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 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.