This page needs to be proofread.

28. WILLIAM ROY. JEROME BARLOW. Franciscan Friars . Read me, and be not wroth l [ 1528 ]. (a) Rede me and be nott wrothe , For I saye no thynge but trothe. I will ascende makynge my state so hye , That my pompous honoure shall never dye. O Caytyfe when thou thynkest least of ally With confusion thou shalt have a fall. This is the famous satire on Cardinal Wolsey, and is the First English Protestant book ever printed, not being a por- tion of Holy Scripture. See /. 22 for the Fifth such book. The next two pieces form one book, printed by Hans Luft, at Marburg, in 1530. (b) A proper dya- loge , betwene a Gentillman and a husbandman , echecom- playnynge to other their miserable catamite , through the ambicion of the clergy e, (c) A compendious old treaty se, shewynge , how that we ought to haue the scripture in Englysshe . English Reprints 29. Sir WALTER RALEIGH. GERVASE MARKHAM. J. H. van LIN- SCHOTEN. The Last Fight of the “ Revenge.” 1591- (a) A Report of the trvth of the fight about the lies of A cores, this last la Sommer . Be- twixt the Reuenge, one of her Maiesties Shippes, and an Armada of the King of Spaine. [By Sir W. Raleigh.] (b) The most honor- able Tragedie of Sir Richard Grinuile, Knight 1595 . [By Gervase Markham.] (c) [The Bight and Cyclone at the Azores. By Jan Huyghen van Linschoten.] Several accounts are here given of one of the most extra- ordinary . Sea fights in our Naval History. l 9 30. barnabe GOOGE. Eglogues, Epitaphs, and Sonnets. I 5^3- Eglogs, Epytaphes , and Sonettes Newly written by Barnabe Googe. Three copies only known. Reprinted from the Huth copy. In the prefatory Notes of the Life and Writings oj B. GOOGE , will be found an account of the trouble he had in yinning Mary Darell for his wife. A new Literature generally begins with imitations and translations. When this book first appeared, Translations were all the rage among the “ young England ” of the day. This Collection of original Occasional Verse is therefore the more noticeable. The Introduction gives a glimpse of the principal Writers of the time, such as the Authors of the Mirror for Magistrates , the Translators of Seneca’s Tragediesy &c. , and including such names as Baldwin, B a v a n d e, Blundeston, Neville, North, Norton, Sackville, and Yelverton.