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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67462 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67462)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 3 of 4), by
-E. K. Chambers
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 3 of 4)
-
-Author: E. K. Chambers
-
-Release Date: February 21, 2022 [eBook #67462]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Karin Spence and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE (VOL 3
-OF 4) ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE
-
- VOL. III
-
-
-
-
- Oxford University Press
-
- _London_ _Edinburgh_ _Glasgow_ _Copenhagen_
- _New York_ _Toronto_ _Melbourne_ _Cape Town_
- _Bombay_ _Calcutta_ _Madras_ _Shanghai_
-
- Humphrey Milford Publisher to the UNIVERSITY
-
- [Illustration: FROM THE VENICE TERENCE OF 1499]
-
-
-
-
- THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE
- BY E. K. CHAMBERS. VOL. III
-
- OXFORD: AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
- M.CMXXIII
-
-
-
-
- Printed in England
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- VOLUME III
-
-
- PAGE
- XIX. STAGING AT COURT 1
-
- XX. STAGING IN THE THEATRES: SIXTEENTH CENTURY 47
-
- XXI. STAGING IN THE THEATRES: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY 103
-
-
- BOOK V. PLAYS AND PLAYWRIGHTS
-
- XXII. THE PRINTING OF PLAYS 157
-
- XXIII. PLAYWRIGHTS 201
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Coliseus sive Theatrum. From edition of Terence
- published by Lazarus Soardus (Venice, 1497
- and 1499) _Frontispiece_
-
- Diagrams of Stages pp. 84, 85
-
-
-
-
- NOTE ON SYMBOLS
-
-
-I have found it convenient, especially in Appendix A, to use the symbol
-< following a date, to indicate an uncertain date not earlier than that
-named, and the symbol > followed by a date, to indicate an uncertain
-date not later than that named. Thus 1903 <> 23 would indicate the
-composition date of any part of this book. I have sometimes placed the
-date of a play in italics, where it was desirable to indicate the date
-of production rather than publication.
-
-
-
-
- XIX
-
- STAGING AT COURT
-
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Of the dissertations named in the
- _note_ to ch. xviii, T. S. Graves, _The Court and the London
- Theatres_ (1913), is perhaps the most valuable for the subject
- of the present chapter, which was mainly written before it
- reached me. A general account of the Italian drama of the
- Renaissance is in W. Creizenach, _Geschichte des neueren
- Dramas_, vol. ii (1901). Full details for Ferrara and Mantua
- are given by A. D’Ancona, _Origini del Teatro Italiano_
- (1891), of which App. II is a special study of _Il Teatro
- Mantovano nel secolo xvi_. F. Neri, _La Tragedia italiana del
- Cinquecento_ (1904), E. Gardner, _Dukes and Poets at Ferrara_
- (1904), and _The King of Court Poets_ (1906), W. Smith, _The
- Commedia dell’ Arte_ (1912), are also useful. Special works
- on staging are E. Flechsig, _Die Dekorationen der modernen
- Bühne in Italien_ (1894), and G. Ferrari, _La Scenografia_
- (1902). The Terence engravings are described by M. Herrmann,
- _Forschungen zur deutschen Theatergeschichte des Mittelalters
- und der Renaissance_ (1914). Of contemporary Italian treatises,
- the unprinted _Spectacula_ of Pellegrino Prisciano is in
- _Cod. Est. lat._ d. x. 1, 6 (cf. G. Bertoni, _La Biblioteca
- Estense_, 13), and of L. de Sommi’s _Dialoghi in materia di
- rappresentazione scenica_ (c. 1565) a part only is in L.
- Rasi, _I Comici italiani_ (1897), i. 107. The first complete
- edition of S. Serlio, _Architettura_ (1551), contains Bk. ii,
- on _Perspettiva_; the English translation was published by
- R. Peake (1611); extracts are in App. G; a biography is L.
- Charvet, _Sébastien Serlio_ (1869). Later are L. Sirigatti, _La
- pratica di prospettiva_ (1596), A. Ingegneri, _Della poesia
- rappresentativa e del modo di rappresentare le favole sceniche_
- (1598), and N. Sabbatini, _Pratica di fabricar scene e macchine
- ne’ Teatri_ (1638).
-
- For France, E. Rigal, _Le Théâtre de la Renaissance_ and _Le
- Théâtre au xvii^e siècle avant Corneille_, both in L. Petit
- de Julleville, _Hist. de la Langue et de la Litt. Françaises_
- (1897), iii. 261, iv. 186, and the same writer’s _Le Théâtre
- Français avant la Période Classique_ (1901), may be supplemented
- by a series of studies in _Revue d’Histoire Littéraire de la
- France_--P. Toldo, _La Comédie Française de la Renaissance_
- (1897–1900, iv. 336; v. 220, 554; vi. 571; vii. 263), G. Lanson,
- _Études sur les Origines de la Tragédie Classique en France_
- (1903, x. 177, 413) and _L’Idée de la Tragédie en France avant
- Jodelle_ (1904, xi. 541), E. Rigal, _La Mise en Scène dans les
- Tragédies du xvi^e siècle_ (1905, xii. 1, 203), J. Haraszti,
- _La Comédie Française de la Renaissance et la Scène_ (1909,
- xvi. 285); also G. Lanson, _Note sur un Passage de Vitruve_,
- in _Revue de la Renaissance_ (1904), 72. Less important is E.
- Lintilhac, _Hist. Générale du Théâtre en France_ (1904–9, in
- progress). G. Bapst, _Essai sur l’Histoire du Théâtre_ (1893),
- and D. C. Stuart, _Stage Decoration and the Unity of Place in
- France in the Seventeenth Century_ (1913, _M. P._ x. 393), deal
- with staging, for which the chief material is E. Dacier, _La
- Mise en Scène à Paris au xvii^e siècle: Mémoire de L. Mahelot
- et M. Laurent_ in _Mémoires de la Soc. de l’Hist. de Paris et
- de l’Ile-de-France_, xxviii (1901), 105. An edition by H. C.
- Lancaster (1920) adds Mahelot’s designs.]
-
-We come now to the problems, reserved from treatment in the foregoing
-chapter, of scenic background. What sort of setting did the types
-of theatre described afford for the plots, often complicated, and
-the range of incident, so extraordinarily wide, which we find in
-Elizabethan drama? No subject in literary history has been more often
-or more minutely discussed, during the quarter of a century since the
-Swan drawing was discovered, and much valuable spadework has been done,
-not merely in the collecting and marshalling of external evidence,
-but also in the interpretation of this in the light of an analysis of
-the action of plays and of the stage-directions by which these are
-accompanied.[1] Some points have emerged clearly enough; and if on
-others there is still room for controversy, this may be partly due to
-the fact that external and internal evidence, when put together, have
-proved inadequate, and partly also to certain defects of method into
-which some of the researchers have fallen. To start from the assumption
-of a ‘typical Shakespearian stage’ is not perhaps the best way of
-approaching an investigation which covers the practices of thirty or
-forty playing companies, in a score of theatres, over a period of not
-much less than a century. It is true that, in view of the constant
-shifting of companies and their plays from one theatre to another, some
-‘standardization of effects’, in Mr. Archer’s phrase, may at any one
-date be taken for granted.[2] But analogous effects can be produced
-by very different arrangements, and even apart from the obvious
-probability that the structural divergences between public and private
-theatres led to corresponding divergences in the systems of setting
-adopted, it is hardly safe to neglect the possibility of a considerable
-evolution in the capacities of stage-management between 1558 and 1642,
-or even between 1576 and 1616. At any rate a historical treatment
-will be well advised to follow the historical method. The scope of
-the inquiry, moreover, must be wide enough to cover performances at
-Court, as well as those on the regular stage, since the plays used for
-both purposes were undoubtedly the same. Nor can Elizabethan Court
-performances, in their turn, be properly considered, except in the
-perspective afforded by a short preliminary survey of the earlier
-developments of the art of scenic representation at other Renaissance
-Courts.
-
-The story begins with the study of Vitruvius in the latter part of
-the fifteenth century by the architect Alberti and others, which led
-scholars to realize that the tragedies of the pseudo-Seneca and the
-comedies of Terence and the recently discovered Plautus had been
-not merely recited, but acted much in the fashion already familiar
-in contemporary _ludi_ of the miracle-play type.[3] The next step
-was, naturally, to act them, in the original or in translations.
-Alberti planned a _theatrum_ in the Vatican for Nicholas V, but the
-three immediate successors of Nicholas were not humanists, and it
-is not until the papacy of Innocent VIII that we hear of classical
-performances at Rome by the pupils of Pomponius Laetus. One of these
-was Tommaso Inghirami, who became a cardinal, without escaping the
-nickname of Phaedra from the part he had played in _Hippolytus_. This,
-as well as at least one comedy, had already been given before the
-publication (_c._ 1484–92) of an edition of Vitruvius by Sulpicius
-Verulanus, with an epistle addressed by the editor to Cardinal
-Raffaelle Riario, as a notable patron of the revived art. Sulpicius is
-allusive rather than descriptive, but we hear of a fair adorned stage,
-5 ft. high, for the tragedy in the forum, of a second performance in
-the Castle of St. Angelo, and a third in Riario’s house, where the
-audience sat under _umbracula_, and of the ‘picturatae scenae facies’,
-which the cardinal provided for a comedy by the Pomponiani.[4]
-Performances continued after the death of Pomponius in 1597, but we
-get no more scenic details, and when the _Menaechmi_ was given at the
-wedding of Alfonso d’Este and Lucrezia Borgia in 1502 it is noted that
-‘non gli era scena alcuna, perchè la camera non era capace’.[5] It
-is not until 1513 that we get anything like a description of a Roman
-neo-classical stage, at the conferment of Roman citizenship on Giuliano
-and Lorenzo de’ Medici, the Florentine kinsmen of Leo X.[6] This had a
-decorated back wall divided by pilasters into five spaces, in each of
-which was a door covered by a curtain of golden stuff. There were also
-two side-doors, for entrance and exit, marked ‘via ad forum’.
-
-An even more important centre of humanistic drama than Rome was
-Ferrara, where the poets and artists, who gathered round Duke Ercole
-I of Este, established a tradition which spread to the allied courts
-of the Gonzagas at Mantua and the Delle Rovere at Urbino. The first
-neo-classical revival on record at Ferrara was of the _Menaechmi_
-in 1486, from which we learn that Epidamnus was represented by five
-marvellous ‘case’ each with its door and window, and that a practicable
-boat moved across the _cortile_ where the performance was given.[7]
-
-In 1487 it was the turn of the _Amphitrio_ ‘in dicto cortile a tempo
-di notte, con uno paradiso cum stelle et altre rode’.[8] Both the
-_Amphitrio_ and the _Menaechmi_ were revived in 1491; the former had
-its ‘paradiso’, while for the latter ‘nella sala era al prospecto
-de quattro castelli, dove avevano a uscire quilli dovevano fare la
-representatione’.[9] Many other productions followed, of some of
-which no details are preserved. For the _Eunuchus_, _Trinummus_,
-and _Penulus_ in 1499 there was a stage, 4 ft. high, with decorated
-columns, hangings of red, white, and green cloth, and ‘cinque casamenti
-merlati’ painted by Fino and Bernardino Marsigli.[10] In 1502, when
-Lucrezia Borgia came, the stage for the _Epidicus_, _Bacchides_, _Miles
-Gloriosus_, _Casina_, and _Asinaria_ was of the height of a man, and
-resembled a city wall, ‘sopra gli sono le case de le comedie, che sono
-sei, non avantagiate del consueto’.[11] The most elaborate description
-on record is, however, one of a theatre set up at Mantua during the
-carnival of 1501, for some play of which the name has not reached us.
-Unfortunately it is not very clearly worded, but the stage appears to
-have been rather wider than its depth, arcaded round, and hung at the
-back with gold and greenery. Its base had the priceless decoration of
-Mantegna’s _Triumphs_, and above was a heaven with a representation of
-the zodiac. Only one ‘casa’ is noted, a ‘grocta’ within four columns at
-a corner of the stage.[12]
-
-The scanty data available seem to point to the existence of two
-rather different types of staging, making their appearance at Ferrara
-and at Rome respectively. The scene of the Ferrarese comedies, with
-its ‘case’ as the principal feature, is hardly distinguishable from
-that of the mediaeval _sacre rappresentazioni_, with its ‘luoghi
-deputati’ for the leading personages, which in their turn correspond
-to the ‘loci’, ‘domus’, or ‘sedes’ of the western miracle-plays.[13]
-The methods of the _rappresentazioni_ had long been adopted for
-pieces in the mediaeval manner, but upon secular themes, such as
-Poliziano’s _Favola d’Orfeo_, which continued, side by side with
-the classical comedies, to form part of the entertainment of Duke
-Ercole’s Court.[14] The persistence of the mediaeval tradition is very
-clearly seen in the interspersing of the acts of the comedies, just
-as the _rappresentazioni_ had been interspersed, with ‘moresche’ and
-other ‘intermedii’ of spectacle and dance, to which the ‘dumb-shows’
-of the English drama owe their ultimate origin.[15] At Rome, on the
-other hand, it looks as if, at any rate by 1513, the ‘case’ had been
-conventionalized, perhaps under the influence of some archaeological
-theory as to classical methods, into nothing more than curtained
-compartments forming part of the architectural embellishments of the
-_scena_ wall. It is a tempting conjecture that some reflex, both of the
-Ferrarese and of the Roman experiments, may be traced in the woodcut
-illustrations of a number of printed editions of Terence, which are all
-derived from archetypes published in the last decade of the fifteenth
-century. The synchronism between the revival of classical acting and
-the emergence of scenic features in such illustrations is certainly
-marked. The Terentian miniatures of the earlier part of the century
-show no Vitruvian knowledge. If they figure a performance, it is a
-recitation by the wraith Calliopius and his gesticulating mimes.[16]
-Nor is there any obvious scenic influence in the printed Ulm _Eunuchus_
-of 1486, with its distinct background for each separate woodcut.[17]
-The new spirit comes in with the Lyons _Terence_ of 1493, wherein may
-be seen the hand of the humanist Jodocus Badius Ascensius, who had
-certainly visited Ferrara, and may well also have been in touch with
-the Pomponiani.[18] The Lyons woodcuts, of which there are several to
-each play, undoubtedly represent stage performances, real or imaginary.
-The stage itself is an unrailed quadrangular platform, of which the
-supports are sometimes visible. The back wall is decorated with
-statuettes and swags of Renaissance ornament, and in front of it is a
-range of three, four, or five small compartments, separated by columns
-and veiled by fringed curtains. They have rather the effect of a row of
-bathing boxes. Over each is inscribed the name of a character, whose
-‘house’ it is supposed to be. Thus for the _Andria_ the inscriptions
-are ‘Carini’, ‘Chreme[tis]’, ‘Chrisidis’, ‘Do[mus] Symonis’. On the
-scaffold, before the houses, action is proceeding between characters
-each labelled with his name. Sometimes a curtain is drawn back and a
-character is emerging, or the interior of a house is revealed, with
-some one sitting or in bed, and a window behind. It is noteworthy
-that, while the decoration of the back wall and the arrangement of the
-houses remain uniform through all the woodcuts belonging to any one
-play, they vary from play to play. Sometimes the line of houses follows
-that of the wall; sometimes it advances and retires, and may leave
-a part of the wall uncovered, suggesting an entrance from without.
-In addition to the special woodcuts for each play, there is a large
-introductory design of a ‘Theatrum’. It is a round building, with
-an exterior staircase, to which spectators are proceeding, and are
-accosted on their way by women issuing from the ‘Fornices’, over which
-the theatre is built. Through the removal of part of the walls, the
-interior is also made visible. It has two galleries and standing-room
-below. A box next the stage in the upper gallery is marked ‘Aediles’.
-The stage is cut off by curtains, which are divided by two narrow
-columns. In front of the curtains sits a flute-player. Above is
-inscribed ‘Proscenium’. Some of the Lyons cuts are adopted, with others
-from the Ulm _Eunuchus_, in the Strasburg _Terence_ of 1496.[19] This,
-however, has a different ‘Theatrum’, which shows the exterior only, and
-also a new comprehensive design for each play, in which no scaffold
-or back wall appears, and the houses are drawn on either side of an
-open place, with the characters standing before them. They are more
-realistic than the Lyons ‘bathing boxes’ and have doors and windows
-and roofs, but they are drawn, like the Ulm houses, on a smaller scale
-than the characters. If they have a scenic origin, it may be rather
-in the ‘case’ of Ferrara than in the conventional ‘domus’ of Rome.
-Finally, the Venice _Terence_ of 1497, while again reproducing with
-modifications the smaller Lyons cuts, replaces the ‘Theatrum’ by a new
-‘Coliseus sive Theatrum’, in which the point of view is taken from the
-proscenium.[20] No raised stage is visible, but an actor or prologue is
-speaking from a semicircular orchestra on the floor-level. To right and
-left of him are two houses, of the ‘bathing-box’ type, but roofed, from
-which characters emerge. He faces an auditorium with two rows of seats
-and a gallery above.
-
-We are moving in shadowy regions of conjecture, and if all the material
-were forthcoming, the interrelations of Rome and Ferrara and the
-Terentian editors might prove to have been somewhat different from
-those here sketched. After all, we have not found anything which
-quite explains the ‘picturatae scenae facies’ for which Cardinal
-Raffaelle Riario won such praise, and perhaps Ferrara is not really
-entitled to credit for the innovation, which is generally supposed
-to have accompanied the production of the first of Ariosto’s great
-Italian comedies on classical lines, the _Cassaria_ of 1508. This
-is the utilization for stage scenery of the beloved Italian art of
-architectural perspective. It has been suggested, on no very secure
-grounds, that the first to experiment in this direction may have been
-the architect Bramante Lazzari.[21] But the scene of the _Cassaria_
-is the earliest which is described by contemporary observers as a
-_prospettiva_, and it evidently left a vivid impression upon the
-imagination of the spectators.[22] The artist was Pellegrino da
-Udine, and the city represented was Mytilene, where the action of the
-_Cassaria_ was laid. The same, or another, example of perspective may
-have served as a background in the following year for Ariosto’s second
-comedy, _I Suppositi_, of which the scene was Ferrara itself.[23]
-But other artists, in other cities, followed in the footsteps of
-Pellegrino. The designer for the first performance of Bernardo
-da Bibbiena’s _Calandra_ at Urbino in 1513 was probably Girolamo
-Genga;[24] and for the second, at Rome in 1514, Baldassarre Peruzzi, to
-whom Vasari perhaps gives exaggerated credit for scenes which ‘apersono
-la via a coloro che ne hanno poi fatte a’ tempi nostri’.[25] Five
-years later, _I Suppositi_ was also revived at Rome, in the Sala d’
-Innocenzio of the Vatican, and on this occasion no less an artist was
-employed than Raphael himself.[26] As well as the scene, there was an
-elaborately painted front curtain, which fell at the beginning of the
-performance. For this device, something analogous to which had almost
-certainly already been used at Ferrara, there was a precedent in the
-classical _aulaeum_. Its object was apparently to give the audience
-a sudden vision of the scene, and it was not raised again during the
-action of the play, and had therefore no strictly scenic function.[27]
-
-The sixteenth-century _prospettiva_, of which there were many later
-examples, is the type of scenery so fully described and illustrated
-by the architect Sebastiano Serlio in the Second Book of his
-_Architettura_ (1551). Serlio had himself been the designer of a
-theatre at Vicenza, and had also been familiar at Rome with Baldassarre
-Peruzzi, whose notes had passed into his possession. He was therefore
-well in the movement.[28] At the time of the publication of the
-_Architettura_ he was resident in France, where he was employed,
-like other Italians, by Francis I upon the palace of Fontainebleau.
-Extracts from Serlio’s treatise will be found in an appendix and I need
-therefore only briefly summarize here the system of staging which it
-sets out.[29] This is a combination of the more or less solid ‘case’
-with flat cloths painted in perspective. The proscenium is long and
-comparatively shallow, with an entrance at each end, and flat. But from
-the line of the _scena_ wall the level of the stage slopes slightly
-upwards and backwards, and on this slope stand to right and left the
-‘case’ of boards or laths covered with canvas, while in the centre is
-a large aperture, disclosing a space across which the flat cloths are
-drawn, a large one at the back and smaller ones on frames projecting
-by increasing degrees from behind the ‘case’. Out of these elements
-is constructed, by the art of perspective, a consistent scene with
-architectural perspectives facing the audience, and broken in the
-centre by a symmetrical vista. For the sake of variety, the action can
-use practicable doors and windows in the façades, and to some extent
-also within the central aperture, on the lower part of the slope. It
-was possible to arrange for interior action by discovering a space
-within the ‘case’ behind the façades, but this does not seem to have
-been regarded as a very effective device.[30] Nor is there anything
-to suggest that Serlio contemplated any substantial amount of action
-within his central recess, for which, indeed, the slope required by
-his principles of perspective made it hardly suitable. As a matter of
-fact the action of the Italian _commedia sostenuta_, following here
-the tradition of its Latin models, is essentially exterior action
-before contiguous houses, and some amusing conventions, as Creizenach
-notes, follow from this fact; such as that it is reasonable to come
-out-of-doors in order to communicate secrets, that the street is a good
-place in which to bury treasure, and that you do not know who lives in
-the next house until you are told.[31] In discussing the decoration
-of the stage, Serlio is careful to distinguish between the kinds of
-scenery appropriate for tragedy, comedy, and the satyric play or
-pastoral, respectively, herein clearly indicating his debt and that of
-his school to the doctrine of Vitruvius.
-
-It must not be supposed that Serlio said the last word on Italian
-Renaissance staging. He has mainly temporary theatres in his mind, and
-when theatres became permanent it was possible to replace laths and
-painted cloths by a more solid architectural _scena_ in relief. Of
-this type was the famous _Teatro Olympico_ of Vicenza begun by Andrea
-Palladio about 1565 and finished by Vincenzo Scamozzi about 1584.[32]
-It closely followed the indications of Vitruvius, with its _porta
-regia_ in the middle of the _scena_, its _portae minores_ to right
-and left, and its proscenium doors in _versurae_ under balconies for
-spectators. And it did not leave room for much variety in decoration,
-as between play and play.[33] It appears, indeed, to have been used
-only for tragedy. A more important tendency was really just in the
-opposite direction, towards change rather than uniformity of scenic
-effect. Even the perspectives, however beautiful, of the comedies
-did not prove quite as amusing, as the opening heavens and hells and
-other ingeniously varied backgrounds of the mediaeval plays had been,
-and by the end of the sixteenth century devices were being tried for
-movable scenes, which ultimately led to the complete elimination of the
-comparatively solid and not very manageable ‘case’.[34]
-
-It is difficult to say how far the Italian perspective scene made its
-way westwards. Mediaeval drama--on the one hand the miracle-play, on
-the other the morality and the farce--still retained an unbounded
-vitality in sixteenth-century France. The miracle-play had its own
-elaborate and traditional system of staging. The morality and the
-farce required very little staging at all, and could be content at
-need with nothing more than a bare platform, backed by a semicircle
-or hollow square of suspended curtains, through the interstices of
-which the actors might come and go.[35] But from the beginning of
-the century there is observable in educated circles an infiltration
-of the humanist interest in the classical drama; and this, in course
-of time, was reinforced through two distinct channels. One of these
-was the educational influence, coming indirectly through Germany and
-the Netherlands, of the ‘Christian Terence’, which led about 1540 to
-the academic Latin tragedies of Buchanan and Muretus at Bordeaux.[36]
-The other was the direct contact with humanist civilization, which
-followed upon the Italian adventures of Charles VIII and Louis XII,
-and dominated the reigns of François I and his house, notably after
-the marriage of Catherine de’ Medici to the future Henri II in 1533.
-In 1541 came Sebastiano Serlio with his comprehensive knowledge of
-stage-craft; and the translation of his _Architettura_, shortly after
-its publication in 1545, by Jean Martin, a friend of Ronsard, may be
-taken as evidence of its vogue. In 1548 the French Court may be said to
-have been in immediate touch with the _nidus_ of Italian scenic art
-at Ferrara, for when Henri and Catherine visited Lyons it was Cardinal
-Hippolyte d’Este who provided entertainment for them with a magnificent
-performance of Bibbiena’s famous _Calandra_. This was ‘nella gran sala
-di San Gianni’ and was certainly staged in the full Italian manner,
-with perspective by Andrea Nannoccio and a range of terra-cotta statues
-by one Zanobi.[37] Henceforward it is possible to trace the existence
-of a Court drama in France. The Italian influence persisted. It is not,
-indeed, until 1571 that we find regular companies of Italian actors
-settling in Paris, and these, when they came, probably played, mainly
-if not entirely, _commedie dell’ arte_.[38] But Court performances in
-1555 and 1556 of the _Lucidi_ of Firenzuola and the _Flora_ of Luigi
-Alamanni show that the _commedia sostenuta_ was already established
-in favour at a much earlier date.[39] More important, however, is the
-outcrop of vernacular tragedy and comedy, on classical and Italian
-models, which was one of the literary activities of the Pléiade.
-The pioneer in both _genres_ was Étienne Jodelle, whose tragedy of
-_Cléopâtre Captive_ was produced before Henri II by the author and his
-friends at the Hôtel de Reims early in 1553, and subsequently repeated
-at the Collège de Boncour, where it was accompanied by his comedy of
-_La Rencontre_, probably identical with the extant _Eugène_, which is
-believed to date from 1552. Jodelle had several successors: in tragedy,
-Mellin de Saint-Gelais, Jacques and Jean de la Taille, Jacques Grévin,
-Robert Garnier, Antoine de Montchrestien; and in comedy, Rémy Belleau,
-Jean de Baïf, Jean de la Taille, Jacques Grévin, and Pierre Larivey.
-So far as tragedy was concerned, the Court representations soon came
-to an end. Catherine de’ Medici, always superstitious, believed that
-the _Sophonisbe_ of Mellin de Saint-Gelais in 1556 had brought ill
-luck, and would have no more.[40] The academies may have continued to
-find hospitality for a few, but the best critical opinion appears to
-be that most of the tragedies of Garnier and his fellows were for the
-printing-press only, and that their scenic indications, divorced from
-the actualities of representation, can hardly be regarded as evidence
-on any system of staging.[41] Probably this is also true of many of the
-literary comedies, although Court performances of comedies, apart from
-those of the professional players, continue to be traceable throughout
-the century. Unfortunately archaeological research has not succeeded in
-exhuming from the archives of the French royal households anything that
-throws much light on the details of staging, and very possibly little
-material of this kind exists. _Cléopâtre_ is said to have been produced
-‘in Henrici II aula ... magnifico veteris scenae apparatu’.[42] The
-prologue of _Eugène_, again, apologizes for the meagreness of an
-academic setting:
-
- Quand au théâtre, encore qu’il ne soit
- En demi-rond, comme on le compassoit,
- Et qu’on ne l’ait ordonné de la sorte
- Que l’on faisoit, il faut qu’on le supporte:
- Veu que l’exquis de ce vieil ornement
- Ores se voue aux Princes seulement.
-
-Hangings round the stage probably sufficed for the colleges, and
-possibly even on some occasions for royal _châteaux_.[43] But Jodelle
-evidently envisaged something more splendid as possible at Court,
-and a notice, on the occasion of some comedies given before Charles
-IX at Bayonne in 1565, of ‘la bravade et magnificence de la dite
-scène ou théâtre, et des feux ou verres de couleur, desquelles elle
-etait allumée et enrichie’ at once recalls a device dear to Serlio,
-and suggests a probability that the whole method of staging, which
-Serlio expounds, may at least have been tried.[44] Of an actual
-theatre ‘en demi-rond’ at any French palace we have no clear proof.
