Sir John Denham

1615–1669

Introduction

The Osborn Manuscript

Only one significant autograph literary manuscript by Denham is known to survive. Now preserved at Yale (Osborn pb 53), it is Denham's own exemplum of his collected Poems and Translations (London, 1668). On twenty-eight pages bound-in at the beginning (pp. 18-24 being left blank), Denham has copied out eleven verse satires on Sir William Davenant, all of them evidently of his own composition. Eight of the poems were published anonymously some fifteen years earlier in the pamphlet Certain Verses (1653), a collection of which Denham is known to have been the principal author. The assumption is made in Banks (p. 312) that the three poems in Denham's hand which did not appear in the 1653 pamphlet were probably composed likewise in 1653 or shortly after; however, one is a mock elegy on Davenant, who died on 7 April 1668 (and whose funeral Denham attended), and all three were conceivably composed after that date. Denham evidently came to feel in 1668 not only that his eight earlier satires were worth acknowledging as his own, but that the series was worth revising and extending, for incorporation in his collected works. Furthermore, Denham made numerous autograph corrections and alterations throughout the main body of printed text in this volume, affecting thirteen of the poems (including Cooper's Hill, in which six autograph lines are inserted) as well as his play The Sophy. Prepared in the last year of the author's life, this volume is the nearest approximation to an approved official collection of his poetical and dramatic works.

Presentation and Inscribed Volumes

W.W. Greg (in A Bibliography of the English Printed Drama to the Restoration, 3 vols (London, 1939-57), III, 1058-60) records two presentation exempla of the 1668 volume: one, owned by himself, in the original binding and inscribed Cal: Ian: 1667/8 Guliell Rogers ex hospitie Lincoln è Dono Authoris; the other, apparently the dedication exemplum (Charles II's own copy), in the British Library (C.83.b.9) — this identification based on the fact that the volume is in a contemporary Royal binding.

A volume that came to light in 1982 was also once in the possession of the author. It is what appears to be a unique recorded exemplum of the edition of 1653 of Cooper's Hill, bearing three corrections (supplying omitted words) in Denham's distinctive hand (see *DeJ 9). This edition, which was printed in London for Humphrey Moseley and described on the title-page as Now Printed from a perfect copy; And a Corrected Impression, can claim to be the first authorized edition of Denham's most celebrated poem. Originally composed in 1640, a version of Cooper's Hill (what O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks, has designated the A-text) was first published in 1642, in a pirated edition, of which two equally unauthorized reprints were subsequently issued. What has hitherto been regarded (by Banks, O Hehir and others) as the first authorized edition of the poem (in a revised version: the B-text) is that of 1655, which, in fact, proves to have been set up largely from the same standing type as the edition of 1653 but with the addition of a preface by one J. B. making the claim: I obtained from the Author's owne papers this perfect Edition. The most extensive attempt made as yet to disentangle the complex textual problems of this poem was that by O Hehir in 1969. However, the discovery of this exemplum, as well as of further manuscript copies of the poem (see below), gives rise to query as to whether a definitive critical text has yet been established in full.

Letters and Documents

The authenticity of the autograph manuscripts noted above may be established by comparison with other surviving examples of Denham's hand. Although it is not true, as Banks stated (p. 1), that No personal letters or manuscripts [of Denham] remain, the number of those that have yet come to light is certainly limited. It is possible to record at present the existence of only nine surviving letters by Denham (DeJ 129-137), not all of which have been known to his biographers. Two of the earliest, for instance, concern the activities of Royalist exiles on the continent and Denham's attempts to save his estate and his poore family from ruine in 1651-2. They incidentally throw light on a relatively obscure period in his life, while in exile, and on the chronology of his embassy to Poland with Lord Crofts in 1650-51.

One early example of Denham's hand is known, since at the age of sixteen, in 1631, he signed the Oxford subscription book upon matriculating at Trinity College (*DeJ 138). At the other end of his life, probably the last document he signed is his will, six days before his death in 1669 (*DeJ 140). Otherwise, surviving documents written or signed by Denham are largely official papers deriving from the period, following the Restoration in 1660, when Denham was appointed Surveyor General of the Works. Examples of Denham's certificates, warrants, minutes, accounts and receipts relating to the Works and the Exchequer between 1661 and 1669 are most readily found in the National Archives, Kew (notably: SP 29/40/27; 29/51/45; 29/52/135; 29/53/100; 29/58/113; 29/109/74; 29/157/90; 29/198/120; 29/199/17; 29/203/92; 29/211/39; 29/215/121; 29/219/59; 29/229/130.I; 29/236/195; 29/251/161; and 29/255/74).

These items can be supplemented by numerous other documents that relate to Denham, which can be found in the National Archives, Kew, British Library, Bodleian, Pepys Library at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and elsewhere. Some of them are cited in O Hehir, Harmony, and in Kelliher. For instance, a set of Instructions for Mr. Denham, written out in the hand of Abraham Cowley (as secretary to Henry Jermyn) and signed by Queen Henrietta Maria, on 10 May 1649, is in the British Library (Add. MS 19399, ff. 72r-3r: see *CoA 252) and is edited in Kelliher, pp. 18-19. The original draft of a letter written by the Earl of Clarendon to Denham on 4/14 February 1659/60 is in the Bodleian (MS Clarendon 69, f. 66r) and is edited in O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 141-2. Documents relating to various legal suits in which Denham was involved are among the Chancery Papers in the National Archives, Kew, as is the Royal Letters Patent for his appointment as Surveyor General of the Works (C.66/2951/29). These papers are discussed in Herbert Berry, Sir John Denham at Law, Modern Philology, 71 (1973-4), 266-76. Estate documents relating in part to the sequestration of Denham's property in 1651 are in the Essex Record Office, Chelmsford (D/DOt T1).

Manuscripts Copies of Denham's Verse

While it is true that Denham's poems are not, for the most part, among those most frequently transcribed in this period, some of them clearly had a limited circulation in manuscripts. Of these the most notable is his verse translation of Virgil's Aeneid, Books II to VI, Denham's earliest known poetical composition, written probably c.1636. The translation has remained to this day unpublished, and the author's own manuscript is lost. The text is preserved in a transcript made a few years later by Lucy Hutchinson (DeJ 116). Celebrated for her biography of her husband, the regicide Colonel John Hutchinson, Governor of Nottingham, she was the sister of Allen Apsley, associate of Denham's possibly from as early as his student days at Oxford and at Lincoln's Inn. John Hutchinson himself (who married Lucy on 3 July 1638) was likewise a contemporary of Denham's at Lincoln's Inn. The translation must have come into Lucy's hands in some way as a fruit of the temporary conjunction of her husband, her brother, and Denham at Lincoln's Inn (O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 11-13). Professor O Hehir (1927-91) produced an edition of Denham's translation in typescript, originally intended for the Augustan Reprint Society, but it remained unpublished at his death.

Other poems by Denham evidently had some degree of circulation among the Royalist community with whom Denham was associated both in the Civil War period of the 1640s and during his exile in the 1650s. In this connection contemporary copies of several of his poems are found among the papers of such figures as the Duke of Ormonde (DeJ 21, DeJ 58, DeJ 103), Viscount Conway (DeJ 53, DeJ 57), and the Egerton family, Earls of Bridgewater (DeJ 16, DeJ 23, DeJ 35, DeJ 91), while one poem (one of the previously unpublished satires on Davenant) has even been copied out by the Earl of Clarendon's secretary, William Edgeman (DeJ 56). The channels through which many texts were transmitted must remain a matter for speculation. Clear indication of one instance, however, is in the copy of one of the satires on Davenant which appears in John Watson's miscellany (DeJ 26) with a note saying that it was communicated to him on 20 January 1669/70 by his brother Thomas (i.e. Thomas Watson (1637-1717) of St John's College Cambridge, later Bishop of St David's).

Cooper's Hill

Cooper's Hill, Denham's best-known work, was transcribed repeatedly — in versions of both A and B texts. What was alleged to be Denham's Autograph manuscript of the poem was once owned by Edward Umfreville (1702?-86), collector of legal manuscripts, and was offered in Paterson's auction catalogue, 13 February 1758, MSS lot 16. Whether it really was autograph, rather than a copy, is now beyond determination.

Some of the copies recorded below (DeJ 7.2-19) may conceivably derive from printed texts, but the majority are certainly the product of manuscript circulation. One of the copies (DeJ 11) is in the hand of the professional copyist now known as the Feathery Scribe. whose work is found in huge numbers of political and antiquarian tracts, poems and miscellaneous papers of the 1620s and '30s. Yet another copy (DeJ 17) — unknown to Banks and O Hehir — is among the State Papers, where it has been docketed as written by an vnknowne Author.

Printed texts of Cooper's Hill, in addition to those recorded below, are sometimes found with contemporary manuscript additions. For instance, an exemplum of the edition of 1642 in the Huntington (RB 134086-7), recorded in O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks, pp. 56-7, has a manuscript emendation on p. 19 probably in the hand of Izaak Walton, while an exemplum of the edition of 1655, owned in 1988 by Theodore Hofmann, has a series of textual alterations and annotations partly in the hand of the historian James Tyrrell (1642-1718). There are also a few manuscript copies of a Latin translation of Cooper's Hill by Moses Pengry, Chaplain to the Earl of Devonshire, which are recorded below (DeJ 19.2-19.8).

The Canon

The canon of Denham's verse, prose and dramatic works has been largely established in Banks and in O Hehir (see the latter's Revised Canon of the Works of John Denham in Harmony, pp. 262-5). O Hehir's most notable modification to the canon which was accepted in Banks is his rejection of three poems, which he classifies as Works attributed to Denham but almost certainly not written by him. Two of these — i.e. A Panegyrick on His Excellency, the Lord General George Monck (If England's bleeding story may transmit) [Banks, pp. 147-9] and The Prologue to His Majesty (Greatest of Monarchs, welcome to this place) [Banks, pp. 94-5] — are currently found only in printed sources; but the third, Verses on the Cavaliers Imprisoned in 1655, occurs in several contemporary manuscripts (DeJ 112-15), including a copy among the Earl of Clarendon's papers. In no text is the poem ascribed to Denham and the attribution was not made until 1890 (see O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 117-19).

A somewhat more controversial modification made by O Hehir to the canon is his classification of The Second Advice to a Painter (Nay painter, if thou dar'st design that flight) as a work of uncertain authorship attributed to Denham and not improbably written by him, although he agrees that the attribution to Denham of various other Directions to a Painter is spurious (see Harmony, pp. 217-19, 227-8; Banks, pp. 328-32, and Mary Tom Osborne, Advice-to-a-Painter Poems 1633-1856 (University of Texas, 1949), Nos. 10, 11, 12, 13 and 65). The authorship of these poems has been, and is likely to remain, a subject of scholarly debate. For manuscript texts of some of the poems, including The Second Advice, see Andrew Marvell, MaA 314-504.

Other doubtful attributions to Denham, which have not been mentioned by editors, need not command undue attention. Three of the poems in a manuscript collection of Rump songs and ballads in the Huntington (HM 16522, pp. 27-30, 67-9, 143-6) have ascriptions to Denham added afterwards: i.e. The Parliament Accompt (So much to purchase peace of ye Scot), Londons farewell to the Parliament (Farewell the Parliament wth hey wth hey) and A Battaile in Wales (List and a story you shall heare), the last ascribed to Mr Denham, & Pepper the Player. The first two of these poems appear anonymously in other sources. One of the anonymous satires on Davenant printed with Denham's satires in Certain Verses (1653) — i.e. Upon Fighting Will (The King knights Will for fighting on his side) — is specifically ascribed to Sr John Denham in a more elaborately titled miscellany-version in the Bodleian (MS Douce 357, f. 1r). It occurs twice, anonymously, in a miscellany of William Fulman (Corpus Christi College, Oxford, MS 309, ff. 52v, 59r). Niall Allsopp, Lett none our Lombard author rudely blame for's righteous paine: An Annotated Copy of Sir William Davenant's Gondibert (1651), The Library, 7th Ser. 16 (2015), 24-50, discusses Certain Verses material and other annotations possibly in Denham's hand, as well as contributions from several others, in a National Library of Scotland copy. Yet another satire on Davenant, which does not appear in Certain Verses — namely, On Gondibert (All in ye Land of Lombardie) — is interestingly ascribed to Sr Jo: Denham in one of the miscellanies of William (later Archbishop) Sancroft in the Bodleian (MS Sancroft 53, pp. 33-4). Reference has also been made, in Banks (p. xiii), to an unspecified ms. poem of Denham, comprising eighteen lines in very halting anapaests addressed to D'Avenant and written in the flyleaf of an exemplum of Gondibert (1651), a volume owned in 1933 by the bookseller B.J. Beyer, of 5 East 52nd Street, New York. Unless it can be identified with the text of one of Denham's established poems on Davenant (also comprising eighteen lines) written in an exemplum of Gondibert formerly in John Sparrow's library (DeJ 55), this text remains untraced. Lines beginning Swans must have pleasant nests high feeding, said to be translated by Denham from Guarini's Il Pastor Fido, are in University of Leeds, Brotherton Collection, MS Lt. 97, f. 56r.

