <i>London</i>, (but by
-the Arch-Biſhops meanes, who had been Vice-Chancellor, and afterwards
-Chancellor of the Univerſity of <i>Oxon</i>) <i>Corſellis</i> was carryed with a
-Guard to <i>Oxon</i>; which Guard conſtantly watch’d, to prevent
-<i>Corſellis</i> from any poſſible Escape, till he had made good his
-Promiſe, in teaching how to Print: So that at <i>Oxford</i> Printing was
-firſt ſet up in <i>England</i>, which was before there was any
-Printing-Press, or Printer, in <i>France</i>, <i>Spain</i>, <i>Italy</i>, or
-<i>Germany</i>, (except the City of <i>Mentz</i>) which claimes Seniority, as to
-Printing, even of <i>Harlein</i> it ſelf, calling her City, <i>Urbem
-Maguntinam Artis Tipographicæ Inventricem primam</i>, though ’tis known
-to be otherwiſe, that City gaining that Art by the Brother of one of
-the Workmen of <i>Harlein</i>, who had learnt it at Home of his Brother,
-and after ſet up for himſelf at <i>Mentz</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>This Preſs at <i>Oxon</i> was at leaſt ten years before there was any
-Printing in <i>Europe</i> (except at <i>Harlein</i>, and <i>Mentz</i>) where alſo it
-was but new born. This Preſs at <i>Oxford</i>, was afterwards found
-inconvenient, to be the ſole Printing-place of <i>England</i>, as being too
-far from <i>London</i>, and the Sea: Whereupon the King ſet up a Preſs at
-St. <i>Albans</i>, and another in the Abby of <i>Weſtminster</i>, where they
-Printed ſeveral Bookes of Divinity and Phyſick, (for the King, for
-Reaſons beſt known to himſelf and Council) permitted then no Law-Books
-to be Printed; nor did any Printer exerciſe that ART, but onely ſuch
-as were the Kings ſworn Servants; the King himſelf having the Price
-and Emolument for Printing Books.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Printing thus brought into <i>England</i>, was moſt Graciouſly received by
-the King, and moſt cordially entertained by the Church, the Printers
-having the Honour to be ſworn the King’s Servants, and the Favour to
-Lodge in the very Boſome of the Church; as in <i>Weſtminſter</i>, St.
-<i>Albans</i>, <i>Oxon</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As no one believes in this story it is not worth while to do more than
-to point out that no corroboration of it has ever been found, (much less
-the original record discovered), that Henry VI was deposed 4 March 146<span class='fraction'>0<br /><span class='ov'>1</span></span>,
-and that the type shows no resemblance to that of Haarlem. Nor does
-the rest of the book concern us. The tale, however, in the absence of
-contradiction, obtained some vogue, so that we find for instance in Layer
-Marney church in Essex some such inscription as the following “Præ-missus,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>non amissus, Nicolas Corsellis Armiger Dominus hujus manerii
-hic requiescit, hâc vitâ ad meliorem commigratus Anno D 1674 Die
-Octobris 19<sup>o</sup>.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Artem typographi miratam Belgicus Anglis</div>
- <div class='line'>Corsellis docuit, Regis prece munere victus.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hic fuit extremis mercator cognitus Indis:</div>
- <div class='line'>Incola jam cælis, virtus sua famaque vivent.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Johannes Corsellis ejus Executor &amp; Consanguineus hoc monumentum
-posuit.” The Corsellis family came from Flanders in the 17th century.
-There is no question that this clumsy forgery of Atkyns has had its effect
-in befogging the subject to which it relates, and has predisposed critics to
-suspect the date of the first Oxford book.</p>
-
-<h5 class='c036'>II. <span class='sc'>The disputed date, “1468.”</span></h5>
-
-<p class='c019'>The first who threw doubt on the recorded date of the Jerome was
-Conyers Middleton in his <cite>Dissertation on the origin of Printing</cite> published
-in 1735, and since then the opinion that 1468 is an error for 1478 (an
-<span class='fss'>X</span> having dropped out of “<span class='fss'>MCCCCLXXVIII</span>”) has steadily gained ground
-with the advance of critical methods, until authorities like Bradshaw
-and Blades and Duff have come to regard the question as settled. The
-only two separate and formal defences of the date (not counting incidental
-passages in books) are a MS. in the Guildhall Library in London, in
-a volume of Stukeley’s <cite>Palæographia Britannica</cite> marked B. 2. 1, perhaps
-written in about 1770, and S. W. Singer’s <cite>Some Account of the book printed at
-Oxford in <span class='fss'>MCCCCLXVIII</span></cite> (London, 1812, 50 copies for private distribution),
-a work which the author subsequently called in as far as he was able. In
-the former the arguments are of a general character, such as that if, as
-Middleton asserted, the King had not leisure to attend to such matters
-during Civil War, the archbishop <i>had</i>, and that Caxton’s silence counts
-for nothing in the general obscurity which surrounds the earliest printing
-presses. The Corsellis story is accepted. Singer is more scientific, as
-befits the later date, and adduces several of the technical arguments which
-may still be used.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is now time to state the present aspect of the dispute, and to ascertain
-how far the date “1468” is not only dubious but untenable. The
-arguments against the date may be stated in presumed order of their
-cogency, with the remarks on the other side which they severally suggest.</p>
-
-<h6 class='c036'>1. <i>The presence of Signatures.</i></h6>
-
-<p class='c019'>The Jerome presents to our eyes the ordinary signatures to which we
-are accustomed in fifteenth-century books, that is to say the marks a j, a ij,
-a iij, a iiij on the recto of each of the four leaves which form the first half
-of the sections of eight leaves (sixteen pages) of which the book is generally
-composed. These are placed just below the last letters of the printed
-page, close under them. Now the earliest known book with a date in
-which signatures elsewhere occur in this developed form is an <cite>Expositio
-Decalogi</cite>, by Johannes Nider, printed at Cologne by Koelhoff in 1472, the
-next being a Cologne book by F. de Platea in 1474. The argument is
-that it is extremely unlikely that an isolated printer in a provincial town
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>in England should make such a discovery and advance, and that the next
-similar book should be a German one four years later<a id='r9' /><a href='#f9' class='c007'><sup>[9]</sup></a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What may be called the common ground of the discussion on this
-point is well explained in Blades’s <cite>Books in Chains</cite> (Lond. 1892), pp.
-85–122, in a paper on Signatures. He shows that the idea of signatures
-in manuscripts is as old as books themselves, but that in manuscripts
-the marks, being in writing and intended for the binder’s eye alone,
-were naturally, as a rule, at the foot or corner of the page, and often
-cut off in the process of binding. When printing came in, the obvious
-difficulty was to print marks so far from the rest of the printed page as to
-be cut off in binding. This difficulty was met in two ways: either the
-signatures were <i>written in</i> at the extreme foot (from 1462?), or the signatures
-were stamped on by hand with single types (from 1473?). Some
-printers, however, did manage by care to print signatures far from the
-text (1474 on?). Ultimately in a single case in 1472 and with increasing
-frequency from 1474 printers found that the essential ugliness of printed
-signatures close to the page was counterbalanced by the utility and convenience
-of the change, and our modern system was begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now, it must be constantly remembered that the entire weight of disproof
-lies with those who dispute the printed date. This is why it is
-simply amusing to read Blades’s sage words on the subject of this 1472
-book with normal printed signatures. He is pledged to renounce the
-Oxford date, but he finds it awkward that there <i>is</i> an isolated book of
-1472 in precisely the same category—with the same want of precedent,
-the same absence of imitators, the same forlorn appearance. Observe how
-he deals with it (p. <a href='#Page_116'>116</a> of the book above cited):—“This is a puzzling
-book, for it is at least two years earlier than any other book so signed.
-In this city, too. [i. e. Lübeck<a id='r10' /><a href='#f10' class='c007'><sup>[10]</sup></a>] many works were issued with MS. signatures
-with a later date than this. It is dangerous to assert that a book is
-wrongly dated because you cannot make it fit into a bibliographical
-theory; but I feel inclined, from the general aspect of the book, to date
-it as 1482, rather than 1472.” And yet a very high authority on typography
-assures me that the book is <i>undoubtedly</i> of 1472! What then
-prevents the tentative and isolated experiment of Cologne from having
-a similar tentative and isolated forerunner, even at Oxford? We
-may remember too that in the infancy of printing it was common
-to detect errors as the book went through the press, and often the printer
-himself corrected an error with his pen, as in the colophon of the Aegidius
-(see p. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>). Or a reader would do the same. But it is believed that in no
-copy of the Jerome is there any attempt to correct or even throw
-suspicion on the date. There is the date, plain and detailed, and it is
-allowable to wait for scientific proof before it is abandoned. <i>A priori</i>
-considerations have force, but they are liable to sudden overthrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Clearly the consideration of signatures alone cannot avail to disprove
-the date of the Jerome. But much more remains.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>
- <h6 class='c036'>2. <i>Signs of progress.</i></h6>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>It is said that, if we consider the interval between 1468 and 1479, we
-shall reasonably expect definite signs of progress. On the contrary, the
-first three Oxford books are printed with the same type, with similar
-signatures, with the same sized page and the same number of lines in
-a column. “In fact,” says Blades in the <cite>Antiquary</cite>, vol. iii, no. 13, Jan.
-1881, in an article on <cite>The First Printing Press at Oxford</cite>, “if a leaf of one
-was extracted and inserted in another it would, typographically, excite no
-remark.” <i>Natura nihil facit per saltum</i>, and we are accustomed to apply
-the idea of evolution and development to every art and trade. It is
-asserted also that there is no other case of the cessation of a press for
-over ten years. But cessation of printing for such a time is not unknown.
-No book was produced at Bamberg between 1462 and 1480, or at Caen
-between 1480 and 1500, or at Brussels between 1484 and 1500, or at
-Haarlem for some years after 1486, or at Saragossa after 1475 till 1485?
-Moreover the only early printing known at Tavistock is two books in
-1525 and 1534. The <i>same type</i> and <i>identical woodcuts</i> are found in the
-two, with an interval of nine years. And where there is cessation, it is
-obvious that we may be content with fewer signs of advance when work
-is resumed at the same press with the same type, than if the activity had
-been continuous, or if the instruments were changed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But this question of progress is a plain issue. Are there no signs of
-advance in the two later books compared with the earlier one?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first book often has an unevenness at the right-hand edge of
-a column (in 28 pages out of 84). In the other two it is always perfectly
-even<a id='r11' /><a href='#f11' class='c007'><sup>[11]</sup></a>. Again, the Jerome starts printing on sign. a 1, whereas the other
-two start with a blank leaf, the printing beginning on a 2. Again, in the
-Jerome there is a peculiar misuse of the capitals H and Q (see p. <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>),
-not found in the following books. And lastly, to omit smaller matters,
-there is the decided and important fact that whereas in the Jerome each
-page was printed separately, in the Aegidius and Aretinus two pages were
-printed at a time.</p>
-
-<h6 class='c036'>3. <i>The Type.</i></h6>
-
-<p class='c019'>Of the palmary arguments against the date, one still remains. The
-first Oxford type presents a remarkable similarity to that used by
-Gerard ten Raem de Bercka (see p. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>), and his only dated book at
-present known is of 1478. There is certainly a real connexion between
-the two founts, but we know so extremely little of this printer that it is at
-present unsafe to base any conclusion on his work. The typographical
-genealogy of the early printers of the Netherlands and Germany has not
-yet been fully drawn out, and of the 1478 <cite>Modus Confitendi</cite> (Hain 11455),
-which is here in question, only two copies <i>with the date</i> are known,
-one in the John Rylands (Spencer) library at Manchester and one on the
-continent. On this point we shall doubtless know more in time, but at
-present we are bound to suspend our judgment.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>
- <h6 class='c036'>4. <i>Mistakes of date common.</i></h6>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>There are two subsidiary considerations left. One is that mistakes of
-date in colophons are not uncommon. An edition of Aeneas Sylvius’s
-<cite>Epistolae</cite> (Cologne, printed by Koelhoff) is dated <span class='fss'>MCCCCLXVIII</span>, which is
-stated to be an error for 1478, and an <cite>Opusculum de componendis versibus</cite> by
-Mataratius, printed at Venice, is also believed to be erroneously dated 1468
-for 1478. Caxton’s edition of Gower’s <cite>Confessio Amantis</cite> is dated 1493
-instead of 1483. I have noticed the following additional errors affecting
-dates before 1501:—720 for 1720, 1061 for 1601, 1099 for 1499, 1334
-for 1734, 1400 for 1490 or 1500, 1444 for 1494, 1461 for 1471, 1461
-for 1641, 1462 for 1472, 1472 for 1482.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There is no doubt therefore that a mistake of date in an early book
-has many parallels, and so far the improbability of it happening in other
-books is diminished. At the same time one would expect the first printers
-in a place of learning to be careful enough, even if an initial blunder of
-this magnitude were committed, to correct it in some copies before issue.
-It is of course conceivable that the date was deliberately falsified, to avoid
-expected unpleasant consequences of being found <i>flagrante delicto</i>, but
-this hypothesis may be left to be dealt with when some one maintains it.</p>
-
-<h6 class='c036'>5. <i>Books bound with the Jerome.</i></h6>
-
-<p class='c019'>There remains a consideration of some weight. Until this century it
-was common to bind together several books (not merely pamphlets) in one
-volume. What books have been found in the same binding with the
-“1468” volume? Four copies of the Jerome are, or are known to have
-been, bound with several other treatises (see p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>). One is bound with
-(and before) the Aretinus of 1479, and it is interesting that though a few
-leaves of modern paper now separate them there is an offset of the first
-page of the Aretinus on the last page of the Jerome, showing that the
-Aretinus was bound with the Jerome before the former was entirely dry.
-No conclusion however about the date of the Jerome can be drawn from
-this and whatever presumption of synchronism might be raised is removed
-by the fact that the well defined stains at the end of the Jerome and
-beginning of the Aretinus do <i>not</i> run from the one to the other. A second
-copy was bound with seven others, only two of which are dated, 1478 and
-(the Oxford Aegidius) 1479: one of the undated is about 1485 (Perottus).
-A third copy was bound with four preceding treatises, of which the only
-dated one was the first, the Oxford Aegidius of 1479. A fourth has five
-pieces with it, the first two of which are of about 1480, the Jerome is
-third, the fourth is of 1485, the fifth is undated, and the last is of 1486
-or 1487.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Clearly we are on very unsafe ground when we base any conclusion on
-these companion treatises, and our hesitation is not lessened when we
-notice that the only copy of the <cite>Vulgaria Terentii</cite> (Oxf., not later than
-1483) which is bound with other treatises, occurs after books dated 1488
-and 1486, the rest being without a date.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>
- <h6 class='c036'>6. <i>First printing in Europe.</i></h6>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The following list of places and dates will show how far it is likely, if
-we turn from facts to probabilities, that Oxford should have started
-printing in 1468. Only the first two towns of each country are given,
-with the exception of England: and the claim of Oxford is purposely
-ignored.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. Germany (Mainz, not after 1454: Strassburg, before 1460:
-Cologne began not later than 1466).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Italy (Subiaco, 1465: Rome, 1467).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. Switzerland (Basel, not after 1468: Beromünster, 1470).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. France (Paris, 1470: Lyon, not after 1473).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5. Netherlands (Utrecht, about 1471–3: Alost, 1473).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>6. Austro-Hungary (Buda-Pesth, 1473: Trient, 1475).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>7. Spain (Valencia, 1474: Saragossa, 1475).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>8. England (Westminster, 1477: Oxford, 1478: St. Alban’s, 1480
-[1479?]: London, 1480).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>9. Denmark (Odensee, 1482: Schleswig, 1486).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>10. Sweden (Stockholm, 1483: Wadsten, 1495).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>11. Portugal (Lisbon, 1489: Leiria, 1492).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>12. Montenegro (Cettinje, 1494).</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>It is hoped that the above summary statement of the arguments for and
-against the date of the Jerome will serve to make the present position of
-the question clear. What general conclusion can be arrived at before
-further facts are discovered? Caxton, who began to print in England in
-1477, nowhere claims to have introduced printing into England. Is it
-still conceivable that Oxford preceded Westminster by nine years? The
-answer is that it is still conceivable, but not probable. The ground has
-been slowly and surely giving way beneath the defenders of the Oxford
-date, in proportion to the advance of our knowledge of early printing,
-and all that can be said is that it has not yet entirely slipped away. All
-the new contributions to the argument and all the chief bibliographers
-are against it, while no fresh defending forces are in sight. But it is
-still allowable to assert that the destructive arguments, even if we admit
-their cumulative cogency, do not at the present time amount to proof.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the venerable building at the north-east corner of St. Mary’s Church
-at Oxford—the old House of Congregation, which, though once the cradle
-of the University,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Nunc situs informis premit et deserta vetustas—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>there is still a single tenant, feebly holding his ground and refusing to be
-evicted. He wears the form of King Alfred and bears a legend beneath,
-telling us boldly that he founded the University<a id='r12' /><a href='#f12' class='c007'><sup>[12]</sup></a>. The clamour of disputation
-never reaches that silent room, the changes of centuries have
-disregarded it, and it remains the one place where a belief which cast
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>a lustre of royalty over early Oxford, and to this day gives primacy to one
-of the oldest colleges, is still maintained without contradiction. The
-figure neither utters nor listens to argument: it asserts and chooses to
-assert. But the spirit of the age is at the door: St. Mary’s is swathed in
-scaffolding: the sounds of trowel and saw penetrate through the dim glass
-and the cobwebs and all things become new. It is probable that the
-opening years of the twentieth century will see the age-worn bust of Alfred
-and the copy of the Oxford Jerome in the University archives consigned
-to a common flame as Impostors in an age of light.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. British Museum. Perfect. Given by the Earl of Oxford on 10 Mar. 17<span class='fraction'>29<br /><span class='ov'>30</span></span> to
-James West, at whose sale in 1773 it probably passed to M. C. Tutet: then in
-the King’s Library, which passed in 1829 to the British Museum, where it bore
-the mark 8. D. 5; now 167. b. 26.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Bodleian. Wanting e 10, a blank leaf. One page (b 7<sup>r</sup>) is printed askew, in this
-copy only. Owned in 1582 by William Wright: then Bp. Juxon’s, who gave
-it on 31 July 1657 to Bp. Barlow, among whose books it passed to the Bodleian
-in 1693: where it has been successively marked A. 19. 6 Linc., Auct. Q. 1. 5. 18,
-Auct. Q. 1. 6. 12 and Auct. R. supra 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. All Souls College, Oxford. Wanting a 4, a 5. Given by Benj. Buckler in 1756:
-bound in the 18th cent. with the Aretinus (see p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>). Marked NN. 10. 1,
-now LL. 10. 17.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. Oriel College, Oxford. Perfect. Originally this was bound 4th in a volume
-containing Augustinus de dignitate sacerdotum: Meditationes Bernardi:
-Exempla Scripturae, Paris, 1478: the Jerome: Comm. Petri de Osoma in
-symbolum Quicunque vult, Paris: the Aegidius, Oxf. 1479: Ars bene moriendi:
-and Hugonis Speculum ecclesiae. Owned by Edmund Lyster in the 16th cent.
-The present binding is of the 18th century: but there are old manuscript
-signatures throughout the volume.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5. Oxford University Archives. Perfect. Owned by John Rhodes in 1664: given by
-Moses Pit, a London bookseller, 31 Jan. 16<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span>. Bound with the <cite>Casus breves</cite>
-of Johannes Andreas (n. d.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>6. Cambridge University Library. Wanting e 10, a blank leaf. This copy has
-a painting of St. Jerome, a coloured capital and border, &amp;c., and a coat of
-arms. It bears a George I bookplate dated 1713. Marked C. 5. 1, and now
-AB. 5. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>7. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Perfect. Bought for the Spencer Library for
-£150: bound by C. Lewis: marked 17320, or E. 237: transferred to Manchester
-with the whole Spencer Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>8. The Huth Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>9. The Earl of Pembroke’s Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>10. Sir Henry Dryden’s Library. Wanting e 10, a blank leaf. In original binding,
-part of a volume containing Joh. Sulp. Verulanus de Octo partibus orationis:
-Aug. Senensis de loquendi regulis: the Jerome: Alb. de Ferrariis de horis
-canonicis, 1485: Kamintus on the pestilence: and two leaves of a Prognostication
-of 1486 or 1487.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>11. Paris National Library. Bought by Lord Blandford in Feb. 1812 for £91: in the
-White Knights sale sold for £28.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>12. A copy recently sold to an American. Perfect. It was originally in an Oxford
-contemporary binding with the Oxford Aegidius, 1479: Mich. de Hungaria’s
-Tredecim Sermones: “Oxoniensis cuiusdam exercitationes”: Adelard of Bath’s
-Quaestt. naturales: the Jerome was last. Owned by A. Hilton in the 15th cent.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>In 1862 a copy in F. S. Ellis’s catalogue (p. 14, no. 957) was priced £110.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—Leaves a 2, a 7, a 8, b 4, c 1, c 3, e 3, e 6–8 are in the Bodleian.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>2. <b>Aretinus</b> (1479, see p. 1).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>The reasons for placing this book second are given above at pp. <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>–2:
-if they are regarded as sufficient, we must take “1479” in the Aegidius
-as what we should call 1480, which is in agreement with the ordinary
-usage of the time and which gains a slight probability, in that the printing
-would have been finished on a Sunday, if the year were taken as 147<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>.
-All copies are poorly printed. It was quite fitting that the first book
-printed at Oxford should be theological and the second the Nicomachean
-Ethics of Aristotle.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. British Museum. Wanting a 1, a blank leaf. In this copy alone there is a director
-for the large O of <i>Omnis</i> on b 1<sup>r</sup>. Owned by Will. Davis in 1792: then in the
-Grenville Library: marked “7. p. 115. 1,” 8. D. 5, 163. B. 2, G. 7930, and
-now C. 2. a. 7. Bound with it is a manuscript translation into Latin of Aristotle’s
-<cite>Œconomica</cite> and <cite>Politics</cite>, dedicated to Humphrey Duke of Gloucester.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Bodleian. Perfect. In this copy at o 2<sup>r</sup> and o 2<sup>v</sup> is a ć printed in the margin,
-apparently meaning “cancel,” since the recto is printed askew. Manuscript
-notes show that the book, which is in contemporary binding, was at first in
-the hands of an Oxford student (?) who received pittance from the Prior of
-Oseney. Then “Codex Michaelis Canni.” Owned by John Selden, among
-whose books it came to the Library in 1659. Marked 8<sup>o</sup> A. 17 Art. Seld.,
-Auct. Q. 1. 5. 17, Auct. R. supr. 8, and now S. Selden e. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. All Souls College, Oxford. Perfect. Bound with the Jerome (see p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. Norwich Cathedral Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Imperfect, wanting a 1, a blank leaf. Made
-up out of two copies, the Alchorne and the Freeling. Bound by C. Lewis:
-marked 15969 or G. 237: transferred as the Jerome.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>6. The Earl of Pembroke’s Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>7. Chetham Library at Manchester. Wants a 1 and two leaves in sign. k.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>8. Lord Ashburnham.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Anthony Askew possessed a copy (Sale catal. 1775, no. 998, sold for £5 5<i>s.</i> to Dent),
-and an imperfect one occurred in the Bright sale in 1845 (no. 180), and
-fetched £5 15<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—The Bodleian possesses fragments comprising l 3, l 6–8, v 3, v 6, v 7,
-v 8: Queen’s College, Oxford, possesses m 8, with some variations of reading:
-and i 4 was in 1888 in the possession of F. J. H. Jenkinson, Esq., at Cambridge.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>3. <b>Aegidius</b> (14<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span>?, see p. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>In this work the colophon is printed in red, the only instance of colour
-printing in the early Oxford press. The book is for some reason rarer
-than the two which precede. It is noticeable that in every known copy
-the bad grammar of the printed colophon was corrected in red ink before
-it left the office.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. Bodleian. Perfect. Owned by Robert Burton, the author of the <cite>Anatomy of
-Melancholy</cite>, in 1601. Originally bound first in a volume also containing De
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>viginti preceptis elegantiarum, Bois-le-duc, 1487: Perotti grammatica: Bonaventurae
-Soliloquium. Marked 4<sup>o</sup> A. 28 Th., then Auct. Q. 1. 5. 16, then
-separately bound as Auct. R. supra 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Oriel College Library. Perfect. See the Jerome, no. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Wanting a 1 and c 8, blank leaves and a 8.
-Purchased by Lord Spencer: once part of the volume containing the Jerome
-no. 12.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>A copy was in the Harleian Library (Catal. vol. 3, no. 6674).</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>4. <b>Cicero, Pro Milone</b> (1480?, see p. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>This is a puzzling book. The type so closely resembles Oxford type
-that every bibliographer has accepted it provisionally as identical. Yet
-it exhibits spaced type, it uses / for a comma (both points unique in
-Oxford printing), and the sections are made up in sixes. It is also by
-many years the first classic printed in England, the next being a Terence
-in 1497. The volume probably consisted of a—e in sixes, allowing
-a leaf blank at the beginning: perhaps section e was in eight. The first
-half of each section bears signatures. The book was clearly made up of
-half quarto sheets, three to each section. Mr. Blades was of opinion that
-the type was more worn than that of the Ales: and Mr. E. G. Duff thinks
-that the spacing and other peculiarities point to a later date than 1480.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments known:—b 3–4, c 3–4 are in the Bodleian (Auct. R. supra 3), having been
-presented by Sir William H. Cope in 1872. They were fly leaves in a volume
-containing five treatises dated from 1491 to 1505, probably bound in Oxford
-for William Cope (d. 1513) who lived near Banbury. Also c 1–2, 5–6 are in
-Merton College Library, Oxford, among some loose printed fragments.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>5. <b>Latin Grammar</b> (1481?, see p. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>This is only known from two leaves in the British Museum, acquired
-in 1872 or late in 1871, which were found in the binding of a book,
-which in the sixteenth cent. belonged to Nicholas Browere. It is
-a Latin grammar in English, the examples of which connect its composition
-with Oxford (e. g. “I goo to grammer att Oxforde Incumbo
-grammatice Oxonij,” “Y go to Oxforde Eo Oxonium vel ad Oxonium.”)
-From letters in the <cite>Athenaeum</cite>, 4 and 11 Nov. 1871, and notes in the
-book, it appears that the author might be John Anwykyll (see p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>)
-and that it is probably not by Holt or Stanbridge. The chain lines run
-across the page: but it is at present impossible to say whether the sections
-were in sixes or eights. Marked C. 33. i. 10.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>6. <b>Ales</b> (1481, see p. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>The woodcut border which is found in some copies of the Ales and
-Latteburius is the earliest found in English printing, though Caxton uses
-woodcut engravings in the text (for the first time) in the same year. It
-consists of birds and flowers grouped on long winding stems, the four
-pieces which form the border measuring in all not less than 11¼ × 7¾ in.
-(no quite intact copy is known, the binder’s ruthless knife invariably
-removing a portion). A full-size reproduction of it is given in E. G.
-Duff’s <cite>Facsimiles of English types</cite> (Lond. 1895).</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. British Museum. Without border. Wanting a 4, a 5. Re-bound lately, but with
-the original sides. Owned by William Wodebrigge, sub-prior of Butleigh,
-co. Suffolk: then by John Warner: then by Cranmer: then by lord Lumley.
-In the Old Royal Library: once 520. 9. 12, now C. 38. g. 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Bodleian. Without border. Perfect: in original Oxford binding, plain sides.
-Owned by Roger Balkwell in the 15th cent. Marked A. 5. 4 Art., then C. 7.
-15 Art., now Auct. R. supra 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. Oxford—Balliol.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. Oxford—Brasenose. Without border. On vellum. Imperfect, wanting 13 leaves.
-In contemporary Oxford binding, with stamped sides. Owned by—Claxton
-and Patrick Grante.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5, 6. Oxford—Magdalen. Two copies, one imperfect, both with border. In J. E. T.
-Rogers’s <cite>History of Prices</cite> is a note that Magdalen purchased a copy of this
-book in 1481 for 33<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c037'>7. Oxford—New College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>8. Oxford—St. John’s (<i>not</i> in Oriel, as has been stated).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>9. Oxford—Trinity.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>10. Oxford—Worcester. Without border. Imperfect, wanting a i (blank), k 2, y 3.
-Given to Gloucester Hall by Clement Barksdale.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>11. Cambridge University Library. With border in three places, a 2, h 1, z 1. Perfect.
-Marked P*. 9. 15.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>12. Do. Without border. Wanting a 1 (blank). Marked AB. 10. 9: with George I’s
-bookplate.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>13. John Rylands Library, Manchester. With border in three places, a 2, h 1 and z 1.
-Wanting three leaves, a 1, g 6, y 8, all blank. Marked D. 237, E. 237, 19944,
-in the Spencer Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>14. Durham Cathedral Library. Without border.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>15. Dulwich College Library: bound with Lettou’s edition of Ant. Andreae, 1480.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>16. Lincoln Cathedral Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—In the Bodleian r 6 and parts of C 1, E 6: in Merton College, Oxford,
-two leaves (one is i 7): in Corpus Christi College, Oxford, part of one leaf:
-in the Cambridge University Library, parts of E 1 and other fragments: in the
-British Museum (MS. Harl. 5929, no. 36: last leaf with colophon and date):
-at Trinity College, Cambridge.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>7. <b>Latteburius</b> (1482, see p. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Some copies of this work also bear the engraved border noticed on
-p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>. Some copies have a distinct variation on sign. “kk” (= K) 7<sup>v</sup>,
-thus</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>liū super capitulum s’m trenorū Ihe, <i>or</i></div>
- <div class='line'>liū suꝑ capitulū secūdū trenorū Ihe.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Clearly the type was altered because s’m is a fair contraction when
-meaning “according to,” but not properly used when meaning “second.”
-See plate III.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. British Museum. With border. Perfect. In the original stamped leather binding.
-Owned by Simon Foderby in the 15th century: by Christopher Viscount
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>Castlecomer, and W. F. (?) Hunter, 1824. Marked 1215. k. 1, 1215. k. 6,
-45. b. 30. 135, now C. 37. h. 10.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Bodleian. With border. Perfect. Owned by John Cuthbertson, priest, and
-Robert Bonwick. Marked L. 1. 3 Th., L. 7. 2 Th., Auct. Q. 1. 2. 8, now Auct.
-R. supra 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c038'>3. Oxford—All Souls. Without border. On vellum. Perfect, except that part of
-O 6 (blank) is gone. Given by Richard Gavent formerly Fellow of the College.
-The binding is contemporary Oxford stamped leather. This copy is remarkable
-from the fact that four names, apparently of parchment-sellers, occur as
-signing certain leaves: on 54 leaves (representing 108) F. H.: on 31, Hawkyns
-or Haukins: on 8, Alison: on 3, J. Alexander (Alysaunder): probably some
-other signings are cut off. A comparison of two sets of similar markings in
-other books almost establishes the fact that these names do not represent
-revisers of the printing, but dimply the owners of the parchment. Sometimes
-“8 ff,” and once “8 ff alison,” occur, showing that the pieces were sold in
-bundles of eight (?). Marked P. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>. 18, then QQ. 8. 11.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. Oxford—Corpus Christi College. With border. Wanting almost all of a 1, L 8,
-O 6 blank leaves. In contemporary binding. Marked X. P. iv. 4, then
-<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Δ</span>. 18. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5. Oxford—New College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>6, 7. Cambridge University Library. Both with border. One perfect (E. 4. 1), in
-contemporary binding of stamped leather. Given by Albanus Butler to Richard
-Butler, rector of Aston-le-Walls (co. Northants) 23 June 1603. The other,
-AB. 7. 27, only wants a 1 (blank leaf); with a George I bookplate.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>8. Cambridge—Jesus College. With border.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>9. Cambridge—Trinity College. Perfect (?). Marked vi<sup>d</sup>. 8. 9 (described in Sinker’s
-<cite>Catalogue</cite>, 1876).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>10. John Rylands Library at Manchester. With border. Wanting only a 1 (blank
-leaf). Owned by “Henri Joliff.” Marked 16741 or E. 237.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>11. Lambeth Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>12. Westminster Chapter Library. On vellum.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>13. Stonyhurst Library. Wanting only three blank leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>14. T. Etherington Cooke, Esq., residing in Glasgow. Perfect. With border. In
-original binding.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>15. Brussels Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Copies occurred in the Sams sale (185-, £17 5<i>s.</i>, one leaf in manuscript): Bateman
-sale (1893: lot 1176): Payne and Foss (1848: art. 3120, £8 8<i>s.</i>): Gardiner sale
-(£9 12<i>s.</i>): Towneley sale (1883, with border, wanting O 6, and also L 1 and
-L 8, H 3 and H 6 occurring in their stead: this copy was in Quaritch’s Rough
-List. 99, no. 572, Sept. 1889, £32 10<i>s.</i>): B. H. Bright sale 1845, lot 3364
-(£7 7<i>s.</i>, with another book).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments known:—Lord Robartes (on vellum, part of one leaf, O 3); Trinity
-College, Cambridge; Queen’s College, Oxford (on vellum; l 3, l 5, B 4, B 5,
-kk 5, kk 6); King’s College, Cambridge; Emmanuel College, Cambridge
-(on vellum, two half leaves, in q. 4. 62); Wadham College, Oxford (f 2, f 3,
-f 6, f 7); British Museum (one leaf, i 8, in 618. l. 18, and one leaf on vellum
-in Harl. MS. 5977. fol. 44); S. Sandars, Esq. (one leaf); New College, Oxford
-(four leaves, H 2, H 7, g 3, p 4: and on vellum four leaves, D 2–3, &amp;c.);
-Bodleian (I 3, I 5, kk 2, kk 7, M 2, b 2–5; C 7–8 on vellum); Brasenose
-College, Oxford (on vellum, I 6); Corpus Christi College, Oxford (four leaves:
-and two leaves on vellum).</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>
- <h4 class='c036'>8. <b>Anwykyll</b> (1483?, see p. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>).</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>Four of the chief English grammarians of the 16th century were connected
-with Magdalen College Grammar School at Oxford. The first
-master was John Anwykyll (1481?-87); the first usher and second
-master was John Stanbridge (1481?-88, 1488–94, <i>d.</i> 1510); John Holte,
-the author of the <cite>Lac Puerorum</cite>, was master; and Robert Whittington
-was Stanbridge’s pupil at the school. Dean Colet, William Lily and
-Cardinal Wolsey were also members of Magdalen (see Bloxam’s <cite>Register
-of Magdalen College</cite>, iii., ad init.). Of the Latin Grammar in Latin which
-is now before us and has been assigned with probability by Bradshaw to
-Anwykyll, no complete copy is known, but it was reprinted at Deventer
-in 1489. The <cite>Vulgaria Terentii</cite> occurs also separately, and consists of
-sentences from Terence with English translation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There appear to be two different editions of this Grammar (not
-Vulgaria), for it can be shown that the Cambridge fragments are not of
-the same edition as the Bodleian book. Not only, for instance, are the
-contents of sign. h 3 in each entirely different, but the signatures themselves
-are in different type, and in the Corpus (Cambridge) fragment
-the signature is n 3, and yet it belongs to the Compendium and not the
-Vulgaria. The height of the printed page also varies considerably, and
-the width of the Vulgaria pages is less than that of the Grammar. The
-subject needs further investigation.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Parts known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. London—British Museum, Vulgaria Terentii only, with written date at end 5 Jan.
-1500/1. Marked C. 33. i. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Oxford—Bodleian. A fragment containing signn. fg<sup>8</sup>hk<sup>6</sup>lm<sup>8</sup> and (Vulgaria) n-q<sup>8</sup>.
-Sign. i probably contained the Tertia pars grammaticae. With the Condover
-Hall (Cholmondeley) bookplate: bought by the Bodleian from Quaritch in
-1892: in whose Rough List, no. 124, May 1892, it is priced £100. Now
-marked Inc. e. E 2 <span class='fraction2'><span class='under'>1483</span><br />1</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. Oxford—Bodleian. The Vulgaria only, bound first in a volume containing also
-P. P. Vergerii de ingenuis moribus liber (Louvain, Joh. de Westphalia, n. d.),
-and Adelardi Quaestiones (n. pl. or d.). The following interesting inscription
-is in it:—“1483. Frater Johannes grene emit hunc librum Oxoñ de elemosinis
-amicorum suorum.” In plain 15th cent. binding. Owned also by Henry
-Strathyn at Bedford, John Uncle, Robert Hunter (all 16th cent.). Bought by
-the Bodleian at the T. Thomson sale Jan. 1866 (lot 1068) for £36. Marked
-Auct. R. supra 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. Cambridge—University Library. The Vulgaria only. Bound originally in a volume
-containing Perotti Erudimenta Grammatices (Par. 1488): Opusculum quintu-pertitum
-grammaticale (Gouda, 1486); Ars Epistolandi Jac. P(ublicii) (n. pl.
-or d.); the Vulgaria; Matheoli Perusini tractatus de memoria (n. pl. or d.).
-Marked AB. 5. 16. 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5. John Rylands Library, Manchester. The Vulgaria only.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Small Fragments known:—Cambridge University Library (two leaves, h 3, and
-[without sign.] the beginning of the 3rd part): Trinity College Library,
-Cambridge (one leaf, d 1, of the same edition as the University Library fragments).
-Photographs of these fragments are in the Bodleian. The Rev. W.
-D. Macray states in his <cite>Annals of the Bodleian</cite> (2nd ed., 1890, p. 159, <i>note</i>)
-that Bradshaw found two leaves at Corpus and two at St. John’s (both
-Cambridge), but these really belong to the Alexander (p. 260). Four leaves
-are in the library of Lord Dillon at Ditchley, Oxfordshire, discovered by Mr.
-Macray in 1867.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>
- <h4 class='c036'>9. <b>Hampole</b> (1483?, see p. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>).</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>This work by Richard Rolle of Hampole (<i>d.</i> 1349) was also printed
-at Paris in 1510 and at Cologne in 1536. Noticed in J. Ph. Berjeau’s
-<cite>Bibliophile</cite>, no. 24 (Dec. 1863), p. 146.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. Cambridge University Library. Wants a 1 and l 4 (both blank: AB. 4. 31, with
-a George I bookplate).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Cambridge University Library. Wants l 4 (H* 9. 51. 5).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. John Rylands Library, Manchester, purchased in 1893 from the Cambridge University
-Library. Wants almost all a 1 (F* 5. 26. 3, when at Cambridge).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—Some leaves from the Babington sale (1889) are in the Library of
-St. John’s College, Cambridge.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>10. <b>Logic</b> (1483?, see p. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>There is a Registrum cartarum at the end of this book, on sign. <span class='fss'>D</span> d 8<sup>r</sup>.
-Diagrams are on <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span> 5<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>B</span> 6<sup>v</sup>, cf. <span class='fss'>C</span> c 2<sup>r</sup>.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. New College, Oxford. Wanting nearly all a 1 (blank leaf). Owned by John
-Utting. Marked Auct. V. 2. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Merton College, Oxford. Wanting a 1 (blank), B 3, B 4. Marked D. 6. 13 Art.,
-D. 8. 17 Art., then 19. E. 18.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—Bodleian (one leaf, Q 2: marked Auct. R. supra 16): Cambridge
-University Library: Trinity College, Cambridge (one leaf, 26 half leaves):
-St. John’s College, Cambridge (O 1, O 2, O 5, O 6): Lambeth Library (four
-leaves).</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>11. <b>Lyndewoode</b> (1483?, see p. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>This contains a large wood engraving (on sign. a 1<sup>v</sup>) of Jacobus de
-Voragine writing the Golden Legend, seated at his desk beneath a
-canopy; on each side are two trees, the foliage of which, as in the
-Festial, is represented by nearly horizontal lines in rude style. Size
-4⅜ × 7⅜ in., to outer bounding lines. See plate IV.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. British Museum. Wanting aa 1 and either S 10 or (the second) aa 1 (both blank).
-Marked 497. i. 1, then C. 37. l. 2. In this copy f 1, f 2, f 7, f 8, all g, h and i,
-k 1, k 2 have been re-set, compared with the other two, which are probably
-the earlier issue. As a test, in this copy the catchword on sign. f 1<sup>r</sup> is under
-<i>quamuis</i>, but in nos. 2 and 3 under <i>glosa</i>, as is usual.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. British Museum. Wanting S 10 (blank); and a duplicate of f 3, f 6 is placed after
-t 3. Owned by Tho. Chandler, dean of Hereford March 148<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>2</span></span> to 1490, then
-by James Scudamour, who gave it to Richard Tomson in 1595. Marked 711. i.
-15, and 41. 11. 6. 164: now C. 37. l. 7. The sides of the binding are old
-stamped leather.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>3. British Museum. Wanting a 1, R 1, R 8, cc 3, cc 6, and all dd. Owned by
-Nicholas Peir(ce?), John Harrison (?), and William Graves who gave it to the
-Museum. Marked 497. i. 2.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>4. Oxford, Bodleian. Perfect. In original binding of stamped leather, re-backed.
-Marked L. 4. 8 Jur., then Auct. Q. 1. 1. 4, then Auct. R. supra 12, now Inc.
-b. E 2. <span class='fraction2'><span class='under'>1485</span><br />1</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>5. Oxford, All Souls. Perfect. Marked A. 1. 29, C. 3. 12, D. 11. 12, now I. 11. 10.
-Owned by Thomas Windsor in 1634, and bp. Nathaniel Crewe.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>6. Oxford, New College. (“Auct. V. 12”.)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>7. Oxford, Queen’s College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>8. Cambridge University Library. Wanting aa 1 (nearly all), y 4, y 5. With
-a George I bookplate, 1715. Marked B. 1. 5, now AB 1. 19.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>9. —— 2nd copy. Wanting A 2, S. 10, dd 1, dd 10. Marked L. 3. 38, now
-Q. 2. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>10. Cambridge, Clare College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>11. Cambridge, Corpus Christi College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>12. Cambridge, King’s College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>13. Cambridge, St. John’s College. On vellum.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>14. John Rylands Library, Manchester: bought from the late Rev. J. E. Millard by
-Lord Spencer. Wanting a 1, S 10, aa 1, dd 10. This had been in the Savile
-sale (1862), lot 497.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>15. Edinburgh, Advocates’ Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>16. Durham Cathedral Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>17. Glasgow, Free Church College Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>18. E. Gordon Duff, Esq.: bought at a London sale for £12 15<i>s.</i>: wanting a 1,
-S 10, aa 1.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>19. Lord Crawford.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>20. National Library at Paris. On vellum.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>A copy occurred in the Bateman sale (1893), lot 1190.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments known:—Bodleian (part of D 2: marked Auct R. supra 17: now Inc.
-c. E 7. 1); Jesus College, Oxford (part of a leaf of index): Mr. E. G. Duff
-possesses a Valerius Maximus of 1519, in a Cambridge binding (about 1520),
-the boards of which are entirely made up of the Oxford Lyndewoode; from
-the Hailstone Library.</p>
-<p class='c006'>☞ <b>The following book was discovered since sheet B was
-printed off.</b></p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>12. <b>Augustine</b> (1483?).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'><b>Augustine</b>, St. [Sign. a 2<sup>r</sup>:—] Excitatio fidelis anime ad ele⸗|mosinam
-faciendam A b<span class='small'>ea</span>to Au⸗|gustino conscripta.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>[Oxford, about 1483]: (eight) sm. 4<sup>o</sup>: pp. [16], sign. a<sup>8</sup>: sign. a 3<sup>r</sup> beg. <i>Non enim</i>.
-Contents:—sign. a 2-a 8<sup>r</sup>, the sermon.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This piece of Oxford printing was discovered in the spring of 1891 in
-the British Museum. It was originally bound with Gerson’s De modo
-vivendi (Joh. de Westphalia, n. d.), the Cordiale de quattuor novissimis
-(Delft, 1482), Albertanus de arte loquendi, 1484, Adelardi Quæstiones
-naturales, and the Historia septem sapientum. Marked 702. d. 34, now
-C. 38. f. 37: it had been part of lot 4912 in the Colbert sale. A facsimile
-is given in E. G. Duff’s <cite>Early printed books</cite> (Lond. 1893).</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>
- <h4 class='c036'>13. <b>Phalaris</b> (1485, see p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>).</h4>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>The computation of the date by Olympiads is very uncommon, in
-early printed books: it is however the most ancient classical method.
-Each Olympiad is a period of four years, and the first is computed to
-have commenced in July, <span class='fss'>B. C.</span> 776: so that July <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 1 corresponded
-with the beginning of Olympiad 195. The computation ceased for
-practical purposes in <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 395, and the present revival is of an artificial
-kind, in which the expression “every fifth year,” which by a Greek could
-be applied to an Olympiad (<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πενταετηρίς</span>), was taken in its ordinary sense
-and used for computation. Thus “in the 297th Olympiad from the birth
-of Christ” was in the present book taken to represent (297 × 5 =)
-<span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 1485. A similar use is found in the 1472 (Venice) edition of the
-Epigrams of Ausonius<a id='r13' /><a href='#f13' class='c007'><sup>[13]</sup></a>. But the 1494 (Parma) edition of the Declamations
-of Quintilian contains a futile attempt to use the ancient method,
-for it was printed “Olympiade quingentesima sexagesima octaua qui est
-annus a salute christiana M.cccc.xciiii quinto non. Iul.”, whereas it would
-properly have been 1493. And M. A. Giry (<cite>Manuel de Diplomatique</cite>,
-1894, p. 96) records an unintelligible attempt to use this computation in
-a deed of 1102.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. Oxford, Corpus Christi College. Perfect. Owned by John Lacy, and Herbert
-Randolph (1724). Marked <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Χ</span> P. <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>. 12, then <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Δ</span>. 1. 14.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Oxford, Wadham College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Perfect. Marked in the Spencer Library
-S. 5. 3, and 15835 (G. 237).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—Bodleian (parts of i 4, i 6, now Auct. R. supra 9): Corpus Christi
-College, Oxford (parts of l 2 and l 7): St. John’s College Library, Oxford
-(one leaf): Trin. Coll. Camb. (one leaf of sign. d): Westminster Abbey Library
-(four leaves of sign. k).</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>14. <b>Alexander</b> (1485?, see p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>There are editions of the Textus Alexandri by Pynson in 1505, 1513,
-1516 and by Wynkin de Worde, 1503.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments known:—St. John’s College, Cambridge (c 2 and c 3 [?]): Corpus Christi
-College, Cambridge (two leaves, n 3 and one unsigned; probably part of the
-Alexander).</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>15. <b>Festiall</b> (148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, see p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>).</h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Printed in “1486,” “on the day aftir Seint Edward the kyng”: which
-would seem to be March 19, 148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>. This book is distinguished by the
-occurrence of many woodcut engravings, and by the use of a woodcut
-capital G (52 times). This latter is the only woodcut letter used in the
-early Oxford Press (see Bradshaw in the <cite>Communications</cite> of the Cambridge
-Antiquarian Society, iii. 136). In the same paper (p. <a href='#Page_138'>138</a>)
-Bradshaw suggests that the eleven large cuts were perhaps intended for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>an edition of the Golden Legend, and that the five smaller ones
-belong to a lost Oxford Primer on Horae. The text is nearer to that
-of Caxton’s second issue (1491) than of his first (1483). The two sets
-of woodcuts are as follows:—</p>
-
-<table class='table4' summary='woodcuts'>
- <tr><th class='c016' colspan='3'><i>Larger kind</i> (general size, about 4½ × 4½–5½ in.).</th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>1.</td>
- <td class='c022'>(&nbsp;) 1<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Woodcut of the Crucifixion, laid sideways.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>2.</td>
- <td class='c022'>(&nbsp;) i<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Woodcut of St. Christopher bearing Christ, beneath a canopy.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>3.</td>
- <td class='c022'>h 5<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Bishop under canopy, with two trees (facsimile in Dibdin’s <i>Ædes Althorpianæ</i>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>4.</td>
- <td class='c022'>i 5<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Martyrdom of St. Thomas.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>5.</td>
- <td class='c022'>k 7<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Stoning of St. Stephen (facsimile in Dibdin).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>6.</td>
- <td class='c022'>l 2<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>St. John the Evangelist (?) with cup and palm-branch, between two figures.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>7.</td>
- <td class='c022'>l 6<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Murder of the Innocents.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>8.</td>
- <td class='c022'>l 8<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Murder of Thomas a Becket.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>9.</td>
- <td class='c022'>m 5<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>The Circumcision.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>10.</td>
- <td class='c022'>n 6<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>The Conversion of St. Paul.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>11.</td>
- <td class='c022'>o 7<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>The Annunciation.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><th class='c016' colspan='3'><i>Smaller kind</i> (general size, about 2½ × 1½ in.).</th></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>12.</td>
- <td class='c022'>c 4<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Crucifixion.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c022'>d 8<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Space for woodcut.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c022'>e 2<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>&#8196;&#8196;Do. ?</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>13.</td>
- <td class='c022'>e 3<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>Pentecost.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c022'>e 5<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>&#8196;&#8196;Do., the same woodcut.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>14.</td>
- <td class='c022'>f 2<sup>v</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>The Trinity.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>15.</td>
- <td class='c022'>h 1<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>St. Andrew with his cross, with a book and trees.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c015'>16.</td>
- <td class='c022'>h 1<sup>r</sup>.</td>
- <td class='c017'>St. Andrew with his cross.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c001'>The prints are rude in execution, the foliage of trees being generally
-indicated simply by horizontal lines (as in a French <cite>Ortus Sanitatis</cite> of
-about 1485). The shoes, sword-scabbards, and the like are often entirely
-black, showing that the cuts were intended to be coloured by hand.
-They appear to be entirely unknown elsewhere. See plate V.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>1. Bodleian. Imperfect. Wanting all (&nbsp;), c 3, c 4, g 4, k 4, k 5, o 4, o 5, r 5, s 3,
-s 4, s 5, s 6, z 1, z 3, z 4. Marked Auct. R. supra 5. The variations of signn.
