Notes and Queries, Number 15, February 9, 1850 by Various
page 45 of 71 (63%)
page 45 of 71 (63%)
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Cas" by "Gibbe our Cat."]
_Lay of the Phoenix._--"SELEUCUS" is informed that the Anglo-Saxon Lay of the Phoenix is contained in the _Codex Exoniensis_, edited by Mr. B. Thorpe. The Latin poem, in hexameters and pentameters, attributed to Lactantius, is given at the foot of the page. It will be found at the end of the works of Lactantius, in the small edition by Fritzsche (Lipsiæ, 1842). Fritzsche mentions two separate editions of the poem; 1. by Martini, Lunæburgi, 1825; 2. by Leyser, Quedlinburgi, 1839. C.W.G. _Lay of the Phoenix._--"SELEUCUS" (No. 13, p. 203.) asks, "Is there any published edition of the hexameter poem by Lactantius, which is said to have suggested the idea of the Anglo-Saxon _Lay of the Phoenix_?" This poem is not in hexameter, but in elegiac verse; and though, on account of its brevity, we could not expect that it would have been separately published, it is to be found very commonly at the end of the works of Lactantius; for example, in three editions before me, Basil. 1524, Lugd. 1548, Basil. 1563. That this poem, however, belongs to the Christian Cicero, at any period of his life, is more than doubtful, even by the admission of Romanists, who readily avail themselves of other compositions of similar authority. It has been sometimes ascribed to Venantius Fortunatus, and is by Sirmondus attributed to Theodulphus, Bishop of Orleans. (_Opp._, ii. 840. cf. iv. 519. Venet. 1728.) |
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