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P. cexciv. l. 1. Absolution was occasionally granted to persons after death; chiefly, as it would seem, that they might obtain the rites of Christian burial. A commission from the archbishop of Canterbury for this purpose, is printed in the Concilia. A certain man had died excommunicate, and not only an absolution is ordered to be pronounced, but prayers and psalms, usual at such solemnities. What these were, does not appear. tom. 2. p. 531. This was in the year 1326. Another was granted, in 1369. Also by the archbishop. Some years ago a stone coffin was discovered in the cloisters of Chichester cathedral, and close by it, was found a thin plate of lead, with a form of absolution upon it, granted to Geoffry bishop of Chichester in 1088. Archæol. vol. 23. p. 419. It is not improbable, that in such cases, of persons absolved from ecclesiastical censures after death, the absolution was buried with them.

P. 42. "ante ostium ecclesiæ." It appears almost needless to remind the reader of Chaucer's Wife of Bath:

"She was a worthy woman all hire live,

Housbondes at the chirche dore had she had five.” prol. 461. And compare the account of the marriage in the merchant's tale:

"Forth cometh the preest, with stole about his nekke,

And bade hire be like Sara and Rebekke; etc." l. 9577.

There is a remarkable passage, in the evidence relating to Sir William Plumpton's second marriage, taken before the Ecclesiastical Court in the year 1472, which shews, that marriages were performed sometimes, not at the door of the church, but at the door of the chancel; that is, I suppose, of the rood-screen.

"Richard Clerk, parish clerk of Knaresborough, deposed-that very early in the morning of the said Friday came the said Sir William and Joan to the parish church of Knaresborough—, and, they standing at the door of the chancel of the said church within the said church, the aforesaid John Brown, [then vicar,] came from the high altar in his vestments and solemnized marriage between them in the presence of the deponent; etc." Plumpton correspondence, pref. p. lxxvj.

VOL. II.

P. xxxv. Since the publication of the two first volumes of this work, I have found two other manuscript Prymers. One of these is in the library of Queen's college, Oxford: (S. 20. in arch.) imperfect, of about the year 1420. It has the word "corinnice" in the version of the two psalms, vol. 2. p. 22: but the "hours of the cross," are in rhyme, thus agreeing with the manuscripts in the Bodleian, and at Cambridge.

The other is in the Ashmolean library at Oxford: No. 1288. which I have not yet had an opportunity to examine. The kindness of a friend enables me to state that its contents are much the same with those of the other copies.

P. xliv. l. 10. About the year 1459, a monk at Bolton Abbey is requested in a letter to send a prymer: "as ever I be saved, she praied me write for either salter or primmer." Plumpton Correspondence. pref. p. xxxix. In the year 1500, among the presentments to the commissary of the diocese of London, occurs: "Avicia Godfrey notatur officio quod subtraxit quendam librum, vocatum a premar Elisabetha Sekett ser

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viente W. Ward extra ecclesiam, etc." Hale's Precedents, No. ccxliij.

Archdeacon

The learned editor seems to have been in error, in stating this to have been a case of "taking a book from the church." I do not remember any example of a prymer, among the service books of a church; nor would there have been any need of such a book, for the purpose of public and general prayer.

P. xlix. 1. 8. The Prymer was not confined to the Church of England; it was authorised abroad also, for the use of the laity. These books are however of great rarity. The Dutch copies the most frequently occur: and I know one, in French, in a private library. A very remarkable printed Spanish Prymer, (Simon Vostre, 8vo.) has lately been purchased for the library of the British Museum,

Benedictus Dominus Deus: a saeculo et in saeculum.

Inder to the Third Uolume.

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