The London Thornton Manuscript is a medieval manuscript compiled and copied by the fifteenth-century English scribe and landowner Robert Thornton. The manuscript was long considered a miscellany, but is more properly called a collection of spiritual texts.[1]
Contents
edit- Wynnere and Wastoure (unique)
- The Parlement of the Thre [sic] Ages (only complete copy)
- The Sege of Melayne (unique)
- The Four Leaves of the Truelove (one of two extant copies)
- Rowland and Otuel
- "Have Mercy of Me" (Psalm 51)
- alliterative rendering of Psalm 51. Since at least two leaves are missing, translation breaks off after l. 134; a complete version would have had more than 240 lines.[2]
- The Virtues of the Mass
References
edit- Notes
- Bibliography
- Fein, Susanna Greer (1989). "'Haue Mercy of Me' (Psalm 51): An Unedited Alliterative Poem from the London Thornton Manuscript". Modern Philology. 86 (3): 223–41. doi:10.1086/391701. S2CID 161094763.
- Thompson, John J. (1979). "Lincoln Cathedral Library MS. 91: Life and Milieu of the Scribe". Studies in Bibliography. 32: 158–79.
- Keiser, George R.. (1983). "More Light on the Life and Milieu of Robert Thornton". Studies in Bibliography. 36: 111–19.
- Thompson, John J. (1987). Robert Thornton and the London Thornton manuscript: British Library MS Additional 31042. D.S. Brewer. ISBN 978-0-85991-190-0.