-h and i show that this is a later issue than no. 2. Owned by William Little.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>2. Bodleian. Imperfect. Wanting all (&nbsp;), a-f, g 1, g 2, h 1, i 6, k 1–3, k 6–8,
-l 3, l 6, l 8, o 3, p 6, r 4–6, t 1, t 6, x 1, x 2, x 7, x 8, y, z: but y 2, y 5 are
-inserted from Hearne’s fragments. This was William Herbert’s copy: no. 730
-in the Utterson sale 1852, where it was bought by the Bodleian for £6 10<i>s.</i>:
-marked Auct. R. supra 7.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>3. John Rylands Library, Manchester. Wanting a 1, a 2 (supplied in manuscript),
-z 4. Owned by Ratcliffe (sale, no. 1430, £3 2<i>s.</i>), then Alchorne, then
-Johnes. No. 15409 (E. 237) in the Spencer Library. Dibdin’s collation is
-very faulty. Signn. h, i are of the later kind.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>4. Lambeth Library. Wants z 4 (blank). The variations in signn. h, i are of the later
-type. Once archbp. Tenison’s copy. Marked once lxiii. 1. 19, now 38. 2. 23. f.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>A copy occurred for sale in Rodd’s 1831 catalogue, priced £6 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Fragments:—British Museum (one leaf, y 3, in MS. Harl. 5919, no. 139): Wadham
-College, Oxford (1½ leaves): Brasenose College, Oxford (several leaves): parts
-of two leaves (q 6 and another) were offered by A. Iredale, bookseller of
-Torquay (catal. 31, Oct. 1887, no. 1) for 21<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Printing Press at Oxford ceases its work suddenly in 148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, and
-there is no reason for this stop at present known. The printing at
-St. Alban’s ceased at about the same time. It has been suggested that
-Rood left Oxford for Cologne, where a Theodericus printed books in 1485
-and 1486 in a type similar to that of the Ales and Latteburius. In this case
-Hunt may have continued for a short time alone, and then relinquished
-the work.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX B.<br /> <span class='large'>The Early Sixteenth Century Press.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>(Supplementary to, and corrective of, pp. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>–7.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>From December 1517 to February “1519” (15<span class='fraction'>19<br /><span class='ov'>20</span></span>?) a printing press is
-found in work at Oxford in St. John’s Street near Merton College, connected
-in 1518 with the name of Johannes Scolar and in the last book
-with the name of Carolus Kyrfoth. Both of these appear to be foreigners,
-but nothing certain has yet been discovered about them or the causes of the
-establishment and cessation of the press<a id='r14' /><a href='#f14' class='c007'><sup>[14]</sup></a>. In 1524 none of these names
-occurs among the inhabitants of Oxford paying taxes (Oxf. Hist. Soc.,
-<cite>City Documents</cite>, ed. by J. E. T. Rogers, 1891, p. 5): nor are they otherwise
-known in Oxford as booksellers or stationers. Although Scolar
-uses the arms of the University (their earliest occurrence in print), yet
-the Registers of the University almost entirely ignore the fact that for
-the second time the greatest literary invention since speech and writing
-were known, was silently at work in its midst. Three of the books were
-however issued “Cum Privilegio.” It is peculiar that whereas theology
-claimed a fair proportion of the first press, it is entirely absent from the
-second; grammar, logic, arithmetic, natural science, and the Ethics of
-Aristotle being alone represented, except that one broadside consists of a
-Prognostication, which Dorne’s lists in 1520 show to have been a popular
-form of literature in Oxford at that time. All are in small quarto, and
-similar in the types used, namely an English and Brevier black-letter,
-with a Great Primer for titles. Not only at Oxford but also at Cambridge,
-York, Tavistock, and Abingdon, in all of which there was an
-early 16th cent. press, printing entirely ceases for nearly the central forty
-years of that century.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1. <b>Burley</b> on Aristotle (1517, see p. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>).</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Bodleian.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—St. John’s College.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>The titlepage is reproduced in plate VI. The Royal Arms on the
-penultimate page of this treatise, and also in the 1518 Burley’s
-<cite>Principia</cite>, are a wood engraving which belonged to Winkin de
-Worde, as I am informed by Mr. E. G. Duff.</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>2. <b>Dedicus</b> (1518, May, see p. <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>).</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>On the title is the woodcut mark of John Scolar engraved in Berjeau’s
-<cite>Printers’ Marks</cite> (Lond. 1866) no. 81, and his <cite>Bookworm</cite> (Lond. 1868),
-no. 32, p. 126: see also the <cite>Corrections and Additions</cite> to Chandler’s
-Catalogue of editions of Aristotle’s Ethics (Oxf. 1868), p. 7.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>London—British Museum, bought at the Crawford sale, 1891, lot 932. The last leaf
-with colophon is also in MS. Harl. 5929, fol. 41.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Corpus Christi College, wanting titlepage.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Jesus College (two copies).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—University Library: which has also a fragment containing the greater part
-of pp. <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>–12, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>–17.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Edinburgh—University Library (wants 4 leaves, sign. I 3–6).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>King’s Norton Parish Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>A copy was in the Inglis sale, 1826.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>3. <b>De Luce</b> (1518, June 5: see p. <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>).</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Bodleian.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Jesus College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—University Library.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>4. <b>Burley’s</b> Principia (1518, June 7: see p. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>).</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Bodleian.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Jesus College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—University Library, wanting D 4.</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>The titlepage is reproduced in plate VII. See note on the 1517
-Burley, p. 263.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c040'>5. <b>Whittington</b> (1518, June 27: see p. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>, where in l. 3 <i>protouatis</i> is a misprint for <i>prothouatis</i>. The square brackets in the title may now be removed).</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Bodleian (imperfect).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Jesus College.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—University Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—Pembroke College (six copies).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>John Rylands Library.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Ham House.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>6. <b>Laet</b> (1518?: see p. <a href='#Page_6'>6</a>).</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>The title is now known to be “Prenostica” simply. The parts known
-are (1) from the Cambridge copy, from the top a head line and 34 lines,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>from the bottom 33 lines of small type and 5 of larger type: (2) from
-the Oxford copy, 22 lines from the top, and 22–24 from the bottom.
-At present the intervening space, which must be small, is unknown.
-The type is 8¼ in. broad, and red ink is used.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copies known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxford—Corpus Christi College (28 fragments of the upper and lower parts).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—University Library (two fragments).</p>
-
-<h3 id='Details' class='c008'>7. <b>Compotus</b> (1519: see p. <a href='#Page_7'>7</a>).</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Beneath the title is a woodcut, 5¾ × 4⅜ in., representing a master at
-his desk, with a birch in his left hand and a book in his right: above
-him and on each side are other volumes, and before him five students
-on a bench with their books. Two windows are in the background.
-On <span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>r</sup> is a diagram of the open hand (5 × 3⅝ in.), for purposes of
-computation: and different diagrams of the hand or part of it are on
-<span class='fss'>A</span> 2<sup>v</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>r</sup>, <span class='fss'>A</span> 4<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>Copy known.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Cambridge—University Library.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Details of the Early Sixteenth Century Press.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table5' summary='Details of the Early Sixteenth Century Press.'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='4%' />
-<col width='19%' />
-<col width='18%' />
-<col width='18%' />
-<col width='40%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt c033'><span class='sc'>No.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Book.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Date.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Printer named.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt c033'><span class='sc'>Place named.</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Burley</b> on Aristotle</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>1517 Dec. 4</td>
- <td class='brt c041'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c034'>Academia Oxonie</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Dedicus</b></td>
- <td class='brt c041'>1518 May 15</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>J. Scolar<a id='r15' /><a href='#f15' class='c007'><sup>[15]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='c034'>Celeberrima Universitas Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>De Luce</b></td>
- <td class='brt c041'>1518 June 5</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>J. Scolar<a href='#f15' class='c007'><sup>[15]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='c034'>Celeberrima Universitas Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Burley’s</b> Principia</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>1518 June 7</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>J. Scolar<a href='#f15' class='c007'><sup>[15]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='c034'>Celeberrima Universitas Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Whittington</b></td>
- <td class='brt c041'>1518 June 27</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>J. Scolar</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxonia</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Laet</b> (1518?)</td>
- <td class='brt c041'><hr /></td>
- <td class='brt c041'><hr /></td>
- <td class='c034'>Celeberrima Oxoniensis Academia</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Compotus</b></td>
- <td class='brt c041'>“1519” Feb. 5</td>
- <td class='brt c041'>C. Kyrfoth</td>
- <td class='c034'>Celeberrima Universitas Oxoniensis (St. John’s St.)</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<table class='table6' summary='Details of the Early Sixteenth Century Press.'>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='4%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-<col width='20%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-<col width='12%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-<col width='28%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt c033'><span class='sc'>No.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Book.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Pages.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Lines in page.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Large Capitals.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><span class='sc'>Head Line.</span></th>
- <th class='btt bbt c033'><span class='sc'>Woodcuts.</span></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Burley</b> on Aristotle</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>20</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>55</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxf. &amp; Royal Arms</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Dedicus</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>152 (foliated)</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>56</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxf. &amp; Royal Arms</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>De Luce</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>55–6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxf. &amp; Magi</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Burley’s</b> Principia</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>57</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxf. &amp; Royal Arms &amp; Scholar</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Whittington</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>20</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>59</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxf. &amp; Scholar</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Laet</b> (1518?)</td>
- <td class='c033' colspan='5'>[broadside: no complete copy known]</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c035'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c034'><b>Compotus</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>31–2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='c034'>Oxf. &amp; Scholars &amp; Hands</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX C.<br /> <span class='large'>A CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF PERSONS AND PROCEEDINGS CONNECTED WITH BOOK-PRODUCTION AT OXFORD, A.D. 1180–1640.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Three districts in Oxford are associated with the early production of
-books.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>One is Bookbinders Bridge, which is still standing, namely the bridge
-which as one starts from close under the Castle in Titmouse Lane
-towards St. Thomas’s Church, crosses the second piece of water. The
-bridge was on the limits of Oseney Abbey and the neighbouring tenements
-were largely occupied by binders who worked for the Abbey. See Clark’s
-edition of Wood’s <cite>History of the City</cite>, i. 433.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Schidyard St., now Oriel St., is said to imply by its name that it was
-the locus schediasticorum, the place of writers on <i>schedae</i> or sheets of
-paper. Certainly with St. John Baptist St. (now Merton St.) and Cat St.,
-it was a great centre for scribes, illuminators, bookbinders, and the like.
-See Clark’s Wood, as above, i. 139, 175, 184.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Also Cheney Lane, earlier St. Mildred’s Lane, and now Market St., was
-largely tenanted by the same class. See Clark’s Wood, i. 72.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The stationarius (or virgifer) of the University was regularly appointed
-(see Clark’s <cite>Register of the University</cite>, vol. ii, pt. 1, p. 261), and was
-generally employed to value the books of a scholar after death or sequestration.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But these general facts require to be supplemented by the details which
-follow: with respect to which it must be remembered that many persons
-combined several of the trades here recorded, and that, for instance, the
-earliest printers always bound the books they produced.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-l c004'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[<i>Chief Authorities</i>:—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>Coxe. = Catalogus codicum MSS. qui in collegiis aulisque Oxoniensibus hodie adservantur.
-Confecit H. O. Coxe. (Oxf. 1852.)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Kirchhoff, Albrecht: Die Handschriftenhändler des Mittelalters. Zweite Ausgabe.
-(Leipz. 1853), pp. 132, 136.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Magd. = Notes from the muniments of St. Mary Magdalen College, Oxford, by the rev.
-W. D. Macray. (Oxf. 1882.)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxf. City Doc. = Oxford City Documents, 1268–1665, edited by J. E. Thorold Rogers.
-(Oxf. Hist. Soc. vol. xviii, 1891.)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Twyne. = Brian Twyne’s manuscript collections in the Oxford University archives.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills. = An Index to Wills proved in the Court of the Chancellor
-of the University of Oxford, by John Griffiths. (Oxf. 1862.)]</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>(<span class='sc'>Scribes, Illuminators, Bookbinders, Stationers and Booksellers, Parchment-makers, Printers.</span>)</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c042'>Not later than 1180:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c043'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Peter, illuminator (Deed of Elias Bradfoth, in Oxf. Univ. Archives).</div>
- <div class='line'>Ralph, illuminator (do.).</div>
- <div class='line'>William, illuminator (do.).</div>
- <div class='line'>Thomas, scribe (“scriptor”) (do.).</div>
- <div class='line'>Reginald, parchment-maker (do.).</div>
- <div class='line'>Roger, parchment-maker (do.).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1190–1200. John, “illuminator”, in St. Mary’s<a id='r16' /><a href='#f16' class='c007'><sup>[16]</sup></a> parish (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1190–1200. Roger, “pergamenarius”, in St. Mary’s parish (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1190–1215. Peter, illuminator, in St. Mary’s parish (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1210–20 (?) Augustine, bookbinder, in St. Peter’s-in-the-East parish
-(Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1212, Nov. A, scribe (“Explicit opus manuum mearum, quod compleui
-ego frater A subdiaconus sancte Frideswide seruientium minimus,
-anno ... M<sup>o</sup> CC<sup>o</sup> ... xii<sup>o</sup> ... anno conuersionis mee vij<sup>o</sup> ...”:
-Paris, Bibl. Nat. MS. fonds Français 24766).</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>In the first half of the 13th cent. occurs as a witness Reginald, bookbinder,
-in an old deed in the Oxford Univ. archives between Will.
-Burgey, and Nicholas “serviens Universitatis”, in one of the
-mayoralties of Petrus filius Toraldi. (Twyne I, p. 52.)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1232–40. John, illuminator, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1232–40. Walter, bookbinder, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1237–8. Walter de Ensham, illuminator, St. Mary’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1240–57. Roger, scribe, (“exemplarius”, alias “Saumplarier”,) apparently
-dead in 1276: St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1240–90. Simon Scoticus, parchment-maker (“parcamenarius”) in
-Cattestrete, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1242. Robert de Derbi, illuminator, in Cattestrete, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>About the middle of the 13th cent. the following names occur in
-Twyne’s transcript of a St. Frideswide record—a deed between
-Petrus filius Toraldi and Adam filius Hugonis Ruffi about land
-in the parish of St. Mary the Virgin:—Robert, illuminator; Simon,
-parchment-maker; and as witnesses, Thomas, scribe; Peter,
-parchment-maker (Twyne XXIII, p, 69).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1251–2. Stephen, parchment-maker (“percamenarius”), in Cattestrete,
-St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1252–3. William, scribe (“le Samplarier”), St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1252–90. Stephen, bookbinder, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1264–84. William de Pikerynge, bookbinder, (“laminator”), died before
-1308: found both in St. Mary’s and St. Peter’s deeds: probably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>the same as William the bookbinder of Oxford, the motto on
-whose seal in 1275 was “Vivite innocue; lumen adest” (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1266. Hugh, illuminator, St. Mary’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1266–78. Symon and Yon, bookbinders, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1267. Reginald, illuminator, St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1268–90. Martin, scribe (“Exemplarius” alias “le Saumplarier”): dead
-in 1298: St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1290. In this year it is agreed between the University and City that
-“Pergamenarii, Luminatores, Scriptores” were in the jurisdiction
-of the Chancellor of the University (<cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, ed.
-Anstey, p. 52).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Before 1304. Geoffrey, illuminator (“alluminator”), St. Mary’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1308. Robert, notary and stationer in Cattestrete: St. Mary’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>In the first quarter of the 14th cent. William of Nottingham wrote MSS.
-Merton Coll. 158, 166, 168, 169, 170 at Oxford (Coxe: see
-Little’s <cite>Grey Friars in Oxford</cite>, 1892, pp. 165–6).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1340/1, Feb. Adam, bookbinder, occurs incidentally as holding a tenement
-in Schidyerd way (now Oriel St.), in the Bodleian Oxford charter
-no. 125* (Turner’s Catal., p. 307). This tenement he left to the
-altar of St. Thomas the Martyr in St. Mary the Virgin’s church in
-1349 (Wood’s <cite>City</cite>, ed. A. Clark, ii. 22, from a copy of the will).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1341. Symon Faunt and John Faunt, bookbinders, St. Mary’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1342. In this year a MS. of William of Ockham’s Summa Logices now
-at Bâle (F. ii. 25 according to A. G. Little’s <cite>Grey Friars in
-Oxford</cite>, p. 226: see Sir Tho. Phillipps’s Catalogue of MSS. at
-Bâle, p. 7) was written at Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1344. John Joye, illuminator (“lumnour”), of Cattestrete: St. Peter’s
-(Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1345. In this year the Chancellor of the University was acknowledged
-to have jurisdiction over “quattuor stationarios ad hujusmodi
-officium per ... Universitatem admissos et pro tempore admittendos
-ac Universitati juratos vel jurandos, necnon in omnes et
-singulos scriptores scholaribus in scriptorum officio servientes”
-(<cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, ed. Anstey, p. 150, cf. 176; Wood’s
-<cite>Annals</cite>, ed. Gutch, i. 441).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1349. In I. B. De Rossi’s <cite>Codices Palatini Latini bibliothecae Vaticanae
-descripti</cite> (1886) in MS. no. 377 “adnotatur emptio codicis ‘pro
-duobus Florenis cum dimidio Anno domini M<sup>o</sup>.CCC<sup>o</sup>.XL<sup>o</sup> nono
-in ciuitate oxoniensi.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>XIVth cent. Roger, stationer (Oxf. Univ. Archives, box F, no 24).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>XIVth cent. Adam de Walton, parchment maker (<i>ibid.</i>, box F. no. 26).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>XIVth cent. William, bookbinder (<i>ibid.</i>, box F, no. 28).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1350. MS. New College 134 was written at Oxford in about <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1350
-(Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>In the 14th cent. in an undated deed in the Oxf. Univ. Archives
-between John Pilat and Walter “filius Paulini de Eynsham”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>about land in St. Mary’s parish, the following occur as witnesses:—Ralph,
-Robert, James, illuminators; Walter, Augustine, Adam,
-bookbinders (“liurs”); Simon, parchment-maker (Twyne XXIII,
-p. 103; cf. Bodl. MS. Wood D. 2, p. 489).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1353. Thomas Hamme, bookseller (“Vetus quoddam inventarium de
-bonis Thomæ Hamme bibliopolæ et stationarii ut videtur anno
-domini 1353,”) once in the Oxf. Univ. Archives, box K, no. 2;
-but this most interesting document is noted by Gerard Langbaine
-as having been stolen during the Civil War (MS. Twyne I, 278).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1358/9. Richard Lynne, stationer (“stacionarius Universitatis Oxun.”)
-(Coxe): Richard the stationer occurs in Lent 1358 (Boase’s
-<cite>Registrum Oxoniense</cite>, 1st ed., p. xi).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1364. MS. New College 173 was written at Oxford in this year (Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1370. Robert, bookbinder, St. Mary’s (Magd.): Robert Bokebinder
-and Agnes his wife occur in 1377 (?) and 1380 (Oxf. City Doc.,
-pp. 41, 47).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1373/4, Jan. 27. At this date “Quia, propter excessivam multitudinem vendentium
-libros Oxoniæ Universitati minime juratorum, plerique
-codices magni valoris ad partes exteras deferuntur” the University
-decreed that no booksellers except the sworn stationers or
-their deputies should sell any book exceeding half a mark in value.
-(Anstey’s <cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, p. 233: see Appendix D. I,
-below, p. <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1377? John, parchment-maker (“Parchemenor”), Holywell (Oxf. City
-Doc., p. 52).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1377? Richard, parchment-maker (“Parchemenor”), Holywell (Oxf.
-City Doc., p. 52).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1377? Roger Somervyle, stationer, St. Peter’s (Oxf. City Doc., p. 52).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. MS. Corpus Christi College (Oxford) 151 was written at Oxford
-in this year (Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. Roger, illuminator (“lymenour”), St. Mary’s (Oxf. City Doc.,
-p. 41).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. John Madesdon, illuminator (“limenour”), St. Mary’s (Oxf. City
-Doc., p. 41).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. William, illuminator (“Lymenour”), St. Mary’s (Oxf. City Doc.,
-p. 41).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. John Hyrys, parchment-maker (“Parchemener”) (Oxf. City Doc.,
-p. 41).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. Richard, parchment-maker (“Parchemener”) (Oxf. City Doc.,
-p. 43).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. Edward, parchment-maker (“Parchemener”) (Oxf. City Doc.,
-p. 44).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1380. John Langeport, once stationer (“quondam stationarius”), north-east
-ward (Oxf. City Doc., p. 22).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1393. In Florence MS. Laurentian, bibl. S. Crucis, plut. xvii Sin., cod. x.
-“Explicit compilatio quaedam ... scripta per me F[ratrem]
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>I[acobum] Fey de Florentia Ordinis Fratrum Minorum in Conventu
-Oxoniae anno Domini <span class='fss'>MCCCXC</span>iii, die ... [xi Martii]”
-(Bandini’s Catalogue, A. G. Little’s <cite>Grey Friars in Oxford</cite>,
-p. 252).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1393. John Brother, illuminator (“limnator”), St. Mary’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1403. John Brown, stationer, sold MS. Merton College 130 in this year,
-(Coxe), cf. MS. New College 104: see <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1440.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1410. In the record of a tax levied on the University in this year occur
-the names of William and Roger, illuminators; Richard, senior
-and junior, parchment-makers; and Thomas and Robert, scribes
-(Twyne IV, p. 70).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1411. The University enacts that as the duties of the University stationers
-are laborious and anxious every one on graduation shall give
-clothes to one of the stationers (<cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, ed. Anstey,
-p. 253).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1419. See under 1490.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1423. “Finit Menon Platonis [Latine] scriptus per Fredericum Naghel
-de Trajecto anno Domini <span class='fss'>MCCCC.XX</span>iij ... in alma Universitate
-Oxoniensi” (MS. Corpus Christi College, Oxford, no. 243:
-Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1424. “Guilermus Secomps venditor librorum” may possibly be an
-Oxford bookseller in this year (see Coxe’s account of MS. Lincoln
-College Latin 14).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1424/5 John Dolle, bookbinder: see under 1453.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>First half of 15th cent. In Bodl. MS. e Mus. 155, p. 507 (written perhaps
-in the first half of the 15th cent.) “Explicit liber 3<sup>us</sup> de consideracione
-4<sup>te</sup> essencie secundum Rogerum Bacon correctus et scriptus
-per Johannem Cokkes manibus suis propriis Oxon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1426. John Wake, illuminator (“lymner”), St. Mary’s (Magd.): he
-appears as a surety in 1434 (Univ. Register Aaa, fol. 1).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1427. “Explicit conflatus Francisci de Maronis finitus per manus Nicolai
-de Bodelswerdia anno Domini 1427 ... tum temporis Oxoniæ
-studentis” (MS. Merton College 133: Coxe). A similar inscription
-dated 1429 is in MS. Oriel College 70 (Coxe). Kirchhoff
-mentions Nicolas de Frisia alias de Bolswerdia as a bookseller
-in 1427–31.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1430. “Explicit conflatus Francisci de Mayronis ... finitus et completus
-anno Domini 1430 ... per manus Johannis Jacobi Spaen
-de Amsterdamis, tunc temporis Oxonie studentis” (MS. Magd.
-Coll., Oxf., 103: Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1434. John Clerk (Clericus) occurs as a stationer in this year and 1438
-(Univ. Register Aaa, foll. 4*, 11).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>c. 1436. “Stephanus ligator librorum de Oxonia” occurs at about this
-date in Cambr. Univ. MS. Dd. xiv. 2, fol. 139 (information from
-T. W. Jackson, M.A.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1439. John Godsond occurs as a stationer (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Aaa,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>fol. 15<sup>v</sup>): he has a dispute in the same year with John Coneley
-a “lymner,” his assistant (Anstey’s <cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>,
-pp. 550–1): in 1458 he is paid for chaining some Exeter College
-books (Boase’s <cite>Reg. Exon.</cite>, 1st ed., p. 21).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1440. John Brown, stationer, in this year (cited by Heyner) may be the
-same as the one noted under 1403.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1440. John More, stationer, occurs frequently: in 1440 he or a person
-of his name sells MS. Lincoln College, Latin 109, probably in
-Oxford (Coxe): on 7 Nov. 1444 he is mentioned in Anstey’s
-<cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, p. 741: in Apr. 1445 he values books
-in Oxford (<i>ibid.</i>, p. 544): also in 1447–48 (<i>ibid.</i>, pp. 565, 579,
-cf. 741) mentioned in the Treasurer’s accounts at Oriel, 1451–65:
-on 12 Apr. 1454 or ‘55 he sold MS. Magd. Coll. (Oxf.) 4 in Oxford
-(Coxe): in 1457 he values Exeter College books (Boase’s <cite>Reg.
-Exon.</cite>, 1st ed., p. lxviii): on 21 Oct. 1457 he sold MS. Magd.
-Coll. (Oxf.) 134 in Oxford (“Mare,” in Coxe). A John More was
-living in 1460–61 and 1468–9 on the east side of Cat Street,
-probably in Lady Hall = Great St. Mary’s Entry, according to the
-St. Mary the Virgin church accounts preserved in the Bodleian
-(Oxford Rolls 13 &amp;c.). He was also a binder (Oriel accounts).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1445. John Coneley, illuminator: see 1439: he is bound to work for Godsond
-for one year from 8 Nov. 1445 for 4 marks and 10 shillings.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1446. “Thomas Bokebynder de Catys-street” was imprisoned by the
-Chancellor for saying that the mayor and townsfolk were not
-under oath to respect the rights of the University (Anstey, <cite>Munimenta
-Academica</cite>, p. 556).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1448. William Bedewyne, illuminator (“lymnour”), “late of Oxford,”
-St. Peter’s (Magd.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>XVth cent. Willelmus Sengleton wrote MS. New College 127 (Coxe):
-he may be the Will. Singleton who was admitted B.A. in 1566/7
-(<cite>Register of the Univ.</cite>, vol. i., ed. Boase, p. 265).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>XVth cent. “Expliciunt Questiones ... scripte per Johannem de Almania
-sive de Kasterle, in usum ... Thome Grace, illic [sc. at Oxford]
-in artibus graduati,” in MS. Magd. Coll. (Oxf.) 162 (Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1450–64. In these years Willelmus Salomon “Leonensis diocesis”
-wrote the works of Hugo de Sancto Caro or Hugo Viennensis
-in Oxford for Roger Keys, who in 14<span class='fraction'>69<br /><span class='ov'>70</span></span> presented them to
-Exeter College, where they are now MSS. 51–68 (Coxe).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1452. “Johannes Bokebyndere Oxoniæ” occurs in the will of dr. Richard
-Browne (Anstey’s <cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, p. 648).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1453. John Delle or Dolle, stationer, mentioned (<cite>Register of the Univ.</cite>,
-vol. i., ed. Boase, p. 20, “Delle”): and in 1454 (Anstey’s <cite>Munimenta
-Academica</cite>, p. 741, “Dolle”). In 1454 his name occurs in
-Bodleian Oxford Charters 491 (Turner’s Catal., p. 351). He
-may be the same as John Dolle, bookbinder, who lived in Cat
-Street in 142<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span> (Boase’s <cite>Reg. Exon.</cite>, 1894, p. 295).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1453. John Reynbold, a German, agreed at Oxford to write out three
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>books of Duns Scotus on the Sentences (Bodl. MS. Ballard 46,
-fol. 70). He wrote several MSS. now at Balliol and Merton
-between 1451 and 1464.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1459. June 17. Will. Bokebynder occurs as a witness in Oxford, when
-MS. Merton Coll. 135 was given to the College (Coxe). In the
-same year he is mentioned in Oxford Univ. Archives, box F, no. 28.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1467. British Museum MS. Royal 6 D II once bore the following interesting
-inscription, before it was re-bound, “Iste liber ligatus erat
-Oxonii, in Catstrete, ad instantiam Reverendi Domini Thome
-Wybarun in sacra Theologia Bacalarii Monachi Roffensis, Anno
-Domini 1467” (see Casley’s <cite>Catalogue of the Manuscripts of the
-Kings Library</cite> (1734), Dibdin’s <cite>Bibliographical Decameron</cite> (1817),
-ii. 449: the volume contains the Letters of St. Jerome, and had
-been given to Rochester by Benedict, bp. of Rochester, <i>d.</i> 1226).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>“1468”–148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>. Oxford printing, see Appendix A.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1473. Thomas Hunt, “universitatis Oxonie stacionarius,” sold Brit. Mus.
-MS. Burney 11 (a Latin Bible) in this year (see the Catalogue,
-printed in 1840). In 1477 and 1479 he was living in Haberdasher
-hall in the parish of St. Mary the Virgin (Bodl. MS. Wood
-F. 15, a collection of Oseney rentals: Wood’s “Thomas Howle,
-stacioniar,” of Haberdasher hall in 1477 in Bodl. MS. Wood D. 2,
-p. 587, from the above MS., is a mis-reading by Wood for Honte,
-i. e. Hunte). In 1483 he appears as agreeing to sell certain books
-in Oxford at fixed prices (the list, which is on a paper now forming
-a fly-leaf of a French translation of Livy (Paris, 1486) now in
-the Bodleian, is printed in the publications of the Oxf. Hist. Soc.
-vol. v. (<cite>Collectanea</cite>, I), pp. 74, 141–3). In all probability he is the
-same Thomas Hunt who in 1485 printed the <cite>Phalaridis Epistolae</cite>
-at Oxford in conjunction with Theodoric Rood (see pp. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1481–85. Theodoric Rood, printed at Oxford (see pp. <a href='#Page_2'>2</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1482. F. H., — Hawkins, J. Alexander (Alison) occur as parchment-sellers:
-see p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1490. William Vavasour, scribe. MS. Corpus Christi Coll. (Oxf.) 228 was
-written “per manum fratris Wyllelmi Vavysur,” “Oxonie anno
-1490” (the date and word “Oxonie” might possibly refer to the
-time and place of the “determinationes physicæ”: but) MS.
-Corpus 227 was “scriptus per me fratrem Wyllelmum, studentem
-Oxonie anno ... 1419 [1491]” and “per manum fratris Wyllelmi
-Vavysur ejusdem ordinis [sc. fratrum Minorum] ... 1491.”</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1501. Sebastian Actors, bookseller of St. Mary the Virgin’s parish.
-Record of a grant of administration after his decease, 23 April
-1501 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1501. Christopher Coke, stationer. A similar record with inventory,
-13 Dec. 1501 (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1502/3. William Lesquier, bookseller. A similar record, 1 Feb. 150<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span> (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1506. Georgius Castellanus, bookseller (?): see p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>1514. Henricus Jacobi. On Dec. 11, 1514 administration of the effects
-of Henricus Jacobi, deceased, was granted (Oxf. Univ. Archives).
-Two imperfect leaves of an edition of the <cite>Formalitates de mente
-magistri Johannis Duns Scoti</cite> by Antonius Syrretus were found in
-New College Library at Oxford by R. G. C. Proctor, Esq., the
-first of which bears the words “Venundantur in vniuersitate
-Oxoniensi sub intersignio sanctissime Trinitatis ab Henrico
-Jacobi bibliopole Londoniensis.” See p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1518. John Scolar and (15<span class='fraction'>19<br /><span class='ov'>20</span></span>) Carolus Kyrfoth, printers, see pp. <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>–7, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1521. John Dorne, bookseller. His day-ledger, showing what books he
-sold and at what prices, from 19 Jan.-23 Dec. 1520, is MS.
-Corpus Christi College, Oxford, no. 131; this and two leaves of
-a similar day-book of about 1518–19, found in a binding in the
-same College library, are printed in the Oxford Historical Society’s
-<cite>Collectanea</cite> volume, no. 1 (pp. 78–139) and 2 (pp. 457–62), where
-also it is shown that Dorne, who was certainly “a Dutchman,”
-and as such paid with others an alien tax at Oxford in 1524 (see
-Rogers’s <cite>Oxford City Documents</cite>, Oxf. Hist. Soc. xviii, 1891,
-p. 56, as Johan Thorn), may be the Johannes Dorn who printed
-at Brunswick in 1507–9. An <cite>Opus Insolubilium</cite> printed by Treveris
-was to be sold “apud I. T.”, which Mr. E. G. Duff thinks is
-probably I. Thorne.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1524. William Howberghe (Howbert or Hubbert), Douchman (Dutchman:
-he resigned his office as Stationer 11 Oct. 1532, see Boase’s
-<cite>Reg. Oxon.</cite>, p. 171). Gerard Pylegreme, Douchman (his will is
-extant at Oxford, dated 7 Feb. “1537”: Oxf. Univ. Archives).
-Balthasar Churchyard, Douchman. Harry Renkens, Douchman.
-All these pay taxes as Dorne above, in 1524, in the capacity of
-Stationers or Booksellers. Richard Alcoke, bell-ringer, Margarete
-Page, Rose Cater, Henry Mancipull, and “Sir Person” are
-possible additions to this list.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>About 1525. Gressop, bookbinder. In Bodl. MS. Rawl. G. 47 (N. C.
-14778) there is a note that the volume, which had been presented
-to All Souls Library by bp. Goldwell, was “resarcitus per Gressopum”:
-the date must be about 1525.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1531, Oct. A commission from the bp. of Lincoln to search the booksellers’
-stalls at St. Frideswide’s fair for heretical books (Brit. Mus.
-MS. Lansdowne 938).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1532. David Pratt, B.A., of Cambridge, is stationer from 10 March
-1535/6 to Oct. 1536 (Boase’s <cite>Reg. Oxon.</cite>, p. 171).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1534. A patent is issued to Cambridge (where printing had been exercised
-from 1521 to 1522) allowing the University to have three licensed
-stationers and printers or sellers of books, and authority to print
-books is granted to the Chancellor and three Doctors. No
-similar patent was issued to Oxford.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1552. Henry Mylward, stationer (Boase’s <cite>Reg. Oxon.</cite>, p. xx). He retired
-on 11 Apr. 1597 from old age (Clark’s <cite>Register</cite>, i. 262, where
-it is suggested that his name appears as Miller in 157<span class='fraction'>8<br /><span class='ov'>9</span></span>, living in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>St. Mary’s Parish). In 1583 (July 12) Beef Hall was leased to
-him (Oxf. Univ. Archives, box O, no. 10. cf. A. no. 14).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1554, Nov. 14. Herman Evans admitted stationer, but pronounced “contumax”
-in Oct. 1563 (Clark’s <cite>Register</cite>, i. 261).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1556, Aug. 11. Nicholas Wayte, admitted bookseller (Clark, i. 321).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— —— Richard Walles, do. (Clark, <i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— Aug. 12. James à Wood, adm. parchment-seller (Clark, i. 322).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1564, Sept. 30. Thomas Wadloffe, adm. parchment-seller (Clark, <i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1566, June 20. “Garbrande Harkes,” bookseller, licensed to sell wine
-(Clark, i. 323).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1566/7, Jan. 27. Conrad Myller, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): licensed
-to sell ale in St. Mary’s parish, 16 Sept. 1572: living in 1587/8
-(Clark, i. 325).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1567, Apr. 3. Gilbert Burnet, alias Cornyshe, adm. parchment-seller
-(Clark, i. 326).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1570, June 28. Nicholas Clyfton, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— Oct. 6. Christopher Cavye, do. (<i>ibid.</i>): in 1574 the Chancellor
-recommended that he should have a monopoly of second-hand
-books, since he was in difficulties (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1570/1, Mar. 21. William Spyre, of St. Mary’s parish, adm. bookseller on
-the Chancellor’s recommendation. Still bookseller in 1590 (<i>ibid.</i>),
-and stationer in 1617 and 1619 (Clark, i. 321, 343). Probably
-the same as Will “Spewe” of the Company of Stationers (C. R.
-Rivington, <cite>Stationers Company</cite>, 1883, p. 27). Died before 20 Nov.
-1636 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1573, Sept. 8. <b>Joseph Barnes</b>, adm. bookseller (<i>ibid.</i>). He was licensed
-to sell wine from Oct. 1575 to at least Oct. 1596. He was sole
-printer to the University from 1585 to 1617, resigned on 12 Feb.
-1616/7, and died in 1618, being buried in St. Mary’s on Dec. 17 in
-that year. He lived (and printed) in a house at the west end of
-St Mary’s, now St. Mary’s Entry (see <cite>Letters from the Bodleian</cite>,
-ii. 428).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1573, Sept. 8. Robert Cave, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): still a bookseller
-in 1693 (fragm. in C. C. C, Oxf., Library from M. XX. II).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1573, Dec. 5. Richard Garbrand, or Harks, adm. bookseller: still bookseller
-in 1599 (MS. Wood D. 3, p. 281, cf. 286, where it is stated
-that he was churchwarden of St. Mary’s in 1569); he died before
-31 Jan 160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span> (Clark, i. 323. compared with Griffiths’ <cite>Index of
-Oxford Wills</cite>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1574, Mar. 25. Dominique Pinart, adm. bookseller (Clark, <i>ibid.</i>): in 1583
-he occurs as a bookbinder (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. Y. 99);
-still bookseller in 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (Clark, i. 321). Died before 18 Feb.
-1627/8 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1574. John Gore occurs as an Oxford bookseller in a lease summarized
-in MS. Wood D. 3, p. 281, and lived in or near Cat St.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>1577, Apr. 24. Humphrey Archer, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321). Administration
-was granted after his death on 13 Feb. 158<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span> (Oxf.
-Univ. Archives).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1577. Rowland Jenckes or Jenkes, a bookbinder, was condemned at the
-Assizes at Oxford for sedition (Wood’s <cite>History and Antiquities
-of the University of Oxford</cite>, ed. Gutch, ii. (1796), p. 188: and
-Webster’s <cite>Treatise of Witchcraft</cite>, p. 245, quoted by Bagford in
-Brit. Mus. MS. Harl. 5901, fol. 62).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1583. Carre occurs as a bookbinder (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. Y. 99).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1584, Aug. 15. £100 is lent by the University to Joseph Barnes with
-which to set up a press, to be repaid in six years (<i>ibid.</i> Reg. L. 10,
-fol. 287, cf. 246). In Oct. 1592 the money had not been repaid.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1585. For printers and publishers from 1585–1640, see also p. <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1585/6, Jan. 10. A Committee of Convocation at Oxford appointed to consider
-<cite>De libris imprimendis</cite> (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. L. 10,
-fol. 283).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1586, June 23. An Ordinance of the Star Chamber allows only two
-presses outside London, one at Oxford and one at Cambridge,
-and only one apprentice to each press (printed in full in Arber’s
-<cite>Transcript</cite>, ii. 807).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1588. In about this year occurs an Inventory of the goods of John Pigot,
-scrivener, implying his previous death (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1590, Nov. 27. Robert Foxon, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): but on
-7 Mar. 159<span class='fraction'>0<br /><span class='ov'>1</span></span> an Inventory of his goods was taken, implying
-previous death (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— Thomas Middleton, adm. bookseller (Clark, <i>ibid.</i>): he
-died before 28 March 1604 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— Francis Peirce, do. (<i>ibid.</i>): still bookseller in 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (Clark,
-i. 521): died before 4 Jan. 162<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span> (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— Stephen Wilson, do. (<i>ibid.</i>): in 1591 he is a bookbinder
-also (Clark, i. 342).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1591, May 25. A patent was granted to Richard Wright of Oxford and
-his assigns to print Tacitus’s <cite>History</cite> in English, for life. (Patent
-Roll 33 Eliz., part 17, Arber’s <cite>Transcript</cite>, ii. 16). This partly
-explains the peculiarity noticed in 1591, no. 5 (p. 31, above):
-clearly it was printed nominally by Barnes, but published in London
-and perhaps in part printed there. Wright appears as belonging
-to both cities.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1593/4, Feb. 21. Thomas Gowre resigns the office of parchment seller and
-is succeeded by William Jennings (Fenninge?) (Clark, i. 322).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1594, Sept. 3. John Barnes, son of Joseph Barnes, is apprenticed to Rich.
-Watkins of St. Paul’s Churchyard, London, for seven years from
-Mich. 1594 (Arber’s <cite>Transcript</cite>, ii. 195: see the same work under
-date 7 June, 1602, &amp;c.).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>1596, May 21. Application was made to Convocation for a licence to
-Joseph Barnes to have a monopoly of printing inedited Greek
-and Latin books (Oxf. Univ. Archives, Reg. Ma., p. 15).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1597, Apr. 11. Lancelot Waistiell or Waystayle adm. stationer of the
-University: he resigned in 1608.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1598/9, Mar. 16. John Crosley adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): stationer
-in 1611 (Clark, i. 342): died before 12 Feb. 161<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span> (Oxf. Univ.
-Archives—Wills, where he is described as a citizen of London).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1600/1. Robert Billingsley occurs as a bookseller (Clark, i. 342): also
-bookbinder: he died before 17 Nov. 1606 (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1603. The Stationers Company in London obtain a monopoly of printing
-Primers, Psalms and Almanacs.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1608, Apr. 18. Denis Edmonds adm. stationer.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1609. Nicholas Smith, bookbinder, died before 9 Aug. 1609 (Oxf.
-Univ. Archives—Wills): his wife Anne was Rob. Billingsley’s
-widow.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1609, Oct 24. John Garbrand alias Herks, bookseller, was licensed to
-sell wine (Clark, i. 323): he died before 29 Sept. 1617 (<i>ibid.</i>),
-and after 21 Mar. 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (Clark, i. 321).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1609, Oct. 20. William Davies occurs as stationer (Clark, i. 342): still
-such in 1615 and 1621 and 1637 (Clark, i. 343–4): bookseller in
-March, 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (Clark, i. 321).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1609/10, Mar. 13. A tenement in St. Mary’s parish was leased to John
-Adams, stationer (Oxf. Univ. Archives, box A, no. 23): he was a
-bookbinder from 1610 to 1620 (Magd. college deeds, cf. Clark, i.
-343). In 1637, July 20, a house just North of the Schools Quadrangle
-was “lately” in the tenure of John Adams, bookbinder
-(Agreement between Magdalen and the University in Reg. R. 24,
-fol. 149<sup>r</sup>). For his printing, see pp. <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1610, Dec. Henry Blewet or Bluett occurs as a bookseller in St Mary’s
-parish (Clark, i. 321): still such in 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (<i>ibid.</i>): died before 3 Jan.
-1633/4 (“bookbinder”: Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1611. Sampson Stronge alias Starkey, limner, died before 30 Mar. 1611
-(Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1615/6, Jan. 2. Robert Nixon alias Waie occurs as a bookseller (Clark,
-i. 343): and in 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (i. 321).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1616/7, Feb. 12. William Wrench becomes a University printer, until
-19 Jan. 161<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>8</span></span>: see p. <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— John Lichfield, do.: see p. <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>: created Inferior Bedel 20 Mar.
-1616/7: resigned his offices Jan. 163<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1616/7, Mar. 21. Richard Wylcocks is bookseller (Clark, i. 321, <i>bis</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— William Turner, do. (<i>ibid.</i>): is University printer from 1624
-to 164<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>: see p. <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>. In 1639 he was found to have abstracted
-in 1634 the Savile Greek type “under the pretence of printing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>a Greek Chronologer (one Malala)”: and by Feb. 13, 16<span class='fraction'>39<br /><span class='ov'>40</span></span> had
-brought them back (Wharton’s <cite>Remains of Laud</cite>, ii. 174).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1616/7, Mar. 21. Edward Forrest is bookseller (Clark, i. 321).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— William Toldervey, do. (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— —— John Westall, do. (ibid.): he occurs as binding for the Bodleian
-in 1636–7 (Macray’s <cite>Annals</cite>, 2nd ed., p. 77).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1617/8, Jan. 19. James Short do.: see p. <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1617, May 16. Roger Barnes, adm. bookseller (Clark, i. 321): see 1626,
-below.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— June 10. William Wildgoose, do. (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— June 11. John Allam, do. (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c039'>The two latter with Christopher Barker, William Johnson and
-John Chambers were reprimanded on 23 May, 1617, for setting
-up as booksellers without the Vice-Chancellor’s leave (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1619, July 30. Edward Miles occurs as bookseller (Clark, i. 343): he
-was Clerk of the University, and died before 1 May, 1637 (Oxf.
-Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1620/1, Jan. 6. Richard Parne adm. parchment seller, in place of Henry
-Dochin, dead, who had succeeded John Cooke (Clark, i. 322).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1623, Apr. Thomas Huggins occurs as stationer (Clark, i. 343), also in
-1627 (of St. Mary’s parish) and 1634 (<i>ibid.</i> and 344).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1625/6. William Webbe occurs as stationer (Clark, i. 343). See p. <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.
-Still stationer in 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (<i>ibid.</i> 344), and binder to the Bodleian
-(Macray’s <cite>Annals</cite>, 2nd ed., p. 77: died in 1652).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1626, June 18. Roger Barnes and John his son occur as bookbinders
-(Clark, i. 343), John is still bookbinder in 1630 (<i>ibid.</i>) and 1636–7,
-(Macray’s <cite>Annals of the Bodleian</cite>, 2nd ed., p. 77). Roger died
-before 30 Nov. 1631 (of All Saints parish, bookbinder and
-stationer: Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1629, June 16. The University of Cambridge begs the loan of the
-Greek matrixes given to Oxford by sir Henry Savile: the request
-was granted on June 30 on Laud’s recommendation, and the
-matrixes returned 24 June, 1631. The year in which Savile’s
-famous “silver” Greek type (with which the <cite>Chrysostom</cite> of
-1610–13 was printed at Eton) came to Oxford is not at present
-ascertainable.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1631. From the fine of £300 inflicted on the printer of the Wicked
-Bible of this year a fount of Greek type was purchased by Laud
-(not before 1634) for printing in London, Oxford or Cambridge,
-as the editors of the books might prefer. As a fact the printing
-took place in London, from 1637 on.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1632, Nov. 12. The first charter to Oxford allowing printing: printed
-in App D. II., p. 281: confirmed and amplified, 13 March, 1632/3
-(p. 283). Laud in a letter to the University mentions King and
-Motteshead as two printers the University might well appoint
-out of the three allowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>1635. Leonard Lichfield succeeded his father John, as University printer:
-died in 1657.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1636. Tit. xviii, sect. 5 of the Statutes of the University is framed “De
-Typographis Universitatis”: printed in App. D. V., p. 287. The
-Architypographus is here first mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1636. John Haviland of London is stated to have a press at London,
-Oxford and Cambridge (Arber’s <cite>Transcript</cite>, iii. 704).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1636–37. — Seale occurs as binding for the Bodleian (Macray’s <cite>Annals</cite>,
-2nd ed., p. 77).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>—— — Bott, do. (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1636/7, Mar. 12. See p. <a href='#Page_285'>285</a> (agreement between the University and the
-Stationers’ Company).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1637, July 11. A severe decree of Star-Chamber is issued, restricting
-printing, but allowing the rights of Oxford: printed in Arber’s
-<cite>Transcript</cite>, iv. 528.</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1637. In this year Laud, who had in every way facilitated the acquisition
-of good Oriental and other type by the University, was able to
-write to the Vice-Chancellor (on May 5) “You are now upon a
-very good way towards the setting up of a learned Press.”</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1637, Oct. 14. The will of Hugh Jones of St. Mary Magdalen parish,
-printer (apprentice?), was proved (Oxf. Univ. Archives—Wills).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1638, Apr. 12. The will of John Wilmot, stationer, was proved (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1639. See under 161<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span> (Turner).</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>1639, Aug. 12. Agreement with the Stationers’ Company: see p. <a href='#Page_287'>287</a>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The following booksellers of Oxford are at present only known from
-their imprints:—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Jackson, Simon, 1618.</div>
- <div class='line'>Cripps, Henry, 1620–39.</div>
- <div class='line'>Peerse, Elias, 1625–39.</div>
- <div class='line'>Curteyne, Henry, 1625–40.</div>
- <div class='line'>Butler, Thomas, 1628.</div>
- <div class='line'>Bowman, Francis, 1634–40.</div>
- <div class='line'>Allam, Thomas, 1636–39.</div>
- <div class='line'>Godwin, Joseph, 1637–39.</div>
- <div class='line'>Robinson, Thomas, 1639–40.</div>
- <div class='line'>Hunt, Matthew, 1639–40.</div>
- <div class='line'>Young, Robert, 1640.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>[London booksellers who published for Oxford printers are here
-omitted: see pp. <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>–3.]</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>[The following discussion of the authorship of the <cite>Praise of Music</cite>
-(1586, no. 10) is referred to on p. <a href='#Page_20'>20</a> as occurring in Appendix C, and
-is therefore here inserted.]</p>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>
- <h3 class='c008'><cite>The Praise of Music</cite> (1586).</h3>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>This work is probably not by John Case, although constantly attributed
-to him. The facts of the matter may be stated as follows.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The book is strictly anonymous: all that can be gathered directly
-from it is that the author was himself an enthusiastic musician,
-though not necessarily of eminence; that he was a well-read scholar,
-as well in the Fathers as in the Classics, and that his style and
-method point to a man of imaginative mind, young in years, and with
-considerable elegance of thought and expression. The printer writes
-a dedication to Sir Walter Raleigh, alluding to the book as “an Orphan
-of one of Lady Musickes children.” This can only be meant to convey
-the impression that the author was dead: on the other hand the treatise
-can only have been composed recently from the allusions to the controversy
-about Church music: in fact the author was undoubtedly
-a Protestant in Elizabeth’s reign, who approved of elaborate music in
-Churches, within certain common-sense limits.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In 1588 John Case published at Oxford an “Apologia Musices”
-written in Latin, and maintaining nearly the same view about Church
-music as the book before us, to which Case makes no allusion. Case was
-elected scholar of St. John’s College, Oxford, in 1564; and in 1568 fellow.
-“But so it was,” says Wood (<cite>Ath. Ox.</cite>, ed. Bliss, i. 685), “that being
-Popishly affected he left his fellowship and married [in 1574] and ...
-read logic and philosophy to young men (mostly of the R. C. religion) in
-a private house in St. Mary Magd. parish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The external evidence about the authorship in question may be put
-as follows. In favour of Case is the important fact that Thomas Watson
-the poet in a sonnet to Case does certainly seem to allude to the English
-as well as the Latin treatise. Most of the expressions may, and more
-than one must, apply to the <cite>Apologia</cite>, but the allusion to Marsyas can
-only refer to the “Praise,” which indeed is mentioned by name, “Mr.
-John Case ... his learned booke lately made in the prayes of Musick.”
-Again, the fact that the <cite>Apologia</cite> nowhere alludes to the former poem is
-itself an argument that they were not independent of each other, while
-supposing that Case was partly ashamed of so light and poetical a production
-and desired to be judged rather by a more philosophical work,
-such as the Latin treatise, we can understand a desire to ignore the
-former. To this may be added that such considerations as the above
-were sufficient to convince critics like Dr. Farmer, Mr. Joseph Haslewood
-and Dr. Bliss, as well as almost all others who have considered the
-point. Against such a conclusion the following points may be urged.
-Antony à Wood, who wrote lives of all Oxford writers up to his own
-time, and who was born in 1632, will not even suggest that Case was the
-author, but on the contrary declares that in all his searches he could
-never discover who wrote the book. Richard Heber seems also to
-have argued against Case’s connexion. With respect to Watson’s testimony
-it must be remembered that he had left the University some years
-before either book was published, and that it is quite possible that he
-wrote his sonnet with both books before him and with little on which
-to form a judgment except an obvious similarity of subject and point of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>view. Some catalogues are said to have credited the printer with the
-authorship, and Lowndes ascribes it to Barnaby Barnes!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The internal evidence is against the common authorship of the two
-books. The style of E.<a id='r17' /><a href='#f17' class='c007'><sup>[17]</sup></a> is light, poetical and imaginative, with numerous
-digressions, apologized for and repeated: that of L. is more staid and so
-to speak scholastic; the sentences and thoughts fall into a logical form
-which are natural to Case. The latter passes by the mythological part of
-the history of Music, the former finds it in accordance with his taste.
-Both authors are learned: in E. the references to the Fathers are as numerous
-as those from any other source: in L. the references to secular authors
-predominate. Both draw from common sources, such as the <cite>Theatrum
-vitae humanae</cite> of Beyerlinck and the classical authors: but in the longest
-quotation common to both, one from Ornithoparchus’s <cite>Micrologus</cite>
-(E. pp. 39–40: L. pref.), a treatise on singing and music (afterwards, in
-1609, translated into English), in which the imaginary descent of Concentus
-and Accentus from Sonus is given, they differ materially in one
-point of the account: nor are the explanations of the kinds and effects of
-the Greek styles of music entirely in accord. So too there are expressions
-peculiar to each book which could hardly have been absent from the
-other, had the authors been the same person (as in E. allusions to
-Mercury’s three parts of music; the Roman college of minstrels; three
-causes of music, pleasure, grief and enthusiasm: in L. to inanimate
-nature moved by music, Homer as a minstrel, the idea that strings from
-wolves’ and sheep’s guts would not harmonize together, bees not having ears,
-modern musicians). But lastly the personality of the authors is different.
