Notes and Queries, Number 51, October 19, 1850 by Various
page 15 of 117 (12%)
page 15 of 117 (12%)
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"Abbatis pars prima notis que fulget aliemis Est vindelini pressa labore mei: Cuius ego ingenium de vertice palladis ortum Crediderim. veniam tu mihi spira dabis." 12. Is it not unquestionable that Heroldt's _Promptuarium Exemplorum_ was published at least as early as his _Sermones_? The type in both works is clearly identical, and the imprint in the latter, at the end of _Serm._ cxxxvi., vol. ii., is Colon. 1474, an edition unknown to very nearly all bibliographers. For instance, Panzer and Denis commence with that of Rostock, in 1476; Laire {325} with that of Cologne, 1478; and Maittaire with that of Nuremberg, in 1480. Different statements have been made as to the precise period when this humble-minded writer lived. Altamura (_Bibl. Domin._, pp. 147. 500.) places him in the year 1400. Quetif and Echard (i. 762.), Fabricius and Mansi (_Bibl. Med. et inf. Latin._), prefer 1418, on the unstable ground of a testimony supposed to have proceeded from the author himself; for whatever confusion or depravation may have been introduced into subsequent impressions, the _editio princeps_, of which I have spoken, does not present to our view the alleged passage, viz., "à Christo autem transacti sunt _millequadringenti decem et octo_ anni," but most plainly, "M.cccc. & liij. anni." (_Serm._ lxxxv., tom. ii.) To this same "Discipulus" Oudin (iii. 2654.), and Gerius in the Appendix to Cave (p. 187.), attribute the _Speculorum Exemplorum_, respecting which I have before proposed a Query; but I am convinced that they have confounded the _Speculum_ with the _Promptuarium_. The former was first printed at Deventer, A.D. 1481, and the compiler of it enters upon his prologue in the following striking style: "Impressoria arte jamdudum longe lateque per orbem diffusa, multiplicatisque libris quarumcunque fere materiarum," &c. |
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