-Philibert de l’Orme built a _salle de spectacle_ for Catherine in the
-Tuileries, on a site afterwards occupied by the grand staircase, but
-its shape and dimensions are not on record.[45] There was another in
-the pleasure-house, which he planned for Henri II in the grounds of
-Saint-Germain, and which was completed by Guillaume Marchand under
-Henri IV. This seems, from the extant plan, to have been designed as
-a parallelogram.[46] The hall of the Hôtel de Bourbon, hard by the
-Louvre, in which plays were sometimes given, is shown by the engravings
-of the _Balet Comique_, which was danced there in 1581, to have been,
-in the main, of similar shape. But it had an apse ‘en demi-rond’ at
-one end.[47] It may be that the Terence illustrations come again to
-our help, and that the new engravings which appear, side by side with
-others of the older tradition, in the _Terence_ published by Jean de
-Roigny in 1552 give some notion of the kind of stage which Jodelle and
-his friends used.[48] The view is from the auditorium. The stage is
-a platform, about 3½ ft. high, with three shallow steps at the back,
-on which actors are sitting, while a prologue declaims. There are no
-hangings or scenes. Pillars divide the back of the stage from a gallery
-which runs behind and in which stand spectators. Obviously this is not
-on Italian lines, but it might preserve the memory of some type of
-academic stage.
-
-If we know little of the scenic methods of the French Court, we know
-a good deal of those employed in the only public theatre of which,
-during the sixteenth century and the first quarter of the seventeenth,
-Paris could boast. This was the Hôtel de Bourgogne, a rectangular hall
-built by the Confrérie de la Passion in 1548, used by that body for the
-representation of miracle-plays and farces up to 1598, let between 1598
-and 1608 to a succession of visiting companies, native and foreign, and
-definitively occupied from the latter year by the Comédiens du Roi, to
-whom Alexandre Hardy was dramatist in chief.[49] The _Mémoire pour la
-décoration des pièces qui se représentent par les comediens du roy,
-entretenus de sa Magesté_ is one of the most valuable documents of
-theatrical history which the hazard of time has preserved in any land.
-It, or rather the earlier of the two sections into which it is divided,
-is the work of Laurent Mahelot, probably a machinist at the Hôtel de
-Bourgogne, and contains notes, in some cases apparently emanating from
-the authors, of the scenery required for seventy-one plays belonging
-to the repertory of the theatre, to which are appended, in forty-seven
-cases, drawings showing the way in which the requirements were to be
-met.[50] It is true that the _Mémoire_ is of no earlier date than about
-1633, but the close resemblance of the system which it illustrates to
-that used in the miracle-plays of the Confrèrie de la Passion justifies
-the inference that there had been no marked breach of continuity since
-1598. In essence it is the mediaeval system of juxtaposed ‘maisons’,
-corresponding to the ‘case’ of the Italian and the ‘houses’ of the
-English tradition, a series of independent structures, visually related
-to each other upon the stage, but dramatically distinct and serving,
-each in its turn, as the background to action upon the whole of the
-free space--_platea_ in mediaeval terminology, _proscenium_ in that of
-the Renaissance--which stretched before and between them. The stage
-of the Hôtel de Bourgogne had room for five such ‘maisons’, one in
-the middle of the back wall, two in the angles between the back and
-side-walls, and two standing forward against the side-walls; but in
-practice two or three of these compartments were often devoted to a
-‘maison’ of large size. A ‘maison’ might be a unit of architecture,
-such as a palace, a senate house, a castle, a prison, a temple, a
-tavern; or of landscape, such as a garden, a wood, a rock, a cave, a
-sea.[51] And very often it represented an interior, such as a chamber
-with a bed in it.[52] A good illustration of the arrangement may be
-found in the _scenario_ for the familiar story of Pyramus and Thisbe,
-as dramatized about 1617 by Théophile de Viaud.[53]
-
- ‘Il faut, au milieu du théâtre, un mur de marbre et pierre
- fermé; des ballustres; il faut aussi de chasque costé deux ou
- trois marches pour monster. A un des costez du théâtre, un
- murier, un tombeau entouré de piramides. Des fleurs, une éponge,
- du sang, un poignard, un voile, un antre d’où sort un lion,
- du costé de la fontaine, et un autre antre à l’autre bout du
- théâtre où il rentre.’
-
-The _Pandoste_ of Alexandre Hardy required different settings for the
-two parts, which were given on different days.[54] On the first day,
-
- ‘Au milieu du théâtre, il faut un beau palais; à un des costez,
- une grande prison où l’on paroist tout entier. A l’autre costé,
- un temple; au dessous, une pointe de vaisseau, une mer basse,
- des rozeaux et marches de degrez.’
-
-The needs of the second day were more simply met by ‘deux palais et une
-maison de paysan et un bois’.
-
-Many examples make it clear that the methods of the Hôtel de Bourgogne
-did not entirely exclude the use of perspective, which was applied
-on the back wall, ‘au milieu du théâtre’; and as the Italian stage,
-on its side, was slow to abandon altogether the use of ‘case’ in
-relief, it is possible that under favourable circumstances Mahelot
-and his colleagues may have succeeded in producing the illusion of
-a consistently built up background much upon the lines contemplated
-by Serlio.[55] There were some plays whose plot called for nothing
-more than a single continuous scene in a street, perhaps a known and
-nameable street, or a forest.[56] Nor was the illusion necessarily
-broken by such incidents as the withdrawal of a curtain from before an
-interior at the point when it came into action, or the introduction of
-the movable ship which the Middle Ages had already known.[57] It was
-broken, however, when the ‘belle chambre’ was so large and practicable
-as to be out of scale with the other ‘maisons’.[58] And it was broken
-when, as in _Pandoste_ and many other plays, the apparently contiguous
-‘maisons’ had to be supposed, for dramatic purposes, to be situated in
-widely separated localities. It is, indeed, as we shall find to our
-cost, not the continuous scene, but the need for change of scene, which
-constitutes the problem of staging. It is a problem which the Italians
-had no occasion to face; they had inherited, almost unconsciously, the
-classical tradition of continuous action in an unchanged locality,
-or in a locality no more changed than is entailed by the successive
-bringing into use of various apertures in a single façade. But the
-Middle Ages had had no such tradition, and the problem at once declared
-itself, as soon as the matter of the Middle Ages and the manner of
-the Renaissance began to come together in the ‘Christian Terence’.
-The protest of Cornelius Crocus in the preface to his _Joseph_ (1535)
-against ‘multiple’ staging, as alike intrinsically absurd and alien
-to the practice of the ancients, anticipates by many years that law
-of the unity of place, the formulation of which is generally assigned
-to Lodovico Castelvetro, and which was handed down by the Italians
-to the Pléiade and to the ‘classical’ criticism of the seventeenth
-century.[59] We are not here concerned with the unity of place as a
-law of dramatic structure, but we are very much concerned with the
-fact that the romantic drama of western Europe did not observe unity
-of place in actual practice, and that consequently the stage-managers
-of Shakespeare in England, as well as those of Hardy in France, had to
-face the problem of a system of staging, which should be able rapidly
-and intelligibly to represent shifting localities. The French solution,
-as we have seen, was the so-called ‘multiple’ system, inherited from
-the Middle Ages, of juxtaposed and logically incongruous backgrounds.
-
-Geography would be misleading if it suggested that, in the westward
-drift of the Renaissance, England was primarily dependent upon the
-mediation of France. During the early Tudor reigns direct relations
-with Italy were firmly established, and the classical scholars of
-Oxford and Cambridge drew their inspiration at first hand from the
-authentic well-heads of Rome and Florence. In matters dramatic, in
-particular, the insular had little or nothing to learn from the
-continental kingdom. There were French players, indeed, at the Court
-of Henry VII in 1494 and 1495, who obviously at that date can only
-have had farces and morals to contribute.[60] And thereafter the
-lines of stimulus may just as well have run the other way. If the
-academic tragedy and comedy of the Pléiade had its reaction upon the
-closet dramas of Lady Pembroke, Kyd, Daniel, Lord Brooke, yet London
-possessed its public theatres long before the Parisian makeshift of
-the Hôtel de Bourgogne, and English, no less than Italian, companies
-haunted the Court of Henri IV, while it is not until Caroline days that
-the French visit of 1495 can be shown to have had its successor. The
-earliest record of a classical performance in England was at Greenwich
-on 7 March 1519, when ‘there was a goodly commedy of Plautus plaied’,
-followed by a mask, in the great chamber, which the King had caused
-‘to be staged and great lightes to be set on pillers that were gilt,
-with basons gilt, and the rofe was covered with blewe satyn set full
-of presses of fyne gold and flowers’.[61] The staging here spoken of,
-in association with lights, was probably for spectators rather than
-for actors, for in May 1527, when a dialogue, barriers, and mask were
-to be given in a banqueting-house at Greenwich, we are told that ‘thys
-chambre was raised with stages v. degrees on every syde, and rayled
-and counterailed, borne by pillars of azure, full of starres and
-flower delice of gold; every pillar had at the toppe a basin silver,
-wherein stode great braunches of white waxe’.[62] In this same year
-1527, Wolsey had a performance of the _Menaechmi_ at his palace of York
-Place, and it was followed in 1528 by one of the _Phormio_, of which
-a notice is preserved in a letter of Gasparo Spinelli, the secretary
-to the Italian embassy in London.[63] Unfortunately, Spinelli’s
-description proves rather elusive. I am not quite clear whether he is
-describing the exterior or the interior of a building, and whether his
-_zoglia_ is, as one would like to think, the framework of a proscenium
-arch, or merely that of a doorway.[64] One point, however, is certain.
-Somewhere or other, the decorations displayed in golden letters the
-title of the play which was about to be given. Perhaps this explains
-why, more than a quarter of a century later, when the Westminster boys
-played the _Miles Gloriosus_ before Elizabeth in January 1565, one
-of the items of expenditure was for ‘paper, inke and colores for the
-wryting of greate letters’.[65]
-
-Investigation of Court records reveals nothing more precise than
-this as to the staging of plays, whether classical or mediaeval in
-type, under Henry VIII. It is noticeable, however, that a play often
-formed but one episode in a composite entertainment, other parts of
-which required the elaborate pageantry which was Henry’s contribution
-to the development of the mask; and it may be conjectured that in
-these cases the structure of the pageant served also as a sufficient
-background for the play. Thus in 1527 a Latin tragedy celebrating the
-deliverance of the Pope and of France by Wolsey was given in the ‘great
-chamber of disguysings’, at the end of which stood a fountain with a
-mulberry and a hawthorn tree, about which sat eight fair ladies in
-strange attire upon ‘benches of rosemary fretted in braydes layd on
-gold, all the sydes sette wyth roses in braunches as they wer growyng
-about this fountayne’.[66] The device was picturesque enough, but can
-only have had an allegorical relation to the action of the play. The
-copious Revels Accounts of Edward and of Mary are silent about play
-settings. It is only with those of Elizabeth that the indications of
-‘houses’ and curtains already detailed in an earlier chapter make their
-appearance.[67] The ‘houses’ of lath and canvas have their analogy
-alike in the ‘case’ of Ferrara, which even Serlio had not abandoned,
-and in the ‘maisons’ which the Hôtel de Bourgogne inherited from the
-Confrérie de la Passion. We are left without guide as to whether the
-use of them at the English Court was a direct tradition from English
-miracle-plays, or owed its immediate origin to an Italian practice,
-which was itself in any case only an outgrowth of mediaeval methods
-familiar in Italy as well as in England. Nor can we tell, so far as the
-Revels Accounts go, whether the ‘houses’ were juxtaposed on the stage
-after the ‘multiple’ fashion of the Hôtel de Bourgogne, or were fused
-with the help of perspective into a continuous façade or vista, as
-Serlio bade. Certainly the Revels officers were not wholly ignorant of
-the use of perspective, but this is also true of the machinists of the
-Hôtel de Bourgogne.[68] Serlio does not appear to have used curtains,
-as the Revels officers did, for the discovery of interior scenes, but
-if, on the other hand, any of the great curtains of the Revels were
-front curtains, these were employed at Ferrara and Rome, and we have no
-knowledge that they were employed at Paris. At this point the archives
-leave us fairly in an _impasse_.
-
-It will be well to start upon a new tack and to attempt to ascertain,
-by an analysis of such early plays as survive, what kind of setting
-these can be supposed, on internal evidence, to have needed. And
-the first and most salient fact which emerges is that a very large
-number of them needed practically no setting at all. This is broadly
-true, with exceptions which shall be detailed, of the great group
-of interludes which extends over about fifty years of the sixteenth
-century, from the end of Henry VII’s reign or the beginning of Henry
-VIII’s, to a point in Elizabeth’s almost coincident with the opening
-of the theatres. Of these, if mere fragments are neglected, there
-are not less than forty-five. Twenty are Henrican;[69] perhaps seven
-Edwardian or Marian;[70] eighteen Elizabethan.[71] Characteristically,
-they are morals, presenting abstract personages varied in an increasing
-degree with farcical types; but several are semi-morals, with a
-sprinkling of concrete personages, which point backwards to the
-miracle-plays, or forward to the romantic or historical drama. One or
-two are almost purely miracle-play or farce; and towards the end one
-or two show some traces of classical influence.[72] Subject, then, to
-the exceptions, the interludes--and this, as already indicated, is a
-fundamental point for staging--call for no changes of locality, with
-which, indeed, the purely abstract themes of moralities could easily
-dispense. The action proceeds continuously in a locality, which is
-either wholly undefined, or at the most vaguely defined as in London
-(_Hickscorner_), or in England (_King Johan_). This is referred to,
-both in stage-directions and in dialogue, as ‘the place’, and with
-such persistency as inevitably to suggest a term of art, of which the
-obvious derivation is from the _platea_ of the miracle-plays.[73] It
-may be either an exterior or an interior place, but often it is not
-clearly envisaged as either. In _Pardoner and Friar_ and possibly in
-_Johan the Evangelist_ it is a church; in _Johan Johan_ it is Johan’s
-house. Whether interior or exterior, a door is often referred to as the
-means of entrance and exit for the characters.[74] In _Johan Johan_ a
-door is supposed to lead to the priest’s chamber, and there is a long
-colloquy at the ‘chamber dore’. In exterior plays some kind of a house
-may be suggested in close proximity to the ‘place’. In _Youth_ and in
-_Four Elements_ the characters come and go to a tavern. The ‘place’ of
-_Apius and Virginia_ is before the gate of Apius. There is no obvious
-necessity why these houses should have been represented by anything
-but a door. The properties used in the action are few and simple;
-a throne or other seat, a table or banquet (_Johan Johan_, _Godly
-Queen Hester_, _King Darius_), a hearth (_Nature_, _Johan Johan_), a
-pulpit (_Johan the Evangelist_), a pail (_Johan Johan_), a dice-board
-(_Nice Wanton_). My inference is that the setting of the interludes
-was nothing but the hall in which performances were given, with for
-properties the plenishing of that hall or such movables as could be
-readily carried in. Direct hints are not lacking to confirm this view.
-A stage-direction in _Four Elements_ tells us that at a certain point
-‘the daunsers without the hall syng’. In _Impatient Poverty_ (242)
-Abundance comes in with the greeting, ‘Joye and solace be in this
-hall!’ _All for Money_ (1019) uses ‘this hall’, where we should expect
-‘this place’. And I think that, apart from interludes woven into the
-pageantry of Henry VIII’s disguising chambers, the hall contemplated
-was at first just the ordinary everyday hall, after dinner or supper,
-with the sovereigns or lords still on the dais, the tables and benches
-below pushed aside, and a free space left for the performers on the
-floor, with the screen and its convenient doors as a background and
-the hearth ready to hand if it was wanted to figure in the action. If
-I am right, the staged dais, with the sovereign on a high state in the
-middle of the hall, was a later development, or a method reserved for
-very formal entertainments.[75] The actors of the more homely interlude
-would have had to rub shoulders all the time with the inferior members
-of their audience. And so they did. In _Youth_ (39) the principal
-character enters, for all the world like the St. George of a village
-mummers’ play, with an
-
- A backe, felowes, and gyve me roume
- Or I shall make you to auoyde sone.[76]
-
-In _Like Will to Like_ the Vice brings in a knave of clubs, which he
-‘offreth vnto one of the men or boyes standing by’. In _King Darius_
-(109) Iniquity, when he wants a seat, calls out
-
- Syrs, who is there that hath a stoole?
- I will buy it for thys Gentleman;
- If you will take money, come as fast as you can.
-
-A similar and earlier example than any of these now presents itself in
-_Fulgens and Lucres_, where there is an inductive dialogue between
-spectators, one of whom says to another
-
- I thought verely by your apparel,
- That ye had bene a player.
-
-Of a raised stage the only indication is in _All for Money_, a late
-example of the type, where one stage-direction notes (203), ‘There must
-be a chayre for him to sit in, and vnder it or neere the same there
-must be some hollowe place for one to come vp in’, while another (279)
-requires ‘some fine conueyance’ to enable characters to vomit each
-other up.
-
-I come now to nine interludes which, for various reasons, demand
-special remark. In _Jacob and Esau_ (> 1558) there is coming and going
-between the place and the tent of Isaac, before which stands a bench,
-the tent of Jacob, and probably also the tent of Esau. In _Wit and
-Wisdom_ (> 1579) action takes place at the entrances of the house of
-Wantonness, of the den of Irksomeness, of a prison, and of Mother Bee’s
-house, and the prison, as commonly in plays of later types, must have
-been so arranged as to allow a prisoner to take part in the dialogue
-from within. Some realism, also, in the treatment of the den may be
-signified by an allusion to ‘these craggie clifts’. In _Misogonus_
-(_c._ 1560–77), the place of which is before the house of Philogonus,
-there is one scene in Melissa’s ‘bowre’ (ii. 4, 12), which must somehow
-have been represented. In _Thersites_ (1537), of which one of the
-characters is a snail that ‘draweth her hornes in’, Mulciber, according
-to the stage-directions, ‘must have a shop made in the place’, which he
-leaves and returns to, and in which he is perhaps seen making a sallet.
-Similarly, the Mater of Thersites, when she drops out of the dialogue,
-‘goeth in the place which is prepared for her’, and hither later
-‘Thersites must ren awaye, and hyde hym behynde hys mothers backe’.
-These four examples only differ from the normal interlude type by some
-multiplication of the houses suggested in the background, and probably
-by some closer approximation than a mere door to the visual realization
-of these. There is no change of locality, and only an adumbration of
-interior action within the houses. Four other examples do entail
-some change of locality. Much stress must not be laid on the sudden
-conversions in the fourth act of _The Conflict of Conscience_ (> 1581)
-and the last scene of _Three Ladies of London_ of the open ‘place’
-into Court, for these are very belated specimens of the moral. And
-the opening dialogue of the _Three Ladies_, on the way to London, may
-glide readily enough into the main action before two houses in London
-itself. But in _The Disobedient Child_ (_c._ 1560) some episodes are
-before the house of the father, and others before that of the son in
-another locality forty miles away. In _Mary Magdalene_ (< 1566), again,
-the action begins in Magdalo, but there is a break (842) when Mary
-and the Vice start on their travels, and it is resumed at Jerusalem,
-where it proceeds first in some public place, and afterwards by a
-sudden transition (1557) at a repast within the house of Simon. In both
-cases it may be conjectured that the two localities were indicated on
-opposite sides of the hall or stage, and that the personages travelled
-from one to the other over the intervening space, which was regarded
-as representing a considerable distance. You may call this ‘multiple
-staging’, if you will. The same imaginative foreshortening of space
-had been employed both in the miracle-plays and in the ‘Christian
-Terence’.[77] Simon’s house at Jerusalem was, no doubt, some kind of
-open _loggia_ with a table in it, directly approachable from the open
-place where the earlier part of the Jerusalem action was located.
-
-_Godly Queen Hester_ (? 1525–9) has a different interest, in that, of
-all the forty-four interludes, it affords the only possible evidence
-for the use of a curtain. In most respects it is quite a normal
-interlude. The action is continuous, in a ‘place’, which represents
-a council-chamber, with a chair for Ahasuerus. But there is no
-mention of a door, and while the means of exit and entrance for the
-ordinary personages are unspecified, the stage-directions note, on
-two occasions (139, 635) when the King goes out, that he ‘entreth the
-trauerse’. Now ‘traverses’ have played a considerable part in attempts
-to reconstruct the Elizabethan theatre, and some imaginative writers
-have depicted them as criss-crossing about the stage in all sorts of
-possible and impossible directions.[78] The term is not a very happy
-one to employ in the discussion of late sixteenth-century or early
-seventeenth-century conditions. After _Godly Queen Hester_ it does
-not appear again in any play for nearly a hundred years, and then, so
-far as I know, is only used by Jonson in _Volpone_, where it appears
-to indicate a low movable screen, probably of a non-structural kind,
-and by John Webster, both in _The White Devil_ and in _The Duchess of
-Malfi_, where it is an exact equivalent to the ‘curtains’ or ‘arras’,
-often referred to as screening off a recess at the back of the
-stage.[79] Half a century later still, it is used in the Restoration
-play of _The Duke of Guise_ to indicate, not this normal back curtain,
-but a screen placed across the recess itself, or the inner stage which
-had developed out of it, behind ‘the scene’.[80] Webster’s use seems
-to be an individual one. Properly a ‘traverse’ means, I think, not a
-curtain suspended from the roof, but a screen shutting off from view
-a compartment within a larger room, but leaving it open above. Such
-a screen might, of course, very well be formed by a curtain running
-on a rod or cord.[81] And a ‘traverse’ also certainly came to mean
-the compartment itself which was so shut off.[82] The construction is
-familiar in the old-fashioned pews of our churches, and as it happens,
-it is from the records of the royal chapel that its Elizabethan use can
-best be illustrated. Thus when Elizabeth took her Easter communion at
-St. James’s in 1593, she came down, doubtless from her ‘closet’ above,
-after the Gospel had been read, ‘into her Majestes Travess’, whence
-she emerged to make her offering, and then ‘retorned to her princely
-travess sumptuously sett forthe’, until it was time to emerge again and
-receive the communion. So too, when the Spanish treaty was sworn in
-1604, ‘in the chappell weare two traverses sett up of equall state in
-all thinges as neare as might be’. One was the King’s traverse ‘where
-he usually sitteth’, the other for the Spanish ambassador, and from
-them they proceeded to ‘the halfe pace’ for the actual swearing of
-the oath.[83] The traverse figures in several other chapel ceremonies
-of the time, and it is by this analogy, rather than as a technical
-term of stage-craft, that we must interpret the references to it in
-_Godly Queen Hester_. It is not inconceivable that the play, which was
-very likely performed by the Chapel, was actually performed in the
-chapel.[84] Nor is it inconceivable, also, that the sense of the term
-‘traverse’ may have been wide enough to cover the screen at the bottom
-of a Tudor hall.
-
-I come now to the group of four mid-century farces, _Gammer Gurton’s
-Needle_, _Jack Juggler_, _Ralph Roister Doister_, and _Tom Tyler_,
-which literary historians have distinguished from the interludes as
-early ‘regular comedies’. No doubt they show traces of Renaissance
-influence upon their dramatic handling. But, so far as scenic setting
-is concerned, they do not diverge markedly from the interlude type.
-Nor is this surprising, since Renaissance comedy, like the classical
-comedy upon which it was based, was essentially an affair of continuous
-action, in an open place, before a background of houses. _Gammer
-Gurton’s Needle_ requires two houses, those of Gammer Gurton and of
-Dame Chat; _Jack Juggler_ one, that of Boungrace; _Ralph Roister
-Doister_ one, that of Christian Custance. Oddly enough, both _Gammer
-Gurton’s Needle_ and _Jack Juggler_ contain indications of the presence
-of a post, so placed that it could be used in the action.[85] _Tom
-Tyler_, which may have reached us in a sophisticated text, has a
-slightly more complicated staging. There are some quite early features.
-The locality is ‘this place’ (835), and the audience are asked (18), as
-in the much earlier _Youth_, to ‘make them room’. On the other hand, as
-in _Mary Magdalene_ and in _The Conflict of Conscience_, there is at
-one point (512) a transition from exterior to interior action. Hitherto
-it has been in front of Tom’s house; now it is within, and his wife is
-in bed. An open _loggia_ here hardly meets the case. The bed demands
-some discovery, perhaps by the withdrawal of a curtain.
-
-I am of course aware that the forty-four interludes and the four farces
-hitherto dealt with cannot be regarded as forming a homogeneous body
-of Court drama. Not one of them, in fact, can be absolutely proved to
-have been given at Court. Several of them bear signs of having been
-given elsewhere, including at least three of the small number which
-present exceptional features.[86] Others lie under suspicion of having
-been written primarily for the printing-press, in the hope that any
-one who cared to act them would buy copies, and may therefore never
-have been given at all; and it is obvious that in such circumstances a
-writer might very likely limit himself to demands upon stage-management
-far short of what the Court would be prepared to meet.[87] This is all
-true enough, but at the same time I see no reason to doubt that the
-surviving plays broadly represent the kind of piece that was produced,
-at Court as well as elsewhere, until well into Elizabeth’s reign.
-Amongst their authors are men, Skelton, Medwall, Rastell, Redford,
-Bale, Heywood, Udall, Gascoigne, who were about the Court, and some
-of whom we know to have written plays, if not these plays, for the
-Court; and the survival of the moral as a Court entertainment is borne
-witness to by the Revels Accounts of 1578–9, in which the ‘morrall of
-the _Marriage of Mind and Measure_’ still holds its own beside the
-classical and romantic histories which had already become fashionable.
-As we proceed, however, we come more clearly within the Court sphere.
-The lawyers stand very close, in their interests and their amusements,
-to the Court, and with the next group of plays, a characteristically
-Renaissance one, of four Italianate comedies and four Senecan
-tragedies, the lawyers had a good deal to do. Gascoigne’s Gray’s
-Inn _Supposes_ is based directly upon one of Ariosto’s epoch-making
-comedies, _I Suppositi_, and adopts its staging. Jeffere’s _Bugbears_
-and the anonymous _Two Italian Gentlemen_ are similarly indebted
-to their models in Grazzini’s _La Spiritata_ and Pasqualigo’s _Il
-Fedele_. Each preserves complete unity of place, and the continuous
-action in the street before the houses, two or three in number, of the
-principal personages, is only varied by occasional colloquies at a door
-or window, and in the case of the _Two Italian Gentlemen_ by an episode
-of concealment in a tomb which stands in a ‘temple’ or shrine beneath
-a burning lamp. Whetstone’s _Promos and Cassandra_, the neo-classical
-inspiration of which is advertised in the prefatory epistle, follows
-the same formula with a certain freedom of handling. In the first part,
-opportunity for a certain amount of interior action is afforded by
-two of the three houses; one is a prison, the other a barber’s shop,
-presumably an open stall with a door and a flap-down shutter. The third
-is the courtesan’s house, on which Serlio insists. This reappears in
-the second part and has a window large enough for four women to sit
-in.[88] The other houses in this part are a temple with a tomb in it,
-and a pageant stage used at a royal entry. The conveniences of exterior
-action lead to a convention which often recurs in later plays, by which
-royal justice is dispensed in the street. And the strict unity of place
-is broken by a scene (iv. 2) which takes place, not like the rest of
-the action in the town of Julio, but in a wood through which the actors
-are approaching it. Here also we have, I think, the beginnings of a
-convention by which action on the extreme edge of a stage, or possibly
-on the floor of the hall or on steps leading to the stage, was treated
-as a little remote from the place represented by the setting in the
-background. The four tragedies were all produced at the Court itself
-by actors from the Inns of Court. It is a little curious that the
-earliest of the four, _Gorboduc_ (1562), is also the most regardless
-of the unity of place. While Acts I and III-V are at the Court of
-Gorboduc, Act II is divided between the independent Courts of Ferrex
-and Porrex. We can hardly suppose that there was any substantial change
-of decoration, and probably the same generalized palace background
-served for all three. Here also the convention, classical enough,
-rules, by which the affairs of state are conducted in the open. By 1562
-the raised stage had clearly established itself. There are no regular
-stage-directions in _Gorboduc_, but the stage is often mentioned in the
-descriptions of the dumb-shows between the acts, and in the fourth of
-these ‘there came from vnder the stage, as though out of hell, three
-furies’. Similarly in _Jocasta_ (1566) the stage opens in the dumb-shows
-to disclose, at one time a grave, at another the gulf of Curtius.
-The action of the play itself is before the palace of Jocasta, but
-there are also entrances and exits, which are carefully specified in
-stage-directions as being through ‘the gates called Electrae’ and ‘the
-gates called Homoloydes’. Perhaps we are to infer that the gates which,
-if the stage-manager had Vitruvius in mind, would have stood on the
-right and left of the proscenium, were labelled ‘in great letters’ with
-their names; and if so, a similar device may have served in _Gorboduc_
-to indicate at which of the three Courts action was for the time being
-proceeding. _Gismond of Salerne_ has not only a hell, for Megaera, but
-also a heaven, for the descent and ascent of Cupid. Like _Jocasta_, it
-preserves unity of place, but it has two houses in the background, the
-palace of Tancred and an independent ‘chamber’ for Gismond, which is
-open enough and deep enough to allow part of the action, with Gismond
-lying poisoned and Tancred mourning over her, to take place within it.
