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singham, at Boston, at Lincoln, at Ipswiche, and I cannot tell where."--Wilson's _Rule of Reason_, 1551, 8vo. sign S ii _verso_. In Percy's _Reliques_, ii. 91, is the ballad "As I went to Walsingham." "Have with you to Walsingham" is mentioned as a musical composition in Ward's _Lives of the Professors of Gresham College_. See also Burney's _Hist. of Music_, iii. p. 111. When people employed this form of adjuration, as was formerly very common, they were said, for brevity's sake, "to swear Walsingham." In the play of _The Weakest Goeth to the Wall_, 1600, 4to. Barnaby Bunch the Botcher sings: "King Richard's gone to Walsingham, To the Holy Land!" with what are intended for comic interlocutions. In March, 1502--3, Elizabeth of York, consort of Henry VII, made an oblation of six shillings and eightpence to "oure lady of Walsingham" (_Privy Purse Expenses of Elizabeth of York_, edited by Nicolas, p. 3). This offering may not appear very large, but it was thought a considerable sum to devote to the purpose in those days; for in the _Northumberland Household Book_, ed. 1827, p. 337, we find that the yearly offering of the Earl of Northumberland (Henry Algernon Percy, 5th. Earl, b. 1478, d. 1527) to the same shrine was fourpence. There is a fuller account of the Shrine of Walsingham, &c., in Chappell's _Popular Music of the Olden Time_, 121, et seqq. [259] It is just possible that this individual may be identical with the "John Reynolde" mentioned in the subjoined extract from the _Privy Purse Expenses of Elizabeth of York_, under date of December, 1502:-- "It[=m] the xvth day of Decembre, to John Reynolde for money by him payed to a man that broke a yong hors of the Quenes at Mortymer by the space of v wekes, every weke iis. s[=m]. xs." + _Of the yonge man of Bruges, and his spouse._ lxxiii. + A yonge man of Bruges, that was betrouthed to a fayre mayden, came on a tyme, whan her mother was out of the way, and had to do with her. Whan her mother was come in, anone she perceyued by her doughters chere, what she had done; wherfore she was so sore displesed, that she sewed a diuorse, and wolde in no wyse suffre that the yonge man shulde marye her daughter. Nat longe after, the same yonge man was maryed to an other mayden of the same parysshe: and as he and his wyfe satte talkynge on a tyme of the forsayde dammusell, to whome he was betrouthed, he fell in a nyce[261] laughyng. Whereat laugh ye? quod his wyfe
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