Miscellaneous

The autograph manuscript of John Aubrey's account of Denham is in the Bodleian (principally MS Aubrey 6, f. 105r; also MSS Aubrey 8, f. 6v, and 23, f. 84r): see Brief Lives, ed. Andrew Clark (Oxford, 1898), I, 216-21.

A printed exemplum of the 1719 edition of Denham's Poems and Translations bearing the copious annotations of George Thorn-Drury, KC (1860-1931), literary scholar and editor, is now in the Bodleian (Thorn-Drury d. 51).

Abbreviations

Banks
The Poetical Works of Sir John Denham, ed. Theodore Howard Banks, [1st edition, 1928], 2nd edition ([New Haven], 1969).
Certain Verses (1653)
Certain Verses Written By severall of the Authors Friends; To be re-printed with the Second Edition of Gondibert (London, 1653).
Kelliher
Hilton Kelliher, John Denham: New Letters and Documents, British Library Journal, 12 (1986), 1-20.
O Hehir, Harmony
Brendan O Hehir, Harmony from Discords: A Life of Sir John Denham (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1968).
O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks
Brendan O Hehir, Expans'd Hieroglyphicks: A Critical Edition of Sir John Denham's Coopers Hill (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1969).

Verse

'After so many sad mishaps'

First published, as To Sir W. Davenant, in Certain Verses (1653), pp. 5-7. Banks, pp. 313-16.

*DeJ 1
Autograph

Autograph.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 3-7)
DeJ 3

Copy, headed On Sr W. Davenant's Gondibert, and subscribed Sr Jo. Denham.

An octavo book of jests and verse compiled by William Sancroft (1617-93), Archbishop of Canterbury, vi + 374 pages (pp. 72-306 blank), in contemporary calf.

c.1682-91
Bodleian Library, Sancroft MSS (MS Sancroft 53 pp. 33-4)
DeJ 4

Copy in Fulman's hand, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Corpus Christi College, Oxford (MS 309 ff. 50v-1v)
DeJ 5

Copy, headed To Sr Wm Dauenantt in prayse of his Gondiberit.

A small (?sextodecimo) pocket notebook, in probably a single small cursive mixed hand, 134 leaves (including blanks), in contemporary calf.

Compiled by Richard Brathwaite (1587/8-1673), poet, writer and Justice of Peace for Westmoreland.

c.1652-7

Among the collections of Christopher Hunter (1675-1757), Durham antiquary and physician.

Durham Cathedral Library (Hunter MS 132 ff. 119v-20v)
DeJ 5.5

Copy.

A folio volume of political and miscellaneous verse and prose, in several secretary verse, written from both ends, comprising Book I (viii + 254 pages one way and pp. 255-309 inverted) and Book II (282 pages inverted), including a table of contents, in half reversed calf.

Compiled partly by Sir Thomas Swinburne (c.1589-1645), of Edlingham and Nafferton, Sheriff of Northumberland in 1628-9.

c.1640s

Among the family collection established by Christopher Mickleton (1612-69), Durham attorney, and by his eldest son James (1638-93), lawyer and antiquary, which was later incorporated in the collections of Gilbert Spearman (1675-1738), lawyer and antiquary.

Durham University Library (Mickleton & Spearman MS 9 Book II, p. 255)
DeJ 6

Copy, headed To Sr William Davenant on his Gondibert.

A folio miscellany of poems chiefly on affairs of state, entitled A Collection of Poems, including 27 poems by Rochester (all ascribed to him), xii + 299 pages (plus a number of blanks), including a table of contents, in contemporary calf (rebacked).

In a single professional hand but for a few later additions at the very end (pp. 295-8, with some pages tipped-in).

c.1690s

Recorded in IELM, II.ii as the Harvard MS: RoJ Δ 7.

Harvard, other MSS (fMS Eng 636 pp. 148-51)
DeJ 7

Copy, headed To Sr William D'Av'nant on his Gondibert.

A quarto formal verse anthology entitled The Whimsical Medley or A Miscellaneous Collection of severall Pieces in Prose & Verse [etc.], in a single stylish italic hand, with a tipped-in six-leaf table of contents, bound in three volumes, also incorporating printed pamphlets, 217 + 232 + 216 leaves (plus blanks), each volume in contemporary calf gilt.

Compiled by Theophilus Butler (1669-1723), first Baron Newtown of Newtown-Butler, book collector.

c.1720

Old pressmark I. 5. 1-3.

Trinity College, Dublin, numbers 800 through end (MS 879 Vol. I, ff. 118r-19r)
The Author upon himself ('I am old Davenant')

See DeJ 83-84.

Cato Major ('Though all the Actions of your Life are crown'd')

Banks, pp. 202-32.

DeJ 7.1

Extracts, fourteen lines headed Covetousness in Old Age and beginning Of Ages Avarice I cannot see, subscribed Denham.

A folio verse miscellany, in possibly two neat rounded hands, 366 pages plus a five-page index, dated at the end Finis August ye. 6th 1717.

1715-17
University of Chicago (MS 553 p. 52)
Cooper's Hill ('Sure there are Poets which did never dream')

First published in London, 1642. Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 62-89. O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks.

DeJ 7.2

Extracts.

Autograph manuscript of John Aubrey's Perambulations of Surrey.

Mid-late 17th century
Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Aubrey 4 ff. 185r-6r, 189r-v)
DeJ 7.3 Late 17th century

Extracts, headed out of Coopers Hill, three lines beginning As Court make not Kings but kings the Court, and twelve lines, headed pag. 3d, beginning Under his proud sarvey the City lies, on one side of a folio leaf of verse.

A large folio composite volume of verse MSS, in various hands and paper sizes, 160 leaves, mounted on guards.

Volume XXXIIIA (Series III) of the papers of Sir John Coke (1563-1644), Secretary of State, and his family.

Purchased from the Marquess of Lothian, of Melbourne Hall, Derbyshire, 14 July 1987.

DeJ 7.4

Extract, followed by a Latin translation.

A quarto notebook of verse and prose, in English, Latin and French, in several hands over a period, much in a small cursive hand, 50 leaves, in quarter-morocco gilt.

Probably compiled in part by Edmund Killingworth (of Winchester College and New College, Oxford).

Late 17th-early 18th century

Discussed in Hilton Kelliher, Dryden Attributions and Texts from Harley MS. 6054, BLJ, 25.1 (Spring 1999), pp. 1-22, with facsimiles of ff. 20r and 27r on pp. 4 and 10.

DeJ 7.5

Extract, beginning O, could I flow..., written on a rear flyleaf in a printed exemplum of Robert Peele's The Arraignment of Paris (London, 1584).

c.1650s-60s
DeJ 7.7

Extracts.

A verse miscellany.

c.1674

Owned by Henry Bracegirdle, of Merton College, Oxford, and in 1674 by one Hugh Massey.

King's College, Cambridge (Hayward Collection, H. 11. 13 f. [25r-v])
DeJ 7.8

Extracts.

A composite collection of separate copies of English verse, 64 folio and quarto pages.

Assembled by the traveller Lorenzo Magalotti (1637-1712).

Late 17th century

Sotheby's, 19 July 1966, lot 518.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 66 No. 26)
*DeJ 8
Autograph

An autograph correction in line 97 and six autograph lines inserted between lines 188 and 189 in the printed text.

These MS insertions printed in Banks, p. xvii, and in O Hehir (in his B Text, Draft IV), p. 150.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 12)
*DeJ 9
Autograph

Three possibly autograph corrections, supplying omitted words on sig. B2v, B4r and D1r.

In an exemplum of the quarto edition of 1653, in contemporary calf.

Inscribed on the front paste-down Charles Hurt jun: Wirksworth: May: 7: 1823. Quaritch's sale catalogue No. 1027 (1982), item 55.

An apparently unique recorded exemplum of this edition was isted in Quaritch's catalogue No. 1027 (1982), with a facsimile of the title-page.

Yale (1983 219)
DeJ 9.5

Series of pages of the 1709 printed edition of the poem mounted, with MS collations from the 1643 edition on many of the facing pages.

A quarto verse miscellany, in a single neat hand, ii + 168 leaves (plus blanks), including some laid-down printed pages, in contemporary calf (lacking upper cover).

c.1740

Sotheby's, 18 May 2000, lot 558, to Hugh Pagan.

DeJ 10

Copy, with corrections in another hand, imperfect at the beginning and now consisting of 270 lines, on five folio leaves, subscribed in a later hand The above is Part of Sir John Denham's Cooper's Hill - last Edition.

This MS collated in Banks; used to correct Draft I in O Hehir; pp. 77-90, and collated and described on pp. 44-8.

A folio composite volume of miscellaneous papers, in verse and prose, in various hands, including that of John Stow (1524/5-1605), London historian, 192 leaves, in 19th-century half-leather gilt.

DeJ 11 c.1640

Copy of a 338-line version, beginning Sure we have Poets, that did never dreame.

This MS collated in Banks and in O Hehir, pp. 91-105 et seq. (and described pp. 53-4). Beal, In Praise of Scribes, p. 232 (No. 56.1).

A folio composite volume of miscellaneous tracts and verse, in several hands, 97 leaves, in panelled mottled calf.

Folios 62r-78v comprise an independent verse miscellany in the hand of the Feathery Scribe, with his title-page A: Booke;, Off, verses &c.

Later owned by Edward Stillingfleet (1635-99), Bishop of Worcester. Bought by Robert Harley in 1707.

Briefly described in Peter Beal, In Praise of Scribes: Manuscripts and their Makers in Seventeenth-Century England (Oxford, 1998), p. 242 (No. 56).

DeJ 12

Copy (on versos only), as By Denham, a version beginning If they were poets who did never dream.

An octavo miscellany of verse and drama, largely in a single small cursive hand, with later additions by one or two hands after p. 142, 185 pages (including blanks) plus a tipped-in leaf at the end, in brown calf.

Late 17th century

Sotheby's, 13 June 1870, lot 157, to James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps (1820-89), literary scholar and book collector; thence, on 5 July 1870, to Warwick Castle Library. Formerly Folger MS 3.4.

DeJ 13

Copy of a 340-line version, beginning Sure we have Poetts that did never dreame, as written by Mr. Denham to Mr. Waller.

Edited from this MS (as Draft II) in O Hehir, pp. 91-105 (and collated and described pp. 48-51).

A quarto verse miscellany, 170 leaves, paginated 1-8 (Latin text in a small secretary hand), then pp. 1-162 (in one or possibly two largely italic hands; pp. 108-57 blanks; pp. 158-62 containing later notes), in modern red morocco gilt.

The pagination cited below relates to the second, main series of pagination.

c.1640

Inscribed on a flyleaf in red ink Matheus Day me suum vvst: i.e. Matthew Day (d.1661), five times Mayor of Windsor. Later owned by John Payne Collier (1789-1883), literary scholar, editor and forger. Collier's sale, 1884, lot 906. Formerly Folger MS 452.1.

DeJ 14

Copy of a 340-line version, beginning Sure wee haue poetts that did neuer dreame, subscribed Mr Denham (originally Dodderidge which is deleted).

This MS collated in O Hehir, pp. 91-105 et seq. (and described pp. 51-3).

A quarto verse miscellany, with later accounts on the last page dated June 1658, 1* + 238 pages (including stubs of extracted pages 191-6, plus numerous blanks), in old calf (rebacked).

Including 11 poems by Carew and 14 poems by Randolph.

c.1630s-40s

Inscribed Jane Wheeler and Tho: Oliver Busfield. Francis Quarles's poem (pp. 209-11) To ye two partners of my heart Mr John Wheeler, and Mr Symon Tue. Item 96 in an unidentified sale catalogue. Formerly Folger MS 2071.6.

A Jo. Wheeler signed the Christ Church, Oxford, disbursement books for 1641-3 (xii, b.85 and 86).

Cited in IELM, II.i-ii (1987-93), as the Wheeler MS: CwT Δ 25 and RnT Δ 7.

DeJ 14.5

A printed exemplum of Cooper's Hill containing a series of textual alterations and annotations in two, or possibly three, hands, one of them that of the historian James Tyrrell (1642-1718).

1655
Theodore Hofmann ([no shelfmark])
DeJ 15

MS marginalia, probably transcribed from a MS of the early version of the poem, in an exemplum of the printed edition of 1650.

c.1700

Later owned by Professor Brendan O Hehir (1927-91), literary scholar, of the University of California at Berkeley.

Collated in O Hehir, pp. 91-105, et seq. (and described p. 55).

Untraced, miscellaneous ([O Hehir/Denham])
DeJ 16

Copy of a 326-line version, headed Coopers Hill, by Sr: John Denham (Betweene this & Windsore, whence this Survey) and beginning Sure we have Poets that did never dreame, with annotations and emendations in the hand of the second Earl olf Bridgewater, on five folio leaves.