-_The Misfortunes of Arthur_ is, of course, twenty years later than
-the other members of the group. But it is true to type. The action
-is in front of three _domus_, the ‘houses’ of Arthur and of Mordred,
-which ought not perhaps historically to have been in the same city,
-and a cloister. A few years later still, in 1591, Wilmot, one of the
-authors of _Gismond of Salerne_, rewrote it as _Tancred and Gismund_.
-He did not materially interfere with the old staging, but he added an
-epilogue, of which the final couplet runs:
-
- Thus end our sorrowes with the setting sun:
- Now draw the curtens for our Scaene is done.
-
-If these lines had occurred in the original version of the play, they
-would naturally have been taken as referring to curtains used to cover
-and discover Gismond’s death-chamber. But in this point Wilmot has
-modified the original action, and has made Gismund take her poison and
-die, not in her chamber, but on the open stage. Are we then faced,
-as part of the paraphernalia of a Court stage, at any rate by 1591,
-with a front curtain--a curtain drawn aside, and not sinking like the
-curtains of Ferrara and Rome, but like those curtains used to mark the
-beginning and end of a play, rather than to facilitate any changing
-of scenes?[89] It is difficult to say. Wilmot, not re-writing for the
-stage, may have rewritten loosely. Or the epilogue may after all have
-belonged to the first version of the play, and have dropped out of the
-manuscript in which that version is preserved. The Revels Accounts
-testify that ‘great curtains’ were used in Court plays, but certainly
-do not prove that they were used as front curtains. The nearest
-approach to a corroboration of Wilmot is to be found in an epigram
-which exists in various forms, and is ascribed in some manuscripts to
-Sir Walter Raleigh.[90]
-
- What is our life? a play of passion.
- Our mirth? the musick of diuision.
- Our mothers wombs the tyring houses bee
- Where we are drest for liues short comedy.
- The earth the stage, heauen the spectator is,
- Who still doth note who ere do act amisse.
- Our graues, that hyde vs from the all-seeing sun,
- Are but drawne curtaynes when the play is done.
-
-If these four comedies and four tragedies were taken alone, it
-would, I think, be natural to conclude that, with the Italianized
-types of drama, the English Court had also adopted the Italian type
-of setting.[91] Certainly the tragedies would fit well enough into
-Serlio’s stately façade of palaces, and the comedies into his more
-homely group of bourgeois houses, with its open shop, its ‘temple’, and
-its discreet abode of a _ruffiana_.[92]
-
-As courtly, beyond doubt, we must treat the main outlook of the choir
-companies during their long hegemony of the Elizabethan drama, which
-ended with the putting down of Paul’s in 1590. Unfortunately it is not
-until the last decade of this period, with the ‘court comedies’ of
-Lyly, that we have any substantial body of their work, differentiated
-from the interludes and the Italianate comedies, to go upon. The _Damon
-and Pythias_ of Richard Edwardes has a simple setting before the gates
-of a court. Lyly’s own methods require rather careful analysis.[93] The
-locality of _Campaspe_ is throughout at Athens, in ‘the market-place’
-(III. ii. 56).[94] On this there are three _domus_: Alexander’s palace,
-probably represented by a portico in which he receives visitors, and
-from which inmates ‘draw in’ (IV. iii. 32) to get off the stage; a
-tub ‘turned towardes the sun’ (I. iii. 12) for Diogenes over which he
-can ‘pry’ (V. iii. 21); a shop for Apelles, which has a window (III.
-i. 18), outside which a page is posted, and open enough for Apelles
-to carry on dialogue with Campaspe (III. iii.; IV. iv), while he
-paints her within. These three _domus_ are quite certainly all visible
-together, as continuous action can pass from one to another. At one
-point (I. iii. 110) the philosophers walk direct from the palace to the
-tub; at another (III. iv. 44, 57) Alexander, going to the shop, passes
-the tub on the way; at a third (V. iv. 82) Apelles, standing at the
-tub, is bidden ‘looke about you, your shop is on fire!’ As Alexander
-(V. iv. 71) tells Diogenes that he ‘wil haue thy cabin remoued nerer
-to my court’, I infer that the palace and the tub were at opposite
-ends of the stage, and the shop in the middle, where the interior
-action could best be seen. In _Sapho and Phao_ the unity of place is
-not so marked. All the action is more or less at Syracuse, but, with
-the exception of one scene (II. iii), the whole of the first two acts
-are near Phao’s ferry outside the city. I do not think that the actual
-ferry is visible, for passengers go ‘away’ (I. i. 72; ii. 69) to cross,
-and no use is made of a ferryman’s house, but somewhere quite near
-Sibylla sits ‘in the mouth of her caue’ (II. i. 13), and talks with
-Phao.[95] The rest of the action is in the city itself, either before
-the palace of Sapho, or within her chamber, or at the forge of Vulcan,
-where he is perhaps seen ‘making of the arrowes’ (IV. iv. 33) during a
-song. Certainly Sapho’s chamber is practicable. The stage-directions
-do not always indicate its opening and shutting. At one point (III.
-iii. 1) we simply get ‘Sapho in her bed’ in a list of interlocutors;
-at another (IV. i. 20) ‘Exit Sapho’, which can only mean that the door
-closes upon her. It was a door, not a curtain, for she tells a handmaid
-(V. ii. 101) to ‘shut’ it. Curtains are ‘drawne’ (III. iii. 36; IV.
-iii. 95), but these are bed-curtains, and the drawing of them does not
-put Sapho’s chamber in or out of action. As in _Campaspe_, there is
-interplay between house and house. A long continuous stretch of action,
-not even broken by the act-intervals, begins with III. iii and extends
-to the end of V. ii, and in the course of this Venus sends Cupid to
-Sapho, and herself waits at Vulcan’s forge (V. i. 50). Presently (V.
-ii. 45) she gets tired of waiting, and without leaving the stage,
-advances to the chamber and says, ‘How now, in Saphoes lap?’ There is
-not the same interplay between the city houses and Sibylla’s cave, to
-which the last scene of the play returns. I think we must suppose that
-two neighbouring spots within the same general locality were shown
-in different parts of the stage, and this certainly entails a bolder
-use of dramatic foreshortening of distance than the mere crossing the
-market-place in _Campaspe_. This foreshortening recurs in _Endymion_.
-Most of the action is in an open place which must be supposed to be
-near the palace of Cynthia, or at the lunary bank (II. iii. 9), of
-Endymion’s slumber, which is also near the palace.[96] It stands in a
-grove (IV. iii. 160), and is called a ‘caban’ (IV. iii. 111). Somewhere
-also in the open space is, in Act V, the aspen-tree, into which Dipsas
-has turned Bagoa and from which she is delivered (V. iii. 283). But
-III. ii and IV. i are at the door of ‘the Castle in the Deserte’ (III.
-i. 41; ii. 1) and III. iv is also in the desert (cf. V. iii. 35),
-before a fountain. This fountain was, however, ‘hard by’ the lunary
-bank (IV. ii. 67), and probably the desert was no farther off than
-the end of the stage.[97] In _Midas_ the convention of foreshortening
-becomes inadequate, and we are faced with a definite change of
-locality. The greater part of the play is at the Court of Midas,
-presumably in Lydia rather than in Phrygia, although an Elizabethan
-audience is not likely to have been punctilious about Anatolian
-geography. Some scenes require as background a palace, to which it is
-possible to go ‘in’ (I. i. 117; II. ii. 83; III. iii. 104). A temple
-of Bacchus may also have been represented, but is not essential. Other
-scenes are in a neighbouring spot, where the speaking reeds grow. There
-is a hunting scene (IV. i) on ‘the hill Tmolus’ (cf. V. iii. 44). So
-far Lyly’s canons of foreshortening are not exceeded. But the last
-scene (V. iii) is out of the picture altogether. The opening words are
-‘This is Delphos’, and we are overseas, before the temple of Apollo. In
-_Galathea_ and in _Love’s Metamorphosis_, on the other hand, unity is
-fully achieved. The whole of _Galathea_ may well proceed in a single
-spot, on the edge of a wood, before a tree sacred to Neptune, and in
-Lincolnshire (I. iv. 12). The sea is hard by, but need not be seen.
-The action of _Love’s Metamorphosis_ is rather more diffuse, but an
-all-over pastoral setting, such as we see in Serlio’s _scena satirica_,
-with scattered _domus_ in different glades, would serve it. Or, as
-the management of the Hôtel de Bourgogne would have put it, the stage
-is _tout en pastoralle_. There are a tree of Ceres and a temple of
-Cupid. These are used successively in the same scene (II. i). Somewhat
-apart, on the sea-shore, but close to the wood, dwells Erisichthon.
-There is a rock for the Siren, and Erisichthon’s house may also have
-been shown.[98] Finally, _Mother Bombie_ is an extreme example of the
-traditional Italian comic manner. The action comes and goes, rapidly
-for Lyly, in an open place, surrounded by no less than seven houses,
-the doors of which are freely used.
-
-Two other Chapel plays furnish sufficient evidence that the type of
-staging just described was not Lyly’s and Lyly’s alone.[99] Peele’s
-_Arraignment of Paris_ is _tout en pastoralle_. A poplar-tree dominates
-the stage throughout, and the only house is a bower of Diana, large
-enough to hold the council of gods (381, 915). A trap is required
-for the rising and sinking of a golden tree (489) and the ascent of
-Pluto (902). Marlowe’s _Dido_ has proved rather a puzzle to editors
-who have not fully appreciated the principles on which the Chapel
-plays were produced. I think that one side of the stage was arranged
-_en pastoralle_, and represented the wood between the sea-shore and
-Carthage, where the shipwrecked Trojans land and where later Aeneas
-and Dido hunt. Here was the cave where they take shelter from the
-storm.[100] Here too must have been the curtained-off _domus_ of
-Jupiter.[101] This is only used in a kind of prelude. Of course it
-ought to have been in heaven, but the Gods are omnipresent, and it
-is quite clear that when the curtain is drawn on Jupiter, Venus, who
-has been discoursing with him, is left in the wood, where she then
-meets Aeneas (134, 139, 173). The other side of the stage represents
-Carthage. Possibly a wall with a gate in it was built across the stage,
-dividing off the two regions. In the opening line of Act II, Aeneas
-says,
-
- Where am I now? these should be Carthage walles,
-
-and we must think of him as advancing through the wood to the
-gate.[102] He is amazed at a carved or printed representation of Troy,
-which Virgil placed in a temple of Juno, but which Marlowe probably
-thought of as at the gate. He meets other Trojans who have already
-reached the city, and they call his attention to Dido’s servitors, who
-‘passe through the hall’ bearing a banquet. Evidently he is now within
-the city and has approached a _domus_ representing the palace. The
-so-called ‘hall’ is probably an open _loggia_. Here Dido entertains
-him, and in a later scene (773) points out to him the pictures of her
-suitors. There is perhaps an altar in front of the palace, where Iarbas
-does his sacrifice (1095), and somewhere close by a pyre is made for
-Dido (1692). Either within or without the walls may be the grove in
-which Ascanius is hidden while Cupid takes his place.[103] If, as is
-more probable, it is without, action passes through the gate when Venus
-beguiles him away. It certainly does at the beginning (912, 960) and
-end (1085) of the hunt, and again when Aeneas first attempts flight and
-Anna brings him back from the sea-shore (1151, 1207).
-
-The plays of the Lylyan school, if one may so call it, seem to me to
-illustrate very precisely, on the side of staging, that blend of the
-classical and the romantic tempers which is characteristic of the later
-Renaissance. The mediaeval instinct for a story, which the Elizabethans
-fully shared, is with difficulty accommodated to the form of an action
-coherent in place and time, which the Italians had established on the
-basis of Latin comedy. The Shakespearian romantic drama is on the
-point of being born. Lyly and his fellow University wits deal with
-the problem to the best of their ability. They widen the conception
-of locality, to a city and its environs instead of a street; and even
-then the narrative sometimes proves unmanageable, and the distance
-from one end of the stage to the other must represent a foreshortening
-of leagues, or even of the crossing of an ocean. In the hands of less
-skilful workmen the tendency was naturally accentuated, and plays had
-been written, long before Lyly was sent down from Magdalen, in which
-the episodes of breathless adventure altogether overstepped the most
-elastic confines of locality. A glance at the titles of the plays
-presented at Court during the second decade of Elizabeth’s reign will
-show the extent to which themes drawn from narrative literature were
-already beginning to oust those of the old interlude type.[104] The
-new development is apparent in the contributions both of men and of
-boys; with this distinction, that the boys find their sources mainly
-in the storehouse of classical history and legend, while the men turn
-either to contemporary events at home and abroad, or more often to the
-belated and somewhat jaded versions, still dear to the Elizabethan
-laity, of mediaeval romance. The break-down of the Italian staging must
-therefore be regarded from the beginning, as in part at least a result
-of the reaction of popular taste upon that of the Court. The noblemen’s
-players came to London when the winter set in, and brought with them
-the pieces which had delighted _bourgeois_ and village audiences up
-and down the land throughout the summer; and on the whole it proved
-easier for the Revels officers to adapt the stage to the plays than the
-plays to the stage. Nor need it be doubted that, even in so cultivated
-a Court as that of Elizabeth, the popular taste was not without its
-echoes.
-
-Of all this wealth of forgotten play-making, only five examples
-survive; but they are sufficient to indicate the scenic trend.[105]
-Their affiliation with the earlier interludes is direct. The ‘vice’ and
-other moral abstractions still mingle with the concrete personages,
-and the proscenium is still the ‘place’.[106] The simplest setting is
-that of _Cambyses_. All is at or within sight of the Persian Court.
-If any _domus_ was represented, it was the palace, to which there are
-departures (567, 929). Cambyses consults his council (1–125) and there
-is a banquet (965–1042) with a ‘boorde’, at the end of which order
-is given to ‘take all these things away’.[107] In other episodes the
-Court is ‘yonder’ (732, 938); it is only necessary to suppose that they
-were played well away from the _domus_. One is in a ‘feeld so green’
-(843–937), and a stage-direction tells us ‘Heere trace up and downe
-playing’. In another (754–842) clowns are on their way to market.[108]
-The only other noteworthy point is that, not for the first nor for
-the last time, a post upon the stage is utilized in the action.[109]
-_Patient Grissell_, on the other hand, requires two localities. The
-more important is Salucia (Saluzzo), where are Gautier’s mansion,
-Janickell’s cottage, and the house of Mother Apleyarde, a midwife
-(1306). The other is Bullin Lagras (Bologna), where there are two short
-episodes (1235–92, 1877–1900) at the house of the Countess of Pango.
-There can be little doubt that all the _domus_ were staged at once.
-There is direct transfer of action from Gautier’s to the cottage and
-back again (612–34; cf. 1719, 2042, 2090). Yet there is some little
-distance between, for when a messenger is sent, the foreshortening of
-space is indicated by the stage-direction (1835), ‘Go once or twise
-about the Staige’.[110] Similarly, unless an ‘Exiunt’ has dropped
-out, there is direct transfer (1900) from Bullin Lagras to Salucia.
-In _Orestes_ the problem of discrete localities is quite differently
-handled. The play falls into five quasi-acts of unequal length, which
-are situated successively at Mycenae, Crete, Mycenae, Athens, Mycenae.
-For all, as in _Gorboduc_, the same sketchy palace background might
-serve, with one interesting and prophetic exception. The middle
-episodes (538–925), at Mycenae, afford the first example of those siege
-scenes which the Shakespearian stage came to love. A messenger brings
-warning to Aegisthus and Clytemnestra of the purpose of Orestes ‘to
-inuade this Mycoene Citie stronge’. Aegisthus goes into the ‘realme’,
-to take up men, and Clytemnestra will defend the city. There is a
-quarrel between a soldier and a woman and the Vice sings a martial
-song. Then ‘Horestes entrith with his bande and marcheth about the
-stage’. He instructs a Herald, who advances with his trumpeter. ‘Let
-y^e trumpet go towarde the Citie and blowe.’ Clytemnestra answers. ‘Let
-y^e trumpet leaue soundyng and let Harrauld speake and Clytemnestra
-speake ouer y^e wal.’ Summons and defiance follow, and Orestes calls
-on his men for an assault. ‘Go and make your liuely battel and let it
-be longe, eare you can win y^e Citie, and when you haue won it, let
-Horestes bringe out his mother by the armes, and let y^e droum sease
-playing and the trumpet also, when she is taken.’ But now Aegisthus
-is at hand. ‘Let Egistus enter and set hys men in a raye, and let the
-drom play tyll Horestes speaketh.’ There is more fighting, which ends
-with the capture and hanging of Aegisthus. ‘Fling him of y^e lader,
-and then let on bringe in his mother Clytemnestra; but let her loke
-wher Egistus hangeth’. Finally Orestes announces that ‘Enter now we
-wyll the citie gate’. In the two other plays the changes of locality
-come thick and fast. The action of _Clyomon and Clamydes_ begins in
-Denmark, and passes successively to Swabia, to the Forest of Marvels
-on the borders of Macedonia, to the Isle of Strange Marshes twenty
-days’ sail from Macedonia, to the Forest again, to the Isle again,
-to Norway, to the Forest, to the Isle, to the Forest, to a road near
-Denmark, to the Isle, to Denmark. Only two _domus_ are needed, a
-palace (733) in the Isle, and Bryan Sans Foy’s Castle in the Forest.
-This is a prison, with a practicable door and a window, from which
-Clamydes speaks (872). At one point Providence descends and ascends
-(1550–64). In one of the Forest scenes a hearse is brought in and it
-is still there in the next (1450, 1534), although a short Isle scene
-has intervened. This looks as though the two ends of the stage may
-have been assigned throughout to the two principal localities, the
-Forest and the Isle. Some care is taken to let the speakers give the
-audience a clue when a new locality is made use of for the first time.
-Afterwards the recurrence of characters whom they had already seen
-would help them. The Norway episode (1121) is the only one which need
-have much puzzled them. But _Clyomon and Clamydes_ may have made use of
-a peculiar device, which becomes apparent in the stage-directions of
-_Common Conditions_. The play opens in Arabia, where first a spot near
-the Court and then a wood are indicated; but the latter part alternates
-between Phrygia, near the sea-shore, and the Isle of Marofus. No
-_domus_ is necessary, and it must remain uncertain whether the wood
-was represented by visualized trees. It is introduced (295) with the
-stage-direction, ‘Here enter Sedmond with Clarisia and Condicions
-out of the wood’. Similarly Phrygia is introduced (478) with ‘Here
-entreth Galiarbus out of Phrygia’, and a few lines later (510) we get
-‘Here enter Lamphedon out of Phrygia’. Now it is to be noted that the
-episodes which follow these directions are not away from, but in the
-wood and Phrygia respectively; and the inference has been drawn that
-there were labelled doors, entrance through one of which warned the
-spectators that action was about to take place in the locality whose
-title the label bore.[111] This theory obtains some plausibility from
-the use of the gates Homoloydes and Electrae in _Jocasta_; and perhaps
-also from the inscribed house of the _ruffiana_ in Serlio’s _scena
-comica_, from the early Terence engravings, and from certain examples
-of lettered _mansions_ in French miracle-plays.[112] But of course
-these analogies do not go the whole way in support of a practice of
-using differently lettered entrances to help out an imagined conversion
-of the same ‘place’ into different localities. More direct confirmation
-may perhaps be derived from Sidney’s criticism of the contemporary
-drama in his _Defence of Poesie_ (_c._ 1583). There are two passages to
-be cited.[113] The first forms part of an argument that poets are not
-liars. Their feigning is a convention, and is accepted as such by their
-hearers. ‘What Childe is there’, says Sidney, ‘that, comming to a Play,
-and seeing _Thebes_ written in great letters vpon an olde doore, doth
-beleeue that it is _Thebes_?’ Later on he deals more formally with the
-stage, as a classicist, writing after the unity of place had hardened
-into a doctrine. Even _Gorboduc_ is no perfect tragedy.
-
- ‘For it is faulty both in place and time, the two necessary
- companions of all corporall actions. For where the stage
- should alwaies represent but one place, and the vttermost time
- presupposed in it should be, both by _Aristotles_ precept and
- common reason, but one day, there is both many dayes, and many
- places, inartificially imagined. But if it be so in _Gorboduck_,
- how much more in al the rest? where you shal haue _Asia_ of
- the one side, and _Affrick_ of the other, and so many other
- vnder-kingdoms, that the Player, when he commeth in, must
- ever begin with telling where he is, or els the tale wil not
- be conceiued. Now ye shal haue three ladies walke to gather
- flowers, and then we must beleeue the stage to be a Garden. By
- and by, we heare newes of shipwracke in the same place, and
- then wee are to blame if we accept it not for a Rock. Vpon the
- backe of that, comes out a hidious Monster, with fire and smoke,
- and then the miserable beholders are bounde to take it for a
- Caue. While in the meantime two Armies flye in, represented with
- foure swords and bucklers, and then what harde heart will not
- receiue it for a pitched fielde?’
-
-It is evident that the plays which Sidney has mostly in mind, the
-‘al the rest’ of his antithesis with _Gorboduc_, are precisely those
-romantic histories which the noblemen’s players in particular were
-bringing to Court in his day, and of which _Clyomon and Clamydes_ and
-_Common Conditions_ may reasonably be taken as the characteristic
-débris. He hints at what we might have guessed that, where changes
-of scene were numerous, the actual visualization of the different
-scenes left much to the imagination. He lays his finger upon the
-foreshortening, which permits the two ends of the stage to stand
-for localities separated by a considerable distance, and upon the
-obligation which the players were under to let the opening phrases of
-their dialogue make it clear where they were supposed to be situated.
-And it certainly seems from the shorter passage, as if he was also
-familiar with an alternative or supplementary device of indicating
-locality by great letters on a door. The whole business remains rather
-obscure. What happened if the distinct localities were more numerous
-than the doors? Were the labels shifted, or were the players then
-driven, as Sidney seems to suggest, to rely entirely upon the method
-of spoken hints? The labelling of special doors with great letters
-must be distinguished from the analogous use of great letters, as
-at the _Phormio_ of 1528, to publish the title of a play.[114] That
-this practice also survived in Court drama may be inferred from Kyd’s
-_Spanish Tragedy_, in which Hieronimo gives a Court play, and bids
-his assistant (IV. iii. 17) ‘hang up the Title: Our scene is Rhodes’.
-Even if the ‘scene’ formed part of the title in such cases, it would
-only name a generalized locality or localities for the play, and would
-not serve as a clue to the localization of individual episodes.[115]
-A retrospect over this discussion of Tudor staging, which is mainly
-Court staging, up to a point well subsequent to the establishment of
-the first regular theatres, seems to offer the following results. The
-earliest interludes, other than revivals of Plautus and Terence or
-elements in spectacular disguisings, limited themselves to the setting
-of the hall in which they were performed, with its doors, hearth, and
-furniture. In such conditions either exterior or interior action could
-be indifferently represented. This arrangement, however, soon ceased
-to satisfy, in the Court at any rate, the sixteenth-century love of
-decoration; and one or more houses were introduced into the background,
-probably on a Renaissance rather than a mediaeval suggestion, through
-which, as well as the undifferentiated doors, the personages could
-come and go. The addition of an elevated stage enabled traps to be
-used (_All for Money_, _Gorboduc_, _Jocasta_, _Gismond of Salerne_,
-_Arraignment of Paris_); but here, as in the corresponding device of
-a descent from above (_Gismond of Salerne_, _Clyomon and Clamydes_),
-it is the mediaeval grading for heaven and hell which lies behind the
-Renaissance usage. With houses in the background, the normal action
-becomes uniformly exterior. If a visit is paid to a house, conversation
-takes place at its door rather than within. The exceptions are rare and
-tentative, amounting to little more than the provision of a shallow
-recess within a house, from which personages, usually one or two only,
-can speak. This may be a window (_Two Italian Gentlemen_, _Promos
-and Cassandra_), a prison (_Wit and Wisdom_, _Promos and Cassandra_,
-_Clyomon and Clamydes_), a bower (_Misogonus_, _Endymion_, _Dido_,
-_Arraignment of Paris_), a tub (_Campaspe_), a shrine or tomb (_Two
-Italian Gentlemen_, _Promos and Cassandra_), a shop (_Thersites_,
-_Promos and Cassandra_, _Campaspe_, _Sapho and Phao_), a bedchamber
-(_Gismund of Salerne_, _Tom Tyler_, _Sapho and Phao_). Somewhat
-more difficulty is afforded by episodes in which there is a banquet
-(_Mary Magdalene_, _Dido_, _Cambyses_), or a law court (_Conflict
-of Conscience_), or a king confers with his councillors (_Midas_,
-_Cambyses_). These, according to modern notions, require the setting of
-a hall; but my impression is that the Italianized imagination of the
-Elizabethans was content to accept them as taking place more or less
-out-of-doors, on the steps or in the cortile of a palace, with perhaps
-some arcaded _loggia_, such as Serlio suggests, in the background,
-which would be employed when the action was supposed to be withdrawn
-from the public market-place or street. And this convention I believe
-to have lasted well into the Shakespearian period.[116]
-
-The simplicity of this scheme of staging is broken into, when a
-mediaeval survival or the popular instinct for storytelling faces
-the producer with a plot incapable of continuous presentation in
-a single locality. A mere foreshortening of the distance between
-houses conceived as surrounding one and the same open _platea_, or as
-dispersed in the same wood, is hardly felt as a breach of unity. But
-the principle is endangered, when action within a city is diversified
-by one or more ‘approach’ episodes, in which the edge of the stage
-or the steps leading up to it must stand for a road or a wood in the
-environs (_Promos and Cassandra_, _Sapho and Phao_, _Dido_). It is
-on the point of abandonment, when the foreshortening is carried so
-far that one end of the stage represents one locality and the other
-end another at a distance (_Disobedient Child_, _Mary Magdalene_,
-_Endymion_, _Midas_, _Patient Grissell_). And it has been abandoned
-altogether, when the same background or a part of it is taken to
-represent different localities in different episodes, and ingenuity
-has to be taxed to find means of informing the audience where any
-particular bit of action is proceeding (_Gorboduc_, _Orestes_, _Clyomon
-and Clamydes_, _Common Conditions_).[117]
-
-After considering the classicist group of comedies and tragedies, I
-suggested that these, taken by themselves, would point to a method of
-staging at the Elizabethan Court not unlike that recommended by Serlio.
-The more comprehensive survey now completed points to some revision
-of that judgement. Two localities at opposite ends of the stage could
-not, obviously, be worked into a continuous architectural façade. They
-call for something more on the lines of the multiple setting of the
-Hôtel de Bourgogne, although the width of the Elizabethan palace halls
-may perhaps have accommodated a longer stage than that of the Hôtel,
-and permitted of a less crude juxtaposition of the houses belonging to
-distinct localities than Mahelot offers us. Any use of perspective, for
-which there is some Elizabethan evidence, was presumably within the
-limits of one locality.[118]
-
-The indications of the Revels Accounts, scanty as they are, are not
-inconsistent with those yielded by the plays.[119] If the _Orestes_
-of 1567–8, as may reasonably be supposed, was Pikeryng’s, his ‘howse’
-must have been the common structure used successively for Mycenae,
-Crete, and Athens. The ‘Scotland and a gret Castell on thothere side’
-give us the familiar arrangement for two localities. I think that the
-‘city’ of the later accounts may stand for a group of houses on one
-street or market-place, and a ‘mountain’ or ‘wood’ for a setting _tout
-en pastoralle_. There were tents for _A Game of the Cards_ in 1582–3,
-as in _Jacob and Esau_, a prison for _The Four Sons of Fabius_ in
-1579–80, as in several extant plays. I cannot parallel from any early
-survival the senate house for the _Quintus Fabius_ of 1573–4, but this
-became a common type of scene at a later date. These are recessed
-houses, and curtains, quite distinct from the front curtain, if any,
-were provided by the Revels officers to open and close them, as the
-needs of the action required. Smaller structures, to which the accounts
-refer, are also needed by the plays; a well by _Endymion_, a gibbet by
-_Orestes_, a tree by _The Arraignment of Paris_, and inferentially by
-all pastoral, and many other plays. The brief record of 1567–8 does not
-specify the battlement or gated wall, solid enough for Clytemnestra
-to speak ‘ouer y^e wal’, which was a feature in the siege episode of
-_Orestes_. Presumably it was part of the ‘howse’, which is mentioned,
-and indeed it would by itself furnish sufficient background for the
-scenes alike at Mycenae, Crete, and Athens. If it stood alone, it
-probably extended along the back of the stage, where it would interfere
-least with the arrays of Orestes and of Aegisthus. But in the accounts
-of 1579–85, the plays, of which there are many, with battlements also,
-as a rule, have cities, and here we must suppose some situation for
-the battlement which will not interfere with the city. If it stood for
-the gate and wall of some other city, it may have been reared at an
-opposite end of the stage. In _Dido_, where the gate of Troy seems to
-have been shown, although there is no action ‘ouer’ it, I can visualize
-it best as extending across the middle of the stage from back to
-front. With an unchanging setting it need not always have occupied
-the same place. The large number of plays between 1579 and 1585 which
-required battlements, no less than fourteen out of twenty-eight in all,
-is rather striking. No doubt the assault motive was beloved in the
-popular type of drama, of which _Orestes_ was an early representative.
