[32.] G. Reese, Music in the Middle Ages ([ch. 1, note 11]) 201.

[33.] L. Ellinwood, “The Conductus,” Musical Quarterly, 27 (1941) 2. 165-203.

Chapter Seven
Influence and Survival of Latin Hymns

[1.] W. B. Sedgwick, “The Origin of Rhyme,” ([ch. 4, note 28]) 333.

[2.] For translations see Helen J. Waddell, Medieval Latin Lyrics (London, 1929); The Wandering Scholars (New York, 1949), new edition.

[3.] P. S. Allen, Romanesque Lyric ([ch. 4, note 28]), Ch. XII, especially p. 223.

[4.] F. J. E. Raby, History of Secular Latin poetry in the Middle Ages, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1934) II, 332.

[5.] E. M. Sanford, “Were the Hymns of Prudentius actually sung?” Classical Philology 31 (1936) 71.

[6.] For the texts of liturgical plays, see K. Young, The Drama of the Medieval Church, 2 vols. (Oxford, 1933).

[7.] B. M. Peebles, “O Roma nobilis,” Amer. Benedictine Review, I (1950) no. 1.