PROJECT RESOURCES / MANUSCRIPT DESCRIPTION
Oxford, Bodleian Library MS e Museo 35
Described by: Ryan Perry
Source: microfilm analysis
Revision Date: June 1st, 2010
Heading
Nicholas Love, Mirror of the Blessed Life, c. 1410-25.Condition of the MS
Some of the decorative initials at the beginning of chapters have been roughly removed with the parallel text; there are some localised examples of water damage, smudging and staining.
Number of Items
3 (although only items 1 and 3 were 'commisions' by the patron of the book); there are a number of other added sub items.
Title(s) of Pseudo-Bonaventuran Text(s)
Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ
Incipit
N/AColophon
N/A
Secundo Folio
N/A
Explicit
N/A
Languages of the MS
The main items are in English though so,e Latin items can be found in the flyleaves.
Detailed Description of Contents
1. Mirror of the Blessed Life, pp. 1-218
2. English prayer, beginning, 'Ihu my god and my maker I be com þi creature as to þe þt is my cretourur and my maker', ends, 'blysee & lowyng; pp. 219-20. This appears to be a 'filler text' that has been subseqently added in the blank space between items 1 and 3.
3. A Mirror to Lewed Men and Women, begins imperfectly, 'litel or none deuocion'; IPMEP 209; Manual 7.XX.8.; pp. 221-467.
There are a number of texts on the front flyleaves which are probably contemporary with the accomplished ink drawing of a crucifix on p. vi, which is dated 1475*:
- Latin goliardic poem, beginning, ‘Cur mundus militat’, explicit’, ‘Explicit quod Barnardus [?] insecurus [?]’, p. v.
- Latin poem on the deaths of the Apostles, begins, ‘In cruce Petrus obit’, p v.
- English verse on the canonical hours of St. George’, begins, ‘Saynt George of kyngryk of Capidous so clere’, IMEV 2902; ed. K. Hammerle, "Verstreute me und frühne Lyrik," Archiv 166 (1935), pp. 200-2; p. vii.
- A part of a large leaf containing text from a treatise on civil law (?) forms a protective bifolium before the Mirror, pp. xi-xii.
*Due to the poor quality of the film images for the flyleaves I am partially dependant on the descriptions of the MS in the Summary Catalogue for these entries
Estimated Date of Production
Using the evidence of the decoration in the book Kathleen Scott dates the book to c. 1420 ('Illustration', p. 68)
Writing Support
Parchment
Foliation
vii (v-vii original or early) + pp. 470; paginated in pen (though the page numbers are only marked on the recto sides).
Dimensions of Page and Writing Space
- Leaf size: 306-11 x 210-15
- Writing Space: 207-11 X 135-9*
*Dimensions kindly checked by Eva Oledzka from the Special Collections in the Bodleian Library.
Collation
The entire volume appears to have been constructed of quires of 8; the quire signatures in the booklet containing the Mirror to Lewed Men and Women begin at 'a', and the first leaf of this quire is missing.
Layout
1 column, 36 lines (in both items 1 and 3); no signs of pricking and lines not visible from film (though the quires were certainly ruled).
Rubrication/ Ordinatio
- Initials: New chapters marked by very high quality 6-line painted initials with a variety of spray decorations; the quality of the initials in the first gatherings, whilst high, does not appear to be in the same style or artistic quality of those which begin on p. 27 (chapter 7); the high-quality initrials bearing a similar range of motifs continue in the Mirror to Lewed Men and Women, and may well be by the same artist or 'shop'.
- Titles, Headings, Rubrics: Running headers are applied somewhat sporadically; titles and chapter numbers in text block, red ink with paraphs (alternating gold and blue) set in pen-work decoration; these paraphs also mark textual divisions; direct citations from biblical characters etc underlined in red; sidenotes underlined in red.
