"The King who will win the Holy Cross": Malory, Caxton, and Political Prophecy in the Morte Darthur
Quiz "How many kings of England were alive when Malory died on 14 March 1471?"
Sir Thomas Malory / William Caxton: Parallel Lives
The "Eight-Book" Malory Product
The "Three-Stage" Malory Process
Two manuscript versions of the "Holy Cross" prophecy: MS Hatton 56 (c. 1453) and Trinity MS R 3 19, owned by Caxton's contemporary, Richard Thorney (c. 1471-83)
Surviving MSS of the "Holy Cross" prophecy
Rubrication of f. 349r ("Sankgreal")
Chart of W. Marginalia from C15
Marginal note at f. 23r, and scribal index for important events
Malory on Trystram and the Hunt II (f. 280v. "Amen") (Deleted in Caxton's ed. prin.)
The Rotherly Poem, Ellesmere MS, f. iv r "O thow Roiall Bore" and "Amen" (?1462-4 or 1471-84)
Tom "The Freynsshe Booke" Malory Speaks (chart)
Malory's rejection of the "Holy Cross" prophecy on f. 482v (Included in Caxton's ed. prin.)
Caxton's printed edition of f. 482v with capital (Rubric in Table: "Of thoppynyon of somme men of the deth of kynge Arthur and how quene Guenever made hir a nonne in Almesburye.")
Note: all images were captured using a low-resolution digital camera from facsimiles and are not intended to infringe upon the copyright of either edition. They are for scholarly use only, and they should be properly cited if used in any other way. The sources are N.R. Ker, ed., The Winchester Malory: A Facsimile. London: EETS, 1976, and Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte D'Arthur Printed by William Caxton 1485, Reproduced in facsimile from the copy in the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York, with an introduction by Paul Needham. London: Scolar Press, 1976.
Additional Information:
Spreadsheet of W. Marginalia from C15
The Rotherly Poem, Ellesmere MS, f. iii v "the Bore of grace" (?1462-4 or 1471-84?)
A-B-C practice in the margins. (Lancelot and Gwenyvere exchange letters with Trystram at Tyntagel, 254v)
Scribal marginal note (last) at Gawayne's death-bed letter to Lancelot absolving him of all responsibility for his death.
Possible Reader Responses in W. to the "Holy Cross" prophecy:
Edward IV as the "Rose of Rouen" in the Towton Victory Poem (1461)
Addenda
John Audley's Poem of Henry V and Henry VI as the King Þe hole cros wyn or he dye (c. 1429)
Malory's First Explicit (f. 180v) (Deleted in Caxton's ed. prin.)