-Both indeed take up the same general point of view, that music is lawful
-in a Church, and both entirely neglect the <i>science</i> of music though they
-profess to be ardent musicians: but in E. there is a distinct purpose to
-oppose the attempt to exclude all mixed and “exquisite” music from the
-public services: the author writes to his equals for the purpose of interesting
-and convincing them: in L. we see the dialectician addressing those
-trained in the schools and accustomed to the subtle distinctions and
-formalities of scholastic logic, and also the teacher of youth, indulging in
-moral and didactic reflexions (pp. 53–55). Once more, Case, according
-to Wood, was known before 1574 to have proclivities towards the Roman
-Catholic religion, and accordingly in L. we find no word of blame
-addressed to that Church, the nearest approach being a note of triumph
-over the defeat of the Armada on the last page. Could he then have
-written, as the author of E., the following expressions, all used in contempt,
-“in the time of popery” (p. 129), “popish church Musicke”
-(ibid.), “the hypocriticall Monkes and Friers sang their seuen canonicall
-houres” (p. 133), “rotten rythmes of popery and superstitious inuocation
-or praying vnto Saints doth not giue greater cause of vomit to any man
-than to my selfe” (p. 136)?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The author of the “Praise of Musicke” may one day be discovered,
-but he will probably be found to be some other than Dr. John Case.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX D.<br /> <span class='large'>DOCUMENTS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>I.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>(Statute to prevent the removal of valuable books from
-Oxford, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1373: from <cite>Munimenta Academica</cite>, ed. by
-F. Anstey (Rolls Series) 1868, i. 233: with <i>æ</i> altered to <i>ae</i>.)</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A.D. 1373.<br />There are a great many booksellers in Oxford, who are not sworn to the University; the consequence of which is, that books of great value are sold and carried away from Oxford, the owners of them are cheated, and the sworn stationers are deprived of their lawful business; <i>it is therefore hereby enacted</i>, that no bookseller, except the sworn stationers or their deputies, shall sell any book, being either his own property or that of another, exceeding half a mark in value, under pain of, for the first offence, imprisonment, for the second, a fine of half a mark, for the third, abjuring his trade within the precincts of the University.</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>Quia, propter excessivam multitudinem vendentium libros,
-Oxoniae Universitati minime juratorum, plerique codices magni
-valoris ad partes exteras deferuntur, veri domini librorum
-eorumdem exquisitis coloribus seducuntur, a stationariis Universitatis
-praedictae lucrum consuetum subtrahitur, in Universitatis
-dedecus non modicum, gravamen et jacturam, habita
-primitus de praemissis deliberatione sufficienti, per congregationem
-Regentium antiquam consuetudinem in hac parte
-renovare volentium <i>extitit ordinatum</i>, quod de caetero nullus
-librorum venditor, publicis stationariis duntaxat exceptis, seu
-ab eis legitime deputatis, aliquem librum alienum seu proprium
-vendat excedentem pretium dimidiae marcae, infra jurisdictionem
-domini Cancellarii Universitatis praefatae, sub poenis
-inferius annotatis; <i>videlicet</i> quod, si quis legitime convictus
-fuerit super transgressione hujus ordinationis, prima vice incarceretur,
-et, in secunda vice et transgressione, solvat dimidiam
-marcam Universitatis usibus applicandam, tertia vero convictus
-abjuret officium sive artem venditionis hujusmodi infra limites
-superius expressatos.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Facta est autem haec ordinatio vicesimo septimo die mensis
-Januarii, anno Domini millesimo trecentesimo septuagesimo
-tertio.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>II.<br /> 1632, Nov. 12.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>(Letters patent from Charles I granting to the University three printers
-and booksellers with privileges. Printed from the original in the Oxford
-University Archives.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><b>Carolus Dei gratia</b> Anglie Scotie Francie et Hibernie Rex fidei defensor
-&amp;c. <b>Omnibus</b> ad quos presentes litere pervenerint salutem <b>Sciatis</b> quod
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>nos de gratia nostra speciali ac ex certa scientia et mero motu nostris dedimus
-et concessimus Ac per presentes pro nobis heredibus et Successoribus nostris
-damus et concedimus dilectis nobis in Christo Cancellario Magistris et
-Scholaribus Vniversitatis nostre Oxon licenciam quod ipsi et Successores sui
-per scripta comuni eorum Sigillo munita de tempore in tempus tres Typographos
-librorum Impressores et Bibliopolas tam de alienigenis et extra
-obedientiam nostram heredum et Successorum nostrorum ortis vel oriundis
-quam de Indigenis infra eandem obedientiam natis vel nascendis infra
-Septum vel Ambitum eiusdem Vniversitatis residentes et inhabitantes tam
-conductivas quam proprias Domos habentes vel tenentes designare poterint
-et constituere quorum singuli omnimodos libros seu Codices publice non
-prohibitos editos vel edendos et librorum exemplar Cancellarii eiusdem
-Vniversitatis vel eius vices gerentis ac trium Doctorum quorum vnus ad
-minus Sacre Theologie existat Professor quibus per eosdem Cancellarium
-magistros et Scholares facultas facta fuerit libros examinandi Judicio approbandos
-ibidem imprimere excudere ac Typis mandare ac tam libros et
-Codices illos quam alios vbicunque sive infra Dominia nostra heredum vel
-successorum nostrorum seu extra eadem impressos vel excusos ac vt prefertur
-approbatos tam in eadem vniversitate quam alibi vendicioni exponere
-vendere et distrahere quocies voluerint valeant et possint Quibus quidem
-Typographis librorum Impressoribus ac Bibliopolis et singulis eorum tam
-presentibus quam futuris ad omnia premissa licite et impune agendi licentiam
-similiter damus et concedimus per presentes. <b>Ac</b> pro nobis heredibus et
-Successoribus nostris vlterius volumus et concedimus quod huiusmodi Typographi
-librorum Impressores et Bibliopole eciam extra obedienciam nostram
-heredum vel Successorum nostrorum orti vel oriundi et eorum singuli quamdiu
-infra ambitum vniversitatis predicte moram traxerint et negocio antedicto
-sint intendentes in omnibus et per omnia tanquam fideles Subditi et ligei
-nostri infra Regnum Anglie oriundi reputentur habeantur et tractentur et
-singulis libertatibus liberis consuetudinibus legibus et privilegiis vti et gaudere
-valeant libere et quiete provt aliquis fidelis Subditus et ligeus noster heredum
-vel Successorum nostrorum infra Regnum Anglie ortus vel oriundus vti et
-gaudere debeat et ad quotas onera Consuetudines vel Imposiciones quascunque
-aliter aut alio modo quam ceteri fideles Subditi et ligei nostri heredum
-vel Successorum nostrorum infra Regnum Anglie orti vel oriundi Solvenda
-vel contribuenda nullus eorum arctetur vel compellatur Statutis de Alienigenis
-antehac editis seu Statutis vel Provisionibus quibusvis aliis in contrarium
-non obstantibus <b>Proviso</b> tamen quod iidem Typographi librorum Impressores
-et Bibliopole et singuli eorum extra obedienciam nostram heredum vel
-Successorum nostrorum oriundi omnia et omnimoda Custumas et Subsidia
-et alia debita et onera pro rebus et merchandizis suis extra Regnum Anglie
-traducendis vel in idem Regnum inducendis vt alienigene solvere teneantur
-et legibus Regni nostri Anglie sint obedientes <b>Eo quod</b> expressa mencio
-de vero valore annuo vel de certitudine premissorum sive eorum alicuius aut
-de aliis Donis sive Concessionibus per nos seu per aliquem Progenitorum
-sive Predecessorum nostrorum prefatis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus
-ante hec tempora facta in presentibus minime facta existit aut aliquo Statuto
-Actu Ordinacione Provisione Proclamacione sive Restriccione in contrarium
-inde antehac habitis factis editis ordinatis sive provisis aut aliqua
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>alia re causa vel materia quacunque in aliquo non obstante <b>In Cuius</b> rei
-testimonium has literas nostras fieri fecimus Patentes <b>Teste</b> me ipso apud
-Westmonasterium Duodecimo die Novembris Anno regni nostri octavo.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>per breve de privato Sigillo.&#8196; Wolseley.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>III.<br /> 1632/3, March 13.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>(Letters patent from Charles I, confirming the charter of 12 Nov. 1632,
-and further allowing each printer to have two presses and two apprentices,
-forbidding unauthorized reprints for 21 years. Printed from the original
-in the Oxford University Archives.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><b>Carolus Dei gratia Anglie Scocie</b> Francie et hibernie Rex fidei Defensor
-&amp;c. <b>Omnibus</b> ad quos presentes litere pervenerint salutem <b>Inspeximus</b>
-quasdam literas nostras Patentes magno Sigillo nostro Anglie Sigillatas
-Quarum tenor sequitur in hec verba Carolus dei gracia ... [&amp;c., as above,
-dated 12 Nov. 1632, ending] ... Anno regni nostri Octavo <b>Sciatis</b> quod nos
-de gracia nostra speciali ac ex certa scientia et mero motu nostris predictas
-literas Patentes et singula in eisdem contenta tam predictis Cancellario
-Magistris et Scholaribus quam Typographis librorum Impressoribus et
-Bibliopolis sub forma in eisdem literis Patentibus specificata designandis
-et constituendis tam presentibus quam futuris concedimus et confirmamus
-Volentes quod eorum singuli libertatibus et privilegiis in eisdem contentis
-plenarie gaudeant et vtantur <b>Volumus</b> eciam et pro nobis heredibus et
-Successoribus nostris concedimus eisdem Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus
-et Successoribus suis et Bibliopolis librorum Impressoribus et Typographis
-in vniversitate predicta designandis et constituendis vt predictum
-est dum moram trahunt et residentes sunt infra septum vel ambitum eiusdem
-vniversitatis quod liceat eorum cuilibet duo Prela seu Impressoria infra precincta
-predicta habere et occupare eisque vti in omnibus suis necessariis
-Decreto in Curia Camere Stellate Anno regni Domine Elizabethe nuper
-Regine Anglie vicesimo octavo [17 Nov. 1585–16 Nov. 1586] seu decreto
-quovis alio in contrarium in aliquo non obstante <b>Et</b> quod quilibet dictorum
-Typographorum librorum Impressorum et Bibliopolarum duos Apprenticios
-ad sibi deserviendum in arte et misterio predicto capere et conducere valeat
-Statutis in huiusmodi casu editis et provisis in aliquo non obstantibus <b>Ac</b>
-vt Magistri et Scholares eiusdem vniversitatis librorum exemplaria idiomatis
-diversi tam vernaculi quam peregrini in Bibliothecis in eadem Vniversitate
-hactenus latencia divulgare ac libros Concionum exemplaria et tractatus de
-novo componere et edere in religionis Christiane ac bonarum literarum et
-Artium incrementum incitentur Dictique Typographi et librorum Impressores
-labores et sumptus huiusmodi exemplaria ac libros typis mandandi et
-imprimendi subeant libencius <b>Sciatis</b> vlterius quod nos de vberiori gracia
-nostra speciali et ex certa scientia et mero motu nostris concessimus dictis
-Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus et Successoribus suis ac Typographis
-et librorum Impressoribus infra septum vel ambitum Vniversitatis predicte
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>pro tempore existentibus residentibus tam presentibus quam futuris in forma
-predicta designandis et constituendis Et tenore presencium pro nobis heredibus
-et Successoribus nostris volumus et concedimus quod quocies predictorum
-Typographorum seu librorum Impressorum quispiam exemplaria
-librorum Idiomatis cuiuscunque vernaculi vel peregrini ex Bibliotheca quavis
-infra Vniversitatem predictam desumpta preantea non excusa vel impressa
-Dummodo huiusmodi Exemplaria sub forma in predictis literis Patentibus
-specificata divulgari approbentur Typis mandare vel imprimere quod non
-liceat alicui cuiuscunque status vel condicionis infra Terminum viginti et
-vnius Annorum proximorum post huiusmodi exemplarium primam impressionem
-absque speciali licencia Cancellarii Magistrorum et Scholarium predictorum
-in scriptis prehabita imprimere seu reimprimere aut ab aliis imprimi
-seu reimprimi facere aut impressa aut reimpressa vendere venalia habere
-edere vel evulgare seu clam vel palam distrahere infra Diciones nobis
-vbicunque subiectas <b>Ac</b> de vberiori gracia nostra speciali ac ex certa
-scientia et mero motu nostris pro nobis heredibus et Successoribus nostris
-concessimus dictis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus et Successoribus
-suis ac Typographis et librorum Impressoribus infra septum vel ambitum
-vniversitatis predicte pro tempore existentibus residentibus tam presentibus
-quam futuris in forma predicta designandis et constituendis <b>Et volumus</b>
-tenore presencium quod quociescunque predictorum Typographorum vel
-librorum Impressorum quispiam Conciones tractatus vel libros per Magistrorum
-seu Scholarium predictorum quempiam de novo componendos et
-edendos Dummodo huiusmodi Conciones tractatus et libri vt prefertur
-approbentur Typis mandare vel imprimere quod non liceat alicui cuiuscunque
-status vel Condicionis infra decem Annos proximos post huiusmodi
-Concionum tractatuum vel librorum primam impressionem absque speciali
-licencia Cancellarii Magistrorum et Scholarium predictorum in scriptis prehabita
-imprimere seu reimprimere aut ab aliis imprimi seu reimprimi facere
-aut impressos vel reimpressos vendere venales habere edere vel evulgare seu
-clam vel palam distrahere infra Diciones nostras Typographis Bibliopolis
-librorum Impressoribus aliisque vniversis cuiuscunque Status vel Condicionis
-existant infra Diciones nostras vbicunque constitutis strictius inhibentes ne
-quis eorum infra seperatos Terminos decem Annorum et viginti et vnius
-Annorum proximorum post huiusmodi exemplarium Concionum tractatuum
-seu librorum primam Impressionem preter Typographos vel librorum Impressores
-in Vniversitate predicta vt predictum designandos et constituendos infra
-Diciones nostras imprimere seu reimprimere aut ab aliis imprimi seu reimprimi
-facere aut impressos vel reimpressos vendere venales habere edere vel
-evulgare seu clam vel palam infra Dominia nostra distrahere inducere vel
-importare sine licentia dictorum Cancellarii Magistrorum et Scholarium in
-Scriptis prius habita presumat sub pena Confiscacionis librorum huiusmodi
-preter Arbitrar, in mandata nostra contemnentes infligenda <b>Ac</b> eisdem Cancellario
-Magistris et Scholaribus damus et concedimus potestatem in locis
-quibusvis infra Dominia nostra in quibus iusta fuerit suspicionis causa libros
-excusos vel distractos contra tenorem Mandati nostri abscondi vel custodiri
-per seipsos vel Deputatos suos pacis Custode Constabulario vel Decennario eis
-asciociato scrutari et disquirere ac libros huiusmodi repertos capere ad loca
-publica ad vsum nostrum deferre ibidem remansuros quovsque vlterius in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>ea parte ordinatum fuerit <b>Mandantes</b> insuper vniversis et singulis vice-comitibus
-Custodibus pacis Maioribus Balliuis Constabulariis Decennariis
-Prepositis et Ministris quocies ex parte predictorum Cancellarii Magistrorum
-et Scholarium fuerint requisiti quod eis auxiliantes sint consulentes et presidio
-assistentes. <b>Eo quod</b> expressa mencio de vero valore annuo vel de
-certitudine premissorum sive eorum alicuius aut de aliis Donis sive Concessionibus
-per nos seu per aliquem Progenitorum sive Predecessorum
-nostrorum prefatis Cancellario Magistris et Scholaribus ante hec tempora
-facta in presentibus minime facta existit aut aliquo Statuto Actu Ordinacione
-Provisione Proclamacione sive Restriccione in contrarium inde antehac
-habito facto edito ordinato sive proviso aut aliqua alia re causa vel materia
-quacunque in aliquo non obstante <b>In Cuius</b> rei testimonium has literas
-nostras fieri fecimus Patentes <b>Teste</b> me ipso apud Westmonasterium Tertio-decimo
-die Marcii Anno regni nostri Octavo</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-r c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>per Breve de privato Sigillo Wolseley</div>
- <div class='line in8'>(with the Seal attached).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>IV.<br /> 1636/7, March 12.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>(An Indenture between the University of Oxford and the Stationers’
-Company, by which the former releases to the latter all its rights of
-printing Bibles &amp;c. for the term of three years from 16 Feb. 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, for
-the sum of £200 yearly. Printed from the original in the University
-Archives.)</p>
-
-<p class='c010'><b>This Indenture made</b> the Twentieth Day of March Anno Domini 1636
-And in the Twelueth yeare of the Raigne of our soueraigne Lord Charles by
-the grace of God of England Scotland France and Ireland King Defender
-of the faith &amp;c. <b>Betweene</b> the Chancellor Masters and Schollers of the
-vniuersity of Oxford of the one part And the Master and Keepers or
-Wardens and Communaltie of the Art or Mistery of Stationers of the Citty
-of London of the other part. <b>Whereas</b> by an Order made at whitehall the
-Ninth Day of March in the yeare of our Lord god 1635 by the Kings most
-excellent Maiestie and the right honorable the Lords and others of his
-highnes priuie Councell it is recyted that there had thentofore risen Diverse
-Debates and Controuersies betweene the vniuersitie of Cambridge and the
-Printers there And the Kings Printer and the Company of Stacioners in
-London for the printing of Diuers Bookes in regard of a Charter for printing
-graunted to the vniuersitie of Cambridge 26<sup>o</sup> Hen. 8<sup>o</sup> And that the same
-Controuersies and Contentions vpon seuerall Refferences from his Maiestie
-had byn setled by two Orders The one of the Tenth of December 1623 The
-other of the Sixteenth of Aprill 1629 And that in regard his Maiestie of his
-equall indulgence and grace to the vniuersitie of Oxford had graunted the
-like Charter for printing to the said vniuersitie of Oxford as was formerly
-graunted to the vniuersity of Cambridge It was that day ordered by the
-Board according to the Kings expresse pleasure declared That the vniuersitie
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>of Oxford and their Printers should for the time to Come enioy the benifitt
-of all the Articles and Clauses in the said Orders of the Tenth of December
-1623 And of the Sixteenth of Aprill 1629 As by the same Order made the
-said Ninth day of March relacion being therevnto had appeareth <b>Now
-this Indenture witnesseth</b> that the Chancellor Masters and Schollers of
-the said vniuersitie of Oxford for divers good Causes and Consideracions
-them therevnto moveing <b>Haue</b> given and graunted And by these presents
-doe give and graunt vnto the said Master and Keepers or Wardens and
-Comunaltie their Successors and assignes full power License Libertie and
-authority to print and Cause to be Imprinted All and euery such and such
-number of Bibles and other Bookes and things whatsoeuer now or heretofore
-vsed to be printed by the Kings Maiesties Printer And alsoe Lilies Grammers
-As the said Chancellors Masters and Schollers or their Printer or
-Printers of the said vniuersitie may might Could or ought to print or Comprint
-or cause to be Comprinted or imprinted by force or vertue of the said Three
-seuerall Orders before mencioned or any of them <b>To haue and to hould</b>
-the said power License Libertie and authoritie vnto the said Master and
-Keepers or Wardens and Comunalty and their Successors and Assignes
-from the Sixteenth Day of February last past for and During the Terme of
-Three yeares fully to be Compleat and ended <b>At vpon and vnder</b> the
-yearely Rent or Summe of Two hundred Poundes of Currant English money
-Payable at the Feasts of the Annunciacion of the Blessed Ladie St Marie
-the Virgin and of St Michaell Tharchangell by euen and equall porcions
-The first payment thereof to begin and to be made at and vpon the Fiue
-and Twentieth Day of this instant month of March or within Fifteene Dayes
-after either or any of the said Feasts or Dayes of payment <b>And the said</b>
-Chancellor Masters and Schollers doe for themselues and their Successors
-Couenant graunt and agree to and with the said Master and Keepers or
-Wardens and Comunaltie and their Successors and Assignes by these presents
-That neither the printers of the said vniuersitie of Oxford nor any of
-them nor any person or persons whatsoeuer by or vpon any License or
-authoritie deriued or to be deriued from or given or graunted by the said
-Chauncellor Masters and Schollers other then the said Master and Keepers
-or Wardens and Communalty their Successors and Assignes shall or will at
-any tyme or tymes hereafter within or During the said Terme of Three
-yeares print or Comprint or Cause permit or suffer to be imprinted or Comprinted
-any Booke Bookes or parcell of Booke Bookes Copies or things
-whatsoeuer in the said Orders or any or either of them mencioned or which
-they the said Chancellor Masters and Schollers or their Printers may or
-might print or Comprint by force or vertue of the said Orders or any or
-either of them <b>And the said</b> Master and Keepers or Wardens and
-Comunaltie doe for themselues and their Successors Couenaunt graunt and
-agree to and with the said Chancellor Masters and Schollers and their
-Successors by these presents That they the said Master and Keepers or
-Wardens and Comunaltie and their Successors shall and will well and truely
-pay the said Two hundred pound in manner and forme and at the daies and
-tymes before lymited and expressed for the payment thereof vnto the said
-Chancellor Masters and Schollers <b>And lastly</b> it is mutually Couenanted
-graunted and promised by and betweene the said parties to these presents
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>and their successors respectively That vpon and at the tyme of the Expiration
-of the said Terme of Three yeares They and either of them shall and will
-renue Continue and then make and Conclude such and the like amicable
-Composicion and agreement And vpon such termes rates and proposicions
-as are herein Conteyned and expressed for soe long tyme after and vntill it
-shall be reasonably agreed on both parts to relinquish the same <b>In witnes</b>
-whereof to the one part of these present Indentures remayning with the said
-Master and Keepers or wardens and Comunalty of the said Art or mistery
-of Stacioners of the saide Citty of London The said Chancellor Masters and
-Schollers of the said vniuersity of Oxford haue sett their Comon seale And
-to the other parte of these present Indentures remayning with the said
-Chancellor Masters and Schollers of the said vniuersitie of Oxford The said
-Master and Keepers or wardens and Comunaltie of the said Art or mistery
-of Stacioners of the said Citty of London haue sett their Comon seale The
-Day and yeares first aboue written</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Delivered as the Deede of the Stationers of London for the vse of the
-Chancellors M<sup>rs</sup> and Schollars of the Vniversitie of Oxford 31<sup>o</sup> Martij
-1637. By the Warden of the sayd Companie in the presence of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c025'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in8'>John French</div>
- <div class='line in8'>John Thimble</div>
- <div class='line in8'>G. Locksmyth</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>[with a fragment of the seal]</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>[With this Indenture is an agreement of the same date that if more
-than £200 a year be agreed to be paid to the University of Cambridge
-for a similar suspension of rights a correspondingly increased sum will
-be paid to the University of Oxford.]</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c001'>A precisely similar indenture and agreement dated 12 Aug. 1639
-renew the deeds of 1636 for a second term of three years from 17 Feb.
-1639/40, under the same conditions.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>V.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>(Tit. xviii, Sect. v. of the Laudian Statutes of the University, 1636,
-printed from Griffiths’ and Shadwell’s edition, Oxford, 1888; with ae for
-æ. It would appear that no Architypographus was appointed till 1658.)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='sc'>De Typographis Universitatis.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>Cum Sereniss. <span class='sc'>Rex Carolus</span> eius nominis Primus, pro eo affectu quo
-Literas ac Literatos fovet, Privilegia Universitatis, quoad rem Typographicam
-nimis antehac arctata, mirum in modum amplificaverit; ne Clementiss.
-Regis indulgentia sordidi ac illiberales Artifices ad privatum suum quaestum
-abutantur: Statutum est, quod nullus Typographus in posterum his Privilegiis
-aut titulo Typographi Universitatis nostrae gaudebit, nisi qui in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>Admissione sua singulis Statutis et Ordinationibus circa regimen Typographorum,
-per Domum Convocationis factis, vel in posterum edendis, se
-submiserit.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Quoniam vero in re Typographica usu compertum est, Mechanicos hosce
-Artifices (lucri sui compendium cum dispendio operis plerumque sectantes)
-Calligraphiae seu Operis decori et elegantiae minime studere, sed opera
-quaeque rudia ac inemendata in publicam lucem extrudere; Idcirco praesenti
-Statuto cautum esto, quod publicae Universitatis Typographiae, instruendae
-in Domo aliqua huic usui specialiter deputata, praeficiatur Architypographus
-unus, Vir Graecis Latinisque literis probe instructus, et in studiis Philologicis
-versatissimus: Cuius munus erit, Operis Typographicis ibidem praeesse;
-materiam sive supellectilem typographicam (Chartam scilicet, Praela, Typos,
-et alia huius Opificii instrumenta) ut sint in suo quaeque genere lectissima
-providere. In Operibus e publica Universitatis Typographia prodeuntibus,
-Typorum modulum, Chartae qualitatem, Marginum mensuram praescribere;
-Correctorum errata emendare; et alia quaecunque, ad Operis ornatum et
-perfectionem spectantia, sedulo curare. Cui muneri quo alacrius et liberius
-vacet, (praeter certam portionem lucri e libris impressis provenientis, ipsi
-posthaec, pro ratione symbolae quam ad publicae Typographiae peculium
-seu sortem communem contulerit, assignandam ab iis qui a Domo Convocationis
-ad ordinanda Statuta Typographica delegandi erunt,) Officium superioris
-Bedelli in Iure Civili, (utpote reliquis minus negotiosum,) quandocunque
-primum quoquo modo vacaverit, perpetuo in posterum annectendum fore
-praesenti Statuto cautum esto.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX E.<br /> <span class='large'>WOODCUT ORNAMENTS, TYPE, ETC.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<h3 class='c008'>A. <i>Woodcut and Metal Ornaments.</i> 1585–1640.</h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>Of these there are two classes, the first large and used for the centre
-of titlepages or with conspicuous colophons (these I term <i>Devices</i>), the
-other smaller ornaments, used for borders, or to mark the beginning
-or end of a chapter, or generally for decorative purposes: these I call
-<i>Woodcuts</i>. The descriptions which follow are not intended to be fuller
-than is sufficient to distinguish the more important. The measurements
-(as always) are the least possible, and not the full size of the plate or
-block.</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>I. <i>Devices.</i></h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>Of these there are, in the period under review, fourteen:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>A. 3<span class='fraction'>11<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 2⅞ in. On a shield the arms of the University (with motto <span class='fss'>SAP</span>i<span class='fss'>EN</span>|<span class='fss'>T</span>i<span class='fss'>AE:</span> |
-<span class='fss'>ET.</span> | <span class='fss'>FEL</span>i|<span class='fss'>C</span>i<span class='fss'>TA</span>|<span class='fss'>T</span>i<span class='fss'>S.</span> | ), within a border bearing <span class='fss'>ACADE=</span>|<span class='fss'>MIA.</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONI=</span>|<span class='fss'>ENSIS.</span> |
-At the corners are two females and two satyrs.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1585–93, 1597–1600, and at intervals till 1635, but not from 1625 to 1633.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>B. 1⅞ × 1⅝ in. A metal engraving. In centre the arms of the University, with</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='brt c045'>Sa<br />Pi</td>
- <td class='c045'>et<br />Fe,</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c010'>within a ribbon bearing <span class='fss'>ACADEMIA OXONIENSIS.</span> Above and on each side
-and below are female figures with emblems and scrolls, and underneath all <span class='fss'>IOSEPH’
-BARNESIUS.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used only in 1591. (Barne and Tacitus.)</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>B<i>a</i>. 1<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 1¾ in. A wood engraving from B, omitting Barnes’s name: the motto
-is</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='brt c045'><span class='fss'>SA</span><br /><span class='fss'>PI</span></td>
- <td class='c045'>et<br />F:</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c010'>and there are other small changes.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1627–8, 1630–33, 1635–7, 1640.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>C. 1¼ × 1<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. An ornamental shield, with the arms of the University, the legend
-being</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='brt c045'><span class='fss'>SA</span><br /><span class='fss'>PI</span><br /><span class='fss'>ET</span></td>
- <td class='c045'><span class='fss'>FE</span><br /><span class='fss'>LI</span><br /><span class='fss'>CI:</span></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c010'>at the sides <span class='fss'>AC:</span> and <span class='fss'>OX.</span> There is a defect (a short line omitted)
-on one shoulder, which serves to distinguish it from H.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used at intervals from 1592 to 1638.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>There is a counterfeit of this used in London printing of at least 1616 and 1624:
-see pp. <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>, and H, below.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>D. 1<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> + in. squ. A nine-spoked wheel with two mottos “Omnia subiacent vicissitudini,”
-and “Sola virtus cadere non potest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1592–3, 1620, 1629.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'><span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>E. 1¼ × 1<span class='fraction'>1<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. An ornamental shield with the Royal Arms, and at the sides E:
-and R.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1594.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>F. 1<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 1<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. An ornamental shield with the arms of New College between
-two W&thinsp;s (William of Wykeham).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1598, 1605.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>G. 1¾ in. squ. A circular watch-face, with “Donec dies est . Iohan: 9.4”, and
-figures: for John Day of Oriel.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1614–5, 1620.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>H. 1<span class='fraction'>5<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 1⅜. Similar to C, but slightly larger. Perhaps a London counterfeit.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1616 and 1624.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>I. 2¼ × 1<span class='fraction'>15<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. In centre the arms of the University on a white shield with</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='brt c045'><span class='fss'>SAP</span><br /><span class='fss'>IEN</span><br /><span class='fss'>TJA</span></td>
- <td class='c045'><span class='fss'>FEL</span><br /><span class='fss'>ICIT</span><br /><span class='fss'>ATIS</span>,</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c010'>and round it a band with <span class='fss'>ACADE</span>|<span class='fss'>MIA.</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONI=</span>|<span class='fss'>ENSIS.</span> At the corners
-are two winged figures, a rose and a thistle.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1628, and at intervals till 1637, by Turner only.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>J. 2⅝ × 2<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> in. An Agnus Dei; beneath it “<span class='fss'>IOH</span> : 1 : 26” and “<span class='fss'>ECCE AGN’</span> |
-<span class='fss'>DEI</span>”, a text round it.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1628.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>K. 1<span class='fraction'>7<br /><span class='ov'>16</span></span> × 1⅜. The arms of the University, with the motto</p>
-
-<table class='table2' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='brt c045'><span class='fss'>SAP</span><br /><span class='fss'>IENC</span><br /><span class='fss'>TIA</span></td>
- <td class='c045'><span class='fss'>.ET</span><br /><span class='fss'>FELI</span><br /><span class='fss'>CIT</span><br /><span class='fss'>ATE</span>,</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='c010'>and round
-it <span class='fss'>ACADEMIA.</span> | <span class='fss'>OXONIESIS</span>, a cherub above.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1630–4, 1636–8, 1640: in and after 1634 the <span class='fss'>ATE</span> is altered to <span class='fss'>ATIS</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>L. 3½ × 2⅜ in. The arms of Great Britain and Ireland, crowned, with “C.”, “R.”
-at sides of crown.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1636.</p>
-
-<p class='c044'>M. 4½ × 3⅜. A Tree of Knowledge, boys plucking fruit, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>Used in 1636 (Lily’s Grammar).</p>
-
-<h4 class='c036'>II. <i>Woodcuts.</i></h4>
-
-<p class='c019'>These are 142 in number (not counting <i>plain</i> woodcut capitals), of
-which 32 were used by Barnes. Most of these passed on to his successors,
-who augmented them. In 1627 the two University printers
-printed separately, and John Lichfield took the larger number for himself,
-a few being used in common. It would be idle to print a complete list
-of these, but the writer has full notes of the occurrence of all that are
-found in each book. Twelve are alphabets, fifteen frames within which
-any capital could be placed, and four are arched borders.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>B. <i>Type.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>The following table exhibits the use made of different type by Oxford
-printers 1585–1640, but applies only to the chief type of the body of the
-work. Thus Pica Greek is the chief type of a book in 1591 at earliest,
-but it is found occasionally in 1587, and Long Primer Greek in 1585.
-So too Great Primer Greek is used in 1624, 9. And Hebrew type is
-used sporadically from 1596 on (Long Primer, Pica and English, pointed
-and unpointed: see 1596, 8 &amp; 9; 1601, 2; 1602, 3; &amp;c.)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span><span class='sc'>Oxford Type.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='type'>
-
-<table class='table2' summary='Oxford Type.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c035'></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c034'>&nbsp;</th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1585</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1590</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1595</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1600</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1605</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1610</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1615</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1620</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1625</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1630</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033' colspan='5'><b>1635</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt brt c033'><b>1640</b></th>
- <th class='btt bbt c033'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c033' colspan='2'><b>English:</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Long Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Pica</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Great Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c033' colspan='2'><b>Roman:</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Minion</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Brevier</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>5</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Long Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='c033'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Pica</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>12½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>15½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>9½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>10</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>14</td>
- <td class='c033'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>8</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>English</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>8½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>10</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='c033'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>9</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Great Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2½</td>
- <td class='c033'>9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>10</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Double Pica</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>10</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c033' colspan='2'><b>Italic:</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>11</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Long Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>12</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Pica</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>13</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>English</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='c033'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>14</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Great Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='c033'>14</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt brt c033' colspan='2'><b>Greek:</b></td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>15</td>
- <td class='brt c034'>Long Primer</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>½</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c033'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>16</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c034'>Pica</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1½</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>1</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c033'>16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c033' colspan='58'>The above table has reference only to the chief type of the body of the book.</td>
- <td class='bbt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c034' colspan='2'>Number of books or pieces printed at Oxford</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>11</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>4</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>8</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>11</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>3</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>12</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>11</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>10</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>13</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>8</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>10</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>17</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>2</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>24</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>26</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>17</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>8</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>6</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>5</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>8</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>24</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>14</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>22</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>19</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>14</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>32</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>9</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>34</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>21</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>16</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>18</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>24</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>23</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>20</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033'>26</td>
- <td class='bbt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt brt c033' colspan='2'>Average</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033' colspan='5'>8</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033' colspan='10'>7</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033' colspan='10'>10</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033' colspan='10'>12</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033' colspan='10'>12</td>
- <td class='bbt brt c033' colspan='11'>21</td>
- <td class='bbt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>The ordinary size (<i>now</i>) of the type used in the Oxford Press from
-1585 to 1640 is as follows, see p. <a href='#Page_144'>144</a> (1629, no. 4):—</p>
-<div class='block'>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <th class='c014'><i>Name.</i></th>
- <th class='c021'><i>Lines in one foot.</i></th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Nonpareil</td>
- <td class='c046'>144</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Minion</td>
- <td class='c046'>120</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Brevier</td>
- <td class='c046'>about 110</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Long Primer</td>
- <td class='c046'>90</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Pica</td>
- <td class='c046'>72</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>English</td>
- <td class='c046'>64</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Great Primer</td>
- <td class='c046'>51</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Double Pica (which is double “<i>small</i> Pica”)</td>
- <td class='c046'>41</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Canon</td>
- <td class='c046'>20</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-<p class='c001'>The old measures make the type of all these very slightly smaller
-than the above measurements.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>C. <i>Notanda.</i></h3>
-
-<p class='c019'>It is curious to observe the small points which break the smooth
-course of ordinary printing in these earlier times, some of them marking
-progress, some a perturbation in the office, some stupidity. The following
-are random notes of some bibliographical interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>1. The change of use in the case of <i>u</i> and <i>v</i> (<i>Vniuersity</i> being the old spelling, and
-<i>University</i> the new) may be remarked in progress in 1589, no. 5, and is practically
-completed by 1610. But a capital U is not found at all in the period dealt with, its
-place being in a few cases supplied by a large lower-case u.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>2. For “at Oxford” the common Latin is <i>Oxoniæ</i>, but <i>Oxonii</i> occurs sporadically.
-<i>Bellositi Dobunorum</i> occurs in 1628: and <i>Rhydychen</i> (in Welsh books) in 1595, 1600.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>3. In 1588 (no. 8) we first find an Oxford <i>édition de luxe</i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>4. The state of the office is shown by 1595, no. 4 (small stock of type); 1601,
-no. 2 (Hebrew words sometimes transliterated, sometimes in Hebrew type: yet in
-1603, no. 2, there is a complaint of the want of Hebrew type!); 1625, no. 16 (one
-sheet in different type); 1628, no. 16 (carelessness).</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>5. Red ink is found in 14<span class='fraction'>79<br /><span class='ov'>80</span></span>, 1628, 1631, 1633 and thereafter; and gold-printing in
-1633.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>6. Curiosities of workmanship will be found in 1629, no. 14; 1631, nos. 10, 17;
-1633, nos. 26, 33; 1634, no. 9; 1635, no. 3; 1636, no. 15 (signatures); 1638, nos. 3,
-17 (do.); 1640, no. 24: and eccentricity on the author’s part in 1631, no. 29; 1633,
-no. 9 (phonetic spelling); 1635, no. 10. In 1613 no. 29 (Rainolds) on the first two
-pages of each section the headline is “prophecy”, but on every other page it is “prophecie”.