Mid-17th century

Among the papers of the Egerton family, Earls of Bridgewater.

Edited from this MS (as his Draft I) in O Hehir, pp. 77-90 (and collated and described pp. 42-4).

DeJ 16.5

An exemplum, which has a MS emendation on p. 19 probably in the hand of Izaak Walton.

1642

Recorded in Brendan O Hehir, Expans'd Hieroglyphicks: A Critical edition of Sir John Denham's Coopers Hill (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1969), pp. 56-7.

DeJ 17 Mid-17th century

Copy, in a rounded hand, of a version headed Coopers Hill [(Betweene this & windsor, whence this Survey.) added in another hand] and beginning Sure, we have Poets that did never dreame, with marginal annotations and scribbling in later hands, docketed as written by an vnknowne Author, inscribed at the end Wm Johnson Carolus dei gra Anglia, on four folio leaves, slightly imperfect.

This MS mentioned in Herbert Berry, Sir John Denham at Law, MP, 71 (1973-4), 266-76 (p. 266n).

A folio guard-book of miscellaneous letters and papers, 378 leaves.

National Archives, Kew (SP 46/127 ff. 327r-30v)
DeJ 18

Copy of two versions, written out in parallel columns, headed respectively A Copy of Coopers Hill taken in the year 1643 and A Copy of Coopers Hill after the 3d. Impression in ye Year 1684.

A large folio verse miscellany, including (on pp. 1-88) 73 poems by Katherine Philips, dating as late as 1662, written in a single, neat non-professional hand, the remainder of the volume filled with other poems in several hands, viii + 140 pages (plus numerous blanks), in contemporary calf gilt, A S in a gilt lozenge on each cover.

The later additions partly compiled by George Clarke (1661-1736), politician and virtuoso (whose bookplate is inside the cover and whose family coat of arms is on f. [iv]), son of Sir William Clarke (1623?-66), Secretary of War to the Commonwealth and Charles II.

c.1662[-1730s]

Inside the front cover inscribed E[?] Barrow, evidently a member of the family of Samuel Barrow (1625-82), Royal Physician and friend of John Milton, Barrow being the second husband of Sir William Clarke's widow, Dorothy (d.1695). Formerly MSS 6. 13.

Cited in IELM, II.ii (1993), as the Clarke MS: PsK Δ 5. See also Elizabeth H. Hageman, Treacherous Accidents, and the Abominable Printing of Katherine Philips's 1664 Poems, in New Ways of Looking at Old Texts, III, ed. W. Speed Hill (Tempe, AZ, 2004), pp. 85-95.

Worcester College, Oxford (MS 58 pp. 229-37)
DeJ 19

Copy of a version beginning Sure there are Poets which did never dreame.

A quarto verse miscellany, written in a single professional hand on rectos only, 53 leaves, disbound.

Late 17th century
Yale, Osborn MS b 50 through Osborn MS b 99 (Osborn MS b 86 ff. 26r-40r)
Cooper's Hill (Latin translation)

A Latin translation of Cooper's Hill by Moses Pengry, Chaplain to the Earl of Devonshire (beginning Si fuerint Vates, Parnassi nulla bicollis), prepared for Lord William Cavendish and printed at Oxford in 1676. The text is reprinted in O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks, pp. 257-75.

DeJ 19.2

An exemplum of the printed edition of Denham's Poems and Translations, with The Sophy (London, 1668), in contemporary calf, in which the text of Coopers Hill on pp. 1-22 is interlineated in manuscript with the Latin version by Moses Pengry.

Late 17th century

Henry Sotheran's sale catalogue Picadilly Notes 29 (Winter 1992), item 178.

Dr Peter Beal, London (Cooper's Hill)
DeJ 19.4

Copy of the Latin version by Moses Pengry, on rectos only.

An octavo miscellany of verse and drama, largely in a single small cursive hand, with later additions by one or two hands after p. 142, 185 pages (including blanks) plus a tipped-in leaf at the end, in brown calf.

Late 17th century

Sotheby's, 13 June 1870, lot 157, to James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps (1820-89), literary scholar and book collector; thence, on 5 July 1870, to Warwick Castle Library. Formerly Folger MS 3.4.

DeJ 19.6

Copy of the Latin translation of Cooper's Hill by Moses Pengry, written on twelve pages interleaved in the printed text in an exemplum of the octavo London edition of 1709.

c.1709
DeJ 19.8

Copy of a Latin translation by Moses Pengry.

A quarto miscellany of verse and prose, in Latin and English, in several hands, in contemporary vellum.

Apparently compiled by members of the English College at Douai.

Late 17th century
Yale, Osborn MS b 200 through end (Osborn MS b 210 pp. 285-99)
The Destruction of Troy ('While all with silence & attention wait')

First published in London, 1656. Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 159-78.

*DeJ 20
Autograph

Autograph alteration of one word in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 63)
A Dialogue between Sir John Pooley and Mr. Thomas Killigrew ('To thee, Dear Thom. my self addressing')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 103-6.

DeJ 21

Copy, untitled and here beginning Pooly. Deare Tom, to thee my selfe addressing on two conjugate quarto leaves.

This MS collated in Banks.

A folio composite volume of MS poems presented to, or owned by, James Butler (1610-88), first Duke of Ormonde, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, c.120 pages, of various sizes, in 19th-century calf.

Some items docketed by Ormonde or by his private secretary Sir George Lane.

Mid-late 17th century

Formerly British Library Loan MS 37/6. The greater part of the collection sold at Sotheby's, 19 July 1994, lot 276, to C.R. Johnson Rare Books. Photocopies are in the British Library, RP 6829.

Recorded in HMC, 14th Report, Appendix VII, Ormonde I (1895), pp. 105-18.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 228 pp. 56-7)
DeJ 22

Copy.

A folio verse miscellany, in possibly two neat rounded hands, 366 pages plus a five-page index, dated at the end Finis August ye. 6th 1717.

1715-17
University of Chicago (MS 553 pp. 6-8)
DeJ 23

Copy, headed A Dialogue between Iack Pooley having got a Clap, and Tom Killigrew.

A quarto miscellany of poems on affairs of state, in at least three professional hands, 49 leaves (including some blanks) and c.150 blank leaves at the end, in contemporary red morocco gilt, the spine lettered Songs Vol. 2:.

c.1690s

Among the papers of the Egerton family, Earls of Bridgewater.

DeJ 24

Copy, headed A Diologue betweene Mr. Pooley and his Cosen Mr Tho. R. Killygrew.

This item recorded in a list made in 1948 for the National Register of Archives.

A miscellany.

c.1655-6

Owned in 1948 by Raymond Richards, of Oxford House, Birkdale, Southport, and afterwards of Gawsworth Old Rectory, Gawsworth, Cheshire (MS No. 14). (Not among Richards MSS at the University of Keele.)

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Richards MS] [unspecified pages])
Elegy on Sir William D'avenant ('Though hee is dead th'Imortall name')

First published in Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700, ed. W. C. Hazlitt ([London], 1870), pp. [270-3]. James M. Osborn, New Poems by Sir John Denham, TLS (1 September 1966), p. 788. Banks, pp. 323-5.

*DeJ 25
Autograph

Autograph draft with revisions, untitled.

Edited from this MS in Hazlitt, in Osborn and in Banks. Facsimiles of the first two pages in Croft, Autograph Poetry, I, 50, and in in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 25-8)
DeJ 26

Copy, subscribed Communicat a frater Tho: Watson Januar: 20: 1669/70.

This MS recorded in Croft. See also Introduction.

An octavo miscellany of English and Latin verse and some prose, largely in one mixed hand, 123 leaves, with (ff. 2r-4r) an index, in calf gilt.

Compiled by John Watson (d. c.1707), of Queens' College, Cambridge, vicar of Mildenhall, Suffolk.

c.1667-73

Inscribed (f. 1r) Ex dono Drs Barb: Rhodes ...Mri Joan: Rhodes Decemb: 5 1667; Janawary ye 2 day 1726; Wm faildham London to ye Land of maderah & from thence to Jamaca. Purchased from Lilly, 13 July 1850.

Elegy on the Death of Judge Crooke ('This was the Man! the Glory of the Gown')

First published in The Topographer for the year 1790 (London, 1790), II, 177. Banks, pp. 156-8.

DeJ 27 Mid-late 17th century

Copy, headed An Elegie on Judge Crooke.

A large folio composite volume of verse, in various largely secretary hands, 327 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf.

Collected, and partly written, by Elias Ashmole (1617-92), astrologer and antiquary.

Betagraph of the watermark in f. 29 in Ted-Larry Pebworth, Towards a Taxonomy of Watermarks, in Puzzles in Paper: Concepts in Historical Watermarks, ed. Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Saffle and Ernest W. Sullivan, II (London, 2000), pp. 229-42 (p. 239).

Bodleian Library, Ashmole Collection (MS Ashmole 36/37 f. 32r-v)
DeJ 28

Copy.

A folio volume of poems chiefly on affairs of state, in professional hands, ff. 1-49 comprising poems of the 1640s, ff. 49v onwards Restoration poems up to 1681, 174 leaves (including twelve blanks), in contemporary calf, both covers stamped 1642, with remains of clasps.

Including nine poems in the Marvell canon (plus apocryphal poems); ff. 1-157 a single unit in variant styles of hand; ff. 158-62 in yet another hand on a smaller tipped-in quire of paper.

Mid-late 17th century

Among the collections of Francis Douce (1757-1834), antiquary and collector.

Cited in IELM, II.i (1993) as the Douce MS: MaA Δ 3. Marvell contents recorded and selectively collated in Margoliouth and in POAS, I and II.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Douce 357 ff. 22v-3r)
DeJ 29

Copy, headed Reader no superscription here I writt / Because ye verse it selfe entitles it.

An octavo verse miscellany, in two or more hands, 95 leaves (plus blanks), including two Indexes, in contemporary vellum.

Compiled by an Oxford University man, possibly a member of St John's College.

c.1634-43

A receipt (f. 104r) by John Weston recording payment from his brother Ed: Weston, 3 May 1714. The name John Saunders inscribed on the final leaf.

Bodleian Library, Malone Collection (MS Malone 21 ff. 53v-4r)
DeJ 30

Copy, headed vpon Judge Crooke.

This MS collated in Banks.

A duodecimo verse miscellany in several hands, written from both ends, 46 leaves, in contemporary calf.

Mid-17th century

Inscribed names (on front paste-down and f. 1r) of Fra: Norreys (? Sir Francis Norris (1609-69)) and Hen. Balle. Purchased from J. Harvey 8 December 1877.

The British Library: Egerton MSS (Egerton MS 2421 ff. 39v-40r)
DeJ 31

Copy.

A quarto verse miscellany, in three hands, including eight poems by Randolph (one twice), 102 leaves, in modern half-morocco gilt.

Fols 1r-93v, 95r-100v in the hand of Peter Calfe (1610-67), son of a Dutch merchant in London (whose name is inscribed on a flyleaf: f. 1*); f. 94r-v in an unidentified hand, and ff. 101v-2r in that of Peter Calfe's son, Peter Calfe the Younger (d.1693).

c.1650-9

Later owned by John, Baron Somers (1651-1716), Lord Chancellor, and afterwards by Edward Harley (1689-1741), second Earl of Oxford. Inscribed (f. 1r) Janu. 6. 1738/9.

Cited in IELM, II.i-ii (1987-93), together with British Library, Harley MS 6917 with which it was once bound, as the Calfe MS: CwT Δ 18; KiH Δ 9; RnT Δ 4.

DeJ 32

Copy, headed An Elegy on the Death of Judge Crooke by Mr John Denham MS not printed in his Poems.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

An octavo verse miscellany, in a single hand, entitled Poetical Characteristicks Vol 2d Collected by W O, 35 leaves (plus blanks), in modern black morocco gilt.

c.1730s
DeJ 33

Copy, headed An Elegie on the Death of Judge Crooke. by Mr. Denham.

This MS recorded in O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks, p. 48.

A quarto verse miscellany, 170 leaves, paginated 1-8 (Latin text in a small secretary hand), then pp. 1-162 (in one or possibly two largely italic hands; pp. 108-57 blanks; pp. 158-62 containing later notes), in modern red morocco gilt.

The pagination cited below relates to the second, main series of pagination.

c.1640

Inscribed on a flyleaf in red ink Matheus Day me suum vvst: i.e. Matthew Day (d.1661), five times Mayor of Windsor. Later owned by John Payne Collier (1789-1883), literary scholar, editor and forger. Collier's sale, 1884, lot 906. Formerly Folger MS 452.1.

DeJ 34

Copy, subscribed Mr Denham Author.

This MS recorded in O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks, p. 51.

