A hidden treasury of medieval voices, restored and brought to life. Short, sharp, quietly brilliant verse. Edited by J. Furnivall, this carefully curated volume assembles the minor poems of the Vernon manuscript (Part II) together with selected items from the Digby manuscripts 2 and 86. The result is a compact middle English anthology that makes accessible the devotional strains, satirical flashes and didactic notes of fourteenth-century England. Here you encounter religious medieval verse alongside moral allegory poems in forms at once plain and suggestive: short lyrics, homiletic pieces and vernacular counsels that reveal how piety, instruction and everyday feeling were woven into manuscript culture. The language and rhythms reward reading aloud and close attention alike, offering a gateway to early English literature for newcomers and a rich seam for readers already engaged with medieval English poetry. Beyond immediate pleasure, the book is valuable to students, scholars and anyone tracing the currents of British literary history: these so-called minor poems are primary witnesses to vernacular practice, liturgical taste and the moral concerns of ordinary readers in fourteenth-century England. As an academic research resource it supports manuscript literature studies and provides ready access to Digby manuscript texts and Vernon material that underpin palaeographical and textual inquiry. Yet the tone remains welcoming: casual readers find clear moral allegory and devotional imagery, while poetry for medievalists offers lines and variants worth sustained study. The volume suits classroom use, reading groups, and cabinet collections alike - equally at home on a student desk or a collector's shelf. Casual readers and classic-literature collectors alike find in these pages both rare intimacy and archival value. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.