Volume 1, Number 2 (August 1995)
The Bibliography and First-Line Index of English Verse, 1559-1603
Steven W. May
Georgetown College
May, Steven W. "The Bibliography and First-Line Index of English Verse, 1559-1603."
Early Modern Literary Studies 1.2 (1995): 13.1-5
<URL: http://www.library.ubc.ca/emls/01-2/mayindex.html>.
Copyright (c) 1995 by the author, all rights reserved. Volume 1.2 as a whole is copyright (c)
1995 by Early Modern Literary Studies, all rights reserved, and may be used and
shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. copyright law. Archiving and
redistribution for profit, or republication of this text in any medium, requires the consent of the
author and the Editor of EMLS.
- The Bibliography and First-Line Index of English Verse, 1559-1603 is a
computerized first-line index of the poetry printed or transcribed in manuscripts during the reign
of Queen Elizabeth I. In addition to listing the first lines alphabetically, the Index provides
thoroughly cross-indexed information about each entry. This data is cross-referenced by technical
forms, authors, titles, subscriptions, refrains, genres, and subject matter, with later editions and
published scholarship cited for each text as relevant.
- The Elizabethan Index complements William A. Ringler's Bibliography and First-Line
Index of English Verse Printed 1476-1558, and its companion volume of English
Verse in Manuscript, 1501-1558, prepared by Michael Rudick and Susan J. Ringler.
Mansell Press will publish the final instalment of the Index in hardcover uniform with these first
two volumes in the series. Unlike them, however, the Elizabethan Index is computerized and may
also be published in CD-ROM or on-line.
- Professor Ringler originally designed the Tudor verse indexing project to help editors locate
texts; however, the range of information provided for each poem extends the usefulness of the
Index to disciplines beyond English literature. Our ancestors used verse to record anything they
thought worth remembering. The subject index records poems on such topics as the plague and
surgery, priests and monks, the New World, cooking and recipes, alchemy, Robin Hood, the Earl
of Essex, marriage, women, monopolies, and kingship. Historians, historians of art, music, and
medicine, and scholars in many other fields will find a wealth of research data readily available in
the Index.
- Work on the Index continues under auspices of a three-year grant from the Research Division
of the National Endowment for the Humanities. Presently, over 18,000 poems from a
bibliography of some 1200 books and manuscripts are entered on the data base. The Elizabethan
age will undoubtedly yield more extant verse, both by line count and number of individual poems,
than has survived for all the preceding centuries of English poetry combined. The Index provides
flexibility of control over this vast cultural resource: it will supply researchers with quick access to
basic data for books, articles, dissertations, and term papers for generations to come.
- The Index is currently housed at Georgetown College, Georgetown, KY, 40324, under the
direction of Steven W. May, Professor of English.
Responses to this piece intended for the Readers' Forum may be sent to the Editor at EMLS@arts.ubc.ca.
Return to EMLS 1.2 Table of Contents.
[RGS; August 2, 1995.]