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Cambridge (ed. M. Prickett and J. Wright), 301 (s. a. 1610-
11), describing a University Sermon by Wm. Ames, Fellow
of Christ’s, who ‘had (to use his own expression) the place
of a watchman for an hour in the tower of the University;
and took occasion to inveigh against the liberty taken at
that time, especially in such colleges who had lords of
misrule, a pagan relic which (he said) as Polidore Vergil
showeth, remaineth only in England.’ W. Ames had, in
consequence, to ‘forsake his college.’ Polydore Vergil, de
Inventoribus Rerum, v. 2 (transl. Langley, f. 102v), speaks
of ‘the Christemass Lordes’ of England.
[1495] Cooper, op. cit. ii. 112; Baker, St. John’s, ii. 573. Lords
in 1545 and 1556.
[1496] Ibid. ii. 111. A lord in 1566. Peile, Christ’s College, 54,
quotes payments of the time of Edward VI ‘for sedge when
the Christenmasse lords came at Candlemas to the
Colledge with shewes’; ‘for the lordes of S. Andrewes and
his company resorting to the Colledge.’ These were
perhaps from the city; cf. p. 419.
[1497] Dee, Compendious Rehearsal (Chronicle of John of
Glastonbury, ed. T. Hearne, 502), ‘in that College also (by
my advice and by my endeavors, divers ways used with all
the other colleges) was their Christmas Magistrate first
named and confirmed an Emperor. The first was one Mr.
Thomas Dun, a very goodly man of person, stature and
complexion, and well learned also.’ Warton, iii. 302,
describes a draught of the college statutes in Rawl. MS.
233, in which cap. xxiv is headed ‘de Praefecto Ludorum
qui Imperator dicitur,’ and provides for the superintendence
by the Imperator of the Spectacula at Christmas and
Candlemas. But the references to the Imperator have been
struck out with a pen, and the title altered to ‘de Comoediis
Ludisque in natali Christi exhibendis.’ This is the title of
cap. xxiv as actually issued in 1560 (Mullinger, University of
Cambridge, 579). The earlier statutes of 1552 have no
such chapter.
[1498] H. King, Funeral Sermon of Bishop Duppa (1662), 34
‘Here he had the greatest dignity which the School could
afford put upon him, to be the Paedonomus at Christmas,
Lord of his fellow scholars: which title was a pledge and
presage that, from a Lord in jeast, he should, in his riper
age, become one in earnest’; cf. J. Sargeaunt, Annals of
Westminster School, 64.
[1499] Records of Lincoln’s Inn: Black Books, i. 1.
[1500] Paston Letters, i. 186. The names of two gentlemen
chosen stewards this year at the Middle and Inner Temples
are mentioned.
[1501] Fortescue, de Laudibus, cap. xlix.
[1502] N. E. D. s. v. Cockney, supposes the word to be here
used in the sense of ‘cockered child,’ ‘mother’s darling.’
[1503] Records of Lincoln’s Inn: Black Books, i. xxx, 181, 190;
ii. xxvii, 191; iii. xxxii, 440; W. Dugdale, 246; W. Herbert,
314; J. A. Manning, Memoirs of Rudyerd, 16; J. Evelyn,
Diary (s. ann. 1661-2). As an appendix to vol. iii of the
Black Book is reprinted ’Εγκυκλοχορεία, or Universal
Motion, Being part of that Magnificent Entertainment by the
noble Prince de la Grange, Lord Lieutenant of Lincoln’s
Inn. Presented to the High and Mighty Charles II’ (1662).
Evelyn mentions the ‘solemne foolerie’ of the Prince de la
Grange.
[1504] Cf. p. 257.
[1505] ‘Supper ended, the Constable-Marshall presenteth
himself with Drums afore him, mounted upon a Scaffold,
born by four men; and goeth three times round about the
Harthe, crying out aloud “A Lorde, a Lorde, &c.”—Then he
descendeth and goeth to dance, &c., & after he calleth his
Court, every one by name, in this manner: “Sir Francis
Flatterer, of Fowleshurst, in the county of Buckingham. Sir
Randle Rackabite, of Rascall Hall, in the County of
Rakehell. Sir Morgan Mumchance, of Much Monkery, in the
County of Mad Mopery. Sir Bartholmew Baldbreech, of
Buttocke-bury, in the County of Brekeneck”.... About
Seaven of the Clocke in the Morning the Lord of Misrule is
abroad, and if he lack any Officer or attendant, he repaireth
to their Chambers, and compelleth them to attend in
person upon him after Service in the Church, to breakfast,
with Brawn, Mustard, and Malmsey. After Breakfast ended,
his Lordship’s power is in suspence, until his personal
presence at night; and then his power is most potent.’
