Wednesday (Ash)8th. # Holiday at the Musm. I remained at home
all day, copying part of a MS. sent me yesterday by Mr Petrie, &
belonging to Hudson Gurney Esqr. This MS. or MSS. (for it #####contains
# several very##### different in point of age & subject) was formerly
in the possession of Dr. Macro, & was purchased at Christie’s by Mr
Gurney. It consists of the following pieces: —
1. Juvenal, in a neat hand of ^the 12 Centy, but very early, in fact,
it might be placed in the 11th. membr. A very copious gloss is
added to the 1st. Satire by different hands, one ^of which is coæval. It appears
to be a good copy, but I had not time to collate it. At the end is
HIC. IVVENALIS EXPLICIT. fol. 43.
2. Collection of Laws, written in a hand temp. Hen 2d #in a fine clear
letter. It is imperfect at the beginning, 20 folios being lost, con-
taining ^the Laws of Canute, Alfred, & part of Ina’s. The remainder are
partly printed in Brompton, but not exactlycorrectly, & the Saxon of many of them is
to be found in the Textus Roffensis & elsewhere. ^(The Latin (except 6) of these Laws is in Brompton.) The Laws in this
MS. occur in the following order.
Leges Canuti (gone) ^In Brompton, col.
_____ Alfredi (gone) Do – col.
_____ Inæ (partly gone) Init: baptismo emendetur. Do. ^col. 761.57 – 768.11.
_____ Athelstani. _____ Do. ^col. 839.53 – 841.46.
__________ De Officio Episcopi. _____ Do. ^col 845.6 – 67.
__________ de Weregildis personarum. __________ Do ^col. 845.58 – 846.15.
_________ de emendatione et infractioni Ordinis:– Do ^col. 846.15 – 42.
_____Inæ, de triplici juramento et ordalio. — Do ^col 846.65 – 847.24.
_____ Athelstani de hundredis. ________ Do ^col. 848.54
_____ _____ (Exoniæ institutæ) _____ Do ^col. 850.4 – 55.
Epistola epor~ Cantensium ad Athelstanum. Do. ^col. 850.57 – 851.38.
Judicia Civitatis Londoniæ (Text. Roff. Saxe) — Do. ^col. 851.44 – 856.5.
Lex Inæ, de ordalio. (Text. Roff.) — Do. col. 856.5 -37.
Leges Ӕthelredi ( Wodestoc) — (Text. Roff.) Do. ^col. 893.53 – 894.62.
Do ————– (Uuanting) ———– Do. col. 894.83 – 899.18.
Pax Ӕthelredi cum Analavo, &c. _____ Do. col. 899.24 – 901.31.
Senatus consultus de Monti colis Walliæ. ________ (Wilkins ^p.125.)
Leges Ӕthelredi (Huban) – Brompt. ^col. 901.36 – 903. 2.
Quales debent esse Judices. ^Brompt. col. 903.3 – 52.
Institutiones Eadgari. — Brompt. col. 870.52 – 872.42.
Foedus Alfredi et Godrum. ________ (Wilkins)
Leges quædam.
Foedus Alfredi et Guthrum. ________ (Wilkins)
Leges Eadwardi. – Brompt. ^col. 835.37 – 837.42.
________ Edmundi. (Lundon) Br. ^col 858.34 – 859.19.
________________ (Culinton.) Br. ^col 859.25 – 860.28.
Do _____________ ___ Br. ^col 860.34 – 861.41.
De Juramentis (Text. Roff. )
De Sponsalib3 et persolutione occisi. Br. ^col 861.46 – 862.19.
Institutio Willielmi Regis. (Text. Roff. Saxe.) — ^(Wilkins.)
________________ De Veteri Consuetudine promotionum. Br. ^col. 982.46 – 983.3.
Rectitudines personarum.
Institutiones Hen. [I.] Regis. – Br. ^col. 1021.38 – 1022.54:
Carta Regis Stephani de Constitutione H. II. hered. sui. ________
Coll. Foed. 1 . 18 . Br. ^col. 1037.62.
Of this collection I am to copy as far as Instit. H. Regis. I have been
thus particular in making a list ^of the contents, because I know there is a similar MS.####
at Mr Coke‘s, & therefore I may have occasion to take notice of this MS.
hereafter.
3. [fol. 88.] In a hand of ^the 17th. Centy. is written: –
“Liber Alchemiæ sine principio et fini.”