A quarto verse miscellany, with later accounts on the last page dated June 1658, 1* + 238 pages (including stubs of extracted pages 191-6, plus numerous blanks), in old calf (rebacked).

Including 11 poems by Carew and 14 poems by Randolph.

c.1630s-40s

Inscribed Jane Wheeler and Tho: Oliver Busfield. Francis Quarles's poem (pp. 209-11) To ye two partners of my heart Mr John Wheeler, and Mr Symon Tue. Item 96 in an unidentified sale catalogue. Formerly Folger MS 2071.6.

A Jo. Wheeler signed the Christ Church, Oxford, disbursement books for 1641-3 (xii, b.85 and 86).

Cited in IELM, II.i-ii (1987-93), as the Wheeler MS: CwT Δ 25 and RnT Δ 7.

DeJ 36

Copy on a single folio leaf.

A guard book of separate copies of poems, 72 pages, various sizes.

Chiefly late 17th century

Assembled by Col. Cyril Hackett Wilkinson (1888-1960), Vice Provost of Worcester College, Oxford, literary scholar. Sotheby's, 26 June 1961, lot 212. At Yale formerly Osborn Box 89. No. 7.

a microfilm of this MS is in the British Library, M/625.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 106 No. 16)
An Essay in Explanation of Mr. Hobbs… ('Of all ill Poets by their Lumber known')

See DeJ 108-109.

A Letter sent to the good Knight ('Thou hadst not been so long neglected.')

See DeJ 95-96.

Lord Crofts ('Denham come helpe to laugh')

First published, as Vpon the Author, in Certain Verses (1653), p. 14. Banks, p. 321.

*DeJ 37
Autograph

Autograph, headed Ld Crofts.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 11)
DeJ 38

Copy in Fulman's hand, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Martial. Epigram Out of an Epigram of Martial ('Prithee die and set me free')

First published in Sportive Wit (London, 1656). Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 180-1.

DeJ 39

Copy, in a musical setting.

Edited from this MS in Cutts, Drexel Manuscript 4041, p. 185.

A folio songbook, in a single secretary hand, some items misnumbered, 144 leaves.

c.1640s

Once owned by the Shirley family, Earls Ferrers, of Staunton Harold, Leicestershire. Also owned, and annotated, by Edward Francis Rimbault (1816-76), organist and author. Acquired in 1888.

Generally cited as the Earl Ferrers MS. Collated in Cutts, Drexel Manuscript 4041, Musica Disciplina, 18 (1964), 151-202. A complete facsimile is in English Song 1600-1675, ed. Elise Bickford Jorgens, Vol. 9 (New York & London, 1987).

New York Public Library, Music Division (Drexel MS 4041 No. 79, ff. 57v-8r)
DeJ 39.5

Copy, headed Song.

A folio formal verse miscellany, in a single rounded hand, 259 pages (plus a three-page index), in modern boards.

The contents, the latest of which (on pp. 203-7) can be dated to a marriage that took place in November 1656, reflect the taste of Interregnum Royalist sympathisers.

c.Late 1650s

Formerly in the library of Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bt (1792-1872), manuscript and book collector: Phillipps MS 4001. Sotheby's, 29 June 1946, lot 164, to Myers. Then in the library of Charles Kay Ogden (1889-1957), psychologist, linguist, and book collector.

University College London (MS Ogden 42 pp. 230-1)
Natura Naturata ('What gives us that Fantastick Fit')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 106-7.

*DeJ 40
Autograph

Autograph alteration of one word in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 76)
News from Colchester ('All in the Land of Essex')

First published as A Relation of a Quaker [1659]. Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 91-4.

*DeJ 41
Autograph

Autograph deletion of one word in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 112)
DeJ 42

Copy on three pages of two folio leaves.

A large folio composite volume of verse, in various largely secretary hands, 327 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf.

Collected, and partly written, by Elias Ashmole (1617-92), astrologer and antiquary.

Betagraph of the watermark in f. 29 in Ted-Larry Pebworth, Towards a Taxonomy of Watermarks, in Puzzles in Paper: Concepts in Historical Watermarks, ed. Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Saffle and Ernest W. Sullivan, II (London, 2000), pp. 229-42 (p. 239).

Bodleian Library, Ashmole Collection (MS Ashmole 36/37 ff. 88r-9r)
DeJ 42.5

Copy, ascribed by Sr. J Denham.

A quarto verse miscellany, in English and Latin, in two or more cursive hands, written from both ends, iv + 278 pages, in contemporary calf.

Compiled principally by one H. S., a Cambridge University man.

c.1640s-60s

This MS volume edited in Diana Julia Rose, MS Rawlinson Poetical 147: An Annotated Volume of Seventeenth-Century Cambridge Verse (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Leicester, 1992), of which a copy is in Cambridge University Library, Manuscript Department, A8f.

DeJ 43

Copy, headed A ballad vpon one Greene a quaker and a mare.

A folio verse miscellany, 215 leaves (plus a few blanks), in modern calf gilt.

Entirely in the hand of John Hopkinson (1610-80), Yorkshire antiquary, of Lofthouse, near Leeds, and comprising Volume 17 of the Hopkinson MSS.

c.1670

Signed bookplate of Frances Mary Richardson Currer (1785-1861), book collector, of Eshton Hall, West Yorkshire. Subsequently owned by her step-father Matthew Wilson.

Recorded in HMC, 3rd Report (1872), Appendix, pp. 295-6.

Bradford Archives (32D86/17 ff. 60v-1v)
DeJ 44

Copy, headed The Quaker and The Mare.

A quarto verse miscellany, including (ff. 113r-15r) copies of, or brief extracts from, 30 poems by Donne (plus two apocryphal poems), in a single hand, transcribed from the 1635 or 1639 edition of Donne's Poems, headed Donnes quaintest conceits in several hands, 156 leaves (plus blanks), in modern black morocco gilt.

Late 17th century

Once owned by Thomas Rawlinson (1681-1725) and afterwards among the collections of Edward Harley, second Earl of Oxford (1689-1741).

Cited in IELM I.i (1980) as the Harley Rawlinson MS: DnJ Δ 64.

DeJ 45

Copy, headed Certain Carnal Passages Betwixt a Quaker & a Colt at Horsly near Colchester in Essex.

An octavo verse miscellany, in probably a single neat hand, with a two-page index at the end, 143 pages, in limp vellum.

Early 18th century

Formerly P7455M1 [1712?] Bound.

Clark Library, Los Angeles (MS. 1948. 003 pp. 88-92)
DeJ 45.5

Copy, untitled.

A folio formal verse miscellany, comprising c.406 poems, many of them song lyrics, in various neat hands, compiled probably over a period, 8 blank leaves (pp. [i-xvi]) + 10 unnumbered pages of poems (pp. [xvii-xxvi]) + 9 numbered pages (pp. 1-9) + ff. [9v]-151v + 12 leaves at the end blank but for a poem on the penultimate page (f. [11v]), in contemporary calf gilt.

Once erroneously associated with Thomas Killigrew (1612-83), whose hand does not appear in the volume.

Mid-17th century-c.1702

Inscribed (f. [ir]) Sr Robert Killigrew / 1702. Later in the library of Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bt (1792-1872), book and manuscript collector: Phillipps MS 9070. Sotheby's, 19 May 1897, lot 455.

Discussed, with a facsimile example, in Nancy Cutbirth, Thomas Killigrew's Commonplace Book?, Library Chronicle of the University of Texas at Austin, NS No. 13 (1980), 31-8.

University of Texas at Austin (Ms (Killigrew, T) Works B Commonplace book f. 114r-v)
DeJ 46

Copy, headed The Colchester Quaker, in the hand of William Trumbull, on both sides of a single octavo-size strip of paper.

c.1700

From the papers of the Trumbull family of Easthampstead Park, Berkshire.

Microfilm of this MS in the British Library, M/690.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn Poetry Box XIII/39a-b)
An Occasional Imitation of a Modern Author upon the Game of Chess ('A Tablet stood of that abstersive Tree')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 113-14.

DeJ 47

Copy in Fulman's hand, headed Chesse.

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
DeJ 47.5

Copy, written on a preliminary blank leaf in a printed exemplum of The Royall Game of Chesse-Play (London, 1656).

Mid-late 17th century
Private owners in the UK ([Denham, Chesse])
Of Justice (''Tis the first Sanction, Nature gave to Man')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 198-201.

DeJ 48

Copy.

An octavo verse miscellany, 48 leaves, in contemporary calf.

In a single neat rounded hand, largely written lengthways in oblong form.

Late 17th century

Name inscribed inside the lower cover John Spearling. Sotheby's, 20 February 1967, lot 185.

Microfilm in the British Library, RP 86.

Of Prudence ('Wisdoms first Progress is to take a View')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 189-98.

*DeJ 49
Autograph

Two autograph lines inserted between lines 198 and 199 and six autograph lines inserted between lines 202 and 203 in the printed text.

These MS additions edited in Banks, pp. xvii-xviii.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 159, 170)
DeJ 50

Copy.

An octavo verse miscellany, 48 leaves, in contemporary calf.

In a single neat rounded hand, largely written lengthways in oblong form.

Late 17th century

Name inscribed inside the lower cover John Spearling. Sotheby's, 20 February 1967, lot 185.

Microfilm in the British Library, RP 86.

On Gondibert The Preface, being Published before the Booke was Written, Upon the Preface ('Room Room for the best of Poets heroick')

First published, as Vpon the Preface, in Certain Verses (1653), pp. 3-4. Banks, p. 313.

*DeJ 51
Autograph

Autograph, headed One Gondibert Vpon the Preface.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 2)
DeJ 52

Copy, headed Vpon the Three Praises of Gondibert not then Published, on a single quarto leaf.

A folio composite volume of verse, in various hands, i + 250 leaves.

Collected by Peter Le Neve (1661-1729). Some pages in the hand of Richard Rawlinson.

DeJ 53 Mid-17th century

Copy, untitled and here beginning Make roome for the best of Poets Heroicke, on one side of a single quarto leaf.

A folio composite volume of miscellaneous papers in verse and prose, in various hands and paper sizes, 170 leaves, mounted on guards, in modern half-morocco.

Including eleven poems by John Donne, three of them (ff. 10r-14v, 55r, 76r-7r) in the italic hand of his friend Sir Henry Goodyer (1571-1627); ff. 95r-8r in the same hand as the Leconfield MS (DnJ Δ 5) and constituting part of what was probably a quarto MS book of Donne's satires; f. 132r-v constituting a set of six verse epistles by Donne, the text related to the Westmoreland MS (DnJ Δ 19).

Early-mid-17th century

From the Conway Papers belonging chiefly to Sir Edward Conway, Baron Conway of Ragley, later Viscount Killultagh and Viscount Conway of Conway Castle (c.1564-1631), and to his son, Edward, second Viscount Conway (1594-1655). Later owned by John Wilson Croker (1780-1857), politician and writer, and presented 10 January 1860.

Cited in IELM, I.i, as the Conway MS: DnJ Δ 40. Cited as A23 by editors. Facsimile of f. 62r in Michael Roy Denbo, Editing a Renaissance Commonplace Book: The Holgate Miscellany, in New Ways of Looking at Old Texts, III, ed. W. Speed Hill (Tempe, AZ, 2004). pp. 65-73 (p. 71).

DeJ 54

Copy in Fulman's hand, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
DeJ 55

Copy, headed Upon the 3 Praisers of D'avenants Gondibert not then published, on the end-paper of an exemplum of the printed quarto edition of Gondibert (London, 1651).

c.1651

Once owned by one Ferdinando Marsh. Later in the Oxford library of John Sparrow (1906-92), literary scholar and book collector. Christie's, 21 October 1992 (Sparrow sale), lot 111, to Hannas.

This volume, or else DeJ 55.5, possibly corresponds to the exemplum of Gondibert (1651) with 118 lines on the fly-leaf sold at Sotheby's, 19 November 1906 (sale of the Trentham Hall Library of the Duke of Sutherland), lot 461.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Marsh's Gondibert])
DeJ 55.5

Copy, untitled, inscribed on blank leaf A1 in an exemplum of the printed quarto edition of Davenant's Gondibert (London, 1651).

c.1651

Sotheby's, New York, 30 April-1 May 1990 (H. Bradley Martin sale), lot 2749.

This volume, or else DeJ 55, possibly corresponds to the exemplum of Gondibert (1651) with 118 lines on the fly-leaf sold at Sotheby's, 19 November 1906 (sale of the Trentham Hall Library of the Duke of Sutherland), lot 461.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Bradley Martin/ Gondibert])
On Mr. Tho. Killigrew's Return from his Embassie from Venice, and Mr. William Murray's from Scotland ('Our Resident Tom, From Venice is come')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 111-12.

DeJ 56

Copy in the hand of William Edgeman, secretary of Edward Hyde, first Earl of Clarendon, headed To the Tune of First came my Ld Scroope, he did hallow & hoope &c, on a single quarto leaf.

