clear bold hand of the second half of the thirteenth century, A very valuable MS. of which note has been taken in Hardy's nullos hanc meam admiraturos esse audaciam quod Prisciani precepta de arte grammatica brevius ausus sim colligere, Tamen . . and ending on fol. 92 with a quotation from Horace: Phoebe silvarumque potens Diana. . to illustrate a combination of the Adonic and Sapphic rhythms. On the same leaf follows the dedication, beginning Habes mi Antoni ab observantissimo tui munus non satis celsitudine tua dignum. . and ending ipsi tibi queas ac ceteris inservire on the reverse of fol. 92. Small 4to. MS. ON VELLUM, in semi-Italic characters; bound in calf, from the Phillipps' collection About 1460 The author's name does not appear. He was evidently the tutor of the Antonio to whom his book is dedicated; this Antonio being the recognised heir to some sovereign prince who, it is insinuated, was excellent in learning and in arms. 22 GUIDO COLONNA. Page 1: CI COMMENCE LI PROLOGUE histoire de Troye. £ 8. d. An escutcheon in one of the miniatures shows that the book was illuminated for a member of the Breton family of Tournemine; probably Gilles Tournemine, a distinguished warrior in the second half of the fifteenth century. This is the same text as appears in the British Museum Additional MS. 9785, but here we have a folio on vellum with miniatures, while the B. M. copy is in quarto on paper without miniatures. The B. M. copy begins with the passage which in the above MS. appears 330 Small folio, MS. ON VELLUM, in lettres bâtardes, double columns, 34 lines to the column, numerous illuminated initials, and 17 VERY FINE MINIATURES with borders; old rough calf, enclosed in a red leather case Written about 1460-65 440 0 0 in the second column of pa. 11: Apres deferma medea vn petit The book appears to have been written in fifteen quires, of which the last had ten leaves, the others being in eights; which would amount to 121 written leaves and a final blank. We have only 109 leaves in consequence of the following deficiencies. In quire II its leaf 1 is wanting, in V its fifth, in VI the third and fifth, in X the third and fifth, in XI the fifth and sixth, in XII the first and sixth, in XIII the eighth, and in XIV the seventh. 22* HERBAL. Fol. 1 blank. Foll. 2-8 contain an alphabetical index of the Small 8vo. MS. on paper, by an Italian hand; calf neat About 1460 23 HOMER. IAIAAOC AAPA OMHPOY PAYNAIAC... The Iliad, Books 1-15 with Glosses, all in Greek, sm. folio, neat MS. on glazed paper, the text in black ink and the glosses in red; in the original (mended) stamped calf binding, apparently Venetian Text and gloss are both in the same Greek hand; evidently by one of the refugees From inscriptions on the fly-leaves we learn that the MS. at the beginning of the Some of the letter-forms seem to show that the scribe had an ancient codex before him. 24 HOMER. A small 4to. MS. in Greek, about 620 pp. in the original stamped black leather About 1650 About 1480 15 0 0 CONTENTS: θεοφίλου Κορυδαλέως . . Εκθεσις περὶ ἐπιστολικῶν τύπων with interlineal glosses. 144 pp. 101 pp. Επιστολαὶ ἐγκωμιαστικαί. Romaic and Greek. Γρηγορίου τοῦ θεολόγου Τετράστιχα. With interlineal glosses. 156 pp. Book 5, of the Iliad. 76 pp. Enynois. Prose commentary on the same. 25 HORÆ. B. V. M. etc. (ad usum Turonensem). Small 4to. ILLUMINATED MS. ON VELLUM, with 12 MINIATURES, some of them a little rubbed, with numerous ornamental initials, and many pretty floral borders; calf, with the gilt covers of the sixteenth-century binding preserved on the sides The book is perfect with the exception of the first leaf of the Penitential Psalms. It is shown to have been written at Tours in this way. The Calendar has two entries for St. Gatian; in the Suffrages of Saints, SS. Martin and Gatian immediately follow St. Laurence, and precede St. Nicolaus; in the Litany, Gatian and Martin are invoked immediately after Silvester and before St. Nicolaus. The "use" is neither that of Paris, nor that of Rome. 2 16 0 44 0 (Tours?) about 1445-50 24 0 0 26 HORÆ B. V. M. etc. (secundum usum