- CONTENTS.
- [i] THE LIFE OF ROBIN HOOD
- [xiv] NOTES AND ILLUSTRATIONS
- Part the Second.
- [149] I. ROBIN HOOD’S BIRTH, BREEDING, VALOUR, AND MARRIAGE
- [161] II. ROBIN HOOD’S PROGRESS TO NOTTINGHAM
- [166] III. THE JOLLY PINDER OF WAKEFIELD, WITH ROBIN HOOD, SCARLET, AND JOHN
- [170] IV. ROBIN HOOD AND THE BISHOP
- [175] V. ROBIN HOOD AND THE BUTCHER
- [181] VI. ROBIN HOOD AND THE TANNER
- [189] VII. ROBIN HOOD AND THE TINKER
- [197] VIII. ROBIN HOOD AND ALLIN A DALE
- [203] IX. ROBIN HOOD AND THE SHEPHERD
- [209] X. ROBIN HOOD AND THE CURTALL FRYER
- [217] XI. ROBIN HOOD AND THE STRANGER
- [235] XII. ROBIN HOOD AND QUEEN KATHERINE
- [244] XIII. ROBIN HOOD’S CHASE
- [249] XIV. ROBIN HOOD’S GOLDEN PRIZE
- [254] XV. ROBIN HOOD RESCUING WILL STUTLY
- [262] XVI. THE NOBLE FISHERMAN; OR, ROBIN HOOD’S PREFERMENT
- [268] XVII. ROBIN HOOD’S DELIGHT
- [274] XVIII. ROBIN HOOD AND THE BEGGAR
- [280] XIX. LITTLE JOHN AND THE FOUR BEGGARS
- [285] XX. ROBIN HOOD AND THE RANGER
- [290] XXI. ROBIN HOOD AND LITTLE JOHN
- [298] XXII. ROBIN HOOD AND THE BISHOP OF HEREFORD
- [303] XXIII. ROBIN HOOD RESCUING THE WIDOW’S THREE SONS FROM THE SHERIFF WHEN GOING TO BE EXECUTED
- [309] XXIV. ROBIN HOOD AND MAID MARIAN
- [314] XXV. THE KING’S DISGUISE, AND FRIENDSHIP WITH ROBIN HOOD
- [323] XXVI. ROBIN HOOD AND THE GOLDEN ARROW
- [330] XXVII. ROBIN HOOD AND THE VALIANT KNIGHT
- [335] XXVIII. ROBIN HOOD’S DEATH AND BURIAL
- Part the Second.
- [341] APPENDIX
- [387] GLOSSARY
- LIST OF EMBELLISHMENTS.
PREFACE.
HE singular circumstance that the name of an outlawed individual of the twelfth or thirteenth century should continue traditionally popular, be chanted in ballads, and, as one may say,
Familiar in our mouth as household words,
at the end of the eighteenth, excited the editor’s curiosity to retrieve all the historical or poetical remains concerning him that could be met with: an object which he has occasionally pursued for many years; and of which pursuit he now publishes the result. He cannot, indeed, pretend that his researches, extensive as they must appear, have been attended with all the success he could have wished; but, at the same time, it ought to be acknowledged that many poetical pieces, of great antiquity and some merit, are deservedly rescued from oblivion.
The materials collected for the “Life” of this celebrated character, which are either preserved at large or carefully referred to in the “Notes and Illustrations,” are not, it must be confessed, in every instance, so important, so ancient, or, perhaps, so authentic, as the subject seems to demand; although the compiler may be permitted to say, in humble second-hand imitation of the poet Martial:
Some there are good, some middling, and some bad;