Printed from this MS in Calendar of the Clarendon State Papers, II (Oxford, 1869), p. 143; collated in Banks.

A composite volume of letters and papers of the Earl of Clarendon, for March 1651/2-October 1652, 358 leaves.

Bodleian Library, Clarendon MSS (MS Clarendon 43 f. 236r)
DeJ 56.5

A three-line quotation from the poem, in an autograph letter by the Earl of Middleton to Sir George Etherege, from Whitehall, 7 December 1685.

1685
Bischöfliches Zentralarchiv, Regensburg (BZA/Sch.F XV11, Fasz. 1, No. 13)
DeJ 57

Copy, in a mixed hand, untitled, on the first page of a pair of conjugate folio leaves, addressed pn the fourt page To the right hoble. the Lord Conway, and folded, sealed and sent as a letter.

A folio composite volume of miscellaneous papers in verse and prose, in various hands and paper sizes, 170 leaves, mounted on guards, in modern half-morocco.

Including eleven poems by John Donne, three of them (ff. 10r-14v, 55r, 76r-7r) in the italic hand of his friend Sir Henry Goodyer (1571-1627); ff. 95r-8r in the same hand as the Leconfield MS (DnJ Δ 5) and constituting part of what was probably a quarto MS book of Donne's satires; f. 132r-v constituting a set of six verse epistles by Donne, the text related to the Westmoreland MS (DnJ Δ 19).

Early-mid-17th century

From the Conway Papers belonging chiefly to Sir Edward Conway, Baron Conway of Ragley, later Viscount Killultagh and Viscount Conway of Conway Castle (c.1564-1631), and to his son, Edward, second Viscount Conway (1594-1655). Later owned by John Wilson Croker (1780-1857), politician and writer, and presented 10 January 1860.

Cited in IELM, I.i, as the Conway MS: DnJ Δ 40. Cited as A23 by editors. Facsimile of f. 62r in Michael Roy Denbo, Editing a Renaissance Commonplace Book: The Holgate Miscellany, in New Ways of Looking at Old Texts, III, ed. W. Speed Hill (Tempe, AZ, 2004). pp. 65-73 (p. 71).

DeJ 58 Late 17th century

Copy, in a neat professional hand, on a single folio leaf.

A folio composite volume of MS poems presented to, or owned by, James Butler (1610-88), first Duke of Ormonde, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, c.120 pages, of various sizes, in 19th-century calf.

Some items docketed by Ormonde or by his private secretary Sir George Lane.

Mid-late 17th century

Formerly British Library Loan MS 37/6. The greater part of the collection sold at Sotheby's, 19 July 1994, lot 276, to C.R. Johnson Rare Books. Photocopies are in the British Library, RP 6829.

Recorded in HMC, 14th Report, Appendix VII, Ormonde I (1895), pp. 105-18.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 228 p. 195)
On My Lord Croft's and My Journey into Poland ('Tole, tole Gentle Bell, for the Soul')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 107-10.

*DeJ 59
Autograph

Autograph deletion of one line in the printed text.

This MS alteration recorded in Banks, p. xvii.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 68)
DeJ 60

Copy, untitled.

A quarto verse miscellany, in English and Latin, predominantly in a single hand (up to f. 34v), with additions in four subsequent hands (ff. 37-50v), 50 leaves, in vellum.

Compiled for the most part by a University of Oxford man, with (f. 1r-v) a list of contents.

c.1640s

Once owned by one John Faith, and by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Formerly cited as Corpus Christi College, MS E.i.33.

On the Earl of Strafford's Tryal and Death ('Great Strafford! worthy of that Name, though all')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 153-4.

DeJ 61

Copy, headed An Eligie on ye Earle of Strafford.

A large folio composite volume of verse, in various largely secretary hands, 327 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf.

Collected, and partly written, by Elias Ashmole (1617-92), astrologer and antiquary.

Betagraph of the watermark in f. 29 in Ted-Larry Pebworth, Towards a Taxonomy of Watermarks, in Puzzles in Paper: Concepts in Historical Watermarks, ed. Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Saffle and Ernest W. Sullivan, II (London, 2000), pp. 229-42 (p. 239).

Bodleian Library, Ashmole Collection (MS Ashmole 36/37 f. 33v)
DeJ 62 c.1640s

Second copy, untitled, on the first page of two conjugate small quarto leaves, endorsed Verses on the Earle of Strafford.

A large folio composite volume of verse, in various largely secretary hands, 327 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf.

Collected, and partly written, by Elias Ashmole (1617-92), astrologer and antiquary.

Betagraph of the watermark in f. 29 in Ted-Larry Pebworth, Towards a Taxonomy of Watermarks, in Puzzles in Paper: Concepts in Historical Watermarks, ed. Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Saffle and Ernest W. Sullivan, II (London, 2000), pp. 229-42 (p. 239).

Bodleian Library, Ashmole Collection (MS Ashmole 36/37 f. 214r)
DeJ 63

Copy, headed Wentworth's Tryumph over all. The text followed (f. 8r-v) by a parody.

A folio volume of poems chiefly on affairs of state, in professional hands, ff. 1-49 comprising poems of the 1640s, ff. 49v onwards Restoration poems up to 1681, 174 leaves (including twelve blanks), in contemporary calf, both covers stamped 1642, with remains of clasps.

Including nine poems in the Marvell canon (plus apocryphal poems); ff. 1-157 a single unit in variant styles of hand; ff. 158-62 in yet another hand on a smaller tipped-in quire of paper.

Mid-late 17th century

Among the collections of Francis Douce (1757-1834), antiquary and collector.

Cited in IELM, II.i (1993) as the Douce MS: MaA Δ 3. Marvell contents recorded and selectively collated in Margoliouth and in POAS, I and II.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Douce 357 f. 8r)
DeJ 64

Copy of a twenty-line version, headed An Epitaph on the Earle of Strafford.

Edited from this MS in O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 36-7.

A folio miscellany of verse and some prose, compiled in part by John Locke (1632-1704), philosopher, and also in part by Thomas Barlow and Sylvester Brownover, xxviii + 358 pages (pp. 224-358 blank), in calf.

Late 17th century
Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Locke e. 17 pp. 81-2)
DeJ 65

Copy, headed In obitum Thomae Wentworth Comitis de Strafford, D. Locum: Tenent: Hiberniae, &c. qui decollatus est apud Turrem Londinens: Maij 12°. 1641.

A folio composite volume, chiefly of English and Latin verse, in various hands; vi + 186 leaves, in reversed calf.

Scribbling on f. iir including ffor mr William Rabey in New=market..., ffor my Louing ffriend in G John westhropp at mr Rogers Reringe house Bury in S[uffolk], ffor mr John fford at his house in Newmarket in the countey of cambridge; notes on f. iiiv-ivr, one Recd 22 July 1669, subscribed John Cooke and including, on f. vir, ffor mr John Cocke at his howse neere the white harte in Thetford.... Later owned, in the 1730s, by Charles Barlow, of Emmanuel College, Cambridge (his bookplate f. iiv).

DeJ 66

Copy, headed On Strafford, subscribed J. Denham.

A quarto verse miscellany, in English and Latin, in two or more cursive hands, written from both ends, iv + 278 pages, in contemporary calf.

Compiled principally by one H. S., a Cambridge University man.

c.1640s-60s

This MS volume edited in Diana Julia Rose, MS Rawlinson Poetical 147: An Annotated Volume of Seventeenth-Century Cambridge Verse (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Leicester, 1992), of which a copy is in Cambridge University Library, Manuscript Department, A8f.

DeJ 67

Copy, headed Upon the same [i.e. Strafford].

A folio volume of state documents, speeches and verse, 284 leaves (plus blanks), in modern calf gilt.

Entirely in the hand of John Hopkinson (1610-80), Yorkshire antiquary, of Lofthouse, near Leeds, and comprising Volume 27 of the Hopkinson MSS. Chiefly transcribed from papers belonging to John Savile, Baron of Pontefract, and Edward Taylor, of Furnivall's Inn, Holborn.

1674

Signed bookplate of Frances Mary Richardson Currer (1785-1861), book collector, of Eshton Hall, West Yorkshire. Subsequently owned by her step-father Matthew Wilson.

Recorded in HMC, 3rd Report (1872), Appendix, p. 298.

Bradford Archives (32D86/27 f. 189r)
DeJ 68

Copy, headed An Elegie upon the death of the Earle of Strafford.

A folio miscellany of verse and some prose, 282 pages, in calf gilt.

Entirely in the hand of John Hopkinson (1610-80), Yorkshire antiquary, of Lofthouse, near Leeds, and comprising Volume 34 of the Hopkinson MSS.

Mid-late 17th century

Signed bookplate of Frances Mary Richardson Currer (1785-1861), book collector, of Eshton Hall, West Yorkshire. Subsequently owned by her step-father Matthew Wilson.

Recorded in HMC, 3rd Report (1872), Appendix, p. 299.

Bradford Archives (32D86/34 p. 203)
DeJ 69

Copy of a twenty-line version, headed vpon my Lo Straford.

Edited from this MS in Banks, p. 153 (footnote).

A duodecimo verse miscellany in several hands, written from both ends, 46 leaves, in contemporary calf.

Mid-17th century

Inscribed names (on front paste-down and f. 1r) of Fra: Norreys (? Sir Francis Norris (1609-69)) and Hen. Balle. Purchased from J. Harvey 8 December 1877.

The British Library: Egerton MSS (Egerton MS 2421 f. 39r rev.)
DeJ 70

Copy, headed May 1641 An offering to the sacred memory of the never sufficiently admired E. of Strafford.

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, predominantly in a single secretary hand, written from both ends, 179 leaves, in 19th-century half blue morocco gilt.

c.1640s

Inscribed (f. 179r) This is Sr. Thomas Meres [or ? Maiors] Book: i.e. probably Sir Thomas Meres (1634-1715), of Kirton, Lincolnshire. Later bookplate of the Rev. John Curtis. Purchased from Mrs Ann Austin Curtis 12 October 1889.

The British Library: Egerton MSS (Egerton MS 2725 f. 78r-v)
DeJ 71

Copy of lines 1-2, 11-20, 27-30.

This MS recorded in Banks, p. 153.

A quarto composite volume of verse, in several (possibly female) rounded hands, 79 leaves, in 19th-cntury half-morocco.

c.1730
The British Library: Stowe MSS (Stowe MS 970 f. 10r)
DeJ 71.5

Copy, in two secretary hands, headed in probably another hand An epitaph of ye Earl of Strafford.

A folio volume of political and miscellaneous verse and prose, in several secretary verse, written from both ends, comprising Book I (viii + 254 pages one way and pp. 255-309 inverted) and Book II (282 pages inverted), including a table of contents, in half reversed calf.

Compiled partly by Sir Thomas Swinburne (c.1589-1645), of Edlingham and Nafferton, Sheriff of Northumberland in 1628-9.

c.1640s

Among the family collection established by Christopher Mickleton (1612-69), Durham attorney, and by his eldest son James (1638-93), lawyer and antiquary, which was later incorporated in the collections of Gilbert Spearman (1675-1738), lawyer and antiquary.

Durham University Library (Mickleton & Spearman MS 9 Book II, p. 214)
DeJ 72

Copy, headed Vpon ye Death of Thomas wentworth Earl of Strafford beheaded ye < > of May 1641, subscribed by Mr Sidney Godolpin.

A quarto miscellany, in several hands, written over a period, 80 leaves (plus 67 blanks and stubs of numerous extracted leaves), in contemporary vellum gilt.

Compiled by or for Sir Henry Cholmley, brother of Sir Hugh Cholmley (1600-57), the ascription by my brother Sr Hugh Cholmley (1600-57) inserted on f. 19r in a cursive hand responsible for entries on ff. 3r-12v, 15v-29r, 41r-v, 75v-7r, the contents including twelve poems by Thomas Carew and poems by members of the circle of Lucius Cary (1610?-43), second Viscount Falkland, of Great Tew, Oxfordshire, by the St Leger family of Ulcombe, Kent, and by Sir William Twysden of Kent.

c.1624-41

Later bookplate of Henry B. Humphrey.

Recorded in IELM, II.i (1987), as the Cholmley MS: CwT Δ 27.

Harvard, other MSS (MS Eng 703 ff. 75v-6r)
DeJ 73

Copy.

A small octavo volume of verse and prose relating to the Earl of Strafford, in a single hand, ii + 31 leaves, in red morocco gilt.

Mid-17th century
Harvard, other MSS (MS Eng 1091 ff. [1r-2r])
DeJ 74

Copy of a twenty-line version, headed E. of Straffords Epitaphe.

Edited from this MS in H.L. Hamilton, Lines by Denham, TLS (22 September 1966), p. 888. Recorded in Banks, p. xiv.

A quarto volume of pasquinades and other verse, almost all in a single cursive secretary hand, 54 leaves, in contemporary brown calf (rebacked).