quemdam Francia). Small 4to. ILLUMINATED MS. ON VELLUM, with 10 MINIATURES, hundreds of gilt and painted initials, and numerous pretty floral borders; old French olive morocco extra, gilt edges (Derome) (Abbeville?) about 1450-60 42 0 0 There are a great many specially French saints in the Calendar, but the chief one is "S. Romainge" on the 23 October, written in gold. His name is the only one so decorated, except the saints of the early The miniatures are: St. John at Patmos, the Annunciation, the Some hymns and prayers are added on a hand of about 1490, and MS. ON VELLUM, with many fine initials and floral 27 HORÆ B.V.M., Sanctæ Crucis, Spiritus sancti, et Trinitatis, small 4to. MS. ON VELLUM, with 10 borders, 5 MINIATURES, and a great number of Written in England by a Flemish hand about 1450 12 12 0 28 HORÆ B. V. M. etc. Small 4to. RICHLY ILLUMINATED A lovely book inside and outside. Stev. Genevieve is found in gold letters in the Calendar; she is also one of the Saints in the litany, and she is included among the special Saints who have offices of commemoration at the end of the book. We may therefore assume that the MS. was executed in or near Paris. The Calendar is in French, as are also the rubricated headings of many of the prayers, and the two sets of Prayers which begin Douce Dame and Beau sire Dieu. The Use is French, and Rex noster stands in the place usually occupied by the Dominus Apostolicus. £ 8. (Paris?) About 1470 72 0 0 The figure-designs in the miniatures have a stately repose in their attitudes which resembles rather the Italian style than the French, the work, however, being unmistakably French. The binding is a beautiful work of art executed by a binder who will, I think, be ultimately identified with Le Gascon, in the days before he took to pointillé. d. The illumination, as we glean from the numerous armorial emblazonments, was done (in 1446), probably for Jouvenel des Ursins 29 HEURES DE LA VIERGE etc., des Ursins-Montbéron. Small 8vo. (12mo.) BEAUTIFUL ILLUMINATED MS. ON VELLUM; with leaf-and-flower borders, and 9 fine MINATURES IN GRISAILLE; red morocco, a handsome French binding done in Le Gascon's time About 1446 150 0 0 Bishop of Laon, as a present for his brother Michel on the marriage 30 JONSON (Ben) THE GYPSEYES CHANG'D (a Masque), small 4to. MS. on paper, 58 pp. bds. UNIQUE, said by Gifford to be in the AUTOGRAPH OF RARE BEN HIMSELF, from the Phillipps Collection This humorous Masque was printed in 1640 by itself (surreptitiously), and in 1641 in the folio, under the title of the Gipsies Metamorphosed. Gifford used this MS. (then in Heber's possession) for his text, and says, "The folio is here grievously incorrect. . The surreptitious copy.. leaves many errors. These I have been enabled. . to remove by the assistance of a MS... This which is in his own hand and is perhaps the only MS. piece of Jonson's in existence, is more full and correct than either of the printed copies .. and is certainly prior to them both." The masque was played at Burleigh, at Belvoir, and at Windsor in 1621 before the Court. This MS. notes the variations made at each place. It is possible, notwithstanding Gifford's opinion to the contrary, that the book is not in Ben Jonson's autograph; but its value in any case is very high as a unique MS. giving the best form of the text, and as being considerably anterior to the printed editions. 31 JUVENAL. Fol. 1: Semper ego auditor tantum ? nunquamne reponam ? Vexatus. Leaf 102.. ventri indulsit non omne legumen. About 1622 12 12 0 Sm. 4to. MS. on vellum, written in Roman characters by an Italian hand, 19 lines to the page; the first page decorated with a fine interlaced initial, and two emblazoned escutcheons; calf, from the library of Sir Thomas Phillipps About 1450-60 10 0 0 The older of the two escutcheons on the first page was painted about 1470 for a man whose initials were F. R., and whose bearing was like that of the Tagliavia (see Ginanni). A later owner, about 1500, was P. L., whose arms are azure, three cinqfoils (two and one) or; with a chief, or, bearing three besants, azure, fesswise. The number of the Satires is complete, but the last and second last have changed places. 