-A castle in a wood, where a knight is imprisoned, is assaulted in
-_Clyomon and Clamydes_, and the Shakespearian stage never wearied of
-the device. I have sometimes thought that with the Revels officers
-‘battlement’ was a technical term for any platform provided for action
-at a higher level than the floor of the stage. Certainly a battlement
-was provided in 1585 for an entertainment which was not a play at all,
-but a performance of feats of activities.[120] But as a matter of fact
-raised action, so common in the Shakespearian period, is extremely
-rare in these early plays. With the exceptions of Clytemnestra peering
-over her wall, and the descents from heaven in _Gismond of Salerne_
-and _Clyomon and Clamydes_, which may of course have been through
-the roof rather than from a platform, the seventy or so plays just
-discussed contain nothing of the kind. There are, however, two plays
-still to be mentioned, in which use is made of a platform, and one of
-these gives some colour to my suggestion. In 1582 Derby’s men played
-_Love and Fortune_ at Court, and a city and a battlement, together with
-some other structure of canvas, the name of which is left blank, were
-provided. This may reasonably be identified with the _Rare Triumphs
-of Love and Fortune_, which claims on its title-page of 1589 to have
-been played before the Queen. It is a piece of the romantic type. The
-action is divided between a court and a cave in a wood, which account
-for the city and the unnamed structure of the Revels record. They were
-evidently shown together, at opposite ends of the stage, for action
-passes directly from one to the other. There is no assault scene. But
-there is an induction, in which the gods are in assembly, and Tisiphone
-arises from hell. At the end of it Jupiter says to Venus and Fortune:
-
- Take up your places here, to work your will,
-
-and Vulcan comments:
-
- They are set sunning like a crow in a gutter.
-
-They remain as spectators of the play until they ‘shew themselves’ and
-intervene in the _dénouement_. Evidently they are in a raised place
-or balcony. And this balcony must be the battlement. An exact analogy
-is furnished by the one of Lyly’s plays to which I have not as yet
-referred. This is _The Woman in the Moon_, Lyly’s only verse play, and
-possibly of later date than his group of productions with the Paul’s
-boys. The first act has the character of an induction. Nature and the
-seven Planets are on the stage and ‘They draw the curtins from before
-Natures shop’. During the other four there is a human action in a
-pastoral setting with a cave, beneath which is a trap, a grove on the
-bank of Enipeus, and a spot near the sea-shore. And throughout one or
-other of the Planets is watching the play from a ‘seate’ (II. 176; III.
-i. 1) above, between which and the stage they ‘ascend’ and ‘descend’
-(I. 138, 230; II. 174, 236; III. ii. 35; IV. 3).
-
-
-
-
- XX
-
- STAGING IN THE THEATRES: SIXTEENTH CENTURY
-
- [For _Bibliographical Note_, _vide_ ch. xviii.]
-
-
-In dealing with the groups of plays brought under review in the
-last chapter, the main problem considered has been that of their
-adaptability to the conditions of a Court stage. In the present chapter
-the point of view must be shifted to that of the common theatres.
-Obviously no hard and fast line is to be drawn. There had been regular
-public performances in London since the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign
-or earlier, and there is no reason to suppose that the adult companies
-at least did not draw upon the same repertory both for popular and for
-private representation. But there is not much profit in attempting
-to investigate the methods of staging in the inns, of which we know
-nothing more than that quasi-permanent structures of carpenter’s work
-came in time to supplement the doors, windows, and galleries which
-surrounded the yards; and so far as the published plays go, it is
-fairly apparent that, up to the date of the suppression of Paul’s, the
-Court, or at any rate the private, interest was the dominating one. A
-turning-point may be discerned in 1576, at the establishment, on the
-one hand of the Theatre and the Curtain, and on the other of Farrant’s
-house in the Blackfriars. It is not likely that the Blackfriars
-did more than reproduce the conditions of a courtly hall. But the
-investment of capital in the Theatre and the Curtain was an incident
-in the history of the companies, the economic importance of which has
-already been emphasized in an earlier discussion.[121] It was followed
-by the formation of strong theatrical organizations in the Queen’s men,
-the Admiral’s, Strange’s, the Chamberlain’s. For a time the economic
-changes are masked by the continued vogue of the boy companies; but
-when these dropped out at the beginning of the ’nineties, it is clear
-that the English stage had become a public stage, and that the eyes of
-its controllers were fixed primarily upon the pence gathered by the
-box-holders, and only secondarily upon the rewards of the Treasurer of
-the Chamber.
-
-The first play published ‘as it was publikely acted’ is the
-_Troublesome Raigne of John_ of 1591, and henceforward I think it
-is true to say that the staging suggested by the public texts and
-their directions in the main represents the arrangements of the
-public theatres. There is no sudden breach of continuity with the
-earlier period, but that continuity is far greater with the small
-group of popular plays typified by _Clyomon and Clamydes_ and _Common
-Conditions_, than with anything which Lyly and his friends produced
-at Paul’s or the Blackfriars. Again it is necessary to beware of
-any exaggeration of antithesis. There is one Chapel play, _The Wars
-of Cyrus_, the date of which is obscure, and the setting of which
-certainly falls on the theatre rather than the Court side of any
-border-line. On the other hand, the Queen’s men and their successors
-continued to serve the Court, and one of the published Queen’s plays,
-_The Old Wive’s Tale_, was evidently staged in a way exactly analogous
-to that adopted by Lyly, or by Peele himself in _The Arraignment of
-Paris_. It is _tout en pastoralle_, and about the stage are dispersed a
-hut with a door, at the threshold of which presenters sit to watch the
-main action (71, 128, 1163), a little hill or mound with a practicable
-turf (512, 734, 1034), a cross (173, 521), a ‘well of life’ (743,
-773), an inn before which a table is set (904, 916), and a ‘cell’ or
-‘studie’ for the conjurer, before which ‘he draweth a curten’ (411,
-773, 1060).[122] Of one other play by Peele it is difficult to take
-any account in estimating evidence as to staging. This is _David and
-Bethsabe_, of which the extant text apparently represents an attempt to
-bring within the compass of a single performance a piece or fragments
-of a piece originally written in three ‘discourses’. I mention it here,
-because somewhat undue use has been made of its opening direction in
-speculations as to the configuration of the back wall of the public
-stage.[123] It uses the favourite assault motive, and has many changes
-of locality. The title-page suggests that in its present form it was
-meant for public performance. But almost anything may lie behind that
-present form, possibly a Chapel play, possibly a University play, or
-even a neo-miracle in the tradition of Bale; and the staging of any
-particular scene may contain original elements, imperfectly adapted to
-later conditions.
-
-Counting in _The Wars of Cyrus_ then, and counting out _The Old Wive’s
-Tale_ and _David and Bethsabe_, there are about seventy-four plays
-which may reasonably be taken to have been presented upon common
-stages, between the establishment of the Queen’s men in 1583 and the
-building of the Globe for the Chamberlain’s men in 1599 and of the
-Fortune for the Admiral’s men in 1600. With a few exceptions they were
-also published during the same period, and the scenic arrangements
-implied by their texts and stage-directions may therefore be looked
-upon as those of the sixteenth-century theatres. These form the
-next group for our consideration. Of the seventy-four plays, the
-original production of nine may with certainty or fair probability be
-assigned to the Queen’s men, of two to Sussex’s, five to Pembroke’s,
-fourteen to Strange’s or the Admiral’s or the two in combination,
-thirteen to the Admiral’s after the combination broke up, seventeen
-to the Chamberlain’s, three to Derby’s, one to Oxford’s, and one to
-the Chapel; nine must remained unassigned.[124] It is far less easy
-to make a guess at the individual theatre whose staging each play
-represents. The migrations of the companies before 1594 in the main
-elude us. Thereafter the Admiral’s were settled at the Rose until 1600.
-The Chamberlain’s may have passed from the Theatre to the Curtain
-about 1597. The habitations of the other later companies are very
-conjectural. Moreover, plays were carried from theatre to theatre,
-and even transferred from company to company. _Titus Andronicus_,
-successively presented by Pembroke’s, Strange’s, Sussex’s, and the
-Chamberlain’s, is an extreme case in point. The ideal method would have
-been to study the staging of each theatre separately, before coming to
-any conclusion as to the similarity or diversity of their arrangements.
-This is impracticable, and I propose therefore to proceed on the
-assumption that the stages of the Theatre, the Curtain, and the Rose
-were in their main features similar. For this there is an _a priori_
-argument in the convenience of what Mr. Archer calls a ‘standardisation
-of effects’, especially at a time when the bonds between companies and
-theatres were so loose.[125] Moreover, the Theatre and the Curtain
-were built at much the same date, and although there was room for
-development in the art of theatrical architecture before the addition
-of the Rose, I am unable, after a careful examination of the relevant
-plays, to lay my finger upon any definite new feature which Henslowe
-can be supposed to have introduced. It is exceedingly provoking that
-the sixteenth-century repertory of the Swan has yielded nothing which
-can serve as a _point de liaison_ between De Witt’s drawing and the
-mass of extant texts.
-
-It will be well to begin with some analysis of the various types of
-scene which the sixteenth-century managers were called upon to produce;
-and these may with advantage be arranged according to the degree of
-use which they make of a structural background.[126] There are, of
-course, a certain number of scenes which make no use of a background
-at all, and may in a sense be called unlocated scenes--mere bits of
-conversation which might be carried on between the speakers wherever
-they happened to meet, and which give no indication of where that
-meeting is supposed to be. Perhaps these scenes are not so numerous as
-is sometimes suggested.[127] At any rate it must be borne in mind that
-they were located to the audience, who saw them against a background,
-although, if they were kept well to the front or side of the stage,
-their relation to that background would be minimized.
-
-A great many scenes are in what may be called open country--in a
-road, a meadow, a grove, a forest, a desert, a mountain, a sea-shore.
-The personages are travelling, or hunting, or in outlawry, or merely
-taking the air. The background does not generally include a house in
-the stricter sense; but there may be a cottage,[128] a hermit’s or
-friar’s cell,[129] a rustic bower,[130] a cave,[131] a beacon.[132]
-Even where there is no evidence, in dialogue or stage-directions,
-for a dwelling, a table or board may be suddenly forthcoming for a
-banquet.[133] There may be a fountain or well,[134] and a few scenes
-seem to imply the presence of a river.[135] But often there is no
-suggestion of any surroundings but rocks or trees, and the references
-to the landscape, which are frequently put in the mouths of speakers,
-have been interpreted as intended to stimulate the imagination of
-spectators before whose eyes no representation, or a very imperfect
-representation, of wilderness or woodland had been placed.[136] But
-it is not likely that this literary artifice was alone relied upon,
-and in some cases practicable trees or rocks are certainly required
-by the action and must have been represented.[137] There are plays
-which are set continuously in the open country throughout, or during a
-succession of scenes, and are thus analogous to Court plays _tout en
-pastoralle_. But there are others in which the open-country scenes are
-only interspersed among scenes of a different type.[138]
-
-Nothing was more beloved by a popular audience, especially in an
-historical play or one of the _Tamburlaine_ order, than an episode
-of war. A war scene was often only a variety of the open-country scene.
-Armies come and go on the road, and a battle naturally takes place in
-more or less open ground. It may be in a wood, or a tree or river may
-be introduced.[139] Obviously large forces could not be shown on the
-stage.
-
- We shall much disgrace,
- With four or five most vile and ragged foils,
- Right ill disposed in brawl ridiculous,
- The name of Agincourt.[140]
-
-The actual fighting tended to be sketchy and symbolical. There were
-alarums and excursions, much beating of drums and blowing of trumpets.
-But the stage was often only on the outskirts of the main battle.[141]
-It served for a duel of protagonists, or for a flight and pursuit of
-stragglers; and when all was over a triumphant train marched across it.
-There may be a succession of ‘excursions’ of this kind, in which the
-stage may be supposed, if you like, to stand for different parts of a
-battle-field.[142] Battle scenes have little need for background; the
-inn at St. Albans in _Henry VI_ is an exception due to the fulfilment
-of an oracular prophecy.[143] A more natural indication of _milieu_ is
-a tent, and battle scenes merge into camp scenes, in which the tents
-are sometimes elaborate pavilions, with doors and even locks to the
-doors. Seats and tables may be available, and the action is clearly
-sometimes within an opened tent.[144] Two opposing camps can be
-concurrently represented, and action may alternate between them.[145]
-Another kind of background is furnished, as in _Orestes_, by the walls
-of a besieged city. On these walls the defenders can appear and parley
-with the besieging host. They can descend and open the gates.[146] They
-can shoot, and be shot at from below.[147] The walls can be taken by
-assault and the defenders can leap from them.[148] Such scenes had an
-unfailing appeal, and are sometimes repeated, before different cities,
-in the same play.[149]
-
-Several scenes, analogous in some ways to those in the open country,
-are set in a garden, an orchard, a park. These also sometimes utilize
-tents.[150] Alternative shelter may be afforded by an arbour or bower,
-which facilitates eavesdropping.[151] The presence of trees, banks, or
-herbs is often required or suggested.[152] As a rule, the neighbourhood
-of a dwelling is implied, and from this personages may issue, or may
-hold discourse with those outside. Juliet’s balcony, overlooking
-Capulet’s orchard, is a typical instance.[153] A banquet may be brought
-out and served in the open.[154]
-
-The next great group of scenes consists of those which pass in some
-public spot in a city--in a street, a market-place, or a churchyard.
-Especially if the play is located in or near London, this may be
-a definite and familiar spot--Cheapside, Lombard Street, Paul’s
-Churchyard, Westminster.[155] Often the action is self-sufficient and
-the background merely suggestive or decorative. A procession passes;
-a watch is set; friends meet and converse; a stranger asks his way.
-But sometimes a structure comes into use. There is a scaffold for an
-execution.[156] Lists are set, and there must be at least a raised
-place for the judge, and probably a barrier.[157] One street scene
-in _Soliman and Perseda_ is outside a tiltyard; another close to an
-accessible tower.[158] Bills may be set up.[159] In _Lord Cromwell_
-this is apparently done on a bridge, and twice in this play it is
-difficult to resist the conclusion, already pointed to in certain
-open-country scenes, that some kind of representation of a river-side
-was feasible.[160] In Rome there are scenes in which the dialogue is
-partly amongst senators in the capitol and partly amongst citizens
-within ear-shot outside.[161] A street may provide a corner, again,
-whence passers-by can be overheard or waylaid.[162] And in it, just
-as well as in a garden, a lover may hold an assignation, or bring a
-serenade before the window of his mistress.[163] A churchyard, or in
-a Roman play a market-place, may hold a tomb.[164] Finally one or more
-shops may be visible, and action may take place within them as well as
-before them.[165] Such a shop would, of course, be nothing more than a
-shallow stall, with an open front for the display of wares, which may
-be closed by a shutter or flap from above.[166] It may also, like the
-inn in _Henry VI_, have a sign.[167]
-
-Where there is a window, there can of course be a door, and street
-scenes very readily become threshold scenes. I do not think that it
-has been fully realized how large a proportion of the action of
-Elizabethan plays passes at the doors of houses; and as a result
-the problem of staging, difficult enough anyhow, has been rendered
-unnecessarily difficult. Here we have probably to thank the editors
-of plays, who have freely interspersed their texts with notes of
-locality, which are not in the original stage-directions, and, with
-eighteenth-century models before them, have tended to assume that
-action at a house is action in some room within that house. The
-playwrights, on the other hand, followed the neo-classic Italian
-tradition, and for them action at a house was most naturally action
-before the door of that house. If a man visited his friend he was
-almost certain to meet him on the doorstep; and here domestic
-discussions, even on matters of delicacy, commonly took place. Here
-too, of course, meals might be served.[168] A clue to this convention
-is afforded by the numerous passages in which a servant or other
-personage is brought on to the stage by a ‘Who’s within?’ or a call
-to ‘Come forth!’ or in which an episode is wound up by some such
-invitation as ‘Let us in!’ No doubt such phrases remain appropriate
-when it is merely a question of transference between an outer room
-and an inner; and no doubt also the point of view of the personages
-is sometimes deflected by that of the actors, to whom ‘in’ means ‘in
-the tiring-room’ and ‘out’ means ‘on the stage’.[169] But, broadly
-speaking, the frequency of their use points to a corresponding
-frequency of threshold scenes; and, where there is a doubt, they
-should, I think, be interpreted in the light of that economy of
-interior action which was very evident in the mid-sixteenth-century
-plays, and in my opinion continued to prevail after the opening
-of the theatres. The use of a house door was so frequent that the
-stage-directions do not, as a rule, trouble to specify it.[170] Two
-complications are, however, to be observed. Sometimes, in a scene
-which employs the ‘Let us in!’ formula, or on other ground looks like
-a threshold scene, we are suddenly pulled up either by a suggestion
-of the host that we are ‘in’ his house or under his roof, or by an
-indication that persons outside are to be brought ‘in’.[171] The first
-answer is, I think, that the threshold is not always a mere doorstep
-opening from the street; it may be something of the nature of a porch
-or even a lobby, and that you may fairly be said to be under a man’s
-roof when you are in his porch.[172] The second is that in some
-threshold scenes the stage was certainly regarded as representing a
-courtyard, shut off from the street or road by an outer gate, through
-which strangers could quite properly be supposed to come ‘in’.[173]
-Such courtyard scenes are not out of place, even before an ordinary
-private house; still less, of course, when the house is a castle, and
-in a castle courtyard scene we get very near the scenes with ‘walls’
-already described.[174] Some prison scenes, in the Tower or elsewhere,
-are apparently of this type, although others seem to require interior
-action in a close chamber or even a dungeon.[175] Threshold scenes may
-also be before the outer gate of a palace or castle, where another
-analogy to assault scenes presents itself;[176] or before a church or
-temple, a friar’s cell, an inn, a stable, or the like.[177] Nor are
-shop scenes, since a shop may be a mere adjunct to a house, really
-different in kind.
-
-The threshold theory must not be pushed to a disregard of the clear
-evidence for a certain amount of interior action. We have already come
-across examples of shallow recesses, such as a tent, a cave, a bower, a
-tomb, a shop, a window, within which, or from within which, personages
-can speak. There are also scenes which must be supposed to take
-place within a room. In dealing with these, I propose to distinguish
-between spacious hall scenes and limited chamber scenes. Hall scenes
-are especially appropriate to palaces. Full value should no doubt be
-given to the extension in a palace of a porch to a portico, and to the
-convention, which kings as well as private men follow in Elizabethan
-plays, especially those located in Italian or Oriental surroundings, of
-transacting much important business more or less out-of-doors.[178] The
-characteristic Roman ‘senate house’, already described, is a case in
-point.[179] But some scenes must be in a closed presence-chamber.[180]
-Others are in a formal council room or parliament house. The conception
-of a hall, often with a numerous company, cannot therefore be
-altogether excluded. Nor are halls confined to palaces. They must be
-assumed for law courts.[181] There are scenes in such buildings as the
-London Exchange, Leadenhall, the Regent House at Oxford.[182] There
-are scenes in churches or heathen temples and in monasteries.[183]
-There are certainly also hall scenes in castles or private houses,
-and it is sometimes a matter of taste whether you assume a hall scene
-or a threshold scene.[184] Certain features of hall scenes may be
-enumerated. Personages can go into, or come forth from, an inner room.
-They can be brought in from without.[185] Seats are available, and
-a chair or ‘state’ for a sovereign.[186] A law court has its ‘bar’.
-Banquets can be served.[187] Masks may come dancing in.[188] Even a
-play ‘within a play’ can be presented; that of Bottom and his fellows
-in ‘the great chamber’ of Theseus’ palace is an example.[189]
-
-My final group is formed by the chamber scenes, in which the action
-is clearly regarded as within the limits of an ordinary room. They
-are far from numerous, in proportion to the total number of scenes in
-the seventy-three plays, and in view of their importance in relation
-to staging all for which there is clear evidence must be put upon
-record. Most of them fall under two or three sub-types, which tend to
-repeat themselves. The commonest are perhaps bedchamber scenes.[190]
-These, like prison scenes, which are also frequent, give opportunity
-for tragic episodes of death and sickness.[191] There are scenes
-in living-rooms, often called ‘studies’.[192] A lady’s bower,[193]
-a counting-house,[194] an inn parlour,[195] a buttery,[196] a
-gallery,[197] may also be represented.
-
-This then is the practical problem, which the manager of an
-Elizabethan theatre had to solve--the provision of settings, not
-necessarily so elaborate or decorative as those of the Court, but
-at least intelligible, for open country scenes, battle and siege
-scenes, garden scenes, street and threshold scenes, hall scenes,
-chamber scenes. Like the Master of the Revels, he made far less use
-of interior action than the modern or even the Restoration producer
-of plays; but he could not altogether avoid it, either on the larger
-scale of a hall scene, in which a considerable number of persons had
-occasionally to be staged for a parliament or a council or the like,
-or on the smaller scale when only a few persons had to be shown in
-a chamber, or in the still shallower enclosure which might stand as
-part of a mainly out-of-doors setting for a cell, a bower, a cave, a
-tent, a senate house, a window, a tomb, a shop, a porch, a shrine, a
-niche.[198] Even more than the Master of the Revels, he had to face
-the complication due to the taste of an English audience for romantic
-or historical drama, and the changes of locality which a narrative
-theme inevitably involved. Not for him, except here and there in a
-comedy, that blessed unity of place upon which the whole dramatic art
-of the Italian neo-classic school had been built up. Our corresponding
-antiquarian problem is to reconstruct, so far as the evidence permits,
-the structural resources which were at the Elizabethan manager’s
-disposal for the accomplishment of his task. As material we have the
-numerous indications in dialogue and stage-directions with which the
-footnotes to this chapter are groaning; we have such contemporary
-allusions as those of Dekker’s _Gull’s Hornbook_; we have the débris of
-Philip Henslowe’s business memoranda; we have the tradition inherited
-from the earlier Elizabethan period, for all the types of scene usual
-in the theatres had already made their appearance before the theatres
-came into existence; to a much less degree, owing to the interposition
-of the roofed and rectangular Caroline theatre, we have also the
-tradition bequeathed to the Restoration; and as almost sole graphic
-presentment we have that drawing of the Swan theatre by Johannes de
-Witt, which has already claimed a good deal of our consideration, and
-to which we shall have to return from time to time, as a _point de
-repère_, in the course of the forthcoming discussion. It is peculiarly
-unfortunate that of all the seventy-three plays, now under review,
-not one can be shown to have been performed at the Swan, and that the
-only relics of the productions at that house, the plot of _England’s
-Joy_ of 1602 and Middleton’s _Chaste Maid in Cheapside_ of 1611, stand
-at such a distance of time from DeWitt’s drawing as not to exclude
-the hypothesis of an intermediate reconstruction of its stage. One
-other source of information, which throws a sidelight or two upon the
-questions at issue, I will here deal with at more length, because it
-has been a good deal overlooked. The so-called ‘English Wagner Book’
-of 1594, which contains the adventures of Wagner after the death of
-his master Faustus, although based upon a German original, is largely
-an independent work by an author who shows more than one sign of
-familiarity with the English theatre.[199] The most important of these
-is in chapter viii, which is headed ‘The Tragedy of Doctor Faustus
-seene in the Ayre, and acted in the presence of a thousand people of
-Wittenberg. An. 1540’. It describes, not an actual performance, but an
-aerial vision produced by Wagner’s magic arts for the bewilderment of
-an imperial pursuivant. The architecture has therefore, no doubt, its
-elements of fantasy. Nevertheless, it is our nearest approach to a pen
-picture of an Elizabethan stage, whereby to eke out that of De Witt’s
-pencil.
-
- ‘They might distinctly perceiue a goodlye Stage to be reard
- (shining to sight like the bright burnish golde) uppon many a
- faire Pillar of clearest Cristall, whose feete rested uppon the
- Arch of the broad Raynebow, therein was the high Throne wherein
- the King should sit, and that prowdly placed with two and twenty
- degrees to the top, and round about curious wrought chaires for
- diverse other Potentates, there might you see the ground-worke
- at the one end of the Stage whereout the personated divels
- should enter in their fiery ornaments, made like the broad wide
- mouth of an huge Dragon ... the teeth of this Hels-mouth far
- out stretching.... At the other end in opposition was seene the
- place where in the bloudlesse skirmishes are so often perfourmed
- on the Stage, the Wals ... of ... Iron attempered with the most
- firme steele ... environed with high and stately Turrets of the
- like metall and beautye, and hereat many in-gates and out-gates:
- out of each side lay the bended Ordinaunces, showing at their
- wide hollowes the crueltye of death: out of sundry loopes many
- large Banners and Streamers were pendant, brieflye nothing was
- there wanting that might make it a faire Castle. There might
- you see to be short the Gibbet, the Posts, the Ladders, the
- tiring-house, there everything which in the like houses either
- use or necessity makes common. Now above all was there the gay
- Clowdes _Vsque quaque_ adorned with the heavenly firmament, and
- often spotted with golden teares which men callen Stars. There
- was lively portrayed the whole Imperiall Army of the faire
- heavenly inhabitaunts.... This excellent faire Theator erected,
- immediatly after the third sound of the Trumpets, there entreth
- in the Prologue attired in a blacke vesture, and making his
- three obeysances, began to shew the argument of that Scenicall
- Tragedy, but because it was so far off they could not understand
- the wordes, and having thrice bowed himselfe to the high Throne,
- presently vanished.’
-
-The action of the play is then described. Devils issue from hell mouth
-and besiege the castle. Faustus appears on the battlements and defies
-them. Angels descend from heaven to the tower and are dismissed by
-Faustus. The devils assault the castle, capture Faustus and raze the
-tower. The great devil and all the imperial rulers of hell occupy the
-throne and chairs and dispute with Faustus. Finally,
-
- ‘Faustus ... leapt down headlong of the stage, the whole company
- immediatly vanishing, but the stage with a most monstrous
- thundering crack followed Faustus hastely, the people verily
- thinking that they would have fallen uppon them ran all away.’
