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Mirror for Magistrates
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Mirror for Magistrates

English book published in 1559 consisting of 19 tragic stories written in verse written by various authors. The stories are told by figures from English history – such as Richard III and Edward VI – who describe their rise to power and subsequent downfall. The book became very popular (enlarged editions appeared in 1563, 1578, and 1610) and influenced Shakespeare's history plays.

Written by William Baldwin, George Ferrers, and others, the stories were a continuation of John Lydgate's long poem Fall of Princes, which was itself a version of a book by Boccaccio.



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Scott Lucas finds that A Mirror for Magistrates, first published in 1553 as part of a larger project to advise princes, counseled "magistrates to take upon themselves the task of preventing monarchical misrule" (96).
Nonetheless, Cambises' death remains problematic, not least because it subverts the traditional account of his fall: disaster does afflict the tyrant in the same way that it afflicts the protagonists in de casibus texts such as A Mirror for Magistrates and Richard Robinson's epic poem The Rewarde of Wickednesse (1574).
Paul Budra, A Mirror for Magistrates and the de casibus Tradition Toronto and London: University of Toronto Press, 2000.
 
 
 
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