32 LANFRANCO. Here begynny the the prologe of þe Anothomy of Mayster' Langfranke of Meleyn Surgur' & ffesycian compylede & chapyterd in fygurs as folowithe. All thowe it be by hight to det'myn' Anothomy, the entent was not to nowmbr' all membris in pticuler', pou; pe old' Surgers bene wont to deuyd' in noumbr' membrys pticulerly. On fol. 15 ends the fifth chapter of Anatomy. Fol. 16: Hire begynnyth the lese book compiled & made by maist' Lanffrank of Meleyne Surgur' & phesician pmo if the wound' be made withe a swerd' 16-18 contain a table. Fol. 19: Here begynnype pe ploge of pe las book.. The text ends on fol. 49. Fol. 50: Of all the sygnes of the body win declaryng tweyn þe strongest beth yfounde. . Fol. 53-57 contain a set of recipes. Fol. 58: Electuariù dulce. It purgethe pe flewme. . Fol. 66 reverse. Her' endethe a tretice of powders pillules Explicit. Fol. 67: Emanuel. A good emplast' that ys seyd Emanuell or pe goodnes of god. . Fol. 68: This was writtyn fro Monpileris to pe Quen essabell of England atte pe prayer of kyng of Fraunce his brother . . Foll. 71-86 contain a list of medical herbs, beginning Aloe ys hoote and drye .. end ending Zinziber Gingiuer Zuccara Sugur £ 8. d Roy. 8vo. MS. ON VELLUM; bound in rough calf About 1470-80 32 0 0 Additional recipes by the scribe and others of the same period are added upon several of the blank pages. This is a rare and interesting MS. of the Magna et Parva Chirurgia of Lanfranco -one of the greatest physicians of the Middle Ages—in a fifteenth-century English form. 33 MANDEVILLE. Page 1: Come il soit ainsi que la terre doultremer Cest assauoir la terre saincte de promission entre toutes autres terres soit la plus excellente.. Page 3: . . Ie Jehan de mandeuille chlr ja soit ce que ne soie dignes, nes et nourris dangleterre de la ville de saint albain, qui passe la mer lan Mil CCC et xxij. . Page 197: . . Et ie Jehan de mandeuille dessusdit qui me parti de ntre pais et passay la mer lan de grace Mil CCC et xxij qui mainte terre et maint pais ay puis cerchie et qui ay este en mainte bonne cōpaignie et veu maint beau fait combien que ne fise onqs beau fait ne belle empr ne autre bn de quoy on doie tenir compte et qui maintenant suy reuenus a Repos maugre moy pour gouste artetiqs qui moy destroignent en prendre soulas en mon chief repos et en recordant le temps passe ay ces choses compulees et mise en escript ce quil me puet souuenir lan de grace mil CCC Ivij du XXXV an que ie men pti de nre pais Si prie atous les lisans . . . p tous siecles et p tout temps Amen Explicit 4to. MS. ON VELLUM, with one bordered initial, illuminated, on the first page; brown morocco antique About 1380-90 25 0 0 Written by a French hand. The scribe was unable to understand the passage in which the author says that we English have two letters, þ and, which the other people know not, and consequently does not give it clearly; but he has made the Arab cry of faith more nearly correct than it is found in most of the MSS.-thus: La elech ella [allab] machomed rosel alla. 34 MANDEVILLE. Page 1: De Itineracione terre promissionis et aliis mirandis insulis liber iohis demandeuille militis. Cum terra Ierosolimitana terra promissionis filiorum dei dignior cunctis mundi terris sit habenda.. Page 145: .. De composicione huius tractatus in nobili ciuitate Leodiensi. Capituluz 52. In reuertendo igitur. Itaque anno anatiuitate dni M. ccc. lv. in repatriando cum ad nobilem legie seu leodij ciuitatem peruenissem et pergrandi in infirmitate ut arteticis guttis illic decumberem in uico qui dicitur bassauenir consului circa convalescendi aliquos medicos ciuitatis Et accidit.. intrare physicus super alios etate similiter ac canitie venerandus. . communiter dicitur Magister Iohannes d Barban.. Page 146: . . Explicit libellus. scriptus p me fratrem iohannem Swanfelder ordis fratrum. . de monte carmeli.. Anno dni M cccclvij.. Pp. 147-8 contain the Table of chapters. • ST. PATRICK'S PURGATORY. George of Hun- • . £ 8. d. |