-
-The three salient features of the Swan stage, as depicted by De Witt,
-are, firstly the two pairs of folding doors in the back wall; secondly,
-the ‘heavens’ supported on posts, which give the effect of a division
-of the space into a covered rear and an uncovered front; and thirdly,
-the gallery or row of boxes, which occupies the upper part of the back
-wall. Each of these lends itself to a good deal of comment. The two
-doors find abundant confirmation from numerous stage-directions, which
-lead up to the favourite dramatic device of bringing in personages from
-different points to meet in the centre of the stage. The formula which
-agrees most closely with the drawing is that which directs entrance
-‘at one door’ and ‘at the other door’, and is of very common use.[200]
-But there are a great many variants, which are used, as for example
-in the plot of _2 Seven Deadly Sins_, with such indifference as to
-suggest that no variation of structure is necessarily involved.[201]
-Thus an equally common antithesis is that between ‘one door’ and, not
-‘the other door’, but ‘an other door’.[202] Other analogous expressions
-are ‘one way’ and ‘at an other door’, ‘one way’ and ‘another way’,
-‘at two sundry doors’, ‘at diverse doors’, ‘two ways’, ‘met by’;[203]
-or again, ‘at several doors’, ‘several ways’, ‘severally’.[204] There
-is a divergence, however, from De Witt’s indications, when we come
-upon terminology which suggests that more than two doors may have
-been available for entrances, a possibility with which the references
-to ‘one door’ and ‘an other’ are themselves not inconsistent. Thus
-in one of the _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ variants, after other personages
-have entered ‘seuerall waies’, we find ‘Gorboduk entreing in the midst
-between’. There are other examples of triple entrance in _Fair Em_,
-in _Patient Grissell_, and in _The Trial of Chivalry_, although it
-is not until the seventeenth century that three doors are in so many
-words enumerated.[205] We get entrance ‘at every door’, however, in
-_The Downfall of Robin Hood_, and this, with other more disputable
-phrases, might perhaps be pressed into an argument that even three
-points of entrance did not exhaust the limits of practicability.[206]
-It should be added that, while doors are most commonly indicated as the
-avenue of entrance, this is not always the case. Sometimes personages
-are said to enter from one or other ‘end’, or ‘side’, or ‘part’ of
-the stage.[207] I take it that the three terms have the same meaning,
-and that the ‘end’ of a stage wider than its depth is what we should
-call its ‘side’. A few minor points about doors may be noted, and
-the discussion of a difficulty may be deferred.[208] Some entrances
-were of considerable size; an animal could be ridden on and off.[209]
-There were practicable and fairly solid doors; in _A Knack to Know an
-Honest Man_, a door is taken off its hinges.[210] And as the doors give
-admittance indifferently to hall scenes and to out-of-door scenes,
-it is obvious that the term, as used in the stage-directions, often
-indicates a part of the theatrical structure rather than a feature
-properly belonging to a garden or woodland background.[211]
-
-Some observations upon the heavens have already been made in an earlier
-chapter.[212] I feel little doubt that, while the supporting posts
-had primarily a structural object, and probably formed some obstacle
-to the free vision of the spectators, they were occasionally worked
-by the ingenuity of the dramatists and actors into the ‘business’ of
-the plays. The hints for such business are not very numerous, but they
-are sufficient to confirm the view that the Swan was not the only
-sixteenth-century theatre in which the posts existed. Thus in a street
-scene of _Englishmen for my Money_ and in an open country scene of _Two
-Angry Women of Abingdon_ we get episodes in which personages groping
-in the darkness stumble up against posts, and the second of these is
-particularly illuminating, because the victim utters a malediction
-upon the carpenter who set the post up, which a carpenter may have
-done upon the stage, but certainly did not do in a coney burrow.[213]
-In _Englishmen for my Money_ the posts are taken for maypoles, and
-there are two of them. There are two of them also in _Three Lords
-and Three Ladies of London_, a post and ‘the contrarie post’, and
-to one of them a character is bound, just as Kempe tells us that
-pickpockets taken in a theatre were bound.[214] The binding to a post
-occurs also in _Soliman and Perseda_.[215] In _James IV_ and in _Lord
-Cromwell_ bills are set up on the stage, and for this purpose the posts
-would conveniently serve.[216] All these are out-of-door scenes, but
-there was a post in the middle of a warehouse in _Every Man In his
-Humour_, and Miles sits down by a post during one of the scenes in the
-conjurer’s cell in _Bacon and Bungay_.[217] I am not oblivious of the
-fact that there were doubtless other structural posts on the stage
-besides those of the heavens, but I do not see how they can have been
-so conspicuous or so well adapted to serve in the action.[218] Posts
-may have supported the gallery, but I find it difficult to visualize
-the back of the stage without supposing these to have been veiled by
-the hangings. But two of them may have become visible when the hangings
-were drawn, or some porch-like projection from the back wall may have
-had its posts, and one of these may be in question, at any rate in the
-indoor scenes.
-
-The roof of the heavens was presumably used to facilitate certain
-spectacular effects, the tradition of which the public theatres
-inherited from the miracle-plays and the Court stage.[219] Startling
-atmospheric phenomena were not infrequently represented.[220] These
-came most naturally in out-of-door scenes, but I have noted one example
-in a scene which on general grounds one would classify as a hall
-scene.[221] The illusion may not have gone much beyond a painted cloth
-drawn under the roof of the heavens.[222] More elaborate machinery may
-have been entailed by aerial ascents and descents, which were also
-not uncommon. Many Elizabethan actors were half acrobats, and could
-no doubt fly upon a wire; but there is also clear evidence for the
-use of a chair let down from above.[223] And was the arrangement of
-cords and pulleys required for this purpose also that by which the
-chair of state, which figures in so many hall scenes and even a few
-out-of-door scenes, was put into position?[224] Henslowe had a throne
-made in the heavens of the Rose in 1595.[225] Jonson sneered at the
-jubilation of boyhood over the descent of the creaking chair.[226] The
-device would lighten the labours of the tire-man, for a state would be
-an awkward thing to carry on and off. It would avoid the presence of
-a large incongruous property on the stage during action to which it
-was inappropriate. And it would often serve as a convenient signal
-for the beginning or ending of a hall scene. But to this aspect of the
-matter I must return.[227] Whatever the machinery, it must have been
-worked in some way from the upper part of the tire-house; possibly from
-the somewhat obscure third floor, which De Witt’s drawing leaves to
-conjecture; possibly from the superstructure known as the hut, if that
-really stood further forward than De Witt’s drawing suggests. Perhaps
-the late reference to Jove leaning on his elbows in the garret, or
-employed to make squibs and crackers to grace the play, rather points
-to the former hypothesis.[228] In favour of the latter, for what it
-is worth, is the description, also late, of a theatre set up by the
-English actors under John Spencer at Regensburg in 1613. This had a
-lower stage for music, over that a main stage thirty feet high with a
-roof supported by six great pillars, and under the roof a quadrangular
-aperture, through which beautiful effects were contrived.[229]
-
-There has been a general abandonment of the hypothesis, which found
-favour when De Witt’s drawing was first discovered, of a division of
-the stage into an inner and an outer part by a ‘traverse’ curtain
-running between the two posts, perhaps supplemented by two other
-curtains running from the posts back to the tire-house.[230] Certainly
-I do not wish to revive it. Any such arrangement would be inconsistent
-with the use of the tire-house doors and gallery in out-of-door scenes;
-for, on the hypothesis, these were played with the traverse closed. And
-it would entail a serious interference with the vision of such scenes
-by spectators sitting far round in the galleries or ‘above the stage’.
-It does not, of course, follow that no use at all was made of curtains
-upon the stage. It is true that no hangings of any kind are shown by
-De Witt. Either there were none visible when he drew the Swan in 1596,
-or, if they were visible, he failed to draw them; it is impossible to
-say which. We know that even the Swan was not altogether undraped in
-1602, for during the riot which followed the ‘cousening prancke’ of
-_England’s Joy_ in that year the audience are said to have ‘revenged
-themselves upon the hangings, curtains, chairs, stooles, walles,
-and whatsoever came in their way’.[231] It is not, indeed, stated
-that these hangings and curtains were upon the stage, and possibly,
-although not very probably, they may have been in the auditorium.
-Apart, however, from the Swan, there is abundant evidence for the use
-of some kind of stage hangings in the public theatres of the sixteenth
-century generally. To the references in dialogue and stage-directions
-quoted in the footnotes to this chapter may be added the testimony
-of Florio in 1598, of Ben Jonson in 1601, of Heywood in 1608, and of
-Flecknoe after the Restoration.[232] We can go further, and point to
-several passages which attest a well-defined practice, clearly going
-back to the sixteenth century, of using black hangings for the special
-purpose of providing an appropriate setting for a tragedy.[233] Where
-then were these hangings? For a front curtain, on the public stage,
-as distinct from the Court stage, there is no evidence whatever, and
-the precautions taken to remove dead bodies in the course of action
-enable us quite safely to leave it out of account.[234] There may have
-been hangings of a decorative kind in various places, of course; round
-the base of the stage, for example, or dependent, as Malone thought,
-from the heavens. But the only place where we can be sure that there
-were hangings was what Heywood calls the ‘fore-front’ of the stage,
-by which it seems clear from Florio that he means the fore-front of
-the tiring-house, which was at the same time the back wall of the
-stage. It is, I believe, exclusively to hangings in this region that
-our stage-directions refer. Their terminology is not quite uniform.
-‘Traverse’ I do not find in a sixteenth-century public play.[235] By
-far the most common term is ‘curtain’, but I do not think that there
-is any technical difference between ‘curtain’ and the not infrequent
-‘arras’ or the unique ‘veil’ of _The Death of Robin Hood_.[236] ‘Arras’
-is the ordinary Elizabethan name for a hanging of tapestry used as
-a wall decoration, and often projected from a frame so as to leave
-a narrow space, valuable to eavesdroppers and other persons in need
-of seclusion, between itself and the wall. The stage arras serves
-precisely this purpose as a background to interior scenes. Here stand
-the murderers in _King John_; here Falstaff goes to sleep in _1 Henry
-IV_; and here too he proposes to ‘ensconce’ himself, in order to
-avoid being confronted with both his ladyloves together in _The Merry
-Wives_.[237]
-
-The stage-directions, however, make it quite clear that the curtains
-were not merely an immovable decoration of the back wall. They could
-be ‘opened’ and ‘shut’ or ‘closed’; and either operation could
-indifferently be expressed by the term ‘drawn’. This drawing was
-presumably effected by sliding the curtain laterally along a straight
-rod to which it was affixed by rings sewn on to its upper edge;
-there is no sign of any rise or fall of the curtain. The operator
-may be an actor upon the stage; in _Bacon and Bungay_ Friar Bacon
-draws the curtains ‘with a white sticke’. He may be the speaker of
-a prologue.[238] Whether the ‘servitours’ of a theatre ever came
-upon the stage, undisguised, to draw the curtains, I am uncertain;
-but obviously it would be quite easy to work the transformation from
-behind, by a cord and pulley, without any visible intervention.[239]
-The object of the drawing is to introduce interior action, either in
-a mere recess, or in a larger space, such as a chamber; and this, not
-only where curtains are dramatically appropriate, as within a house,
-or at the door of a tent, but also where they are less so, as before a
-cave or a forest bower. One may further accept the term ‘discovered’
-as indicating the unveiling of an interior by the play of a curtain,
-even when the curtain is not specifically mentioned;[240] and may
-recognize that the stage-directions sometimes use ‘Enter’ and ‘Exit’
-in a loose sense of persons, who do not actually move in or out, but
-are ‘discovered’, or covered, by a curtain.[241]
-
-Of what nature, then, was the space so disclosed? There was ordinarily,
-as already stated, a narrow space behind an arras; and if the gallery
-above the stage jutted forward, or had, as the Swan drawing perhaps
-indicates, a projecting weather-board, this might be widened into a
-six- or seven-foot corridor, still in front of the back wall.[242]
-Such a corridor would, however, hardly give the effect of a chamber,
-although it might that of a portico. Nor would it be adequate in
-size to hold all the scenes which it is natural to class as chamber
-scenes; such, for example, as that in _Tamburlaine_, where no less than
-ten persons are discovered grouped around Zenocrate’s bed.[243] The
-stage-directions themselves do not help us much; that in _Alphonsus_
-alone names ‘the place behind the stage’, and as this is only required
-to contain the head of Mahomet, a corridor, in this particular scene,
-would have sufficed.[244] There is, however, no reason why the opening
-curtains should not have revealed a quite considerable aperture in the
-back wall, and an alcove or recess of quite considerable size lying
-behind this aperture. With a 43-foot stage, as at the Fortune, and
-doors placed rather nearer the ends of it than De Witt shows them,
-it would be possible to get a 15-foot aperture, and still leave room
-for the drawn curtains to hang between the aperture and the doors.
-Allow 3 feet for the strip of stage between arras and wall, and a
-back-run of 10 feet behind the wall, and you get an adequate chamber
-of 15 feet × 13 feet. My actual measurements are, of course, merely
-illustrative. There would be advantages, as regards vision, in not
-making the alcove too deep. The height, if the gallery over the stage
-ran in a line with the middle gallery for spectators, would be about 8
-feet or 9 feet; rather low, I admit.[245] A critic may point out that
-behind the back wall of the outer stage lay the tire-house, and that
-the 14-foot deep framework of a theatre no greater in dimensions than
-the Fortune does not leave room for an inner stage in addition to the
-tire-house. I think the answer is that the ‘place behind the stage’ was
-in fact nothing but an _enclave_ within the tire-house, that its walls
-consisted of nothing but screens covered with some more arras, that
-these were only put up when they were needed for some particular scene,
-and that when they were up, although they extended to nearly the full
-depth of the tire-house, they did not occupy its full width, but left
-room on either side for the actors to crowd into, and for the stairs
-leading to the upper floors. When no interior scene had to be set,
-there was nothing between the tire-house and the outer stage but the
-curtains; and this renders quite intelligible the references quoted in
-an earlier chapter to actors peeping through a curtain at the audience,
-and to the audience ‘banding tile and pear’ against the curtains, to
-allure the actors forth.[246] I do not think it is necessary to assume
-that there was a third pair of folding doors permanently fixed in the
-aperture.[247] They would be big and clumsy, although no doubt they
-would help to keep out noise. In any case, there is not much evidence
-on the point. If Tarlton’s head was seen ‘the Tire-House doore and
-tapistrie betweene’, he may very well have gone to the end of the
-narrow passage behind the arras, and looked out where that was broken
-by one of the side-doors. No doubt, however, the aperture is the third
-place of entrance ‘in the midst’, which the stage-directions or action
-of some plays require, and which, as such, came to be regarded as a
-third door.[248]
-
- [Illustration: A. SQUARE THEATRE (Proportions of Fortune)]
-
-I conceive, therefore, of the alcove as a space which the tire-man,
-behind the curtains and in close proximity to the screens and
-properties stored in the tire-house, can arrange as he likes, without
-any interruption to continuous action proceeding on the outer stage. He
-can put up a house-front with a door, and if needed, a porch. He can
-put up a shop, or for that matter, a couple of adjacent shops. He can
-put up the arched gates of a city or castle. These are comparatively
-shallow structures. But he can also take advantage of the whole depth
-of the space, and arrange a chamber, a cave, or a bower, furnishing
-it as he pleases, and adding doors at the back or side, or a back
-window, which would enable him to give more light, even if only
-borrowed light from the tire-house, to an interior scene.[249] One
-point, however, is rather puzzling. There are some scenes which imply
-entrance to a chamber, not from behind, but from the open stage in
-front, and by a visible door which can be knocked at or locked. Thus
-in _Romeo and Juliet_, of which all the staging is rather difficult
-on any hypothesis, the Friar observes Juliet coming towards his cell,
-and after they have discoursed Juliet bids him shut the door. Here,
-no doubt, the Friar may have looked out and seen Juliet through a back
-window, and she may have entered by a back door. But in an earlier
-scene, where we get the stage-direction ‘Enter Nurse and knockes’, and
-the knocking is repeated until the Nurse is admitted to the cell, we
-are, I think, bound to suppose that the entry is in front, in the sight
-of the audience, and antecedent to the knocking.[250] Perhaps an even
-clearer case is in _Captain Thomas Stukeley_, where Stukeley’s chamber
-in the Temple is certainly approached from the open stage by a door
-at which Stukeley’s father knocks, and which is unlocked and locked
-again.[251] Yet how can a door be inserted in that side of a chamber
-which is open to the stage and the audience. Possibly it was a very
-conventional door set across the narrow space between the arras and
-the back wall of the main stage, at the corner of the aperture and at
-right angles to its plane. The accompanying diagrams will perhaps make
-my notion of the inner stage clearer.
-
- [Illustration: B. OCTAGONAL THEATRE (e.g. Globe; size of Fortune)]
-
-It has been suggested, by me as well as by others, that the inner stage
-may have been raised by a step or two above the outer stage.[252] On
-reflection, I now think this unlikely. There would be none too much
-height to spare, at any rate if the height of the alcove was determined
-by that of the spectators’ galleries. The only stage-direction which
-suggests any such arrangement is in the _Death of Robin Hood_, where
-the King sits in a chair behind the curtains, and the Queen ascends to
-him and descends again.[253] But even if the tire-man put up an exalted
-seat in this case, there need have been no permanent elevation. The
-missing woodcut of the Anglo-German stage at Frankfort in 1597 is said
-to have shown a raised inner stage; but until it is recovered, it is
-difficult to estimate its value as testimony upon the structure of the
-London theatres.[254]
-
-It must not, of course, be taken for granted that every curtain,
-referred to in text or stage-directions as ‘drawn’, was necessarily a
-back curtain disclosing an alcove. In some, although not all, of the
-bedchamber scenes the indications do not of themselves exclude the
-hypothesis of a bed standing on the open stage and the revealing of the
-occupant by the mere drawing of bed-curtains.[255] I do not think there
-is any certain example of such an arrangement in a sixteenth-century
-play.[256] But tents also could be closed by curtains, and the plot
-of _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ requires Henry VI to lie asleep in ‘A tent
-being plast one the stage’, while dumb-shows enter ‘at one dore’ and
-‘at an other dore’.[257] However it may have been with other theatres,
-we cannot, on the evidence before us, assert that the Swan had an
-alcove at all; and if it had not, it was probably driven to provide for
-chamber scenes by means of some curtained structure on the stage itself.
-
-On the other hand, it must not be supposed that every case, in which
-a back curtain was drawn, will have found record in the printed book
-of the play concerned; and when the existence of an alcove has once
-been established, it becomes legitimate to infer its use for various
-chamber and analogous scenes, to the presentation of which it would
-have been well adapted. But this inference, again, must not be twisted
-into a theory that the stage in front of the back wall served only for
-out-of-door scenes, and that all interior action was housed, wholly
-or in part, in the alcove. This is, I think, demonstrably untrue, as
-regards the large group of indoor scenes which I have called hall
-scenes. In the first place, the alcove would not have been spacious
-enough to be of any value for a great many of the hall scenes. You
-could not stage spectacular action, such as that of a coronation, a
-sitting of parliament, or a trial at the bar, in a box of 15 by 13 feet
-and only 9 feet high. A group of even so many as ten persons clustered
-round a bed is quite another thing. I admit the device of the so-called
-‘split’ scene, by which action beginning in the alcove is gradually
-extended so as to take the whole of the stage into its ambit.[258] This
-might perhaps serve for a court of justice, with the judges in the
-alcove, the ‘bar’ drawn across the aperture, and the prisoners brought
-in before it. A scene in which the arras is drawn in _Sir Thomas More_
-points to such a setting.[259] But a scene in which a royal ‘state’ is
-the dominating feature would be singularly ineffective if the state
-were wedged in under the low roof of the alcove; and if I am right
-in thinking that the ‘state’ normally creaked down into its position
-from the heavens, it would clearly land, not within the alcove, but
-upon the open stage in front of it. Indeed, if it could be placed into
-position behind a curtain, there would be no reason for bringing it
-from the heavens at all. Then, again, hall scenes are regularly served
-by two or more doors, which one certainly would not suppose from the
-stage-directions to be any other than the doors similarly used to
-approach out-of-door scenes; and they frequently end with injunctions
-to ‘come in’, which would be superfluous if the personages on the
-stage could be withdrawn from sight by the closing of the curtain.
-Occasionally, moreover, the gallery over the stage comes into play in
-a hall scene, in a way which would not be possible if the personages
-were disposed in the alcove, over which, of course, this gallery
-projected.[260] Some of these considerations tell more directly against
-the exclusive use of the alcove for hall scenes, than against its use
-in combination with the outer stage; and this combined use, where
-suitable, I am quite prepared to allow. But ordinarily, I think, the
-hall scenes were wholly on the outer stage; and this must necessarily
-have been the case where two rooms were employed, of which one opens
-out behind the other.[261]
-
-It may be said that the main object of the curtain is to allow of
-the furniture and decorations of a ‘set’ scene, which is usually an
-interior scene, being put in place behind it, without any interruption
-to the continuous progress of an act; and that hall scenes cannot
-be set properly, unless they also are behind the curtain line. I do
-not think that there is much in this argument. A hall scene does
-not require so much setting as a chamber scene. It is sufficiently
-furnished, at any rate over the greater part of its area, with the
-state and such lesser seats as can very readily be carried on during
-the opening speeches or during the procession by which the action is
-often introduced. A bar can be set up, or a banquet spread, or a sick
-man brought in on his chair, as part of the action itself.[262] Even
-an out-of-door scene, such as an execution or a duel in the lists,
-sometimes demands a similar adjustment;[263] it need no more give pause
-than the analogous devices entailed by the removal of dead bodies from
-where they have fallen.
-
-I must not be taken to give any countenance to the doctrine that
-properties, incongruous to the particular scene that was being played,
-were allowed to stand on the public Elizabethan stage, and that the
-audience, actually or through a convention, was not disturbed by
-them.[264] This doctrine appears to me to rest upon misunderstandings
-of the evidence produced in its support, and in particular upon a
-failure to distinguish between the transitional methods of setting
-employed by Lyly and his clan, and those of the permanent theatres
-with which we are now concerned. The former certainly permitted of
-incongruities in the sense that, as the neo-classic stage strove to
-adapt itself to a romantic subject-matter, separate localities, with
-inconsistent properties, came to be set at one and the same time in
-different regions of the stage. But the system proved inadequate to
-the needs of romanticism, as popular audiences understood it; and,
-apart from some apparent rejuvenescence in the ‘private’ houses,
-with which I must deal later, it gave way, about the time of the
-building of the permanent theatres, to the alternative system, by
-which different localities were represented, not synchronously but
-successively, and each in its turn had full occupation of the whole
-field of the stage. This full occupation was not, I venture to think,
-qualified by the presence in any scene of a property inappropriate
-to that scene, but retained there because it had been used for some
-previous, or was to be used for some coming, scene. I do not mean to
-say that some colourless or insignificant property, such as a bench,
-may not have served, without being moved, first in an indoors and then
-in an out-of-doors scene. But that the management of the Theatre or
-the Rose was so bankrupt in ingenuity that the audience had to watch
-a coronation through a fringe of trees or to pretend unconsciousness
-while the strayed lovers in a forest dodged each other round the
-corners of a derelict ‘state’, I, for one, see no adequate reason to
-believe. It is chiefly the state and the trees which have caused the
-trouble. But, after all, a state which has creaked down can creak up
-again, just as a banquet or a gallows which has been carried on can be
-carried off. Trees are perhaps a little more difficult. A procession of
-porters, each with a tree in his arms, would be a legitimate subject
-for the raillery of _The Admirable Bashville_. A special back curtain
-painted _en pastoralle_ would hardly be adequate, even if there were
-any evidence for changes of curtain; trees were certainly sometimes
-practicable and therefore quasi-solid.[265] The alcove, filled with
-shrubs, would by itself give the illusion of a greenhouse rather
-than a forest; moreover, the alcove was available in forest scenes
-to serve as a rustic bower or cottage.[266] Probably the number of
-trees dispersed over the body of the stage was not great; they were a
-symbolical rather than a realistic setting. On the whole, I am inclined
-to think that, at need, trees ascended and descended through traps;
-and that this is not a mere conjecture is suggested by a few cases in
-which the ascent and descent, being part of a conjuring action, are
-recorded in the stage-directions.[267] One of these shows that the
-traps would carry not merely a tree but an arbour. The traps had, of
-course, other functions. Through them apparitions arose and sank;[268]
-Jonah was spewed up from the whale’s belly;[269] and the old device of
-hell-mouth still kept alive a mediaeval tradition.[270] Only primitive
-hydraulics would have been required to make a fountain flow or a fog
-arise;[271] although it may perhaps be supposed that the episodes,
-in which personages pass to and from boats or fling themselves into
-a river, were performed upon the extreme edge of the stage rather
-than over a trap.[272] I do not find any clear case, in the public
-sixteenth-century theatres, of the convention apparently traceable in
-Lyly and Whetstone, by which the extreme edge of the stage is used
-for ‘approach’ scenes, as when a traveller arrives from afar, or when
-some episode has to be represented in the environs of a city which
-furnishes the principal setting.[273] And I think it would certainly
-be wrong to regard the main stage, apart from the alcove, as divided
-into an inner area covered by the heavens and an outer area, not so
-covered and appropriate to open-country scenes. Indeed, the notion that
-any substantial section of the stage appeared to the audience not to
-lie under the heavens is in my view an illusion due to the unskilful
-draughtsmanship of De Witt or his copyist. Skyey phenomena belong most
-naturally to open-country scenes, nor are these wholly debarred from
-the use of the state; and the machinery employed in both cases seems to
-imply the existence of a superincumbent heavens.[274]
-
-I come finally to the interesting question of the gallery above the
-stage. This, in the Swan drawing, may project very slightly over the
-scenic wall, and is divided by short vertical columns into six small
-compartments, in each of which one or two occupants are sitting. They
-might, of course, be personages in the play; but, if so, they seem
-curiously dissociated from the action. They might be musicians, but
-they appear to include women, and there is no clear sign of musical
-instruments. On the whole, they have the air of spectators.[275]
-However this may be, let us recall what has already been established
-in an earlier chapter, that there is conclusive evidence for some use
-of the space above the stage for spectators, at least until the end
-of the sixteenth century, and for some use of it as a music-room, at
-least during the seventeenth century.[276] With these uses we have
-to reconcile the equally clear indications that this region, or some
-part of it, was available when needed, throughout the whole of the
-period under our consideration, as a field for dramatic action. For
-the moment we are only concerned with the sixteenth century. A glance
-back over my footnotes will show many examples in which action is said
-to be ‘above’ or ‘aloft’, or is accompanied by the ascent or descent
-of personages from or to the level of the main stage. This interplay
-of different levels is indeed the outstanding characteristic of the
-Elizabethan public theatre, as compared with the other systems of
-stage-presentment to which it stands in relation. There are mediaeval
-analogies, no doubt, and one would not wish to assert categorically
-that no use was ever made of a balcony or a house-roof in a Greek
-or Roman or Italian setting. But, broadly speaking, the classical
-and neo-classical stage-tradition, apart from theophanies, is one of
-action on a single level. Even in the Elizabethan Court drama, the
-platform comes in late and rarely, although the constant references to
-‘battlements’ in the Revels Accounts enable us to infer that, by the
-time when the public theatres came to be built, the case of _Orestes_
-was not an isolated one. Battlements, whatever the extension which
-the Revels officers came to give to the term, were primarily for
-the beloved siege scenes, and to the way in which siege scenes were
-treated in the theatres I must revert. But from two plays, _The Rare
-Triumphs of Love and Fortune_ and _The Woman in the Moon_, both of
-which probably represent a late development of the Court drama, we may
-gather at least one other definite function of the platform, as a point
-of vantage from which presenters, in both cases of a divine type, may
-sit ‘sunning like a crow in a gutter’, and watch the evolution of their
-puppets on the stage below.[277] This disposition of presenters ‘aloft’
-finds more than one parallel in the public theatres. The divine element
-is retained in _The Battle of Alcazar_, where Henslowe’s plot gives us,
-as part of the direction for a dumb-show, ‘Enter aboue Nemesis’.[278]
-There are traces of it also in _James IV_ and in _A Looking Glass for
-London and England_. In _James IV_ the presenters are Bohan, a Scot,
-and Oberon, king of fairies. They come on the stage for an induction,
-at the end of which Bohan says, ‘Gang with me to the Gallery, and Ile
-show thee the same in action by guid fellowes of our country men’, and
-they ‘_Exeunt_’. Obviously they watch the action, for they enter again
-and comment upon it during act-intervals. One of their interpositions
-is closed with the words ‘Gow shrowd vs in our harbor’; another with
-‘Lets to our sell, and sit & see the rest’.[279] In the _Looking Glass_
-we get after the first scene the direction, ‘Enters brought in by an
-angell Oseas the Prophet, and set downe ouer the Stage in a Throne’.
