The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Paston Letters, Volume IV (of 6), Edited by James Gairdner
| Note: |
Images of the original pages are available through
Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries. See
[
http://archive.org/details/pastonlettersad04gairuoft]
Project Gutenberg has the other volumes of this work. [Volume I]: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/43348/43348-h/43348-h.htm [Volume II]: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/40989/40989-h/40989-h.htm [Volume III]: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/41024/41024-h/41024-h.htm [Volume V]: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42239/42239-h/42239-h.htm [Volume VI, Part 1 (Letters, Chronological Table)]: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42240/42240-h/42240-h.htm [Volume VI, Part 2 (Index)]: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42494/42494-h/42494-h.htm |
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The Gairdner edition of the Paston Letters was printed in six volumes. Each volume is a separate e-text; Volume VI is further divided into two e-texts, Letters and Index. Volume I, the General Introduction, will be released after all other volumes, matching the original publication order.
All brackets are in the original, as are parenthetical question marks and (sic) notations. Series of dots representing damaged text are shown as printed. Note that the printed book used z to represent original yogh ȝ. This has not been changed for the e-text. The copy number (first page of each volume) is hand-written.
The year of each letter was printed in a sidenote at the top of the page; this has been merged with the sidenote at the beginning of each letter. Footnotes have their original numbering, with added page number to make them usable with the full Index. They are grouped at the end of each Letter or Abstract.
Text lightly shaded in violet indicates the site of a typographical error. Hover the cursor over the shaded text, and the explanation should appear. Typographical errors are listed again at the end of the Letter, after any footnotes. In the primary text, errors were only corrected if they are clearly editorial, such as missing italics, or mechanical, such as u-for-n misprints. Italic “d” misprinted as “a” was a recurring problem, especially in Volume IV. The word “invisible” means that there is an appropriately sized blank space, but the letter or punctuation mark itself is missing.
Some Specifics: The spelling “Jhon” is not an error. Gresham and Tresham are different people. Conversely, the inconsistent spelling of the name “Lipyate” or “Lipgate” in footnotes is unchanged. In Volume IV, the spelling “apostyle” for “apostille” is used consistently.
[The Paston Letters: Edward IV]
[Contents of this Volume]
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