Compiled by Sir James Balfour, first Baronet (1600-57), of Denmilne and Kinncaird, Lyon King of Arms and antiquary.

c.1637-47
DeJ 75 c.1640s

Copy, in a roman hand, headed Lord Straufords Elegie.

A folio composite volume of verse, prose and dramatic works, in various hands, written over a period from both ends, 543 pages (including blanks), in contemporary panelled calf with remains of metal clasps.

Compiled by members of the Salusbury family of Llewenni, Denbighshire, including works by Sir Thomas Salusbury, second Baronet (1612-43), poet and politician.

Early-mid 17th century

Later owned by J. Baskerville-Glegg, of Withington Hall, Chelford. Sotheby's, 14-16 March 1921, lot 421.

National Library of Wales (NLW MS 5390 D p. 5)
DeJ 75.2

Copy.

An octavo verse miscellany, in various hands, including seventeen poems by Carew, a title-page inscribed A book of Verses / Seria mixta Jocis, c.260 pages, in calf blind-stamped V/I F 1667.

References to Westminster Drollerie (which was not published until 1671) added on pp. 1 and 242.

c.1667-8

Inscribed on the title-page Frendraught Legi: i.e. by James Crichton (d.1674/5), second Viscount Frendraught. Bookplate of Thomas Fraser Duff (1830-77), of Woodcote, Oxfordshire. Bloomsbury Book Auctions, 9 April 1987, lot 272 (with a facsimile of p. 131 in the sale catalogue), sold to Quaritch.

Estate of Robert S Pirie, New York ([Frendraught MS] pp. 159-60)
DeJ 75.4

Copy, headed Verses made upon the Earle of Strafford.

A folio verse miscellany, comprising 162 poems in English, in a single hand, 273 pages, in brown morocco gilt.

c.late 1640s

Formerly (before 1686) in the Palatine Library at Heidelberg. Possibly acquired by Charles Louis (1617-80), Elector Palatine, while at the English court of his uncle, Charles I, from 1635 to 1649.

This volume discovered, and announced in the TLS, 23 July 2010, pp. 14-15, by June Schlueter and Paul Schlueter.

DeJ 75.6 c.1640s

Copy, in a secretary hand, untitled, among other poems on Strafford.

A folio composite volume of state tracts and papers, in various hands and paper sizes, with a table of contents, 599 leaves.

Inscribed (f. 141r) John: Saunders is the trew owner of this booke, Captaine Christo: Blounte, and Valentine LLawless.

Owned by John Madden, MD (1649-1703/4), physician and manuscript collector. Old pressmark F. 1. 20.

DeJ 75.8

Copy, headed In obitu Thomæ wentworth comitis se Strafford; D. Locu tenent: Hiberniæ &sc. qui de collabus erat aput turro Londinensem. maii 12o. 1641.

A quarto miscellany of verse and prose, with a title-page, 385 pages numbered 858-1243 (pp. 914-29, 966-7, 981-2, 995-6, 1023-4, 1041-2, 1083-4, 1135-6, and 1173-6 excised), in 17th-century calf.

In non-professional hands, the miscellany entitled A Collection of Witt and Learning…consisting of verses, poems, songs, sonnetts, Ballads, Lampoons, Libells, Dialouges...from the year 1600, to this present year: 1677.

c.1681

Formerly Osborn MS Chest II, Number 14.

DeJ 75.9

Copy, untitled.

A quarto verse miscellany, in several hands (one predominating up to p. 167), probably associated with Oxford, 436 pages (pp. 198-9 and 269-70 skipped in the pagination, and including many blanks and an index) and numerous further blank leaves at the end, in modern black morocco gilt.

Including 14 poems by Carew, 13 poems by Corbett and 25 poems (plus one poem of doubtful authorship) by Strode.

c.1650

Scribbling on the first page including the words Peyton Chester….

Cited in IELM, II.i-ii (1987-93), as the Osborn MS I: CwT Δ 38; CoR Δ 14; StW Δ 29.

Yale, Osborn MS b 200 through end (Osborn MS b 200 p. 279)
DeJ 76

Copy, headed Wentworth Triumphe over all, on two folio leaves. The text accompanied by a parody.

A guard book of separate copies of poems, 72 pages, various sizes.

Chiefly late 17th century

Assembled by Col. Cyril Hackett Wilkinson (1888-1960), Vice Provost of Worcester College, Oxford, literary scholar. Sotheby's, 26 June 1961, lot 212. At Yale formerly Osborn Box 89. No. 7.

a microfilm of this MS is in the British Library, M/625.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 106 No. 9, f. 2)
The Progress of Learning ('My early Mistress, now my Antient Muse')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 114-21.

DeJ 77

Copy, including the Preface.

written upright

An octavo verse miscellany, 48 leaves, in contemporary calf.

In a single neat rounded hand, largely written lengthways in oblong form.

Late 17th century

Name inscribed inside the lower cover John Spearling. Sotheby's, 20 February 1967, lot 185.

Microfilm in the British Library, RP 86.

'Raised by a Prince of Lambard blood'

First published in Certain Verses (1653), pp. 15-19. Banks, pp. 316-18.

*DeJ 78
Autograph

Autograph, untitled.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 7-11)
DeJ 79

Copy in Fulman's hand, headed Canto 2, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Corpus Christi College, Oxford (MS 309 ff. 53v-4v)
Sarpedon's Speech to Glaucus in the 12th of Homer ('Thus to Glaucus spake')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 179-80.

*DeJ 80
Autograph

Autograph alterations in two lines in the printed text.

These MS alterations recorded in Banks, p. xvii.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 78-9)
DeJ 80.5

Copy, untitled.

A duodecimo miscellany of verse and prose, predominantly in a single non-professional hand, iv + 214 pages, in contemporary calf.

Inscribed (p. 211) I ended this book Novr. 13th 1723.

c.1723
The Second Advice to a Painter ('Nay, Painter, if thou dar'st design that fight')

See MaA 314-360.

A Second Western Wonder ('You heard of that wonder, of the Lightning and Thunder')

First published in Rump: or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs (London, 1662). Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 133-4.

DeJ 80.8 c.1630s

Copy, in double columns, headed The Westerne Wonder; The second part to the same Tune, here beginning You haue hard of that wonder, subscribed Sr John Hotham, on a folio leaf, once folded as a letter or packet, in a file of verse MSS.

A box of unbound and unnumbered legal and miscellaneous papers.

National Archives, Kew (C 108/63 unnumbered item)
*DeJ 81
Autograph

Autograph altertions in three lines in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 107-9)
DeJ 81.5 c.1640

Copy, in a probably professional mixed hand, headed The Westerne Wonder The second part to the same tune, here beginning You have herd of that wonder, subscribed Sr John Hotham, on two pages of a pair of conjugate folio leaves.

A collection of unbound verse manuscripts, in various hands and paper sizes (chiefly folio), 142 leaves.

Partly compiled by Sir Richard Browne and his father Christopher Browne (1577-1646), of Saye's Court, Deptford.

Volume LXVII of the Evelyn Papers, of John Evelyn (1620-1706), diarist and writer, of Wootton House, Surrey, and his family, also incorporating papers of his father-in-law, Sir Richard Browne, Bt (1605-83), diplomat, and his family. Formerly preserved at Christ Church, Oxford. Acquired March 1995.

DeJ 82

Copy, headed The 2d part of a Westerne Wonder. 40 and here beginning You have heard of the Wonder, when Lightning & Thunder.

A quarto verse miscellany of Scottish provenance, chiefly in a single cursive hand, written from both ends, including some shorthand, inscribed (f. 1r) Incept. March. 23. 1652/3., 190 leaves, in old brown calf gilt (rebacked).

c.1653-64

Purchased c.1798.

Song ('I am old Davenant')

First published, as The Author upon himself, in Certain Verses (1653), p. 9. Banks, p. 319.

*DeJ 83
Autograph

Autograph, headed Song.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 14)
DeJ 84

Copy in Fulman's hand, headed To Sir W. Davenant, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Song To the Tune of Walsingham ('As I came from Lombardy')

First published complete in Banks (1969), pp. 321-2. Extracts in James M. Osborn, New Poems by Sir John Denham, TLS (1 September 1966), p. 788.

*DeJ 85
Autograph

Autograph, headed Song to ye tune of Walsi[n]gham.

Edited from this MS in Osborn and in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 12-13)
A Speech against Peace at the Close Committee ('But will you now to Peace incline')

First published as a broadside entitled Mr. Hampdens speech occasioned upon the Londoners Petition for Peace [Lonon, 1643]. Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 122-7.

*DeJ 86
Autograph

Autograph alteration in one line in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 95)
DeJ 87 c.1640s

Copy, headed Mr Hampdens Speech agst peace, on two folio leaves.

A large folio composite volume of verse, in various largely secretary hands, 327 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf.

Collected, and partly written, by Elias Ashmole (1617-92), astrologer and antiquary.

Betagraph of the watermark in f. 29 in Ted-Larry Pebworth, Towards a Taxonomy of Watermarks, in Puzzles in Paper: Concepts in Historical Watermarks, ed. Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Saffle and Ernest W. Sullivan, II (London, 2000), pp. 229-42 (p. 239).

Bodleian Library, Ashmole Collection (MS Ashmole 36/37 ff. 71r-2v)
DeJ 88

Copy, headed A Libell agst ye Parliamt.

A folio volume of poems chiefly on affairs of state, in professional hands, ff. 1-49 comprising poems of the 1640s, ff. 49v onwards Restoration poems up to 1681, 174 leaves (including twelve blanks), in contemporary calf, both covers stamped 1642, with remains of clasps.

Including nine poems in the Marvell canon (plus apocryphal poems); ff. 1-157 a single unit in variant styles of hand; ff. 158-62 in yet another hand on a smaller tipped-in quire of paper.

Mid-late 17th century

Among the collections of Francis Douce (1757-1834), antiquary and collector.

Cited in IELM, II.i (1993) as the Douce MS: MaA Δ 3. Marvell contents recorded and selectively collated in Margoliouth and in POAS, I and II.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Douce 357 ff. 38v-9v)
DeJ 88.5

Copy, headed A speech against peace.

A folio volume of state documents, speeches and verse, 284 leaves (plus blanks), in modern calf gilt.

Entirely in the hand of John Hopkinson (1610-80), Yorkshire antiquary, of Lofthouse, near Leeds, and comprising Volume 27 of the Hopkinson MSS. Chiefly transcribed from papers belonging to John Savile, Baron of Pontefract, and Edward Taylor, of Furnivall's Inn, Holborn.

1674

Signed bookplate of Frances Mary Richardson Currer (1785-1861), book collector, of Eshton Hall, West Yorkshire. Subsequently owned by her step-father Matthew Wilson.

Recorded in HMC, 3rd Report (1872), Appendix, p. 298.

Bradford Archives (32D86/27 ff. 223v-4v)
DeJ 88.8

Copy, headed A speech against peace.

A folio miscellany of verse and some prose, 282 pages, in calf gilt.

Entirely in the hand of John Hopkinson (1610-80), Yorkshire antiquary, of Lofthouse, near Leeds, and comprising Volume 34 of the Hopkinson MSS.

Mid-late 17th century

Signed bookplate of Frances Mary Richardson Currer (1785-1861), book collector, of Eshton Hall, West Yorkshire. Subsequently owned by her step-father Matthew Wilson.

Recorded in HMC, 3rd Report (1872), Appendix, p. 299.

Bradford Archives (32D86/34 pp. 252-3)
DeJ 89

Copy, headed Hampdens Ghost.

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, predominantly in a single secretary hand, written from both ends, 179 leaves, in 19th-century half blue morocco gilt.

c.1640s

Inscribed (f. 179r) This is Sr. Thomas Meres [or ? Maiors] Book: i.e. probably Sir Thomas Meres (1634-1715), of Kirton, Lincolnshire. Later bookplate of the Rev. John Curtis. Purchased from Mrs Ann Austin Curtis 12 October 1889.

The British Library: Egerton MSS (Egerton MS 2725 ff. 20r-1v)
DeJ 90

Copy, in an accomplished italic hand, untitled, on three pages of two conjugate folio leaves, endorsed Ballad probably in Kg. Ch.i.

Mid-17th century

Recorded in HMC 9, Salisbury (Cecil) MSS, XXIV (1976), p. 283.

The Marquess of Salisbury, Hatfield House (Cecil Papers 140/128-129)
DeJ 91

Copy, untitled, on three folio pages.

Mid-17th century

Among the papers of the Egerton family, Earls of Bridgewater.

This MS recorded in O Hehir, Hieroglyphicks, p. 43.

DeJ 92

Copy, headed Mr. Hampden's Speech against peace at a Close Comittee, to ye tune of I went from England.

A folio miscellany of Royalist (Rump) poems, in various hands, entitled in a slightly later hand A Collection of Poems & Ballads in ridicule of the Parliamty Party during the Quarrell with Ch: I, c.172 pages (and at least 40 blank leaves), with an Index of contents, in contemporary calf gilt.

