| PAGE | |
Adam Bell, Clym of the Clough and William of Cloudesly |
147 |
| Captain Ward and the Rainbow | 219 |
| Gest of Robyn Hode, A | 1 |
| Henry Martyn | 213 |
| John Dory | 216 |
| Johnny o’ Cockley’s Well | 177 |
| Outlaw Murray, The | 183 |
| Robin and Gandeleyn | 92 |
| Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne | 128 |
| Robin Hood and the Monk | 96 |
| Robin Hood and the Potter | 113 |
| Robin Hood’s Death | 140 |
| Sir Andrew Barton | 196 |
| Sweet Trinity, The | 224 |
| PAGE | |
| As it befell in midsummer-time | 197 |
| As it fell on a holy-day | 216 |
| Ettrick Forest is a fair forest | 183 |
| I heard a carping of a clerk | 92 |
| In merry Scotland, in merry Scotland | 213 |
| In summer, when the leavës spring | 113 |
| In summer, when the shaws be sheen | 96 |
| I will never eat nor drink, Robin Hood said | 141 |
| Johnny he has risen up i’ the morn | 178 |
| Lythe and listin, gentilmen | 6 |
| Mery it was in grene forest | 148 |
| Sir Walter Raleigh has built a ship | 225 |
| Strike up, you lusty gallants | 219 |
Printed by T. and A. Constable, Printers to His Majesty at the Edinburgh University Press
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⁂ The purpose of this book is to provide an anthology of English lyrical poetry earlier than the advent of the Sonnet with Wyatt and Surrey during the sixteenth century. It includes 152 poems, ranging between 1225 and 1550 A.D., an essay on Some Aspects of Mediæval Lyric by E. K. Chambers, and full notes.
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