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ElizabethanEngland,byWilliam Harrison
The Project Gutenberg EBook ofElizabethanEngland,byWilliamHarrison This eBook is for the use of
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Title: ElizabethanEnglandFrom 'A Descriptionof England,' byWilliam Harrison
Author: William Harrison
Editor: Lothrop Withington
Release Date: May 30, 2010 [EBook #32593]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ELIZABETHANENGLAND ***
Produced by Chris Curnow and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file
was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
The Camelot Series.
EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS.
Elizabethan England,byWilliamHarrison 1
ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND.
ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND: FROM "A DESCRIPTIONOF ENGLAND," BYWILLIAMHARRISON (IN
"HOLINSHED'S CHRONICLES"). EDITED BY LOTHROP WITHINGTON, WITH INTRODUCTION BY
F. J. FURNIVALL, LL.D.
LONDON:
WALTER SCOTT, 24 WARWICK LANE,
PATERNOSTER ROW.
CONTENTS.
PAGE
Elizabethan England,byWilliamHarrison 2
CHAPTER I.
OF DEGREES OF PEOPLE IN THE COMMONWEALTH OFENGLAND 1
CHAPTER I. 3
CHAPTER II.
OF CITIES AND TOWNS IN ENGLAND 17
CHAPTER II. 4
CHAPTER III.
OF GARDENS AND ORCHARDS 24
CHAPTER III. 5
CHAPTER IV.
OF FAIRS AND MARKETS 34
CHAPTER IV. 6
CHAPTER V.
OF THE LAWS OFENGLAND SINCE HER FIRST INHABITATION 43
CHAPTER V. 7
CHAPTER VI.
OF THE ANCIENT AND PRESENT ESTATE OF THE CHURCH OFENGLAND 56
CHAPTER VI. 8
CHAPTER VII.
OF THE FOOD AND DIET OF THE ENGLISH 84
CHAPTER VII. 9
CHAPTER VIII.
OF OUR APPAREL AND ATTIRE 107
CHAPTER VIII. 10
[...]... CHAPTER XXIII OF THE NAVY OFENGLAND 229 25 CHAPTER XXIV CHAPTER XXIV OF SUNDRY KINDS OF PUNISHMENT APPOINTED FOR OFFENDERS 237 26 CHAPTER XXV 27 CHAPTER XXV OF UNIVERSITIES 248 APPENDIX-A. HOLINSHED'S DEDICATION 263 B. AN ELIZABETHAN SURVEY OFENGLAND 265 C. SOMEBODY'S QUARREL WITH HARRISON 266 D. HARRISON' S CHRONOLOGY 266 "FOREWORDS."[1] I am unwilling to send out this Harrison, the friend of some twenty... us the very Englandof Shakspere's day From its Parliament and Universities, to its beggars and its rogues; from its castles to its huts, its horses to its hens; from how the state was managd, to how Mrs Wm Harrison (and no doubt Mrs William Shakspere) brewd her beer; all is there The book is a deliberately drawn picture ofElizabethan England; and nothing could have kept it from being often reprinted... sundrie places & shires ofEngland, " and "by conference with diuers folk,"[8] and "by mine owne reading,"[9] together with Master Sackford's charts or Maps,"[10] Harrison notwithstanding the failure of his correspondents[11] and the loss of part of his material "scambled up," what he depreciatingly calls "this foule frizeled Treatise of mine," to "stand in lieuofadescriptionof my Countrie." But,... countrie men ofEngland, " we may be sure it was deservd; Shakspere does it too[16] (Merchant, I ii 80; Much Ado, III ii 36, etc.) Harrison' s book will inform and amuse the reader Besides writing the Descriptions of Britaine and England for Holinshed's Chronicle, WilliamHarrison also translated for it, from Scotch into English, Archdeacon Bellenden's version of Hector Boetius's Latin Descriptionof Scotland... if Cornelis of Chelmeresford saie true." In the chapter on the Parliament the only personal bit is Harrison' s saying that he copies from Sir Thomas Smith,[44] "requiting him with the like borrowage as he hath vsed toward me in his discourse of the sundrie degrees of estates in the commonwealth of England. " But in the next chapter, "Of the Laws ofEngland, " after a dull account of the Trial by Ordeal,... interesting account of the virtues of the Queen's Maids of Honour, the vices of the Courtiers; the studies of the young Ladies, and the medical powers of the old; all of them being able to cook admirably, and the Carte or Bill of Fare of the dinner having been just introduced Lastly he notes the admirable order and absence of ill-doing in the Queen's court Her "Progresses" he approv'd of He treats "Of Armour... notice of where Harrison was buried.[32] (I can't get a line from the now rector of Radwinter.) For the following abstract ofHarrison' s Will, I am indebted to Colonel Chester-(81 Nevell.) "William Harrison, Clerk, parson of Radwinter and Prebendary of Windsor dated at Radwinter 27 July 1591 to be buried at Radwinter or Windsor, as I may die at either place My goods to be divided into 4 equal parts 'of. .. this time of our two vniuersities, in each of which I haue receiued such degree as they have vouchsafed, rather of their fauour than my desert, to yeeld and bestow vpon me." Of his chapter on "Degrees of the People of England" the most interesting parts to me are those on the evil of sending young Englishmen to Italy; the anticipation of the modern J S Mill & Coöperative doctrine of the evil of too many... IX OF THE MANNER OF BUILDING AND FURNITURE OF OUR HOUSES 113 11 CHAPTER X CHAPTER X OF PROVISION MADE FOR THE POOR 122 12 CHAPTER XI CHAPTER XI OF THE AIR AND SOIL AND COMMODITIES OF THIS ISLAND 130 13 CHAPTER XII CHAPTER XII OF SUNDRY MINERALS AND METALS 143 14 CHAPTER XIII CHAPTER XIII OF CATTLE KEPT FOR PROFIT 151 15 CHAPTER XIV CHAPTER XIV OF WILD AND TAME FOWLS 161 16 CHAPTER XV CHAPTER XV OF. .. translation vnto his [Bellenden's] letter." Harrison dedicated this translation the Descriptionof Scotland to the Maister Sackford, or Secford, whose "cards," charts, or Maps, had been of such use to him in his account of the English rivers in his Descriptionof Britaine Happily for us, WilliamHarrison was not one of those dignified prigs who are afraid of writing about themselves in their books He . Elizabethan England, by William Harrison
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Elizabethan England, by William Harrison This eBook is for the use of
anyone. 1
ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND.
ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND: FROM "A DESCRIPTION OF ENGLAND, " BY WILLIAM HARRISON (IN
"HOLINSHED'S CHRONICLES"). EDITED BY