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Oportet Meliora Tempora Non Expectare Sed Facere. The Arduous Life of Francis Tregian, the Younger
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2015
Extract
‘One must not wait for better times but create them’. Such was the message that the young Francis Tregian (1574–1617) received from the teaching of Dr William Allen, president of Douai. In such a way he lived his life, preserving his faith and later struggling, in adverse political conditions, to improve the fortunes of his family. Was he also able to copy several important music manuscripts, including the Fitzwilliam Virginal Book? This article is yet another examination of a problem much discussed for over a hundred years.
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References
Notes
1 Landmarks of earlier bibliography: Barclay Squire, W. and Fuller-Maitland, J. A., The Fitzwilliam Virginal Book (1899);Google Scholar Schofield, Bertram and Dart, Thurston, ‘Tregian's Anthology’, Music and Letters, vol. 32 (1951), pp. 205–16;CrossRefGoogle Scholar Cole, Elizabeth, ‘In Search of Francis Tregian’, Music and Letters, vol. 33 (1952), pp. 28–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Thompson.
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11 Douay (1878), p. 240.
12 Douay (1878), p. 246.
13 Foley, vol. 6 (1880), p. 565.
14 Allen, p. 376.
15 Allen, pp. 364–70.
16 HMC, Salisbury, vol. 11 (1906), p. 231; see also Thompson, p. 12, n. 44.
17 Sega's report is printed in Foley, vol. 6 (1880), pp. 1–66.
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22 Petti (1959).
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24 Thompson, p. 12, n. 48.
25 Thompson, pp. 12–14, gives detailed references.
26 Thompson, p. 14, n. 59.
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43 Foley, vol. 3 (1878), pp. 298–300; vol. 7, ii (1883), p. 736.
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53 Thompson, p. 13, nn. 50, 51.
54 A. Cecil (1915), pp. 97–101.
55 CSPD, James I, vol. 4, no. 84; see also Edwards, Francis, Guy Fawkes. The Real Story of the Gunpowder Plot? (1969), pp. 57–60,Google Scholar for the involvement of George and Henry Brooke in the Main and Bye plots. The recent publication by Edwards, Francis, The Succession, Bye and Main Plots of 1601–1603 (Dublin, 2006),Google Scholar provides ample evidence that Cecil's conduct was influenced by political considerations, not family relationships.
56 Loomie (1973), pp. 3, 5, 6, 8. Loomie's introduction, p. xxii, summarises Cecil's attitude: ‘Some courtiers, such as Robert Cecil, admitted that they desired friendship not on the basis of religion but from the conditions of the diplomatic scene at the time’. See also Loomie, ‘Sir Robert Cecil and the Spanish Embassy’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, vol. 42 (1969), pp. 30–57,CrossRefGoogle Scholar reprinted in Spain and the Early Stuarts 1585–1655 (1996).
57 Boyan, p. 112.
58 Hulse, Lynn, ‘The Musical Patronage of Robert Cecil, First Earl of Salisbury’, Journal of the Royal Musical Association, vol. 116 (1991), pp. 24–40;CrossRefGoogle Scholar another survey by Hulse is in Pauline Croft, J., Patronage (2002), pp. 139–58.Google Scholar
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61 London, British Library MS Egerton 3665 (‘The Tregian Manuscript’), with introduction by Frank A. D'Accone (Garland Publishing, Inc., New York and London, 1988).
62 See Boyan, plate between pp. 120–21: a small section is reproduced in Trudgian (1998), p. 40.
63 Botstiber, H., ‘Musicalia in the New York Public Library’ in Sammelbdnde der International Musikgesellschaft, vol. 4 (1903), p. 741.Google Scholar
64 The play, Los empeños de una casa, by Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz, first performed in Mexico City in 1683, quotes this passage for a character in distress: ‘I am like a ship wrecked in a storm on tempestuous seas…’ (from the translation by Catherine Boyle, House of Desires, 2004).
65 Willetts, Pamela, ‘Tregian's Part-Books’, The Musical Times, vol. 104 (1963), pp. 334–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
66 An example is cited by Ledbetter, Steven in ‘Marenzio's Early Career’, Journal of the American Musicological Society, vol. 32 (1979), p. 316.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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