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THE ELIZABETHAN FAIRIES

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224 ROBIN GOODFELLOW<br />

In the early part of the 16th century, he was treated<br />

as a known and accepted folk hero by William Tyndale,<br />

who, in The Exposition of the First Epistle of St. John<br />

and in The Obedience of a Christian Man,13 recounted<br />

his exploits but failed to mention his race. In The Bugg-<br />

bears of 1564 (c.),14 he was added as an English spirit,<br />

with no further specifications - except his tide of Robin<br />

Goodfellow - to the spirits enumerated in the Italian<br />

original,15 and in the translation of the Popish Kingdome<br />

of Naogeorgus by Barnabe Googe in I 570," he was cited<br />

as an individual with neither introduction nor classi-<br />

fication.<br />

Not until 1584 does any attempt seem to have been<br />

made to define or classify him. In the Discovery of<br />

Witchcraft of that year, he was spoken of as a devil,'?<br />

and specifically classified as a cousin of Incubus,18 and as<br />

the English counterpart of " Virunculi terrei," who " are<br />

Harris Nicolas, London, 1847; and The Historie of Tithes by John<br />

Selden, 1618 ed., Chap. V, p. 51, for the use of Hobgoblin similar to<br />

that of Hobbe Hyrste of the Paston letters.<br />

Halliwell in his introduction to his Illus. of the Fairy Myth. of<br />

M. N. D., p. xi, states that a story, found in a manuscript of the 13th<br />

century in the Bodleian Library, has been pointed out by Sir Frederick<br />

Madden as apparently introducing "Robin Goodfellow both in name<br />

and action at that early period." The name given here is Robinet<br />

and the characteristic represented is not the most striking or most<br />

familiar of those attributed to Robin Goodfellow.<br />

l2 Expositions and Notes, Parker Soc. ed., 1849, Vol. 37, p. 139.<br />

l3 Doctrinal Treatises, Parker Soc. ed., 1848, Vol. 32, p. 321.<br />

14For date, cf. Introd. to Early Plays from the Italian, Bond ed.,<br />

P- 83.<br />

l6 Page I 17.<br />

l6 Hope ed., 1880, The third Booke, p. 33.<br />

Scot, 1651 ed., "To the Reader," B. This reference may have<br />

furnished the inspiration for Shakespeare's " Puck."<br />

Scot, 1651 ed., p. 66.

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