Staffordshire Record Office
D649/1/1
Offering evidence of Burton's part-authorship of a lost play (probably in Latin),
Among the papers of William Burton (1575-1645), Leicestershire antiquary.
Edited and discussed in Richard L. Nochimson, To my very loving brother
, but that it is not clear whether it belongs to the letter of 11 August 1605 or to some other, lost letter. Facsimile in Nicolas K. Kiessling's exhibition catalogue
Edited and discussed in Richard L. Nochimson, To my very loving brother
, but that it is not clear whether it belongs to the letter of 11 August 1605 or to some other, lost letter. Facsimile in Nicolas K. Kiessling's exhibition catalogue
D 661/11/1/7
Copy, here beginning
First published in
A paraphrase by Dyott from memory presumably of this poem: Sir Jo: Harrington in his epigrammes brings in a country fellow who had taken advise of a lawyer and when his deeds 3 weekes had bin perused told the lawyer he had no mony to give him…
.
McClure No. 331, p. 278. Kilroy, Book IV, No. 45, p. 226, a version headed
D 1287/19/6, [uncatalogued MS]
Among archives of the Bridgeman family, Earls of Bradford.
First published, as a broadside, [in London, 1679]. Antwerp
, 1680). Vieth, pp. 118-20. Walker, pp. 62-4. Harold Love,
D 1287/19/6, [uncatalogued volume]
Among the archives of the Bridgeman family, Earls of Bradford.
Copy, headed
First published in London, 1682.
The text also discussed extensively in G. Blakemore Evans,
Copy.
A satire written in 1675 by John Sheffield, Earl of Mulgrave, but it was widely believed by contemporaries (including later Alexander Pope, who had access to Mulgrave's papers) that Dryden had a hand in it, a belief which led to the notorious assault on him in Rose Alley on 18 December 1679, at the reputed instigation of the Earl of Rochester and/or the Duchess of Portsmouth.
First published in London, 1689.
The authorship discussed in Macdonald, pp. 217-19, and see John Burrows, Mulgrave had by far the major hand
. Recorded in Hammond & Hopkins, V, 684, in an Index of Poems Excluded from this Edition
.
Copy.
First published in
Copy.
First published in probably by the Ld Dorset
in Pope's exemplum of
Copy, headed
First published (anonymously) in
Copy, headed
First published, ascribed to Henry Savile, in
D 1721/3/186 [item 1]
Among the papers of the Bagot family of Blithfield, Staffordshire.
Transcripts of Ralegh's speech have been printed in his At the time of his death
: Manuscript Instability and Walter Ralegh's Performance on the Scaffold
D 1721/3/186 [item 2]
Ralegh's letter of 1618 to his cousin George, Lord Carew of Clopton (beginning
D 1721/3/246
Copy, headed
First published (in two versions) in
Copy, headed
First published in
Copy, on a single leaf.
This MS collated in part in California.
First published in London, 1671. California, X (1970), pp. 195-314 (p. 245). Kinsley, I, 125. Hammond & Hopkins, I, 221-2. This song first published in
Copy, headed
First published in
Copy of an untitled version, beginning
First published in
Copy, in a mixed hand, headed
First published, in
Copy, on two pages, sent as a letter to Mr Walter Bagott at Sr Edward Bagotts at Bliffields
.
First published in
Copy.
(Sometimes called
Copy.
Published in T. R.
. Usually anonymous in MS copies and the school variously identified as being in Castlethorpe or in Batley, Yorkshire, or in Lewes, Sussex, or elsewhere.
D3259/14/42C
First published in Internally unlike his manner
. Morris & Withington, p. 66, among Poems probably by Cleveland
. The attribution to Cleveland is dubious. The epitaph is also attributed to Clement Paman: see
D 4038/I/33
Among the archives of the Bagot family, of Blithfield Hall.
Autograph signature of Hobbes as witness to a bond, for the sum of £350 out of a total sum of £600, owed to Edmond Skory, drawn up by the London scrivener Leonard Willworth, signed by Sir William Cavendish, 4 March 1617/18.
Possibly the earliest known example of Hobbes's hand.
1618.