Mid-late 17th century

The upper cover stamped in gilt with the crest of Edward Conway (1594-1655), second Viscount Conway and second Viscount Killultagh, politician and book collector.

DeJ 93

Copy, in double columns, untitled, on the first page of two conjugate folio leaves, endorsed Libell agat. the parl./amt..

A folio guard book of 51 miscellaneous MSS, chiefly verse, in various hands and paper sizes.

Late 17th century

Formerly MSS. 6. 16: shelfmark MSS 5.27.

Worcester College, Oxford (MS 237 item 13)
DeJ 94

Copy, headed Mr Hamdens speech occasioned upo ye Londoners petition for peace, on a single broadsheet.

A guard book of separate copies of poems, 72 pages, various sizes.

Chiefly late 17th century

Assembled by Col. Cyril Hackett Wilkinson (1888-1960), Vice Provost of Worcester College, Oxford, literary scholar. Sotheby's, 26 June 1961, lot 212. At Yale formerly Osborn Box 89. No. 7.

a microfilm of this MS is in the British Library, M/625.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 106 No. 8)
'Thou hadst not been so long neglected'

First published, as A Letter sent to the good Knight, in Certain Verses (1653), p. 10. Banks, pp. 318-19.

*DeJ 95
Autograph

Autograph, untitled.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 13)
DeJ 96

Copy in Fulman's hand, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Corpus Christi College, Oxford (MS 309 f. 52r-v)
To Sir John Mennis being Invited from Calice to Bologne to Eat a Pig ('All on a weeping Monday')

First published in Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 100-2.

*DeJ 97
Autograph

Autograph alteration of one word in the printed text.

This MS alteration recorded in Banks, p. xvii.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 73)
To Sir Richard Fanshaw Upon His Translation of Pastor Fido ('Such is our Pride, our Folly, or our Fate')

First published in Fanshawe's translation of Guarini's Il Pastor Fido (London, 1648). Banks, pp. 143-4.

*DeJ 98
Autograph

Autograph alteration in one line in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 121)
DeJ 99

Copy, headed To ye Author of this Translation and transcribed from the 1660 edition of Fanshawe's Pastor Fido.

A quarto volume comprising two principal works (the second Sir Richard Fanshawe's translation of Guarini's Il Pastor Fido), 32 leaves.

Late 17th century
Corpus Christi College, Oxford (MS 368 ff. 35v-6r)
To Sir W. Davenant ('After so many sad mishaps')

See DeJ 1-7.

To the Five Members of the Honourable House of Commons. The Humble Petition of the Poets ('After so many Concurring Petitions')

First published in Rump: or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs (London, 1662). Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 128-9.

DeJ 100

Copy, headed The Humble Peticon of the Poets to the 5 Members, on one side of a single folio leaf.

A large folio composite volume of verse, in various largely secretary hands, 327 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf.

Collected, and partly written, by Elias Ashmole (1617-92), astrologer and antiquary.

Betagraph of the watermark in f. 29 in Ted-Larry Pebworth, Towards a Taxonomy of Watermarks, in Puzzles in Paper: Concepts in Historical Watermarks, ed. Daniel W. Mosser, Michael Saffle and Ernest W. Sullivan, II (London, 2000), pp. 229-42 (p. 239).

Bodleian Library, Ashmole Collection (MS Ashmole 36/37 f. 97r)
DeJ 101

Copy, in a probably professional hand, on both sides of a single folio leaf. Mid-late-17th century.

A folio composite volume of letters, verses, academic plays and other documents, in various hands and paper sizes, 253 leaves, in 18th-century black half-calf.

Assembled by Thomas Hearne (178-1735), antiquary, who has inscribed a slip attached to the front pastedown Tho: Hearne Junij 21o. 1709.

DeJ 102

Copy, headed The humble Peticon of the Poetts to the fiue cheife Members of the house of Commons.

A duodecimo verse miscellany, in a single small hand, 54 leaves, in vellum boards.

Compiled by a Cambridge University man.

c.1640s
DeJ 103

Copy on a single folio leaf.

A folio composite volume of MS poems presented to, or owned by, James Butler (1610-88), first Duke of Ormonde, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, c.120 pages, of various sizes, in 19th-century calf.

Some items docketed by Ormonde or by his private secretary Sir George Lane.

Mid-late 17th century

Formerly British Library Loan MS 37/6. The greater part of the collection sold at Sotheby's, 19 July 1994, lot 276, to C.R. Johnson Rare Books. Photocopies are in the British Library, RP 6829.

Recorded in HMC, 14th Report, Appendix VII, Ormonde I (1895), pp. 105-18.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn MS fb 228 pp. 1-2)
DeJ 104

Copy.

An octavo miscellany of verse and prose, closely written in possibly several minute predominantly secretary hands, 291 leaves (ff. 212-16 bound out of order after f. 24), in modern calf.

c.1640s

Inscribed (f. 1r) Joseph Hall (not the bishop). Later owned by John Payne Collier (1789-1883), literary scholar, editor and forger, who has entered in pseudo-17th-century secretary script copies of various ballads on ff. 39r-41r, 107v-79r, 181r-v, 227r-8v, 243r-6r, as well as adding foliation (1-284) before the more recent foliation (1-291, used below). Quaritch's sale catalogue of English Literature (August-November 1884), item 22350, Collier's transcript of the MS made c.1860 being item 22352. Formerly Folger MS 2071.7.

Discussed, with facsimile examples, in Giles E. Dawson, John Payne Collier's Great Forgery, SB, 24 (1971), 1-26.

DeJ 105

Copy, headed To ye 5 principell Members of ye hoble:House of Commons. The humble Petition of the Poetts, subscribed Jo Denham in another hand.

A folio miscellany of Royalist (Rump) poems, in various hands, entitled in a slightly later hand A Collection of Poems & Ballads in ridicule of the Parliamty Party during the Quarrell with Ch: I, c.172 pages (and at least 40 blank leaves), with an Index of contents, in contemporary calf gilt.

Mid-late 17th century

The upper cover stamped in gilt with the crest of Edward Conway (1594-1655), second Viscount Conway and second Viscount Killultagh, politician and book collector.

To the Honourable Edward Howard Esq. upon his Poem of The British Princes ('What mighty Gale has rais'd a flight so strong?')

First published in Edward Howard, The British Princes (London, 1669). Banks, pp. 155-6.

DeJ 106

Copy, on an endpaper in a printed exemplum of Denham, Poems and Translations, 3rd edition (London, 1684).

Late 17th century

Once owned by two Cambridge men. Stuart Bennett's sale catalogue No. 2: English Verse from Chaucer to Hardy (1981), item 41.

Private owners in the UK ([Denham, Poems])
To the Tune of Arthur of Bradley ('Sir William's no more a Poet')

First published complete in Banks (1969), pp. 322-3. Extracts in James M. Osborn, New Poems by Sir John Denham, TLS (1 September 1966), p. 788.

*DeJ 107
Autograph

Autograph.

Edited from this MS in Osborn and in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 115-17)
To the Tune of Fortunes might ('Of all ill Poets by their Lumber known')

First published, as An Essay in Explanation of Mr. Hobbs…, in Certain Verses (1653), pp. 21-2. Banks, p. 320.

*DeJ 108
Autograph

Autograph.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 pp. 16-17)
DeJ 109

Copy in Fulman's hand, headed Canto 1, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Vpon the Author ('Denham come helpe to laugh')

See DeJ 37-38.

Vpon the Preface ('Room for the best of Poets heroick')

See DeJ 51-55.

Upon the Preface of Gondibert. Mars. Epig. Lasciva est nobis pagina vita proba est ('As Martials Life was grave and sad')

First published in Certain Verses (1653), p. 4. Banks, p. 320.

*DeJ 110
Autograph

Autograph, crossed out.

Edited from this MS in Banks.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 3)
DeJ 111

Copy in Fulman's hand, transcribed from Certain Verses (1653).

A quarto miscellany of verse and some prose, 129 leaves, in half-vellum on marbled boards.

Compiled and largely written by William Fulman (1632-88), Oxford antiquary.

Mid-17th century
Verses on the Cavaliers Imprisoned in 1655 ('Through the gover[n]inge part cannot finde in their heart')

First published, and attributed to Denham, by C.H. Firth in N&Q, 7th Ser. 10 (19 July 1890), 41-2. Banks, pp. 135-41. Denham's authorship rejected in O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 117-19.

DeJ 112

Copy, untitled, on a single folio leaf, endorsed by Edward Hyde, first Earl of Clarendon, Lybell of the psons impryson'd 1655.

Edited from this MS in Firth and in Banks.

A composite volume of letters and papers of the Earl of Clarendon, for April-December 1655, 296 leaves.

Bodleian Library, Clarendon MSS (MS Clarendon 50 f. 290r)
DeJ 113

Copy, untitled.

A quarto verse miscellany, probably in a single hand, written largely on rectos only and from both ends, 44 leaves (plus numerous blanks), in calf gilt (rebacked).

Mid-17th century

Inscribed (f. [iir]) Edward Pulton / Aprill 1645, and (f. 44v rev.) Edwardus Jackson 1687.

DeJ 114

Copy, headed St Jame's prisoners 1655.

A quarto verse miscellany, including (ff. 113r-15r) copies of, or brief extracts from, 30 poems by Donne (plus two apocryphal poems), in a single hand, transcribed from the 1635 or 1639 edition of Donne's Poems, headed Donnes quaintest conceits in several hands, 156 leaves (plus blanks), in modern black morocco gilt.

Late 17th century

Once owned by Thomas Rawlinson (1681-1725) and afterwards among the collections of Edward Harley, second Earl of Oxford (1689-1741).

Cited in IELM I.i (1980) as the Harley Rawlinson MS: DnJ Δ 64.

DeJ 114.5

Copy, in double columns, untitled.

A folio formal verse miscellany, comprising c.406 poems, many of them song lyrics, in various neat hands, compiled probably over a period, 8 blank leaves (pp. [i-xvi]) + 10 unnumbered pages of poems (pp. [xvii-xxvi]) + 9 numbered pages (pp. 1-9) + ff. [9v]-151v + 12 leaves at the end blank but for a poem on the penultimate page (f. [11v]), in contemporary calf gilt.

Once erroneously associated with Thomas Killigrew (1612-83), whose hand does not appear in the volume.

Mid-17th century-c.1702

Inscribed (f. [ir]) Sr Robert Killigrew / 1702. Later in the library of Sir Thomas Phillipps, Bt (1792-1872), book and manuscript collector: Phillipps MS 9070. Sotheby's, 19 May 1897, lot 455.

Discussed, with a facsimile example, in Nancy Cutbirth, Thomas Killigrew's Commonplace Book?, Library Chronicle of the University of Texas at Austin, NS No. 13 (1980), 31-8.

University of Texas at Austin (Ms (Killigrew, T) Works B Commonplace book f. 106r-v)
DeJ 115

Copy, untitled, on two folio leaves, endorsed by Dugdale Verses concerning the Prisonors at St James Gr.

A bundle of unbound papers of Sir William Dugdale (1605-86), antiquary and herald.

Mid-17th century
Sir William Dugdale, Merevale Hall (Dugdale MSS, Bundle XVI (ii) [no item number])
[Virgil's Aeneid. Books II to VI] ('While all intent with heedfull silence stand')

Unpublished. [Other versions by Denham of portions of Books II and IV published as the Destruction of Troy (London, 1656) and The Passion of Dido for Aeneas in Poems and Translations (London, 1668): see Banks, pp. 159-78, 181-9].

DeJ 116

Copy of Denham's early translation, in two italic hands, principally Hutchinson's, the second on pp. 110-35, untitled, subscribed by Hutchinson Finis Denham / W Virgilis Æneis.

This MS discussed in the Rev. Francis E. Hutchinson, Sir John Denham's Translations of Virgil, TLS (7 July 1927), p. 472; in Banks, pp. 41-3; and in O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 12-13.

A quarto verse miscellany, in possibly several hands, written from both ends, paginated 1-205, then from the reverse end 206-58 (plus blanks to 271), in old reversed calf (rebacked).

Mid-17th century

Later owned by Lucy Hutchinson's nephew Julius Hutchinson (1678-1738).

This MS is described in the online Perdita Project.

Nottinghamshire Archives (DD/Hu 1 pp. 5-135)
A Western Wonder ('Do you not know, not a fortnight ago')

First published in Rump: or an Exact Collection of the Choycest Poems and Songs (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 130-2.

*DeJ 117
Autograph

Autograph alteration in one line in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 106)
DeJ 118

Copy, headed A Libell Concerning a Misreport of Sr. Raeph Hoptons death.

A folio volume of poems chiefly on affairs of state, in professional hands, ff. 1-49 comprising poems of the 1640s, ff. 49v onwards Restoration poems up to 1681, 174 leaves (including twelve blanks), in contemporary calf, both covers stamped 1642, with remains of clasps.

