IntroductionThe main manuscript sources of Dunbar's poems have long been known to scholars: namely, the Bannatyne MS (National Library of Scotland, Adv. MS 1.1.6); the Maitland Folio MS (Magdalene College, Cambridge, Pepys Library, MS 2553); the Reidpeth MS (Cambridge University Library, MS Ll. 5. 10); and the Asloan MS (National Library of Scotland, MS 16500), the last manuscript originally including a number of other poems by Dunbar which are recorded in the list of contents but now lacking.
A few other manuscripts in which particular poems appear are recorded (DuW 55, DuW 75, DuW 130, DuW 151-152, DuW 159, DuW 181-184, DuW 189). No examples of Dunbar's own handwriting are known to survive.
The only other early textual source is the Chepman and Myllar Prints. This is a collection of printed tracts, the only extant but imperfect exemplum of which is preserved in the National Library of Scotland. The first nine of the tracts, which include seven poems at present attributed to Dunbar, were printed in Edinburgh in or about the year 1508 by Walter Chepman and Androw Myllar. The collection was reprinted in Stevenson (1918), and reproduced in facsimile in The Chepman and Myllar Prints, ed. William Beattie (Edinburgh Bibliographical Society, 1950), and (on CD) in The Chepman and Myllar Prints: Digitised facsimiles with introduction, headnotes, and transcription, ed. Sally Mapstone (Scottish Text Society and the National Library of Scotland, 2008). Otherwise, so far as is known, Dunbar's poems were not printed until the eighteenth century, when Scottish anthologists like Allan Ramsay, Lord Hailes, and John Pinkerton published selections from the manuscript sources.
A few additional transcripts of poems by Dunbar made in 1793 and afterwards by Joseph Ritson, George Chalmers, and David Laing can be found in Edinburgh University Library (MS La. III. 476).
Peter Beal