5. “Two olde playes or maskes but Imperfect, & little worthe.”
Below, in another##### hand: –
3. “1. Fragmentum Libri Aristotelis perfecti magisterii in Scientia occulta.”
fol. primo.
“2. Liber Secretorum, de voce Rubici Rubecari Mahumeth, &c. de
specieb3, vasibus, operatione specierum. f.1.b. et sequentib3 usque ad
finem. Est autem hoc fragmentum libri tantum, ex libris enim par-
tibus, in quas hoc opus divisum fuit, prima tantum et principum
secundæ hic exhibetur, cætera desidenatur. Ja. Cob. 5o. Januarii 1650.”
These two alchemical tracts are written on parchment in ^a hand of ^the 14th. Centy.
Imperfect at beginning & end. The first occupies a folio & 1/2. “Explicit
liber Aristotel‘ ꝑfcī magisterii in scientia occulta. Laus sit Deo“.
4. The ## title of the 2d is: “Incipit liber Secretorum de voce rubica
rubeorii, Mahumeth, filii Zeciarrazi”. (Const. 7. fol. et olim.)
5. [f. 98] The rest of the MS. is on paper and contains three plays or
Moralities, written in a hand of the Hen. 67th’s time. There are no titles,
but the plot may easily be learnt by a perusal, & they are extremely
curious, as tending to throw much light on the early history of ###the
stage.x I took large extracts from them, which I shall not introduce
here. The stage directions are frequent & very curious. All the Plays are#########
written in verse, & the last in a of stanza precisely similar to that
of the old ballad of Sussan in ^MS Cott. Calig. A. II. & with similar alliteration
The characters of the first play are added at the end (fol. 121.), thus:
“Wysdom _______ Two lines are added, (- but not by the same hand)
Aīa v Wyttes _____| which give us the ^name of the owner of the book – but I
Mynde _________ | doubt whether we can ascribe the plays to him,
Wndyrstōdynge _ | “o liber, si qis [quis] cui cōstas forte qe retr,
¬
Lucyfer _________| Hyngham q3 [quod] monacho dices suꝑ oiā
|
Cōsto” ___|
6. [fol. 122]. Here follows the 2d Playwork, which may ##or may not want the
beginn’g, but the others are perfect. The characters are: Mercy, Myscheffe,
Nought’, New gyse, Now a days, Mankynde, & Tytyvillins.
The ###### lowest ribaldry seems to have been admitted into
these compositions, which it is difficult to believe were ever exhibited to a
public audience. What would the polished manners & refined ears
of the present generation say to # the follow.g dilectable catch of three
voices?
“Make rom’, f’s, for we have be longe, Now A days.
We wyll’ end (cum?) gyf yow a crystemas songe.
Now I prey all’ ye yemandry yt ys her’ Nought‘.
To synge wt ws wt A mery cher’.
‘Yt ys wretyn’ wt A coll’ [coal], yt ys wretyn’ wt a cole,
Yt ys wretyn’ wt A colle ^ yt ys wretyn, c~ [&c.] New gyse & Nowad
He yt schytyth wt hys hoyll’, ^[hole?] he yt schytyth wt hys hoyll’, Nought‘
He yt schytyth wt hys hoyll’, c~ Newgys nowad
But he wyppe his ars clen’#, but he c~ Nought’.
But he wype hys ars clen’, but he c~ New gyse Nowad.
On’ hys breche yt xall’ be sen’, on’ hys breche c~ Nought’.
On hys breche yt xall’ be sen’, on’ hys c~ Newgyse Nowad.
Hoylyke, holyke, holyke, holyke, holyke, holyke, cātant omēs
The same couplet “o liber“. &c. occurs at the end, f. 134.
7. [f. 135] Another title page. In the former hand of ^the 17. Cent’y is written
“1. Judicium Urinæ exitusq. morbi, secundum ### signorum stellarumq.
virtutes, per Willielmum Browne.
8. 2. Chimica Hermetis et Rogeri Baconis, per Tho. Oliverium transcripta”.
Cob has added: –
“Willielmi, natione anglici, civis massiliensis, medici et astronomi,
de natura Egritudinis et exitu morbi judicium, secundum signorum
stellarumq. vires. Liber quidem non ineligans aut indoctus, sed scrip=
toris inscitia miseris modis deformatus.
2. Accedunt Chimica Hermetis et Rogeri Baconis per Tho. Oliverium,
transcripta.”
