1. Agincourte Battell, beginning—
"A councell brave our King did hold,"
in the Percy Folio MS. (see Hales and Furnivall's edition, vol. ii. p. 166).
2. Agincourt, or the English Bowman's Glory, a spirited ballad quoted in Heywood's King Edward IV., the first stanza of which is as follows—
"Agincourt, Agincourt!
Know ye not Agincourt?
Where English slue and hurt
All their French foemen?
With our pikes and bills brown,
How the French were beat downe,
Shot by our bowman."
3. King Henry V., his Conquest of France, commencing—
"As our King lay musing on his bed."
4. The Cambro-Briton's Ballad of Agincourt, by Michael Drayton.
Besides these ballads there is a poem attributed to Lydgate, and Drayton's Battaile of Agincourt. For further information on the subject the reader should see Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas's History of the Battle, and Hales and Furnivall's edition of the Percy Folio MS. (vol. ii. pp. 158, 595).