Sir David Lindsay
Verse
First published [in Edinburgh, 1529-30?]. Hamer, I, 39-53.
Copy, in the cursive secretary hand of David Anderson of Aberdeen.
1566), in contemporary calf on wooden boards gilt.
Inscribed (f. 2r) W. hay. 1527
; (f. 1r) This buik partinis to david andersone burger of abirdene, be gift of Mr Wm hay person of turrest. 1563.
; and (f. 2r) a record of the gift of the MS to Edinburgh College by John Aikman, son of William Aikman.
This MS described in Hamer, IV, 8-11.
First published [Edinburgh, 1537]. Hamer, I, 105-12.
Copy, in the cursive secretary hand of David Anderson of Aberdeen.
1566), in contemporary calf on wooden boards gilt.
Inscribed (f. 2r) W. hay. 1527
; (f. 1r) This buik partinis to david andersone burger of abirdene, be gift of Mr Wm hay person of turrest. 1563.
; and (f. 2r) a record of the gift of the MS to Edinburgh College by John Aikman, son of William Aikman.
This MS described in Hamer, IV, 8-11.
Copy, as the XXVIII Chapter of the
Bookplate of Viscount Cholmondeley. Phillipps MS 3107. Owned in 1896 by John Scott, CB, of Halkshill. Among the muniments of the Earl of Crawford and Balcarres, formerly in the John Rylands Library, University of Manchester.
Edited from this MS in
First published in Allan Ramsay,
Copy, subscribed ffinis [p Lindsay in a different hand]
.
Compiled by George Bannatyne (b.1545), student of St Andrews and merchant burgess of Edinburgh. Subscribed on the last page finis. / 1568
but probably written over a period of some years.
Descending to Bannatyne's son-in-law George Foulis. Later (c.1712) inscribed (p. 60) This book is gifted to Mr William Carmichael Be me James Foulis
. Some annotations by Allan Ramsay (1684-1758), poet and editor, and by Thomas Percy (1729-1811), Bishop of Dromore, writer and literary editor. Presented in 1772 by John Carmichael, fourth Earl of Hyndford.
Generally cited as the Bannatyne MS. Complete facsimile, introduced by Denton Fox and William A. Ringler, published by the Scolar Press, 1980. Complete text edited in Murdoch and in Ritchie. Discussed in Priscilla Bawcutt,
Edited from this MS in Ramsay and in Hamer.
First published [in St Andrews or Edinburgh, c.1554]. Hamer, I, 197-386.
Copy, complete with the Epistle to the Reader and Prologue, in the cursive secretary hands of William Hay and David Anderson of Aberdeen, probably transcribed, from a printed edition.
1566), in contemporary calf on wooden boards gilt.
Inscribed (f. 2r) W. hay. 1527
; (f. 1r) This buik partinis to david andersone burger of abirdene, be gift of Mr Wm hay person of turrest. 1563.
; and (f. 2r) a record of the gift of the MS to Edinburgh College by John Aikman, son of William Aikman.
This MS described in Hamer, IV, 8-11.
This MS described in Hamer, IV, 5-8, and partly collated, III, 233 et seq.
First published [in Edinburgh, 1528-30?]. Hamer, I, 3-38.
Copy, complete with the Epistle and Prologue, in the cursive secretary hand of David Anderson of Aberdeen.
1566), in contemporary calf on wooden boards gilt.
Inscribed (f. 2r) W. hay. 1527
; (f. 1r) This buik partinis to david andersone burger of abirdene, be gift of Mr Wm hay person of turrest. 1563.
; and (f. 2r) a record of the gift of the MS to Edinburgh College by John Aikman, son of William Aikman.
This MS described in Hamer, IV, 8-11.
First published [in Edinburgh, 1579-80?]. Hamer, I, 145-96. Edited by James Kinsley (London & Edinburgh, 1959).
Later owned by John Pinkerton (1758-1826), by Richard Heber (1774-1833), book collector, and (in 1836) by J. Bohn.
Recorded in Hamer, IV, 12, and in Kinsley, p. 2.
First published [in Edinburgh, 1530]. Hamer, I, 55-90.
Copy, in the cursive secretary hand of David Anderson of Aberdeen, subscribed (f. 144v) with his signature and (f. 145v) his inscription Dauid andersone burges of Aberdene 1563
, before verses on f. 146r-v in other hands.
1566), in contemporary calf on wooden boards gilt.
Inscribed (f. 2r) W. hay. 1527
; (f. 1r) This buik partinis to david andersone burger of abirdene, be gift of Mr Wm hay person of turrest. 1563.
; and (f. 2r) a record of the gift of the MS to Edinburgh College by John Aikman, son of William Aikman.
This MS described in Hamer, IV, 8-11.
Dramatic works
First published (in Hamer's Version III
) in Edinburgh, 1602. Edited by James Kinsley (London, 1954).
The different versions of the play discussed in Anna J. Mill,
Extracts, headed Richt famous pepill ye sall vnderstand...
, in an irregular order, together with the prefatory banns
, from a version performed on the Castle Hill, Cupar, Fifeshire, on 7 June 1552.
Compiled by George Bannatyne (b.1545), student of St Andrews and merchant burgess of Edinburgh. Subscribed on the last page finis. / 1568
but probably written over a period of some years.
Descending to Bannatyne's son-in-law George Foulis. Later (c.1712) inscribed (p. 60) This book is gifted to Mr William Carmichael Be me James Foulis
. Some annotations by Allan Ramsay (1684-1758), poet and editor, and by Thomas Percy (1729-1811), Bishop of Dromore, writer and literary editor. Presented in 1772 by John Carmichael, fourth Earl of Hyndford.
Generally cited as the Bannatyne MS. Complete facsimile, introduced by Denton Fox and William A. Ringler, published by the Scolar Press, 1980. Complete text edited in Murdoch and in Ritchie. Discussed in Priscilla Bawcutt,
Edited from this MS (Hamer's Version II
), in a parallel text with the 1602 edition, in Hamer, Vol. II; ed. James Kinsley (London, 1954). Also edited from this MS in
A prose summary of the version performed in the Banquetting Hall in the Palace at Linlithgow before James V and Marie de Lorraine on 6 January 1539/40 (Hamer's Version I
), as written by a Protestant Scotsman: (f. 138r-v) a copy, in a secretary hand, headed
Edited from this MS in Hamer, II, 1-6.
Owned in 1627 by William Drummond of Hawthornden, whose main books and MSS are in Edinburgh University Library and the National Library of Scotland, but the rest dispersed.
Recorded in Drummond's catalogue of his library,
Letters
Autograph letter signed, to the Scottish Secretary, from Antwerp, 23 August 1531.
Edited in Hamer, IV, 255, and, with a facsimile of the signature, in Of officiaris serving thy senyeorie
: David Lyndsay's diplomatic letter of 1531