- Other:
Illustration
There are 7 borders in the book (beginning of proheme, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday); the two roundels at the bottom of the opening full bar border bear the letters M and N, which in combination with the arms in the shields Neville and Beaufort (the first erased but which has been examined under ultra-violet), links the book to Margaret Neville (d. c. 1426), wife of Thomas Beaufort. Both the Mirror of the Blessed Life and Mirror to Lewed Men and Women have beautifully executed spray initials at the beginning of new chapters. Click link for an image from p. 80, courtesy of the Bodleian Library.
The art-work in the manuscript has been linked to the output of an artist of the Bedford Hours (BL MS 42131). The same artist was involved in the production of the Admiralty Ordinances (BL Cotton Vespasian B. xxii) for Thomas Beaufort, the husband of Margaret Neville. The artist was invoved in the production of a number of other books for patrons of magnate rank, including Huntington Library, HM 19913, BL Arundel MS 38 and BL MS Harley 4866 (Hoccleve, Regiment) BL MS Stowe 16 (Book of Hours), Rennes, Bibliotheque Municipale, MS 22 and Bodleian Library MS Don.d.85 (Psalter) and Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale, MS anglais 25, Guy de Chauliac Cyrurgie.
Number of Scribal Hands
A: pp. xii-218 (item 1).
B: pp. 219-20 (item 2).
C: pp. 221-437 (item 3).
D: pp. 438-467 (item 3).
Style of Hands
A: Good quality Anglicana with influence of Secretary forms; similar to scripts being developed by metropolitan scribes such as the so-called Selden scribe (see Manchester, John Rylands Library MS 98).
B: uncalligraphic Anglicana.
C: -
D: -
Estimated Date of Hands
A: c. late 1st quarter C15.
B: C15
C: c. late 1st quarter C15.
D: c. late 1st quarter C15.
Scribal Annotation
1Notable Dialect Features
The dialect has been profiled to Warwickshire: Sargent writes, 'according to a characterization by Margaret Laing, the profile of this manuscript fits Warwickshire generally, and probably the northeast quadrant of the county in particular' (p. 107). My examination of the forms suggests that the deialect might be better placed slightly to the south and west, somewhere in the area where Warkwickshire meets Worcstershire and Gloucstershire. The scribes of item 3 are describe in LALME as both being of NW Lincs, although there is not a full linguistic profile for either hand (see LALME, I, p. 148).
Sample of Forms from Scribe A:
after: after, aftir, aftur
again: a3eyn
against: a3eynus
any: any
are: bene, ben
buried: biried(e)
burning: brennynge)
busy: bisy, besi
but: bot(e)
called: cleped, clepide
church: chirche
eyes: eyene
first: first(e)
flesh: flesh, flessh
gave: 3af
give: 3iue
given: 3iuen
her: hire, here
high: hie
many: many
much: miche, moche
said: seyde, seide
shall: shal, shole, shul
she: she
sister: sistere
sisters: sistres
should: shuld, sholde
strength:strenght
such: sech
them: hem
then: þan, þanne, þen
these: þese
they: þei
think: þenke
together: to gedire
two: tweyn, tuen
when: when, whan, whon (very rare)
where: wher(e)
which: whech, which
whither:
will (vb): wole
work (n): werke
work (vb): werche
yet: 3it
Sample of Forms from Scribe B:
after: affter
again: agayne
but: bote
gave: gaffe
given: gyffyn
holy: holy
life: lyffe
love: luff
only: only
said: sayd(e)
should: suld
soul: saule
strenth: strenght, strenghe
when: qwen
where: qware
which: qwylke
with: qwith
Localisable on Google Earth
(click markers to view sample dialect forms)
View Oxford, Bodleian Library MS e. Musaeo 35 in a larger mapAnnotation and Marginalia
N/A
Graffitti
N/A
Names recorded, signatures, ex libris marks
The book was probably produced for the household of Margaret Neville and Thomas Beaufort (View the illustration [opens new window]).
Notes
The dialectal location of the scribal hands in this manuscript is very interesting in respect of imagining how the book came to be constructed. Scribe A, whose letter forms look like those adopted by metropolitan scribes working on high status books might well have copied his text literatim, thus revealing the forms in his exemplar. It is interesting that these dialectal forms are not far removed from other early α books, and it may be that copies such as CUL Add. MSS 6686, 6578, and BL MS Add. 19901 preserve forms that are close to Love's own dialect, or at least those of an early copying centre for the α text.