-Oseas is evidently a presenter; the actors ignore him, but he makes
-moral comments after various scenes, and at the end of Act IV comes the
-further direction, ‘Oseas taken away’.[280] Purely human presenters in
-_The Taming of a Shrew_ are still on a raised level. Sly is removed
-from the main stage during the first scene of the induction. He is
-brought back at the beginning of the second scene, presumably above,
-whence he criticizes the play, for towards the end the lord bids his
-servants
-
- lay him in the place where we did find him,
- Just underneath the alehouse side below;
-
-and this is done by way of an epilogue.[281]
-
-I do not suggest that presenters were always above; it is not so when
-they merely furnish the equivalent of a prologue or epilogue, but only
-when it is desired to keep them visible during the action, and on
-the other hand they must not obstruct it. Sometimes, even when their
-continued presence might be desirable, it has to be dispensed with, or
-otherwise provided for. The presenters in _Soliman and Perseda_ come
-and go; those in _The Spanish Tragedy_ sit upon the stage itself. Why?
-I think the answer is the same in both cases. A platform was required
-for other purposes. In _Soliman and Perseda_ one scene has the outer
-wall of a tiltyard reached by ladders from the stage; another has a
-tower, from which victims are tumbled down out of sight.[282] In the
-_Spanish Tragedy_, apart from some minor action ‘above’, there is
-the elaborate presentation of Hieronimo’s ‘play within the play’ to
-be provided for. This must be supposed to be part of a hall scene.
-It occupies, with its preparations, most of the fourth, which is
-the last, act; and for it the King and his train are clearly seated
-in an upper ‘gallerie’, while the performance takes place on the
-floor of the hall below, with the body of Horatio concealed behind a
-curtain, for revelation at the appropriate moment.[283] We are thus
-brought face to face with an extension on the public stage of the
-use of ‘above’, beyond what is entailed by the needs of sieges or of
-exalted presenters. Nor, of course, are the instances already cited
-exhaustive. The gallery overlooking a hall in the _Spanish Tragedy_ has
-its parallel in the window overlooking a hall in _Dr. Faustus_.[284]
-More frequent is an external window, door, or balcony, overlooking an
-external scene in street or garden.[285] In these cases the action
-‘above’ is generally slight. Some one appears in answer to a summons
-from without; an eavesdropper listens to a conversation below; a girl
-talks to her lover, and there may be an ascent or descent with the help
-of a rope-ladder or a basket. But there are a few plays in which we
-are obliged to constitute the existence of a regular chamber scene,
-with several personages and perhaps furniture, set ‘above’. The second
-scene of the induction to the _Taming of the Shrew_, just cited, is
-already a case in point. The presenters here do not merely sit, as
-spectators in the lord’s room might, and listen. They move about a
-chamber and occupy considerable space. Scenes which similarly require
-the whole interior of an upper room to be visible, and not merely its
-balcony or window bay, are to be found in _1 Sir John Oldcastle_, in
-_Every Man In his Humour_, twice in _The Jew of Malta_, in _2 Henry
-IV_, and in _Look About You_.[286] I do not know whether I ought to add
-_Romeo and Juliet_. Certainly the love scenes, Act II, scc. i and ii,
-and Act III, sc. v, require Juliet’s chamber to be aloft, and in these
-there is no interior action entailing more than the sound of voices,
-followed by the appearance of the speakers over Juliet’s shoulder as
-she stands at the casement or on a balcony.[287] It would be natural
-to assume that the chamber of Act IV, sc. iii, in which Juliet drinks
-her potion, and sc. v, in which she is found lying on her bed, is the
-same, and therefore also aloft. Obviously its interior, with the bed
-and Juliet, must be visible to the spectators. The difficulty is that
-it also appears to be visible to the wedding guests and the musicians,
-as they enter the courtyard from without; and this could only be,
-if it were upon the main level of the stage. If the scene stood by
-itself, one would undoubtedly assign it to the curtained recess behind
-the stage; and on the whole it is probable that on this occasion
-architectural consistency was sacrificed to dramatic effect, and
-Juliet’s chamber was placed sometimes above and sometimes below.[288]
-There is one other type of scene which requires elevated action, and
-that is the senate-house scene, as we find it in _The Wounds of Civil
-War_ and in _Titus Andronicus_, where the Capitol clearly stands above
-the Forum, but is within ear-shot and of easy approach.[289]
-
-I think we are bound to assume that some or all of this action ‘above’
-took place in the gallery ‘over the stage’, where it could be readily
-approached from the tiring-house behind, and could be disposed with the
-minimum of obstruction to the vision of the auditorium. A transition
-from the use of this region for spectators to its use for action is
-afforded by the placing there of those idealized spectators, the
-presenters. So far as they are concerned, all that would be needed, in
-a house arranged like the Swan, would be to assign to them one or more,
-according to their number, of the rooms or compartments, into which the
-gallery was normally divided. One such compartment, too, would serve
-well for a window, and would be accepted without demur as forming part
-of the same ‘domus’ to which a door below, or, as in _The Merchant
-of Venice_, a penthouse set in the central aperture, gave access.
-To get a practicable chamber, it would be necessary to take down a
-partition and throw two of the compartments, probably the two central
-compartments, into one; but there would still be four rooms left for
-the lords. As a matter of fact, most upper chamber scenes, even of
-the sixteenth century, are of later date than the Swan drawing, and
-some architectural evolution, including the provision of a music-room,
-may already have taken place, and have been facilitated by the waning
-popularity of the lord’s rooms. It will be easier to survey the whole
-evolution of the upper stage in the next chapter.[290] For the present,
-let us think of the upper chamber as running back on the first floor of
-the tiring-house above the alcove, and reached from within by stairs
-behind the scenic wall, of which, if desired, the foot could perhaps be
-made visible within the alcove.[291] Borrowed light could be given by
-a window at the back, from which also the occupants of the room could
-pretend to look out behind.[292] Internal doors could of course also be
-made available. A scene in _The Jew of Malta_ requires a trap in the
-floor of the upper chamber, over a cauldron discovered in the alcove
-below.[293] The upper chamber could be fitted, like the alcove itself,
-with an independent curtain for discoveries.[294]
-
-Are we to conclude that all action ‘above’ was on or behind the back
-line of the stage? The point upon which I feel most uncertainty is
-the arrangement of the battlements in the stricter sense.[295] These
-appear to be generally regarded as running along the whole of the back
-line, with the gates of the town or castle represented in the central
-aperture below. Some writers suggest that they occupied, not the actual
-space of the rooms or boxes ‘over the stage’, but a narrow balcony
-running in front of these.[296] I cannot satisfy myself that the Swan
-drawing bears out the existence of any projecting ledge adequate for
-the purpose. On the other hand, if all the compartments of the gallery
-were made available and their partitions removed, all the spectators
-‘over the stage’ must have been displaced; and siege scenes are early,
-and numerous. I do not know that it is essential to assume that the
-battlements extended beyond the width of two compartments. There is
-some definite evidence for a position of the ‘walles’ on the scenic
-line, apart from the patent convenience of keeping the main stage clear
-for besieging armies, in Jasper Mayne’s laudation of Ben Jonson:
-
- Thou laid’st no sieges to the music-room.[297]
-
-I am content to believe that this is where they normally stood. At
-the same time, it is possible that alternative arrangements were not
-unknown. In the _Wagner Book_, which must be supposed to describe a
-setting of a type not incredible on the public stage, we are told of
-a high throne, presumably at the back, of hell mouth ‘at the one
-end of the stage’, and of an elaborate castle ‘at the other end in
-opposition’. This is ‘the place where in the bloudlesse skirmishes
-are so often perfourmed upon the stage’, and although I should not
-press this as meaning that the walls were always at an ‘end’ of the
-stage, the passage would be absurd, if they were invariably at the
-back.[298] Further, there is at least one extant play in which it is
-very difficult to envisage certain scenes with the walls at the back.
-This is _1 Henry VI_, the Orleans scenes of which, with the leaping
-over the walls, and the rapid succession of action in the market-place
-within the town and in the field without, seem to me clearly to point
-to walls standing across the main stage from back to front.[299] But if
-so, how were such walls put into place? The imagination boggles at the
-notion of masons coming in to build a wall during the action, in the
-way in which attendants might set up a bar or a lists, or carpenters
-the gibbet for an execution. Bottom’s device for _Pyramus and Thisbe_
-would hardly be more grotesque. Yet the Orleans siege scenes in _1
-Henry VI_ are by no means coincident with acts, and could not therefore
-be set in advance and dismantled at leisure when done with. Can the
-walls have been drawn forwards and backwards, with the help of some
-machine, through the doors or the central aperture?[300] It is not
-inconceivable, and possibly we have here the explanation of the ‘j
-whell and frame in the Sege of London’, which figures in the Admiral’s
-inventories. Once the possibility of a scenic structure brought on to
-the main stage is mooted, one begins to look for other kinds of episode
-in which it would be useful. This, after all, may have been the way in
-which a gibbet was introduced, and the Admiral’s had also ‘j frame for
-the heading in Black Jone’, although nothing is said of a wheel.[301]
-The senate houses could, I think, have been located in the gallery,
-but the beacon in _King Leir_ would not look plausible there, and the
-Admiral’s had a beacon, apparently as a detached property.[302] I am
-also inclined to think that a wall may occasionally have been drawn
-across the stage to make a close of part of it for a garden scene. In
-Act II of _Romeo and Juliet_ Romeo pretty clearly comes in with his
-friends in some public place of the city, and then leaps a wall into
-an orchard, where he is lost to their sight, and finds himself under
-Juliet’s window. He must have a wall to leap. I mentioned _Pyramus and
-Thisbe_ just above with intent, for what is _Pyramus and Thisbe_ but a
-burlesque of the _Romeo and Juliet_ motive, which would have been all
-the more amusing, if a somewhat conspicuous and unusual wall had been
-introduced into its model? Another case in point may be the ‘close
-walk’ before Labervele’s house in _A Humorous Day’s Mirth_.[303] I have
-allowed myself to stray into the field of conjecture.
-
-One other possible feature of action ‘above’ must not be left out of
-account. The use of the gallery may have been supplemented on occasion
-by that of some window or balcony in the space above it, which De
-Witt’s drawing conceals from our view. Here may have been the ‘top’ on
-which La Pucelle appears in the Rouen episode of _1 Henry VI_, and the
-towers or turrets, which are sometimes utilized or referred to in this
-and other plays.[304] It would be difficult to describe the central
-boxes of the Swan gallery as a tower.
-
-Before any attempt is made to sum up the result of this long
-chapter, one other feature of sixteenth-century staging, which is
-often overlooked, requires discussion. In the majority of cases the
-background of an out-of-door scene need contain at most a single
-_domus_; and this, it is now clear, can be represented either by a
-light structure, such as a tent or arbour, placed temporarily upon
-the floor of the stage, or more usually by the _scena_ or back wall,
-with its doors, its central aperture, and its upper gallery. There
-are, however, certain scenes in which one _domus_ will not suffice,
-and two or possibly even three, must be represented. Thus, as in
-_Richard III_, there may be two hostile camps, with alternating action
-at tents in each of them.[305] There may also be interplay, without
-change of scene, between different houses in one town or village.
-In _Arden of Feversham_, Arden’s house and the painter’s are set
-together;[306] in _The Taming of A Shrew_, the lord’s house and the
-alehouse for the induction, and Polidor’s and Alphonso’s during the
-main play;[307] in _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria_, the houses of
-Elimine and Samethis;[308] in _1 Sir John Oldcastle_, Cobham’s gate
-and an inn;[309] in _Stukeley_, Newton’s house and a chamber in the
-Temple;[310] in _A Knack to Know an Honest Man_, Lelio’s and Bristeo’s
-for one scene, Lelio’s and a Senator’s for another, possibly Lelio’s
-and Servio’s, though of this I am less sure, for a third.[311] These
-are the most indisputable cases; given the principle, we are at liberty
-to conjecture its application in other plays. Generally the houses
-may be supposed to be contiguous; it is not so in _Stukeley_, where
-Old Stukeley clearly walks some little distance to the Temple, and
-here therefore we get an example of that foreshortening of distance
-between two parts of a city, with which we became familiar in the
-arrangement of Court plays.[312] It is not the only example. In
-_George a Greene_ Jenkin and the Shoemaker walk from one end to the
-other of Wakefield.[313] In _Arden of Feversham_, although this is
-an open-country and not an urban scene, Arden and Francklin travel
-some little way to Raynham Down.[314] In _Dr. Faustus_, so far as
-we can judge from the unsatisfactory text preserved, any limitation
-to a particular neighbourhood is abandoned, and Faustus passes
-without change of scene from the Emperor’s Court to his own home in
-Wittenberg.[315] Somewhat analogous is the curious device in _Romeo and
-Juliet_, where the maskers, after preparing in the open, ‘march about
-the stage’, while the scene changes to the hall of Capulet, which they
-then enter.[316]
-
-I think, then, it must be taken that the background of a public stage
-could stand at need, not merely for a single _domus_, but for a ‘city’.
-Presumably in such cases the central aperture and the gallery above it
-were reserved for any house in which interior action was to proceed,
-and for the others mere doors in the scenic wall were regarded as
-adequate. I do not find any sixteenth-century play which demands either
-interior action or action ‘above’ in more than one house.[317] But a
-question arises as to how, for a scene in which the scenic doors had to
-represent house doors, provision was made for external entrances and
-exits, which certainly cannot be excluded from such scenes. Possibly
-the answer is, although I feel very doubtful about it, that there
-were never more than two houses, and that therefore one door always
-remained available to lead on and off the main stage.[318] Possibly
-also entrances and exits by other avenues than the two scenic doors,
-which we infer from the Swan drawing, and the central aperture which we
-feel bound to add, are not inconceivable. We have already had some hint
-that three may not have been the maximum number of entrances. If the
-Elizabethan theatre limited itself to three, it would have been worse
-off than any of the early neo-classic theatres based upon Vitruvius, in
-which the _porta regia_ and _portae minores_ of the scenic wall were
-regularly supplemented by the _viae ad forum_ in the _versurae_ to
-right and left of the _proscenium_.[319] No doubt such wings could not
-be constructed at the Swan, where a space was left on the level of the
-‘yard’ between the spectators’ galleries and the right and left edges
-of a narrow stage. But they would be feasible in theatres with wider
-stages, and the arrangement, if it existed, would make the problem of
-seats on the stage easier.[320] It is no more than a conjecture. It has
-also been suggested that the heavy columns drawn by De Witt may have
-prevented him from showing two entrances round the extreme ends of the
-scenic wall, such as are perhaps indicated in some of the Terentian
-woodcuts of 1493.[321] Or, finally, actors might have emerged from the
-tiring-house into the space on the level of the yard just referred to,
-and thence reached the stage, as from without, by means of a short
-flight of steps.[322]
-
-Working then from the Swan stage, and only departing in any essential
-from De Witt’s drawing by what appears to be, at any rate for theatres
-other than the Swan, the inevitable addition of a back curtain, we
-find no insuperable difficulty in accounting for the setting of all
-the types of scenes recognizable in sixteenth-century plays. The
-great majority of them, both out-of-door scenes and hall scenes, were
-acted on the open stage, under the heavens, with no more properties
-and practicable _terrains_ than could reasonably be carried on by the
-actors, lowered from the heavens, raised by traps, or thrust on by
-frames and wheels. For more permanent background they had the scenic
-doors, the gallery above, the scenic curtain, and whatever the tire-man
-might choose to insert in the aperture, backed by an alcove within the
-tire-house, which the drawing of the curtain discovered. For entrances
-they had at least the scenic doors and aperture. The comparatively few
-chamber scenes were set either in the alcove or in a chamber ‘above’,
-formed by throwing together two compartments of the gallery. A window
-in a still higher story could, if necessary, be brought into play. So,
-with all due respect to the obscurities of the evidence, I reconstruct
-the facts. It will, I hope, be apparent without any elaborate
-demonstration that this system of public staging, as practised by
-Burbadge at the Theatre, by Lanman at the Curtain, by Henslowe at the
-Rose, and perhaps with some modifications by Langley at the Swan, is
-very fairly in line with the earlier sixteenth-century tradition, as
-we have studied it in texts in which the Court methods are paramount.
-This is only natural, in view of the fact that the same plays continued
-to be presented to the public and to the sovereign. There is the same
-economy of recessed action, the same conspicuous tendency to dialogue
-on a threshold, the same unwillingness to break the flow of an act by
-any deliberate pause for resetting. The public theatre gets in some
-ways a greater variety of dramatic situation, partly owing to its free
-use of the open stage, instead of merely a portico, for hall scenes,
-partly owing to its characteristic development of action ‘above’.
-This, in spite of the battlements of the Revels accounts, may perhaps
-be a contribution of the inn-yard. The main change is, of course, the
-substitution for the multiple staging of the Court, with its adjacent
-regions for different episodes, of a principle of successive staging,
-by which the whole space became in turn available for each distinct
-scene. This was an inevitable change, as soon as the Elizabethan love
-for history and romance broke down the Renaissance doctrine of the
-unity of place; and it will not be forgotten that the beginnings of
-it are already clearly discernible in the later Court drama, which of
-course overlaps with the popular drama, itself. Incidentally the actors
-got elbow-room; some of the Lylyan scenes must have been very cramped.
-But they had to put up with a common form setting, capable only of
-minor modifications, and no doubt their architectural decorations and
-unvarying curtain were less interesting from the point of view of
-_spectacle_, than the diversity of ‘houses’ which the ingenuity and
-the resources of the Court architects were in a position to produce.
-In any case, however, economy would probably have forbidden them to
-enter into rivalry with the Revels Office. Whether the Elizabethan type
-of public stage was the invention of Burbadge, the ‘first builder of
-theatres’, or had already come into use in the inn-yards, is perhaps
-an idle subject for wonder. The only definite guess at its origin
-is that of Professor Creizenach, who suggests that it may have been
-adapted from the out-of-door stages, set up from time to time for the
-dramatic contests held by the Rederijker or Chambers of Rhetoric in
-Flanders.[323] Certainly there are common features in the division of
-the field of action into two levels and the use of curtained apertures
-both below and above. But the latest examples of the Flemish festivals
-were at Ghent in 1539 and at Antwerp in 1561 respectively; and it would
-be something of a chance if Burbadge or any other English builder had
-any detailed knowledge of them.[324]
-
-
-
-
- XXI
-
- STAGING IN THE THEATRES: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY
-
- [For _Bibliographical Note_, _vide_ ch. xviii.]
-
-
-The turn of the century is also a turning-point in the history of the
-public theatres. In 1599 the Chamberlain’s men built the Globe, and in
-1600, not to be outdone, the Admiral’s men built upon the same model
-the Fortune. These remained the head-quarters of the same companies,
-when at the beginning of the reign of James the one became the King’s
-and the other the Prince’s men. Worcester’s, afterwards the Queen’s,
-men were content for a time with the older houses, first the Rose,
-then the Curtain and the Boar’s Head, but by 1605 or 1606 they were
-occupying the Red Bull, probably a new building, but one of which we
-know very little. Meanwhile the earlier Tudor fashion of plays by boys
-had been revived, both at Paul’s, and at the Blackfriars, where a
-theatre had been contrived by James Burbadge about 1596 in a chamber of
-the ancient priory, for the purposes of a public stage.
-
-We cannot on _a priori_ grounds assume that the structural arrangements
-of the sixteenth-century houses were merely carried into those of
-the seventeenth century without modification; the experience of
-twenty-five years’ working may well have disclosed features in the
-original plan of James Burbadge which were not altogether convenient
-or which lent themselves to further development. On the other
-hand, we have not got to take into account the possibility of any
-fundamental change or sharp breach of continuity. The introduction
-of a new type of stage, even if it escaped explicit record, would
-inevitably have left its mark both upon the dramatic construction of
-plays and upon the wording of their stage-directions. No such mark
-can be discerned. You cannot tell an early seventeenth-century play
-from a late sixteenth-century one on this kind of evidence alone;
-the handling and the conventions, the situations and the spectacular
-effects, remain broadly the same, and such differences as do gradually
-become apparent, concern rather the trend of dramatic interest than
-the external methods of stage-presentation. Moreover, it is evident
-that the sixteenth-century plays did not pass wholly into disuse. From
-time to time they were revived, and lent themselves, perhaps with some
-minor adaptation, to the new boards as well as to the old. In dealing
-with early seventeenth-century staging, then, I will assume the general
-continuance of the sixteenth-century plan, and will content myself with
-giving some further examples of its main features, and with considering
-any evidence which may seem to point to specific development in one
-or more particular directions. And on the whole it will be convenient
-to concentrate now mainly upon the theatres occupied by the King’s
-men. For this there are various reasons. One is that the possession of
-Shakespeare’s plays gives them a prerogative interest in modern eyes;
-another that the repertories of the other companies have hardly reached
-us in a form which renders any very safe induction feasible.
-
-Even in the case of the King’s men, the material is not very ample, and
-there are complications which make it necessary to proceed by cautious
-steps to somewhat tentative conclusions. The Globe was probably opened
-in the autumn of 1599. The first play which we can definitely locate
-there is _Every Man Out of his Humour_; but I have decided with some
-hesitation to treat _Henry V_ and _Much Ado about Nothing_, for the
-purposes of these chapters, as Globe plays.[325] So far as we know,
-the Globe was the only theatre used by the company up to the winter
-of 1609, when they also came into possession of the Blackfriars. From
-1609 to 1613 they used both houses, but probably the Globe was still
-the more important of the two, for when it was burnt in 1613 they
-found it worth while to rebuild it fairer than before. At some time,
-possibly about the end of James’s reign, the Blackfriars began to come
-into greater prominence, and gradually displaced the Globe as the main
-head-quarters of the London drama. This, however, is a development
-which lies outside the scope of these volumes; nor can I with advantage
-inquire in detail whether there were any important structural features
-in which the new Globe is likely to have differed from the old Globe.
-At the most I can only offer a suggestion for the historian of the
-Caroline stage to take up in his turn. In the main, therefore, we
-have to consider the staging of the Globe from 1599 to 1609, and of
-the Globe and the Blackfriars from 1609 to 1613. The plays available
-fall into four groups. There are nineteen or twenty printed and
-probably produced during 1599–1609, of which, however, one or two were
-originally written for private theatres.[326] There are two produced
-and printed during 1609–12, and one preserved in manuscript from the
-same period.[327] There are ten probably produced during 1599–1603,
-but not printed before 1622 or 1623.[328] There are perhaps nine or
-ten produced during 1609–13, and printed at various dates from 1619 to
-1634.[329] It will be seen that the first group is of much the greatest
-value evidentially, as well as fortunately the longest, but that it
-only throws light upon the Globe and not upon the Blackfriars; that
-the value of the second and fourth groups is discounted by our not
-knowing how far they reflect Globe and how far Blackfriars conditions;
-and that the original features of the third and fourth groups may
-have been modified in revivals, either at the Blackfriars or at the
-later Globe, before they got into print. I shall use them all, but,
-I hope, with discrimination.[330] I shall also use, for illustration
-and confirmation, rather than as direct evidence, plays from other
-seventeenth-century theatres. The Prince’s men were at the Fortune
-during the whole of the period with which we are concerned, and then on
-to and after the fire of 1621, and the reconstruction, possibly on new
-lines, of 1623. We know that its staging arrangements resembled those
-of the Globe, for it was provided in the builder’s contract that this
-should be so, and also that the stage should be ‘placed and sett’ in
-accordance with ‘a plott thereof drawen’. Alleyn would have saved me
-a great deal of trouble if he had put away this little piece of paper
-along with so many others. Unfortunately, the Prince’s men kept their
-plays very close, and only five or six of our period got into print
-before 1623.[331] From the Queen’s men we have rather more, perhaps
-sixteen in all; but we do not always know whether these were given at
-the Red Bull or the Curtain. Nor do we know whether any structural
-improvements introduced at the Globe and Fortune were adopted at the
-Red Bull, although this is _a priori_ not unlikely.[332] From the Swan
-we have only _The Chaste Maid of Cheapside_, and from the Hope only
-_Bartholomew Fair_.
-
-At the Globe, then, the types of scene presented are much the same as
-those with which we have become familiar in the sixteenth century; the
-old categories of open-country scenes, battle scenes, garden scenes,
-street scenes, threshold scenes, hall scenes, and chamber scenes
-will still serve. Their relative importance alters, no doubt, as the
-playwrights tend more and more to concern themselves with subjects of
-urban life. But there are plenty of battle scenes in certain plays,
-much on the traditional lines, with marchings and counter-marchings,
-alarums for fighting ‘within’, and occasional ‘excursions’ on the field
-of the stage itself.[333] Practicable tents still afford a convenient
-camp background, and these, I think, continue to be pitched on the
-open boards.[334] The opposing camps of _Richard III_ are precisely
-repeated in _Henry V_.[335] There are episodes before the ‘walls’
-too, with defenders speaking from above, assaults by means of scaling
-ladders, and coming and going through the gates.[336] I find no example
-in which a wall inserted on the line of the scenic curtain would not
-meet the needs of the situation. Pastoral scenes are also common, for
-the urban preoccupation has its regular reaction in the direction of
-pastoral. There is plenty of evidence for practicable trees, such as
-that on which Orlando in _As You Like It_ hangs his love verses, and
-the most likely machinery for putting trees into position still seems
-to me to be the trap.[337] A trap, too, might bring up the bower for
-the play within the play of _Hamlet_, the pleached arbour of _Much
-Ado about Nothing_, the pulpit in the forum of _Julius Caesar_, the
-tombstone in the woods of _Timon of Athens_, the wayside cross of
-_Every Man Out of his Humour_, and other _terrains_ most easily thought
-of as free-standing structures.[338] It would open for Ophelia’s
-grave, and for the still beloved ascents of spirits from the lower
-regions.[339] It remains difficult to see how a riverbank or the
-sea-shores was represented.[340] As a rule, the edge of the stage, with
-steps into the auditorium taken for water stairs, seems most plausible.
-But there is a complicated episode in _The Devil’s Charter_, with a
-conduit and a bridge over the Tiber, which I do not feel quite able
-to envisage.[341] There is another bridge over the Tiber for Horatius
-Cocles in the Red Bull play of the _Rape of Lucrece_. But this is
-easier; it is projected from the walls of Rome, and there must be a
-trapped cavity on the scenic line, into which Horatius leaps.[342]
-
-The Hope contract of 1613 provides for the heavens to be supported
-without the help of posts rising from the stage. For this there was
-a special reason at the Hope, since the stage had to be capable of
-removal to make room for bear-baitings. But the advantage of dispensing
-with the posts and the obstacle to the free vision of the spectators
-which they presented must have been so great, that the innovation may
-well have occurred to the builders of the Globe. Whether it did, I do
-not think that we can say. There are one or two references to posts in
-stage-directions, but they need not be the posts of the heavens.[343]
-Possibly, too, there was less use of the descending chair. One might
-even fancy that Jonson’s sarcasm in the prologue to _Every Man In
-his Humour_ discredited it. The new type of play did not so often
-call for spectacular palace scenes, and perhaps some simpler and
-more portable kind of ‘state’ was allowed to serve the turn. There
-is no suggestion of a descent from the heavens in the theophanies
-of _As You Like It_ and _Pericles_; Juno, however, descends in _The
-Tempest_.[344] This, although it has practically no change of setting,
-is in some ways, under the mask influence, the most spectacular
-performance attempted by the King’s men at Globe or Blackfriars during
-our period.[345] But it is far outdone by the Queen’s plays of the
-_Golden_, _Silver_, and _Brazen Ages_, which, if they were really
-given just as Heywood printed them, must have strained the scenic
-resources of the Red Bull to an extreme. Here are ascents and descents
-and entries from every conceivable point of the stage;[346] divinities
-in fantastic disguise;[347] mythological dumb-shows;[348] battles and
-hunting episodes and revels;[349] ingenious properties, often with
-a melodramatic thrill;[350] and from beginning to end a succession
-of atmospheric phenomena, which suggest that the Jacobeans had made
-considerable progress in the art of stage pyrotechnics.[351] The Globe,
-with its traditional ‘blazing star’, is left far behind.[352]
-
-The critical points of staging are the recesses below and above.
-Some kind of recess on the level of the main stage is often required
-by the King’s plays; for action in or before a prison,[353] a
-cell,[354] a cave,[355] a closet,[356] a study,[357] a tomb,[358] a
-chapel,[359] a shop;[360] for the revelation of dead bodies or other
-concealed sights.[361] In many cases the alcove constructed in the
-tiring-house behind the scenic wall would give all that is required,
-and occasionally a mention of the ‘curtains’ or of ‘discovery’ in a
-stage-direction points plainly to this arrangement. The ‘traverse’ of
-Webster’s plays, both for the King’s and the Queen’s men, appears,
-as already pointed out, to be nothing more than a terminological
-variant.[362] Similarly, hall scenes have still their ‘arras’ or their
-‘hangings’, behind which a spy can post himself.[363] A new feature,
-however, now presents itself in the existence of certain scenes,
-including some bedchamber scenes, which entail the use of properties
-and would, I think, during the sixteenth century have been placed in
-the alcove, but now appear to have been brought forward and to occupy,
-like hall scenes, the main stage. The usage is by no means invariable.
