36. An ancient French poem concerning the foundation of the city of Ross in Ireland, written in the year 1265. Beg. "Talent me prent de vimauncer;" [qu. a mistake of the copyist for "romauncer"?]
39. "Collections out of an old booke sometime belonginge to Christchurche, Dublin, and now in the library of Trinitie Colledge by Dublin: gathered in Jan. 1604, by D. Molyneux Ulster." fo. 95. These are notes from an old calendar, in which the deaths of several eminent persons had been entered.
48. The book of Hercyest, otherwise called the book of Margan in Glamorganshire, from the year 681 to the year 1532; translated from the Welsh. fo. 116.
37. A note by the transcriber of the eight preceding articles from the Book of Ross, that there is in this book a long discourse in metre, putting the youth of Waterford in mind of harm taken by the Povers, and wishing them to beware for the time to come. Of this he transcribes the first stanza ...
29. An ancient song or ballad, made on the death of Sir Pers the Birmingham, an Englishman, the great foe and scourge of the Irish, who died, according to the ballad, on the 20th April 1308. Beg. "Sith Gabriell gan grete Ure ladi Mari swete." fo. 89. It is said to have been copied out of a small...
28. A letter to King Henry V. in the behalf of the Lord Furnyvale, L. Lieutenant of Ireland. Out of the White Book of the Exchequer, burnt in Sir Francis Angiers closet at Jacobs Newmans, anno 1610. fo. 85.