References and Other Resources
Kathleen L. Scott, 'The Illustration and Decoration of Manuscripts of Nicholas Love's Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ', Nicholas Love at Waseda (Cambridge: Brewer, 1997), pp. 61-86.
_ _ _, Later Gothic Manuscripts, 1390-1490, 2 vols (London: Harvey Miller, 1996).
Kantik Ghosh, 'Manuscripts of Nicholas Love's The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ and Wycliffite Notions of 'Authority' ', in Prestige, authority and power in late medieval manuscripts and texts, ed. Felicity Riddy (York Manuscripts Conferences: Proceedings Series, IV), Woodbridge, etc.: York Medieval Press, 2000, pp. 17-34 (p. 28).
Mary C. Erler, 'Devotional literature', in The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, vol. III, 1400-1557, eds. Lotte Hellinga & J. B. Trapp, Cambridge 1999, pp. 495-525 (p. 517).
Anne M. Dutton, 'Passing the book: testamentary transmission of religious literature to and by women in England 1350-1500', Women, the Book and the Ungodly: Selected Proceedings of the St Hilda's Conference, 1993, Vol. 1 (eds. Lesley Smith & Jane H. M. Taylor), Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1995, pp. 41-54, at p. 53
George S. Keiser, 'Ordinatio in the manuscripts of John Lydgate's Lyf of Our Lady: its value for the reader, its challenge for the modern editor', in Medieval literature: texts and interpretation, ed. Tim William Machan (Binghampton, NY: Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1991), pp. 139-157 (p. 153)
Sargent Groupings
α1
Sargent Pages
Plate 4; intro. 53, 88, 90, 97, 105-6, 110-11, 142, 148, 159.
Sargent Number
Mu
Credits
Please note: Descriptions of Mirror MSS are indebted to: Nicholas Love, The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ: A Full Critical Edition, ed. by Michael G. Sargent (Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2005).
Heading
Condition of the MS
Some of the decorative initials at the beginning of chapters have been roughly removed with the parallel text; there are some localised examples of water damage, smudging and staining.
Number of Items
3 (although only items 1 and 3 were 'commisions' by the patron of the book); there are a number of other added sub items.
Title(s) of Pseudo-Bonaventuran Text(s)
Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ
Incipit
Colophon
N/A
Secundo Folio
N/A
Explicit
N/A
Languages of the MS
The main items are in English though so,e Latin items can be found in the flyleaves.
Detailed Description of Contents
1. Mirror of the Blessed Life, pp. 1-218
2. English prayer, beginning, 'Ihu my god and my maker I be com þi creature as to þe þt is my cretourur and my maker', ends, 'blysee & lowyng; pp. 219-20. This appears to be a 'filler text' that has been subseqently added in the blank space between items 1 and 3.
3. A Mirror to Lewed Men and Women, begins imperfectly, 'litel or none deuocion'; IPMEP 209; Manual 7.XX.8.; pp. 221-467.
-
There are a number of texts on the front flyleaves which are probably contemporary with the accomplished ink drawing of a crucifix on p. vi, which is dated 1475*:
- Latin goliardic poem, beginning, ‘Cur mundus militat’, explicit’, ‘Explicit quod Barnardus [?] insecurus [?]’, p. v.
- Latin poem on the deaths of the Apostles, begins, ‘In cruce Petrus obit’, p v.
- English verse on the canonical hours of St. George’, begins, ‘Saynt George of kyngryk of Capidous so clere’, IMEV 2902; ed. K. Hammerle, "Verstreute me und frühne Lyrik," Archiv 166 (1935), pp. 200-2; p. vii.
- A part of a large leaf containing text from a treatise on civil law (?) forms a protective bifolium before the Mirror, pp. xi-xii.