-Even in so late a play as _Cymbeline_, Imogen’s chamber, with Iachimo’s
-trunk and the elaborate fire-places in it, must, in spite of the
-absence of any reference to curtains, have been disposed in the alcove;
-for the trunk scene is immediately followed by another before the door
-of the same chamber, from which Imogen presently emerges.[364] But I do
-not think that the alcove was used for Gertrude’s closet in _Hamlet_,
-the whole of which play seems to me to be set very continuously on
-the outer stage.[365] Hamlet does not enter the closet direct from in
-front, but goes off and comes on again. A little distance is required
-for the vision of the Ghost, who goes out at a visible ‘portal’. When
-Hamlet has killed Polonius, he lugs the guts into the neighbour room,
-according to the ordinary device for clearing a dead body from the
-main stage, which is superfluous when the death has taken place in the
-alcove. There is an arras, behind which Polonius esconces himself, and
-on this, or perhaps on an inner arras disclosed by a slight parting
-of the ordinary one, hangs the picture of Hamlet’s father. Nor do I
-think, although it is difficult to be certain, that the alcove held
-Desdemona’s death-chamber in _Othello_.[366] True, there are curtains
-drawn here, but they may be only bed-curtains. A longish chamber, with
-an outer door, seems to be indicated. A good many persons, including
-Cassio ‘in a chaire’, have to be accommodated, and when Emilia enters,
-it is some time before her attention is drawn to Desdemona behind
-the curtains. If anything is in the alcove, it can only be just the
-bed itself. The best illustrations of my point, however, are to be
-found in _The Devil’s Charter_, a singular play, with full and naïve
-stage-directions, which perhaps betray the hand of an inexperienced
-writer. Much of the action takes place in the palace of Alexander
-Borgia at Rome. The alcove seems to be reserved for Alexander’s study.
-Other scenes of an intimately domestic character are staged in front,
-and the necessary furniture is very frankly carried on, in one case
-by a protagonist. This is a scene in a parlour by night, in which
-Lucrezia Borgia murders her husband.[367] Another scene represents
-Lucrezia’s toilet;[368] in a third young men come in from tennis and
-are groomed by a barber.[369] My impression is that in the seventeenth
-century, instead of discovering a bedchamber in the alcove, it became
-the custom to secure more space and light by projecting the bed through
-the central aperture on to the main stage, and removing it by the
-same avenue when the scene was over. As to this a stage-direction in
-_2 Henry VI_ may be significant. There was a scene in _1 Contention_
-in which the murdered body of the Duke of Gloucester is discovered in
-his bedchamber. This recurs in _2 Henry VI_, but instead of a full
-direction for the drawing of curtains, the Folio has the simple note
-‘Bed put forth’.[370] This is one of a group of formulas which have
-been the subject of some discussion.[371] I do not think that either
-‘Bed put forth’ or still less ‘Bed thrust out’ can be dismissed as
-a mere equivalent of ‘Enter in a bed’, which may admittedly cover a
-parting of the curtains, or of such a warning to the tire-man as ‘Bed
-set out’ or ‘ready’ or ‘prepared’.[372] There is a difference between
-‘setting out’ and ‘thrusting out’, for the one does and the other
-does not carry the notion of a push. And if ‘Bed put forth’ is rather
-more colourless, ‘Bed drawn out’, which also occurs, is clear enough.
-Unfortunately the extant text of _2 Henry VI_ may be of any date up
-to 1623, and none of the other examples of the formulas in question
-are direct evidence for the Globe in 1599–1613.[373] To be sure of the
-projected bed at so early a date, we have to turn to the Red Bull,
-where we find it both in the _Golden_ and the _Silver Age_, as well
-as the amateur _Hector of Germany_, or to the Swan, where we find it
-in _The Chaste Maid of Cheapside_.[374] The _Golden Age_ particularly
-repays study. The whole of the last two acts are devoted to the episode
-of Jupiter and Danae. The scene is set in
-
- the Darreine Tower
- Guirt with a triple mure of shining brasse.
-
-Most of the action requires a courtyard, and the wall and gate of this,
-with a porter’s lodge and an alarm-bell, must have been given some kind
-of structural representation on the stage. An inner door is supposed to
-lead to Danae’s chamber above. It is in this chamber, presumably, that
-attendants enter ‘drawing out Danae’s bed’, and when ‘The bed is drawn
-in’, action is resumed in the courtyard below.[375]
-
-There are chamber scenes in the King’s plays also, which are neither in
-the alcove nor on the main stage, but above. This is an extension of a
-practice already observable in pre-Globe days. Hero’s chamber in _Much
-Ado about Nothing_ is above.[376] So is Celia’s in _Volpone_.[377] So
-is Falstaff’s at the Garter Inn in _The Merry Wives of Windsor_.[378]
-In all these examples, which are not exhaustive, a reasonable amount
-of space is required for action.[379] This is still more the case in
-_The Yorkshire Tragedy_, where the violent scene of the triple murder
-at Calverley Hall is clearly located upstairs.[380] Moreover, there
-are two plays which stage above what one would normally regard as hall
-rather than chamber scenes. One is _Sejanus_, where a break in the
-dialogue in the first act can best be explained by the interpretation
-of a scene in an upper ‘gallery’.[381] The other is _Every Man Out
-of his Humour_, where the personages go ‘up’ to the great chamber at
-Court.[382] Elaborate use is also made of the upper level in _Antony
-and Cleopatra_, where it represents the refuge of Cleopatra upon a
-monument, to which Antony is heaved up for his death scene, and on
-which Cleopatra is afterwards surprised by Caesar’s troops.[383] But I
-do not agree with the suggestion that it was used in shipboard scenes,
-for which, as we learn from the presenter’s speeches in _Pericles_, the
-stage-manager gave up the idea of providing a realistic setting, and
-fell back upon an appeal to the imagination of the audience.[384] Nor
-do I think that it was used for the ‘platform’ at Elsinore Castle in
-_Hamlet_;[385] or, as it was in the sixteenth century, for scenes in a
-Capitoline senate overlooking the forum at Rome.[386] In _Bonduca_, if
-that is of our period, it was adapted for a high rock, with fugitives
-upon it, in a wood.[387] I do not find extensive chamber scenes
-‘above’ in any King’s play later than 1609, and that may be a fact
-of significance to which I shall return.[388] But shallow action, at
-windows or in a gallery overlooking a hall or open space, continues to
-be frequent.[389] In _The Devil is an Ass_, which is a Blackfriars
-play of 1616, a little beyond the limits of our period, there is an
-interesting scene played out of two contiguous upper windows, supposed
-to be in different houses.[390]
-
-There is other evidence to show that in the seventeenth century as
-in the sixteenth, the stage was not limited to the presentation of a
-single house only at any given moment. A multiplicity of houses would
-fit the needs of several plays, but perhaps the most striking instance
-for the Globe is afforded by _The Merry Devil of Edmonton_, the last
-act of which requires two inns on opposite sides of the stage, the
-signs of which have been secretly exchanged, as a trick in the working
-out of the plot.[391] The King’s plays do not often require any marked
-foreshortening of distance in journeys over the stage. Hamlet, indeed,
-comes in ‘a farre off’, according to a stage-direction of the Folio,
-but this need mean no more than at the other end of the graveyard,
-although Hamlet is in fact returning from a voyage.[392] In _Bonduca_
-the Roman army at one end of the stage are said to be half a furlong
-from the rock occupied by Caractacus, which they cannot yet see; but
-they go off, and their leaders subsequently emerge upon the rock from
-behind.[393] The old device endured at the Red Bull, but even here the
-flagrant example usually cited is of a very special type.[394] At the
-end of _The Travels of the Three English Brothers_, the action of
-which ranges widely over the inhabited world, there is an appeal to
-imagination by Fame, the presenter, who says,
-
- Would your apprehensions helpe poore art,
- Into three parts deuiding this our stage,
- They all at once shall take their leaues of you.
- Thinke this England, this Spaine, this Persia.
-
-Then follow the stage-directions, ‘Enter three seuerall waies the
-three Brothers’, and ‘Fame giues to each a prospective glasse, they
-seme to see one another’. Obviously such a visionary dumb-show
-cannot legitimately be twisted into an argument that the concurrent
-representation of incongruous localities was a matter of normal
-staging. Such interplay of opposed houses, as we get in _The Merry
-Devil of Edmonton_, would no doubt seem more effective if we could
-adopt the ingenious conjecture which regards the scenic wall as not
-running in a straight line all the way, but broken by two angles, so
-that, while the central apertures below and above directly front the
-spectators, the doors to right and left, each with a room or window
-above it, are set on a bias, and more or less face each other from end
-to end of the stage.[395] I cannot call this more than a conjecture,
-for there is no direct evidence in its favour, and the Swan drawing,
-for what that is worth, is flatly against it. Structurally it would,
-I suppose, fit the round or apsidal ended Globe better than the
-rectangular Fortune or Blackfriars. The theory seems to have been
-suggested by a desire to make it possible to watch action within the
-alcove from a gallery on the level above. I have not, however, come
-across any play which can be safely assigned to a public theatre, in
-which just this situation presents itself, although it is common enough
-for persons above to watch action in a threshold or hall scene. Two
-windows in the same plane would, of course, fully meet the needs of
-_The Devil is an Ass_. There is, indeed, the often-quoted scene from
-_David and Bethsabe_, in which the King watches the Hittite’s wife
-bathing at a fountain; but the provenance of _David and Bethsabe_ is
-so uncertain and its text so evidently manipulated, that it would be
-very temerarious to rely upon it as affording any proof of public
-usage.[396] On the other hand, if it is the case, as seems almost
-certain, that the boxes over the doors were originally the lord’s
-rooms, it would no doubt be desirable that the occupants of those
-rooms should be able to see anything that went on within the alcove.
-I do not quite know what weight to attach to Mr. Lawrence’s analogy
-between the oblique doors which this theory involves and the familiar
-post-Restoration proscenium doors, with stage-boxes above them, at
-right angles to the plane of the footlights.[397] The roofed Caroline
-theatres, with their side-walls to the stage, and the proscenium arch,
-probably borrowed from the masks, have intervened, and I cannot pretend
-to have traced the history of theatrical structure during the Caroline
-period.
-
-I have felt justified in dealing more briefly with the early
-seventeenth-century stages than with those of the sixteenth century,
-for, after all, the fundamental conditions, so far as I can judge,
-remained unaltered. I seem able to lay my finger upon two directions in
-which development took place, and both of these concern the troublesome
-problem of interior action. First of all there is the stage gallery. Of
-this I venture to reconstruct the story as follows. Its first function
-was to provide seating accommodation for dignified and privileged
-spectators, amongst whom could be placed, if occasion arose, presenters
-or divine agents supposed to be watching or directing the action of
-a play. Perhaps a differentiation took place. Parts of the gallery,
-above the doors at either end of the scene, were set aside as lord’s
-rooms. The central part, with the upper floor of the tiring-house
-behind it, was used for the musicians, but was also available for such
-scenes as could effectively be staged above, and a curtain was fitted,
-corresponding to that below, behind which the recess could be set as
-a small chamber. Either as a result of these changes or for other
-reasons, the lord’s rooms, about the end of the sixteenth century, lost
-their popularity, and it became the fashion for persons of distinction,
-or would-be distinction, to sit upon the stage itself instead.[398]
-This left additional space free above, and the architects of the Globe
-and Fortune took the opportunity to enlarge the accommodation for
-their upper scenes. Probably they left windows over the side-doors, so
-that the upper parts of three distinct houses could, if necessary, be
-represented; and it may be that spectators were not wholly excluded
-from these.[399] But they widened the music-room, so that it could now
-hold larger scenes, and in fact now became an upper stage and not a
-mere recess. Adequate lighting from behind could probably be obtained
-rather more easily here than on the crowded floor below. There is an
-interesting allusion which I have not yet quoted, and which seems
-to point to an upper stage of substantial dimensions in the public
-theatres of about the year 1607. It is in Middleton’s _Family of Love_,
-itself a King’s Revels play.[400] Some of the characters have been to
-a performance, not ‘by the youths’, and there ‘saw Sampson bear the
-town-gates on his neck from the lower to the upper stage’. You cannot
-carry a pair of town-gates into a mere box, such as the Swan drawing
-shows.
-
-Meanwhile, what of the alcove? I think that it proved too dark and
-too cramped for the convenient handling of chamber scenes, and that
-the tendency of the early seventeenth century was to confine its use
-to action which could be kept shallow, or for which obscurity was
-appropriate. It could still serve for a prison, or an ‘unsunned lodge’,
-or a chamber of horrors. For scenes requiring more light and movement
-it was replaced, sometimes by the more spacious upper stage, sometimes
-by the main stage, on to which beds and other properties were carried
-or ‘thrust out’, just as they had always been on a less extensive scale
-for hall scenes. The difficulties of shifting were, on the whole,
-compensated for by the greater effectiveness and visibility which
-action on the main scene afforded. I do not therefore think it possible
-to accept even such a modified version of the old ‘alternationist’
-theory as I find set out in Professor Thorndike’s recent _Shakespeare’s
-Theater_. The older alternationists, starting from the principle, sound
-enough in itself, of continuous action within an act, assumed that all
-interior or other propertied scenes were played behind the curtains,
-and were set there while unpropertied action was played outside; and
-they deduced a method of dramatic construction, which required the
-dramatists to alternate exterior and interior scenes so as to allow
-time for the settings to be carried out.[401] The theory breaks down,
-not merely because it entails a much more constant use of the curtains
-than the stage-directions give us any warrant for, but also because
-it fails to provide for the not infrequent event of a succession of
-interior scenes; and in its original form it is abandoned by Professor
-Thorndike in common with other recent scholars, who see plainly enough
-that what I have called hall scenes must have been given on the outer
-stage. I do not think that they have always grasped that the tendency
-of the seventeenth century was towards a decreased and not an increased
-reliance upon the curtained space, possibly because they have not as
-a rule followed the historical method in their investigations; and
-Professor Thorndike, although he traces the earlier employment of the
-alcove much as I do, treats the opening and closing of the curtains as
-coming in time to be used, in _Antony and Cleopatra_ for example and
-in _Cymbeline_, as little more than a handy convention for indicating
-the transference of the scene from one locality to another.[402] Such
-a usage would not of course mean that the new scene was played wholly
-or even partly within the alcove itself; the change might be merely one
-of background. But, although I admit that there would be a convenience
-in Professor Thorndike’s development, I do not see that there is in
-fact any evidence for it. The stage-directions never mention the use
-of curtains in such circumstances as he has in mind; and while I am
-far from supposing that they need always have been mentioned, and have
-myself assumed their use in one scene of _Cymbeline_ where they are
-not mentioned, yet mentions of them are so common in connexion with
-the earlier and admitted functions of the alcove, that I should have
-expected Professor Thorndike’s view, if it were sound, to have proved
-capable of confirmation from at least one unconjectural case.
-
-The difficulty which has led Professor Thorndike to his conclusion
-is, however, a real one. In the absence of a _scenario_ with notes
-of locality, for which certainly there is no evidence, how did the
-Elizabethan managers indicate to their audiences the shifts of
-action from one place to another? This is both a sixteenth- and a
-seventeenth-century problem. We have noted in a former chapter that
-unity of place was characteristic of the earlier Elizabethan interlude;
-that it failed to impose itself upon the romantic narrative plots
-of the popular drama; that it was departed from through the device
-of letting two ends of a continuously set stage stand for discrete
-localities; that this device proved only a transition to a system in
-which the whole stage stood successively for different localities;
-and that there are hints of a convention by which the locality of
-each scene was indicated with the help of a label, placed over the
-door through which the personages in that scene made their exits and
-their entrances.[403] The public stage of the sixteenth and early
-seventeenth centuries experienced no re-establishment of the principle
-of unity; broadly speaking, it presents an extreme type of romantic
-drama, with an unfettered freedom of ranging from one to another of any
-number of localities required by a narrative plot. But the practice,
-or the instinct, of individual playwrights differs. Ben Jonson is
-naturally the man who betrays the most conscious preoccupation with the
-question. He is not, however, a rigid or consistent unitarian. In his
-two earliest plays the scene shifts from the country to a neighbouring
-town, and the induction to _Every Man Out of his Humour_ is in part
-an apology for his own liberty, in part a criticism of the licence of
-others.
-
- _Mitis._ What’s his scene?
-
- _Cordatus._ Mary _Insula Fortunata_, sir.
-
- _Mitis._ O, the fortunate Iland? masse he has bound himself to a
- strict law there.
-
- _Cordatus._ Why so?
-
- _Mitis._ He cannot lightly alter the scene without crossing the
- seas.
-
- _Cordatus._ He needs not, hauing a whole Ilande to runne through,
- I thinke.
-
- _Mitis._ No? howe comes it then, that in some one play we see so
- many seas, countries, and kingdomes, past over with such admirable
- dexteritie?
-
- _Cordatus._ O, that but shewes how well the Authors can travaile in
- their vocation, and out-run the apprehension of their Auditorie.
-
-_Sejanus_ is throughout in Rome, but five or six distinct houses are
-required, and it must be doubtful whether such a multiplicity of
-houses could be shown without a change of scene.[404] The prologue
-to _Volpone_ claims for the author that ‘The laws of time, place,
-persons he obserueth’, and this has no more than four houses, all in
-Venice.[405] In _Catiline_ the scenes in Rome, with some ten houses,
-are broken by two in open country.[406] In _Bartholomew Fair_ a
-preliminary act at a London house is followed by four set continuously
-before the three booths of the fair. Absolute unity, as distinct from
-the unity of a single country, or even a single town, is perhaps only
-attained in _The Alchemist_. Here everything takes place, either in a
-single room in Lovewit’s house in the Blackfriars, or in front of a
-door leading from the street into the same room. Evidently advantage
-was taken of the fact that the scene did not have to be changed, to
-build a wall containing this door out on to the stage itself, for
-action such as speaking through the keyhole requires both sides of the
-door to be practicable.[407] There is also a window from which persons
-approaching can be seen. Inner doors, presumably in the scenic wall,
-lead to a laboratory and other parts of the house, but these are not
-discovered, and no use is made of the upper level. Jonson here is a
-clear innovator, so far as the English public theatre is concerned; no
-other play of our period reproduces this type of permanent interior
-setting.
-
-Shakespeare is no classicist; yet in some of his plays, comedies and
-romantic tragedies, it is, I think, possible to discern at least an
-instinctive feeling in the direction of scenic unity. _The Comedy of
-Errors_, with its action in the streets of Syracuse, near the mart,
-or before the Phoenix, the Porpentine, or the priory, follows upon
-the lines of its Latin model, although here, as in most of Jonson’s
-plays, it is possible that the various houses were shown successively
-rather than concurrently. _Twelfth Night_, _Much Ado about Nothing_,
-and _Measure for Measure_ each require a single town, with two, three,
-and five houses respectively; _Titus Andronicus_, _A Midsummer Night’s
-Dream_, _The Merry Wives of Windsor_, _As You Like It_, _Troilus and
-Cressida_, _Timon of Athens_, each a single town, with open country
-environs. _Love’s Labour’s Lost_ has the unity of a park, with perhaps
-a manor-house as background at one end and tents at the other; _The
-Tempest_ complete pastoral unity after the opening scene on shipboard.
-_Hamlet_ would all be Elsinore, but for one distant open-country scene;
-_Romeo and Juliet_ all Venice, but for one scene in Mantua. In another
-group of plays the action is divided between two towns. It alternates
-from Padua to near Verona in _The Taming of the Shrew_, from Verona
-to Milan in _The Two Gentlemen of Verona_, from Venice to Belmont in
-_The Merchant of Venice_; in _Othello_ an act in Venice is followed
-by four in Cyprus. On the other hand, in a few comedies and in the
-histories and historical tragedies, where Shakespeare’s sources leave
-him less discretion, he shifts his scenes with a readiness outdone by
-no other playwright. The third act of _Richard II_ requires no less
-than four localities, three of which have a castle, perhaps the same
-castle from the stage-manager’s point of view, in the background. The
-second act of _1 Henry IV_ has as many. _King John_ and _Henry V_
-pass lightly between England and France, _All’s Well that Ends Well_
-between France and Italy, _The Winter’s Tale_ between Sicily and
-Bohemia, _Cymbeline_ between Britain, Italy, and Wales. Quite a late
-play, _Antony and Cleopatra_, might almost be regarded as a challenge
-to classicists. Rome, Misenum, Athens, Actium, Syria, Egypt are the
-localities, with much further subdivision in the Egyptian scenes. The
-second act has four changes of locality, the third no less than eight,
-and it is noteworthy that these changes are often for quite short
-bits of dialogue, which no modern manager would regard as justifying
-a resetting of the stage. Shakespeare must surely have been in some
-danger, in this case, of outrunning the apprehension of his auditory,
-and I doubt if even Professor Thorndike’s play of curtains would have
-saved him.
-
-It is to be observed also that, in Shakespeare’s plays as in those of
-others, no excessive pains are taken to let the changes of locality
-coincide with the divisions between the acts. If the second and third
-acts of _All’s Well that Ends Well_ are at Paris, the fourth at
-Florence, and the fifth at Marseilles, yet the shift from Roussillon
-to Paris is in the middle and not at the end of the first act. The
-shift from Sicily to Bohemia is in the middle of the third act of
-_The Winter’s Tale_; the Agincourt scenes begin in the middle of the
-third act of _Henry V_. Indeed, although the poets regarded the acts
-as units of literary structure, the act-divisions do not appear to
-have been greatly stressed, at any rate on the stages of the public
-houses, in the actual presentation of plays.[408] I do not think that
-they were wholly disregarded, although the fact that they are so often
-unnoted in the prints of plays based on stage copies might point to
-that conclusion.[409] The act-interval did not necessarily denote
-any substantial time-interval in the action of the play, and perhaps
-the actors did not invariably leave the stage. Thus the lovers in _A
-Midsummer Night’s Dream_ sleep through the interval between the third
-and fourth acts.[410] But some sort of break in the continuity of the
-performance is a natural inference from the fact that the act-divisions
-are the favourite, although not the only, points for the intervention
-of presenters, dumb-shows, and choruses.[411] The act-intervals cannot
-have been long, at any rate if the performance was to be completed in
-two hours. There may sometimes have been music, which would not have
-prevented the audience from stretching themselves and talking.[412]
-Short intervals, rather than none at all, are, I think, suggested by
-the well-known passage in the induction of _The Malcontent_, as altered
-for performance at the Globe, in which it is explained that passages
-have been added to the play as originally written for Revels boys, ‘to
-entertain a little more time, and to abridge the not-received custom of
-music in our theatre’.[413] Some information is perhaps to be gleaned
-from the ‘plots’ of plays prepared for the guidance of the book-keeper
-or tire-man, of which examples are preserved at Dulwich.[414] These
-have lines drawn across them at points which pretty clearly correspond
-to the beginnings of scenes, although it can hardly be assumed that
-each new scene meant a change of locality. The act-divisions can in
-some, but not all, cases be inferred from the occurrence of dumb-shows
-and choruses; in one, _The Dead Man’s Fortune_, they are definitely
-marked by lines of crosses, and against each such line there is the
-marginal note ‘musique’. Other musical directions, ‘sound’, ‘sennet’,
-‘alarum’, ‘flourish’, come sometimes at the beginning, sometimes in the
-middle of scenes.
-
-We do not get any encouragement to think that a change of locality was
-regularly heralded by notes of music, even if this may incidentally
-have been the case when a procession or an army or a monarch was about
-to enter. Possibly the lines on the plots may signify an even slighter
-pause than that between the acts, such as the modern stage provides
-with the added emphasis of a drop-curtain; but of this there is no
-proof, and an allusion in _Catiline_ to action as rapid
-
- As is a veil put off, a visor changed,
- Or the scene shifted, in our theatres,
-
-is distinctly against it.[415] A mere clearance of the stage does
-not necessarily entail a change of scene, although there are one or
-two instances in which the exit of personages at one door, followed
-by their return at another, seems to constitute or accompany such
-a change.[416] And even if the fact of a change could be signified
-in one or other of these ways, the audience would still be in the
-dark as to what the new locality was supposed to be. Can we then
-assume a continuance of the old practice of indicating localities by
-labels over the doors? This would entail the shifting of the labels
-themselves during the progress of the play, at any rate if there were
-more localities than entrances, or if, as might usually be expected,
-more entrances than one were required to any locality. But there would
-be no difficulty about this, and in fact we have an example of the
-shifting of a label by a mechanical device in the introduction to _Wily
-Beguiled_.[417] This was not a public theatre play, and the label
-concerned was one giving the title of the play and not its locality,
-but similar machinery could obviously have been applied. There is not,
-however, much actual evidence for the use either of title-labels or
-of locality-labels on the public stage. The former are perhaps the
-more probable of the two, and the practice of posting play-bills at
-the theatre door and in places of public resort would not render
-them altogether superfluous.[418] In favour of locality-labels it is
-possible to quote Dekker’s advice to those entering Paul’s, and also
-the praise given to Jonson by Jasper Mayne in _Jonsonus Virbius_:
-
- Thy stage was still a stage, two entrances
- Were not two parts o’ the world, disjoined by seas.[419]
-
-These, however, are rather vague and inconclusive allusions on which to
-base a whole stage practice, and there is not much to be added to them
-from the texts and stage-directions of the plays themselves. Signs are
-of course used to distinguish particular taverns and shops, just as
-they would be in real life.[420] Occasionally, moreover, a locality is
-named in a stage-direction in a way that recalls _Common Conditions_,
-but this may also be explained as no more than a descriptive touch such
-as is not uncommon in stage-directions written by authors.[421] It is
-rather against the theory of labels that care is often taken, when a
-locality is changed, to let the personages themselves declare their
-whereabouts. A careful reader of such rapidly shifting plays as _Edward
-I_, _James IV_, _The Battle of Alcazar_, or _King Leir_ will generally
-be able to orientate himself with the aid of the opening passages of
-dialogue in each new scene, and conceivably a very attentive spectator
-might do the same. Once the personages have got themselves grouped in
-the mind in relation to their localities, the recurrence of this or
-that group would help. It would require a rather careful examination
-of texts to enable one to judge how far this method of localization by
-dialogue continues throughout our period. I have been mainly struck by
-it in early plays. The presenters may also give assistance, either by
-declaring the general scene in a prologue, or by intervening to call
-attention to particular shifts.[422] Thus in _Dr. Faustus_ the original
-scene in Wittenberg is indicated by the chorus, a shift to Rome by
-speeches of Wagner and Faustus, a shift to the imperial court by the
-chorus, and the return to Wittenberg by a speech of Faustus.[423]
-Jonson makes a deliberate experiment with this method in _Every Man Out
-of his Humour_, which it is worth while following in detail. It is the
-Grex of presenters, Mitis and Cordatus, who serve as guides. The first
-act is in open country without background, and it is left to the rustic
-Sogliardo to describe it (543) as his lordship. A visit to Puntarvolo’s
-is arranged, and at the beginning of the second act Cordatus says, ‘The
-Scene is the countrey still, remember’ (946). Presently the stage is
-cleared, with the hint, ‘Here he comes, and with him Signior Deliro
-a merchant, at whose house hee is come to soiourne. Make your owne
-obseruation now; only transferre your thoughts to the Cittie with the
-Scene; where, suppose they speake’ (1499). The next scene then is at
-Deliro’s. Then, for the first scene of the third act, ‘We must desire
-you to presuppose the Stage, the middle Isle in Paules; and that, the
-West end of it’ (1918). The second scene of this act is in the open
-country again, with a ‘crosse’ on which Sordido hangs himself; we are
-left to infer it from the reappearance of the rustic characters. It is
-closed with ‘Let your minde keepe companie with the Scene stil, which
-now remoues it selfe from the Countrie to the Court’ (2555). After
-a scene at Court, ‘You vnderstand where the scene is?’ (2709), and
-presumably the entry of personages already familiar brings us back for
-the first scene of Act IV to Deliro’s. A visit to ‘the Notaries by the
-Exchange’ is planned, and for the second and third scenes the only note
-is of the entry of Puntarvolo and the Scrivener; probably a scrivener’s
-shop was discovered. Act V is introduced by ‘Let your imagination be
-swifter than a paire of oares, and by this, suppose Puntarvolo, Briske,
-Fungoso, and the Dog, arriu’d at the court gate, and going vp to the
-great chamber’ (3532). The action of the next scene begins in the great
-chamber and then shifts to the court gate again. Evidently the two
-localities were in some way staged together, and a guide is not called
-upon to enlighten us. There are yet two more scenes, according to the
-Grex. One opens with ‘Conceiue him but to be enter’d the Mitre’ (3841),
-and as action shifts from the Mitre to Deliro’s and back again without
-further note, these two houses were probably shown together. The final
-scene is introduced by ‘O, this is to be imagin’d the Counter belike’
-(4285). So elaborate a directory would surely render any use of labels
-superfluous for this particular play; but, so far as we know, the
-experiment was not repeated.[424]
-
-When Cordatus points to ‘that’, and calls it the west end of Paul’s,
-are we to suppose that the imagination of the audience was helped out
-by the display of any pictorial background? It is not impossible. The
-central aperture, disclosed by the parting curtains, could easily hold,
-in place of a discovered alcove or a quasi-solid monument or rock, any
-kind of painted cloth which might give colour to the scene. A woodland
-cloth or a battlement cloth could serve for play after play, and for a
-special occasion something more distinctive could be attempted without
-undue expense. Such a back-cloth, perhaps for use in _Dr. Faustus_, may
-have been ‘the sittie of Rome’ which we find in Henslowe’s inventory
-of 1598.[425] And something of this kind seems to be required in _2
-If You Know not Me, You Know Nobody_, where the scene is before Sir
-Thomas Gresham’s newly completed Burse, and the personages say ‘How
-do you like this building?’ and ‘We are gazing here on M. Greshams
-work’.[426] Possibly Elizabethan imaginations were more vivid than a
-tradition of scene-painters allows ours to be, but that does not mean
-that an Elizabethan audience did not like to have its eyes tickled
-upon occasion. And if as a rule the stage-managers relied mainly upon
-garments and properties to minister to this instinct, there is no
-particular reason why they should not also have had recourse to so
-simple a device as a back-cloth. This conjecture is hardly excluded by
-the very general terms in which post-Restoration writers deny ‘scenes’
-and all decorations other than ‘hangings’ to the earlier stage.[427]
-By ‘scenes’ they no doubt mean the complete settings with shuttered
-‘wings’ as well as back-cloths which Inigo Jones had devised for the
-masks and the stage had adopted. Even these were not absolutely unknown
-in pre-Restoration plays, and neither this fact nor the incidental
-use of special cloths over the central aperture would make it untrue
-that the normal background of an Elizabethan or Jacobean play was an
-arras.[428]
-
-The discussions of the last chapter and a half have envisaged the
-plays presented, exclusively in open theatres until the King’s took
-over the Blackfriars, by professional companies of men. I must deal
-in conclusion, perhaps more briefly than the interest of the problem
-would itself justify, with those of the revived boy companies which for
-a time carried on such an active rivalry with the men, at Paul’s from
-1599 to 1606 and at the Blackfriars from 1600 to 1609. It is, I think,
-a principal defect of many investigations into Jacobean staging, that
-the identity of the devices employed in the so-called ‘public’ and
-‘private’ houses has been too hastily assumed, and a uniform hypothesis
-built up upon material taken indifferently from both sources, without
-regard to the logical possibility of the considerable divergences to
-which varying conditions of structure and of tradition may have given
-rise. This is a kind of syncretism to which an inadequate respect for
-the historic method naturally tends. It is no doubt true that the
-‘standardization’ of type, which I have accepted as likely to result
-from the frequent migration of companies and plays from one public
-house to another, may in a less degree have affected the private houses
-also. James Burbadge originally built the Blackfriars for public
-performances, and we know that _Satiromastix_ was produced both at
-the Globe and at Paul’s in 1601, and that in 1604 the Revels boys and
-the King’s men were able to effect mutual piracies of _Jeronimo_ and
-_The Malcontent_. Nor is there anything in the general character of
-the two groups of ‘public’ and ‘private’ plays, as they have come down
-to us, which is in any obvious way inconsistent with some measure of
-standardization. It is apparent, indeed, that the act-interval was of
-far more importance at both Paul’s and the Blackfriars than elsewhere.
