IS THE DANCE OF DEATH. as far as the year 1424*; it was called the Dance of Macaber, from a German poet of that name, who first composed some verses under the same title. Of this person very little is known, but Fabricius thinks the poem more ancient than the paintingsf. His work has been translated into Latin and French, in the last of which languages there are some very ancient and very modern editions. The earliest allusion to the subject, but whether to the above-mentioned farce or to the paintings seems uncertain, is in the following lines, from the Visions of Pierce the Plowman, who wrote about 1350. Death came drivynge after, and all to dust pashed, Kynges and kaysers, knightes and popes Learned and lewde, he ne let no man stande That he hitte even, he never stode after. Many a lovely ladie, and lemmans of knights Swonned and swclted, for sorrow of death dyntes. When the arts of printing and engraving became established, various copies of the Dance of Macaber made their appearance, particularly in the Hours, Breviaries, Missals, and other service books of the church, few of which were unaccompanied with a Dance of Death; and in these the designs gometiraes varied. Many of our own service books for the use of Salisbury were thus * Glossar. Carpentier, torn. ii. 1408. t Bibl. ined. & infim,