Passport for Sir William Constable, granting him license to travel "beyond the seas," for the purpose of gaining experience and knowledge in foreign languages. The passport permits him to bring with him two men and such trunks of clothes and other provisions that are not prohibited, but forbids him to go to the city of Rome without first obtaining King James I's special license. The document is signed by Thomas Egerton, Baron Ellesmere and Viscount Brackley; Henry Howard, 1st Earl of Northampton; Ludovick Stuart, 2nd Duke of Lennox and Duke of Richmond; Edward Somerset, 4th Earl of Worcester; Sir Julius Caesar; and Sir Thomas Parry.
Description:
For information on the source of acquisition, consult the appropriate curator.
Subject (Geographic):
England--Foreign relations--Italy and Italy--Foreign relations--England
Subject (Name):
Caesar, Julius, Sir, 1558-1638, Constable, William, Sir, d. 1655, Egerton, Thomas, Sir, 1540?-1617, James I, King of England, 1566-1625, Lennox, Ludovick Stuart, 2nd Duke of Lennox and Duke of Richmond, 1574-1624, Northampton, Henry Howard, Earl of, 1540-1614, Parry, Thomas, Sir, d. 1616, and Worcester, Edward Somerset, Earl of, 1553-1628
Manuscript consisting of a collection of poems in English by various authors, all in one unidentified hand. Includes works attributed to Walton Poole; Henry King (1592-1669); Sir John Davies (1569-1626); Giles Hayward and Richard Corbet (1582-1635)., Manuscript on paper, in a single secretary hand, of a collection of about 144 English poems, primarily on the subjects of love, women, and marriage. Many poems are addressed to their authors' mistresses, including To Ones Mistress Thinking Her Selfe Too Younge; To His Mistress Having Stayed Long From Her; and John Donne's To His Mistress Going to Bed. The volume also contains several occasional poems, including one on King James' death and another on a son of King Charles I, and numerous satirical verses; several are dedicated to physicians, lawyers, and usurers, one mocks "a Puritan maide," and another satirizes "Sr Robert Carr Earle of Sommerset.", and P. [24] digitized at high resolution.
Description:
Binding: stitched; no covers.
Subject (Name):
Charles I, King of England, 1600-1649, Corbet, Richard, 1582-1635, Donne, John, 1572-1631, James I, King of England, 1566-1625, King, Henry, 1592-1669, and Randolph, Thomas, 1605-1635
Subject (Topic):
Anagrams , Elegiac poetry, English, English poetry--17th century, Epigrams, Metaphysics--Poetry, Occasional verse, English, Verse satire, English, and Women--Conduct of life
Autograph manuscript of a collection of didactic material. The manuscript begins with specimens of calligraphy, labeled Courte hande, Chancerie hande, Secretarie hande, cloven hande, curled hand, chayned hand, and Roman hande, as well as examples of writing in reverse and recipes for making ink, red wax, and white letters on black paper. This section is followed by arithmetic tables; measurements and conversions for dry goods as well as salmon, eels, wine, and oil; a sample genealogical chart drawn as a tree; instructions on how to use counters for counting; and a chart of the names of English kings and the years of their reigns up to James I, dated 1607. The bulk of the collection, however, consists of several hundred Latin proverbs on such topics as error, excellence, faith, honor, and ingratitude, followed by English proverbs and admonitions, and then several English proverbs translated into Latin. This section includes excerpts from King James' Basilikon Doron and How to live and that well by William Perkins. These proverbs are followed by "prettie and necessary rules for such as use to deale in merchandize, easy to be had in memorye," and, at the end of the manuscript, genealogical information for the Hill family, beginning in 1568.
Description:
Imperfect: some pages mutilated with loss of text.
Subject (Name):
Hill family, James I, King of England, 1566-1625, and Perkins, William, 1558-1602
Subject (Topic):
Arithmetic--Handbooks, manuals, etc, Calligraphy --England, Children--Conduct of life, English poetry --17th century, Genealogy--England, Proverbs, English, Proverbs, Latin, Recipes--Great Britain, and Weights and measures--England