02000nam 2200433 n 450 99638615970331620221108043610.0(CKB)1000000000614946(EEBO)2248585506(UnM)99840257(EXLCZ)99100000000061494619910206d1559 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|A myrroure for magistrates[electronic resource] Wherein may be seen by example of other, with howe greuous plages vices are punished: and howe frayle and vnstable worldly prosperitie is founde, even of those, whom fortune seemeth most highly to fauour. Anno. 1559Londini In ædibus Thomæ Marshe[1559][5], lxxxv, [1] leavesBy William Baldwin and others.In verse.A continuation of John Lydgate's "The fall of princes", which is a translation of Giovanni Boccaccio's "De casibus illustrium virorum".A revised edition of: A memorial of suche princes, as since the tyme of King Richard the seconde, have been unfortunate in the realme of England.The first two parts of "A mirror for magistrates" were written by John Higgins and Thomas Blenerhasset respectively; this third part was in fact written before the others.With a final colophon and errata leaf.Running title reads: A myrrour for magistrates.Reproduction of the original in the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery.eebo-0113Political ethicsEarly works to 1800Great BritainHistoryPoetryPolitical ethicsBaldwin Williamca. 1518-1563?1002107Boccaccio Giovanni1313-1375.148906Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996386159703316A myrroure for magistrates2367631UNISA