[1506] W. Dugdale, 153; Herbert, 205, 254; F. A. Inderwick,
Calendar of the I. T. Records, i. xxxiv, 3, 75, 171, 183.
[1507] G. Legh, Accedens of Armory (1562), describes the
proceedings; cf. Dugdale, 151; Herbert, 248; Inderwick, op.
cit. lxiv, 219. Machyn, 273, mentions the riding through
London of this ‘lord of mysrull’ on Dec. 27.
[1508] Cf. references for Gesta Grayorum in p. 417.
[1509] Ashton, 155, quoting The Reign of King Charles (1655)
‘A Lieutenant, which we country folk call a Lord of Misrule.’
In the sixteenth century the lieutenant was only an officer of
the constable-marshal.
[1510] Dugdale, 149; Herbert, 201.
[1511] Dugdale, 202, 205; Herbert, 215, 231, 235.
[1512] J. A. Manning, Memoirs of Rudyerd, 9. Carleton wrote
to Chamberlain on Dec. 29, 1601, that ‘Mrs. Nevill, who
played her prizes, and bore the belle away in the Prince de
Amour’s revels, is sworn maid of honour’ (Cal. S. P. Dom.
Eliz. 1601-3, 136).
[1513] Dugdale, 191.
[1514] G. Garrard to Strafford (Strafford Letters, i. 507);
Warton, iii. 321; Ward, iii. 173.
[1515] Dugdale, 285; Herbert, 333; R. J. Fletcher, Pension
Book of Gray’s Inn (1901), xxviii, xxxix, xlix, 68 and passim.
[1516] His full title was ‘The High and Mighty Prince Henry,
Prince of Purpoole, Arch-duke of Stapulia and Bernardia,
Duke of High and Nether Holborn, Marquis of St. Giles and
Tottenham, Count Palatine of Bloomsbury and Clerkenwell,
Great Lord of the Cantons of Islington, Kentish Town,
Paddington and Knightsbridge, Knight of the most heroical
Order of the Helmet, and Sovereign of the same.’
[1517] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 122; Ward, ii. 27, 628; Sandys, 93;
Spedding, Works of Bacon, viii. 235; S. Lee, Life of
Shakespeare, 70; W. R. Douthwaite, Gray’s Inn, 227;
Fletcher, 107. A full description of the proceedings is in the
Gesta Grayorum (1688), reprinted in Nichols, Progresses
of Elizabeth, iii. 262.
[1518] Douthwaite, op. cit. 234; Fletcher, 72, 299; Nichols,
Progresses of James I, iii. 466. To this year belong the
proceedings of ‘Henry the Second,’ Prince of Purpoole,
printed by Nichols, Eliz. iii. 320, as the ‘Second Part’ of the
Gesta Grayorum; cf. Hazlitt, Manual, 95, 161. ‘Henry the
Second, Prince of Graya and Purpulia,’ was a subscriber to
Minsheu’s Dictionary (1617). An earlier Prince of Purpoole
is recorded in 1587 (Fletcher, 78).
[1519] Dugdale, 281, 286; Herbert, 334, 336.
[1520] Douthwaite, op. cit. 243, 245.
[1521] Percy, N. H. B. 344, 346.
[1522] Machyn, 125.
[1523] Archaeologia, xviii. 333; Ashton, 144. Other passages
showing that lords of misrule were appointed in private
houses are given by Hazlitt-Brand, i. 272.
[1524] Ashton, 144; cf. p. 407.
[1525] Hist. of Cov. in Fordun, Scotichronicon, ed. Hearne, v.
1450; Morris, 353.
[1526] Cf. p. 261.
[1527] Machyn, 162, 274. The Westminster lord seems to
have been treated with scant courtesy, for ‘he was browth
in-to the contur in the Pultre; and dyver of ys men lay all
nyght ther.’
[1528] Cf. p. 173.
[1529] Brewer, ix. 364. The lord of misrule was chosen in the
church ‘to solace the parish’ at Christmas.
[1530] Cf. p. 181.
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