-1634 no. 17 (Statuta) is a true folio, in every sense in which the word is used.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>7. The number of books or editions issued at Oxford is roughly as follows:—15th
-cent., 15: early 16th cent., 7: 1585–1600, 125: 1601–1620, 230: 1621–1640, 370:
-total, about 750. In the 17th cent. about 2700 were issued: in the 18th, about 2100:
-in the first three quarters of the 19th, about 6500. The number from “1468” to 1900
-may be estimated as likely to be about 16000.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>8. Of the Oxford books issued from “1468” to 1640, the British Museum contains
-less than 70 per cent., and the Bodleian about 80 per cent. The following calculation
-is not far from the truth:—</p>
-<div class='block c020'>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Oxford books in Brit. Mus. and Bodl.</td>
- <td class='c014'>about</td>
- <td class='c046'>450</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Oxford books in Brit. Mus. only</td>
- <td class='c014'>"</td>
- <td class='c046'>50</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Oxford books in Bodl. only</td>
- <td class='c014'>"</td>
- <td class='c046'>150</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>Oxford books in neither library</td>
- <td class='c014'>"</td>
- <td class='c046'>100</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c046'><hr /></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c014'>Total</td>
- <td class='c014'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c046'>750</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>APPENDIX F.<br /> <span class='large'>IMPRINTS.</span><br /> <span class='c047'><span class='sc'>Lists and Tables of Oxford Imprints, 1585–1640.</span></span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The following tables and lists explain themselves. They give a detailed
-picture of the mutual relations of Oxford and London printers and
-publishers, and the development of the Oxford book trade. It will be
-noticed how the archaisms (<i>Imprinted at Oxford by</i>, or <i>At Oxford,
-printed by</i>, &amp;c.) are gradually worn off, with the rhetorical descriptions
-(such as <i>celeberrimæ Academiæ typographus</i>), and the use of colophons.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In some cases we find fictitious imprints, as in 1602, nos. 5, 11, 1611
-(see impr. 7<i>a</i>), 1612 (impr. 7), 1613 (impr. 32), 1616 (impr. 35), 1626
-(impr. 67). The number of books with no printer’s or publisher’s name
-is small (see impr. 107, and Appendix, p. 151 (Stanley)), and of <i>books</i> with
-no imprint at all there are very few instances, see 1586, 12; 1602, 8 and
-9; 1603, 5; 1606, 5; 1622, 6; 1625, 9; 1635, 13.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the list which follows the spelling is modernized, the form alone is
-exact.</p>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1585.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>Joseph Barnes</i>, 1585–1617.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>1.</b> Oxoniæ, ex officina typographica Josephi Barnesii celeberrimæ Academiæ Oxoniensis typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1585 (also as a colophon).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>1 <i>a</i>. (Omitting <i>typographica</i> and <i>Oxoniensis</i>).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1589, 1591.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>2.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, printer to the University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1585–6, 1592–4, 1598, 1603, 1606–9, 1615–16.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>2 <i>a</i>. ... printer to that famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1585, 1594.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>2 <i>b</i>. ... printer to the famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1586.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>2 <i>c</i>. Omitting “at.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1603.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span><b>3.</b> Oxoniæ, ex ædibus Josephi Barnes.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1585.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>4.</b> Imprinted [or Printed] at Oxford [or Oxenford] by Joseph Barnes, printer to the University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1585 (also as colophon), 1586, 1591, 1599, 1615.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>4 <i>a</i>. Adding “famous” before “University”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1585.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1586.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>5.</b> Oxoniæ (or -ii), ex officina typographica Josephi Barnesii.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1586–7, 1590, 1592, 1597, 1608.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>5 <i>a</i>. Omitting <i>typographica</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1596, 1598.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>5 <i>b</i>. With <i>typographica</i> the last word.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1598.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>6.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Tiger’s head.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1586–9, 1591–2, 1595.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>6 <i>a</i>. ... at the Tiger’s head.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1587.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>6 <i>b</i>. Imprinted at Oxford by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Tiger’s head.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1588–9.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>7.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1586, 1594, 1603–4, 1607–9, 1610–12 [once as a fictitious imprint], 1613–15.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>7 <i>a</i>. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1588, 1592, 1597, 1599, 1605, 1608–10, 1611 (a false imprint), 1613–15.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>7 <i>b</i>. Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1608.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>8.</b> Excudebat Josephus Barnesius typographus Oxoniensis.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>[1586].</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>9.</b> Oxoniæ, ex officina Josephi Barnesii, et veneunt in cœmeterio Paulino sub signo capitis Tigerini.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1586.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>9*.</b> Impressas en Oxford por Ioseph Barnes, en el año de salud <span class='fss'>M.D.L.XXXVI</span>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1586.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1587.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>10.</b> Oxoniæ, typis Iosephi Barnesii.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1587.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>11.</b> Oxonii (or -iæ), excudebat Iosephus Barnesius.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1587–88, 1590, 1592–96, 1598–99, 1601–17.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>11 <i>a</i>. With <i>Oxoniæ</i> last.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1599.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1589.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>12.</b> Printed by Joseph Barnes, printer ... are to be sold at the Tiger’s head i...</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1589.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1590.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>13.</b> Oxonii, excudebat Josephus Barnesius celeberrimæ Academiæ Typographus.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1590.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>13 <i>a</i>. Omitting Oxonii, and adding <i>Oxoniensis</i> after <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1592.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>13 <i>b</i>. With “Oxoniæ”, and “almæ” for “celeberrimæ.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1602–3.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>13 <i>c</i>. With “Oxoniæ,” and omitting “celeberrimæ.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1615, 1617.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1591.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>Richard Wright</i>, of London, 1591.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>14.</b> Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, for Richard Wright. Cum Privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1591.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>15.</b> Oxoniæ. In officinâ Josephi Barnesii.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1591.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1592.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>16.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Josephus Barnesius, væneunt cum Oxoniæ, tum ad caput Tigridis ad Divi Pauli Londinensium.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1592.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1595.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>17.</b> Joseph Barnes ai printiodd yn Rhydychen.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1595.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1596.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>18.</b> Oxoniæ, apud Josephum Barnesium.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1596, 1605.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>19.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Bible.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1596, 1600–1.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>19 <i>a</i>. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Bible.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1597, 1599, 1600.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>20.</b> Oxoniæ, ex officina typographica Iosephi Barnesii, et veneunt Londini in Cœmeterio D. Pauli, ad insigne Bibliæ (or <i>Bibl.</i>).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1596–7.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1598.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>21.</b> Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, for R. H. [i.e. Richard Haydocke].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1598.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1602.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>John Barnes</i>, of London, 1602–16.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>22.</b> Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John Barnes at the Turk’s Head in Fleet Street [London].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1602.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>23.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Fleet Street [London] at the sign of the Turk’s Head, by John Barnes.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1602 (Powel: <i>fictitious imprint</i>): 1602–3.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>24.</b> At Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, printer to the University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1602 (Higins: <i>fictitious imprint</i>): 1602.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1603.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>Simon Waterson</i>, of London, 1603–6.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>25.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard [London] at the signe of the Crown, by Simon Waterson.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1603–5.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>25 <i>a</i>. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes ... [&amp;c. as above.]</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1604–6.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1605.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>26.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Jos. Barnesius, prostant Londini apud Simonem Waterson in Cæmeterio Ædis Paulinæ.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1605.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>27.</b> At Oxford ¶ Printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John Barnes, dwelling without Newgate [London] by S. Sepulchre’s Church, at the signe of Paris.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1605.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1606.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>28.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Josephus Barnesius, &amp; veneunt Londini apud Simonem Watersonum in cœmeterio Paulino ad signum Coronæ.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1606.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1612.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>29.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John Barnes, dwelling near Holborn Conduit [London].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1612–13 (also <i>fictitious</i>).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>29 <i>a</i>. Printed at Oxford, by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John Barnes, dwelling near Holborn Conduit.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1613 (also <i>fictitious</i>).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>30.</b> Printed at Oxford, for John Barnes, dwelling near Holborn Conduit.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1612.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1613.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>31.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Josephus Barnesius, &amp; Londini væneunt apud Johannem Barnesium propè aquȩductum Holborniensem.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1613.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>32.</b> At Oxford, printed for John Barnes, and are to be sold near Holborn Conduit.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1613 (<i>fictitious</i>).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1614.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>33.</b> At Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, and are to be sold by John Barnes, over against St. Pulcher’s Church.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1614.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1616.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>34.</b> Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, for John Barnes.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1616 (<i>perh. fictitious</i>).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>35.</b> Oxford, printed by Joseph Barnes, for John Barnes, dwelling in Hosier Lane, near Smithfield.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1616 (<i>fictitious</i>).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1617.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>John Lichfield</i>, 1617–35. <i>William Wrench</i>, 1617.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>36.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Wrench, printers to the famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1617.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>37.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Gulielmus Wrench.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1617 (<i>excudebat</i> once, in <i>Jacobi Ara</i>).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>38.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Wrench.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1617.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1618.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>James Short</i>, 1618–24.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>39.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, printers to the famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1618–19: (without “At”) 1620: (with “At”) 1621–24.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>40.</b> Oxoniæ (or -ii), excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Jacobus Short.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1618–22, 1624.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Simon Jackson</i>, 1618.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>41.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Jacobus Short, propter Simonem Jackson.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1618.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1619.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>42.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Jacobus Short, Academiæ typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1619–20, 1623–24.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>42 <i>a</i>. Adding <i>Oxoniensis</i> after <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1622.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>William Spier</i>, 1619.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>43.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for William Spier.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1619.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>44.</b> Printed at Oxford, by John Lichfield and James Short, printers to the University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1619.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>44 <i>a</i>. With “At Oxford” first.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>45.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1619, 1622, 1624.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1620.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>Henry Cripps</i>, 1620–39. <i>John Pyper</i>, of London, 1620.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>46.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for Henry Cripps, and are to be sold by John Pyper in Paules Churchyard, at the sign of the Cross Keys.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1620.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>47.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant I. L. &amp; I. S. Academiæ Typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1620, 1623.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>48.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for Henry Cripps.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1620–21, 1623–24.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1622.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>William Davis</i>, bookseller, 1622–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>49.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and James Short, for William Davis, bookseller.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1622.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>49 <i>a</i>. (Omitting “bookseller”).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1624 (?).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1624.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>William Turner</i>, 1624–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>50.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1624–5.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>W. Jaggard</i>, of London, 1624.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>51.</b> London, printed by W. Jaggard, for W. Turner of Oxford.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1624.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1625.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>52.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, for Henry Cripps.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>53.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Guilielmus Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625–27 (Gulielmus), 1633 (Guliel.).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>54.</b> Printed for Henry Cripps of Oxford.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625 (<i>pr. in London</i>).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Thomas Huggins</i>, 1625–36.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>55.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, and are to be sold by W. Turner and T. Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>56.</b> Oxford, printed by I. L. and W. T. for William Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Elias Peerse</i>, 1625–39.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>57.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, printers to the famous University, for Elias Peerse.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>58.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, printers to the famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625–27.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>58 <i>a</i>. With <i>At</i> Oxford.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Edward Forrest</i>, 1625–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>59.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, for Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625–26.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>60.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield et Guilielmus Turner, Academiæ typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625–27.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>60 <i>a</i>. Adding <i>celeberrimæ</i> before <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>61.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner, printers to the famous University, for Henry Cripps.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Henry Curteyne</i>, 1625–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>62.</b> Imprinted for Henry Cripps and Henry Curteyne at Oxford.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1625 (<i>pr. in London</i>).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1626.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>63.</b> Oxford, Printed by J. L. and W. T.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1626.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>64.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant Johannes Lichfield &amp; Guilielmus Turner, impensis Guilielmi Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1626.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span><b>65.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant J. L. &amp; W. T., impensis Thomæ Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1626.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>66.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield and William Turner for Wi. Turner, Th. Huggins, and Ed. Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1626.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Walter Map</i>, pseudonym, 1626.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>67.</b> Oxonii apud Gualtherum Mapes, Academiae Bidellum [<span class='sc'>printed in Holland</span>].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1626.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1627.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>68.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627–28, 1630; 1631; 1635.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>68 <i>a</i>. With “At Oxford, imprinted ...”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>68 <i>b</i>. With “At Oxford printed ...”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633 or later.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>68 <i>c</i>. Omitting <i>famous</i>, and adding <i>Cum Privilegio</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>68 <i>d</i>. Adding <i>Cum Privilegio</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636–37.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>69.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627–28 (with “Oxon.”), 1631, 1633 (with “Oxonii”), 1633, 1634 (with “Oxonii”), 1636 (“Oxonii” and “G. Turner”), 1637, 1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>70.</b> Oxford, printed for Henry Cripps [by L. Lichfield].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627–28, 1632, 1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>71.</b> Oxford, printed by I. L. and W. T., for William Turner and Thomas Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>72.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, Academiæ Typographus.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627–1629, 1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>72 <i>a</i>. Adding <i>celeberrimæ</i> before <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628–29, 1634, 1639 with Oxonii.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>72 <i>b</i>. Adding <i>cum Privilegio</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>72 <i>c</i>. Adding <i>celeberrimæ</i> after <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>72 <i>d</i>. With “Oxoniæ ex officina Guilielmi Turneri, Academiæ typographi.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>73.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, Academiæ Typographus.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627, 1633 (with Oxonii), 1634–35.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>73 <i>a</i>. Adding <i>almæ</i> before <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630–32.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>73 <i>b</i>. Adding <i>florentissimæ</i> before <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634 (as colophon).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>74.</b> Oxoniæ, impensis Thomæ Huggins &amp; Henrici Curteyn [by W. Turner].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1627.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>
- <h3 class='c008'>1628.</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>75.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, for Henry Cripps.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628 (colophon), 1632 (colophon).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>75 <i>a</i>. Prefixing <i>At</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Philemon Stephens</i>, of London, 1628.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Christopher Meredith</i>, of London, 1628.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>76.</b> Printed at Oxford, 1628. And are to be sold by Ph. Stephens and Ch. Meredith at the Golden Lion in Paul’s Churchyard.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>William Webbe</i>, 1628–39.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>77.</b> Oxford, printed [by John Lichfield] for William Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>78.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, for William Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628–29.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>79.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, for Henry Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>80.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous University, and are to be sold by Henry Curteine.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>81.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the University, and are to be sold by William Web.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>82.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628, 1631, 1633, 1635.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>82 <i>a</i>. Imprinted at Oxford by John Lichfield. Cum privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1632.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>83.</b> Bellositi Dobunorum, excudebat W. T., impensis W. W.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>84.</b> Oxford (or, At Oxford), printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, and are to be sold by Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>84 <i>a</i>. Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, for Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630–32.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>84 <i>b</i>. As 84, omitting <i>famous</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634<a id='r18' /><a href='#f18' class='c007'><sup>[18]</sup></a>.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>85.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628, 1630.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>85 <i>a</i>. (Omitting “At”).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629, 1631, 1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'><span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>85 <i>b</i>. (With “that” for “the”).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>85 <i>c</i>. As 85 <i>a</i>, with “Cum Privilegio.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>85 <i>d</i>. As 85, omitting “At” and “famous,” and putting “imprinted” for “printed.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634 (as colophon).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>85 <i>e</i>. As 85, except “Printed at Oxford,” and omitting “famous.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634 (as colophon).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Thomas Butler</i>, 1628.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>86.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the University, and are to be sold by Thomas Butler.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>87.</b> Oxoniæ (or, Oxonii), impensis Gulielmi Webb bibliopolæ [by L. Lichfield?].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1628, 1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>87 <i>a</i>. Omitting <i>bibliopolæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631, 1636, 1638.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1629.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>Robert Allott</i>, of London, 1629–33.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>88.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, &amp; veneunt per Robertum Allott, Londinensem, in Cœmiterio Pauli.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>89.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, for E. Forrest and W. Webbe.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>90.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, Academiæ typographus, impensis Henrici Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>91.</b> Oxford, printed by I. L. for Henry Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>92.</b> Oxoniæ, recudebat Johannes Lichfield, et væneunt apud Eliam Pearse.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>93.</b> Oxford, printed by I. L.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629, 1632.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>94.</b> At Oxford, printed by W. Turner for Henry Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>94 <i>a</i>. Omitting “At”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>95.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield. Cum privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>95 <i>a</i>. Omitting <i>cum privilegio</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634–35.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>96.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, impensis Guilielmi Davis.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629, 1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span><b>97.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the University, for Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>97 <i>a</i>. Adding “famous” before <i>University</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629–34.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>98.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis authoris.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629, 1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>98 <i>a</i>. Adding “cum licentia &amp; permissu.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Henry Seale</i>, of London, 1629.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>99.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, Printer to the University, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard at the sign of the Tiger’s Head by Henry Seale.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>100.</b> Oxford, printed by W. T. for William Turner and Thomas Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>101.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat J. Lichfield, impensis Edvardi Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1629.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1630<a id='r19' /><a href='#f19' class='c007'><sup>[19]</sup></a>.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>102.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, for Robert Allot, and are to be sold in Paul’s Churchyard.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>103.</b> Printed by W. T. for Robert Allot.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630 (a 2nd title).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>104.</b> Oxoniæ, impensis Guilielmi Turner, celeberrimæ Academiæ typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>105.</b> Oxoniæ, typis Joh. Lichfield, impensis Hen. Curteine.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630–31.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>105 <i>a</i>. Substituting “excudebat” for “typis”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>106.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner for Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>107.</b> Printed at Oxford for the Author [by Leonard Lichfield].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630–31.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>108.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, printer to the famous University, for Thomas Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1630–31.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1631.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>109.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, propriis impensis.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631, 1637 (in secondary title the name of place is omitted in both years).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>109 <i>a</i>. With ipsius impensis; and “Cum Privilegio” added.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span><b>110.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner Academiæ celeberrimæ typographus, impensis Thomæ Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>111.</b> Oxoniæ, apud Johannem Lichfield Academiæ typographum pro Gulielmo Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>112.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat G. T. Academiæ celeberrimæ typographus, impensis Guilielmi Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>112 <i>a</i>. Oxonij excud. G. T. Academiæ Typographus impensis Guil. Webb. Biblio[<i>engraved: -polæ</i> is omitted.]</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>113.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, almæ Academiæ typographus, impensis Thomæ Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>113 <i>a</i>. Omitting <i>almæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>114.</b> Oxoniæ, pro Guiliel(mo) Turner et Th(oma) Huggins [by W. Turner].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Michael Spark</i>, of London, 1631.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>115.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, for Michael Sparke, dwelling in Greene Arbor [London].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>116.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner for Michael Sparke.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>117.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat W. T., impensis Ed. Forrest &amp; Hen. Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>118.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Jo. Lichfield, impensis Guil. Davis, &amp; Ed. Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>119.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631–34, 1637–40.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>120.</b> Oxford, printed for William Turner, and Henry Curteyn, and are to be sold in Greene Arbor at the sign of the Blew Bible by Mich. Sparkes [by W. Turner].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>121.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Henrici Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631, 1637 (with Oxonii), 1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>121 <i>a</i>. With “Cum Privilegio”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634 (Oxonii).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>122.</b> Oxford, printed by W. T. and are to be sold by M. S[parke] at the Blew Bible in Greene Arbor [London].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631 (engraved).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>See 143 <i>a</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1632.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>123.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield, impensis Henrici Cripps. Cum Privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1632.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span><b>124.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, and are to be sold by Thomas Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1632.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1633.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>125.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, for the author [C. Butler].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633–34.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>126.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633–35.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>127.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield printer to the University, and are to be sold by Thomas Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>128.</b> Oxford, printed by J. L. for E. F. (on second title).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>129.</b> Oxoniæ, apud Johannem Lichfield, Academiæ typographum, impensis Henrici Curteyne. Cum privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>129 <i>a</i>. Omitting “cum privilegio”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>129 <i>b</i>. With Excudebat Johannes ... typographus, and omitting “Cum privilegio”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>130.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Johannes Lichfield Academiæ typographus, et veneunt apud Thomam Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>131.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant I. L.&#8196; W. T. (G. T.).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>132.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebant I. L. G. T. celeberrimæ Academiæ Typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633 (as colophon).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>John Clarke</i>, of London, 1633–38.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>133.</b> Oxford, printed by the Printers to the University, and are to be sold by John Clarke under S. Peter’s Church in Corne-hill.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>134.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for William Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>135.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Thomas Huggins. Cum privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>136.</b> Printed by William Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>137.</b> Oxonii, apud Guilielmum Turner. [The reference to this impr. in 1631 is an error for 107.]</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633, 1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>138.</b> Oxford, printed by I. L. printer to the University, for Thomas Huggins. With permission of B. Fisher.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span><b>139.</b> Oxonii, sumptibus Guilielmi Turner.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>140.</b> Oxford, printed for William Turner and Robert Allott.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>141.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Henry Cripps.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>142.</b> Oxford, printed for William Turner [by W. Turner].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1633–34.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1634.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>143.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat I. L., impensis Henrici Cripps. Cum privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>143 <i>a</i>. Omitting “Cum privilegio”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1631 (Appendix C).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>144.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat I. L., impensis Thomæ Huggins. Cum privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>145.</b> Oxonii, excudebat I. L., impensis H. Crypps, E. Forrest, &amp; H. Curteyne. Cum Privilegio.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>146.</b> At Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, and are to be sold by William Webbe.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>147.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, and are to be sold by Ed. Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>John Norton</i>, of London, 1634. <i>Francis Bowman</i>, 1634–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>148.</b> London, printed by John Norton, and are to be sold by Francis Bowman in Oxford.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1634.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1635.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>149.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield for Henry Cripps, and are to be sold by Henry Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>150.</b> Oxford, printed by John Lichfield, and are to be sold by Elias Peerse, at his Shoppe in St. Maries Church-yard.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Leonard Lichfield</i>, 1635–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>151.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, Academiæ typographus.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635–37, 1639–40: in 1639 with “Oxonii.”</div>
- <div class='line in16'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>151 <i>a</i>. Adding <i>celeberrimæ</i> before <i>Academiæ</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>151 <i>b</i>. Oxoniæ, typis Leonardi Lichfield, Academiæ typographi.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636, 1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span><b>152.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635–39.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>152 <i>a</i>. Prefixing <i>At</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>152 <i>b</i>. With “imprinted” for “printed”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636–37.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>153.</b> Oxonii, excudebat Gulielmus Turner, impensis Gulielmi Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635–36, 1639: in 1636 “Oxoniae.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>153 <i>a</i>. With “G.” for “Gulielmus,” and “Guilielmi Webb.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>154.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield for William Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1635–36.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1636.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>155.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield for Thomas Huggins.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>156.</b> Oxford, imprinted by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University, and are to be sold by Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>156 <i>a</i>. With “Printed,” and “famous University.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>156 <i>b</i>. As 156 <i>a</i> with “for” instead of “and are to be sold by.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>157.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636, 1639, 1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>158.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, and are to be sold at the Black Bear in Paul’s Churchyard.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Thomas Allam</i>, 1636–39.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>159.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Thomæ Allam.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636–37.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>160.</b> At Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, for Edward Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>160 <i>a</i>. Omitting “At”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>160 <i>b</i>. As 160 <i>a</i> with “and are to be sold by.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>R. Bishop</i>, of London, 1636.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>161.</b> London, printed by R. Bishop, and are to be sold by Fr. Bowman, in Oxford.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1636.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1637.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>John Willimot</i>, or <i>Wilmot</i>, 1637–38.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>162.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, &amp; veneunt apud Hen. Cripps, Ed. Forrest, Hen. Curteyne, &amp; John Willimot.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637 (secondary title omits name of place).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'><span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>162 <i>a</i>. “pro” for “&amp; veneunt apud.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>163.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat L. Lichfield, impensis Gulielmi Webb bibliopolæ.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>164.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat L. Lichfield, impensis Ed. Forrest &amp; H. Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>165.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat L. Lichfield, impensis H. Curteyne.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>166.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Gulielmi Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>J. Adams</i>, 1637. <i>Joseph Godwin</i>, 1637–39.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>167.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner pro J. Adams, &amp; veneunt apud Joseph. Godwin.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>168.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat L. L., impensis Hen. Cripps, Ed. Forrest, Hen. Curteyne, &amp; Ioh. Wilmot.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>169.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner for William Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>170.</b> Oxford, printed by L. Lichfield, for H. C. printer to the University. (Neither Cripps nor Curteyne were printers to the University, so probably there is some error.)</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>W. Harris</i>, of London, 1637.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>171.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous University. 1637. And are to be sold at London by W. Harris in Colman Street.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1637.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1638.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>John Allam</i>, 1638.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>172.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner for John Allam.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>173.</b> Oxford, imprinted for John Allam [by W. Turner].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>174.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University, for Francis Bowman.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638, 1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>175.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University, for William Davis.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>176.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Ed. Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638, 1639 (with Oxonii).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>177.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner, printer to the famous University, for W. T[urner], Edw. Forrest and Will. Web.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>(<i>John Westall</i>, 1638–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>178.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guil. Turner, pro Joh. Westall, Tho. Allam &amp; Jos. Godwin.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>179.</b> Excusa cum Licentiâ, typis Guil: Turner typographi Universitatis, pro Guil: Webb.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>180.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, printer to the University.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638–40.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>180 <i>a</i>. Adding <i>famous</i> before <i>University</i>.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>181.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by John Clarke under St. Peter’s Church in Cornhill.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>182.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield for Henry Crypps.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638, 1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>183.</b> Oxoniæ, typis Guil: Turner, impensis authoris (V. Bythner).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>184.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, for Francis Bowman.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638–39.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>185.</b> Oxford, printed by L. Lichfield for Joseph Godwin.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1638–39.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1639.</h3>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c000'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>186.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis authoris (G. Dugres).</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>John Allen</i>, of Leicester, 1639.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>187.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by John Allen in “Lecester”.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Thomas Thomas</i>, of Bristol, 1639.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>188.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by Tho. Thomas in Bristol.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Thomas Robinson</i>, 1639–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>189.</b> Oxford, printed by William Turner for Thomas Robinson.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639–40.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>190.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Hen. Crips.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>191.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield, impensis Eliæ Pearse &amp; Tho. Allam.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>191 <i>a</i>. Simply reversing the order of the two publishers.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span><b>192.</b> Oxford, printed for F. Bowman, stationer [by L. Lichfield].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Matthew Hunt</i>, 1639–40.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>193.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, and are to be sold by Matthew Hunt.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1639.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>193 <i>a</i>. “For” instead of “and are to be sold by.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>193 <i>b</i>. As 193 <i>a</i>, beginning “Printed at Oxford by.”</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<h3 class='c008'>1640.</h3>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>(<i>Robert Young</i>, 1640.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>194.</b> Oxford, printed by Leon: Lichfield, printer to the University, for Rob: Young &amp; Ed. Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>195.</b> Excudebat Oxonii Leonardus Lichfield primarius Academiæ typographus, impensis Roberti Young &amp; Edvardi Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>196.</b> Printed [at] Oxford for Francis Bowman [by L. Lichfield].</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640 (engraved title).</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>197.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonard. Lichfield, impensis Matthiæ Hunt.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>198.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guiliel. Turner, impensis Joh. Westall.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>199.</b> Oxford, printed for Leonard Lichfield.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>200.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Edvardi Forrest.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>201.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Leonardus Lichfield impensis Guliel. Davis.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>202.</b> Oxford, printed by L. L.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Richard Royston</i>, of London, 1640.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>203.</b> Oxford, printed by Leonard Lichfield, for Richard Royston, in Ivy Lane.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>(<i>Samuel Enderby</i>, of London, 1640.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>204.</b> Oxford, printed by Leon. Lichfield, for Samuel Enderby.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><b>205.</b> Oxoniæ, excudebat Guilielmus Turner, impensis Tho. Robinson.</div>
- <div class='line in12'>1640.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span><span class='sc'>Oxford Printers and Publishers.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='sc'>Printer</span> ~, in combination +; <span class='sc'>Publisher</span> ○, in combination ⨀; L = London.</div>
- <div class='c000'>[The printers’ names are in small capitals: the names following each printer, in roman type and with a — preceding, are of publishers for whom the printer worked.]</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='printers'>
-
-<table class='table2' summary='Oxford Printers and Publishers.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='2'>1.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1585</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1590</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1595</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1600</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1605</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>1</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>Jos. Barnes</span></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>2</td>
- <td class='c034'>— London shop</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>O</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>2</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>3</td>
- <td class='c034'>— R. Wright</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>3</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— author of book</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>4</td>
- <td class='c034'>— John Barnes L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>5</td>
- <td class='bbt c034'>— S. Waterson L</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>5</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<table class='table3' summary='Oxford Printers and Publishers.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='2'>2.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1610</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1615</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1620</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1625</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1630</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>1635</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>1</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>Jos. Barnes</span> (<i>cont.</i>)</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>1</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>4</td>
- <td class='c034'>— John Barnes L (<i>cont.</i>)</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>4</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>6</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>William Wrench</span></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>7</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>John Lichfield</span></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>7</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>8</td>
- <td class='c034'>— S. Jackson</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>8</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>9</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Spier</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>10</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Cripps</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>10</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>11</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Pyper L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>11</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>12</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Davis</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>12</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>13</td>
- <td class='c034'>— T. Huggins</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>13</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>14</td>
- <td class='c034'>— E. Peerse</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>14</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>15</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Turner</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>15</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>16</td>
- <td class='bbt c034'>— E. Forrest</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>16</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<table class='table3' summary='Oxford Printers and Publishers.'>
- <tr><td class='c016' colspan='29'><span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='2'>3.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1615</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1620</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1625</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1630</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1635</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>1640</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>17</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Webbe</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>17</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>18</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Curteyne</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>18</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>19</td>
- <td class='c034'>— T. Butler</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>19</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>20</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Seale L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>20</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>21</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Clarke L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>21</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>22</td>
- <td class='c034'>[— B. Fisher]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>22</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>23</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>James Short</span></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>23</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— S. Jackson</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Spier</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Cripps</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Pyper</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Davis</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>24</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>William Turner</span><a id='r20' /><a href='#f20' class='c007'><sup>[20]</sup></a></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>+<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />+<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />+<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />+<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />~<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />~<br />+<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>24</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— T. Huggins</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— E. Peerse</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— E. Forrest</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Cripps</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Curteyne</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Webbe</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>25</td>
- <td class='c034'>— R. Allot L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>25</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— author of book</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>26</td>
- <td class='c034'>— M. Sparke L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>26</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Clarke L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>27</td>
- <td class='c034'>— London shop</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>27</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>28</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Willimot</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>28</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>29</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Adams</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>29</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>30</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Godwin</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>30</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>31</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Harris L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>31</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>32</td>
- <td class='c034'>J. Allam</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>32</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>33</td>
- <td class='c034'>J. Westall</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>33</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>34</td>
- <td class='bbt c034'>— T. Robinson</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>34</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<table class='table3' summary='Oxford Printers and Publishers.'>
- <tr><td class='c016' colspan='9'><span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='2'>4.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1635</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>1640</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>35</td>
- <td class='c034'><span class='sc'>Leonard Lichfield</span></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>~<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>35</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Webbe</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— T. Huggins</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— E. Forrest</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>36</td>
- <td class='c034'>— T. Allam</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>36</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Curteyne</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○<br />⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— H. Cripps</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Willimot (or Wilmot)</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>37</td>
- <td class='c034'>— F. Bowman</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>37</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— W. Davis</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Clarke</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Godwin</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— author of book</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>38</td>
- <td class='c034'>— J. Allen of Leicester</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>38</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>39</td>
- <td class='c034'>— T. Thomas of Bristol</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>39</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>— E. Peerse</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>40</td>
- <td class='c034'>— M. Hunt</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>40</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>41</td>
- <td class='c034'>— R. Young</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>41</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>42</td>
- <td class='c034'>— R. Royston L</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>42</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>43</td>
- <td class='bbt c034'>— S. Enderby L</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>43</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<table class='table3' summary='Oxford Printers and Publishers.'>
- <tr>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='2'>5.</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1625</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1630</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033' colspan='5'>1635</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>1640</th>
- <th class='btt bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c034' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Publishers, with no Oxford Printer’s Name.</span></td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>H. Cripps [London<a id='r21' /><a href='#f21' class='c007'><sup>[21]</sup></a> or with Lichfield]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀<br />○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>H. Curteyne [London or with Turner]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>‘W. Mapes’</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>T. Huggins [with Turner]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>44</td>
- <td class='c034'>P. Stephens</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>44</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>45</td>
- <td class='c034'>C. Meredith</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>⨀</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>45</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>W. Webbe [with Lichfield]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>author of book [do.]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c034'>F. Bowman<a id='r22' /><a href='#f22' class='c007'><sup>[22]</sup></a> [London or with Lichfield]</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='bbt blt c035'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt c034'>J. Allam [with Turner]</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>¨</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>○</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='bbt blt c033'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>(Where practicable, the references in this Index are to the year and the first letter of
-the heading in that year: otherwise to pages.)</p>
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c030 center'>A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>A., sub-deacon of St Frideswide’s, Oxford, mentioned p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>A., J., 1634. <i>See</i> Allen, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>A., N., 1616. <i>See</i> Nixon, Anthony.</li>
- <li class='c030'>A., R., 1624. <i>See</i> Ayton, sir Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>A., T., 1612. <i>See</i> Abbay, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Abbas, Georgius. <i>See</i> Abbot, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Abbay, Thomas, of Virginia. Smith’s Proceedings of the English Colonies, ed. by him. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Abbot, George, archbp. of Canterbury. Quaestiones sex totidem praelectionibus in schola theologica Oxoniae habitis discussae, 1597. 1598 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— Reasons which dr. Hill hath brought for the upholding of papistry, unmasked. 1604 A.</li>
- <li>— Letter to him from the Chancellor of the University of Oxford (1606?), in Latin. 1607 W.</li>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1610 B, D, 1614 P, 1620 D, 1628 F, 1635 F.</li>
- <li>— The copy of a letter sent from my Lord’s Grace of Canterbury (about Preachers). 1622 A.</li>
- <li>— Letter about preachers (1622) mentioned. 1622 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Abbot, George, M.P. for Guildford, mentioned. 1621 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Abbot, Robert, bp. of Salisbury. Testimonial from him to C. Angelus, 1616. 1618 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Abingdon. <i>See</i> Godwin, Thomas, 1614.
- <ul>
- <li>— Discourses there by J. Prime, mentioned. 1587 P.</li>
- <li>— Printing there, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Abot, Jeffra, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Accomplishment of the prophecies. <i>See</i> Du Moulin, Pierre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Achilles Tatius. The Loves of Clitophon and Leucippe (tr. by A. Hodges). 1638 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Achitophel, 1628. <i>See</i> Carpenter, Nathaniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Acontius, Jacobus. Stratagemata Satanae, et epistola ad J. Wolfium. 1631 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Acrostics. 1619 O, 1623 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Actors, Sebastian, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Adam, bookbinder, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Adam de Walton, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Adams, J., bookseller, &amp;c., mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Advice of a son to his mother (against Roman Catholicism). 1616 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aegidius de Columna, of Rome, the <i>doctor fundatissimus</i>. De peccato originali. 1479 A, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Æsop, mentioned. 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Æthiopic, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Affaniae. <i>See</i> Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Agatharchides. Excerpta de Rubro Mari, Gr. et Lat. 1597 A, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Airay, Christopher. Fasciculus praeceptorum logicorum. 1628 A, 1633 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Airay, Henry, provost of Queen’s coll., Oxford. Dedications to him. 1613 R, 1614 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Albin, Jean d’. Answer to his Notable discourse against heretics (1575) by Thomas Sparke (the original treatise is here reprinted). 1591 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alchemy. <i>See</i> Thornborough, bp. John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alchorne sale, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>, cf. <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alciatus, Andreas. Excerpt from his Formula Romani Imperii. 1634 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alcock, Richard, bell-ringer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aleman, Mateo. The Rogue, or the Life</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>of Guzman de Alfarache, tr. from the Spanish by J. Mabbe. 1630 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alemannia, Johannes de. <i>See</i> Johannes de Alemannia.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alexander (Alison), J., parchment-seller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alexander de Hales (not de Ales or Alesius). Latin Commentary by him on the De anima of Aristotle. 1481 A, p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <i>see</i> p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a> (“1511”).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alexander de Villa Dei. Textus Alexandri, cum sententiis (a fragment). 1485 A, p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alexandria. <i>See</i> 1638 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alfarache, Guzman de. <i>See</i> Aleman, Mateo.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alfred, king, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_251'>251</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Alitophilus, pseud. <i>See</i> Barclay, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Allam, John, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Allam, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Allen, John. The younger brother his apology. 1634 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Allen, John, bookseller, of Leicester, mentioned, pp 309, 313.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Allen, Thomas, of Gloucester hall, Oxford. MS. of Gregory the Great belonging to him, mentioned. 1610 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— Laudatio funebris in obitum ejus, per Gul. Burton. 1633 B.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem on him, by R. James. 1633 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Allen, cardinal William. Answer to two books by him, by bp. Bilson. 1585 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him in 1589 mentioned. 1602 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Allnutt, William Henry, mentioned. p. vii, 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Allot, Robert, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Almanac. <i>See</i> Booker, John (1637).
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Cowper, Thomas (1637).</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Wyberd, John (1637).</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ambrose, st. Extract from his works, in English. 1637 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ames, William. Bellarminus enervatus, ed. 3<sup>ia</sup>. 1629 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Amoenitates humanae. <i>See</i> Puteanus, Erycius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ampelius, Lucius. Liber memorialis ex bibliotheca Cl. Salmasii. 1638 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Amsterdam, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anagrams, 1619 O, 1623 O, 1624 O, 1625 O (<i>bis</i>), 1633 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anatomy of Melancholy. <i>See</i> Burton, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anchoran, John, mentioned. 1633 G, 1634 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Andrewes, bp. Lancelot. His <cite>Tortura Torti</cite> mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Andrewes, John. Christ his cross. 1614 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Angelus, Christophorus. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πόνησις Χ. Ἀγγέλου.</span> 1617 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— — (the same in English). 1617 A.</li>
- <li>— Account of his sufferings, second issue. 1618 A.</li>
- <li>— Testimonials to him, from the University of Oxford and the bp. of Salisbury. 1618 A.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Anglo-Saxon. Anglo-Saxon fount used in 1634. 1634 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Annalia Dubrensia, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anne, princess, born 1636. Flos Britannicus (poems on her birth by members of the University of Oxford). 1636 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anne of Denmark, queen, <i>d.</i> 1619, mentioned. 1605 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Academiae Oxoniensis Funebria sacra ... Annae ... dicata (Latin poems). 1619 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Anne de Rohan, lady. Dedication to her, by Pierre Du Moulin, in English. 1609 D, 1634 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Answer. Brief answer unto certain objections against the descension of Christ into Hell. <i>See</i> Parkes, Richard, 1604.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anthony, Francis. Cotta contra Antonium. 1623 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Antichristians. <i>See</i> Sparke, Thomas, 1591.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anti-Possevinus, 1625. <i>See</i> James, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Antonius, Franciscus. <i>See</i> Anthony, Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anwykyll, John. Latin Grammar and Vulgaria Terentii, ascribed to him. 1483 A, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Anyan, Thomas. Sermon. 1615 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aphorismi. <i>See</i> Piscator, Johannes.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Apology for women. <i>See</i> Heale, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Apostles’ Creed. <i>See</i> Creed.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Appleton, co. Berks. Dedication to the parishioners. 1628 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aquepontanus, Joannes. <i>See</i> Bridgwater, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Arabic. <i>See</i> Pasor, Matthias, 1626.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poem in Arabic. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— De Arabicae linguae utilitate et praestantia oratio, habita a T. Greaves, 1637. 1639 G.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Arber, prof. Edward, mentioned. P. vii, 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Archaeologia Attica. <i>See</i> Rous, Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Archdeacons. <i>See</i> Articles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Archer, Humphrey, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aretinus, Franciscus. <i>See</i> Franciscus of Arezzo.
- <ul>
- <li>— Leonardus. <i>See</i> Brunus, Leonardus, of Arezzo.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>Aretius, Jacobus. <i>See</i> Martin, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Argenis. <i>See</i> Barclay, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aristophanes. The Knights, in Greek. 1593 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='sc'>Aristotle</span>:
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li>The spurious Peplus mentioned. 1587 S.</li>
- <li>Interpretes librorum Aristotelis, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.</li>
- <li>Latin speeches, &amp;c., by B. Holyday, touching the De Anima, Ethics, Rhetoric, &amp;c. of Aristotle. 1633 H.</li>
- <li>Index Aristotelicus to Pavonius’s Summa Ethicae. 1633 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>De Anima.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Latin commentary on the De Anima (<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">περὶ ψυχῆς</span>) of Aristotle, by Alexander de Hales. 1481 A, p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <i>see</i> p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a> (“1511”).</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Ethics.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Speculum moralium quaestionum in universam Ethicen Aristotelis, authore J. Caso. 1585 C, 1596 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Ethics</cite>, Eudemian.
- <ul>
- <li>Commentarius in Magna Moralia Aristotelis, authore Johanne Caso. 1586 C.</li>
- <li>Reflexus speculi moralis qui commentarii vice esse poterit in Magna Moralia Aristotelis, auctore J. Caso. 1596 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Ethics</cite>, Nicomachean.
- <ul>
- <li>Latin translation by Leonardus Brunus (Aretinus). 1479 A, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li>Questiones super libros Ethicorum (Aristotelis) Joannis Dedicus. 1518 D.</li>
- <li>An Oxford ed. of “1498” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li>Commentarii in aliquot Aristotelis libros ad Nicomachum, ab Edw. Brerewood. 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Oeconomica.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Thesaurus oeconomiae seu comm. in Oeconomica, authore J. Caso. 1587 C (doubtful), 1597 C, 1598 C (doubtful).</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Organon.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Summa veterum interpretum in universam Dialecticam Aristotelis, auctore J. Case. 1592 C, 1598 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Physica.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Ancilla philosophiae seu epitome in octo libros Physicorum, authore J. Caso. 1599 C.</li>
- <li>Lapis philosophicus, comm. in 8 libros Physicorum, auctore J. Caso. 1599 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Politics.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Sphaera civitatis (comm. on the Politics, by J. Case). 1588 C. <i>See</i> 1596 C.</li>
- <li>Johannis Buridani quaestiones in octo libros Politicorum Aristotelis. 1640 B.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Posterior Analytics.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Latin commentary by Walter Burley on the Posterior Analytics of Aristotle. 1517 B, <i>see</i> p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a> (“1512”).</li>
- <li>Analysis Analyticorum Posteriorum, opera et studio G. P[owel.] 1594 P.</li>
- <li>— per G. Powel. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><cite>Sophistici Elenchi.</cite>
- <ul>
- <li>Analysis librorum de Sophisticis Elenchis per G. Powel. 1598 P.</li>
- <li>— “1564,” “1594,” mentioned p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>4 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Arithmetic. <i>See</i> Buscherus, Heizo.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Computus.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Armada, mentioned. 1588 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— A Skeltonicall salutation ... (on the Armada). 1589 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Arminianism, mentioned. 1626 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Arminius, Jacobus, mentioned. 1626 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Arran, earl of. <i>See</i> Hamilton, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Arretinus, Leonardus. <i>See</i> Brunus, Leonardus, of Arezzo.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Arschotanus, dux, mentioned. 1640 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Articles. <i>See</i> Berkshire.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Bridges, John.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> King, John.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Oxford—Diocese.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Thornborough, John.</li>
- <li>— A general (undated) form of Articles of Visitation, apparently for Bishops or Archdeacons. 1633 A.</li>
- <li>— The xxxix Articles of 1562. 1636 A. <i>See</i> James, Thomas.</li>
- <li>— Articuli Christianae fidei, versu, expressi per J. Glanville. 1613 G.</li>
- <li>— Articles agreed on at Charenton. <i>See</i> France, 1623.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ashburnham, Bertram, earl of Ashburnham, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Askew, Anthony, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Atkyns, Richard. His <cite>Original and Growth of Printing</cite>, 1664, p. <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Attonitus, Richardus, pseudonym. Veritas odiosa. Fragmenta colloquii Machiavelli et Mercurii. 1626 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Augustine, bookbinder, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Augustine, st., bp. of Hippo. Sermo beati Augustini de misericordia et pia oratione pro defunctis. 1483 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— De haeresibus. 1631 V.</li>
- <li>— Excitatio fidelis animae (1483?) p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Aurum potabile. <i>See</i> Cotta, John, 1623.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ave Maria. The Ave Maria to the queen of France. 1611 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Aylmer, John, bp. of London. Letter from him mentioned. 1589 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>Ayton, sir Robert. In obitum Thomae Rhaedi. Faciebat A.R.A. (a poem) 1624 A.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., A., 1591. <i>See</i> Devereux, Robert, earl of Essex.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., A., 1640. <i>See</i> Rogers, Hugh.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., C. Tumulus Gustavi Adolphi; a Latin poem. 1636 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., D. <i>See</i> under B., M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., E. The curse of sacrilege; a sermon on tithes (on Mal. iii. 9). 1630 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., E. M., 1636. <i>See</i> Bolton, Edmund (Maria).</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., F., 1639. <i>See</i> Bowman, Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., I., 1616. <i>See</i> Barnes, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., I. Translated Du Moulin’s Confutation of Purgatory. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., J., mentioned. 1640 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., M., wife of D. B. Dedication to her. 1599 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., R., 1631. <i>See</i> Bolton, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., R., 1603. <i>See</i> Brett, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B., T., 1637. <i>See</i> Barlow, bp. Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Babington sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Babington, Anthony. Sermon on Babington’s conspiracy, by John Rainolds. 1586 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Babington, bp. Gervase. Dedication to him. 1602 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bacon, Francis, lord Verulam. The two books of the Proficience and Advancement of Learning. 1633 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Of the advancement and proficience of learning, translated into English by Gilbert Wats: with poems on Bacon, &amp;c. 1640 B, <i>see</i> Frontispiece.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem to him by G. Herbert. 1637 T.</li>
- <li>— Portrait of him mentioned. 1640 B.</li>
- <li>— Latin letter from him to Trinity college, Cambridge. 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bacon, Roger. De retardandis senectutis accidentibus, and de sensibus conservandis. 1590 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bagford, John, mentioned, Pp. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>–12, 1614 A, 1631 S, &amp;c.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bailey, Walter. Discourse of certain baths near Newnham Regis, mentioned. 1587 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Treatise touching the eyesight. 1602 B, 1616 B, 1654 B, 1673 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Baker, Sir Richard, kt., mentioned. 1639 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baker and Leigh, book auctioneers. Their sale 1775, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bâle. Poems about Bodl. MS. Roe 20 (Council of Bâle). 1631 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Balkwell, Roger, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Balzac, Jean Louis Guez de. A collection of some modern epistles of M. de Balzac, translated out of French, vol. 4. 1639 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Banbury, earl of. <i>See</i> Knollys, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bancroft, John, bp. of Oxford. Articles for his first Visitation. 1632 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— — second do. 1635 B.</li>
- <li>— — third do. 1638 B.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to him, describing his public benefactions in the diocese. 1639 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bancroft, Richard, archbp. of Canterbury, <i>d.</i> 1610. Dedications to him. 1601 H, 1605 H, 1608 P, 1610 B, 1634 M.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedicatory poem to him, in Latin. 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— A MS. of Gregory the Great in his possession mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1610 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bandinel, dr. Bulkeley, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baptism. Use of the Cross in baptism: <i>see</i> Hutten, Leonard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baptismal regeneration. <i>See</i> Burges, Cornelius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barclay, John. Argenis (with essays on it). 1634 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Euphormionis Satyricon (partly by Alitophilus), accessit Conspiratio Anglicana (the Gunpowder plot). 1634 B.</li>
- <li>— Poematum libri duo. 1636 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Barclay, William, mentioned. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barker, Christopher, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barksdale, Clement, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barlaamus. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Περὶ τῆς τοῦ Πάπα ἀρχῆς</span>, with Latin version by John Lluyd or Lloyd. 1592 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barlow, Richard. Pietas in patrem (English poems on his death by his son bp. Barlow and others). 1637 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barlow, bp. Thomas. Pietas in patrem, or a few tears upon the death of his father. 1637 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Exercitationes de Deo, per T. B. (with Scheibler’s Metaphysica). 1637 S.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1640 S, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Barne, Thomas. Sermon at Paul’s Cross, 1591. 1591 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barnes, John, son of Joseph, bookseller of London, mentioned, 1602 H, 1617 H, W, pp. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Preface by him, as “I. B.” 1616 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Barnes, Joseph. Address to the earl of Leicester. 1585 C, 1596 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Complimentary Latin verses to him. 1585 C.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1588 C, 1606 O, 1626 B, pp. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>–5, 289, 293, 311.</li>
- <li>— Votum typographi ad regem (a Latin poem). 1603 O.</li>
- <li>— Application for a license to him to have a monopoly of printing classical books, 1596, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li>— Note of 78 copies of James’s <cite>Concordantiae</cite> received from him 30 July, 1607. 1607 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>Barnes, Robert, fellow of Magdalen coll. Oxford. Editor of “Beatae Mariae Magdalenae Lachrimae.” 1606 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon at Henley at the Visitation, 1626. 1626 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Barnes, Roger, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Barneveldt, Jan van Olden, mentioned. 1626 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baronet’s burial. <i>See</i> Potter, Barnabas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bartholinus, Casparus. Anatomicae institutiones. 1633 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Enchiridion ethicum. 1633 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bas, William. <i>See</i> Basse, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Basse or Bas (?), William. Great Britain’s Sunset. 1613 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— other poems by him (?) mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bassett, lady Elizabeth. Dedication to her. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bateman sale, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baterel, Guillermus. Edited Buridan’s Quaestiones in octo libros Politicorum Aristotelis. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bates, William. His <cite>Vitae selectorum virorum</cite> referred to. 1602 B, 1613 O, 1617 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baxter, Nathaniel, mentioned. 1635 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bayley, Thomas. De merito mortis Christi, et modo Conversionis, diatribae duo in schola theologica Oxon., 1621. 1626 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Concio ad clerum, 1622. 1626 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Baylie, dr. Richard. Dedication to him. 1638 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bayly, rev. John. Two sermons. 1630 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bayly, Lewis, bp. of Bangor. Dedication to him. 1630 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bayning, Paul, 2nd viscount Bayning. Poems by Christ Church men on his death. 1638 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bayning, Penelope, viscountess. Dedication to her. 1638 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Baynton, Anne. <i>See</i> Rogers, Hugh.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Beacon, Richard. Solon his follie, or a politique discourse touching the reformation of Common-weales. 1594 B, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Beal, sir Robert. Dedication to him. 1596 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Beaudesert, lord. <i>See</i> Paget, lord.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Becanus, Martinus. His <cite>Refutatio Torturae Torti</cite> alluded to. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bedé, Jean. The Mass displayed, tr. by E. C. 1619 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bedford, countess of. Dedication to her. 1593 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bedford, earl of. <i>See</i> Russell, Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bedingfield, Robert. Sermon at Paul’s Cross (on Rom. vi. 23). 1625 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bedwin, William, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bees. <i>See</i> Butler, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Beesley, Henry. Complimentary poems. 1634 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Belgium. Dedication to the Belgian States. 1629 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bellarmine, cardinal Robert. <i>See</i> Leyden.
- <ul>
- <li>— Rainoldus de Romanae Ecclesiae idololatria (adversus Bellarminum, &amp;c.). 1596 R.</li>
- <li>— Scholastica Theologiae institutio adversus Bellarminum, auctore L. Trelcatio. 1606 T.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the Prophecies, written against Bellarmine. 1613 D.</li>
- <li>— De confessionis auricularis vanitate adversus card. Bellarminum, auctore I. Denisono. 1621 D.</li>
- <li>— Bellarminus enervatus, auctore Gul. Amesio, ed. 3<sup>ia</sup>. 1629 A.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bellositum Dobunorum. <i>See under</i> Oxford, <i>ad init.</i></li>
- <li class='c030'>Bellum Grammaticale (by Andreas Guarna). Prologue and Epilogue to it by W. Gager, in Latin. 1592 G, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Benefield, Sebastian. Doctrinae Christianae sex capita totidem praelectionibus discussa. 1610 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford (on Ps. xxi 6). 1611 B.</li>
- <li>— Commentary on Amos chap. 1, with a sermon on 1 Cor. ix. 19. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— — Latin translation in 1615, mentioned, ibid.</li>
- <li>— — reprint in 1629, mentioned, ibid.</li>
- <li>— Commentary on Amos chapp. 2, 3, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— Sermon, on Amos iii. 6. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— Eight sermons. 1614 B.</li>
- <li>— The sin against the Holy Ghost, 12 sermons. 1615 B.</li>
- <li>— His Haven of the afflicted, a sermon, “1615”. 1615 H.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1619 B.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1627 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bene fundatum, a lost Oxford book (about 1517–19), p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bense, Petrus. Analogo-diaphora (a treatise on French, Italian and Spanish grammar). 1637 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bercka, Gerard ten Raem de. <i>See</i> Raem, Gerard ten.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Berkley, lady Elizabeth. Dedication to her. 1626 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Berkshire, archdeaconry. Visitation articles, 1615 (Lionel Sharpe). 1615 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— — 1631 (Edw. Davenant) 1631 D.</li>
- <li>— — 1635 (John Rives). 1635 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bernard, st. Collectanea, out of St. Bernard, &amp;c., by J. Panke. 1618 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>Bernard, Richard. Fabulous foundation of the Popedom. 1619 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bettes, Francis. A label for his books given to New College, Oxford, 1593, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Beza, Theodorus. Sermons on the Song of Solomon i-iii, tr. into English. 1587 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Preface to him. 1630 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='sc'>Bible</span>:—
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li>For the monopoly of printing Bibles, <i>see under</i> Oxford—Printing (printing privileges).</li>
- <li>Account of the Lithuanian translation, Oxf. “1569”, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li>Biblii Summula, mentioned. 1586 S.</li>
- <li>Catalogus expositorum S. Scripturae in bibl. Bodleiana, auctore T. James. 1605 J.</li>
- <li>Catalogus interpretum S. Scripturae in bibliotheca Bodleiana (per J. Verneuil). 1635 V.</li>
- <li>A nomenclator of such tracts and sermons as have been printed in English on any place of Holy Scripture, by J. Verneuil. 1637 V.</li>
- <li>Hen. Stanley, appendix ad libros tam Veteris quam Novi Testamenti, 1630, p. <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- <li>The Wicked Bible (1631), mentioned, p 277.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Old Testament</i>:—</li>
- <li><i>Genesis.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Exposition of Gen. xxxiii. 1–3, by J. Overton. 1586 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Job.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Explanationes Ricardi Hampole super lectiones Job. 1483 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Psalms.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Meditation on part of the 7th Psalm. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>Day’s Descant on David’s Psalms (1–8). 1620 D.</li>
- <li>The Psalms translated by King James i. 1631 B.</li>
- <li>Liber Psalmorum et precum in usum ecclesiae Cathedralis Oxon. 1639 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Ecclesiastes.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>An exposition of Ecclesiastes, 1573, mentioned. 1586 E.</li>
- <li>Solomon’s Sermon with a paraphrase by Antonio de Corro, englished by Tho. Pye. 1586 E.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Song of Solomon.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Beza’s sermons on the Song of Solomon i-iii, tr. into English. 1587 B.</li>
- <li>Concordantiae patrum in librum Canticorum, auctore T. James. 1607 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Lamentations of Jeremiah.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Latin commentary on the Lamentations by Johannes Latteburius. 1482 L, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Minor Prophets.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Pareus’s Comm. on Joel, Amos and Haggai, in Latin. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Amos.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Benefield’s commentary on Amos chap. 1. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— on chapp. 2, 3, mentioned, ibid.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Obadiah.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>The prophecy of Obadiah explained in connexion with 1 Pet., by J. Rainolds. 1613 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Jonah.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Lectures upon Jonas, by John Kinge. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>New Testament</i>:—
- <ul>
- <li>Disticha J. Scheprevi in Novum Testamentum. 1586 S.</li>
- <li>Disticha in Novum Testamentum in editione Erasmi inserta. 1586 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Matthew.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Analysis cap. 24, authore F. Trigge. 1591 T.</li>
- <li>Pareus’s Comm. on St. Matthew, in Latin. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Romans.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Comment. in cap. 12 ep. ad Rom. (by Francis Trigge). 1590 T.</li>
- <li>Prodromus, a logical resolution of Romans cap. 1, by G. Powel. 1602 P.</li>
- <li>— (the same in Latin; dubious). 1615 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Corinthians.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Latin commentary on the two Epistles by W. Sclater. 1633 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Galatians.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Exposition by J. Prime. 1587 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Hebrews.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>12 Sermons on Heb. x. 26–31, by S. Benefield. 1615 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>1 Peter.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>The prophecy of Obadiah explained in connexion with 1 Pet., by J. Rainolds. 1613 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Revelation.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Noctes sacrae seu lucubrationes in primam partem Apocalypseos (by Francis Trigge). 1590 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bibliotheca scholastica. <i>See</i> Rider, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Billingsley, Robert, bookseller, &amp;c., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bilson, bp. Thomas. True difference between Christian subjection and unchristian rebellion. 1585 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1585 P.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1608 C.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Binding. Bookbinders, &amp;c., in Oxford, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bird, John. Grounds of Latin Grammar. 1639 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>Bisham, mentioned. 1592 E, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bishop, Richard, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bishops. <i>See</i> Articles.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Petition.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Blades, William. His <cite>Books in chains</cite>, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, cf. <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, &amp;c.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Blandford, lord. <i>See</i> Churchill, George Spencer, 4th duke of Marlborough.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Blaxton, John. The English Usurer, or usury condemned. 1634 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— 2nd impression. 1634 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Blessed Birthday. <i>See</i> Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Blewet, or Bluett, Henry, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bliss, dr. Philip, mentioned. 1612 W, 1613 G, 1618 A, 1631 P, 1632 C, &amp;c.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Blon, C. le. <i>See</i> Le Blon, C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Blount, Edward, printer, mentioned. 1630 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Blunt, sir Richard. Dedication to him. 1626 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Boaz and Ruth. <i>See</i> Parsons, Bartholomew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bodleian library. <i>See</i> Oxford—Bodleian library.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bodley, dr. Laurence, canon of Exeter cathedral. Dedications to him. 1614 P, 1637 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bodley, sir Thomas. Dedications to him. 1598 L, 1599 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Justa funebria Ptolemaei Oxoniensis (Latin verses on sir T. Bodley by members of the University of Oxford: and speech on him by I. Wake). 1613 O.</li>
- <li>— Bodleiomnema (Latin poems on Bodley, by members of Merton college, Oxford). 1613 O.</li>
- <li>— Poems in Italian and Latin on his death, by L. Petrucci. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1625 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bollifant, Edmund, printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bolswert, Nicholas de. <i>See</i> Nicholas de Bolswert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bolton, Edmund (Maria), <i>d.</i> 1633 (?). His <cite>Hypercritica</cite> mentioned. 1591 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Translated Florus into English, as “E. M. B.” and “Philanactophil.” 1636 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bolton, Robert. Helps to humiliation, by R. B. 1631 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bond, Nicholas, pres. of Magdalen coll. Oxford. Dedications to him. 1592 S, 1602 B, 1604 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bonwick, Robert, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Book of Common Prayer. <i>See</i> Prayer, Book of Common.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bookbinder, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bookbinder, Thomas, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bookbinder, William, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bookbinders. <i>See</i> Binding.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Booker, John. Almanack sive Prognosticon astrologicum. 1637 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Book-production. <i>See</i> Oxford—Printing.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Transcription.</li>
- <li>— List of persons concerned with it, at Oxford, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Booksellers, &amp;c., in Oxford, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bookworm, periodical, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bordeaux, mentioned. 1626 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bott, —, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bourchier, Thomas, archbp. of Canterbury, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bowing at the name of Jesus. <i>See</i> Page, William, 1631.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Widdowes, Giles.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bowman, Francis, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Preface by F. B(owman), 1639 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bowman, Thomas. Auction catalogue of his books (Oxf. 1687), mentioned. 1597 C, 1613 R, 1615 C, 1631 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>B. P. N. <i>See</i> 1599 R, 1625 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brabant. A dedication to the three Ordines Brabantiae. 1640 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brackley, viscount. <i>See</i> Egerton, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bradshaw, William. Treatise of the Cross in baptism, mentioned. 1605 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brasbridge, Thomas. Quaestiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis, 1586, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>: 1592 B, 1615 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brassicanus (Kohlburger), Johannes Alexander. Annotationes in Salvianum. 1629 S, 1633 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Breda, Jacobus de, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brent, dr. Nathaniel, warden of Merton College, Oxford. Dedications to him. 1628 D, 1637 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brent, William. Dedication to him. 1586 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brerewood, Edward. Logica (Lond. 1614), mentioned. 1614 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Tractatus logici. 1628 B, 1631 B, 1637 B.</li>
- <li>— Treatise of the Sabaoth, with Byfield’s Answer and Brerewood’s Reply. 1630 B, 1631 B.</li>
- <li>— — A second treatise on the Sabbath. 1632 B.</li>
- <li>— Tractatus duo, de meteoris, (de mari), de oculo. 1631 B.</li>
- <li>— Tractatus ethici, sive commentarii in aliquot Aristotelis libros ad Nicomachum. 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Breton, Nicholas. Pilgrimage to Paradise, joined with the Countess of Pembroke’s Love. 1592 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Breton’s Bower of delights, 1591, mentioned. 1592 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Brett, Richard. Agatharchides and Memnon (excerpts in Greek and Latin), ed. by Brett. 1597 A, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>— Symeon’s Lives of Stt. John and Luke, ed. by R. Brett in Greek and Latin. 1597 S.</li>
- <li>— Theses magistri Bret, respondentis in Comitiis Oxon. 1597, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li>— Iconum sacrarum decas, authore R. B. 1603 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bridegroom and his Bride, 1625. <i>See</i> Rawlinson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bridges, John, bp. of Oxford. Articles at his visitation, 1604. 1604 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bridgwater, John. Concertatio eccl. Catholicae per Joannem Aquepontanum (1594), mentioned. 1594 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brierwood, Edward. <i>See</i> Brerewood, Edward.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bright Sale, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bristol. Latin oration at Bristol by J. Sprint 16 Apr. 1587. 1587 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1639 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bristol, earl of. <i>See</i> Digby, George and John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Britain, Great. Dedication to the schoolmasters of Great Britain, in Latin. 1634 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>British Museum. <i>See</i> London—British Museum.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Broad, Thomas. Dialogue between a Jew and a Christian (on Sunday). 1621 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Three questions answered (on Sunday observance). 1621 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bromley, sir Thomas, lord chancellor of England. Dedication to him, 1585. 1586 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Broncar, Henricus, mentioned. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brooke, sir Richard, of Norton. Dedication to him. 1628 B, 1631 B, 1637 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brother, John, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Browere, Nicholas, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brown, John, stationer, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Browne, Thomas. The copy of the University sermon, 24 Dec. 1633 (on Ps. cxxx. 4). 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bruges, Giles, lord Chandos, mentioned. 1592 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Brunus, Leonardus, of Arezzo. Latin translation of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, by Leonardus Arretinus. 1479 A, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— a supposed edition of 1498, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Brussels. The Library mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Buckhurst, lord. <i>See</i> Dorset, earl of.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Buckingham, duke of, <i>d.</i> 1629. <i>See</i> Villiers, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Buckingham, Katharine, duchess of. Dedication to her. 1630 W, 1631 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Buckler, Benjamin, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Budden, dr. John. Gulielmi ... Waynfleti ... vita obitusque. 1602 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Büssenmecherus, Johannes. Extract from a book by him, in Latin. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bullokar, W., mentioned. 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bunny, Edmund. Treatise tending to pacification [accompanying a revised edition of R. Parsons’ Christian exercise]. 1585 P (<i>bis</i>).
