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Mus. 365-6

Manuscript. Metrical psalms in English and French, and sacred and secular songs, scored for one and two voices with continuo; English, mid 17th century. The two volumes function partly as a two-partbook set (in which case Mus. 356 gives the texted upper voice-part in score with unfigured bass, Mus. 366 the texted lower voice-part); elsewhere the two volumes are independent of one another in terms of repertory.

The contents of Mus. 365-6 seem to have been copied by a single unidentified scribe (notwithstanding some small variants in the hand). His identity may be implied by the three pieces attributed to 'S.C.' (items 33, 47 and 60), all of which are apparently unique to this source. A possible candidate is Simon Coleman, organist and master of the choristers at New College, Oxford, c.1640-8. This hypothesis would align with the following facts: (a) Mus. 365-6 apparently reached Christ Church as part of the Goodson bequest; (b) Richard Goodson Sr had been organist of New College in the decade 1682-92, and was therefore a successor to Coleman; (c) Goodson's bequest included several music-books that are definitely of New College provenance; for details, see the entry for Mus. 93.

Many of the pieces in Mus. 365-6 are unidentified. For music incipits, see Godfrey E. P. Arkwright, Catalogue of [manuscript] music in the Library of Christ Church Oxford, Part II: 'MS. works of unknown authorship, (i) Vocal' (Oxford, 1923). This lists the unidentified works in the following order:

