Pagina-afbeeldingen
PDF
ePub

ILLUSTRATIVE OF

EARLY ENGLISH HISTORY AND LITERATURE,

DERIVED FROM MS. SOURCES.

EDITED BY WILLIAM J. THOMS, Esq. F.S.A.

"They are Mucrones Verborum, pointed speeches. Cicero prettily calls them Salinas, salt
pits, that you may extract salt out of and sprinkle it where you will. They serve to be inter-
laced in continued speech: they serve to be recited, upon occasion, of themselves: they serve,
if you take out the kernel of them, and make them your own."-LORD BACON.

[graphic][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][subsumed][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

BY JOHN BOWYER NICHOLS AND SON, PARLIAMENT STREET.

M.DCCC.XXXIX.

3;013

DA 20

R8

COUNCIL

OF

THE CAMDEN SOCIETY,

FOR THE YEAR ENDING MAY 1st, 1839.

President,

THE RIGHT HON. LORD FRANCIS EGERTON, M.P.

THOMAS AMYOT, ESQ. F.R.S. Treas. S.A.

JOHN BRUCE, ESQ. F.S.A. Treasurer.

JOHN PAYNE COLLIER, ESQ. F.S.A.

CHARLES PURTON COOPER, ESQ. Q.C., D.C.L., F.R.S., F.S.A.

T. CROFTON CROKER, ESQ. F.S.A., M.R.I.A.

THE REV. JOSEPH HUNTER, F.S.A.

SIR FREDERICK MADDEN, K.H., F.R.S., F.S.A.

SIR THOMAS PHILLIPPS, BART., F.R.S., F.S.A.

THOMAS STAPLETON, ESQ. F.S.A.

EDGAR TAYLOR, ESQ. F.S.A.

WILLIAM J. THOMS, ESQ. F.SA. Secretary.

THOMAS WRIGHT, ESQ. M.A. F.S.A.

PREFACE.

In submitting to the Members of the Camden Society the following Anecdotes and Traditions, the Editor feels called upon, before proceeding to describe the sources from which they are derived, to explain the motives which induced him to suggest to the Council the propriety of the present publication; a suggestion acceded to with a kindness which calls forth his best thanks.

In the first place, then, it appeared to the Editor very desirable that the Society should follow the example set them by Chaucer, whose intermixture of lighter matters, amidst the graver portions of his "Canterbury Tales," has been the subject of frequent and well deserved encomium; so that those Members of the Society who think Minerva looks most bewitching when her face is dimpled with a smile, may be allowed an occasional glimpse of their divinity in that mood which they deem her happiest.

In the next place, the delight with which the few works of a similar character, existing in English Literature, such

« VorigeDoorgaan »