- <ul>
- <li>— Account by him of his connexion with Parsons’s Resolution or Directory. 1610 B.</li>
- <li>— Of divorce for adultery and marrying again. 1610 B, 1613 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bunny, Francis. Answer to a popish libel intituled “a Petition to the Bishops.” 1607 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Burgersdicius, Franco. Idea Philosophiae tum Naturalis, tum Moralis, ed. 3<sup>ia</sup>. 1631 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Idea Philosophiae tum Moralis, tum Naturalis, ed. 4<sup>a</sup>. 1637 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Burges, Cornelius. Baptismal regeneration of elect infants. 1629 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Burgundus, Nicolaüs. Latin poem on Puteanus’s Comus. 1634 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Burhill, Robert. Edited a sermon by bp. Smith, 1602. 1602 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Invitatorius panegyricus. 1603 O.</li>
- <li>— In controversiam inter Johannem Howsonum et Thomam Pyum tractatus. 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— De potestate regia et usurpatione papali. 1613 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Buridanus, Johannes. Error for Walter Burley, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Quaestiones in octo libros Politicorum Aristotelis. 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Burley, Walter. Latin commentary on the Posterior Analytics of Aristotle. 1517 B, p. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— — “1512,” p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li>— De materia et forma (principia). 1518 B, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li>— — “1500,” p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li>— De relativis (principia). 1518 B, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Burmannus, Petrus, Secundus. Letter of his, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Burnet, alias Cornish, Gilbert, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Burton, Robert, mentioned. 1599 R, 1627 H, 1637 V, 1638 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Anatomy of Melancholy. 1621 B, 1624 B, 1628 B, 1632 B, 1638 B. <i>See</i> p. <a href='#Page_232'>232</a>.</li>
- <li>— Note on the connexion between Ferrand’s <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἐρωτομανία</span> and Burton’s <cite>Anatomy of Melancholy</cite>. 1640 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Burton, Samuel, archdeacon of Gloucester. Articles to be enquired of in his Visitation, 1629. 1629 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Burton, William. Laudatio funebris in obitum Thomae Alleni. 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>Bury, Richard de. <i>See</i> Richard de Bury.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Buscherus, Heizo. Arithmetica in usum Paedagogii Gisseni. 1631 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bushell, Thomas. Speeches and songs at the presentment of Mr. Bushell’s Rock (at Enstone) to the Queen, 23 Aug. 1636. 1636 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Butler, Alban, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Butler, Charles. Rhetoricae libri duo, 1598, 1600 B, 1618 B, 1629 B, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1633 B.</li>
- <li>— Rhetorica and Oratoria, 1629, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- <li>— The feminine monarchy or a treatise concerning bees. 1609 B, 1633 B, 1634 B.</li>
- <li>— <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Συγγένεια</span>, de propinquitate matrimonium impediente. 1625 B.</li>
- <li>— Oratoriae libri duo. 1629 B, 1633 B.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1633 P.</li>
- <li>— The English grammar (in phonetic spelling and type). 1633 B, 1634 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Butler, rev. Richard, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Butler, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_302'>302</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Byfield, Nicholas. Answer to Brerewood’s treatise on the Sabbath, with Brerewood’s Reply. 1630 B, 1631 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Byrd, Josias. Love’s peerless paragon, a sermon. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Bythner, Victorinus. Tabula directoria (a Hebrew grammar). 1637 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Lingua Eruditorum, hoc est Institutio Linguae Sacrae (a Hebrew grammar). 1638 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Bywater, prof. Ingram, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., A., 1586. <i>See</i> Corro, Antonio de.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., Ch., 1638, <i>See</i> Croke, dr. Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., D. E., mentioned. 1608 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., E., 1619. <i>See</i> Chaloner, Edward.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., G., 1624. <i>See</i> Carleton, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., I., 1588. <i>See</i> Case, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., J., 1628. <i>See</i> Casa, Giovanni della.</li>
- <li class='c030'>C., N., Cosmopolitanus. <i>See</i> Carpenter, Nathaniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ca:, Io., mentioned. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Calvin, Jean. Aphorismi maximam partem ex Institutione Calvini excerpti, per J. Piscatorem. 1630 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cambrai (Cameracum). <i>See</i> Sanderson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cambridge. <i>See</i> Letters—Latin.
- <ul>
- <li>— Mention of early printing there. 1585 C.</li>
- <li>— Mention of the patent for printing, 1534, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li>— Letter from the University to that of Oxford, 7 Oct. 1603, about Church reformation: in Latin. 1603 O, 1604 O.</li>
- <li>— Cambridge books mentioned. 1603, Heydon. <i>See</i> 1624 C.</li>
- <li>— Booker’s Almanac printed there in 1636. 1637 B.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to the two Universities. 1640 B.</li>
- <li>— University Library mentioned. 1608 W, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a> (<i>quater</i>), 265 (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li>— Oxford 15th cent. books in the University Library, p. <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li>— Bp. Moore’s library, now in the University Library, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li>— Clare college mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li>— Corpus Christi college mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>–60.</li>
- <li>— Emmanuel college mentioned. 1633 D, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li>— Jesus college mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li>— King’s college mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li>— Pembroke college mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li>— St. John’s college mentioned. 1485 A, pp. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a> (<i>bis</i>), 259, 260.</li>
- <li>— Latin letter from Bacon to Trinity college, Cambridge. 1640 B.</li>
- <li>— Trinity college mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a> (<i>bis</i>), 257, 258, 260.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Camden, William. Camdeni Insignia (poems and orations by members of the University of Oxford). 1624 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1625 W.</li>
- <li>— Parentatio historica manibus Camdeni oblata, De obitu Camdeni, Dedicatio imaginis Camdenianae, auctore D. Whear. 1628 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cameron, John. Examination of those plausible appearances which seem most to commend the Romish Church. 1626 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Of the sovereign judge of controversies in matters of religion. 1628 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Campian, Edmund. His Decem Rationes mentioned. 1601 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Tobiae Matthaei concio apologetica adversus Campianum. 1638 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cannus, Michael. mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Canon Law. <i>See</i> Law—Canon Law.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Canons. Liber quorundam Canonum disciplinae ecclesiae Anglicanae, <span class='fss'>A. D.</span> 1571. 1636 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'><i>Cantica Canticorum.</i> <i>See</i> Bible—<i>Song of Solomon</i>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Capel, Richard. Connected with Pemble’s Vindiciae fidei. 1622 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Perhaps edited Pemble’s De sensibus internis. 1629 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cardiff, lord. <i>See</i> Herbert, Henry.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Carewe, sir Gawain. Funeral sermon on him, 1584, by John Chardon. 1586 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Carey, lady, wife of sir Robert Carey. Dedication to her. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>Carleton, bp. George. Heroici characteres. 1603 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἀστρολογομανία</span>, the madness of Astrologers (against Heydon). 1624 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Carlisle, earl of. <i>See</i> Hay, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Carmelianus, Petrus, of Brescia. Ad lectorem carmen (before Phalaris’s Letters in Latin). 1485 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Carpenter, Nathaniel. Philosophia libera. 1622 C, 1636 C, 1637 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Geography. 1625 C.</li>
- <li>— — 2nd ed. 1635 C.</li>
- <li>— Achitophel, or the picture of a wicked politician. 1628 C, 1640 C.</li>
- <li>— Chorazin and Bethsaida’s woe, a sermon on Matt. xi. 21. 1640 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Carre, —, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Carrus, Nicolaüs. Demosthenis Orationes 15 cum interpretatione Nic. Carri. 1593 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cartwright, Francis. Manner of the murther of W. Storre, by F. Cartwright, 1602. 1603 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cartwright, William. The Royal Slave, a tragi-comedy (anonymous). 1639 C, 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cartwright, bp. William, mentioned. 1638 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cary, sir Lorenzo, son of viscount Falkland. Dedication to him. 1628 T, 1640 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Casa, Giovanni della. Ethica juvenilis, auctore J. C. 1628 C, 1630 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Casaubon, Arnold, father of Isaac Casaubon, mentioned. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Casaubon, Isaac. His Epistola ad Frontonem Ducaeum, etc., mentioned. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Case, John. Speculum moralium quaestionum in universam Ethicen Aristotelis. 1585 C, 1596 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1596 C.</li>
- <li>— Summa veterum interpretum in universam Dialecticam Aristotelis. 1592 C, 1598 C.</li>
- <li>— — a “1584” issue mentioned. 1585 C.</li>
- <li>— Reflexus speculi moralis, seu commentarius in Magna Moralia Aristotelis. 1586 C, 1596 C.</li>
- <li>— The <cite>Praise of Music</cite> (attributed to John Case). 1586 M.</li>
- <li>— — Discussion of the authorship of the <cite>Praise of Music</cite> (Oxf. 1586) attributed to him, p. <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li>— Thesaurus Oeconomiae. 1587 C (doubtful), 1597 C, 1598 C (doubtful).</li>
- <li>— — a “1578” issue mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li>— Apologia musices. 1588 C.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1586 M, p. <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li>— Sphaera civitatis (comm. on the Politics of Aristotle). 1588 C, cf. 1615 C.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1596 C.</li>
- <li>— Poem to Nicholas Breton. 1592 B.</li>
- <li>— Ancilla philosophiae, seu epitome in octo libros Physicorum Aristotelis. 1599 C.</li>
- <li>— Lapis philosophicus, comm. in 8 libros Physicorum Aristotelis. 1599 C.</li>
- <li>— Cursus philosophicus, 3 vols., 1597. <i>See</i> 1597 C, <i>note</i>.</li>
- <li>— A Preface to Richard Haydocke. 1598 L.</li>
- <li>— Mentioned. 1627 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Casimir, Ernest. <i>See</i> Ernest Casimir.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Castellanus, Georgius, bookseller at Oxford, 1506, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Castlecomer, viscount. <i>See</i> Wandesford, Christopher.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Catechism. <i>See</i> Hutchins, Robert, 1617.
- <ul>
- <li>— Ursinus’s lectures on the Heidelberg Catechism, tr. into English. 1587 U, 1589 U, 1591 U, 1595 U, 1601 U.</li>
- <li>— A catechism (the Heidelberg Catechism, ed. by Sparke and Seddon). 1588 C (<i>bis</i>.)</li>
- <li>— The English Catechism explained by W(illiam) D(ickinson). 1628 D.</li>
- <li>— Catechesis religionis Christianae (Heidelberg Catechism). 1629 C.</li>
- <li>— Church Catechism in Latin, English, and French. 1633 G.</li>
- <li>— A short catechism, by John Downe. 1635 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cater, Rose, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Catherine, princess, mentioned, 1638 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Catilinariae proditiones. In Catilinarias proditiones ac proditores domesticos odae 6. 1586 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cause, John, mayor of Plymouth. Dedication to him. 1637 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Caussin, Nicolas. The unfortunate politique by C. N. (i. e. N. Caussin), translated into English by G. P. 1638 C, 1639 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cave, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cavye, Christopher, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Caxton, William. Caxton’s <cite>Chronicles of England</cite> (1482), mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1585 C, pp. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Caxton Exhibition, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cayer, Pierre Victor Palma. Treatise against him by Du Moulin. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cecil, Robert, earl of Salisbury, <i>d.</i> 1612. Dedication to him. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cecil, sir William, earl of Salisbury. Dedication to him. 1633 D, 1634 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cecill, T., engraver, mentioned. 1630 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Encyclopaedia (Oxford statutes) engraved by him. 1635 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cenotaphia. <i>See</i> Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>Cenotaphium Jacobi, 1625. <i>See</i> King, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel, mentioned. 1640 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chaldee. Poem in Chaldee. 1612 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Study of Chaldee at Oxford, mentioned. 1627 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Chaloner, Edward. Bede’s Masse displayed, tr. by E. C(haloner?) 1619 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Six sermons. 1629 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Chambers, John, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chandler, professor Henry William, mentioned. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chandler, dean Thomas, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chandos, lord. <i>See</i> Bruges, Giles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chardon, bp. John. Funeral Sermon of sir Gawain Carewe, 1584. 1586 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon on John ix. 1–3. 1586 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Charenton. Articles agreed on at Charenton. <i>See</i> France, 1623.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Charisteria. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Charles i, King. Dedications to him. 1607 C, 1613 P (<i>bis</i>), 1614 P, 1620 J, 1621 H, 1625 O, R, 1626 P, 1633 B, C, 1636 B, 1638 J, 1640 B, O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Latin poem to him. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— Carolus redux: Latin poem to congratulate Charles on his return from Spain, with a Latin speech by J. King. 1623 O.</li>
- <li>— Epithalamia Oxoniensia in Caroli cum Henrietta Maria Connubium. 1625 O.</li>
- <li>— Britanniae Natalis (Oxford University Poems to the king on the birth of Charles ii). 1630 O.</li>
- <li>— Proclamation by him about King James’s Psalter, with his arms (engraved). 1631 B.</li>
- <li>— Musarum Oxoniensium pro rege suo Soteria. 1633 O.</li>
- <li>— Solis Britannici perigaeum (poems by Oxford men). 1633 O.</li>
- <li>— Vitis Carolinae gemma altera: poems to Charles i, &amp;c. to commemorate the birth of James ii, in Latin, &amp;c.: by members of the University of Oxford. 1633 O.</li>
- <li>— Coronae Carolinae quadratura: poems on the birth of his daughter, by members of the University of Oxford, in Lat. and English. 1636 O.</li>
- <li>— Flos Britannicus (poems to him and the queen on the birth of the princess Anne by members of the University of Oxford). 1636 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Charles ii, King. Britanniae Natalis (Oxford University poems on the birth of Charles ii). 1630 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1632 O, 1634 B, 1637 J, 1639 D, 1640 B.</li>
- <li>— Takes part in a masque at Richmond, 12 Sept. 1636. 1636 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Charles the Great. <i>See under</i> Ubaldini, Petruccio.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Charles Emmanuel I, duke of Savoy, <i>d.</i> 1630. Dedication to him. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chaucer, Geoffrey. Amorum Troili et Creseidae libri duo priores Anglico-Latini (per F. Kinaston). 1635 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chetham library. <i>See</i> Manchester.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chetwind, Edward. Concio ad clerum (on Acts xx. 24). 1608 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chicheley, archbp. Henry. Vita Henrici Chichele ... ab A. Duck. 1617 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chillingworth, William. The religion of Protestants. 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chilmead, Edmund. Translated Ferrand’s <cite>De la maladie d’amour</cite> into English. 1640 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'><cite>Choir and Musical Record</cite>, 1864, mentioned. 1586 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cholmondeley family, of Condover, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chorazin. <i>See</i> Carpenter, Nathaniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Christ. <i>See</i> Jesus Christ.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Christ his Cross, 1614. <i>See</i> Andrewes, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Christian iv, King of Denmark. Dedication to him. 1610 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chronicles. Caxton’s <cite>Chronicles of England</cite>, “Oxf. (15th cent.),” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chronograms. 1619 M, O, 1622 O, 1623 O, 1624 C, O, 1625 K, O (<i>bis</i>), 1628 W, 1629 P, 1630 O, 1633 O (<i>bis</i>), 1636 O, 1637 B (<i>bis</i>), 1637 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chrysostom, st. Homiliae, Oxf. “1565,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Six homilies, in Greek, ed. by John Harmar. 1586 C.</li>
- <li>— Two homilies, in Greek (Lond. 1543), mentioned. 1586 C.</li>
- <li>— Theorremon (selections from st. Chrysostom, in English, by J. Willoughby). 1602 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Church. Summa colloquii de capite et fide ecclesiae (1583). 1610 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Of the Church, five books, by Rich. Field. 1628 F, 1635 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Churchill, George Spencer, lord Blandford, 4th duke of Marlborough, <i>d.</i> 1840, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Churchowse, George, mayor of Salisbury. <i>See</i> Salisbury.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Churchwardens. The oath of Churchwardens and Sidemen, at a Bishop’s Visitation. 1599 K, 1603 T, 1604 B, 1619 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Oath to be taken by Churchwardens and Sworn-men, at an Archdeacon’s Visitation. 1629 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>Churchyard, Balthasar, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Thomas. A handful of gladsome verses. 1592 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Chytraeus, David, mentioned. 1596 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Chytraeus, Nathan. Translated Della Casa’s Ethica juvenilis into Latin. 1628 C, 1630 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cicero, Marcus Tullius. Fragment of the Oratio pro T. Annio Milone. 1480 C, p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Libellus primus Epistolarum, Oxf. “about 1519,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
- <li>— Quaestiones in Officia M. T. Ciceronis, per T. Brasbridge, 1586, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li>— — 1592. 1592 B.</li>
- <li>— — 1615. 1615 B.</li>
- <li>— Godwin’s Romanae Historiae Anthologia, specially intended to illustrate Cicero. 1614 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cirenbergius, Johannes, of Dantzig. Poems to him by members of the University of Oxford. 1631 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>City Match, the, a play. <i>See</i> Mayne, Jasper, 1639.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Civil Law. <i>See</i> Law—Civil Law.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clapham, John, mentioned. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clarke, John, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Classicum poenitentiale. <i>See</i> Kingsmill, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Claxton, —, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clayton, dr. Thomas, regius professor of Medicine at Oxford. Letter to him from John Day, in Latin, 11 July, 1612. 1612 D, 1615 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Clein, Franciscus. Designed the titlepage of 1632 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cleland, James. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἡρω-παιδεία</span>, or the institution of a young Nobleman. 1607 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Instruction of a young Nobleman (the same book). 1612 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Clement, st., of Rome. Epistola ad Corinthios prima, et fragmentum secundae, edente P. Junio. 1633 C, see 1632 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clerk, John (Clericus), stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clifton, Nicholas, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clinton, Bridget, countess of Lincoln. Dedication to her. 1622 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Clinton, Elizabeth, countess of Lincoln. The countess of Lincoln’s Nursery. 1622 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Co., Ty. Verses by him. 1596 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coeffeteau, Nicolas. Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the Prophecies, written against Coeffeteau. 1613 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coins. <i>See</i> Numismatics.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coke, Christopher, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coke, sir Edward, lord chief justice. Dedication to him. 1608 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cokkes, Johannes, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Colbert sale mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coleman, Charles. Composed music for a Masque in 1636. 1636 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Collegium Anti-Bellarminianum. <i>See</i> Leiden.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Collier, John Payne, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Colmore, Matthew. Oratio funebris in obitum G. Sanctpaul. 1613 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cologne. Cologne printing mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–8, 250.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Columna, Aegidius de. <i>See</i> Aegidius de Columna.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Columna, Guido de. <i>See</i> Guido de Columna.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Combachius, Johannes. Metaphysicorum libri duo, ed. 3<sup>ia</sup>. 1633 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Comenius, Johannes Amos. Saltonstall’s Index to the Porta linguarum (Clavis ad Portam). 1634 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Conatuum Comenianorum praeludia (Porta sapientiae reserata: edita a S. Hartlibio). 1637 C.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1633 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Common Prayer, book of. <i>See</i> Prayer, Book of Common.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Communicants, mentioned. 1629 B, 1629 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Communion, Holy. <i>See</i> Preston, John.
- <ul>
- <li>— Last will and testament of Jesus Christ, a treatise on the Lord’s Supper, by bp. Thornborough. 1630 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Compendium. <i>See</i> Lux, 1518.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Computus. Compotus manualis ad usum Oxoniensium cum commento (Paris, 1498), mentioned. 1519 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Compotus manualis ad usum Oxoniensium, 1519. 1519 C, p. <a href='#Page_265'>265</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Comus. <i>See</i> Puteanus, Erycius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Concilia. <i>See</i> Councils.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coneley, John, illuminator, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Confession. <i>See</i> Denison, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Consilia Evangelica. <i>See</i> Evangelical Counsels.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Constitutiones. Constitutiones provinciales, with the Latin Commentary of Will. Lyndewoode. 1483 L, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooke, sir Edward. <i>See</i> Coke, Edw.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooke, F., of Eggington. Dedication to him. 1597 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooke, James. Juridica trium quaestionum ad Majestatem pertinentium determinatio, in Vesperiis, 1608. 1608 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooke, John, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>Cooke, T. Etherington, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooke, Toby, printer in London, mentioned, 1589 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooper, Thomas, bp. of Winchester. Dedication to him. 1588 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cooper, Thomas. Nonae Novembres (on the Gunpowder Plot of 1605). 1607 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cope, sir William H., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Corbet, Richard, bp. of Oxford. Oratio funebris in obitu Thomae Bodleii (really by I. Wake) attributed by error to Corbet. 1613 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Articles to be enquired of in his Visitation, 1629. 1629 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Corderoy, Jeremy. Short dialogue (on) good works, 2nd ed. 1604 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coricaeus, pseud. <i>See</i> R., C. A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cornish, Gilbert. <i>See</i> Burnet, Gilbert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cornwall, 1605. <i>See</i> Hutton, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Corro, Antonio de, (Corranus). Lectures on Ecclesiastes, paraphrased. 1586 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Corsellis, Frederic. The Corsellis forgery, p. <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <i>see</i> also pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Corsellis, Nicolas. His epitaph, p. <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cosin, Richard. Ecclesiae Anglicanae Politeia in tabulas digesta, ed. per Tho. Crompton. 1634 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cosmography. <i>See</i> Heylyn, Peter.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cosmopolitanus, pseud. <i>See</i> Carpenter, Nathaniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coton, William, bp. of Exeter. Dedication &amp;c. to him. 1605 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cotta, John. Cotta contra Antonium, or an Ant-antony (about Aurum potabile). 1623 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cottbus in Silesia, mentioned. 1609 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cotton, Henry, bp. of Salisbury. Oratio Sarisburiae habita 6 Jun. (1599) cum Episcopus gradum D.D. susciperet, authore T. Holland. 1599 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1600 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cotton, sir Robert. Two Latin poems on him by R. James. 1633 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cotton, William, bp. of Exeter. Dedication to him. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Councils. <i>See</i> Bâle.
- <ul>
- <li>— Council of Vienne, 1311–12: decree mentioned. 1627 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Coventry. Sermon preached there with local opposition, &amp;c. 1610 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coventry, Thomas, i. e. lord Coventry. Dedications to him. 1626 B, 1633 B, E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Coverdale, Miles. Reprint of an edition by him of Wyclif’s Wicket. 1612 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— Translation into Welsh of his translation of Wermueller’s <cite>Precious Pearl</cite>. 1595 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Cowper, Thomas. An almanack for 1637. 1637 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cox, William. Latin letters to and from him. 1627 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crakanthorp, Richard. Introductio in metaphysicam. 1619 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cranmer, archbp., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crawford and Balcarres, earl of. <i>See</i> Lindsay, James Ludovic.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crawford sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Creed. Expositio in Symbolum Apostolorum. <i>See</i> Rufinus, Tyrannius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crewe, bp. Nathaniel, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cripps, Henry, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Critici Sacri, mentioned. 1616 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Criticism. <i>See</i> Textual Criticism.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Croke, dr. Charles. A sad memorial of Henry Curwen by Ch. C(roke). 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crompton, Thomas. Edited Cosin’s <cite>Ecclesiae Anglicanae Politeia</cite>. 1634 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crosfield, Thomas, of Queen’s college, Oxford. Translated and edited Gregorius’s Letter relating the martyrdom of Ketaban. 1633 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— May have issued the <cite>Synopsis Statutorum</cite> and <cite>Encyclopædia</cite> (both 1635 O), and the <cite>Speculum Academicum</cite> (1638), p. <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Crosley, Alexander. Two English poems by him. 1609 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crosley, John, bookseller and stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cross in baptism. <i>See</i> Hutten, Leonard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Crosse, Richard. Edited Ursinus’s Catechism. 1601 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cuddesdon, mentioned. 1639 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Culenburg, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Curio, Coelius Secundus, <i>d.</i> 1569. Pusillus Grex, refutatio libelli (de amplitudine regni Dei) C. S. Curionis, authore Thoma de Vicariis. 1627 V.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1638 V.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Curle, bp. Walter. Dedication to him. 1639 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cursol, Stephanus de, mentioned. 1639 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Curteyne, Henry, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Curwen, Henry. A sad memorial of H. Curwen (by Ch. C[roke]). 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Curwen, sir Patricius and lady. Dedication to them. 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cuthbertson, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cyclus Praelectorum. <i>See</i> Oxford—University, 1635.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cydonius, Andreas Eudaemon-Johannes. <i>See</i> Eudaemon-Johannes, Andreas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Cyprian, st. De bono patientiae, ed. by J. Stephens. 1633 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Extract from his works, in English. 1637 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c004 center'>D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>D., C., 1633. <i>See</i> Downinge, Calybute.</li>
- <li class='c030'>D., E., 1588. <i>See</i> Dyer, Edward.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>D., I., 1628. <i>See</i> Doughty, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>D., I., 1607. <i>See</i> Dunster, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>D., I. Engraver’s initials (?). 1601 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>D., I., H., 1610. <i>See</i> H., I., D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>D., W., 1628. <i>See</i> Dickinson, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Damme, P. v., mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Danby, earl of. <i>See</i> Danvers, Henry.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Daniel, rev. C. H., of Worcester coll., Oxford. His reprint (1883) of the Sixe idyllia (1588) of Theocritus, mentioned. 1588 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Danvers, Henry, lord Danvers, baron Dauntsey (Dantesey), earl of Danby. Dedication to him, as lord “Davers.” 1624 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Date. Mistakes in date, in early printed books, p. <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— by Olympiads, pp. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li>— how referred to, p. viii.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Dauntsey, baron. <i>See</i> Danvers, Henry.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Davenant, Edward, archdeacon of Berkshire. Visitation articles, 1631. 1631 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Davers, lord. <i>See</i> Danvers, Henry.</li>
- <li class='c030'>David’s Enlargement. <i>See</i> 1625 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>David’s Strait. <i>See</i> 1625 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Davies, John. Microcosmos, the discovery of the little world (a poem on man, with other poems by and to J. Davies). 1603 D, 1605 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Davis, Richard. His sale catalogues, mentioned. 1607 K, 1614 S, 1631 P, 1639 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Davis, William, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dawes, Lancelot. Two assize sermons. 1614 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— His Sermons (1653), mentioned. 1614 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Day, —, of Ch. Ch., Oxford, mentioned. 1632 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Day, John, printer in London, 16th cent., mentioned. 1614 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Day, John, of Oriel college, Oxford. Two sermons (on Ps. xxvii. 4), 1609. 1612 D, 1615 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Day’s Dial, twelve lectures. 1614 D.</li>
- <li>— “David’s Desire to go to Church,” mentioned. 1615 D.</li>
- <li>— Day’s festivals or twelve of his sermons (and short pieces on the Sacraments). 1615 D.</li>
- <li>— Day’s Descant on David’s Psalms (1–8). 1620 D.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Daye, Lionel. Concio ad clerum (on Luke xvii. 31), 1609. 1632 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Day’s Dial. <i>See</i> Day, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dead, Office for the. <i>See</i> Liturgy.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dedicus (Dethick?), Joannes. Quaestiones super libros Ethicorum (Aristotelis). 1518 D, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Defence of truth. <i>See</i> Price, Daniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Defensio fidei catholicae. <i>See</i> Grotius, Hugo.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Defunctorum exequiae. <i>See</i> Liturgy.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Deliciae deliciarum. <i>See</i> Epigrams.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Delle, John. <i>See</i> Dolle, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Democritus, junior, pseudonym. <i>See</i> Burton, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Demosthenes. Orationes 15, cum interpretatione Nic. Carri. 1593 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Orationes quindecim, Graece. 1597 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Denison, John. De confessionis auricularis vanitate et de sigilli confessionis impietate. 1621 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dent, —, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Derby, dowager countess of. <i>See</i> Egerton, Alice.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Derby, earl of. <i>See</i> Stanley, Ferdinand.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Stanley, Henry.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Derby, Robert de. <i>See</i> Robert de Derby.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Descent into Hell. <i>See</i> Parkes, Richard, 1604.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dethick, John. <i>See</i> Dedicus, Joannes.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Deventer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Devereux, Robert, earl of Essex. Dedications to him. 1590 G, 1592 G, 1594 P, 1596 P, R, 1598 P, 1607 C, p. <a href='#Page_234'>234</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Preface to Savile’s Tacitus by A.B., said to be by the earl of Essex. 1591 T.</li>
- <li>— Devoraxeis, carmen per. G. Carleton. 1603 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Devon, 1605. <i>See</i> Hutton, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Devoraxeis. <i>See</i> Devereux, Robert, earl of Essex.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Diarium astronomicum. <i>See</i> Wyberd, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dickinson, William. Milk for babes, the English Catechism explained. 1628 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Digby, lord George, 2nd earl of Bristol, <i>d.</i> 1676. Dedication to him. 1631 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Digby, sir John, earl of Bristol, mentioned. 1630 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Digby, sir Kenelm. Dedications to him. 1633 J, M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Digesta scholastica. <i>See</i> Morrice, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Digges, sir Dudley. Dedication to him. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dillon, Harold A. L., viscount Dillon, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dioscorides. Scriptores in Dioscoridem, in bibl. Bodleiana, 1605 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Divine right of Kings, 1611. <i>See</i> Benefield, Sebastian.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Divinity. Manuduction unto divinity, 1625. <i>See</i> James, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dochin, Henry, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Doddington, sir William. Dedication to him. 1637 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dolle or Delle, John, stationer and bookbinder, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>Dormer, Robert, i.e. lord Dormer. Dedication to him. 1626 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dorne (Thorn), John, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>: as I. T. (?), p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dorset, earl of. <i>See</i> Sackville, Richard, Robert, and Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Doughty, John. Two discourses, by I. D. 1628 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dousa, Janus. Declamatio in I. Wouweri Umbram. 1636 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dovelike Soul, 1625. <i>See</i> Rawlinson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Downe, John. Certain treatises, ed. by G. Hakewill. 1633 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Of the true nature and definition of justifying faith (with several other treatises, verses and translations, by the same author). 1635 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Downeham, bp. George. The Christian’s Freedom (two editions). 1635 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Downinge, Calybute. A discourse of the state Ecclesiastical in relation to the Civil, by C. D. 1633 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— 2nd ed. 1634 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Drake, lady Elizabeth, widow of sir Francis Drake. Dedication to her. 1596 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Drake, sir Francis. Sir Francis Drake (a poem by C. Fitz-Geffrey, two issues). 1596 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dramatic. <i>See</i> Plays.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Draudius, Georgius. His <cite>Bibliotheca Exotica</cite>, 1625, mentioned. 1607 D, 1609 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— His <cite>Bibliotheca Classica</cite> (1625) mentioned. 1615 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Dryden, sir Henry, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dublin. Trinity College, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>8 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ducæus, Fronto (Le Duc), mentioned. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Duck, Arthur. Vita Henrici Chichele archiep. Cantuar. 1617 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dudley, Ambrose, earl of Warwick. Oration to him by J. Sprint, in Latin. 1587 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dudley, lady Mary. Dedication to her. 1586 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dudley, Robert, earl of Leicester. Dedications &amp;c. to him. 1585 C, 1587 B, S, 1588 H, 1596 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Carmen in adventum Lecestrensis Comitis ad collegium Lincolniense. 1585 D.</li>
- <li>— Poem to him (29 Aug. 1566?) by J. Sprint, in Latin, 1587 S.</li>
- <li>— Oration to him by J. Sprint, in Latin. 1587 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Duff, Edward Gordon, mentioned, p. vii, 1586 S, pp. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a> (<i>bis</i>), 273.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dugres, Gabriel. Dialogi Gallico-anglico-latini. 1639 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dukas, Jules, mentioned. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dulwich. The College Library, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Du Moulin, Pierre, the elder. Heraclitus or meditations upon the vanity and misery of human life, by Peter du Moulin, translated by R. S(tafford?). 1609 D, 1634 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— The waters of Siloë to quench the fire of purgatory (a confutation of Purgatory). 1612 D.</li>
- <li>— The accomplishment of the prophecies, or the third book in defence of the Catholic Faith. 1613 D.</li>
- <li>— Sermon before the king, 1615. 1620 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Duns Scotus, Johannes. Scriptum Oxoniense super primum Sententiarum (P. Lombardi), 1519, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Dunster, John. Protestation against popery, by I. D. 1607 D, 1609 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Caesar’s penny, a sermon (on 1 Pet. ii. 13–14: on Passive Obedience) 1610 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Du Plessis, seigneur de. <i>See</i> Mornay, Philippe de.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Duppa, dr. Brian. Dedications to him. 1634 L, 1638 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Durham. The Cathedral Library mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Du Val, A. Treatise against him by Du Moulin. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Dyer, Edward. Dedication to E. D., perhaps E. Dyer. 1588 T.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ea., parishioner of St. Mary’s, Oxford, about 1610–15, mentioned. 1615 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ecclesia. <i>See</i> Church.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Echo. An echo song. 1636 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eclogarius. <i>See</i> Panke, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Edinburgh. 1638 (Burton) was partly printed at Edinburgh.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Advocates’ library, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Edmonds, Denis, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Edrychus, Georgius. <i>See</i> Etheridge, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Edward, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Egerton, Alice, countess of Ellesmere, dowager countess of Derby, i. e. Alice Spencer. Dedication to her. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Egerton, John. Dedication to him. 1599 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Egerton, sir Thomas, lord Ellesmere. Dedications to him. 1586 H, 1589 H, 1597 A, K, 1599 C, K, 1600, B, K, R, 1612 R, 1614 B, 1615 A, 1618 B, 1629 B, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a> (1598).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eggington, co. Derby. Dedication to the parishioners of Eggington of a sermon preached there by S. Presse, 1596. 1597 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>Eidyllia. <i>See</i> Henry, prince, 1612.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Elizabeth, princess, daughter of James i, mentioned. 1613 B, P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Epithalamia sive lusus Palatini in nuptias Frederici et Elizabethae (verses by Oxford men). 1613 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Elizabeth, princess, <i>d.</i> 1650. Coronae Carolinae quadratura, poems on the princess’s birth by members of the University of Oxford. 1636 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Elizabeth, queen. Dedications to her. 1585 B, 1591 T, 1594 B, 1614 R, (<i>bis</i>), 1631 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon by J. Prime comparing her with Solomon. 1585 P.</li>
- <li>— De legato (a treatise to support the queen in putting Mary queen of Scots to death.) 1587 L.</li>
- <li>— The consolations of David briefly applied to queene Elizabeth, a sermon by J. Prime. 1588 P.</li>
- <li>— Churchyard’s Handful of gladsome verses given to the queen’s majesty at Woodstock, 1592. 1592 C.</li>
- <li>— Speeches to her Majesty at Bisham, Sudeley and Rycote, 1592. 1592 E, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem to her by W. Gager, 1592. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— Sandford’s <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια</span> in honour of the Queen’s visit to Oxford, 1592. 1592 S.</li>
- <li>— Mention of the celebration of the Queen’s Day (Nov. 17). 1601 H, 1602 H.</li>
- <li>— <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πανηγυρὶς</span> Elizabethae, a sermon 17 Nov. 1599, by T. Holland. 1601 H.</li>
- <li>— Ad Elizabetham carmen, per G. Carleton. 1603 C.</li>
- <li>— Invitatorius panegyricus, de reginae posteriore ad Oxoniam adventu: per Rob. Burhill. 1603 O.</li>
- <li>— Oxoniensis academiae funebre officium in memoriam Elisabethae reginae. 1603 O.</li>
- <li>— Merton College case (disputing a lease to the Queen). 1623 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ellesmere, countess of. <i>See</i> Egerton, Alice.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ellesmere, lord. <i>See</i> Egerton, sir Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ellis, F. S., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Enchiridion oratorium. <i>See</i> Pemble, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Encyclopaedia. <i>See</i> Oxford—University, 1635.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Enderby, Samuel, bookseller of London, mentioned. 1640 S, pp. <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>England. <i>See</i> Armada, Chronicles, Gunpowder Plot.
- <ul>
- <li>— Account of a stay in England, by L. Petrucci (in Ital. and Latin verse). 1613 P.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to the nation. 1618 A.</li>
- <li>— The joyful reuniting the two kingdoms, England and Scotland, by Bp. Thornborough. (Also his “Discourse of the Union.”) 1605 T.</li>
- <li>— Historia Britannica, hoc est de rebus gestis Britanniae seu Angliae commentarioli tres (by J. T. Clain). 1640 C.</li>
- <li>— Church of England. <i>See</i> Articles, Canons.</li>
- <li>— — The authority of the Church. <i>See</i> Mason, Francis.</li>
- <li>— — Church and State. <i>See</i> Downinge, Calybute, 1633.</li>
- <li>— — Ecclesiae Anglicanae Politeia. <i>See</i> Cosin, Richard.</li>
- <li>— — Constitutiones provinciales, with a Latin commentary by W. Lyndewoode. 1483 L, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li>— — Answer of the University of Oxford to the petition of the Church of England desiring reformation of the Church. 1603 O (4 issues, one undated), 1604 O.</li>
- <li>— — Latin letter on the Church by dr. John Rainolds. 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— — Speech in behalf of the Clergy, by sir B. Rudyard. 1628 R.</li>
- <li>— — Form of Articles of Visitation, undated, apparently for Bishops or Archdeacons. 1633 A.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>English. <i>See</i> Phonetic spelling.
- <ul>
- <li>— Grammars. <i>See</i> Butler, Charles.</li>
- <li>— Lexicons. [For lexicons of English and some other language see under the name of the other language.]</li>
- <li>— — Glossary of hard words in Wycliff. 1608 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ensham, Walter de. <i>See</i> Walter de Ensham.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Enstone, co. Oxon. <i>See</i> Bushell, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Enze, earl of. <i>See</i> Gordon, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Epigrams. <i>See</i> Gamage, William.—<i>See</i> Reinolds, John.
- <ul>
- <li>— Deliciae deliciarum sive Epigrammatum in Bibl. Bodleiana <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἀνθολογία</span>, opera A. Wright. 1637 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Epistolae. <i>See</i> Letters—Latin.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Epistolae Eucharisticae. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Epithalamia Oxoniensia. <i>See</i> Oxford—University.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Erasmus, Desiderius. Disticha in Novum Testamentum in editione Erasmi inserta. 1586 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Moriae Encomium. <i>See</i> 1633 E.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ernest, grand duke of Austria. Dedication to him. 1633 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>Ernest Casimir, count of Nassau. Dedication to him. 1629 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Errata. <i>See</i> Pararuades.
- <ul>
- <li>— Note about authors’ revision of proofs and responsibility for Errata. 1638 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Essex, earl of. <i>See</i> Devereux, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eternity. <i>See</i> Tipping, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Etheridge (Edrychus), George. Edited Shepery’s Hippolytus, with a preface. 1586 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ettenius, Christophorus. Dedication to him. 1634 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Euclid. Praelectiones 13 in Elementa Euclidis, auctore H. Savilio. 1621 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eudæmon-Johannes, Andreas (L’Heureux), a Jesuit, mentioned. 1613 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Castigatio A. Eudæmon-Johannis, per I. Prideaux. 1614 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Euphormio, pseud. <i>See</i> Barclay, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Europe. Of the state of Europe, by G. Richardson. 1627 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eustathia. <i>See</i> Roche, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Evangelical Counsels. <i>See</i> Benefield, Sebastian, 1610.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Evans, Edward. Verba dierum, or the day’s report of God’s glory (4 sermons.) 1615 E (two issues).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Evans, Herman, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Evans, William. A translation of the book of Nature into the use of Grace. 1633 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Excommunication. Forma sententiae excommunicationis. 1636 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Exequiae defunctorum. <i>See</i> under Liturgy.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Exeter, diocese. Dedication to the bp. and clergy. 1633 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eye. The vanity of the eye. <i>See</i> Hakewill, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Eye-sight. <i>See</i> Bailey, Walter; Fernelius, Johannes; Riolanus, Johannes.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>F., A. Saints’ Legacies (perhaps by A. Farindon). 1631 F, 1640 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— — mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>F., C., 1596. <i>See</i> Fitz-Geffrey, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>F., J. B., mentioned. 1640 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Faber, —. Gemma Fabri, mentioned. 1586 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fabricius, J. S. Meditationes, Oxf. “1576,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fabulous foundation of the Popedom. <i>See</i> Bernard, Richard, 1619.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Farindon, Anthony. <i>See</i> F., A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Farmer, dr. Richard. Farmer sale, 1798, mentioned. 1589 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Farrear, Robert. Direction to the French Tongue. 1618 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Faunt, John and Simon, bookbinders, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Faustus, Johannes. <i>See</i> Fust, Johann.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fawkner, Antony. The widow’s petition, an assize sermon on Luke xviii. 3. 1635 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Felix, Marcus Minucius. Octavius. 1627 F, 1631 F, 1636 F.
- <ul>
- <li>— Octavius, tr. into English by R. James. 1636 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Fell, bp. John, mentioned. 1638 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fell, dr. Samuel. Primitiae sive oratio ... et concio ... (1626). 1627 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Feltham, Owen. Verses by him. 1638 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Feminine monarchy. <i>See</i> Butler, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fenninge, William. <i>See</i> Jennings, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fernelius, Johannes. Extracts from his works about the eyesight. 1616 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ferrand, Jacques. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἐρωτομανία</span>, or a treatise of love or erotic melancholy. 1640 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ferrar, Nicholas. Translated Valdés’ <cite>Considerations</cite> into English. 1638 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Festivall, or Festiall. <i>See</i> Mirk, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fetiplace, John, son of Richard. Dedication to J. Phetiplacius. 1596 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fetiplace, Richard. Dedication to R. Phetiplacius. 1596 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fetiplace, William, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fey, Jacobus, de Florentia, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Field, rev. Nathaniel. Edited his father’s treatise on the Church. 1628 F, 1635 F.
- <ul>
- <li>— dr. Richard. Of the Church, five books, ed. by Nath. Field. 2nd ed. 1628 F.</li>
- <li>— — 3rd. ed. 1635 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Fischer, Johann. <i>See</i> Piscator, Johannes.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fisher, B., mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fitz-Geffrey, Charles. Sir Francis Drake, a poem (two issues). 1596 F.
- <ul>
- <li>— Affaniae, sive epigrammatum libri tres, et cenotaphia. 1601 F.</li>
- <li>— The Blessed Birthday: also Holy Raptures (poems). 1634 F.</li>
- <li>— Compassion towards captives, three sermons at Plymouth. 1637 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Flavel, John. Tractatus de demonstratione. 1619 F, 1624 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Flemynge, sir Thomas, lord chief justice. Dedication to him. 1608 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fletcher, John. Rule a wife and have a wife, a comedy. 1640 F.
- <ul>
- <li>— The tragedy of Rollo (the Bloody Brother). 1640 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Flit, Thomas, of Worcester. Dedication to him. 1598 I.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Floritius. Dedication to him. 1634 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Florus, Lucius Annaeus. Oratio de eo, per Deg. Whear. 1625 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— Rerum a Romanis gestarum libri iv, cum comm. J. Stadii. 1631 F, 1638 F.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>— Excerpts from him. 1634 P.</li>
- <li>— The Roman Histories, tr. into English by E. M. B(olton). 1636 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Foderby, Simon, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Forrest, Edward, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Foxgrave. <i>See</i> Vosgraf.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Foxle, George. The groans of the spirit. 1639 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Foxon, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>France. Articles agreed on by the Reformed Churches of France at Charenton, Sept. 1623. 1623 F, 1624 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Franciscus, of Arezzo. Latin translation of the Letters of Phalaris by Franciscus Aretinus. 1485 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Franeker. Dedication to four curators of the University. 1629 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Frederick iii, Elector Palatine. Authorized the Heidelberg Catechism in 1562. <i>See</i> Catechism, 1587, &amp;c.
- <ul>
- <li>— Edict about the Heidelberg Catechism, 156<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>, in Latin. 1629 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Frederick v, Elector Palatine, mentioned. 1613 B, P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Epithalamia sive lusus Palatini in nuptias Frederici et Elizabethae (Verses by Oxford men). 1613 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Freeling, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>French. <i>See</i> Bense, Petrus.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Farrear, Robert.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Grave, Jean de.</li>
- <li>— Reglas grammaticales para aprender la lengua Española y Francesa. 1586 S.</li>
- <li>— Janitrix (a French Grammar, in Latin, by P. Morlet). 1596 M.</li>
- <li>— Le guichet François, par J. Sanford. 1604 S.</li>
- <li>— Brief extracts of the former Latin (French) Grammar, done into English by John Sanford. 1605 S.</li>
- <li>— Poems. 1613 O, 1622 O, 1630 O, 1633 O, 1636 O (<i>bis</i>), 1638 O, 1640 O.</li>
- <li>— Dialogi Gallico-anglico-latini, per G. Dugres. 1639 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Frewen, Accepted. Oratio (in obitum principis Henrici), 7 Dec. 1612. 1612 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1638 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Friars. <i>See</i> Wycliff, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Friesland. Dedication to senators of Friesland. 1629 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Frisia, Nicholas de. <i>See</i> Nicholas de Bolswert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Froben, Johann, printer at Bâle, mentioned. 1627 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fromondus, Libertus. Meteorologicorum libri sex. 1639 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fuller, Nicholas. Miscellaneorum theologicorum libri 1–4. 1616 F, <i>see</i> p. x.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fuller, Thomas. His Abel Redivivus mentioned. 1607 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Fust, Johann, printer of Mainz, mentioned 1585 C.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>G. <i>See</i> Gager, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>G., H. Five short Latin poems signed at end “H. G.” 1636 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>G., I., 1634. <i>See</i> Gregory, dr. John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>G., M., 1593. <i>See</i> Gwinne, Matthew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>G., R. R., 1599. <i>See</i> Roche, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>G., T. An answer to Wither’s Motto (in verse). 1625 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gaetani, Enrico. <i>See</i> Sermonetta, cardinal.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gager, William. Edited the Exequiae Philippi Sidnaei. 1587 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poem to N. Breton. 1592 B.</li>
- <li>— Meleager (a play, with other short poems). 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— Panniculus Hippolyto Senecae tragoediae assutus, 1591. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— Prologus in Rivales comoediam, and other short pieces. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— Ulysses Redux, tragoedia. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— An apology for women, against dr. G(ager): by W. Heale. 1609 H.</li>
- <li>— The overthrow of stage plays by way of controversy betwixt Gager and Rainolds, 2nd ed. 1629 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Galen. Scriptores in Galenum, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gallager. <i>See</i> Vicars, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gallinager. <i>See</i> Goldsmith, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gamage, William, of Jesus College, Oxford. Linsi-woolsie, or two centuries of epigrams. 1613 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gamelia. <i>See</i> Rogers, Hugh.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Garassus, Franciscus, S. J., mentioned. 1639 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Garbrand, alias Herks, John, bookseller. Latin poem by him. 1634 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Garbrand, alias Harkes, Richard, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gardiner sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gardyner, dr. Richard. Sermon on Gen. xlv. 8. 1622 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Concio ad clerum, 14 Feb. 1631 (on 1 Tim. iv. 16), with some biographical details in the dedication. 1631 G.</li>
- <li>— Christmas sermon, on John i. 14. 1638 G.</li>
- <li>— Easter sermon, on Rom. viii. 11. 1638 G.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Matth. ii. 2. 1639 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Garnet, Henry, Jesuit, mentioned. 1608 C, 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>Gavent, Richard, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gemma Fabri. <i>See</i> Faber, —.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Geneva. <i>See under</i> Wells, Will.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gentilis, Albericus. De injustitia bellica Romanorum. 1590 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Complimentary poem by him. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— Short poem by him mentioned. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>— Ad Tit. C. de Maleficis &amp;c. commentarius. 1593 G.</li>
- <li>— Italian sonnet by him to J. Budden. 1602 B.</li>
- <li>— Letter from him to dr. Howson, 12 Aug. 1603, in Latin. 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— Four Latin letters between him and dr. Rainolds about stage plays, 1593, 2nd ed. 1629 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Geoffrey, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Geography. <i>See</i> Carpenter, Nathanael; Heylyn, Peter; Pemble, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Georgians. Note about them, by T. Crosfield. 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Geree, John. Edited Pemble’s <cite>Vindiciæ fidei</cite>. 1629 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gerhardus, Johannes. Meditationes sacrae. 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gidding, Little. A Little Gidding binding mentioned. 1638 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Giessen (Gissenum). <i>See</i> Buscherus, Heizo.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gifford, Roger, physician. Dedication to him. 1590 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gigliis, Johannes de. <i>See</i> Johannes de Gigliis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Giles, sir Edward and lady Mary. Dedication to them. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gillow, Joseph, mentioned. 1610 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Glanville, John, of Balliol coll., Oxford. Articuli Christianae fidei, versu expressi. 1613 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Glasgow. Free Church College library mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gloucester, archdeaconry. Articles to be enquired of in the Archdeaconry of Gloucester, 1629. 1629 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gloucester, city. Sermon delivered there, by S. Benefield. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gloucester, Humphrey, duke of, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Goade, Edward. Dedication to him. 1633 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Godsond, John, stationer, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Godwin, bp. Francis. Orders for the reformation of abuses in the diocese of Llandaff. 1603 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Calculation of the value of large numbers of sesterces. 1630 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Godwin, Joseph, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Godwin, Thomas. Romanae Historiae Anthologia, an English exposition of the Roman Antiquities, for the use of Abingdon school. 1613 G, 1614 G, 1616 G, 1620 G, 1623 G, 1625 G, 1628 G, 1631 G, 1633 G, 1638 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Synopsis antiquitatum hebraicarum. 1616 G.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1614 G.</li>
- <li>— His <cite>Moses and Aaron</cite> mentioned. 1616 G.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1637 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Goffe, Thomas. Oratio funebris in obitum Gul. Goodwin (two editions). 1620 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Oratio funebris in obitum Henrici Savilii. 1622 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Gold printing. 1633 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Goldsmith, John (“Gallinager,” = of Henfield). Latin letters to and from him. 1627 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gomarists, mentioned. 1626 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Good works. <i>See</i> Corderoy, Jeremy.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Goodman, Godfrey, bp. of Gloucester. His arguments against the eternity of the world, as printed by dr. Hakewill. 1635 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Goodwin, dr. William, dean of Christ Church, Oxford. Sermon before the king. 1614 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1619 B, M.</li>
- <li>— Oratio funebris in obitum ejus, auctore T. Goffe (two editions). 1620 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Gordon, George, earl of Enze, afterwards 2nd marquis of Huntly. Dedication to him. 1607 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gore, John, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gower, Thomas, parchment seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gowrie’s conspiracy, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1600. Sermon on it by J. Prideaux. 1637 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grammar. <i>See</i> under the language.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grante, Patrick, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grave, Jean de. The pathway to the Gate of Tongues (Latin, French, and English: including the Church Catechism). 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Graves, William, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gravius, Thomas. <i>See</i> Greaves, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Great Britain. <i>See</i> Britain, Great.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Great Britain’s Sunset. <i>See</i> Basse, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Greaves, Thomas (Gravius). De linguae Arabicae utilitate et praestantia. 1639 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Greek. First Greek book printed at Oxford (Cambridge &amp; in England). <i>See</i> 1586 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Tabulae ad grammatica Graeca introductoriae, per Joh. Prideaux. 1607 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.</li>
- <li>— Greek poems, 1613 O (<i>bis</i>), 1619 O, 1622 O, 1623 O, 1624 O, 1625 O (<i>bis</i>), 1630 O, 1633 O (<i>bis</i>), 1636 O (<i>bis</i>), 1637 B, 1638 B, O, 1639 J, 1640 O.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>— Greek poem on lord Spencer of Wormleighton, by R. Parre. 1628 P.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li>— Savile’s Greek type, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Gregorius, monk. Letter relating the martyrdom of Ketaban, 1614. 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gregorius de Valentia. Rainoldus de Romanae Ecclesiae idololatria (adversus Gregorium, &amp;c.) 1596 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gregory the Great. Bellum Gregorianum (a table of passages corrupted in the Roman editions of Gregory’s works). 1610 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— Collectanea, out of St. Gregory, &amp;c., by J. Panke. 1618 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Gregory, dr. John (“I. G.”) Edited Ridley’s View of the civil and ecclesiastical law, 2nd ed. 1634 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grene, Johannes, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grenewey, R., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gressop, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grey, Arthur, lord Grey of Wilton, Dedications to him. 1585 S, 1588 C (<i>bis</i>), 1591 S, 1594 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Funeral sermon on him, by T. Sparke, 1593. 1593 S.</li>
- <li>— In obitum ejus <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">θρηνῳδία</span>, auctore I. Sandfordo. 1593 S.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1606 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Grey, lady Joanna Sybil. Dedication to her. 1606 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grey, Thomas, lord Grey of Wilton. Dedication to him. 1593 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grey, William, son of Arthur, lord Grey of Wilton. Dedication to him. 1605 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Beatae Mariae Magdalenae lachrymae in obitum Gul. Grey. 1606 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Grey of Wilton, lady. Dedication to her. 1593 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Groans of the spirit. <i>See</i> Foxle, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grosart, dr. Alexander B., mentioned. 1596 F, 1601 F, 1603 D, 1634 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Grotius, Hugo. Defensio fidei catholicae de satisfactione Christi adversus Faustum Socinum. 1636 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— De Veritate religionis Christianae. 1639 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Guadus. <i>See</i> Wade, —.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Guarna, Andreas. <i>See</i> Bellum grammaticale.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Guido de Columnia. Historia Trojana per T. R. “Oxf. 1480,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Guild, William. Throne of David. Oxf. “1569,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gulston, bp. William. The Bibliotheca Gulstoniana (1688), mentioned. 1626 W, 1628 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gumbleden, John. God’s great mercy, a sermon. 1628 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Gunpowder plot. <i>See</i> Barclay, John; Hakewill, George; Rainolds, John, 1586 and 1613; Taylor, bp. Jeremy.