  • pp. 53-7: two-voice works with English texts, listed alphabetically by incipit;
  • pp. 57-64: French-texted metrical psalms, listed by psalm-number (1-50);
  • p. 65: works with English texts for which the partbooks supply only a bass voice, listed alphabetically by incipit.
Items 1-40 in the inventory below represent the entire contents of Mus. 365, and are listed in the order in which they appear in that volume; cross-references to Mus. 366 are given where relevant. Items 41-64 are unique to Mus. 366, and again are listed in the order in which they appear in the volume. Comments on individual items:
  • Item 1: equivalent to the entire musical contents of A paraphrase upon the psalmes of David. By G[eorge]. S[andys]. Set to new tunes for private devotion: and a thorow base, for voice, or instrument. By Henry Lawes[,] Gentleman of his Majesty's Chappell Royall (London, 1637/8), of which Christ Church has a copy at shelfmark C.2.2.10. In Mus. 356-6, only selected continuation stanzas are supplied. In Mus. 356, superscript numbers added to the treble part appear to be a rudimentary form of tablature that refers to the courses of a plucked string instrument.
  • Items 2-31: an unidentified cycle of 30 sacred songs for two voices (treble and bass) and continuo. In Mus. 366, the music is copied at the rear with the volume inverted.
  • Items 32-4: the texts are taken from Christopher Harvey's The synagogue (1640 and later editions; there is a copy of the 1647 edition at Christ Church at shelfmark a.2.4(2)). Item 32 is the second stanza of 'Alas, my Lord is going'; items 33-4 set the opening stanzas of their respective poems. In Mus. 366, the music is copied at the rear with the volume inverted.
  • Item 35: equivalent to the entire musical contents of George Withers, The hymns and songs of the church, with musical settings by Orlando Gibbons (various editions, all London, 1623; no copy in the Christ Church collections). For comments on the relationship between the printed editions and the copies in Mus. 365-6, see Orlando Gibbons: II. Full anthems, hymns and fragmentary verse anthems, ed. David Wulstan, Early English Church Music, 21 (London, 1978), p. 204. In Mus. 365-6, continuation stanzas are selectively provided at the foot of the page.
  • Items 35, 37 and 51: tunes and accompanying basses (copied in score) for Psalms 1-50 in the version of the Calvinist psalter of Marot/de Bèze. For Psalms 1-2, separate bass parts are provided in Mus. 366, but thereafter the copyist seems to have decided that scores alone would suffice, and abandoned the two-partbook format. The copy of Psalm 36 (Mus. 366, ff. 30v-31r) is underlaid both in French and with the English text 'Yee children which doe serve the Lord'. The copies of Psalms 41 and 42 are incomplete in Mus. 366 owing to the loss of a leaf after f. 34. For a printed edition (1611) of the standard psalm-tunes, see Mus. 340.
  • Item 37: texted treble and bass parts, copied in score.
  • Items 39-40: copied at the rear of Mus. 365 with the volume inverted.
  • Items 41-5 and 47: texted bass-parts only; the texts are in prose.
  • Item 46: texted bass part only.
  • Items 48-9: texted bass parts only, harmonizing the standard tunes for these psalms.
  • Items 52-64: copied at the rear of Mus. 366 with the volume inverted. Texted bass parts only.
  • Items 52-7: from Coprario's Songs of mourning (London, 1606). A copy of the latter publication is known to have formed part of Aldrich's bequest to Christ Church; it is listed in Archives 1717 at position H12, but was taken from Christ Church in the 19th century, and is now the copy in the British Library at shelfmark K.2.g.8.
  • Item 58: apparently a dialogue, represented here by the bass voice only, with text-cues to the missing upper part ('Dorinda'). Incomplete at the end owing to the loss of a leaf between ff. 48 and 49.
  • Item 60: the words of this piece are also found in Oxford, Bodleian Library, MS Rawl. Poet. 23, a collection of anthem texts compiled for one of the royal chapels c.1625-35.
Table of titles and composers as shown in the manuscript. Display in modern form.
The first column gives the modern numbering of the pieces; the second shows numbering used by the copyist(s).
 Mus. 365Mus. 366
1   [Henry Lawes] [Complete musical contents of 'A paraphrase upon the psalmes of David. By George Sandys' (London, 1637/8)] ff. 1r-13r ff. 1r-12v
2 1   My dayes are full of cumber f. 14r f. 57v
3 2   Thers no greife soe tormenting f. 14v f. 57v
4 3   Twas mortall sin that gave my soule this wounding f. 15r f. 57r
5 4   Poore soule bethinke thee what thou hast comitted f. 15v f. 57r
6 5   A Broken contrit spiritt trusting O lord in thee f. 16r f. 56Av
7 6   The faith that's firmely grounded f. 16v f. 56Av
8 7   Lord rebuke not my faults f. 17r f. 56Ar
9 8   My sin in sorrow endeth f. 17v f. 56Ar
10 9   Ay mee sin hath bereft mee f. 18r f. 56v
11 10   Give mee o lord the comfort of thy spiritt f. 18v f. 56v
12 11   Thes prayers o lord which my weake faith presenteth f. 19r f. 56r
13 12   My soule with love of thee o Lord f. 19v f. 56r
14 13   My teares and my petitions f. 20r f. 55v
15 14   Now dangers compass mee f. 20v f. 55v
16 15   My soule with sin oppressed f. 21r f. 55r
17 16   The pleasant plants greene herbes f. 21v f. 55r
18 17   Alass howe comes this vine f. 22r f. 54v
19 18   If such a spoyle betide a vine f. 22v f. 54v
20 19   Lord what is man thinke I f. 23r f. 54r
21 20   Thou badst mee call o lord f. 23v f. 54r
22 21   To sing her makers praises f. 24r f. 53v
23 22   If thou o lord doe not vouchsafe f. 24v f. 53v
24 23   Thy sweete mercy lord remember f. 25r f. 53r
25 24   I knowe my god thou art in christ well pleased f. 25v f. 53r
26 25   Loe I come when thou cal'st mee f. 26r f. 52v
27 26   Holy lord whom the heaven f. 26v f. 52v
28 27   My soule why art thou vexed f. 27r f. 52r
29 28   See lord my soule is straying f. 27v f. 52r
30 29   fly away[,] tempter leave mee f. 28r f. 51v
31 30   Still as my wounds distress mee f. 28v f. 51v
32     Cheere up thy drooping spirits f. 29r f. 51r
33   S: C Turne in my lord, turne into mee f. 29v f. 50v
34     Unfold thy face unmaske thy ray f. 30r f. 50r
35   [Orlando Gibbons] [Complete musical contents of George Withers, 'The hymns and songs of the church' (various editions, all London, 1623)] ff. 30v-39v ff. 19v-27v
36     [French metrical psalms 1-20, in the versions of Marot/de Bèze] ff. 40r-55v ff. 29r-30r
37   Mr William Child Ye sonns of Sion now rejoyce ff. 56v-58r  
38     [French metrical psalms 21-35, in the versions of Marot/de Bèze] ff. 58v-68v  
39     25: psalm [untexted; two versions; treble and bass in score] f. 69v  
40   [John Wilson] Clora's false love made Clora weepe f. 69r  
41     O God the heathen are come   f. 13r
42     O pray for the peace of Jerusalem   ff. 13v-14r
43     ... And loe, the Angell of the Lord came upon them   ff. 14v-15r
44     Why do the heathen soe furiously rage togeather   ff. 15v-16r
45     O come lett us sing unto the Lord   ff. 16v-17v
46   [John Wilson] When Troy towne for ten yeares warres   f. 18r
47   S: C: O God wherefore art thou absent from us ['2 voc.']   ff. 18v-19r
48     All people that on earth doe dwell   f. 28r
49     Give Laud unto the Lord   f. 28v
50     Attend my people and give eare   f. 30r
51     [French metrical psalms 36-50, in the versions of Marot/de Bèze]   ff. 30v-43r
52   [John Coprario] O griefe, how divers are thy shapes   f. 60v
53   [John Coprario] Tis now dead night   f. 60r
54   [John Coprario] Fortune and glory   f. 59v
55   [John Coprario] So parted you   f. 59r
56   [John Coprario] How like a golden dreame   f. 58v
57   [John Coprario] When pale famine   f. 58r
58     I shall goe to Elizium   ff. 49v-r
59     Mount up my soule to Sion hill   f. 48v
60   S:C Arise shine for thy light is come   ff. 48r-47v
61   Mr [John] Jenkins Welcome pure thoughts ['2 voc.']   ff. 47r-46v
62   Mr [John] Jenkins Victorious tyme whose winged feete ['2 voc.']   ff. 46r-45v
63   [Henry Lawes] While I listen to thy voice   f. 45r
64     Attend my people and give eare [alternative version of no. 50 above]   f. 44v

