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Nicholas Breton and Two Songs by Dowland
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2018
Extract
In the process of editing the poems from the songbooks of the lutenist and composer, John Dowland, I have found that Nicholas Breton is the author of at least one of these poems and may have written another. Both songs were printed in A Pilgrimes Solace (1612). ‘From silent night’ (No. 10) is dedicated ‘To my louing Country-man Mr. John Forster the younger, Merchant of Dublin in Ireland.’ ‘Thou mighty God’ is a single poem divided into three parts (Nos. 14-16). Both are among Dowland's finest songs, remarkable for their emotional intensity and melodic and harmonic boldness. E. H. Fellowes, editor of English Madrigal Verse, lists no author for either poem.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright © Renaissance Society of America 1964
References
1 Oxford, 1929 (second ed.), pp. 617-618. Both songs have been recorded: the first by Alfred Deller for Vanguard, the second by Russell Oberlin for Experiences Anonymes.
2 No. 18 in Dowland. See, e.g., British Museum MS Harl. 6947, ff. 230r-231v; Harvard MS Eng. 757, ff. 175-176. See also Bond, R. W., ed., The Complete Works of John Lyly (Oxford, 1902), III, 445–447.Google Scholar
3 Copy in the Harry Elkins Widener Collection at Harvard. Orlando Gibbons also set stanza 5 of this poem. It is No. 2 of his First Set of Madrigals, printed in the same year as A Pilgrimes Solace, 1612.
4 Corser, Thomas, Collectanea Anglo-Poetica (Manchester, 1867, for the Chetham Society), Part III, 42.Google Scholar
5 Collier, John Payne, ed., Illustrations of Old English Literature (London, 1866), 1, No. 6, pp. i–ii.Google Scholar Collier reprints the 1602 edition.
6 The Works in Verse and Prose of Nicholas Breton (Blackburn, Lanes., 1879) I, Ixxiii.
7 Robertson, Jean, ed., Poems by Nicholas Breton (Liverpool, 1952), xcii–xcviii.Google Scholar
8 British Museum MS Sloane 1779, f. 208v. The poem appears without ascription in MS Egerton 2403 (ff. 38r-48r), which also contains a poem called ‘The Sad Complaint of Mary Queen of Scotts, who was beheaded in England in the reign of Queen Elizabeth.’
9 Bodleian MS Tanner 76, ff. 114r-116v.
10 See, for instance, Neale, J. E., Queen Elizabeth I (Garden City, N. Y., 1957), p. 390.Google Scholar
11 SirWotton, Henry, A Parallel betweene Robert late Earle of Essex, and George late Duke of Buckingham (London, 1641), sig. A3r.Google Scholar