- <ul>
- <li>— Nonae Novembris (by Tho. Cooper). 1607 C.</li>
- <li>— Univ. Sermon, 5 Nov. 1609. 1612 D, 1615 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Gustavus Adolphus, king of Sweden, <i>d.</i> 1632. Latin poem on him, with chronogram, by D. Heinsius. 1637 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Tumulus Gustavi Adolphi, a Latin funeral poem by C. B. 1636 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Gwinne, Matthew. Epicedium in obitum Henrici comitis Derbeiensis. 1593 G.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., A., 1638. <i>See</i> Hodges, Anthony.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., F., parchment seller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., G. <i>See</i> Hakewill, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., H. Greek epigram by him. 1639 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., I. Discourses of Ursinus, &amp;c., translated by I. H. 1600 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., I. Latin complimentary poem to C. Butler. 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., I. D. Preface by him. 1610 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., L., 1605. <i>See</i> Hutten, Leonard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., M., 1640. <i>See</i> Hunt, Matthew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., the lady M. Dedication to her. 1609 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., N. Edited Carpenter’s <cite>Chorazin</cite> and probably his <cite>Achitophel</cite>. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., R., 1598. <i>See</i> Haydocke, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., S., 1640. <i>See</i> Harding, Samuel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., T., 1579. <i>See</i> Hill, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., T., 1605. <i>See</i> Hutton, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., T., 1634. <i>See</i> Hickes, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., W., 1609. <i>See</i> Heale, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>H., W., 1613–14. <i>See</i> Hinde, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Haarlem. Haarlem printing, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Habakkuk, the prophet. Sermon by Hooker, on Habakkuk’s faith, &amp;c. 1612 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Haberdashers’ Company. <i>See</i> London—Haberdashers’ Company.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hacket, Roger. Sermon on 1 Sam. xi. 5–7. 1591 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hailstone sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hakewill, dr. George. The vanity of the eye. 1608 H (<i>bis</i>), 1615 H, 1633 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him, as the donor of a new Chapel to Exeter college, Oxford. 1625 P.</li>
- <li>— Comparison between the days of Purim and that of the Powder Treason, by G. H. 1626 H.</li>
- <li>— An apology of the power and providence of God: by G. H. 1627 H, 1630 H (with author’s name), 1635 H.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>— Edited Downe’s treatises, and prefixed a funeral sermon by himself. 1633 D.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1637 P (ix).</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hales, Alexander de. <i>See</i> Alexander de Hales.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hales, John. Oratio funebris (on sir Thomas Bodley). 1613 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon, on 2 Pet. iii. 16. 1617 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hales Owen, Worcestershire, mentioned in 1481 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hall, bp. Joseph. Letter by him about J. Downe, 1631. 1633 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1639 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ham house, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hamilton, James, 2nd marquis of Hamilton, earl of Arran, <i>d.</i> 1625. Dedications to him. 1625 P, 1637 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hamilton, James, duke of Hamilton, <i>d.</i> 1649. Dedication to him. 1622 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hamme, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hampole, Richard Rolle of. Explanationes super lectiones Job. 1483 H, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hampton Court. The Royal Slave, a tragi-comedy by W. Cartwright, acted at Hampton Court. 1639 C, 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harding, Samuel. Sicily and Naples, or the Fatal Union, a tragedy, by S. H. 1640 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harington, sir John. Dedication to him. 1607 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harkes, Garbrand, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harkes, or Herks, John. <i>See</i> Garbrand, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harkes, Richard. <i>See</i> Garbrand, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harley, Robert, earl of Oxford, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harmar, John. Six homilies of St. Chrysostom, in Greek, ed. by J. Harmar. 1586 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Beza’s sermons on the Song of Solomon i-iii, tr. into English by J. Harmar. 1587 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Harris, W., bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Harrison, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hart, Horace, mentioned, p. vii.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hart, John. Summa Colloquii J. Rainoldi cum J. Harto de capite et fide Ecclesiae, &amp;c. (1583). 1610 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hartlibius, Samuel. Edited Comenius’s Porta Sapientiae. 1637 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hatton, Christopher lord. Dedications to him. 1588 C, 1590 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— William. Dedication to him. 1588 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Haven of the Afflicted. <i>See</i> Benefield, Sebastian.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Haviland, John, printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hawkins, —, parchment seller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hay, lord. Dedication to him. 1606 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hay, James, earl of Carlisle. Dedication to him. 1625 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Haydocke, Richard. Lomazzo’s Arts of Painting, tr. by R. H(aydocke). 1598 L (misplaced on p. <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hayes, William. The paragon of Persia (assize sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford, 7 July, 1624). 1624 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Haywood, dr. William. Dedication to him. 1637 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hazlitt, W. Carew, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heale, William. An apology for women, by W. H. 1609 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hearne, Thomas, mentioned. 1586 C, p. <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heath, John. Translated Du Moulin’s Accomplishment of the Prophecies. 1613 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heber, Richard, mentioned. 1613 G, 1640 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hebrew, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Notes of the use of Hebrew type. 1596 U, 1601 H, 1602 C, 1603 J, 1605 J, 1620 J, 1625 N, W.</li>
- <li>— Poems. 1613 O (<i>bis</i>), 1619 O, 1622 O, 1623 O, 1625 O (<i>bis</i>), 1636 O (<i>bis</i>), 1640 O.</li>
- <li>— Study of Hebrew at Oxford mentioned. 1627 P.</li>
- <li>— Tabula directoria (a Hebrew grammar), by V. Bythner. 1637 B.</li>
- <li>— Lingua Eruditorum, a Hebrew grammar, by V. Bythner. 1638 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hedwigius. Hedwigii liber “Oxon. 1470,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heidelberg Catechism. <i>See</i> Catechism.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heinsius, Daniel. Complimentary Latin poem by him, on Vossius’s Rhetoric. 1631 V.
- <ul>
- <li>— Latin poem on Puteanus’s Comus. 1634 P.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem by him on Gustavus Adolphus. 1637 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Henley. Some Henley notes. 1626 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Henrietta Maria, wife of Charles i. Epithalamia Oxoniensia in Caroli cum Henrietta Maria connubium. 1625 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to her. 1634 B, 1636 M.</li>
- <li>— Speeches, &amp;c. at the presentation of Bushell’s Rock to her, 23 Aug. 1636. 1636 B.</li>
- <li>— Coronae Carolinae quadratura, poems partly to her on the birth of the princess Elizabeth, 1635, by members of the University of Oxford. 1636 O.</li>
- <li>— Flos Britannicus (poems partly to her on the birth of the princess Anne, 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, by members of the University of Oxford). 1636 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>Henry, prince, <i>b.</i> 1640. Poems by members of the University of Oxford in honour of his birth. 1640 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Henry of Bourbon, Dauphin of France. Dedication to him. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Henry, prince of Wales, <i>d.</i> 1612. Poem to him by J. Davies. 1603 D, 1605 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1605 J, 1607 C, W, 1608 P, 1610 P.</li>
- <li>— Mentioned. 1605 O.</li>
- <li>— Eidyllia in obitum Henrici. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Luctus posthumus, sive ... Magdalenensium officiosa pietas (poems on prince Henry’s death). 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Oratio (in obitum ejus), per Acc. Frewen. 7 Dec. 1612. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Great Britain’s Sunset, a poem by W. Basse, on prince Henry’s death. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— Prince Henry his first anniversary, an essay by D. Price. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>— — his second anniversary, by dr. D. Price. 1614 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Heraclitus. <i>See</i> Du Moulin, Pierre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, family, earls of Pembroke. <i>See also</i> Wilton.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, —, earl of Pembroke, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, Charles, son of the earl of Pembroke. Dedication to him. 1634 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, George. Latin poem to Bacon. 1637 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Letter from him to N. Ferrar on the latter’s translation of Valdés’ <cite>Considerations</cite>. 1638 V.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem on Bacon’s <cite>Instauratio Magna</cite>. 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert George R. C., earl of Pembroke, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, Henry, lord Cardiff. Dedication to him. 1594 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, Henry, earl of Pembroke. Dedication to him. 1587 S, U, 1589 U, 1591 U, 1593 U, 1601 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, Mary. <i>See</i> Pembroke, Mary countess of.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, Philip, earl of Pembroke (and Montgomery), <i>d.</i> 1669. Dedications to him. 1625 C, 1634 T, 1640 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, William, bibliographer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herbert, William, earl of Pembroke. Dedications &amp;c. to him. 1592 T, 1622 O, 1625 C, W, 1626 P, 1629 C, Z, 1630 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hereford, diocese, 1586. <i>See</i> Westfaling, Herbert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heresies. <i>See</i> Sparke, Thomas, 1591.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herks. <i>See</i> Harkes.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hermaica gymnasmata (Latin exercises). 1589 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herod the Great. The unfortunate politique (i. e. Herod), by C. N. (i. e. N. Caussin). 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Herodotus. Historiarum liber primus (Graece). 1591 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heropaideia. <i>See</i> Cleland, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hesse, Ludwig and Philip landgraves of. Dedications to them. 1637 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hetone, —, subdean of Christ Church, Oxford. Dedication to him. 1586 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heureux, L’. <i>See</i> Eudæmon-Johannes, Andreas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heydon, sir Christopher. Answer to his <cite>Defence of Judiciary Astrology</cite>, 1603, by bp. George Carleton. 1624 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heylyn, Edward. Poem by him. 1621 H, &amp;c.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Heylyn, Peter. Microcosmus, or a little description of the great world (Cosmography). 1621 H, 1625 H, 1627 H, 1629 H, 1631 H, 1633 H, 1636 H, 1639 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hickes, Francis. Translated select Dialogues of Lucian. 1634 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hickes, Thomas. Edited his father’s translation of select Dialogues of Lucian, with Life of Lucian and notes (“T. H.”) 1634 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hieronymus, S. <i>See</i> Jerome, st.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Higins, John. Answer to mr. William Perkins. 1602 H (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hill, dr. Thomas. Reasons which dr. Hill hath brought for the upholding of papistry, unmasked. By George Abbot. 1604 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— His book on bees (1579, &amp;c.), mentioned. 1609 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hill, William, of Pitminster. Dedication to him. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hilton, A., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hinde, William, of Queen’s college, Oxford. Path to Piety. 1613 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Edited works of dr. John Rainolds. 1613 R, 1614 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hinton, William, archdeacon of Coventry, mentioned. 1610 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hippocrates. Scriptores in Hippocratem, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hippolytus. <i>See</i> Shepery, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Historia Britannica. <i>See</i> England.</li>
- <li class='c030'>History. De ratione legendi Historias. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hodges, Anthony. Translated the <cite>Loves of Clitophon and Leucippe</cite> of Achilles Tatius. 1638 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hoernen, Arnold ther, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hole, William, engraver. Map of Virginia by him. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Holland, dr. Thomas. Oratio Sarisburiae habita 6 Jun. (1599) cum Episcopus gradum D. D. susciperet. 1599 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πανηγυρὶς</span> Elizabethae, a sermon 17 Nov. 1599: whereunto is adjoined an apologetical discourse. 1601 H.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>— Dedication to him. 1607 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.</li>
- <li>— Funeral sermon on him, by R. Kilbie. 1613 K.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Holmes, Randle. His Academy of Armory (1688), mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Holte, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Holyday, Barten. Persius’s satires tr. by B. Holyday, 2nd impression. 1616 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Philosophiae politobarbarae specimen. 1633 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Holyoak, W. H., bookseller, of Leicester, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Holyoke, Francis. Sermon on obedience (on Hebr. xiii. 17). 1610 H, 1613 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Rider’s Dictionary, recast by Holyoke (F. de Sacra Quercu). Lat.-Engl. and Engl.-Lat. 1627 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Holyoke, Thomas, mentioned, 1589 R, 1627 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hommius, Festus. LXX disputationes theologicae adversus Pontificios. 1630 H, 1639 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hooker, Richard. MS. of Gregory the Great belonging to him, mentioned. 1610 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon on Faith in the elect, especially of Habakkuk’s faith. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Pride. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Remedy against sorrow, a sermon. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Justification (on Hab. i. 4). 1612 H: 2nd ed., 1613 H.</li>
- <li>— Travers’s Supplication against Hooker. 1612 T.</li>
- <li>— Answer to a supplication by mr. Walter Travers. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Two sermons on Jude 17–21. 1614 H.</li>
- <li>— His Ecclesiastical Polity, mentioned. 1614 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hopper, Simon. Composed dances for a Masque in 1636. 1636 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Horace. A 1470 edition with signatures, p. <a href='#Page_248'>248</a> <i>n.</i></li>
- <li class='c030'>Horner, John and Anna, of Mells. Dedication to them. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Howard, Theophilus, duke of Suffolk, <i>d.</i> 1640. Dedication to him. 1626 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Howberghe, William (Hubbert), stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Howle, Thomas. An error for Hunt, Thomas. <i>See</i> p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Howson, dr. John, bp. of Oxford. Sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford, 17 Nov. 1602, on Church festivities. 1602 H, 1603 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Uxore dimissa ... aliam non licet superinducere: thesis. 1602 H, 1606 H.</li>
- <li>— Letter to him from Alb. Gentilis, 12 Aug. 1603, in Latin. 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— In controversiam inter Johannem Howsonum et Thomam Pyum tractatus (auctore Rob. Burhill). 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— Articles to be enquired of ..., 1619, 1628, 1619 H, 1628 H.</li>
- <li>— Directions to preachers in his diocese. 1622 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hubbert, William. <i>See</i> Howberghe, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hubbocke. William. Oration to the king at the Tower of London, 12 March 160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>, in Latin and English. 1604 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Huggins, Thomas, stationer, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hugh, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hugh, of Lincoln, st. Dissertation on his life, by T. Holland. 1601 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Huish, Alexander. Edited Flavel’s Tractatus de demonstratione. 1619 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hulderic, prince, of Denmark. Dedication to him. 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Humfrey, Laurence. Latin poems by him. 1585 C, 1587 S, 1614 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Edited Summa et Synopsis Novi Testamenti, and wrote the “Admonitio ad Studiosos” in it. 1586 S.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, 1586 S.</li>
- <li>— A view of the Romish Hydra, sermons. 1588 H.</li>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1615 B, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Humiliation. <i>See</i> Bolton, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Humphrey duke of Gloucester. <i>See</i> Gloucester, Humphrey duke of.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hungerford, sir Anthony. The advice of a son to his dear mother a Roman Catholic; and the memorial of a father. 1639 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hungerford, sir Edward. Edits two treatises of his father. 1639 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hunt, Matthew, bookseller. Edited the <cite>Historia Britannica</cite>, as “M. H.” 1640 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hunt, Thomas, stationer and printer, mentioned. 1485 P, pp. <a href='#Page_238'>238</a>, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hunter, Robert, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hunter, W. F., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Huntly, 2nd marquis of. <i>See</i> Gordon, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hutchins, Edward. Assize sermon, 1586. 1586 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon on Gal. 5. 12. 1586 H.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Cant. iv. 7. 1589 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Hutchins, Robert. Short catechism (<i>no date</i>). 1617 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Huth, Henry. His library mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hutten, Leonard. Answer to a treatise of the Cross in baptism. 1605 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Hutton, Thomas. Reasons for refusal of subscription to the Book of Common Prayer (by) Ministers of Devon and Cornwall, with an answer. 1605 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>Hyrys, John, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>I.</li>
- <li class='c030'>I., T., 1599, 1625. <i>See</i> James, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>I., W. Translated the <cite>Jesuit’s Pater Noster</cite> from the French. 1611 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Idylls. <i>See</i> Henry, prince, 1612.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ieronimus. <i>See</i> Jerome, st.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ilium in Italiam. <i>See</i> Sansbury, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Illuminators, &amp;c., in Oxford, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Imitation of Christ. <i>See</i> Kempis, Thomas à.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Imprimaturs. <i>See</i> 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>In controversiam ... <i>See</i> Burhill, Robert, 1606.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Index Expurgatorius. Index generalis librorum prohibitorum a Pontificiis, per T. James. 1627 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Indulgence. Indulgence of “Oxf. 1489,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ingleby, C. M., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Inglis sale, 1826, mentioned. 1589 S, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ingmethorp, Thomas. Sermon. 1598 I.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Innocent iii, pope. Indulgence of 1489 or 1499 by him, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Instructions for young gentlemen. <i>See</i> Sermonetta, card.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Insubrica historia. <i>See</i> Puteanus, Erycius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Iredale, A., bookseller of Torquay, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ireland. Proverb about Tuesday being unfortunate to Irish. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ironside, dr. Gilbert. Seven questions of the Sabbath briefly disputed. 1637 I.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Isocrates. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πρὸς Δημόνικον, πρὸς Νικοκλέα, Νικόκλης.</span> <i>See under</i> 1586 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— In Isocratis Busiridem praefatio, per Joh. Prideaux. 1607 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Italian. <i>See</i> Bense, Petrus; Petrucci, Lodovico.
- <ul>
- <li>— Grammar or introduction to the Italian tongue, by J. Sanford. 1605 S.</li>
- <li>— Italian poems. 1606 O, 1613 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Italicus, Peregrinus, de Lugo. Principia seu introductiones, Lond. 1506, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ive, Simon, musical composer, mentioned. 1636 B.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>J., S., 1614. <i>See under</i> S., N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jackson, Henry, of C.C.C., Oxford. Edited Hooker’s sermon on Justification. 1612 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Edited Wyclif’s Wicket. 1612 W.</li>
- <li>— Probably edited several of Hooker’s smaller treatises. 1612 H.</li>
- <li>— Translated Benefield on Amos into Latin (1614–15). 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— Edited two sermons of dr. Hooker. 1614 H.</li>
- <li>— Mentioned as editor of Rainold’s Orationes. 1614 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Jackson, Simon, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jackson, Thomas, pres. of Corpus Christi college, Oxford. Two sermons. 1617 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— Diverse sermons. 1637 J.</li>
- <li>— Treatise of the consecration of the Son of God. 1638 J.</li>
- <li>— His judgement on Valdés’ <cite>Considerations</cite>. 1638 V.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Jacobi, Henricus, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jacobus de Voragine, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jaggard, William, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>James, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>James i, king. Dedications, &amp;c., to him. 1603 B, D, O (<i>bis</i>), W, 1604 O, 1605 D, K, T, 1608 S, 1613 P, 1619 O, 1621 D, 1634 B, C, R, 1635 M.
- <ul>
- <li>— Ad Jacobum carmen, per G. Carleton. 1603 C.</li>
- <li>— Academiae Oxoniensis pietas erga Jacobum regem. 1603 O.</li>
- <li>— Oration to him in the Tower of London, 12 March 160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>, by W. Hubbocke, in Latin and English, with dedication to the king. 1604 H.</li>
- <li>— Musa hospitalis Ecclesiae Christi Oxon. (poems to greet the king, &amp;c.). 1605 O.</li>
- <li>— Rex Platonicus, sive de adventu Regis ad academiam Oxoniensem, 27 Aug. 1605; narratio ab Is. Wake. 1607 W (<i>bis</i>), 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W, 1663 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>— His Apologie for the Oath of Allegiance, mentioned. 1613 D.</li>
- <li>— Jacobi ara (congratulatory poems by the University of Oxford, on his return from Scotland). 1617 O.</li>
- <li>— Sermon by J. Rawlinson on the king’s “inauguration,” 24 March. 161<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>: dedicated also to the king. 1619 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>— Mandate about preaching (1622) mentioned. 1622 H.</li>
- <li>— Latin speech to him by dr. J. Prideaux. 24 Aug. 1624. 1624 P.</li>
- <li>— Cenotaphium Jacobi (a funeral oration by dr. John King, with a list of the king’s works, &amp;c.). 1625 K.</li>
- <li>— Oxoniensis academiae Parentalia memoriae Jacobi dicata. 1625 O.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>— The Book of Psalms translated by James i. 1631 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>James ii, king. Poems to celebrate his birth by members of the University of Oxford, in Latin, &amp;c. 1633 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>James, dr. Francis. Dedication to him. 1614 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>James, Richard. Anti-possevinus, a sermon. 1625 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— Concio ad clerum (Matth. xvi. 18). 1633 J.</li>
- <li>— Edited sir Thomas More’s Epistola ad academiam Oxon., adding some Latin poems of his own on Cotton and Allen. 1633 M.</li>
- <li>— Translated Felix’s Octavius into English. 1636 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>James, dr. Thomas. Richardi de Bury Philobiblon, ed. by T. I. (i. e. T. James). 1599 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Catalogus librorum (impressorum et manuscriptorum) bibliothecae Bodleianae, cum elencho expositorum. 1605 J.</li>
- <li>— Enlarged edition of his catalogue of Expositors of the Bible, by J. Verneuil. 1635 V.</li>
- <li>— Concordantiae patrum in librum Canticorum. 1607 J.</li>
- <li>— Apology for John Wycliff. 1608 J.</li>
- <li>— Two short treatises of Wycliff, ed. by dr. James, with Glossary. 1608 W.</li>
- <li>— Bellum Gregorianum sive corruptionis Romanae in Operibus Gregorii loca insigniora (ed. by James). 1610 J.</li>
- <li>— The Jesuit’s downfall threatened against them, with the Life of father Parsons. 1612 J.</li>
- <li>— Catalogus bibl. Bodleianae, cum appendice. 1620 J.</li>
- <li>— Humble and earnest request (about restoring perverted texts of the Fathers): signed “T. I.” 1625 J.</li>
- <li>— — Explanation or enlarging of the Supplication (a reprint with comments of the Request, with rules of Textual Criticism and biographical details). 1625 J.</li>
- <li>— His Ecloga Oxonio-Cantabrigiensis mentioned. 1625 J.</li>
- <li>— A manuduction or introduction unto divinity (comments on the Articles, &amp;c.). 1625 J.</li>
- <li>— Index generalis librorum prohibitorum a Pontificiis. 1627 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>James, William, dean of Christ Church, Oxford. Dedications to him. 1586 C, 1591 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1587 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Jeanes, Henry. A Christian’s careful abstinence from all appearance of evil. 1640 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jenkinson, F. J. H., mentioned, pp. vii, 253.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jenks, Rowland, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jennings (Fenninge?), William, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jenson, Nicholas, printer, mentioned. 1485 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jerome, st. For Expositio s. Hieronymi in Symbolum Apostolorum. <i>See</i> Rufinus, Tyrannius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jersey, earl of. <i>See</i> Villiers, Victor Albert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jests. Merry jests concerning Popes, monks, and friars. 1617 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jesuits. <i>See</i> James, dr. Thomas, 1612.
- <ul>
- <li>— Relation of an alleged imposture by them in Georgia, 1614. 1633 G.</li>
- <li>— Decretum Universitatis Oxoniensis (contra Jesuitas). 1622 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Jesuit’s Pater Noster. The Jesuit’s Pater Noster given to Philip iii king of Spain, with the Ave Maria. Englished by W. I. 1611 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jesus Christ. “The last will and testament of Jesus Christ.” <i>See</i> Communion, Holy.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Spark (1622, Spark of Christ’s beauty).</li>
- <li>— Descent in Hell. <i>See under</i> Parkes, Richard, 1604.</li>
- <li>— Christus, sive dicta et facta Christi, per H. Tozer. 1634 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Jewell, bp. John. Apologia ecclesiae Anglicanae, in Greek. 1614 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— — in Greek and Latin. 1639 J.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1628 R, 1633 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Johannes de Alemannia, alias de Kasterle, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Johannes Chrysostomus. <i>See</i> Chrysostom, st.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Johannes Duns Scotus. <i>See</i> Duns Scotus, Johannes.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Johannes de Gigliis (Liliis). Indulgence from him 1489 or 1499, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Johannes, Andreas Eudæmon. <i>See</i> Eudæmon-Johannes, Andreas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>John, st., the Evangelist. Life of him by Symeon, ed. by R. Brett in Greek and Latin. 1597 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>John, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>John, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>John Rylands library. <i>See</i> Manchester.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Johnes sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Johnson, Benjamin. Poem by him. 1630 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, 1640 F, H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Johnson, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Joliffe, Henry, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jones, Hugh, printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>Josephus, Flavius. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εἰς Μακκαβαίους ἢ περὶ αὐτοκράτορος λογισμοῦ</span>, with Latin translation. 1590 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Joye, John, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Julius, Christianus, Erricus and Gregorius, Danes. Dedication to them. 1629 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Junius, Francis. Funeral oration on Z. Ursinus, tr. into English. 1600 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Junius, Patricius. <i>See</i> Young, Patrick.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jus canonicum. <i>See</i> Law—Canon Law.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Jus civile. <i>See</i> Law—Civil Law.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Justification. <i>See</i> Pemble, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Juxon, bp., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kasterle, Johannes de. <i>See</i> Johannes de Alemannia.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kellett, dr. Edward. Dedication to him. 1633 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kempis, Thomas à. The Imitation of Christ, revised by W. P(age). 1639 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ketaban. <i>See</i> Gregorius, monk.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kilbie, Kichard. Funeral sermon on dr. Holland. 1613 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Killigrew, sir William, mentioned. 1629 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kinaston, sir Francis. Translated the first two books of Chaucer’s Troilus and Cressida into Latin verse. 1635 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>King, —, printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>King, Henry, Sermon on Ps. xxxii. 5 (part of “Two Sermons ...”). 1625 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>King, bp. John. Lectures upon Jonas. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.
- <ul>
- <li>— Funeral sermon by him on John Piers archbp. of York, 1594. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.</li>
- <li>— Sermon at York, 1595. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.</li>
- <li>— Articles ministered in his visitation as archdn. of Nottingham, 1599, 1605, 1599 K, 1605 K.</li>
- <li>— The fourth sermon (on Cant. viii. 11) preached at Hampton Court, 30 Sept. 1606. 1606 K, 1607 K.</li>
- <li>— Five sermons before the King. 1607 K.</li>
- <li>— Sermon, on Ps. xlvi. 7–11. 1607 K.</li>
- <li>— Sermon at St. Mary’s, Oxford (on 1 Chron. xxix. 26–8). 1608 K.</li>
- <li>— Sermon at Whitehall, 5 Nov. 1608 (on Ps. xi. 2–4). 1608 K.</li>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1611 B, 1613 B, G.</li>
- <li>— <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Πανακαδημικὸς</span> sive gratulatio pro Carolo reduce. 1623 O.</li>
- <li>— Cenotaphium Jacobi (an oration). 1625 K.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on 2 Sam. xxiv. 14 (part of “Two Sermons ... “). 1625 K.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>King’s Norton, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kingsmill, Thomas. Classicum poenitentiale (et) De Scandalo. 1605 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kingsmill, William. Edited the “Encomion Rodolphi Warcoppi.” 1605 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Knight, Roger, mentioned. 1607 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Knight, William, of Broadgates hall, Oxford, mentioned. 1622 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Knollys, William, lord Knollys of Grays, afterw. earl of Banbury. Dedication to him. 1605 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Knott, Edward. <i>See</i> Wilson, Matthias.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kohlburger, Johann Alexander. <i>See</i> Brassicanus, Joh. Alex.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Korsellis. <i>See</i> Corsellis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kynaston, sir Francis. <i>See</i> Kinaston, sir Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Kyrfoth, Carolus, printer at Oxford, mentioned. 1519 C, p. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>L., G. (1636, 1638). <i>See</i> Langbaine, Gerard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>L., H., 1595. <i>See</i> Lewis, Hugh.</li>
- <li class='c030'>L., R., 1594. <i>See</i> Lewes, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>L., T., 1622. <i>See</i> Lodge, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lactantius, Lucius Coelius Firmianus, mentioned. 1627 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lacy, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Laet, Jaspar. Praenostica excerpta e praenosticis Jasparis Laet. 1518 L, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lake, dr. Arthur, warden of New College, bp. of Bath and Wells. Dedications to him. 1616 E, 1617 T, 1619 F, 1625 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lancaster, sir James, mentioned. 1626 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Langbaine, dr. Gerard. Edited Longinus de grandiloquentia, as “G. L.”, and added a Latin poem on T. Wethereld. 1636 L, 1638 L.
- <ul>
- <li>— Translated Ranchin’s Council of Trent. 1638 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Langport, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Langton, dr. William, pres. of Magdalen college, Oxford. Dedications to him. 1614 J, 1639 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Large paper copies. 1634 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Latewar, Richard, pres. of St. John’s coll., Oxford. Poem by him, in Latin. 1588 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lathbury, John. Latin Commentary on the Lamentations of Jeremiah by “Johannes Latteburius.” 1482 L, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span><span class='sc'>Latin</span>:
- <ul>
- <li><i>Grammars.</i>
- <ul>
- <li><i>See</i> Sanford, John.</li>
- <li>Latin Grammar in English. 1481 L, p. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- <li>Anwykyll’s Compendium totius grammaticae. 1483 A, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li>Lily’s Grammar in Latin and English. 1636 L.</li>
- <li>Grounds of Grammar by J. Bird. 1639 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Lexicons.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Bibliotheca scholastica, a double dictionarie (Engl.-Lat. &amp; Lat.-Engl.) by John Rider. 1589 R.</li>
- <li>Dictionarium Etymologicum Latinum a Francisco de Sacra Quercu (Holyoke). 1627 H.</li>
- <li>Bibliotheca Rideri scholastica, ed. by F. Holyoke (English-Latin). 1627 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Latteburius, Johannes. <i>See</i> Lathbury, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Laud, archbp. William. Dedications to him. 1631 G, 1634 Z, 1636 Z, 1637 I, 1638 T, 1639 B, G, W.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, 1631 P, 1638 C, 1639 H; cf. p. vii.</li>
- <li>— His action with respect to Potter’s <cite>Want of Charity</cite>. 1633 P.</li>
- <li>— The “Laudian Statutes” of the University of Oxford. 1634 O.</li>
- <li>— Proclamation by him as Chancellor of the University of Oxford about the City Market. 1634 O.</li>
- <li>— Mention of his donations to the Bodleian. 1639 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Laurence, Thomas. Two sermons. 1635 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='sc'>Law</span>:
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li><i>See</i> Zouche, Richard.</li>
- <li>Dedication to law students. 1629 Z.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Canon Law.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>For the Canon Law of England <i>see under</i> England—Church.</li>
- <li>Interpretes Juris Canonici, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Civil Law.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Interpretes Juris Civilis, in bibl. Bodleiana. 1605 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Layer Marney, Essex, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Le Blon, C. Engraved a title for Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, 3rd and following edd. 1628 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Le Duc, Fronto. <i>See</i> Ducæus, Fronto.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lee Priory press, mentioned. 1596 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Leech, Humphrey. Doctrinae Christianae sex capita (adversus H. Leech [<cite>Triumph of Truth</cite>]), auctore S. Benefield. 1610 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— — The defence of Truth, by D. Price, against the <cite>Triumph of Truth</cite> by H. Leech. 1610 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Legatus. De legato et absoluto principe perduellionis reo. 1587 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Legh, Edward. Selected Observations concerning the first twelve Cæsars. 1635 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Legh, Henry. Dedication to him. 1635 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Legh, sir Urian. Sermon at his wedding, by W. Massie, 1586. 1586 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Leicester, mentioned. 1639 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Leicester, earl of. <i>See</i> Dudley, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Leigh, sir Thomas. Dedication to him by J. Verneuil, acknowledging his and his grandfather (sir Thomas Leigh)’s help. 1628 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lennox, duke of. <i>See</i> Stewart, Ludovic.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Leslie, Henry. Sermon at Windsor, on Heb. iii. 8. 1625 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lesquier, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Letters, Latin.
- <ul>
- <li>Cujusdam Christiani Epistola (Camb., 1521), mentioned. 1586 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lewes, Richard. Apologia innocentiae et integritatis R. L[ewes] adversus E. Osb[erni] calumnias. 1594 L.
- <ul>
- <li>— Concio habita Oxoniae <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1594 per R. L. (on Phil. iii. 1). 1594 L.</li>
- <li>— Sermon at Paules Cross (Gen. xxvii. 1–10). 1594 L.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lewin, sir Justinian. Dedication to him. 1631 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lewis, Hugh. Translation by H. L[ewis] into Welsh of Coverdale’s English translation of Wermueller’s <cite>Precious Pearl</cite>. 1595 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lex Talionis, 1625. <i>See</i> Rawlinson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ley, John. Letter from him. 1616 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Leyden. Ger. Joh. Vossii Theses quas disputandas proposuit in academia Leidensi. 1628 V.
- <ul>
- <li>— LXX disputationes theologicae in gratiam Collegii Anti-Bellarminiani in acad. Leydensi, auctore F. Hommio. 1630 H, 1639 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>L’Heureux, André, alluded to. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lhuyd, John. Edited the Peplus Philippi Sidnaei. 1587 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Edited Josephus <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εἰς Μακκαβαίους</span> with a Latin translation and a few notes. 1590 J.</li>
- <li>— Barlaamus de papae principatu, Gr.-Lat., ed. by J. Luidus. 1592 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lichfield, John, printer. Latin poem by him. 1633 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— His disputes with Turner mentioned. 1636 L.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lichfield, Leonard, printer. Poems by him. 1636 O, 1638 O, 1640 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Liliis, Johannes de. <i>See</i> Johannes de Gigliis.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>Lily, William. Lily’s Latin Grammar, in Latin and English. 1636 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Limbomastix. <i>See under</i> Willett, Andrew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lincoln, Sir George St. Paul’s work there. 1613 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Cathedral library mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lincoln, countesses of. <i>See</i> Clinton, Bridget and Elizabeth.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lindsay, James Ludovic, earl of Crawford and Balcarres, mentioned pp. <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Linsi-woolsie. <i>See</i> Gamage, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lion in the Lamb, the. <i>See</i> Wall, John, 1628.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Listrius, Gerardus. <i>See</i> Lystrius, Gerardus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lithotheorikos. <i>See</i> Thornborough, bp. John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lithuanian. <i>See under</i> Bible.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Little, William, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Liturgy. Explanationes Ricardi Hampole super illas lectiones Job quae solent in exequiis defunctorum legi. 1483 H, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Llandaff, diocese. Orders for the reformation of abuses issued by the bishop. 1603 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Llewellin, Martin, mentioned. 1638 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poem by him, 1640 F.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lloyd, John, 1590, 1592. <i>See</i> Lhuyd, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Loarte, Gaspare, mentioned. 1585 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lodge, Thomas. Wrote a preface to, and possibly revised, the countess of Lincoln’s <cite>Nursery</cite>. 1622 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Logic. <i>See</i> Airay, Christopher; Brerewood, Edward; Flavel, John; Prideaux, dr. John; Sanderson, John; Sanderson, Robert; Smiglecius, Martinus; Smith, Samuel.
- <ul>
- <li>— Logical treatises, partly by Swineshede, in Latin. 1483 L, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Loidoromastix. <i>See under</i> Willett, Andrew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lomazzo, Giovanni Paolo. Artes of curious painting &amp;c., tr. by R. Haydocke. 1598 L (misplaced under 1599).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lombard, Peter. <i>See under</i> Duns Scotus, Johannes.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='sc'>London</span>:
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li>Summa colloquii (in Turre Londinensi habiti, 1583). 1610 R.</li>
- <li>The fearful summer, or London’s Calamity (the plague), by John Taylor (a poem). 1625 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>British Museum.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>mentioned. 1613 B, O, R. 1631 S, 1640 R, pp. <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- <li>Bagford collections mentioned. 1631 S.</li>
- <li>Clementis Romani Epistola ad Corinthios prima, edited from the Alexandrine MS. by Patricius Junius. 1633 C.</li>
- <li>Oxford 15th cent. books there, p. <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Guildhall.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>A MS. there mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Haberdashers’ Company.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dedication to it. 1613 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Lambeth.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>The library mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Merchants’ Company.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dedication to it. 1608 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Printing.</i>
- <ul>
- <li><i>See</i> pp. <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>–3.</li>
- <li>Sheet of paper printed on the Thames 18 Jan. 1716, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>St. Magnus.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned. 1629 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Skinners’ Company.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dedication to it. 1626 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Stationers’ Company.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Monopoly of Psalms, mentioned. 1615 P.</li>
- <li>Mentioned. 1633 G.</li>
- <li>Its relation to Oxford printing in 1636. 1636 L.</li>
- <li>Its monopoly of primers, &amp;c. (1603) mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li>Agreement between it and the University of Oxford, 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, 1639, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, esp. 285, 287.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Temple.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dispute between Travers and Hooker about the Temple pulpit. <i>See</i> Travers, Walter, 1612.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Tower of London.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Description of it by W. Hubbocke, chaplain there. 1604 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Westminster.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Printing there, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.</li>
- <li>The Chapter library, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Longinus, Dionysius. De grandiloquentia (Gr. &amp; Lat.), ed. by dr. Gerard Langbaine. 1636 L.
- <ul>
- <li>— 2nd ed. 1638 L.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lord’s Prayer. The Jesuit’s Pater Noster. 1611 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lots. Defence of the lawfulness of lots in gaming against N. N., by J. Downe. 1633 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Louis, prince, of Nassau. Dedication to him, 1614. 1630 H, 1639 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Louis xiii, King of France. Dedication to him. 1634 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Advertisement by him, about Balzac. 1639 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Louvain, mentioned. 1640 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Love’s peerless paragon. <i>See</i> Byrd, Josias.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lowe, sir Thomas. Dedication to him and others. 1613 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lucian. Cupido (in Greek), mentioned. 1586 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Select dialogues translated by F. Hickes, with notes and Life by T. Hickes. 1634 L.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>— Epigram by him on his own dialogues, with translation. 1634 L.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Luctus posthumus. <i>See under</i> Henry, prince, 1612.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lübeck, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_248'>248</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lugdunum Batavorum. <i>See</i> Leyden.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lugo, Peregrinus Italicus de. <i>See</i> Italicus, Peregrinus, de Lugo.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Luidus, Ioannes. <i>See</i> Lhuyd, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Luke, st., the Evangelist. Life of him by Symeon, ed. by R. Brett in Greek and Latin. 1597 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lumen. Quaestiones de lumine et luce, Oxf. “1500”, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lumley, —, lord Lumley, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lusus Palatini. <i>See</i> 1613 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lux. Compendium quaestionum de luce et lumine, Oxf. “1510”, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Compendium quaestionum de luce et lumine. 1518 L, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Lycophron. Alexandra (or Cassandra), in Greek. 1592 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lyford, William. Edited Pinke’s <cite>Trial</cite>: <i>see</i> Pinke, William, 1630, 1631, 1636.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lyndewoode, William. Opus W. Lyndewoode (de Tylia nemore) super Constitutiones provinciales. 1483 L, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lynne, Richard, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lyster, Edmund, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Lystrius, Gerardus, Rhenensis. Oratio, Carmen, &amp;c., mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>M., C. B., 1629. This is Carolus Butler, Magdalenensis: <i>see</i> Butler, Charles, 1629 B, 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>M., T., 1617. <i>See</i> Morrice, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mabbe, James, of Magdalen college, Oxford. Translated Aleman’s Rogue. (Diego Puede-Ser = J. Maybe). 1630 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Machiavelli, Niccolo, interlocutor. <i>See</i> Attonitus, Richardus, 1626.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Madesdon, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Majestas. <i>See</i> Cooke, James, 1608.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Maldon, co. Surrey. Merton College Case (about Maldon). 1623 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Maleficae. <i>See under</i> Gentilis, Albericus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Manchester. The Chetham library mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Oxford 15th cent. books owned by the John Rylands (Spencer) library, p. <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- <li>— The John Rylands (once the Spencer) library, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Manciple, Henry, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mandevill, Robert. Timothy’s task, or a Christian sea-card. 1619 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mansell, lady Katherine. Dedication to her. 1613 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Manuduction, 1625. <i>See</i> James, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Manuscripts. <i>See</i> Transcription.
- <ul>
- <li>— Table of MSS. used by dr. Tho. James in his Manuduction unto divinity. 1625 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Map, Walter, mentioned. 1626 A, p. <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Market Raisin. <i>See</i> Rasen Market.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Marlborough. Sermon preached there by B. Parsons. 1637 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Marprelate controversy, mentioned. 1587 P, 1588 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Marshall, William. Engravings by him. 1631 B, 1636 L, 1638 A, L, 1639 B, 1640 B (<i>see</i> frontispiece).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Martin, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Martin, James (“Jacobus Aretius”). Editor of verses on prince Henry. 1612 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Martyr, Peter. De Sacramento Eucharistiae, “1549”, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Letter from him to bp. Jewell, in Latin. 1639 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Mary, St., the Virgin. Our Lady’s Psalter. <i>See</i> Psalter.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mary, queen of Charles i. Musarum Oxoniensium Charisteria pro regina Maria. 1638 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mary de’ Medici, queen of France. The Ave Maria to the queen of France. 1611 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mary countess of Pembroke. <i>See</i> Pembroke, Mary countess of.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mary, queen of Scots. De legato (a treatise to support queen Elizabeth in putting Mary queen of Scots to death). 1587 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mason, Francis. The authority of the church, 2nd ed. 1634 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Masque. The king and queen’s Entertainment at Richmond in a Masque, 12 Sept. 1636. 1636 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mass displayed. <i>See</i> Bedé, Jean.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Massie, William. Wedding sermon, 1586. 1586 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Massinger, Philip, mentioned. 1640 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Matthew, archbp. Tobias. Dedication to him. 1593 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Concio apologetica adversus Campianum (on Deut. xxxii. 7). 1638 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Matthias, grand duke of Austria. Dedication to him. 1633 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Maurer, Benjamin Auber. Dedication to him, 1621. 1631 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Maurice, prince of Orange, mentioned. 1626 A.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>— Dedication to him, 1614. 1630 H, 1639 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Maurice, Nicholas, mentioned. 1592 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mauritius de Portu Hiberniae, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mawle of Heretics. Name given to S. Price. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Maximilian, grand duke of Austria. Dedication to him. 1633 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Maximus Tyrius. Disputationes tres (in Latin). 1614 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>May games. Sermon against May-games, 1598, by H. R(oberts). 1600 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mayence. Mayence printing mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mayne, Jasper, mentioned. 1638 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— The City Match, a comedy. 1639 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Medicine. <i>See</i> Primerose, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mediolanum. <i>See</i> Milan.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meditation. <i>See</i> Bible—<i>O.T.</i>—<cite>Psalms</cite> (1613).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meerman sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meisey Hampton. <i>See</i> Meysey Hampton.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Melancholy. The Anatomy of Melancholy. <i>See</i> Burton, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Memnon. Excerpta de Heraclaea Pontica, Gr. et Lat. 1597 A, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mercurius, interlocutor. <i>See</i> Attonitus, Richardus, 1626.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mercurius Davidicus. <i>See</i> 1634 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meredith, Christopher, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Merry jests. <i>See</i> Jests.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meslier, Hugo, 1506, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Metaphysics. <i>See</i> Crakanthorp, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Metaphysic. <i>See</i> Scheibler, Christophorus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meteorology. <i>See</i> Fromondus, Libertus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Meysey Hampton, co. Gloucester. Sermons delivered there, by S. Benefield. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Michelborne, Edward. Dedication to him, with his reply. 1601 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Michelborne, Thomas. Verses by him. 1596 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Microcosmos. <i>See</i> Davies, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Microcosmus. <i>See</i> Heylyn, Peter.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Middleton, dr. Conyers, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Middleton, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Milan (Mediolanum). <i>See</i> Zouche, Richard.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1640 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Miles, Edward, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Millard, rev. J. E., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Miller, Conrad, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Miller, Henry, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Millissent, sir John. Dedication to him. 1625 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Milward, Henry, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mirk, John. The book that is called Festivall. 1486 M, p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Miscellanea theologica. <i>See</i> Fuller, Nicholas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Molinaeus, Petrus. <i>See</i> Du Moulin, Pierre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Montacutius, R. <i>See</i> Mountague, bp. Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Montague, James, bp. of Bath and Wells, afterwards of Winchester. Dedications to him. 1616 G, 1617 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Montgomery, earl of. <i>See</i> Herbert, Philip.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Montpellier. Description of the University (academia Monspeliaca) by J. Primerose, in Latin. 1631 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Moore, John, bp. of Ely. His Library (now at Cambridge) mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Moore, Robert. Diarium historico poeticum. 1595 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>More, Jean, Poems on John Sanford, in French. 1605 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>More, John, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>More, sir Thomas. Epistola ad academiam Oxoniensem. 1633 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Moreton, near Thame, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Morgan, William, bp. of St. Asaph. Dedication to him. 1602 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Morlet, Pierre. Janitrix (a French Grammar, in Latin). 1596 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mornay, Philippe de, seigneur Du Plessis. Two homilies (two issues, one with and one without the author’s name). 1612 M.
- <ul>
- <li>— Homily on Matt. xvi. 18, tr. from the French by I. V. 1615 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Morrice, Thomas. Digesta scholastica, per T. M. (T. Morrice?). 1617 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Moss, Joseph William, mentioned. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Motteshead, —, printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mottoes. <i>See</i> Proverbs.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Moulin, Pierre du. <i>See</i> Du Moulin, Pierre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mountague, bp. Richard. Apparatus ad Origines Ecclesiasticas, collectore R. Montacutio. 1635 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mourray, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1607 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Murder. <i>See</i> Storre, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Muretus, Marcus Antonius. Verse translation of his Institution for Children, by J. Downe. 1635 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Murray, sir David. Dedication to him. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Musae regnantes. Running title of I. Wake’s <cite>Rex Platonicus</cite>, 1607, &amp;c.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Music. The praise of music (attributed to J. Case). 1586 M.
