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John Lane’s Verball

A lost Elizabethan dictionary project
  • John Considine
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Words in Dictionaries and History
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Words in Dictionaries and History

Abstract

In the liminary materials to an anonymously published narrative poem, The First Booke of the Preservation of King Henry the vij (1599–1600), the author announced a dictionary project, promising – four years before the publication of Cawdrey’s Table Alphabeticall – that he would “set forth a Verball, or littel Dictionarie, with a Prosodia requisite for Poetry.” After a brief account of the context in which this promise was made, I will discuss the author’s identity, which can be narrowed down with some certainty, and established with a high degree of probability, from internal evidence, the likeliest candidate being one John Lane, a member of a well-connected Staffordshire gentry family. I will also discuss the likely form of the dictionary which Lane planned, and suggest why he never completed it.

Abstract

In the liminary materials to an anonymously published narrative poem, The First Booke of the Preservation of King Henry the vij (1599–1600), the author announced a dictionary project, promising – four years before the publication of Cawdrey’s Table Alphabeticall – that he would “set forth a Verball, or littel Dictionarie, with a Prosodia requisite for Poetry.” After a brief account of the context in which this promise was made, I will discuss the author’s identity, which can be narrowed down with some certainty, and established with a high degree of probability, from internal evidence, the likeliest candidate being one John Lane, a member of a well-connected Staffordshire gentry family. I will also discuss the likely form of the dictionary which Lane planned, and suggest why he never completed it.

Heruntergeladen am 28.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1075/tlrp.14.06con/html?lang=de
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