*Due to the poor quality of the film images for the flyleaves I am partially dependant on the descriptions of the MS in the Summary Catalogue for these entries
Estimated Date of Production
Using the evidence of the decoration in the book Kathleen Scott dates the book to c. 1420 ('Illustration', p. 68)
Writing Support
Parchment
Foliation
vii (v-vii original or early) + pp. 470; paginated in pen (though the page numbers are only marked on the recto sides).
Dimensions of Page and Writing Space
- Leaf size: 306-11 x 210-15
- Writing Space: 207-11 X 135-9*
*Dimensions kindly checked by Eva Oledzka from the Special Collections in the Bodleian Library.
Collation
The entire volume appears to have been constructed of quires of 8; the quire signatures in the booklet containing the Mirror to Lewed Men and Women begin at 'a', and the first leaf of this quire is missing.
Layout
1 column, 36 lines (in both items 1 and 3); no signs of pricking and lines not visible from film (though the quires were certainly ruled).
Rubrication/ Ordinatio
- Initials: New chapters marked by very high quality 6-line painted initials with a variety of spray decorations; the quality of the initials in the first gatherings, whilst high, does not appear to be in the same style or artistic quality of those which begin on p. 27 (chapter 7); the high-quality initrials bearing a similar range of motifs continue in the Mirror to Lewed Men and Women, and may well be by the same artist or 'shop'.
- Titles, Headings, Rubrics: Running headers are applied somewhat sporadically; titles and chapter numbers in text block, red ink with paraphs (alternating gold and blue) set in pen-work decoration; these paraphs also mark textual divisions; direct citations from biblical characters etc underlined in red; sidenotes underlined in red.
- Other:
Illustration
There are 7 borders in the book (beginning of proheme, Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday); the two roundels at the bottom of the opening full bar border bear the letters M and N, which in combination with the arms in the shields Neville and Beaufort (the first erased but which has been examined under ultra-violet), links the book to Margaret Neville (d. c. 1426), wife of Thomas Beaufort. Both the Mirror of the Blessed Life and Mirror to Lewed Men and Women have beautifully executed spray initials at the beginning of new chapters. Click link for an image from p. 80, courtesy of the Bodleian Library.
The art-work in the manuscript has been linked to the output of an artist of the Bedford Hours (BL MS 42131). The same artist was involved in the production of the Admiralty Ordinances (BL Cotton Vespasian B. xxii) for Thomas Beaufort, the husband of Margaret Neville. The artist was invoved in the production of a number of other books for patrons of magnate rank, including Huntington Library, HM 19913, BL Arundel MS 38 and BL MS Harley 4866 (Hoccleve, Regiment) BL MS Stowe 16 (Book of Hours), Rennes, Bibliotheque Municipale, MS 22 and Bodleian Library MS Don.d.85 (Psalter) and Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale, MS anglais 25, Guy de Chauliac Cyrurgie.
Number of Scribal Hands
A: pp. xii-218 (item 1).
B: pp. 219-20 (item 2).
C: pp. 221-437 (item 3).
D: pp. 438-467 (item 3).
Style of Hands
A: Good quality Anglicana with influence of Secretary forms; similar to scripts being developed by metropolitan scribes such as the so-called Selden scribe (see Manchester, John Rylands Library MS 98).
B: uncalligraphic Anglicana.
C: -
D: -
Estimated Date of Hands
A: c. late 1st quarter C15.
B: C15
C: c. late 1st quarter C15.
D: c. late 1st quarter C15.
Scribal Annotation
Notable Dialect Features
The dialect has been profiled to Warwickshire: Sargent writes, 'according to a characterization by Margaret Laing, the profile of this manuscript fits Warwickshire generally, and probably the northeast quadrant of the county in particular' (p. 107). My examination of the forms suggests that the deialect might be better placed slightly to the south and west, somewhere in the area where Warkwickshire meets Worcstershire and Gloucstershire. The scribes of item 3 are describe in LALME as both being of NW Lincs, although there is not a full linguistic profile for either hand (see LALME, I, p. 148).