- <ul>
- <li>— — discussion on its authorship, p. <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li>— Apologia musices, by J. Case. 1588 C.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>.</li>
- <li>— The first music printed (engraved) at Oxford. 1609 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>Mychelborne, Thomas. <i>See</i> Michelborne, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Mystery of godliness. <i>See</i> Spark, William.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N. Exercitatio adversus N., auctore Johanne Downe. 1635 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N., B. P. <i>See</i> B. P. N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N., C., 1638. <i>See</i> Caussin, Nicolas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N., E. Dedication to him. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N., K. Dedication to her. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N., N. Treatises by J. Downe against N. N. 1633 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>N., S. (an error for S., N.). 1614 N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Naghel, Fredericus, de Trajecto, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nassau, count of. <i>See</i> Ernest Casimir.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Natural science. <i>See</i> Sennertus, Daniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Netherlands. <i>See</i> Belgium.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nettles, Stephen. Answer to the Jewish part of Selden’s History of tithes. 1625 N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Neville, sir Henry, of Pillingbere, Berkshire. Dedications to him. 1603 C, 1628 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>New Sarum. <i>See</i> Salisbury.</li>
- <li class='c030'>New Testament. <i>See</i> Bible—<i>New Testament</i>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Newcastle upon Tyne. Sermons preached there by T. Jackson. 1637 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Newnham Regis. Discourse of certain baths near Newnham Regis, 1587, p. <a href='#Page_22'>22</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Newton, N., printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nicholas de Bolswert (Bodelswerdia), alias de Frisia, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nichols, John. His Progresses of James i, mentioned. 1604 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nider, Johannes. His Expositio Decalogi mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nixon, Anthony. The dignity of man, by N. A. 1616 N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nixon, alias Way, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nobleman. Instruction of a young nobleman. <i>See</i> Cleland, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nonae Novembres. <i>See</i> Cooper, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nonsuch, co. Surrey. Sermon preached there, 1605. 1605 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1607 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Normandy. <i>See</i> Zouche, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Norris, Henry, lord Norris, mentioned. 1592 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Norton, John, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_306'>306</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nottingham, William of. <i>See</i> William of Nottingham.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Noye, William, attorney general. Dedication to him. 1633 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Numismatics. Comparison of foreign and English coins. 1621 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Of the value of the Roman sesterce, by G(eorge) H(akewill). 1627 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Nuntius chronogrammaticus. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Nursing. <i>See</i> Clinton, Elizabeth, countess of Lincoln.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Oath. <i>See</i> Churchwardens.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Supremacy.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Octavius. <i>See</i> Felix, Marcus Minucius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Odes. <i>See</i> Catilinariae proditiones.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Offenius, a Dane, mentioned. 1629 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Oldys, William. His <cite>British Librarian</cite> mentioned. 1634 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Olympiads, as a method of reckoning time, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Optic glass of humours. <i>See</i> Walkington, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Orange, prince of. <i>See</i> Maurice, prince of Orange.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Philip, prince of Orange.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Oratory. <i>See</i> Butler, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Orford, W., of Exeter coll. Oxford, mentioned. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Origines ecclesiasticae. <i>See</i> Mountague, bp. Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Orthography. <i>See</i> Phonetic spelling.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Orthologus, interlocutor. 1619 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Osberne, Edward. Apologia innocentiae R. L[ewes], adversus E. Osb[erni] calumnias. 1594 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Osborne, Thomas, bookseller. His book-sale in 1756 mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Our Lady’s Psalter. <i>See</i> Psalter.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Overton, John. Exposition of Gen. xxxiii. 1–3. 1586 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ovid. His Heroïdes (Hippolytus) mentioned. 1586 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Metamorphoses englished by G(eorge) S(andys). 1632 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Owen, sir Roger. Dedication to him. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Owen, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1597 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='sc'>Oxford</span>:
- <ul>
- <li>Invitatorius panegyricus, de Elizabethae reginae posteriore ad Oxoniam adventu: per Rob. Burhill. 1603 O.</li>
- <li>Visit of Abr. Scultetus to Oxford, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li>Description of recent buildings in Oxford, 1624, in Latin. 1624 P.</li>
- <li>Cowper 1637. An almanack referred to the famous university and city of Oxford. 1637 C.</li>
- <li>Note on <i>Oxonia</i>, <i>Oxonium</i>, <i>Rhydychen</i>, <i>Bellositum Dobunorum</i>, p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>. <i>See</i> 1628 V.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span><i>All Souls College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Balliol College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Story of damage to the library done by father Parsons, and his expulsion. 1612 J.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Bodleian Library.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned as a Panbiblion, by R. Haydocke. 1598 L.</li>
- <li>Mentioned. 1599 C, R, 1608 W, pp. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a> (<i>ter</i>).</li>
- <li>Early history of it, by T. James. 1605 J.</li>
- <li>Catalogus librorum (impressorum et manuscriptorum), auctore T. James. 1605 J.</li>
- <li>MSS. mentioned. 1608 J.</li>
- <li>MSS. of Gregory the Great mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>Dedications to the Curators. 1620 D, 1627 J.</li>
- <li>Catalogus universalis librorum, auctore Thoma James. Accessit Appendix. 1620 J.</li>
- <li>— the University paid for the above catalogue. 1620 J.</li>
- <li>List of books in the library prohibited by Roman Catholic authority. 1627 J.</li>
- <li>Arabic MSS. there in 1626 mentioned. 1627 P.</li>
- <li>Fictitious entry of a 1628 Catalogus librorum. 1628 B.</li>
- <li>Poems to Johannes Cirenbergius about MS. Roe 20 (Council of Bâle). 1631 O.</li>
- <li>Appendix ad Catalogum librorum, per J. Rouse. 1635 R.</li>
- <li>Catalogus interpretum S. Scripturae in bibliotheca Bodleiana (per J. Verneuil). 1635 V.</li>
- <li>Deliciae deliciarum sive Epigrammatum in bibliotheca Bodleiana <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἀνθολογία</span>, opera A. Wright. 1637 D.</li>
- <li>A Nomenclator of Sermons (chiefly in the Bodleian) by J. Verneuil. 1637 V.</li>
- <li>Statuta, 1620. 1638 O.</li>
- <li>Mention of Laud’s benefactions. 1639 G.</li>
- <li>Oxford 15th cent. books there, p. <a href='#Page_240'>240</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Brasenose College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dedication to it. 1631 B.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Christ Church.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Ulysses Redux, tragoedia in Aede Christi publice recitata, 1591, auctore Gul. Gager. 1592 G.</li>
- <li>Musa hospitalis Ecclesiae Christi Oxon. (poems to greet the King &amp;c.). 1605 O.</li>
- <li>Liber precum publicarum in usum ecclesiæ Cathedralis Christi Oxon. 1615 P, 1639 P.</li>
- <li>Dedication to the dean and canons. 1638 B.</li>
- <li>Poems by Ch. Ch. men on lord Bayning’s death. 1638 O.</li>
- <li>The Royal Slave, a tragi-comedy by W. Cartwright, acted at Christ Church in 1636. 1639 C, 1640 C.</li>
- <li>Bp. Bancroft mentioned as inscribing the Cathedral communion plate. 1639 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>City.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Orders for the market, issued by the Chancellor of the University (undated). 1602 O.</li>
- <li>— 1606. 1606 O.</li>
- <li>Mention of S. Price as a City Lecturer in 1613–14. 1614 P.</li>
- <li>Proclamation by the Chancellor of the University for the well-ordering of the Market. 1634 O.</li>
- <li>Bookbinder’s bridge, Schidyard st., St. John Baptist st., Cat st., and Cheney lane, mentioned as connected with books, p. <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>.</li>
- <li>Mention of a commission to search St. Frideswide’s Fair for heretical books, 1531, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Colleges and Halls.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Miscellanea de antiquis aulis et collegiis, auctore B. Twyne. 1608 T.</li>
- <li>Dedication to Heads of Houses. 1612 D.</li>
- <li>Lists of Colleges in official order of dignity, and of antiquity: also of Founders of Colleges, &amp;c. 1612 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Corpus Christi College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>Sir George St. Paul’s benefaction to the college mentioned. 1613 C.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a> (<i>bis</i>), 260 (<i>bis</i>), 264, 265.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>County.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dedication to the Judges and Justices of the County. 1612 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Diocese.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Articles to be inquired of in the diocese, 1619. 1619 H.</li>
- <li>— 1628. 1628 H.</li>
- <li>— 1629. 1629 C.</li>
- <li>— 1632. 1632 B.</li>
- <li>— 1635. 1635 B.</li>
- <li>— 1638. 1638 B.</li>
- <li>Directions to preachers. 1622 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Exeter College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Threni Exoniensium in obitum Iohannis Petrei, filii Guil. Petrei. 1613 O.</li>
- <li>Sermon at the consecration of the chapel. 1624: by dr. J. Prideaux, with notes of Exeter men. 1625 P, 1637 P (ix).</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>Mentioned. 1634 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Jesus College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>, p. <a href='#Page_264'>264</a> (<i>quater</i>).</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Lincoln College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Carmen in adventum Lecestrensis Comitis ad collegium Lincolniense. 1585 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Magdalen College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li><i>See</i> Waynflete, William.</li>
- <li>Hermaica gymnasmata (exercises by a Magdalen man). 1589 H.</li>
- <li>Sanford’s <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια</span>, on occasion of a banquet at Magdalen to Queen Elizabeth’s retinue, 1592. 1592 S.</li>
- <li>Two poems to the college by J. Davies. 1603 D, 1605 D.</li>
- <li>Dedication to, and rhetorical description of, the college, by J. Sanford. 1605 S.</li>
- <li>Beatae Mariae Magdalenae lachrymae in obitum Gulielmi Grey. 1606 O.</li>
- <li>Luctus posthumus, sive ... Magdalenensium officiosa pietas. (Poems on prince Henry’s death.) 1612 H.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Magdalen hall.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Dedication to its members. 1629 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Merton College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>Mentioned. 1613 B, pp. <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li>Bodleiomnema (Latin poems on sir Thomas Bodley’s death, by members of Merton). 1613 O.</li>
- <li>Merton College Case. 1623 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>New College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Six homilies of St. Chrysostom in Greek, ed. from New college MSS. 1586 C.</li>
- <li>Peplus Philippi Sidnaei (poems by New college men). 1587 S.</li>
- <li>Dedications to the college. 1602 T, 1609 R.</li>
- <li>Encomion Rodolphi Warcoppi (poems in his memory by New college men). 1605 O.</li>
- <li>MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>Account of New college by L. Petrucci, in Ital. and Latin verse. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>Mentioned. 1615 E, pp. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a> (<i>bis</i>), 258, 259, 290.</li>
- <li>A book-label there, printed by Barnes, 1593, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Oriel College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>Dedications to it. 1612 D, 1615 D.</li>
- <li>Day’s Dial, dedicated to Oriel college, and comprising 12 lectures there delivered, by John Day. 1614 D.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Printing.</i>
- <ul>
- <li><i>See</i> Greek; Hebrew; Turner, William.</li>
- <li>List of printers &amp;c. in Oxford, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- <li>Allusion to the origin of printing. 1585 C.</li>
- <li>First printing in England (in 1459) ascribed to it, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- <li>Printing there in “1461”, p. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>.</li>
- <li>Description of Oxford type, “1468”–148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, p. <a href='#Page_241'>241</a>: 1517–9, p. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>: 1585–1640, p. <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
- <li>The Oxford Jerome in the University archives mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li>Notes of the first book at the new Press, 1585. 1585 C.</li>
- <li>Description of Devices, Woodcuts &amp;c., 1585–1640, p. <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>.</li>
- <li>A Committee of Convocation de libris imprimendis, 1586, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li>One press at Oxford allowed, 1586, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li>Errata excused. 1591 S.</li>
- <li>John Sanford was “Corrector Typogr.” in 1592. 1592 T.</li>
- <li>Fictitious Oxford imprints of books really printed in London, p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li>Note of the time taken to print a book. 1608 P.</li>
- <li>The first music printed (engraved) at Oxford. 1609 B.</li>
- <li>Amount produced by a press in 1625. 1625 J.</li>
- <li>Description of type in use in 1629. 1629 B.</li>
- <li>Printing in red. 1631 P, 1634 C, R, 1635 L, M, 1637 B, C, W, 1638 O, pp. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>In gold, 1633 O, p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li>The first two charters allowing printing to the University, 1632, 163<span class='fraction'>2<br /><span class='ov'>3</span></span>, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, esp. 281 and 283.</li>
- <li>Printing privileges at Oxford 1632–3<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>. 1636 L.</li>
- <li>Note of an Oxford book begun in 1768 and still in progress. 1634 O.</li>
- <li>Agreement with the Stationers’ Company, 163<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span>, 1639, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, esp. 285, 287.</li>
- <li>Decree of Star-Chamber, allowing rights of printing, 1637, p. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</li>
- <li>A case of the author having no proofs sent him. 1637 I.</li>
- <li>The Statute de Typographis, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, esp. 287.</li>
- <li>Architypographus mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>.</li>
- <li>Sheldonian press mentioned. 1608 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Queen’s College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span><i>St. John’s Coll.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>MSS. mentioned. 1610 J.</li>
- <li>Complimentary Latin verses by St. John’s men. 1640 S.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>St. Mary the Virgin</i>, parish.
- <ul>
- <li>Oratio funebris habita ab I. Wake in templo B. Mariae, 25 Maii 1607. 1607 W, 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.</li>
- <li>Dedication to the parish. 1612 D.</li>
- <li>Mention of mr. Day’s first sermon as vicar, 1609. 1612 D.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Trinity College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Decretum de gratiis collegio rependendis. 1602 O.</li>
- <li>Mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>University.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Agreement that parchment-sellers, illuminators and scribes were in the jurisdiction of the University, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1290, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li>— a similar acknowledgment about stationers, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 1345, <i>ibid.</i></li>
- <li>Valuable books only to be sold by the authorized stationers, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span> 137<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>, pp. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_281'>281</a>.</li>
- <li>Statute about stationers receiving clothes from graduates, 1411, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li>Compotus manualis ad usum Oxoniensium. 1519 C.</li>
- <li>Said to have instituted the keeping of Nov. 17 as the Queen’s Day, in 1569 (?). 1601 H; cf. 1602 H.</li>
- <li>State alluded to. 1587 P.</li>
- <li>Petition to Convocation (1590) about Case’s Sphaera civitatis, mentioned. 1588 C.</li>
- <li>Sanford’s <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια</span> on occasion of Queen Elizabeth’s visit to Oxford, &amp;c., 1592. 1592 S.</li>
- <li>Dedications to it. 1592 B (“the gentlemen of Oxford”), 1604 S, 1608 C, R, 1610 B (preface), 1619 M, 1627 H, P, 1628 W, 1631 P, 1637 B, W (the Vice-chancellor and Heads of Houses), 1640 B (the two Universities).</li>
- <li>Quaestiones &amp;c. in Schola Theologica, 1597, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li>Theses R. Brett in Comitiis, 1597, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li>Account of conferment of D.D. degree. 1599 H.</li>
- <li>De manuscriptis Oxoniensibus [list of authors, an appendix to T. James’s edition of Richard de Bury’s Philobiblon]. 1599 R.</li>
- <li>Chancellor’s Orders for the Market (undated). 1602 O.</li>
- <li>Answer of the University to the Petition of Ministers desiring reformation of the Church. 1603 O (4 issues, one undated), 1604 O.</li>
- <li>Funebre officium in memoriam Elisabethae reginae. 1603 O.</li>
- <li>Academiae Oxoniensis pietas erga Jacobum regem (poems). 1603 O.</li>
- <li>Rex Platonicus, sive de adventu Jacobi Regis ad academiam Oxoniensem, 27 Aug. 1605, narratio ab Is. Wake. 1607 W (<i>bis</i>), 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W, 1663 W.</li>
- <li>Orders of the Chancellor for the Market. 1606 O.</li>
- <li>Theses for D.C.L. degree, 1608. 1608 C.</li>
- <li>Ilium in Italiam (engravings of University and college arms, with poems). 1608 S.</li>
- <li>Reference to the Act of 1608. 1609 H.</li>
- <li>Theological prælections by S. Benefield, in Latin. 1610 B.</li>
- <li>Allusion to the subject of Evangelical Counsels at Oxford (1609?). 1610 P.</li>
- <li>Account of a stay in Oxford 1610–13, by L. Petrucci: in Ital. and Latin verse. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>Testimonials given to C. Angelus, 1610 and 1618. 1618 A.</li>
- <li>Sir George St. Paul’s benefaction to the New Schools (about 1612?). 1613 C.</li>
- <li>Case of a commoner of Corpus Christi college not matriculated. 1613 C.</li>
- <li>Epithalamia sive lusus Palatini in nuptias Frederici et Elizabethae. (Verses by Oxford men.) 1613 O.</li>
- <li>Thesis at the Act. 1613, quoted. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>Justa funebria Ptolemaei Oxoniensis (Latin verses on sir Thomas Bodley, by members of the University). 1613 O.</li>
- <li>Carmina funebria in obitum Georgii de Sancto Paulo (perhaps by members of the University). 1614 S.</li>
- <li>Allusion to lord Paget’s benefactions to the Margaret Professor of Divinity. 1615 B.</li>
- <li>Jacobi ara (congratulatory poems to James i). 1617 O.</li>
- <li>Funebria sacra memoriae Annae reginae dicata (Latin poems). 1619 O.</li>
- <li>Clerk of the University mentioned (Edward Miles, about 1620–30), p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li>Thomae Baylaei diatribae duae in Schola Theologica Oxon., 1621. 1626 B.</li>
- <li>Form of Latin oath to be taken by all graduates (in favour of Passive Obedience). 1622 O.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>Decretum Universitatis damnans propositiones neotericorum. 1622 O.</li>
- <li>Ultima linea Savilii. Justa Academica. 1622 O.</li>
- <li>Carolus redux: Latin poems to congratulate Charles i. 1623 O.</li>
- <li>Schola moralis in funere Whiti pullata (poems and oration). 1624 O.</li>
- <li>Oxoniensis Academiae Parentalia memoriae Jacobi dicata. 1625 O.</li>
- <li>Epithalamia Oxoniensia in Caroli regis cum Henrietta Maria connubium. 1625 O.</li>
- <li>Oratio auspicalis primi praelectoris Camdeniani (Deg. Whear.) 1625 W.</li>
- <li>Approbation of dr. James’s literary schemes. 1625 J.</li>
- <li>John Taylor’s Farewell to Oxford, and notes of his stay there. 1625 T.</li>
- <li>Oratio habita in Schola Theologica 9 Nov. (1626) per Sam. Fell. 1627 F.</li>
- <li>Oriental studies mentioned. 1627 P.</li>
- <li>Ordo sive series electionis Procuratorum, with Statuta de Procuratoribus. 1629 O.</li>
- <li>The relation of the University to play acting, mentioned. 1629 R.</li>
- <li>Britanniae Natalis (poems on the birth of Charles ii). 1630 O.</li>
- <li>Ad Johannem Cirenbergium carmen (8 poems by members of the University). 1631 O.</li>
- <li>The burning of Pareus’s treatises at Oxford in 1622, mentioned. 1631 P.</li>
- <li>Vitis Carolinae gemma altera (poems). 1633 O.</li>
- <li>Musarum Oxoniensium pro rege suo soteria (poems). 1633 O.</li>
- <li>Solis Britannici [i.e. regis] perigaeum (poems by Oxford men). 1633 O.</li>
- <li>Corpus Statutorum universitatis Oxoniensis. 1634 O, cf. p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li>Bidding prayer (informal). 1634 B.</li>
- <li>Proclamation by the Chancellor for the well-ordering of the Market. 1634 O.</li>
- <li>Residence without matriculation or taking a degree. 1634 S.</li>
- <li>Encyclopaedia, seu orbis literarum (Cyclus Praelectorum) (engraved sheet of times and subjects of lectures &amp;c.: possibly by T. Crossfield). 1635 O.</li>
- <li>Synopsis seu epitome statutorum (possibly by Tho. Crossfield). 1635 O.</li>
- <li>Flos Britannicus (poems on the birth of the princess Anne). 1636 O.</li>
- <li>Coronae Carolinae quadratura. 1636 O.</li>
- <li>Musarum Oxoniensium Charisteria pro regina Maria. 1638 O.</li>
- <li>Speculum Academicum, 1638, p. <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- <li>Poems by members of the University in honour of the birth of prince Henry. 1640 O.</li>
- <li>Epistolae Genevensium et Oxoniensium, 1708, mentioned. 1608 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><hr class='tb' />
- <ul>
- <li>
- <ul>
- <li>Summorum Oxoniensis academiae magistratuum catalogus. 1608 T.</li>
- <li>Antiquitatis academiae Oxoniensis apologia, auctore B. Twyno. 1608 T, 1620 T.</li>
- <li>The University Arms, pp. <a href='#Page_289'>289</a>–90.</li>
- <li>Quaestiones in Vesperiis et Comitiis, p. <a href='#Page_225'>225</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Wadham College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li><i>Worcester College.</i>
- <ul>
- <li>Mentioned, 1608 R, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Oxford, earl of. <i>See</i> Harley, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., B., 1637. <i>See</i> Parsons, Bartholomew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., G., 1594, 1598. <i>See</i> Powell, Griffith.
- <ul>
- <li>— Translated part of N. Caussin’s <cite>Cour Sainte</cite> into English. 1638 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>P., H., 1593. <i>See</i> Price, Henry.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., I., of St. John’s college, Oxford. Distich by him, in Latin, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., I., 1600. <i>See</i> Perrot, sir James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., I., 1624. <i>See</i> Prideaux, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., P., 1640. <i>See</i> Papillon, Philip.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., R., 1585, 1610. <i>See</i> Parsons, Robert, 1585.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., T., 1586. <i>See</i> Pye, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., W., 1626. <i>See</i> Pinke, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., W., 1639. <i>See</i> Page, dr. William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P., W. T. List of foreign coins. 1627 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Paffroet, Richard, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Page, Margaret, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Page, dr. William. A justification of bowing at the name of Jesus. 1631 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Revised the <cite>Imitation of Christ</cite>, in English. 1639 K.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Paget, William, lord Paget of Beaudesert. Dedication to him. 1615 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Palmer, Clement Sadler, London bookseller, mentioned. 1631 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Panke, John. Short admonition by way of dialogue. 1604 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— The fall of Babel (against Papists). 1608 P.</li>
- <li>— — 1613, p. <a href='#Page_231'>231</a>.</li>
- <li>— — 1623, 1623 P.</li>
- <li>— Eclogarius or the title of Supreme Governor given to his Majesty, confirmed (on the oath of Supremacy). 1612 P.</li>
- <li>— Collectanea, out of St. Gregory and St. Bernard (against the Roman Church). 1618 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>Papillon, Philip. Edited Harding’s Sicily and Naples, as ‘P. P.’ 1640 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Papistogelastes, 1614. <i>See</i> S., N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Paragon of Persia. <i>See</i> Hayes, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parallelus Torti. <i>See</i> Eudaemon-Johannes, Andreas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pararuades (= Errata). 1621 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parchment-sellers, &amp;c., in Oxford, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parentalia, 1625. <i>See</i> Oxford—Univ.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parentatio historica. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pareus, David, mentioned. 1622 O, 1631 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Commentarius in SS. Matthaeum, Petrum, et in Joelem, Amos, Haggaeum. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Paris. The National Library mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parkes, Richard. His <cite>Apologie</cite> referred to. 1604 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— A brief answer unto certain objections against the descension of Christ into hell. (anon.) 1604 A, 1613 A.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Parkhurst, bp. John, mentioned 1586 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parne, Richard, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Parre, bp. Richard. Burial sermon on lord Spencer, 1627, on Ps. xxxvii. 37. 1628 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon on Rev. iii. 4. 1628 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Parry, David. Reprint of two of his prefaces in the 1587 ed. of Ursinus’s Catechism. 1600 U.
- <ul>
- <li>— Two discourses of Ursinus, translated by Parry. 1600 U.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Parry, Henry, bp. of Gloucester. Ursinus’s Summe of Christian religion, tr. by H. Parrie. 1587 U, 1589 U, 1591 U, 1595 U, 1601 U.
- <ul>
- <li>— Concio de victoria Christiana, in Apoc. iii. 21. 1593 P, 1594 P.</li>
- <li>— Summa colloquii J. Rainoldi cum J. Harto (1583), H. Parraeo interprete. 1610 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Parsons, Bartholomew. Dorcas, a sermon (on Acts ix. 36). 1631 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon on Boaz and Ruth (Ruth iv. 11). 1633 P.</li>
- <li>— Funeral sermon on sir F. Pile, on Is. lvii. 2. 1636 P.</li>
- <li>— Honos et onus Levitarum, on Tithes vindicated. By B. P. 1637 P.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Eph. vi. 12–13. 1637 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Parsons, Robert, the Jesuit. Book of Christian exercise appertaining to Resolution. By R. P. [i.e. R. Parsons]. 1585 P (<i>bis</i>).
- <ul>
- <li>— Christian Directory, mentioned. 1585 P.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, 1608 J.</li>
- <li>— ‘R. P.’s <cite>Resolution</cite> or <cite>Directory</cite> mentioned. 1610 B.</li>
- <li>— Life of Parsons, by dr. James. 1612 J.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pasor, Matthias. Oratio pro linguae Arabicae professione, 1626. 1627 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pass, Simon, engraver. Titlepage by him. 1636 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Passive Obedience. <i>See</i> Dunster, John, 1610.
- <ul>
- <li>— Decretum Universitatis Oxoniensis (in favour of Passive Obedience). 1622 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pater Noster. <i>See</i> Lord’s Prayer.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Path to piety. <i>See</i> Hinde, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Patten, William. <i>See</i> Waynflete, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pavonius, Franciscus. Summa Ethicae. 1633 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Payne and Foss, messrs., booksellers, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Peerse, Elias, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Peirce, Frances, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Peirce, Nicholas, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pembelus, Guilielmus. <i>See</i> Pemble, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pemble, William. Vindiciae fidei or a treatise of justification by faith. 1625 P, 1629 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Five sermons. 1628 P.</li>
- <li>— — 2nd ed. 1629 P.</li>
- <li>— De sensibus internis tractatus. Guil. Pembeli. 1629 P.</li>
- <li>— Brief introduction to Geography. 1630 P.</li>
- <li>— Sum of moral philosophy. 1630 P, 1632 P.</li>
- <li>— Enchiridion Oratorium (?). 1633 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pembroke, earl of. <i>See</i> Herbert, George R. C., Henry, Philip, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pembroke, Mary countess of. The Countess of Pembroke’s Love (with a dedication to her), by Nicholas Breton. 1592 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Penry, John. Exhortation unto Wales, 1588, mentioned. 1587 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Supplication on behalfe of Wales. 1587 P.</li>
- <li>— View of publike wants within Wales, 1588, mentioned. 1587 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Peregrinus. <i>See</i> Vincentius Lirinensis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Peregrinus, de Lugo. <i>See</i> Italicus, Peregrinus, de Lugo.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Periam (sir William?), mentioned, 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Perkins, rev. William. An answer to mr. William Perkins, by John Higins. 1602 H (<i>bis</i>).
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1628 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Perrot, sir James. Discovery of discontented minds. 1596 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— The first part of the consideration of humane condition. By I. P[errot]. 1600 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>Persius, Satires tr. into English by B. Holyday. 2nd impression. 1616 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Person, sir (?), mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Peter, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Peter, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Petition. Petition to the Bishops, Preachers, and Gospellers (1606?), mentioned. 1607 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Petra, Gabriel de. Edited Longinus De grandiloquentia, 1612. 1636 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Petre, John, lord Petre of Writtle. Threni Exoniensium in obitum Johannis filii Guilielmi Petrei. 1613 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Petre, William, lord Petre of Writtle, <i>d.</i> 1637. Dedication to him. 1613 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Petrucci, Lodovico. Raccolta d’ alcune rime. Farrago poematum (&amp;c.). 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Phaedra. <i>See</i> Shepery, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Phalaris. The letters of Phalaris translated into Latin by Franciscus Aretinus. 1485 P, p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pharamus. <i>See</i> Snelling, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Phelps family, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Phetiplacius, Richardus, &amp;c. <i>See</i> Fetiplace, Richard, &amp;c.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philalethes, interlocutor. 1619 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poem signed ‘Philalethes.’ 1631 V.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Philanactophil, pseudonym. <i>See</i> Bolton, Edmund (Maria).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philip, prince of Orange. Dedication to him. 1634 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philip iii, king of Spain. The Jesuit’s Pater Noster given to Philip iii, king of Spain. 1611 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philobiblon. <i>See</i> Richard de Bury.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philosophia libera. <i>See</i> Carpenter, Nathaniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Philosophy. <i>See</i> Bartholinus, Caspar.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Burgersdicius, Franco.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Combachius, Johannes.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Holyday, Barten.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Pavonius, Franciscus.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Pemble, William.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Scheiblerus, Christophorus.</li>
- <li>— De philosophia, Panathenaicae duae in Comitiis Oxonii habitae (1585 &amp; 1586) (possibly by Tho. Savile). 1586 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Phonetic spelling. <i>See</i> 1633 B, 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Photius. His <cite>Bibliotheca</cite> mentioned. 1597 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pickering, William de. <i>See</i> William de Pickering.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pictorius, Georgius, mentioned. 1609 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pie, Thomas, 1586. <i>See</i> Pye, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Piers, John, archbp. of York. Dedication to him. 1587 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Funeral sermon on him by J. King, 1594. 1597 K, 1599 K, 1600 K.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pietas erga benefactores. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory; Wower, Jan.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pigot, John, scrivener. Mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pile, sir Francis, bart., <i>d.</i> 1635. Dedication to him. 1631 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Funeral sermon on him, by B. Parsons. 1636 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pile, sir Francis, <i>d.</i> 1649. Dedication to him. 1636 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pilgrim, Gerard, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pilgrimage to Paradise. <i>See</i> Breton, Nicholas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pinart, Dominique, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pinke, William. Translated and published (as ‘W. P.’) Cameron’s Examination of the Romish Church. 1626 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— The trial of our sincere love to Christ (2 sermons: ed. by W. Lyford). 1630 P.</li>
- <li>— — 2nd ed. 1631 P.</li>
- <li>— — 3rd ed. 1636 P.</li>
- <li>— The trial of a Christian’s sincere love unto Christ, 2nd ed. (4 sermons). 1634 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pinner, Charles. Sermon on 1 Tim. iv. 16. 1596 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon on 1 Pet. ii. 17. 1597 P.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on 1 Tim. iv. 8. 1597 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Piper, John, bookseller, of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Piscator, Johannes [Fischer?] Aphorismi doctrinae Christianae, 11<sup>a</sup> editio. 1630 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Piscator, Philippus Ludovicus. Preface by him. 1630 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pit, Moses, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pitt, Thomas. <i>See</i> Pye, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Plays. <i>See</i> Cartwright, William.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Fletcher, John.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Gager, William.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Harding, S.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Mayne, Jasper.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Randolph, Thomas.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Snelling, Thomas.</li>
- <li>— The overthrow of stage plays, by dr. John Rainolds. 2nd ed. 1629 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pliny the younger. Plinii Epistolae “Oxon. 1469”, with forged imprint, pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Plouvierius, Maximus, mentioned. 1640 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Plummer, rev. Charles, mentioned. 1592 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Plutarch. <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Περὶ παίδων ἀγωγῆς.</span> <i>See under</i> 1586 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— De morbis animi et corporis (in Latin). 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— De utilitate ex hostibus capienda (in Latin). 1614 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>Plymouth. <i>See</i> Fitz-Geffry, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pococke, dr. Edward, mentioned. 1639 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Polybius, mentioned. 1591 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Popery. <i>See</i> Rome.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Popham, sir John, of Littlecote. Sermon before him, by C. Pinner. 1597 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Porter. Endymion. Dedication to him. 1631 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Portu Hiberniae, Mauritius de. <i>See</i> Mauritius de Portu Hiberniae.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Possevinus, Antonius, <i>d.</i> 1611, mentioned. 1614 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Anti-Possevinus, a sermon by Rich. James. 1625 J.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pots, Richard, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Potter, bp. Barnabas. The baronet’s burial (sermon on sir Edw. Seymour). 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Potter, dr. Christopher. Want of charity justly charged on Romanists. 1633 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1638 C.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1638 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Powel, David, mentioned. 1602 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Powel, Gabriel. Positions concerning Usury. 1602 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Prodromus, a logical resolution of Rom. cap. 1. 1602 P.</li>
- <li>— — (the same in Latin: dubious). 1615 P.</li>
- <li>— Consideration of the papists’ reasons for toleration of popery. 1604 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Powel, Griffinus. <i>See</i> Powell, Griffith.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Powell, Griffith. Analysis Analyticorum Posteriorum Aristotelis, operâ and studio G. P. 1594 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— False date of a book by him, mentioned. 1594 P.</li>
- <li>— Analysis librorum Aristotelis de Sophisticis Elenchis, per G. P. 1598 P.</li>
- <li>— — a supposed edition of 1564 mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- <li>— Analysis librorum Aristotelis de Demonstratione. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Powell, Nathaniel, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Powell, Thomas. Sermon. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Powhatan. Picture of him, 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Poza, don Francisco de Roias marquesse de. Dedication to him. 1630 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>P. R. <i>See</i> R., P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Praenostica, 1518. <i>See</i> Laet, Jaspar.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Praise of Music, 1586. <i>See</i> Music.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pratt, David, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prayer, Book of Common. Reasons for refusal of subscription to the Book of Common Prayer, with an answer by T. Hutton. 1605 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Liber precum publicarum in usum ecclesiae Cathedralis Christi Oxon. 1615 P, 1639 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Prayers. <i>See</i> Winchester.
- <ul>
- <li>— Precationes aliquot privatae et publicae. 1629 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Preachers. Letter from the archbp. of Canterbury (about preachers). 1622 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Preaching, 1622. <i>See</i> Howson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Preces. <i>See</i> Prayers.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prejudice, prejugé. Note on the use of the words. 1626 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prenostica, 1518. <i>See</i> Laet, Jaspar.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Presse, Simon. Sermon at Eggington, 1596. 1597 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Preston, dr. John. Three sermons on the Lord’s Supper. 1631 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Price, dr. Daniel. Sermon, on Is. ii. 3. 1608 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon, on Matt. xiii. 45–6. 1608 P.</li>
- <li>— Sermon, on Rev. ii. 26. 1608 P.</li>
- <li>— The defence of Truth against the <cite>Triumph of Truth</cite> by H. Leech. 1610 P.</li>
- <li>— Act sermon. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>— Spiritual odours to the memory of prince Henry in four sermons. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>— Prince Henry his first anniversary. 1613 P.</li>
- <li>— Prince Henry his second anniversary. 1614 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Price, Henry. Poem to N. Breton. 1592 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Epicedium in obitum Henrici comitis Derbeiensis. 1593 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Price, Sampson. Sermon. 1614 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Price, prof. William. Oratio funebris in laudem Tho. White. 1624 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prideaux, Edmund. Dedication to him and his wife. 1637 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prideaux, dr. John, rector of Exeter College, Oxford. Tabulae ad grammatica Graeca introductoriae: et ad eandem linguam <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">παραίνεσις</span>. 1607 P, 1608 P, 1629 P, 1639 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Castigatio Andreae Eudæmon-Johannis. 1614 P.</li>
- <li>— Ephesus backsliding, a sermon. 1614 P, 1636 P.</li>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1615 M, 1619 B, 1625 N, 1630 B.</li>
- <li>— Two Sermons on Matt. v. 25. 1615 P, 1636 P.</li>
- <li>— Alloquium regi Jacobo Woodstochiæ habitum 24 Aug. 1624; signed “I. P.” 1624 P, 1625 P.</li>
- <li>— Perez-Vzzah, a sermon, on 2 Sam. vi. 6–7. 1625 P.</li>
- <li>— Sermon at the consecration of Exeter college chapel, 1624. 1625 P, 1636 P.</li>
- <li>— Concio ad Artium baccalaureos (1 Sam. xiv. 26). 1626 P.</li>
- <li>— Lectiones decem prout publicè habebantur Oxoniae in Vesperiis, 1616–25. 1626 P.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>— Orationes novem inaugurales, 1616–25: et concio (in Act. vii. 22). 1626 P.</li>
- <li>— Lectiones novem. 1627 P.</li>
- <li>— Tyrocinium ad syllogismum legitimum contexendum expeditissimum. 1629 P.</li>
- <li>— Certain Sermons. 1637 P.</li>
- <li>— Heptades logicae. 1639 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Prime, John. Sermon on 1 Kings x. 9. 1585 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Exposition of St. Paul to the Galatians. 1587 P.</li>
- <li>— The Consolations of David, a sermon on Ps. xxiii. 4. 1588 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Primerose, James. Academia Monspeliensis descripta, Laurus Monspeliaca. 1631 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Printing at Oxford, “1468”-1640. <i>See</i> Oxford—Printing.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Procter, R. G. C., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prognosticon astrologicum. <i>See</i> Booker, John, 1637.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Promises. <i>See</i> F., A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Proverbs. Reusneri Symbola imperatoria (largely a discussion of mottos). 1633 R, 1638 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Prynne, William, mentioned. 1630 W, 1631 P, W, 1633 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Psalms. <i>See under</i> Bible.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Psalter. Notice of “Our Lady’s Psalter.” 1620 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Puede-Ser, Diego. <i>See</i> Mabbe, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Puleston, Roger. Dedication to him. 1586 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Purchas, Samuel, mentioned. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Purgatory. <i>See</i> Du Moulin, Pierre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Puritans. Decretum Universitatis (contra Puritanos). 1622 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Described in ten subdivisions. 1630 W, 1631 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pusillus grex. <i>See</i> Vicars, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Puteanus, Erycius. Comus. 1634 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Historia Insubrica. 1634 P.</li>
- <li>— Amoenitatum humanarum diatribae duae, prior de Laconismo, altera Thyrsi Philotesii. 1640 P.</li>
- <li>— Suada Attica, sive orationum selectarum syntagma. Item Palæstra Bonae Mentis, de Morte, &amp;c. 1640 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pye, Thomas. Translation by him of A. de Corro’s lectures on Ecclesiastes. (“Solomon’s sermon”). 1586 E.
- <ul>
- <li>— English letter to him from dr. John Rainolds, 27 Feb. (160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>?). 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— His Epistola ad ... Joh. Howsonum (1603) mentioned. 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— In controversiam inter Johannem Howsonum et Thomam Pyum tractatus (auctore Rob. Burhill). 1606 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Pye, sir Walter, kt., jun. Dedication to him. 1633 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pym, John. Dedication to him. 1628 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pyne, Henry. Sale of his books (1886) mentioned. 1595 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pynson, Richard, printer of London, mentioned. 1485 A, p. <a href='#Page_11'>11</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Pyper, John. <i>See</i> Piper, John.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>Q.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Quaritch, Bernard, mentioned. 1612 S, pp. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>, <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Quarles, Francis. Poem by him. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Quentell, Heinrich, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., C. A., “Coricæus”. Poem to R. Roche. 1599 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., H., 1600. <i>See</i> Roberts, Hugh.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., H., 1640. <i>See</i> Rogers, Hugh.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., I., 1625. <i>See</i> Rawlinson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., I., 1614. <i>See</i> Raynolds, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., P. P. R. = Professor Regius. 1629 Z.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., R., 1599. <i>See</i> Roche, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., T., 1638. <i>See</i> Randolph, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>R., T. <i>See</i> Rood, Theoderic.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Radford, J. His Directory mentioned. 1610 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Raem. Gerard ten, de Bercka, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rainolds, dr. John. Sermon on Ps. xviii. 47–51 about the Gunpowder plot, 1586. 1586 R, 1613 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Orationes duae. 1587 R, 1608 R.</li>
- <li>— De Romanae Ecclesiae idololatria. 1596 R.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— English letter from him to Thomas Pye, 27 Feb. (160<span class='fraction'>3<br /><span class='ov'>4</span></span>?). 1606 B.</li>
- <li>— Oratio funebris habita ab I. Wake (in memoriam I. Rainoldi) 25 Maii 1607. 1607 W, 1608 W, 1614 R, 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.</li>
- <li>— Summa colloquii J. Rainoldi cum J. Harto de capite et fide Ecclesiae &amp;c. (1583). 1610 R.</li>
- <li>— — supposed ed. of 1619 mentioned. 1619 R.</li>
- <li>— Orationes quinque cum aliis opusculis. 1613 R.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned (1613, 1619, 1628). 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— The prophecy of Obadiah, explained. 1613 R, <i>see</i> p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li>— Orationes duodecim cum aliis opusculis. 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— — London editions of 1619 and 1628 described. 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— Discovery of the Man of Sin, a sermon, by I. R. 1614 R.</li>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>— The overthrow of stage plays: with letters between the author and Albericus Gentilis, 1593. 2nd ed. 1629 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rainolds, William. Latin letter to him from dr. John Rainolds. 1614 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Raleigh, William, barrister. Dedication to him. 1601 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ralph, illuminator, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ramus, Petrus, mentioned. 1592 C, 1598 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ranchin, Guillaume. Review of the Council of Trent. 1638 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Randol, John. Sermon at St. Mary’s Oxford (on Mark iii. 24). 1624 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Randolph, Robert, mentioned. 1638 R, 1640 H, p. <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Randolph, Thomas. Poems, with the Muses’ Looking-glass and Amyntas (by T. R.). 1638 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Jealous Lovers, mentioned. 1640 R.</li>
- <li>— Poems, 2nd edition. 1640 R.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem in memory of Bacon. 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rasen Market, co. Lincoln (Market Raisin). Account of a murder there, 1602. 1603 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rassenghem, Maximilianus de. Dedication to him. 1639 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ratcliffe sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ratcliffe, Henry, earl of Sussex. Acrostic to him. 1589 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ravenspergerus, Hermannus, mentioned. 1636 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ravis, bp. Thomas, mentioned (1605). 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rawley, W., mentioned. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rawlinson, John. Sermon, on Cant. vi. 13. 1606 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Mercy to a beast, a sermon. 1612 R.</li>
- <li>— Vivat rex, a sermon, on 1 Sam. x. 24, 161<span class='fraction'>4<br /><span class='ov'>5</span></span>. 1619 R.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Cant. iv. 8. 1622 R.</li>
- <li>— Quadriga salutis, four ... Lent sermons at Whitehall. (Dovelike Soul, Lex Talionis, Surprising of Heaven, Bridegroom and Bride: by “I. R.”.) 1625 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Read, Thomas. In obitum Thomae Rhaedi. Faciebat R. A[yton]. (a poem). 1624 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Recusants, mentioned. 1629 B, 1629 C, 1635 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Redman, William. Dedication to him. 1616 N.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Red printing. <i>See</i> Oxford—Printing.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Reginald, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Reginald, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Reginald, parchment seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Reinolds, John. Epigrammata (in Reges). 1611 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— — (in Episcopos). 1612 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Renkens, Harry, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Reusner, Nicolas. Symbola imperatoria, ed. 5<sup>a</sup>. 1633 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— — ed. 6<sup>a</sup>. 1638 R, <i>see</i> p. x.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Reuter, Adam. Quæstiones juris controversi. 1609 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— De consilio. 1626 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><i>Rex Platonicus.</i> <i>See</i> Wake, Isaac.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Reynbold, John, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rhaedus, Thomas. <i>See</i> Read, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rheims. Address by John Rainolds to the English Roman Catholic students at Rheims, in Latin. 1596 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to the English Seminaries at Rome and Rheims. 1610 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rhetoric. <i>See</i> Butler, Charles.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Thorne, William.</li>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Vossius, Gerard John.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rhodes, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rhydychen, (= Oxford), in Oxford imprints. <i>See</i> Oxford, <i>ad init.</i></li>
- <li class='c030'>Richard, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richard, sen. and jun., parchment-sellers, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richard, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richard de Bury. Philobiblon, sive de amore librorum. 1599 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richardson, Gabriel. Of the state of Europe. 1627 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richardson, sir Thomas, kt. Dedication to him. 1625 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richardson, William. Edited Crakanthorp’s Metaphysica. 1619 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Richmond. The king and queen’s Entertainment at Richmond, in a Masque, 12 Sept. 1636. 1636 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ricott. <i>See</i> Rycote.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rider, bp. John. Bibliotheca classica, a double dictionarie (Engl.-Lat. and Lat.-Engl.). 1589 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Rider’s dictionary, recast by F. Holyoke (Lat.-Engl. and Engl.-Lat.). 1627 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ridley, sir Thomas. A view of the civil and ecclesiastical law, 2nd ed. edited by I. G[regory]. 1634 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rimbault, Edward Francis, mentioned. 1586 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Riolanus, Johannes, the elder. Extracts from his works on the eyesight. 1616 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rives, George and John. <i>See</i> Ryves, George and John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robartes, Thomas Charles Agar, lord Robartes, mentioned. 1592 B, S, 1625 P, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robert, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>Robert, illuminator, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robert, notary and stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robert, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robert de Derby, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Roberts, Hugh. Sermon (on 1 Pet. ii. 11), 1598, by H. R. 1600 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— The day of hearing, lectures on Hebr. iii. 7–19: by H. R. 1600 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Robinson, Henry, bp. of Carlisle. Dedication to him. 1614 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robinson, Hugh. Preces in usum Scholae Wintoniensis: Grammaticalia: Antiquae historiae synopsis. 1616 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Robinson, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Roche, Robert, of Magdalen coll., Oxford. Eustathia or the constancie of Susanna (a poem). 1599 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rodd, Thomas, bookseller of London, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Roe, sir Thomas. Dedication to him. 1629 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poems partly about him. 1631 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Roger, illuminator, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Roger, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Roger, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Roger, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rogers, Hugh. Gamelia, poems on the wedding of H. R(ogers) with A(nne) B(aynton). 1640 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rohan, Anne de. <i>See</i> Anne de Rohan.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rolle, Richard. <i>See</i> Hampole, Richard Rolle of.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Romanae Historiae Anthologia. <i>See</i> Godwin, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Romanus, Aegidius. <i>See</i> Aegidius de Columna.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rome, Church of. <i>See</i> Index Expurgatorius.
- <ul>
- <li>— Address by John Rainolds to the English Roman Catholic students at Rome, in Latin. 1596 R.</li>
- <li>— Consideration of the papists’ reasons for toleration of popery, by G. Powel. 1604 P.</li>
- <li>— Protestation against popery, by “I. D” (unster.) 1607 D.</li>
- <li>— List of the Popes. 1608 P.</li>
- <li>— Bellum Gregorianum (a table of passages corrupted in the Roman editions of Gregory the Great’s works: ed. by dr. James). 1610 J.</li>
- <li>— Dedication to the English Seminaries at Rome and Rheims. 1610 R.</li>
- <li>— Papistogelastes, or apologues of the Abuses of the Synagogue of the Pope, 1614. <i>See</i> S., N.</li>
- <li>— Sermon by W. Goodwin against the jurisdiction of the Roman Church over sovereigns. 1614 G.</li>
- <li>— S. Price a violent impugner of Roman Catholicism. 1614 P.</li>
- <li>— Advice of a son to his mother (against Roman Catholicism). 1616 A.</li>
- <li>— Merry jests concerning Popes, monks and friars. 1617 W.</li>
- <li>— Collectanea (“Romanism condemned,” 1835) by J. Panke. 1618 P.</li>
- <li>— Confutation of Papists by Papists, by dr. Tho. James. 1625 J.</li>
- <li>— Treatment of texts by Roman Catholic theologians, mentioned. 1625 J.</li>
- <li>— Examination of those plausible appearances which seem most to commend the Romish Church. 1626 C.</li>
- <li>— A Preservative from becoming a Papist, by B. T. 1629 T.</li>
- <li>— LXX disputationes adversus Pontificios, auctore F. Hommio. 1630 H, 1639 H.</li>
- <li>— Want of Charity justly charged on Romanists. <i>See</i> Potter, Christopher, 1633.</li>
- <li>— The advice of a son to his mother a Roman Catholic, by sir A. Hungerford. 1639 H.</li>
- <li>— Fabulae pontificiae dissipatae, authore M. Wescombe. 1639 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rood, Theoderic, de Colonia, printer at Oxford, mentioned. 1485 P, pp. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a> (T. R.), 238, 241–3, 272.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rosaecranzius, Oligerus. Dedication to him. 1633 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rous, Francis. Verses by him. 1596 F.
- <ul>
- <li>— Archaeologia Attica. 1637 R.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1614 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rous, Richard. Verses by him. 1596 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rouse, dr. John, Bodley’s librarian. Wrote a preface to and edited complimentary poems to Johannes Cirenbergius about Bodl. MS. Roe 20. 1631 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1635 C.</li>
- <li>— Appendix ad Catalogum librorum in Bibliotheca Bodleiana. 1635 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Royal Slave. <i>See</i> Cartwright, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Royston, Richard, bookseller of London, mentioned. 1640 S, pp. <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rudyerd, sir Benjamin. Speech in behalf of the Clergy, by sir B. Rudierd. 1628 R.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1628 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Rufinus, Tyrannius. Expositio in Symbolum Apostolorum (ascribed falsely to st. Jerome). 1468 R, p. <a href='#Page_245'>245</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— — mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Russell, lady, mentioned. 1592 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Russell, Francis, earl of Bedford. Funeral sermon on him, 1585, by Tho. Sparke. 1585 S, 1594 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>Russell, Francis, earl of Bedford. Dedication to him. 1629 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Russell, dr. Walter, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Rycote, mentioned. 1592 E, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ryves, dr. George, warden of New college, Oxford. Dedication to him. 1602 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poem on his death, by L. Petrucci, in Ital. and Latin. 1613 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Ryves, dr. John. Articles of visitation for the archdeaconry of Berks, 1635. 1635 R.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., E. Supposed author of the <cite>Historia Britannica</cite>. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., G., 1632. <i>See</i> Sandys, George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., I., 1608. <i>See</i> Sansbury, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., I., 1614. <i>See</i> Smith, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., N. Papistogelastes, or Apologues by which are discovered the Abuses of the Synagogue of the Pope, written in Italian by N. S., tr. into French by S. J., and thence into English by Rowland Willet. 1614 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., R., 1609. <i>See</i> Stafford, Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., S., 1613. <i>See</i> Smith, Samuel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., S. F., 1609. <i>See</i> Stafford, sir Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., T., 1628, 1631, 1640. <i>See</i> Sixsmith, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>S., W., 1612. <i>See</i> Simmonds, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sabaoth, Sabbath. The two words confused. 1631 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sabbath. <i>See</i> Brerewood, Edward.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Ironside, Gilbert.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sackville, Richard, earl of Dorset. Dedication to him. 1622 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sackville, Robert, earl of Dorset. Dedication to him. 1608 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sackville, Thomas, lord Buckhurst, earl of Dorset. Dedications to him. 1592 B, G, 1597 C, 1598 A, 1600 P, 1602 H, 1604 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— Orders for the Oxford City Market, issued by him as Chancellor of the University (undated). 1602 O.</li>
- <li>— Letter from him to the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford (1606?), in Latin. 1607 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sacra Quercu, F. de. <i>See</i> Holyoke, Francis.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sacrilege. <i>See</i> B., E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>St. Alban’s. Printing there mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>St. Paul, sir George, of Snarford. Oratio Matt. Colmori in obitum G. Sanctpaul. 1613 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Carmina funebria in obitum Georgii de Sancto Paulo. 1614 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Saints’ Legacies. <i>See</i> F., A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Salisbury. Dedication to G. Churchowse, Mayor, and the corporation of “New Sarum.” 1618 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Salisbury, earl of. <i>See</i> Cecil, Robert.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Cecil, William.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Salmasius, Claudius. <i>See</i> Ampelius, Lucius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Salomon, Willelmus, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Saltonstall, Wye. Clavis ad portam (index to Comenius’s Porta linguarum). 1634 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Salvianus, st. Account of him from Trithemius, in Latin. 1629 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— De gubernatione Dei. 1629 S, 1633 S.</li>
- <li>— Epistolae. 1629 S.</li>
- <li>— Ad Ecclesiam Catholicam, auctore “Timotheo.” 1629 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sams sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sanctpaul. <i>See</i> St. Paul.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sandars, S., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sanderson, dr. John, canon of Cambrai. Institutiones dialecticae, ed. 3<sup>ia</sup>. 1602 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— — ed. 4<sup>ta</sup>. 1609 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sanderson, Robert. Logicæ Artis Compendium. 1615 S, 1618 S, <i>see</i> p. x, 1631 S, 1640 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— — mentioned. 1602 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sandys, Edwin, archbp. of York. Dedication to him by E. Bunny. 1585 P (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sandys, George. The Metamorphoses of Ovid, englished by G. S(andys): with a translation of the 1st Aeneid of Virgil. 1632 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sanford, rev. John, of Magdalen coll., Oxford. Apollinis et Musarum <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">εὐκτικὰ εἰδύλλια</span>. 1592 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Mentioned as corrector typographicus. 1592 T.</li>
- <li>— In obitum domini Arthuri Greii <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">θρηνῳδία</span>. 1593 S.</li>
- <li>— God’s arrow of the pestilence, a sermon. 1604 S.</li>
- <li>— Le guichet François (French grammar). 1604 S.</li>
- <li>— Brief extracts of the former Latin (French) grammar, done into English. 1605 S.</li>
- <li>— Grammar or introduction to the Italian tongue (with a poem on the author, in French, by J. More). 1605 S.</li>
- <li>— Latin poem by him. 1614 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sansbury, John. Ilium in Italiam (by “I. S.”) 1608 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sarum, New. <i>See</i> Salisbury.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sasquesahanoug. <i>See</i> Susquehanna.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Saumur, mentioned. 1626 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Savery, Salamon. Engraved a title of 1632 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Savile sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>Savile, sir Henry, mentioned. 1586 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Translation of part of Tacitus’s Histories, &amp;c. 1591 T.</li>
- <li>— Praelectiones 13 in Elementa Euclidis. 1621 S.</li>
- <li>— Ultima linea Savilii, Justa Academica (with list of Savile’s benefactions, &amp;c.) 1622 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Savile, Thomas, of Merton college, Oxford. De philosophia: two speeches possibly by him, 1585 and 1586. 1586 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Savoy, duke of. <i>See</i> Charles Emmanuel I.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scandalo, de. <i>See</i> Kingsmill, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Schattenus, Severinus, à Schattenhall. Dedication to him, 1618. 1632 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scheiblerus, Christophorus. Philosophia compendiosa, cui accedit H. Buscheri Arithmetica, ed. 5<sup>ta</sup>. 1631 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Liber Commentariorum Topicorum. 1637 S.</li>
- <li>— Metaphysica. 1637 S, 1638 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Scheprevus, Johannes. <i>See</i> Shepery, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sclater, William. The Christian’s strength, a sermon on Phil. iv. 13. 1612 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Ministers portion, a sermon on 1 Cor. ix. 13–14. 1612 S.</li>
- <li>— The sick soul’s salve, a sermon on Prov. xviii. 14. 1612 S.</li>
- <li>— Utriusque Epistolae ad Corinthios explicato analytica. 1633 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sclater, William, junior. Edited his father’s Utriusque Epistolae ad Corinthios explicatio. 1633 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scolar, John, printer, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>–4.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scoticus, Simon. <i>See</i> Simon Scoticus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scotland. Union of Scotland and England. <i>See</i> England, 1604–5.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scotus, Johannes Duns. <i>See</i> Johannes Duns Scotus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scourge for a railer. <i>See under</i> Willett, Andrew.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scribes, &amp;c. in Oxford. Pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See also</i> Transcription.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Scudamore, James, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Scultetus, Abraham. A dedication to him, &amp;c. (1614–15), mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Seale, —, bookbinder at Oxford, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Seale, Henry, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_303'>303</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Secomps, Guilermus, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Seddon, John. A catechism (the Heidelberg Catechism partly ed. by Seddon). 1588 C (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Selden, John, mentioned. 1592 B, p. <a href='#Page_253'>253</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— Answer to Selden’s History of Tithes, by S. Nettles. 1625 N.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Seneca, Lucius Annaeus. Motto from him. 1585 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— His Hippolytus mentioned. 1592 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sennertus, Daniel. Epitome naturalis scientiae, ed. 3. 1632 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sermonetta, card., i. e. Enrico Gaetani. Instructions for young gentlemen. 1633 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sermons. Note on their length, &amp;c. 1606 R, 1619 R, 1625 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Serranus, Johannes. Commentary on Ecclesiastes mentioned. 1586 E.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Setting-rule, p. <a href='#Page_249'>249</a> <i>n.</i></li>
- <li class='c030'>Seymour, sir Edward. The baronet’s burial, a sermon on sir E. Seymour, by B. Potter. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Shakespeare, William. Epitaph on him by W. Basse, mentioned. 1613 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1640 H, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sharpe, Lionel, archdeacon of Berkshire. Articles in his visitation, 1615. 1615 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Shepery, John (Scheprevus). Disticha Johannis Scheprevi in Novum Testamentum. 1586 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Hippolytus Ovidianae Phaedrae respondens. 1586 S.</li>
- <li>— — mentioned (“1542,” “1584”), pp. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>, <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sherman, Abraham. Edited Chaloner’s sermons, 1629. 1629 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Short, James, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sicily and Naples. <i>See</i> Harding, Samuel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sidesmen. The oath of Churchwardens and Sidemen. 1599 K.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sidney, sir Philip. Exequiae Philippi Sidnaei. 1587 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Peplus Philippi Sidnaei (poems by New college men). 1587 S.</li>
- <li>— P. Sidnæi funus, per G. Carleton. 1603 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Signatures in books, pp. <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>–8.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Simmonds, William, D.D., of Magdalen coll., Oxford, and Virginia. Smith’s Map of Virginia ed. by him. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Simon, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Simon, parchment-seller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Simon Scoticus, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sin against the Holy Ghost. <i>See</i> Benefield, Sebastian.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Singer, S. W., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Singleton, dr. Thomas, principal of Brasenose coll., Oxford. Dedication to him. 1613 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Singleton, William, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sixsmith, Thomas. Edited Brerewood’s Tractatus logici as “T. S.” 1628 B, 1631 B, 1637 B.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>— Edited Brerewood’s de Meteoris, &amp;c. (“T. S.”). 1631 B.</li>
- <li>— Edited Brerewood’s Commentaries on the Ethics of Aristotle, as “T. S.” 1640 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Skelton, John. A Skeltonicall salutation ... (on the Armada). 1589 S., p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Skinners’ Company. <i>See</i> London—Skinners’ Company.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Slatyer, William, mentioned. 1633 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smiglecius, Martinus. Logica. 1634 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, capt. —, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, George, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, John, of Magdalen coll., Oxford. Translated Jewell’s <cite>Apologia</cite> into Greek. 1614 J, 1639 J.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, capt. John, of Virginia. His General History of Virginia and Works mentioned. 1612 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— A map of Virginia with a description of the country (and) The proceedings of those Colonies. 1612 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, Miles, bp. of Gloucester. Assize sermon at Worcester. 1602 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1613 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, Nicholas. <i>See</i> Wilson, Matthias.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, Nicholas, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smith, Samuel. Aditus ad Logicam (autore S. S.). (1613 S, 1614 S), 1617 S, 1618 S, 1627 S, 1633 S, 1639 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smyth. <i>See</i> also Smith.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Smyth, Richard. Munition against man’s misery, 2nd ed. 1612 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— — 3rd ed. 1634 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Snarford. <i>See</i> St. Paul, sir George.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Snelling, Thomas, of St. John’s college, Oxford. Thibaldus tragoedia (issued afterwards as Pharamus). 1640 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Socinus, Faustus, mentioned. 1636 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Solomeaux, Paul, of Vendome. Verses by him. 1638 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Solon. <i>See</i> Beacon, Richard, 1594.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Somers, John lord. His Tracts alluded to. 1602 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Somerville, Roger, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sophronius, abbot, mentioned. 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>South, Warner. Poem by him, in Latin. 1609 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Southampton, earl of. <i>See</i> Wriothesley, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Southcot, Thomas of Moones Ottery. Dedication to him. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spaen, Johannes Jacobus, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spain. <i>See</i> Armada.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spanish. <i>See</i> Bense, Petrus.