Both on paper #### sec. 16. – Cob has added corrections throughout.
9. [f.150] “Liber aureus Rog. Baconis.” at the end: “Aureus iste liber
haud est de opere Gebir. Anno 1571. Aprilis 25o. Thomas Oliu~ scripsit.”
10 [.f.154] the third Play#### – which is the longest, & the most curious, & is
written in a neater hand. I have some idea of copying in entirety. It is
preceded by a Prologue,################, in which the King is prayed
for, & the “good comowns of this towne”. The name of the town is thus
[Qy Nottingham]
abbreviated,

. of which I can make nothing, Nomen? except that the capital
letter is an N. & the other apparently an m. The following lines are
curious. After describ~g the plot, the 2nd banner says:-
” ¶ Grace if god wyl graunte us of hys mykel myth _
sc’ds vexill’
þese ꝑ cell’ in ꝓpyrtes we prpose us to pl#aye _____|__
þis day sevenenyt be for’ you in syth ____________| _ |
At

on þe grene in ryal a ray ______________|
ye haste you þāne þedyrward syres hendly ī hyth __
all’ goode neybores ful specyaly we you pray ______|__
& loke þt ye be þer’ be tyme luffely & lyth __________|__|
for we schul be onward be underne of þe day.” _______|
Grossness of expression is often to be met with, but perhaps not more
so than in Ben Jonson, & Shakespeare. The fact iswas, in the time
of our forefathers, the maidens did not blush to hear “a spade called
a spade”, as anyone who reads the French fabliaux will perceive,
had we not ^English examples in Chaucer’s hendy Nicholas, – & the ad=
venture of Tristram with la belle Iseult. So, in the play before
us, Lechery says to Mankynde. – “Therfor’ ^mankynde, my swete leman, In my
cūte þou shall crepe”!+ The stage directions are very odd – All the
conclusion is:
[+ See, at a later period, Lyndsay’s “Satyre of the
three Esdoites”, in vol. i. p. 470 of his Works, 1806. 8o.]
“Hec sunt noīa ludi.
Inp’mes ii. vexillat’, Mundus & cū eo voluptas, stulticia &
garcio, Belyal & cū eo suꝑbia & Invidia. Caro & cū eo Gula, luxuria
& accidia, hūanū genus & cū es bon’ angel’ & mal’ angel’.
Avaricia, detracō, confessio. Penitencia, Hūilitas, paciencia
caritas, abstinēcia, castitas, solicitudo & largitas, mors, aīa. Mīa
Veritas. Justicia & pax. Pater sedens in trono. Sma [Summa] XXXVI.
ludes.”
On the reverse of this leaf is an excessively curious drawing by
the same pen, of the stage & properties of the play in question, with
stage directions. The stage in fact or ‘place’ was nothing more
then a green, which was to have a circular ditch dug ## round #
it, # filled with water, or, if that ##could not be accomplished, to be strongly
barred, to prevent ^the people disturbing the play. In the middle is
a castle ^of wood, & underneath a bed, where the soul is directed to lie.
Four scaffolds are # at the four cardinal points, Caro– Deus–
Mundus, & Belial. The directions also for Belyal are perfectly
ridiculous. Altogether it is so curious, that I made a fac–
simile of it,* & am astonished it ##should have escaped the ^notice of the writers on
our early stage.Drama. –
*[It is engraved in Sharp’s Dissertation on the
Coventry Mystery Plays, 18 4to.]
In the evening I drank tea with Mr Douce, & mentioned to him
Gurney‘s MS. & the drawing I have above described. He told me, he
had also tak##en a facsim. of it, whilst at Christie’s’, but added
that we both might have saved ourselves the trouble, for it was
engraved#### in Sharp’s “Coventry Mysteries”, a work lately published, &
which Mr D. shewed me. — It is a very curious book, & is dedi-
cated to Mr D. who contributed many of the prints in it. I remained
till ten oC. convers.g. on our usual topics. I gave ^Mr. Douce the alphabets
###from Kopp, Eticus, &c. Among other things, Mr D. shewed me a ####curious
gold coin, which he is unable to decipher, but believes it to be
^ancient Persian, ^& the characters to be Pehlvi. I have subjoined a drawg of it.
x An # analysis is given of them by Collier, in his “Annals of the Stage”, 1831. vol. ii. pp.279-297.
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