26 ACCOUNTS, ETC., OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM. 



The Komance of " Fierabras." Printed by Guillaume Le 

 Roy, Lyons, c. 1485. With 48 woodcuts. 



" Meditatione sopra la Passione del Nostro Signore." 

 Printed by Hieronymus de Sanctis, Venice, 1487. With 11 

 woodcuts. 



" Danse Macabre," Printed by Gui Marchant, Paris, c. 1494. 

 In three parts : Part 1. " La Danse des Hommes." Part 2^ 

 " La Danse des Femmes." Part 3, " Les trois mors et les trois 

 vifz." With numerous and beautiful woodcuts and large 

 capitals. 



"Danse Macabre." Printed by Matthias Huss, Lyons, 1499. 

 With numerous woodcuts, for the most part copied from the 

 Paris editions of Couteau and Menart and of Gui Marchant. 



" The Castell of Laboure." Translated from the French 

 of Pierre Gringore by Alexander Barclay. Printed by Richard 

 Pynson, London, c. 1505. With 29 woodcuts and ornamental 

 capitals. The only perfect copy known. 



" Flower of the Commandments." Translated from the 

 French by Andrew Chertsey. Printed by Wynkyn de Worde, 

 London, 1510. With woodcut illustrations and capitals. 



" Hundred Merry Tales." Printed by John Rastell, London, 

 c. 1526. The only known copy of this edition. A copy of 

 another edition is in the University Library at Gottingen. The 

 book is quoted in " Much Ado about Nothing," Act II., Scene L, 

 where Beatrice says " that I had my good wit out of the 

 Hundred Merry Tales." 



"The Summoning of Everyman." Printed by John Skot, 

 London, c. 1530. The only known copy of this edition. 



"Interrogatories to Churchwardens, Anno 1558." Printed 

 by Robert Caly, London, 6 April, 1558. 



A volume of ballads, consisting of 74 sheets, a few of which 

 contain more than one ballad. The earliest of these ballads is 

 dated 1559; the great majority are printed between 1559 and 

 1572, a few belong to the period between 1572 and 1600, while 

 one bears the date 1615. The volume forms one half of the 

 collection of ballads acquired by George Daniel, the other half 

 of which is in the Library at Britwell Court. 



Broke, Arthur : " The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and 

 Juliet, written first in Italian by Bandell and now in Englishe 

 by Ar. Br." Printed by Richard Tottell, London, 1562. 



Two other copies only are known, one in the Bodleian 

 Library, the other, which is imperfect, in the Library of Trinity 

 College, Cambridge. 



Googe, Barnabe : '• Eglogs, Epytaphes, and Sonettes." 

 Printed by Thomas Colwell for Rudolph Newbery, London, 

 1563. 



