Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 51.djvu/142

 6–10;, Works, ed. Elwin and Courthope, i. 93–103). Other renderings of Ovid by him are in the ‘Miscellany Poems’ of 1684 (, Collection, i. 10–15). He wrote the prologue to Sir George Etherege's ‘Man of Mode,’ a song which was inserted in that play, and the prologue to Lee's ‘Rival Queens’ (ib.) His song of ‘Myrtillo's Sad Despair,’ in Lee's ‘Mithridates,’ is included in Ritson's ‘English Songs’ (ed. 1813, i. 69–70), and the song in the ‘Man of Mode’ is inserted in the same volume (pp. 177–178).

A satirical piece, called ‘A very heroical Epistle from my Lord All-pride to Dol-Common’ (1679), preserved in the ‘Roxburghe Collection of Ballads’ at the British Museum (iii. 819), and printed by Mr. Ebsworth in the fourth volume (pp. 575–576) of his collection, is supposed to have been written by Scrope.



SCROPE, GEOFFREY  (d. 1340), chief justice of the king's bench, was younger son of Sir William le Scrope of Bolton, and brother of Sir Henry le Scrope (d. 1336) [q. v.] His mother was Constance, daughter and heiress of Thomas, son of Gillo de Newsham, variously described as of Newsham-on-Tees and of Newsham-on-Tyne (Scrope and Grosvenor Roll, ii. 10, 58). Geoffrey Scrope certainly had an estate at Whalton, near Morpeth, a few miles south-east of which there is a Newsham, but it is not upon the Tyne. Like his brother, Scrope adopted the profession of the law, and by 1316 he was king's serjeant. He is also called ‘valettus regis.’ He was summoned to councils and parliaments, and occasionally sat on judicial commissions. In 1321–2 he accompanied Edward II in his campaign against the barons, and gave sentence on Roger d'Amory at Tutbury. Both before and after this he was employed in negotiations with the Scots. He was raised to the bench as a judge of the common pleas on 27 Sept. 1323, and promoted to the chief-justiceship of the king's bench on 21 March 1324. The small estate he held as early as 1312 in Coverdale, south of Wensleydale, he augmented before 1318 by the acquisition of the manor of Clifton on Ure at the entrance of the latter dale, where he obtained a license to build a castle in that year. Early in the next reign he purchased the neighbouring manor of Masham from the representatives of its old lords, the Wautons, who held it from the Mowbrays by the service of an annual barbed arrow (ib. ii. 138;, Baronage, i. 657; Kirkby's Quest, Surtees Soc., pp. 153, 334–9). Eltham Mandeville and other Vesci lands in Kent had passed into his hands by 1318. One of Edward II's last acts was to invest him with the great castle and honour of Skipton in Craven forfeited by Roger, lord Clifford. So closely was he identified with the court party that Mortimer was alleged to have projected the same fate for him as for the Despensers (Parliamentary Writs. . ii. 244). But though Edward's deposition was followed by Scrope's removal from office, he received a pardon in February 1328, and was reinstated as chief justice. He was a soldier and diplomatist as well as a lawyer, and his services in the former capacities were in such request that his place had frequently to be supplied by substitutes, one of whom was his brother Henry, and for a time (1334–7) he seems to have exchanged his post for the (nominal) second justiceship of the common pleas. Again chief justice in 1338, he finally resigned the office before October in that year on the outbreak of the French war (cf. Scrope and Grosvenor Roll, i. 155).

In the tournaments of the previous reign, at one of which he was knighted, Scrope had not disgraced the azure bend or of his family, which he bore with a silver label for difference, and in the first months of Edward III's rule he was with the army which nearly joined battle with the Scots at Stanhope Park in Weardale (ib. i. 132). But it was in diplomatic business that Edward III found Scrope most useful. He took him to France in 1329. In 1331 and 1333 he was entrusted with important foreign missions. He had only just been designated (1334) one of the deputies to keep a watch over John Baliol when he was sent on an embassy to Brittany and France. In 1335 and again in 1337 Scottish affairs engaged his attention. Just before crossing to Flanders in 1338 Edward III sent Scrope with the Earl of Northampton to his ally the emperor, and later in the year he was employed in the negotiations opened at the eleventh hour with Philip VI. He had at least six knights in his train, and took the field in the campaign which ended blood-