landing on the
Mountains of Ararat (fol. 521a), from the 13th century
North French Hebrew Miscellany The broadest distinction is between manuscript and printed miscellanies. Manuscript miscellanies were carefully compiled by hand, but also circulated, consumed, and sometimes added to in this organic state – they were a prominent feature of 16th and early 17th century literary culture. Printed miscellanies, which evolved in the late 17th and 18th centuries, were compiled by editors and published by booksellers to make a profit. While manuscript miscellanies were produced by a small coterie of writers, and so were constructed around their own personal tastes, printed miscellanies were increasingly aimed towards a popular audience, and bear the marks of commercially driven, money making, opportunistic endeavours. Multi-authored collections are known to exist in many forms – such as newspapers, magazines, or
journals – and the act of
commonplacing, of transcribing useful extracts and quotations from multiple sources is also well recorded. However, the formal production of
literary miscellanies came into its established form in the 16th and 17th centuries, and reached a highpoint in the 18th century. Although literary miscellanies would often contain critical essays and extracts of prose or drama, their main focus was popular
verse, often including songs. At this time poetry was still a dominant literary form, for both low and high literature, and its variety and accessibility further suited it to miscellaneous publication.
Medieval miscellanies Most medieval miscellanies include some religious texts, and many consist of nothing else. A few examples are given here to illustrate the range of material typically found. The
Theological miscellany (British Library, MS Additional 43460) was made in late 8th century Italy with 202 folios of
patristic writings in Latin. The 9th-century Irish
Book of Armagh is also mostly in Latin but includes some of the earliest surviving
Old Irish writing, as well as several texts on
Saint Patrick, significant sections of the
New Testament, and a 4th-century saint's
Life. The
Nowell Codex (BL Cotton Vitellius A. xv, ignoring a later volume bound in with it) is an
Old English manuscript of about 1000 to 1010. It is famous for the only text of
Beowulf but also includes a life of
Saint Christopher,
Wonders of the East (a description of various far-off lands and their fantastic inhabitants), a translation of a
Letter of Alexander to Aristotle, and the poem
Judith based on the
Old Testament Book of Judith. It is one of
the four Old English Poetic Codices from which the bulk of surviving
Old English poetry comes, all of which can be classed as miscellanies. The
Lacnunga is a 10th or 11th century miscellany in Old English, Latin and Old Irish, with health-related texts taking a wide range of approaches, from
herbal medicine and other medical procedures, to prayers and charms. The lavishly illuminated late 13th century
North French Hebrew Miscellany contains mostly biblical and liturgical texts, but also legal material, over 200 poems, and calendars. The large 9th-century Chinese text
Miscellaneous Morsels from Youyang, contains various Chinese and foreign legends and hearsay, reports on natural phenomena, short anecdotes, and tales of the wondrous and mundane, as well as notes on such topics as medicinal herbs and tattoos. The
Trevelyon Miscellany of 1608, an oversized illustrated manuscript of 594 pages, depicts a wide range of subjects including herbal cures, biblical stories, a list of the mayors of London, proverbs, calendars, and embroidery patterns.
Verse miscellanies . A love poem in a distinctive
hand from
The Devonshire Manuscript, 57r. Verse miscellanies are collections of poems or poetic extracts that vary in authorship, genre, and subject matter. The earlier tradition of manuscript verse continued to be produced in the 16th century and onwards, and many of these early examples are preserved in national, state, and university libraries, as well as in private collections. The
Devonshire Manuscript is a verse miscellany that was produced in the 1530s and early 1540s, and contains a range of works, from original pieces and fragments to translations and medieval verse. Compiled by three eminent women, it is one of the first examples of men and women collaborating on a literary work. Also prominent is the Arundel Harington manuscript, containing the writings of
Sir Thomas Wyatt,
Queen Elizabeth, and
Sir Philip Sidney. Into the 17th century, the two Dalhousie Manuscripts are also of literary significance, as they contain the largest sustained contemporary collection of
John Donne’s verse. Although fewer
medieval verse miscellanies have been preserved, the Auchinleck Manuscript survives as a good example: it was produced in London in the 1330s and offers a rare snapshot of pre-
Chaucerian Middle English poetry. However, most surviving manuscript verse miscellanies are from the 17th century: Printed verse miscellanies arose in the latter half of the 16th century, during the reign of
Elizabeth I (1558–1603). One of the most influential
English Renaissance verse miscellanies was
Richard Tottel’s
Songes and Sonettes, now better known as ''
Tottel's Miscellany''. First printed in 1557, it ran into nine further editions before 1587; it was not then printed again until the 18th century. Although few new miscellanies emerged during the insurrectionary years of
James I and
Charles I (1603–1649), there was a resurgence of interest during the
Restoration period and 18th century, and the vast majority of printed verse miscellanies originate from this latter period. The poetry in these miscellanies varied widely in
genre, form, and subject, and would frequently include: love
lyrics,
pastorals,
odes,
ballads, songs,
sonnets, satires,
hymns,
fables,
panegyrics,
parodies,
epistles,
elegies,
epitaphs, and
epigrams, as well as translations into English and
prologues and
epilogues from plays. The practice of
attributing poems in miscellanies was equally varied: sometimes editors would carefully identify authors, but most often the miscellaneous form would allow them to disregard conventions of authorship. Often authors were indicated by a set of initials, a partial name, or by reference to a previous poem "by the same hand"; equally often there were
anonymous or pseudonymous attributions, as well as misattributions to other authors – or even made-up or deceased persons. Within a miscellany, editors and booksellers would often exercise considerable freedom in reproducing, altering, and extracting texts. Due to early
copyright laws, lesser-known authors would regularly play no part in the printing process, receive no remuneration or
royalties, and their works could be freely redistributed (and sometimes even
pirated) once in the public domain. == Development in the 18th century ==