The contents of Mus. 366 are copied in the following order: (A) at the front of volume: items 1, 41-7, 35, 36 (Psalms 1-2 only) and 50-51; (B) at the rear with the volume inverted: items 52-7, 2-34 and 58-64.

Oblong format, 233 x 120 mm. Physical descriptions:

  • Mus. 365: 69 surviving leaves, foliated in modern pencil. Collation unclear because of the tightness of the binding, but probably regularly in sixes (A6, B6 etc.). A stub at the rear of the volume contains a fragment of a solmization table apparently copied by Richard Goodson Sr; this suggests that the partbooks were used for pedagogical purposes around 1700. Mid 17th-century binding of brown leather over boards, gold-tooled with fillets and small ornaments at the corners and centres of both covers. Edges stained in green. No early bookplate. 19th-century shelfmark: I.4.77.
  • Mus. 366: 61 surviving leaves, foliated '1-56, 56A, 57-60' in modern pencil. Leaves are missing between ff. 34-5 and 48-9. Collation unclear because of the tightness of the binding, but probably regularly in sixes (A6, B6 etc.). Mid 17th-century binding of brown leather over boards, gold-tooled with fillets and small ornaments at the corners and centres of both covers. Edges stained in green. Bookplate 3. 19th-century shelfmark: I.4.78.
Provenance: not listed in any of the 18th-century catalogues of the Christ Church music collections. Presumably from the Goodson bequest, partly on grounds of the fragmentary solmization table at the rear of Mus. 365, and partly on the evidence of the bookplate.

Microfilm: manuscript music, reel 12.