Research Catalog

Rede me and be nott wrothe, for I saye no thinge but trothe. Written by William Roy and Jerome Barlow ... printed by John Schott at Strasburg in 1528. A proper dyaloge betwene a gentillman and a husbandman, eche complaynynge to other their miserable calamite through the ambicion of the clergye, together with A compendious olde treatyse shewynge howe that we ought to haue the Scripture in Englysshe, written by a Lollard about 1450 A.D.: printed by Hans Luft at Marburg, Hesse, in 1530; from the unique copy in the British Museum ...

Title
Rede me and be nott wrothe, for I saye no thinge but trothe. Written by William Roy and Jerome Barlow ... printed by John Schott at Strasburg in 1528. A proper dyaloge betwene a gentillman and a husbandman, eche complaynynge to other their miserable calamite through the ambicion of the clergye, together with A compendious olde treatyse shewynge howe that we ought to haue the Scripture in Englysshe, written by a Lollard about 1450 A.D.: printed by Hans Luft at Marburg, Hesse, in 1530; from the unique copy in the British Museum ...
Author
Roy, William, active 1527-1531.
Publication
Westminster, A. Constable and Co., 1895.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance PR2337.R98 R42 x, 1895Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Barlow, Jerome, active 1527
  • Arber, Edward, 1836-1912
Description
184 p.; 17 cm.
Series Statement
English reprints. [28]
Alternative Title
  • Proper dyaloge betwene a gentillman and a husbandman.
  • Compendious olde treatyse shewynge howe that we ought to haue the Scripture in Englysshe.
Subject
  • Wolsey, Thomas, 1475?-1530
  • Wolsey, Thomas, 1475?-1530 > Poetry
  • 1500-1599
  • Anti-Catholicism > England > Poetry
  • Religious satire, English
  • Verse satire, English
  • English poetry
  • England > Church history > 16th century > Poetry
Genre/Form
  • Church history
  • Poetry
Note
  • On cover: Arber's English reprints.
  • With reproduction of the original title-pages.
  • "Rede me and be nott wrothe" is a satire in verse directed against Cardinal Wolsey.
  • "A proper dyaloge betwene a gentillman and a husbandman" is attributed to William Roy by the British Museum Catalogue and the Dictionary of National Biography.
Bibliography (note)
  • Bibliography: p. [18]
Processing Action (note)
  • committed to retain
LCCN
^^^13001479^
OCLC
  • 5242900
  • SCSB-11721626
Owning Institutions
Harvard Library