Sample of Forms from Scribe A:
after: after, aftir, aftur
again: a3eyn
against: a3eynus
any: any
are: bene, ben
buried: biried(e)
burning: brennynge)
busy: bisy, besi
but: bot(e)
called: cleped, clepide
church: chirche
eyes: eyene
first: first(e)
flesh: flesh, flessh
gave: 3af
give: 3iue
given: 3iuen
her: hire, here
high: hie
many: many
much: miche, moche
said: seyde, seide
shall: shal, shole, shul
she: she
sister: sistere
sisters: sistres
should: shuld, sholde
strength:strenght
such: sech
them: hem
then: þan, þanne, þen
these: þese
they: þei
think: þenke
together: to gedire
two: tweyn, tuen
when: when, whan, whon (very rare)
where: wher(e)
which: whech, which
whither:
will (vb): wole
work (n): werke
work (vb): werche
yet: 3it
Sample of Forms from Scribe B:
after: affter
again: agayne
but: bote
gave: gaffe
given: gyffyn
holy: holy
life: lyffe
love: luff
only: only
said: sayd(e)
should: suld
soul: saule
strenth: strenght, strenghe
when: qwen
where: qware
which: qwylke
with: qwith
Localisable on Google Earth
(click markers to view sample dialect forms)
View Oxford, Bodleian Library MS e. Musaeo 35 in a larger map
Annotation and Marginalia
N/A
Graffitti
N/A
Names recorded, signatures, ex libris marks
The book was probably produced for the household of Margaret Neville and Thomas Beaufort (View the illustration [opens new window]).
Notes
The dialectal location of the scribal hands in this manuscript is very interesting in respect of imagining how the book came to be constructed. Scribe A, whose letter forms look like those adopted by metropolitan scribes working on high status books might well have copied his text literatim, thus revealing the forms in his exemplar. It is interesting that these dialectal forms are not far removed from other early α books, and it may be that copies such as CUL Add. MSS 6686, 6578, and BL MS Add. 19901 preserve forms that are close to Love's own dialect, or at least those of an early copying centre for the α text.
References and Other Resources
Kathleen L. Scott, 'The Illustration and Decoration of Manuscripts of Nicholas Love's Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ', Nicholas Love at Waseda (Cambridge: Brewer, 1997), pp. 61-86.
_ _ _, Later Gothic Manuscripts, 1390-1490, 2 vols (London: Harvey Miller, 1996).
Kantik Ghosh, 'Manuscripts of Nicholas Love's The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ and Wycliffite Notions of 'Authority' ', in Prestige, authority and power in late medieval manuscripts and texts, ed. Felicity Riddy (York Manuscripts Conferences: Proceedings Series, IV), Woodbridge, etc.: York Medieval Press, 2000, pp. 17-34 (p. 28).
Mary C. Erler, 'Devotional literature', in The Cambridge History of the Book in Britain, vol. III, 1400-1557, eds. Lotte Hellinga & J. B. Trapp, Cambridge 1999, pp. 495-525 (p. 517).
Anne M. Dutton, 'Passing the book: testamentary transmission of religious literature to and by women in England 1350-1500', Women, the Book and the Ungodly: Selected Proceedings of the St Hilda's Conference, 1993, Vol. 1 (eds. Lesley Smith & Jane H. M. Taylor), Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 1995, pp. 41-54, at p. 53
George S. Keiser, 'Ordinatio in the manuscripts of John Lydgate's Lyf of Our Lady: its value for the reader, its challenge for the modern editor', in Medieval literature: texts and interpretation, ed. Tim William Machan (Binghampton, NY: Medieval & Renaissance Texts & Studies, 1991), pp. 139-157 (p. 153)
Sargent Groupings
α1
Sargent Pages
Plate 4; intro. 53, 88, 90, 97, 105-6, 110-11, 142, 148, 159.
Sargent Number
Mu
Credits
Please note: Descriptions of Mirror MSS are indebted to: Nicholas Love, The Mirror of the Blessed Life of Jesus Christ: A Full Critical Edition, ed. by Michael G. Sargent (Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2005).