- <ul>
- <li>— Reglas grammaticales para aprender la lengua Española y Francesa. 1586 S.</li>
- <li>— Poems in Spanish. 1606 O, 1612 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Spark. A spark of Christ’s beauty (discourse on Is. ix. 6). 1622 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sparke, Michael, printer of London, mentioned. 1631 W, 1633 G, pp. <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— His business mark. 1631 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sparke, Thomas. Funeral sermon on the earl of Bedford, 1585. 1585 S, 1594 S.
- <ul>
- <li>— A catechisme (the Heidelberg catechism ed. by Sparke, who prefixes a treatise on catechising, and Seddon). 1588 C (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li>— Answer to John de Albine’s Notable discourse against heresies. 1591 S.</li>
- <li>— Funeral sermon at Whaddon on lord Grey, 1593. 1593 S.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Sparke, William. The mystery of godliness. 1628 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Speculation. Twofold treatise ... one of Speculation, the other a discovery of youth and old age. 1612 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Speculum Academicum, 1638, p. <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spelling. <i>See</i> Phonetic spelling.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spelman, sir Henry, mentioned, 1628 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spencer library. <i>See</i> Manchester.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spencer, Alice. <i>See</i> Egerton, Alice.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spencer, Robert, lord Spencer of Wormleighton. Sermon at his burial, 1627, and poems on him, by R. Parre. 1628 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spencer, William, lord Spencer of Wormleighton. Dedications to him. 1628 P, 1629 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spiegelius, mentioned, p 229.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spier, William, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spire, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Spiritual odours. <i>See</i> Price, Daniel.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sprint, John. Ad Comites Warwicensem et Leicestrensem oratio, 1587. 1587 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stadius, Johannes, <i>d.</i> 1579. Commentarius in L. Annaeum Florum. 1631 F, 1638 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stafford, sir Francis. Probably the “S. F. S.” to whom a dedication is addressed in 1609. 1609 D, 1634 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stafford, Robert. Probably the translator of Du Moulin’s Héraclite into English. 1609 D, 1634 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stainton-in-the-Street, or Great Stainton, co. Durham, mentioned. 1598 I.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stamford. Sir George St. Paul’s work there. 1613 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stanbridge, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stanhope, sir Henry. Dedication to him. 1627 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stanhope, lady Katharine. Dedication to her. 1628 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>Stanley, Ferdinand, earl of Derby. Dedication to him. 1593 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stanley, Henry. Appendix ad libros tam Veteris quam Novi Testamenti, 1630, p. <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stanley, Henry, earl of Derby. Epicedium in obitum Henrici comitis Derbeiensis, auctoribus M. Gwinne et H. Price. 1593 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stanley, James, lord Strange. Dedication to him. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Starkey, S. <i>See</i> Strong, Sampson.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stationers, &amp;c., in Oxford. Pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>–78.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stationers’ Company, &amp; Hall. <i>See</i> London—Stationers’ Company.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stephanus, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stephen, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stephen, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stephens, Philemon, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stephens, Jeremy. Edited Cyprian De bono patientiae. 1633 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stewart, Francis, master of Murray. Dedication to him. 1607 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stewart, John, son of the duke of Lennox. Deduction to him. 1607 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stewart, Ludovic, duke of Lennox. Dedication to him. 1621 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stinton, George. Sermon Worcester Cathedral in time of pestilence (on 1 Kings viii. 37–39). 1637 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stonor. The Stonor press alluded to. 1601 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stonyhurst, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Storre, William. Manner of the cruel murther of William Storre, 1602. 1603 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Strada, Firmianus. Prolusiones academicæ. 1631 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Strange, lord. <i>See</i> Stanley, James.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Strangwayes, sir John. Dedication to him. 1630 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Strathyn, Henry, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stricturae breves. <i>See</i> Wells, rev. William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Stronge, alias Starkey, Sampson, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Studley, Thomas, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Suares, Jacques, a Portuguese Franciscan. Treatise against him by Du Moulin. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sudeley, mentioned. 1592 E, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Suffolk, duke of. <i>See</i> Howard, Theophilus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Suggeneia (<span lang="el" xml:lang="el">συγγένεια</span>), 1625. <i>See</i> Butler, Charles.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Suinesheved. <i>See</i> Swineshede, Roger.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Summaster, George, principal of Broadgates hall, Oxford. Dedication to him. 1614 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Supremacy, Oath of. <i>See</i> Panke, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Supreme Governor. <i>See under</i> Panke, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Surprising of Heaven, 1625. <i>See</i> Rawlinson, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Susannah. <i>See</i> Roche, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Susquehanna, U. S. A. Picture of a “Sasquesahanoug” native. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sussex, earl of. <i>See</i> Ratcliffe, Henry.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Swayne, Robert (and Martha), printers of London, mentioned. 1631 F, 1640 S, p. <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Swearing, 1625. <i>See</i> Taylor, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Swineshede, Roger (Suinesheved, Swincet). Insolubilia Swynishede (a logical treatise). 1483 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Sylvester, Joshua. Poem by him. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Symbolum. <i>See</i> Creed.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Symeon Metaphrastes. Lives of Stt. John and Luke, in Greek and Latin, ed. by R. Brett. 1597 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Synopsis anni. <i>See</i> Wyberd, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Synopsis statutorum. <i>See</i> Oxford—University, 1635.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Syriac. Poem in Syriac. 1612 H. <i>See</i> p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Syrretus, Antonius. Formalitates de mente Johannis Duns Scoti, pp. <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>T., B. A Preservative from becoming a Papist. 1629 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>T., I:, <i>see</i> Dorne, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>T., W., 1633. <i>See</i> Tipping, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tacitus. End of Nero and beginning of Galba. Histories, bks. 1–4. Life of Agricola. In English by sir H. Savile. 1591 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Tavistock, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Taylor, bp. Jeremy. Gunpowder treason sermon at St. Mary’s, 1638: on Luke ix. 54. 1638 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Taylor, John, the Water Poet. The fearful summer, or London’s Calamity. 1625 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Against swearing. 1625 T.</li>
- <li>— His Farewell to Oxford. 1625 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Teimurases, prince, mentioned. 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tenison, archbp., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Terence. Vulgaria Terentii (sentences from Terence in Latin and English). 1483 A, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Terry, John. The trial of truth (1st part). 1600 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon, on John xvii. 17. 1617 T.</li>
- <li>— Theological logic, the 3rd part of the Trial of truth. 1625 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Textual Criticism, 1625. Rules by dr. James: <i>see</i> James, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thame. Thame Park, mentioned. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>Theocritus. Sixe idyllia in English verse. 1588 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Theodoricus, printer at Cologne, 1485–6, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Theological logic, 1625. <i>See</i> Terry, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Theology. Scholastica locorum communium theologiæ institutio, auctore L. Trelcatio. 1606 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Theorremon. <i>See</i> Chrysostom, st.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thesaurus, Emanuel. Cæsares, et Carmina. 1637 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thibaldus. <i>See</i> Snelling, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thicknesse, Francis Henry, suffragan bp. of Leicester, mentioned. 1588 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thistlethwaite, Peregrine and Dorothy. Dedication to them. 1633 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thomas, st., of Aquino. Index Thomisticus to Pavonius’s Summa Ethicae. 1633 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thomas, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a> (<i>bis</i>), 270.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thomas, Thomas, bookseller, of Bristol, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thomas, Thomas, printer, of Cambridge, mentioned. 1585 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— His dictionary (Camb. 1588), mentioned. 1589 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Thomson sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thorn, Johan. <i>See</i> Dorne, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thornborough, bp. John. Articles at his first visitation. 1603 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— His “Discourse proving the utilitie of the Union of England and Scotland,” 1604, mentioned. 1605 T.</li>
- <li>— The joyful reuniting the two kingdoms, England and Scotland. 1605 T.</li>
- <li>— <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Λιθοθεωρικός</span> sive nihil, aliquid, omnia (alchemical). 1621 T.</li>
- <li>— The last will and testament of Jesus Christ (treatise on the Lord’s Supper). 1630 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Thornburgh, dr. Edward, archdeacon of Worcester. Articles in his Visitation, 1638. 1638 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thorne, William, of New college, Oxford. Tullius seu <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ῥήτωρ</span>. 1592 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Thorpe, Thomas, bookseller, mentioned. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Throckmorton, sir Clement. Dedications to him. 1610 H, 1627 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Timotheus, pseud. <i>See</i> Salvianus, st.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Timothy’s task. <i>See</i> Mandevill, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tipping, William. A discourse of Eternity, by W. T. 1633 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— A return of thankfulness for recovery out of sickness. 1640 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Tithes. <i>See</i> B., E.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Parsons, Bartholomew.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Todkill, Anas, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Toldervey, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tolson, dr. John, provost of Oriel college, Oxford. Dedication to him. 1640 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tombes, John. Edited Pemble’s Five sermons. 1628 P, 1629 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tomson, Richard, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tortura Torti. <i>See</i> Andrewes, Lancelot.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tortus, Matthaeus. Pseudonym of card. Bellarminus. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Toulouse, mentioned. 1639 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Towneley sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Townley, Zouch. Oratio in memoriam Gul. Camdeni. 1624 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tozer, Henry. Directions for a godly life. 1628 T, 1640 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon (A Christian amendment). 1633 T.</li>
- <li>— Christus, sive dicta et facta Christi. 1634 T.</li>
- <li>— Christian wisdom, a sermon on 1 Kings x. 40. 1639 T.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on John xviii. 3. 1640 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Trafford, sir Edmond. Sermon at his daughter’s wedding, dedicated to him, by W. Massie, 1586. 1586 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Trafford, Margaret. Sermon at her wedding, by W. Massie, 1586. 1586 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Transcription. Cost in 1625. 1625 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Scribes.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Travers, Walter. Supplication to the Privy Council (against Hooker). 1612 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Answer to his supplication, by Rich. Hooker. 1612 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Treatise containing the aequity of an humble supplication in the behalfe of Wales, 1587. <i>See</i> Penry, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Trelcatius, Lucas. Scholastica locorum communium theologiæ institutio adversus Bellarminum. 1606 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Trent, Council of. <i>See</i> Ranchin, Guillaume.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Treveris, Peter. Referred to as a printer at Oxford! p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>: cf. p. <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Trial of truth, 1600. <i>See</i> Terry, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Trigge, Francis. Comment. in cap. 12 ep. ad Rom. 1590 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Noctes sacrae seu lucubrationes in primam partem Apocalypseos. 1590 T.</li>
- <li>— Analysis cap. 24 Evangelii secundum Matthaeum. 1591 T.</li>
- <li>— Sermon (on Is. xxiv. 1–3) at Grantham, 1592. 1594 T, 1595 T.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Trithemius, Johannes. Account of st. Salvianus, in Latin. 1629 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Truman, rev. Richard. Christian memorandum or Doctrine of Reproof. 1629 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tuesday. Proverb about Tuesday being unfortunate to Irish. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Turkey. Account of hardships endured by Chr. Angelus at the hand of the Turks: in Greek. 1617 A.
- <ul>
- <li>— — (the same in English). 1617 A.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>Turkish. Poem in Turkish. 1612 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Turner, William, printer, of Oxford and London. Note on the connexion between his two establishments. 1633 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Address to the reader. 1633 B: 1634 B (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li>— His disputes with John Lichfield, mentioned. 1636 L.</li>
- <li>— mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Turnour, Robert, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tutet, M. C., mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Twittee, Thomas, of Oriel college, Oxford. Concio ad clerum (1 Pet. iii. 8). 1640 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Two Sermons. <i>See</i> King, Henry, 1625.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Twofold treatise. <i>See under</i> Speculation, 1612.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Twyne, Brian. Antiquitatis Academiæ Oxoniensis apologia. 1608 T, 1620 T.
- <ul>
- <li>— Miscellanea de antiquis aulis et collegiis. Ibid.</li>
- <li>— Summorum Oxoniensis Academiae magistratuum catalogus. Ibid.</li>
- <li>— Wrote the preface of the Corpus Statutorum Universitatis Oxon. 1634 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Tylia nemore, Willelmus de. <i>See</i> Lyndewoode, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Type at Oxford. <i>See</i> Oxford—Printing.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tyrius, Maximus. <i>See</i> Maximus, Tyrius.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Tyrwhitt, William, mentioned. 1639 B.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>U, letter. Change from u consonantal to v in printing, noticed. 1589 U, p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ubaldini, Petruccio. La Vita di Carlo Magno, mentioned. 1599 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Umbra. <i>See</i> Wouwerus, Joannes.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Uncle, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Underhill, John, vice-chancellor of the University of Oxford. Latin Verses by him quoted. 1585 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Unfortunate politique, the. <i>See</i> Caussin, Nicolas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>University. Note on the old spelling of the word, p. <a href='#Page_292'>292</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Unton, sir Henry. Dedications to him. 1588 C, 1594 L.
- <ul>
- <li>— Funebria d. Henrici Unton (memorial poems). 1596 U.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Urmstone, rev. Shaw, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_230'>230</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ursino, card. Alexander. Dedication to him. 1631 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ursinus, —, mentioned. 1594 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ursinus, Zacharias. Summe of Christian religion (based on the Tractationes theologicae), tr. by H. Parrie. 1587 U (<i>see</i> p. x), 1589 U, 1591 U, 1595 U, 1601 U.
- <ul>
- <li>— Discourses, translated by I. H. 1600 U.</li>
- <li>— Funeral oration on him by F. Junius, tr. into English. 1600 U.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Urso of Salerno, 13th cent. physician. De primarum qualitatum arcanis &amp; effectibus. 1590 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Ussher, archbp. James. Letter about Hakewill’s Apology. 1630 H.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1640 C.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1640 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Usury. <i>See</i> Blaxton, John.
- <ul>
- <li>— <i>See</i> Powel, Gabriel.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Utterson sale, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_261'>261</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Utting, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_258'>258</a>.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>V, letter. <i>See</i> under U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>V., I., 1615, 1620, 1637. <i>See</i> Verneuil, John.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1612 M.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>V., I. P., 1624. <i>See</i> Prideaux, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Valdés, Juan de. Hundred and ten Considerations, tr. into English by N. Ferrar. 1638 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Valentia, Gregorius de. <i>See</i> Gregorius de Valentia.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Valois, house of, mentioned. 1634 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vaughan, archdn. Richard. Dedication to dr. R. “Vychan,” in Welsh. 1595 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vavasour, William, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Veldener, Jean, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Venice. Venetians mentioned as early printers and booksellers. 1485 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— Venetian printing mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_250'>250</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Vergerius, Petrus Paulus, mentioned. 1638 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Veritas odiosa. <i>See</i> Attonitus, Richardus.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Verneuil, John. Perhaps (as “I. V.”) translated 1615 M (Mornay) from the French: possibly also 1612 M (Mornay).
- <ul>
- <li>— Translated (as “I. V.”) a sermon by Du Moulin. 1620 D.</li>
- <li>— Translated Cameron’s Sovereign judge. 1628 C.</li>
- <li>— Catalogus interpretum S. Scripturae in bibliotheca Bodleiana (anonymous, by J. Verneuil, but based on James’s work). 1635 V.</li>
- <li>— A Nomenclator of such tracts and sermons as have been printed in English on any place of Holy Scripture, by I. V. 1637 V.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Vernon, sir Robert. Dedication to him. 1604 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Verulam, lord. <i>See</i> Bacon, Francis, lord Verulam.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vicars, Thomas. Edited Mandevill’s Timothy’s task. 1619 M.
- <ul>
- <li><span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>— Edited Carleton’s <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">Ἀστρολογομανία</span>. 1624 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Vicars, Thomas (“Gallager,” = of Cockfield). Pusillus grex, refutatio Caelii Secundi Curionis (with some letters). 1627 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vienne. <i>See</i> Councils.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vigilius. Extract from Vigilius about the Incarnation. 1600 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Villa Dei, Alexander de. <i>See</i> Alexander de Villa Dei.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Villiers, George, duke of Buckingham, <i>d.</i> 1629. Dedications to him. 1628 F, S, 1636 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Villiers, Victor Albert, earl of Jersey, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vincentius Lirinensis. Vincentii vel Peregrini Adversus Haereses Commonitoria duo. 1631 V.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vindiciae fidei. <i>See</i> Pemble, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Virgil. The first Aeneid tr. into English verse by G. S(andys). 1632 O.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1485 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Virginia. <i>See</i> Smith, capt. John, 1612.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vitae selectorum virorum. <i>See</i> Bates, William.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vitellescus, Mutius. Dedication to him. 1633 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vitriol. Regarded as of importance in alchemy, by bp. Thornborough. 1621 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Voeglerus, Hieronymus. Dedication to him. 1636 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Voragine, Jacobus de. <i>See</i> Jacobus de Voragine.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vosgraf or Foxgrave, a possible printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vossius, Gerardus Johannes. Theses theologicae et historicae. 1628 V, 1631 V.
- <ul>
- <li>— Rhetorices contractae sive partitionum oratoriarum libri V, ed. altera. 1631 V.</li>
- <li>— Responsio ad judicium H. Ravenspergeri de Grotii Defensione fidei catholicae (he also edited Grotius’s original work). 1636 G.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Vries, dr. Abr. de. His sale at Amsterdam 1864, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Vychan. <i>See</i> Vaughan.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>W., A., 1631. <i>See</i> Walkington, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>W., D., 1596. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>W., J., 1640. <i>See</i> Westall, John.
- <ul>
- <li>— 1628. <i>See</i> Wouwerus, Joannes.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>W., R., 1614. <i>See</i> Willet, Rowland.
- <ul>
- <li>— of Hart hall, Oxford. Translated <cite>Merry Jests</cite> out of French. 1617 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>W., S. Latin complimentary poems to C. Butler. 1633 B (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>W., T. Radices Graecae linguae. 1627 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Waade (or Wadd), William. Acrostic to him. 1589 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wade, —. Preface addressed to him. 1586 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wadloffe, James, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wake, Isaac. Rex Platonicus. 1607 W (<i>bis</i>), 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— Oratio funebris habita ab I. Wake (in memoriam I. Rainoldi) 25 Maii 1607. 1607 W, 1608 W, 1614 R, 1615 W, 1627 W, 1635 W.</li>
- <li>— Oratio funebris (on sir Thomas Bodley). 1613 O.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wake, John, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wakeman, Robert. Act Sermon 1604 (on Acts ii. 46). 1605 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— Sermon before the King 30 Apr. 1605 (on 2 Chron. ix. 8). 1605 W.</li>
- <li>— Sermon, on Jonah iii-v (1603) 2nd impression. 1606 W.</li>
- <li>— Jonah’s Sermon and Nineveh’s Repentance. 3rd ed. 1612 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wales. Supplication on behalfe of Wales [by J. Penry]. 1587 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Walkington, Thomas. The Optic-glass of Humors by T. W. (also attributed to Tho. Wilbie and T. Wombwell). 1631 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wall, dr. John. Verses by him. 1616 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— The watering of Apollos, a Sermon on Acts xviii. 28. 1625 W.</li>
- <li>— Jacob’s Ladder, a sermon on 1 Pet. v. 6. 1626 W.</li>
- <li>— Sermon on Matth. xxi. 9. 1627 W.</li>
- <li>— The Lion in the Lamb, a sermon on Rev. vii. 10. 1628 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Walles, Richard, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wallop, sir Henry. Dedication to him. 1616 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Walsingham, sir Francis. Dedications to him. 1589 R, 1627 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Walter, bookbinder, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Walter de Ensham, illuminator, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Walton, Adam de. <i>See</i> Adam de Walton.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Walton, Izaak, mentioned, 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wandesford, Christopher, viscount Castlecomer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Warcop, Ralph. Encomion Rodolphi Warcoppi (poems to his memory). 1605 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Warner, John, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Warwick, earl of. <i>See</i> Dudley, Ambrose.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Watering of Apollos. <i>See</i> Wall, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Watermarks, p. <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Waters of Siloë. <i>See</i> Du Moulin, Pierre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Waterson, Simon, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_296'>296</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>Wats, Gilbert. Translated Bacon’s <cite>Advancement of learning</cite>, and wrote prefaces, &amp;c. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Watson, sir Lewis. Dedication to him. 1635 F.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Watt, dr. Robert, mentioned, 1633 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Way, R. <i>See</i> Nixon, Robert.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Waynflete, bp. William (Patten), founder of Magdalen college, Oxford. Gulielmi ... Waynfleti ... vita obitusque (auctore J. Buddeno). 1602 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1589 H.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Waystiell, Lancelot, stationer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wayte, Nicholas, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Webbe, William, stationer, &amp;c., mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_301'>301</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Welbourn, co. Linc., mentioned. 1591 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wells, rev. William. Epistola ad authorem libelli Stricturae breves in Epistolas Genevensium et Oxoniensium [anon.] (imprint 1608 for 1708). 1608 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Welsh. Welsh book printed at Oxford. 1595 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wenman, sir Richard, lord Wenman. Dedication to him. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wermueller, Otto. Perl mewn Adfyd (translated from the German into English by Miles Coverdale, and from English into Welsh by H. Lewys). 1595 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wescombe, Martin. Fabulae pontificiae dissipatae. 1639 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>West, James, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Westall, John, bookseller. Signs the preface of 1640 P, as “J. W.”
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Westerman, William, mentioned. 1640 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Westfaling, Herbert, bp. of Hereford, Articles to be inquired of by the Churchwardens &amp;c. within the diocese of Hereford, 1586. 1586 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Westphalia, John of, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wethereld, Thomas, of Queen’s college, Oxford. Latin poem on his death, by Gerard Langbaine. 1636 L.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wh., Diag. 1596. <i>See</i> Whear, Degory.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Whaddon. <i>See under</i> Sparke, Thomas, 1593.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wharton, rev. Rich. (?), vicar of St. Mary the Virgin’s, Oxford, mentioned. 1612 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Whear, Degory. Verses by him, signed D. W. and Diag. Wh. 1596 F.
- <ul>
- <li>— Parentatio historica, sive commemoratio Gul. Camdeni. 1624 O, 1628 W.</li>
- <li>— Nuncius chronogrammaticus (de Camdeno). 1624 O, 1628 W.</li>
- <li>— De ratione et methodo legendi historias: praemittitur Oratio auspicalis. 1625 W.</li>
- <li>— Pietas erga benefactores, mentioned. 1626 W.</li>
- <li>— Latin letters to accompany his <cite>Methodus historica</cite>, 1625. 1628 W.</li>
- <li>— Pietas erga benefactores (Parentatio historica manibus Camdeni oblata, 1623: Nuntius Chronogrammaticus, de obitu Camdeni: Dedicatio imaginis Camdenianae, 1626: Epistolae eucharisticae: Charisteria, 1626). 1628 W.</li>
- <li>— Relectiones hyemales de ratione et methodo legendi historias (3rd ed.). 1637 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Whichford, mentioned, 1632 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Whitaker, William. Latin letter to him from dr. John Rainolds. 1614 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>White, Antony. Truth and error, two sermons. 1628 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>White, dr. Thomas. Schola moralis philosophiae Oxon. in funere Whiti pullata (poems and oration). 1624 O.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Whitgift, John, archbp. of Canterbury. Dedication to him. 1602 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1610 B.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Whittington, Robert. De heteroclitis nominibus et de gradibus comparationis. 1518 W, pp. <a href='#Page_257'>257</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>.
- <ul>
- <li>— “1500,” p. <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>.</li>
- <li>— De concinnitate grammatices. Oxf. “1519,” mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wickliffe, John. <i>See</i> Wyclif, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Widdowes, Giles. The schismatical puritan, a sermon (on 1 Cor. xiv. 40). 1630 W, 1631 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned. 1631 P.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wiffin, Richard, of Virginia. Extracts from his writings. 1612 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wight, John, printer, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_228'>228</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilbie, Thomas. <i>See</i> Walkington, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilcox, Richard, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wildgoose, William, bookseller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilkinson, John, of Magdalen coll. Oxford, mentioned. 1612 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Willett, Andrew. His <cite>Limbomastix</cite> and <cite>Loidoromastix or a scourge for a railer</cite> referred to. 1604 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Willett, Rowland. Translated <cite>Papistogelastes</cite> by N. S., as “R. W.” 1614 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>William, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a> (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- <li class='c030'>William, illuminator, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>William, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>William of Nottingham, scribe, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>William de Pickering, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>Williams, John, archbp. of York. De humorum numero &amp;c. 1590 B.
- <ul>
- <li>— Edited Roger Bacon’s treatise de Senectute and Urso’s de primis qualitatibus. 1590 B.</li>
- <li>— University sermon on Rev. x. 1. 1597 W.</li>
- <li>— Dedications to him. 1625 J, W, 1627 R.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Willoughby, John. Theorremon, (selections from st. Chrysostom, made and translated by J. Willoughby). 1602 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Treatise for the preparation of the Lord’s Supper. 1603 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilmot, John, stationer, &amp;c., mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilson, Mathias, alias Edw. Knott, alias Nicholas Smith, a Jesuit. Charity Mistaken by Edw. Knott, mentioned. 1633 P.
- <ul>
- <li>— The Religion of Protestants (an answer to Wilson’s <cite>Charity maintained</cite>) by W. Chillingworth. 1638 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilson, Stephen, bookseller and bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilson, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1614 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilton, co. Wilts. Book in the earl of Pembroke’s Library at Wilton, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wilton, lord Grey of. <i>See</i> Grey, Arthur.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wiltshire. A masque chiefly in Wiltshire dialect. 1636 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Winchester. Preces in usum scholae Wintoniensis &amp;c., auctore H. Robinson. 1616 R.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Windsor. Thomas, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Winniffe, dr. Thomas, dean of St. Paul’s. Dedication to him. 1640 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Winterton, R., mentioned. 1633 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wirley, rev. Edward, rector of St. Ebbe’s, Oxford. Two Greek poems by him. 1638 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wither, George. An answer to Wither’s Motto, by T. G. 1625 G.
- <ul>
- <li>— Poems by him. 1634 B (<i>bis</i>).</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wodebrigge, William, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wolfius, Johannes, of Zürich. Latin letter to him from J. Acontius, 1562. 1631 A.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wolley, sir John and lady Elizabeth. Dedication to them. 1595 M.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wolsey, cardinal, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_12'>12</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wombwell, Thomas. <i>See</i> Walkington, Thomas.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wood, Antony. Date depending on his accuracy. 1614 D.
- <ul>
- <li>— Confuses the editions of Rainolds’s <cite>Orationes</cite>. 1614 R.</li>
- <li>— His Athenæ Oxonienses mentioned, <i>passim</i>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wood, James, parchment-seller, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Woodcuts. <i>See</i> Engravings.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Woodstock. Churchyard’s Handful of gladsome verses given to the Queen at Woodstock, 1592. 1592 C.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Worcester, archdeaconry. Articles in the Visitation of Edw. Thornburgh, archdeacon of Worcester, 1638. 1638 T.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Worcester, city. Dedication to it. 1637 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Worde, Wynkin de, mentioned. 1485 A, p. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wotton under Edge, co. Gloucester. Sermon delivered there in 1605, by S. Benefield. 1613 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wotton, sir Henry. Dedication to him. 1637 B.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wouwerus, Johannes. Pietas erga Benefactores. 1626 W.
- <ul>
- <li>— mentioned, 1628 W; as J. W. 1628 C.</li>
- <li>— Dies aestiva sive de Umbra paegnion, cum Dousae in eam declamatione. 1636 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wrench, William, printer, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wright, Abraham. Deliciae deliciarum, sive Epigrammatum <span lang="el" xml:lang="el">ἀνθολογία</span>, opera A. Wright. 1637 D.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wright, John, publisher of London, mentioned. 1617 H.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wright, Richard, of Oxford, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wright, Richard, bookseller of London, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_295'>295</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wright, Robert. Editor of Untoni Funebria. 1596 U.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wright, William, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_252'>252</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wriothesley, Thomas, earl of Southampton. Dedication to him. 1628 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Writtle. <i>See</i> Petre.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wroughton, lady Katherine. Dedication to her. 1604 P.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wybarun, dr. Thomas. A binding done for him in 1467, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wyberd, John. Synopsis Anni Christi 1637, sive Diarium (an almanac with prognostications). 1637 W.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Wyclif, dr. John. Apologie for John Wyclif, by dr. James: with a Life of Wyclif. 1608 J.
- <ul>
- <li>— Two short treatises (Four articles, and objections of Friars): ed. by dr. James, with glossary. 1608 W.</li>
- <li>— Wickliffe’s wicket, a treatise on the Sacrament (a reprint of an ed. of 1546 (?)). 1612 W.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Wyffin. <i>See</i> Wiffin.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>Y.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Yon, bookbinder, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'><span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>York, mentioned, p. <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Young, dr. John, dean of Winchester. Dedications to him. 1623 G, 1625 G.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Young, Patrick (Patricius Junius). Edited Clement’s Epistola ad Corinthios prima. 1633 C.
- <ul>
- <li>— Dedication to him. 1635 C.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c030'>Young, Robert, bookseller, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Younger brother’s apology. <i>See</i> Allen, John.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Youth and Old Age. <i>See under</i> Speculation, 1612.</li>
- <li class='c004 center'>Z.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Z., R., 1629, 1640. <i>See</i> Zouche, Richard.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Zamoyskius, Thomas. Dedication to him. 1634 S.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Zel, Ulric, mentioned, pp. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>.</li>
- <li class='c030'>Zouche, dr. Richard. Elementa jurisprudentiae, autore R. Z. 1629 Z.
- <ul>
- <li>— — (with author’s name). 1636 Z.</li>
- <li>— mentioned. 1634 O.</li>
- <li>— Descriptio juris et judicii feudalis, secundum consuetudines Mediolani et Normanniae. 1634 Z.</li>
- <li>— Descriptio juris et judicii ecclesiastici secundum canones et constitutiones Anglicanas. 1636 Z.</li>
- <li>— Descriptio juris et judicii temporalis secundum consuetudines feudales et Normannicas. 1636 Z.</li>
- <li>— Descriptio juris et judicii militaris, nec non maritimi, autore R. Z. 1640 Z.</li>
- <li>— Descriptio juris et judicii sacri. 1640 Z.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>THE END</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Oxford</div>
- <div class='c000'>PRINTED AT THE CLARENDON PRESS</div>
- <div class='c000'>BY HORACE HART, PRINTER TO THE UNIVERSITY</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table7' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='50%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>TYPE 1</td>
- <td class='c046'>II</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='II' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_plate2.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>JERONIMUS, OXFORD, “1468”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table7' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='50%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>TYPES 2, 3</td>
- <td class='c046'>III</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='III' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_plate3.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>LATTEBURIUS, OXFORD, 1482</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table7' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='50%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>TYPES 3, 4, 5, 6</td>
- <td class='c046'>IV</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='IV' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_plate4.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>LYNDEWOODE, OXFORD (1483?)</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table7' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='50%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>TYPES 5, 7</td>
- <td class='c046'>V</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='V' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_plate5.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>FESTIAL, OXFORD, 148<span class='fraction'>6<br /><span class='ov'>7</span></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table7' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='50%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c046'>VI</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='VI' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_plate6.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>BURLEY ON ARISTOTLE, OXFORD, 1517</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table7' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='50%' />
-<col width='50%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c022'>&nbsp;</td>
- <td class='c046'>VII</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div id='VII' class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_plate7.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>BURLEY DE MATERIA, OXFORD, 1518</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_specimen1.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_specimen2.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_specimen3.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_specimen4.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_specimen5.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/i_specimen6.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Oxford Historical Society.</div>
- <div class='c000'>PUBLICATIONS.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1884.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>1. Register of the University of Oxford.</b> Vol. I. (1449–63;
-1505–71), edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>C. W. Boase</span>, M.A., pp. xxviii + 364.
-(Price to the public, without discount, and prepaid, 16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>2. Remarks and Collections of Thomas Hearne.</b> Vol. I. (4 July
-1705—19 March 1707), edited by <span class='sc'>C. E. Doble</span>, M.A., pp.
-viii + 404. (16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1884–85.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>3. The Early History of Oxford (727–1100), preceded by a
-sketch of the Mythical Origin of the City and University.</b>
-By <span class='sc'>James Parker</span>, M.A. With three illustrations, pp. xxxii + 420.
-(20<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1885.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>4. Memorials of Merton College, with biographical notices of
-the Wardens and Fellows.</b> By the Hon. <span class='sc'>Geo. C. Brodrick</span>,
-Warden of Merton College. With one illustration, pp. xx + 416.
-(16<i>s.</i>, to members of Merton 12<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>5. Collectanea, 1st series</b>, edited by <span class='sc'>C. R. L. Fletcher</span>, M.A.
-(Contents:—<i>a.</i> Letters relating to Oxford in the XIVth Century,
-edited by H. H. Henson; <i>b.</i> Catalogue of the Library of Oriel
-College in the XIVth Century, edited by C. L. Shadwell; <i>c.</i> Daily
-ledger of John Dorne, bookseller in Oxford, 1520, edited by
-F. Madan; <i>d.</i> All Souls College <i>versus</i> Lady Jane Stafford, 1587,
-edited by C. R. L. Fletcher; <i>e.</i> Account Book of James Wilding,
-Undergraduate of Merton College, 1682–88, edited by E. G. Duff;
-<i>f.</i> Dr. Wallis’s Letter against Maidwell, 1700, edited by T. W.
-Jackson.) With two illustrations, pp. viii + 358. (16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1886.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>6. Magdalen College and King James II, 1686–88.</b> A series of
-documents collected and edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>J. R. Bloxam</span>, D.D.,
-with additions, pp. lii + 292. (16<i>s.</i>, to members of Magdalen 12<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>7. Hearne’s Collections</b> [as No. 2 above]. Vol. II. (20 Mar.
-1707—22 May 1710), pp. viii + 480. (16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>8. Elizabethan Oxford.</b> Reprints of rare tracts. Edited by the Rev.
-<span class='sc'>C. Plummer</span>, M.A. (Contents:—<i>a.</i> Nicolai Fierberti Oxoniensis
-Academiæ descriptio, 1602; <i>b.</i> Leonard Hutton on the Antiquities</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>of Oxford; <i>c.</i> Queen Elizabeth at Oxford, 1566 [pieces by
-J. Bereblock, Thomas Nele, Nich. Robinson, and Rich. Stephens,
-with appendices]; <i>d.</i> Queen Elizabeth at Oxford, 1592, by Philip
-Stringer; <i>e.</i> Apollinis et Musarum Eidyllia per Joannem Sandford,
-1592), pp. xxxii + 316. (10<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1887.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>9. Letters of Richard Radcliffe and John James, of Queen’s
-College, Oxford, 1749–83</b>: edited by <span class='sc'>Margaret Evans</span>, with
-a pedigree, pp. xxxvi + 306. (15<i>s.</i>, to members of Queen’s 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>10. Register of the University of Oxford, Vol. II. (1571–1622),
-part 1. Introductions.</b> Edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>Andrew Clark</span>, M.A.,
-pp. xxxii + 468. (18<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1887–8.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>11. Do. Part 2. Matriculations and Subscriptions.</b> Edited by
-the Rev. <span class='sc'>Andrew Clark</span>, M.A., pp. xvi + 424. (18<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1888.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>12. Do. Part 3. Degrees.</b> Edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>Andrew Clark</span>, M.A.,
-pp. viii + 448. (17<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>13. Hearne’s Collections</b> [as No. 2 above]. Vol. III. (25 May
-1710—14 December, 1712), pp. iv + 518. (16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1889.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>14. Register of the University of Oxford, Vol. II, Part 4. Index.</b>
-Edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>Andrew Clark</span>, M.A., pp. viii + 468. (17<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>15. Wood’s History of the City of Oxford.</b> <i>New Edition.</i> By the
-Rev. <span class='sc'>Andrew Clark</span>, M.A. Vol. I. The City and Suburbs. With
-three Maps and several Diagrams, pp. xii + 660. (25<i>s.</i>, to
-citizens of Oxford 20<i>s.</i>; the two Maps of old Oxford separately,
-not folded, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, to citizens 1<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1890.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>16. Collectanea, 2nd series</b>, edited by Professor <span class='sc'>Montagu Burrows</span>.
-Contents:—<i>a.</i> The Oxford Market, by O. Ogle; <i>b.</i> The University
-of Oxford in the Twelfth Century, by T. E. Holland;
-<i>c.</i> The Friars Preachers of the University, edited by H. Rashdall;
-<i>d.</i> Notes on the Jews in Oxford, by A. Neubauer; <i>e.</i> Linacre’s
-Catalogue of Grocyn’s Books, followed by a Memoir of Grocyn,
-by the Editor; <i>f.</i> Table-Talk and Papers of Bishop Hough,
-1703–1743, edited by W. D. Macray; <i>g.</i> Extracts from the
-‘Gentleman’s Magazine’ relating to Oxford, 1731–1800, by F. J.
-Haverfield. Appendix: Corrections and Additions to Collectanea,</p>
-
-<p class='c037'>Vol. I. (Day-book of John Dorne, Bookseller at Oxford, <span class='fss'>A.D.</span>
-1520, by F. Madan, including ‘A Half-century of Notes’ on
-Dorne, by Henry Bradshaw.) With one diagram, pp. xii + 518. (16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>17. Wood’s History of the City of Oxford</b> [as No. 15 above].
-Vol. II. Churches and Religious Houses. With Map and
-Diagram, pp. xii + 550. (20<i>s.</i>, to citizens of Oxford 16<i>s.</i>; Map
-of Oxford in 1440, separately, not folded, 9<i>d.</i>, to citizens 6<i>d.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1890–91.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>18. Oxford City Documents</b>, financial and judicial, 1268–1665.
-Selected and edited by <span class='sc'>J. E. Thorold Rogers</span>, late Drummond
-Professor of Political Economy in the University of Oxford.
-pp. viii + 440 (+ 2 loose leaves for vols. 6 and 16). (12<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1891.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>19. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood, antiquary, of
-Oxford, 1632–1695, described by Himself.</b> Collected from
-his Diaries and other Papers, by the Rev. <span class='sc'>Andrew Clark</span>, M.A.
-Vol. I. 1632–1663. With seven illustrations. pp. xvi + 520.
-(20<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>20. The Grey Friars in Oxford.</b> Part I, A History of the Convent;
-Part II, Biographical Notices of the Friars, together with
-Appendices of original documents. By <span class='sc'>Andrew G. Little</span>, M.A.,
-pp. xvi + 372. (16<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1892.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>21. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood</b> [as No. 19]. Vol. II.
-1664–1681. With ten illustrations. pp. xxviii + 576. (20<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>22. Reminiscences of Oxford, by Oxford men, 1559–1850.</b>
-Selected and edited by <span class='sc'>Lilian M. Quiller Couch</span>, pp. xvi + 430.
-(17<i>s.</i>, to members of the University 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1892–93.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>23. Index to Wills proved and Administrations granted in
-the Court of the Archdeacon of Berks, 1508–1652.</b> Edited
-by <span class='sc'>W. P. W. Phillimore</span>, M.A. (Issued in conjunction with
-the British Record Society.) pp. viii + 200. (10<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1893.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>24. Three Oxfordshire Parishes. A History of Kidlington,
-Yarnton and Begbroke.</b> By Mrs. <span class='sc'>Bryan Stapleton</span>. With
-a coloured map and 2 sheet-pedigrees, pp. xx + 400. (17<i>s.</i>, to
-residents in the three villages 10<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c038'><b>25. The History of Corpus Christi College, with Lists of its
-Members.</b> By <span class='sc'>Thomas Fowler</span>, D.D., President of the
-College. With three illustrations. pp. xvi + 482. (20<i>s.</i>, to
-members of Corpus 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1894.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>26. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood</b> [as No. 19]. Vol. III.
-1681/2–1695. With three illustrations. pp. xxxii + 548. (21<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>27. The Register of Exeter College, Oxford</b>, with a history of
-the College, and illustrations. By the Rev. <span class='sc'>C. W. Boase</span>, M.A.
-Third edition, enlarged. pp. [8] + clxxxiv + 400. (<i>Presented to
-the Society by the author</i>: 15<i>s.</i>, to members of the College 10<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>28. The Cartulary of the Monastery of St. Frideswide at
-Oxford.</b> Edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>S. R. Wigram</span>, M.A. With illustrations.
-Vol. I. General and City Charters. pp. xvi + 503 +
-six pages (loose) of corrections to Vol. XXIV. (21<i>s.</i>)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1895.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>29. The Early Oxford Press, a bibliography of printing and
-publishing at Oxford, ‘1468’-1640.</b> With notes, appendixes
-and illustrations. By <span class='sc'>Falconer Madan</span>, M.A. pp. xii + 366.
-(Separate copies can be obtained only from the Clarendon Press,
-price 18<i>s.</i> The Society can only supply it in sets.)</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><i>Forthcoming Publication.</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>1895.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c037'><b>30. The Life and Times of Anthony Wood</b> [as No. 19]. Vol. IV:
-Addenda. With illustrations. pp. xii + 322.</p>
-
-<hr class='c024' />
-<p class='c037'>The 5th (and last) vol. of <span class='sc'>Clark’s</span> edition of <cite>Wood’s Life and Times</cite>,
-the 3rd (and last) vol. of the same Editor’s <cite>Wood’s History of the
-City of Oxford</cite>, the 2nd vol. of the <cite>Cartulary of St. Frideswide’s</cite>
-edited by the Rev. <span class='sc'>S. R. Wigram</span>, the 4th vol. of <cite>Hearne’s Diaries</cite>
-edited by <span class='sc'>C. E. Doble</span>, Esq., the <cite>Place Names of the diocese of
-Oxford</cite>, <cite>Collectanea</cite> III, edited by Prof. <span class='sc'>M. Burrows</span>, and other
-volumes are in active preparation.</p>
-<hr class='c024' />
-
-<p class='c010'>A full description of the Society’s work and objects can be obtained by application
-to any of the Committee residing at Oxford (<span class='sc'>P. Lyttelton Gell</span>, Esq.,
-Headington Hill; <span class='sc'>Falconer Madan</span>, Esq. (<i>Hon. Treasurer</i>), 90 Banbury
-Road; the Rev. the <span class='sc'>Provost of Queen’s College</span> (Dr. <span class='sc'>Magrath</span>); and
-<span class='sc'>C. L. Shadwell</span>, Esq., Frewin Hall, Oxford). The annual subscription is
-one guinea, and <b>the published volumes as a set can be obtained by new
-members at one-fourth the published price (i. e. 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> a year)</b>.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Jan.</i>, 1895.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c048' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>See Appendixes A, B.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Separate leaves from rare and costly books are given in G. E. Klemming’s <cite>Sveriges
-äldre liturgiska literatur</cite>, Stockholm, 1879—a practice which cannot be approved—but
-no local press has as yet been similarly illustrated.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Separate copies can <i>only</i> be obtained by ordering them from the Clarendon Press,
-and are not supplied by the Society.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r4'>4</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For a discussion of special points connected with the Fifteenth Century Oxford
-Press, see Appendix A.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r5'>5</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>For a general discussion of the circumstances of the Early Sixteenth Century
-Oxford Press, see Appendix B.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r6'>6</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>None is paged: nor are there catchwords.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r7'>7</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Exclusive of headline, signatures, and marginal notes.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r8'>8</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>With fragments of the book, independently of copies.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r9'>9</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>As these pages pass through the press I am informed by Mr. E. G. Duff that
-Lord Crawford possesses an edition of Horace’s Opuscula printed in “1470” with
-signatures.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r10'>10</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Blades was under the erroneous impression that Koelhoff printed at Lübeck, instead
-of Cologne: where also books with manuscript signatures occur later than 1472.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r11'>11</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In 1467 Ulric Zel of Cologne (see p. <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>) was unacquainted with the setting-rule,
-which made evenness easy: he adopted it in 1468–9, but Colard Mansion at Bruges
-not till 1478 (Blades, <cite>Books in Chains</cite>, p. 128).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r12'>12</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='fss'>AELFREDVS .</span> | <span class='fss'>LEGVM . ANGLIAE .</span> | <span class='fss'>ACADEMIAE . OXON .</span> | <span class='fss'>CONDITOR .</span></p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r13'>13</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“A nativitate Christi ducentesimae nonagesimae quintae Olympiadis anno. II. VII.
-Idus Decembres,” = 7 Dec. 1472.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r14'>14</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>In 1528 we find a John Scolar, probably identical with the Oxford printer, printing
-a Breviary at Abingdon near Oxford for the use of the Abbey.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r15'>15</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>With privilege.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r16'>16</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“St. Mary’s” and “St. Peter’s”, without qualification, are throughout this
-Appendix used for the parishes of St. Mary the Virgin and St. Peter-in-the-East.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r17'>17</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>E., the English <cite>Praise of Musicke</cite>: L., the Latin <cite>Apologia musices</cite>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r18'>18</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>The references to impr. 84 <i>b</i> in 1630–32 are errors for 84 <i>a</i>.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r19'>19</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>“<i>Oxoniæ</i>” simply is found on an <i>Appendix</i> by Hen. Stanley, 1630, but is not a genuine
-imprint (see p. <a href='#Page_233'>233</a>).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r20'>20</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>W. Jaggard printed in London for Turner in Oxford in 1624.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r21'>21</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>i. e.</i> the <i>printer</i> was either a London man (as in 1625) or, if at Oxford,
-Lichfield (as in 1627–8, 1632, 1638).</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
-<p class='c001'><span class='label'><a href='#r22'>22</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>John Norton printed in London for Bowman in Oxford, 1634.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>R. Bishop printed in London for Bowman in Oxford, 1636.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c005'>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table4' summary='Changes Made'>
- <tr>
- <th class='c049'>Changed From</th>
- <th class='c049'>To</th>
- <th class='c050'>On Page</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“sensibus conservandis.”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“sensibus | conservandis.”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t29a'>29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“illustratus, &amp; emendatus”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“<i>illustratus, &amp; emendatus</i>”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t29b'>29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Oxford. [motto,”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Oxford. | [motto”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t63'>63</a><br /><a href='#t86'>86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“tenere. [motto,”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“tenere. | [motto,”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t68'>68</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Panke. [motto”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Panke. | [motto”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t82'>82</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Doctore. [motto”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Doctore. | [motto”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t115'>115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Vectensi. | line”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Vectensi. | [line”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t124'>124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“a from of approbation”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“a form of approbation”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t124b'>124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Ordinary | line”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Ordinary | [line”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t125'>125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Tem-plo”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Tem-|plo”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t136'>136</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Author. | motto”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Author. | [motto”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t137'>137</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Artes. [two”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Artes. | [two”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t139'>139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“sign. 1<sup>r</sup>”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“sign. A 1<sup>r</sup>”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t146'>146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“See Wood’s Ath. Oxon., 256”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“See Wood’s Ath. Oxon., iii. 256”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t150'>150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“T. S. [line”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“T. S. | [line”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t153'>153</a><br /><a href='#t196'>196</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Oxford | The”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Oxford] | The”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t161'>161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“Illustrantur à [line”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“Illustrantur à | [line”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t169'>169</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“1636. | motto”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“1636. | [motto”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t192'>192</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“line] BY”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“line] | BY”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t214'>214</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“line.] The”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“line.] | The”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t222'>222</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c027'>“doctoris sub= tilissimi”</td>
- <td class='c027'>“doctoris sub=|tilissimi”</td>
- <td class='c051'><a href='#t227'>227</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
- <ol class='ol_1'>
- <li>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
-
- </li>
- <li>Silently corrected typographical errors.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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