Including nine poems in the Marvell canon (plus apocryphal poems); ff. 1-157 a single unit in variant styles of hand; ff. 158-62 in yet another hand on a smaller tipped-in quire of paper.

Mid-late 17th century

Among the collections of Francis Douce (1757-1834), antiquary and collector.

Cited in IELM, II.i (1993) as the Douce MS: MaA Δ 3. Marvell contents recorded and selectively collated in Margoliouth and in POAS, I and II.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Douce 357 ff. 39v-40r)
DeJ 120

Copy, untitled, subscribed Rich: Fanshaw.

A folio miscellany of Royalist (Rump) poems, in various hands, entitled in a slightly later hand A Collection of Poems & Ballads in ridicule of the Parliamty Party during the Quarrell with Ch: I, c.172 pages (and at least 40 blank leaves), with an Index of contents, in contemporary calf gilt.

Mid-late 17th century

The upper cover stamped in gilt with the crest of Edward Conway (1594-1655), second Viscount Conway and second Viscount Killultagh, politician and book collector.

DeJ 121

Copy, headed The first part of a Westerne Wonder. 39.

A quarto verse miscellany of Scottish provenance, chiefly in a single cursive hand, written from both ends, including some shorthand, inscribed (f. 1r) Incept. March. 23. 1652/3., 190 leaves, in old brown calf gilt (rebacked).

c.1653-64

Purchased c.1798.

DeJ 122

Copy, in Sir William Dugdale's hand, untitled, on a single folio leaf.

A bundle of unbound papers of Sir William Dugdale (1605-86), antiquary and herald.

Mid-17th century
Sir William Dugdale, Merevale Hall (Dugdale MSS, Bundle XVI (ii) [no item number])

Prose

The Anatomy of Play

First published in London, 1651.

DeJ 122.2

Copy, as written by John Denham Esq., subscribed Aprill 21th. Finis. Anno. 1651.

A quarto miscellany of verse and prose, almost entirely in a single hand, compiled by a university man, 134 leaves, in modern vellum.

End of 17th century-1700s

In a family library at Bath before 1924. Sotheby's, 23 July 1987, lot 11, to Quaritch.

Dramatic Works

Horace. A Tragedy. Translated from Monsieur Corneille

See PsK 573-574.

The Sophy

First published in London, 1642. Poems and Translations (London, 1668). Banks, pp. 232-309.

*DeJ 123
Autograph

Autograph alterations on nine pages in the printed text.

These MS alterations recorded in Banks, p. xviii. See also DeJ 126.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 The Sophy, pp. 6, 12, 35, 39, 43-4, 49, 81, 95)
DeJ 123.2

Extracts.

An octavo compilation of extracts from plays and poems, in a single italic hand, written on rectos only from both ends (the two sections, 48 leaves each, virtually identical), 96 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf, remains of clasps.

Late 17th century

Booklabel of the John Dryden Collection formed by Percy J. Dobell (1876-1956), bookseller.

DeJ 123.5

Extracts.

An octavo compilation of extracts from plays and poems, in a single italic hand, written on rectos only from both ends (the two sections, 48 leaves each, virtually identical), 96 leaves (plus blanks), in contemporary calf, remains of clasps.

Late 17th century

Booklabel of the John Dryden Collection formed by Percy J. Dobell (1876-1956), bookseller.

DeJ 123.8

Extracts.

A quarto miscellany of religious and political prose and verse, in English and Latin, in several secretary, italic and mixed hands, 318 leaves (including blanks, foliated on versos), in contemporary vellum boards.

Compiled over a period (entries dated between 1621 and 1667) by members of the family of Sir Marmaduke Rawdon (1583-1646), merchant, shipowner and royalist soldier.

Mid-17th century

Inscribed (f. 278r) Mary Elliston october the 27 1763 and Mary Elliston Collchester. Later owned by Edward Hailstone (1818-90), of Walton Hall, Wakefield, botanist and book collector.

York Minster (MS Add. 122 ff. 164v-9v)
DeJ 124

Transcript of the edition of 1642.

A quarto volume comprising two principal works (the second Sir Richard Fanshawe's translation of Guarini's Il Pastor Fido), 32 leaves.

Late 17th century
Corpus Christi College, Oxford (MS 368 ff. 7r-33v)
DeJ 125

Transcript of an edition.

A duodecimo miscellany of verse and prose, in Latin, Greek and English, in several hands (two predominating), probably compiled by men associated with the University of Oxford, written from both ends, c.118 leaves, in contemporary calf.

Mid-late-17th century

Inscribed names of Will. Randolph and William Burry '67 [who matriculated at Christ Church on 26 October 1666], and including (ff. 72v-59v rev.) verses by G. Yalden [? William Yalden, who matriculated at Queen's College on 21 November 1687].

Dr Williams's Library (MSS 28. 49 pp. 1-89 (ff. 73-117v rev.))
The Sophy, V, iii, Song ('Somnus, the humble God that dwells')

Banks, pp. 296-7.

*DeJ 126
Autograph

Autograph alteration of the first word of the song (changing Somnus to Morpheus) in the printed text.

A printed exemplum of Denham's octavo Poems and Translations with The Sophy (London, 1668) with his autograph additional verses on fourteen tipped-in leaves and autograph alterations in the printed text.

1668-9

Later in the library of the Rev. Thomas Corser, FSA (1793-1876), book collector, of Stand Rectory, near Manchester, and afterwards in the library of Henry Huth (1815-78), book collector. Sotheby's, 7 August 1869, lot 231, and 13 June 1912, lot 2322. Bookplates of G. Walter Steeves and James Stewart Geikie, MD.

This volume cited in W.C. Hazlitt, Inedited Poetical Miscellanies 1584-1700 ([London], 1870), [pp. 270-3]. The insertions identified as autograph in James M. Osborn's announcement, New Poems by Sir John Denham, in the TLS of 1 September 1966 (p. 788). Facsimile of two pages in DLB 126: Seventeenth-Century British Nondramatic Poets, Second Series, ed. M. Thomas Hester (Detroit, 1993), p. 106.

Yale, Osborn, others (Osborn pb 53 p. 115)
DeJ 127

Copy of the song, headed Song and here beginning Morpheus ye humble God yt dwells.

A quarto verse miscellany, comprising principally translations or imitations of classical authors, chiefly in a single cursive hand, a later hand writing over a number of pages, entitled A Choice Collection of Miscellany Poems Upon severall Subjects. Gathered out of severall Authors, by Wm. Gordon…In the Year, M.DCC,XI, c.260 pages (plus blanks), all independently paginated in separate sections, in half-morocco.

1711-12
DeJ 128

Copy of the song, in a musical setting by William Lawes.

This MS collated in Cutts, Drexel Manuscript 4041, p. 171.

A folio songbook, in a single secretary hand, some items misnumbered, 144 leaves.

c.1640s

Once owned by the Shirley family, Earls Ferrers, of Staunton Harold, Leicestershire. Also owned, and annotated, by Edward Francis Rimbault (1816-76), organist and author. Acquired in 1888.

Generally cited as the Earl Ferrers MS. Collated in Cutts, Drexel Manuscript 4041, Musica Disciplina, 18 (1964), 151-202. A complete facsimile is in English Song 1600-1675, ed. Elise Bickford Jorgens, Vol. 9 (New York & London, 1987).

New York Public Library, Music Division (Drexel MS 4041 No. 27, ff. 19v-20r)

Letters

Letter(s)
*DeJ 129 1648
Autograph

Autograph letter signed MK, to James Butler, Marquess of Ormonde, from London, 28 February [1647/8].

Edited in Kelliher, p. 5.

A folio composite volume of state letters and papers for the period January 1647/8 to November 1648, 699 leaves.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Carte 22 f. 20r)
*DeJ 130 1651
Autograph

Autograph letter signed, to Lady Isabella Thynne, from The Hague, 27 December [1651].

Edited in Kelliher, pp. 9-11, with a facsimile of the first page. Facsimile also in IELM, II.i (1987), Facsimile XIII, after p. xxiv.

A folio composite volume of state letters and papers for the period December 1650 to January 1650/1, in various hands, 660 leaves.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Carte 29 ff. 45r-6v)
*DeJ 131 1652
Autograph

Autograph letter signed, to Isabella Thynne, 8 February [1651/2].

Edited in Kelliher, pp. 11-12.

A folio composite volume of state letters and papers for the period December 1650 to January 1650/1, in various hands, 660 leaves.

Bodleian Library, other MSS (MS Carte 29 ff. 223-4v)
*DeJ 132 1660
Autograph

Autograph letter signed, in cipher, [to King Charles II], [February] 1659/60.

Edited in O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 143-4.

A folio composite volume of Clarendon's papers and correspondence for February 1659/60, in various hands, 198 leaves.

Bodleian Library, Clarendon MSS (MS Clarendon 69 f. 193r-v)
*DeJ 133 1660
Autograph

Autograph letter signed, partly in cipher, [to Edward Hyde], [February]1659/60.

Edited in O Hehir, Harmony, p. 145.

A folio composite volume of Clarendon's papers and correspondence for February 1659/60, in various hands, 198 leaves.

Bodleian Library, Clarendon MSS (MS Clarendon 69 f. 196r)
*DeJ 134
Autograph

Autograph letter signed by Denham, to Sir George Lane, 24 July 1662.

1662

Summarized in HMC, 36, Ormonde NS III (1904), pp. 19-20.

National Library of Ireland (MS 2326, p. 249, No. 1457)
DeJ 135

Autograph letter signed, to Joseph Williamson, 26 October 1666.

1666

Edited in O Hehir, Harmony, p. 202.

National Archives, Kew (SP 29/176/43, f. 66r)
*DeJ 136
Autograph

Autograph draft petition signed, [to King Charles II], concerning the rebuilding of Denham's house after the Fire of London, [?1667].

1667
National Archives, Kew (SP 29/229/130)
*DeJ 137
Autograph

Letter, in the hand of an amanuensis and signed by the dying Denham, to Henry Bennet, Lord Arlington, 5 March 1668/9.

1669

Edited in O Hehir, Harmony, p. 253.

National Archives, Kew (SP 29/257/37)

Documents

Document(s)
*DeJ 138 1631
Autograph

Denham's signature, aged sixteen, upon matriculating at Trinity College, 16 November 1631.

Oxford Subscription Register.

1615-38
Oxford University Archives (S.P. 39, Register Ac f. 155v)
*DeJ 139
Autograph

A receipt for £600 from Francis Bacon of Gray's Inn signed by both Denham and Thomas Killigrew, 9 October 1667.

1667

Puttick & Simpson's, 3 June 1878, lot 93.

Recorded in The R.B. Adam Library (London & New York, 1929) vol. III, p. 81.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Denham/Killigrew receipt])
Will
*DeJ 140
Autograph

Denham's last will and testament, signed by him, 13 March 1668/9, proved 9 May 1670.

1669

Edited in Wills from Doctors' Commons, ed. John Gough Nichols and John Bruce, Camden Society No. 83 (1863), pp. 119-23, Cited in O Hehir, Harmony, pp. 253, 256.

National Archives, Kew (PROB 10/1024)
DeJ 141

A registered copy of Denham's last will and testament of 13 March 1668/9, proved 9 May 1670.

c.1670
National Archives, Kew (PROB 11/332/57)
DeJ 142

A registered copy of Denham's last will and testament, made 13 March 1669, proved 9 May 1669, with an inventory.

1669
National Archives, Kew (PROB 32/8/45)

Miscellaneous Extracts from Works by Denham

Extracts
DeJ 144

Extracts from works by Denham.

A volume containing parallel translations from Latin of Martial's Epigrams, Other epigrammes ancient and moderne, Epigrammes or sentences epigrammelike out of classical heathen authors, and the anonymous author's own epigrams, in a single hand, with some emendations.

c.1650
DeJ 145

Extracts from works by Denham.

A quarto volume, in two hands.

274 leaves, unnumbered.

Comprising:

[Part I, ff. 12r-168r], five sermons, the first four by Donne, in the hand of Knightley Chetwode, son of Richard Chetwode, of Chetwode, Buckinghamshire, and Oakley, Staffordshire. 1625/6.

[Part II, ff. 1r-78r rev.], a verse miscellany, produced when the original blank pages were later filled from the reverse end, probably by one Katherine Butler. 1696.

1626-96

The volume inscribed as having been given to Katherine Butler by her father in May 1693.

Described in Potter & Simpson, I, 41-2.

St Paul's Cathedral (MS 52. D. 14 Part II, passim)
DeJ 146 Late 17th century

Extracts from works by Denham.

An unbound collection of unbound manuscripts of verse and other writings, in various hands and paper sizes, upwards of 100 items.

Belonging to the family and descendants of Sir William Temple, Bt (1628-99), diplomat and author.

Sotheby's, 13 December 1994, lot 43, to Figgis Rare Books.

Untraced, miscellaneous ([Temple MSS] [unnumbered item])