-But this is largely a matter of degree. The inter-acts of music and
-song and dance were more universal and longer.[429] But the relation
-of the acts to each other was not essentially different. The break in
-the representation may still correspond to practically no interval
-at all in the time-distribution of the play; and there are examples
-in which the action continues to be carried on by the personages in
-dumb-show, while the music is still sounding.[430] In any case this
-particular distinction, while it might well modify the methods of the
-dramatist, need only affect the economy of the tire-house in so far
-as it would give more time for the preparation of an altered setting
-at the beginning of an act. When _The Malcontent_ was taken over at
-the Globe, the text had to be lengthened that the music might be
-abridged, but there is no indication of any further alteration, due to
-a difficulty in adapting the original situations to the peculiarities
-of the Globe stage. The types of incident, again, which are familiar in
-public plays, reappear in the private ones; in different proportions,
-no doubt, since the literary interest of the dramatists and their
-audiences tends rather in the directions, on the one hand of definite
-pastoral, and on the other of courtly crime and urban humour, than in
-that of chronicle history. And there is a marked general analogy in
-the stage-directions. Here also those who leave the stage go ‘in’, and
-music and voices can be heard ‘within’. There are the same formulae
-for the use of several doors, of which one is definitely a ‘middle’
-door.[431] Spirits and so forth can ‘ascend’ from under the stage by
-the convenient traps.[432] Possibly they can also ‘descend’ from the
-heavens.[433] The normal backing of the stage, even in out-of-door
-scenes, is an arras or hanging, through which at Paul’s spectators
-can watch a play.[434] At the Blackfriars, while the arras, even more
-clearly than in the public theatres, is of a decorative rather than a
-realistic kind, it can also be helped out by something in the nature
-of perspective.[435] There is action ‘above’, and interior action,
-some of which is recessed or ‘discovered’. It must be added, however,
-that these formulae, taken by themselves, do not go very far towards
-determining the real character of the staging. They make their first
-appearance, for the most part, with the interludes in which the
-Court influence is paramount, and are handed down as a tradition to
-the public and the private plays alike. They would hardly have been
-sufficient, without the Swan drawing and other collateral evidence,
-to disclose even such a general conception of the various uses and
-interplay, at the Globe and elsewhere, of main stage, alcove, and
-gallery, as we believe ourselves to have succeeded in adumbrating.
-And it is quite possible that at Paul’s and the Blackfriars they may
-not--at any rate it must not be taken for granted without inquiry that
-they do--mean just the same things. Thus, to take the doors alone, we
-infer with the help of the Swan drawing, that in the public theatres
-the three main entrances were in the scenic wall and on the same or
-nearly the same plane. But the Blackfriars was a rectangular room. We
-do not know that any free space was left between its walls and the
-sides of the stage. And it is quite conceivable that there may have
-been side-doors in the planes of these walls, and at right angles to
-the middle door. Whether this was so or not, and if so how far forward
-the side-doors stood, there is certainly nothing in the formulae
-of the stage-directions to tell us. Perhaps the most noticeable
-differentiation, which emerges from a comparative survey of private and
-public plays, is that in the main the writers of the former, unlike
-those of the latter, appear to be guided by the principle of unity
-of place; at any rate to the extent that their _domus_ are generally
-located in the same town, although they may be brought for purposes
-of representation into closer contiguity than the actual topography
-of that town would suggest. There are exceptions, and the scenes in a
-town are occasionally broken by one or two, requiring at the most an
-open-country background, in the environs. The exact measure in which
-the principle is followed will become sufficiently evident in the
-sequel. My immediate point is that it was precisely the absence of
-unity of place which drove the public stage back upon its common form
-background of a curtained alcove below and a curtained gallery above,
-supplemented by the side-doors and later the windows above them, and
-convertible to the needs of various localities in the course of a
-single play.
-
-Let us now proceed to the analysis, first of the Paul’s plays and then
-of the Chapel and Revels plays at the Blackfriars; separately, for
-the same caution, which forbids a hasty syncretism of the conditions
-of public and private houses, also warns us that divergences may
-conceivably have existed between those of the two private houses
-themselves. But here too we are faced with the fact that individual
-plays were sometimes transferred from one to the other, _The Fawn_ from
-Blackfriars to Paul’s, and _The Trick to Catch the Old One_ in its turn
-from Paul’s to Blackfriars.[436]
-
-Seventeen plays, including the two just named and _Satiromastix_, which
-was shared with the Globe, are assigned to Paul’s by contemporary
-title-pages.[437] To these may be added, with various degrees of
-plausibility, _Histriomastix_, _What You Will_, and _Wily Beguiled_.
-For Paul’s were also certainly planned, although we cannot be sure
-whether, or if so when, they were actually produced, the curious
-series of plays left in manuscript by William Percy, of which
-unfortunately only two have ever been published. As the company only
-endured for six or seven years after its revival, it seems probable
-that a very fair proportion of its repertory has reached us. _Jack
-Drum’s Entertainment_ speaks of the ‘mustie fopperies of antiquitie’
-with which the company began its career, and one of these is no doubt
-to be found in _Histriomastix_, evidently an old play, possibly of
-academic origin, and recently brought up to date.[438] The staging
-of _Histriomastix_ would have caused no difficulty to the Revels
-officers, if it had been put into their hands as a Paul’s play of the
-’eighties. The plot illustrates the cyclical progression of Peace,
-Plenty, Pride, Envy, War, Poverty, each of whom in turn occupies a
-throne, finally resigned to Peace, for whom in an alternative ending
-for Court performance is substituted Astraea, who is Elizabeth.[439]
-This arrangement recalls that of _The Woman in the Moon_, but the
-throne seems to have its position on the main stage rather than above.
-Apart from the abstractions, the whole of the action may be supposed
-to take place in a single provincial town, largely in an open street,
-sometimes in the hall of a lord called Mavortius, on occasion in or
-before smaller _domus_ representing the studies of Chrisoganus, a
-scholar, and Fourcher, a lawyer, the shop of Velure, a merchant, a
-market-cross, which is discovered by a curtain, perhaps a tavern.[440]
-Certainly in the ’eighties these would have been disposed together
-around the stage, like the _domus_ of _Campaspe_ about the market-place
-at Athens. And I believe that this is in fact how _Histriomastix_ was
-staged, more particularly as at one point (v. 259) the action appears
-to pass directly from the street to the hall without a clearance.
-Similarly _The Maid’s Metamorphosis_ is on strictly Lylyan lines. It
-is _tout en pastoralle_, in a wood, about whose paths the characters
-stray, while in various regions of it are located the cave of Somnus
-(II. i. 148), the cottage of Eurymine (IV. ii. 4), and a palace where
-‘Phoebus appeares’ (V. ii. 25), possibly above. _Wily Beguiled_ needs
-a stage of which part is a wood, and part a village hard by, with some
-suggestion of the doors of the houses of Gripe, Ploddall, Churms, and
-Mother Midnight. Somewhat less concentration is to be found in _The
-Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll_. Here too, a space of open country, a green
-hill with a cave, the harbourage and a bank, is neighboured by the
-Court of Alphonso and the houses of Cassimere and of Flores, of which
-the last named is adapted for interior action.[441] All this is in
-Saxony, but there is also a single short scene (I. iii) of thirty-two
-lines, not necessarily requiring a background, in Brunswick. The plays
-of William Percy are still, it must be admitted, rather obscure, and
-one has an uneasy feeling that the manuscript may not yet have yielded
-up all its indications as to date and provenance. But on the assumption
-that the conditions contemplated are those of Paul’s in 1599–1606, we
-learn some curious details of structure, and are face to face with a
-technique which is still closely reminiscent of the ’eighties. Percy,
-alone of the dramatists, prefixes to his books, for the guidance of the
-producer, a note of the equipment required to set them forth. Thus for
-_Cuckqueans and Cuckolds Errant_ he writes:
-
- ‘The Properties.
-
- ‘Harwich, In Midde of the Stage Colchester with Image of
- Tarlton, Signe and Ghirlond under him also. The Raungers Lodge,
- Maldon, A Ladder of Roapes trussed up neare Harwich. Highest and
- Aloft the Title The Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants. A Long
- Fourme.’
-
-The house at Colchester is the Tarlton Inn, and here the ghost of
-Tarlton prologizes, ‘standing at entrance of the doore and right under
-the Beame’. That at Harwich is the house of Floredin, and the ladder
-leads to the window of his wife Arvania. Thus we have the concurrent
-representation of three localities, in three distinct towns of Essex.
-To each is assigned one of three doors and, as in _Common Conditions_
-of old, entry by a particular door signifies that a scene is to take
-place at the locality to which it belongs.[442] One is at liberty to
-conjecture that the doors were nominated by labels, but Percy does not
-precisely say so, although he certainly provides for a title label.
-Journeys from one locality to another are foreshortened into a crossing
-of the stage.[443] For _The Aphrodysial_ there were at least two
-houses, the palace of Oceanus ‘in the middle and alofte’, and Proteus
-Hall, where interior action takes place.[444] For _The Faery Pastoral_
-there is an elaborate note:
-
- ‘The Properties
-
- ‘Highest, aloft, and on the Top of the Musick Tree the Title The
- Faery Pastorall, Beneath him pind on Post of the Tree The Scene
- Elvida Forrest. Lowest of all over the Canopie ΝΑΠΑΙΤΒΟΔΑΙΟΝ
- or Faery Chappell. A kiln of Brick. A Fowen Cott. A Hollowe
- Oake with vice of wood to shutt to. A Lowe well with Roape and
- Pullye. A Fourme of Turves. A greene Bank being Pillowe to the
- Hed but. Lastly A Hole to creepe in and out.’
-
-Having written so far, Percy is smitten with a doubt. The stage of
-Paul’s was a small one, and spectators sat on it. If he clutters it up
-like this with properties, will there be room to act at all? He has a
-happy thought and continues:
-
- ‘Now if so be that the Properties of any These, that be outward,
- will not serve the turne by reason of concourse of the People
- on the Stage, Then you may omitt the sayd Properties which be
- outward and supplye their Places with their Nuncupations onely
- in Text Letters. Thus for some.’
-
-Whether the master of Paul’s was prepared to avail himself of this
-ingenious device, I do not know. There is no other reference to it,
-and I do not think it would be safe to assume that it was in ordinary
-use upon either the public or the private stage. There is no change
-of locality in _The Faery Pastoral_, which is _tout en pastoralle_,
-but besides the title label, there was a general scenic label and a
-special one for the fairy chapel. This, which had seats on ‘degrees’
-(v. 5), occupied the ‘Canopie, Fane or Trophey’, which I take to
-have been a discovered interior under the ‘Beame’ named in the other
-play, corresponding to the alcove of the public theatres. The other
-properties were smaller ‘practicables’ standing free on the stage,
-which is presumably what Percy means by ‘outward’. The arrangement must
-have closely resembled that of _The Old Wive’s Tale_. The ‘Fowen Cott’
-is later described as ‘tapistred with cats and fowëns’--a gamekeeper’s
-larder. Some kind of action from above was possible; it may have been
-only from a tree.[445]
-
-The plays so far considered seem to point to the use at Paul’s of
-continuous settings, even when various localities had to be shown,
-rather than the successive settings, with the help of common form
-_domus_, which prevailed at the contemporary Globe and Fortune. Perhaps
-there is rather an archaistic note about them. Let us turn to the
-plays written for Paul’s by more up-to-date dramatists, by Marston,
-Dekker and Webster, Chapman, Middleton, and Beaumont. Marston’s hand,
-already discernible in the revision of _Histriomastix_, appears to be
-dominant in _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_, although neither play was
-reclaimed for him in the collected edition of 1633. Unity of locality
-is not observed in _Jack Drum_. By far the greater part of the action
-takes place on Highgate Green, before the house of Sir Edward Fortune,
-with practicable windows above.[446] But there are two scenes (I.
-282–428; IV. 207–56) in London, before a tavern (I. 345), which may be
-supposed to be also the house where Mistress Brabant lies ‘private’ in
-an ‘inner chamber’ (IV. 83, 211). And there are three (II. 170–246;
-III. 220–413; V) in an open spot, on the way to Highgate (II. 228)
-and near a house, whence a character emerges (III. 249, 310). It is
-described as ‘the crosse stile’ (IV. 338), and is evidently quite near
-Fortune’s house, and still on the green (V. 96, 228). This suggests to
-me a staging closely analogous to that of _Cuckqueans and Cuckolds_,
-with Highgate at one end of the stage, London at the other, and the
-cross stile between them. It is true that there is no very certain
-evidence of direct transference of action from one spot to another,
-but the use of two doors at the beginning of the first London scene is
-consistent, on my theory, with the fact that one entrant comes from
-Highgate, whither also he goes at the end of the scene, and the similar
-use at the beginning of the second cross-stile scene is consistent
-with the fact that the two entrants are wildly seeking the same lady,
-and one may well have been in London and the other at Highgate. She
-herself enters from the neighbouring house; that is to say, a third,
-central, door. With Marston’s acknowledged plays, we reach an order of
-drama in which interior action of the ‘hall’ type is conspicuous.[447]
-There are four plays, each limited to a single Italian city, Venice
-or Urbino. The main action of _1 Antonio and Mellida_ is in the hall
-of the doge’s palace, chiefly on ‘the lower stage’, although ladies
-discourse ‘above’, and a chamber can be pointed to from the hall.[448]
-One short scene (V. 1–94), although near the Court, is possibly in
-the lodging of a courtier, but probably in the open street. And two
-(III. i; IV) are in open country, representing ‘the Venice marsh’,
-requiring no background, but approachable by more than one door.[449]
-The setting of _2 Antonio and Mellida_ is a little more complicated.
-There is no open-country scene. The hall recurs and is still the chief
-place of action. It can be entered by more than one door (V. 17,
-&c.) and has a ‘vault’ (II. 44) with a ‘grate’ (II. ii. 127), whence
-a speaker is heard ‘under the stage’ (V. 1). The scenes within it
-include several episodes discovered by curtains. One is at the window
-of Mellida’s chamber above.[450] Another, in Maria’s chamber, where
-the discovery is only of a bed, might be either above or below.[451] A
-third involves the appearance of a ghost ‘betwixt the music-houses’,
-probably above.[452] Concurrently, a fourth facilitates a murder in a
-recess below.[453] Nor is the hall any longer the only interior used.
-Three scenes (II. 1–17; III. 1–212; IV. ii) are in an aisle (III.
-128) of St. Mark’s, with a trapped grave.[454] As a character passes
-(ii. 17) directly from the church to the palace in the course of a
-speech, it is clear that the two ‘houses’, consistently with actual
-Venetian topography, were staged together and contiguously. _The Fawn_
-was originally produced at Blackfriars and transferred to Paul’s. I
-deal with it here, because of the close analogy which it presents to
-_1 Antonio and Mellida_. It begins with an open-country scene within
-sight of the ‘far-appearing spires’ of Urbino. Thereafter all is within
-the hall of the Urbino palace. It is called a ‘presence’ (I. ii. 68),
-but one must conceive it as of the nature of an Italian colonnaded
-_cortile_, for there is a tree visible, up which a lover climbs to
-his lady’s chamber, and although both the tree and the chamber window
-might have occupied a bit of façade in the plane of the aperture
-showing the hall, they appear in fact to have been within the hall,
-since the lovers are later ‘discovered’ to the company there.[455]
-_What You Will_, intermediate in date between _Antonio and Mellida_
-and _The Fawn_, has a less concentrated setting than either of them.
-The principal house is Albano’s (I; III. ii; IV; V. 1–68), where
-there is action at the porch, within the hall, and in a discovered
-room behind.[456] But there are also scenes in a shop (III. ii), in
-Laverdure’s lodging (II. ii), probably above, and in a schoolroom (II.
-ii). The two latter are also discovered.[457] Nevertheless, I do not
-think that shifting scenes of the public theatre type are indicated.
-Albano’s house does not lend itself to public theatre methods. Act I
-is beneath his wife Celia’s window.[458] Similarly III. ii is before
-his porch. But III. iv is in his hall, whence the company go to dinner
-within, and here they are disclosed in V. Hence, from V. 69 onwards,
-they begin to pass to the street, where they presently meet the duke’s
-troop. I do not know of any public play in which the porch, the hall,
-and an inner room of a house are all represented, and my feeling is
-that Albano’s occupied the back corner of a stage, with the porch and
-window above to one side, at right angles to the plane of the hall.
-At any rate I do not see any definite obstacle to the hypothesis that
-all Marston’s plays for Paul’s had continuous settings. For _What You
-Will_ the ‘little’ stage would have been rather crowded. The induction
-hints that it was, and perhaps that spectators were on this occasion
-excluded, while the presenters went behind the back curtains.
-
-Most of the other Paul’s plays need not detain us as long as Marston’s.
-He has been thought to have helped in _Satiromastix_, but that must
-be regarded as substantially Dekker’s. Obviously it must have been
-capable of representation both at Paul’s and at the Globe. It needs
-the houses of Horace, Shorthose, and Vaughan, Prickshaft’s garden
-with a ‘bower’ in it, and the palace. Interior action is required in
-Horace’s study, which is discovered,[459] the presence-chamber at the
-palace, where a ‘chaire is set under a canopie’,[460] and Shorthose’s
-hall.[461] The ordinary methods at the Globe would be adequate. On the
-other hand, London, in spite of Horace, is the locality throughout,
-and at Paul’s the setting may have been continuous, just as well as
-in _What You Will_. Dekker is also the leading spirit in _Westward
-Ho!_ and _Northward Ho!_, and in these we get, for the first time at
-Paul’s, plays for which a continuous setting seems quite impossible.
-Not only does _Westward Ho!_ require no less than ten houses and
-_Northward Ho!_ seven, but also, although the greater part of both
-plays takes place in London, _Westward Ho!_ has scenes at Brentford
-and _Northward Ho!_ at Ware.[462] The natural conclusion is that, for
-these plays at least, the procedure of the public theatres was adopted.
-It is, of course, the combination of numerous houses and changes of
-locality which leads me to this conclusion. Mahelot shows us that the
-‘multiple’ staging of the Hôtel de Bourgogne permitted inconsistencies
-of locality, but could hardly accommodate more than five, or at most
-six, _maisons_. Once given the existence of alternative methods at
-Paul’s, it becomes rather difficult to say which was applied in any
-particular case. Chapman’s _Bussy d’Ambois_ begins, like _The Fawn_,
-with an open-country scene, and thereafter uses only three houses,
-all in Paris; the presence-chamber at the palace (I. ii; II. i; III.
-ii; IV. i), Bussy’s chamber (V. iii), and Tamyra’s chamber in another
-house, Montsurry’s (II. ii; III. i; IV. ii; V. i, ii, iv). Both
-chambers are trapped for spirits to rise, and Tamyra’s has in it a
-‘gulfe’, apparently screened by a ‘canopie’, which communicates with
-Bussy’s.[463] As the interplay of scenes in Act V requires transit
-through the passage from one chamber to the other, it is natural to
-assume an unchanged setting.[464]
-
-The most prolific contributor to the Paul’s repertory was Middleton.
-His first play, _Blurt Master Constable_, needs five houses. They are
-all in Venice, and as in certain scenes more than one of them appears
-to be visible, they were probably all set together.[465] Similarly,
-_The Phoenix_ has six houses, all in Ferrara;[466] and _Michaelmas
-Term_ has five houses, all in London.[467] On the other hand, although
-_A Mad World, my Masters_ has only four houses,[468] and _A Trick to
-Catch the Old One_ seven,[469] yet both these plays resemble Dekker’s,
-in that the action is divided between London and one or more places in
-the country; and this, so far as it goes, seems to suggest settings
-on public theatre lines. I do not know whether Middleton wrote _The
-Puritan_, but I think that this play clearly had a continuous setting
-with only four houses, in London.[470] And although Beaumont’s
-_Woman Hater_ requires seven houses, these are all within or hard
-by the palace in Milan, and action seems to pass freely from one to
-another.[471]
-
-The evidence available does not dispose one to dogmatism. But this
-is the general impression which I get of the history of the Paul’s
-staging. When the performances were revived in 1599, the master had,
-as in the days before Lyly took the boys to Blackfriars, to make the
-best of a room originally designed for choir-practices. This was
-circular, and only had space for a comparatively small stage. At the
-back of this, entrance was given by a curtained recess, corresponding
-to the alcove of the public theatres, and known at Paul’s as the
-‘canopy’.[472] Above the canopy was a beam, which bore the post of the
-music-tree. On this post was a small stand, perhaps for the conductor
-of the music, and on each side of it was a music-house, forming a
-gallery,[473] which could represent a window or balcony. There were
-at least two other doors, either beneath the music-houses or at right
-angles to these, off the sides of the stage. The master began with
-continuous settings on the earlier sixteenth-century court model, using
-the doors and galleries as far as he could to represent houses, and
-supplementing these by temporary structures; and this plan fitted in
-with the general literary trend of his typical dramatists, especially
-Marston, to unity of locality. But in time the romantic element proved
-too much for him, and when he wanted to enlist the services of writers
-of the popular school, such as Dekker, he had to compromise. It may
-be that some structural change was carried out during the enforced
-suspension of performances in 1603. I do not think that there is any
-Paul’s play of earlier date which could not have been given in the
-old-fashioned manner. In any event, the increased number of houses and
-the not infrequent shiftings of locality from town to country, which
-are apparent in the Jacobean plays, seem to me, taken together, to be
-more than can be accounted for on a theory of clumsy foreshortening,
-and to imply the adoption, either generally or occasionally, of some
-such principle of convertible houses, as was already in full swing upon
-the public stage.[474]
-
-I do not think that the history of the Blackfriars was materially
-different from that of Paul’s. There are in all twenty-four plays
-to be considered; an Elizabethan group of seven produced by the
-Children of the Chapel, and a Jacobean group of seventeen produced by
-the successive incarnations of the Revels company.[475] Structural
-alterations during 1603 are here less probable, for the house only
-dated from Burbadge’s enterprise of 1596. Burbadge is said to have
-intended a ‘public’ theatre, and it may be argued on _a priori_ grounds
-that he would have planned for the type of staging familiar to him
-at the Theatre and subsequently elaborated at the Globe. The actual
-character of the plays does not, however, bear out this view. Like
-Paul’s, the Blackfriars relied at first in part upon revivals. One was
-_Love’s Metamorphosis_, already produced by Lyly under Court conditions
-with the earlier Paul’s boys, and _tout en pastoralle_.[476] Another,
-or if not, quite an archaistic play, was _Liberality and Prodigality_,
-the abstract plot of which only needs an equally abstract scene, with
-a ‘bower’ for Fortune, holding a throne and scaleable by a ladder (30,
-290, 903, 932, 953), another ‘bower’ for Virtue (132), an inn (47,
-192, 370), and a high seat for a judge with his clerks beneath him
-(1245).[477] The two new playwrights may reasonably be supposed to
-have conformed to the traditional methods. Jonson’s _Cynthia’s Revels_
-has a preliminary act of open country, by the Fountain of Self-Love,
-in Gargaphia. The rest is all at the Gargaphian palace, either in the
-presence, or in an ante-chamber thereto, perhaps before a curtain, or
-for one or two scenes in the nymphs’ chamber (IV. i-v), and in or
-before the chamber of Asotus (III. v).[478] _Poetaster_ is all at Rome,
-within and before the palace, the houses of Albius and Lupus, and the
-chamber of Ovid.[479] There is certainly no need for any shifting of
-scenes so far. Nor does Chapman demand it. _Sir Giles Goosecap_, except
-for one open-country scene, has only two houses, which are demonstrably
-contiguous and used together.[480] _The Gentleman Usher_ has only
-two houses, supposed to be at a little distance from each other, and
-entailing a slight foreshortening, if they were placed at opposite ends
-of the stage.[481] _All Fools_ adopts the Italian convention of action
-in an open city space before three houses.[482]
-
-To the Jacobean repertory not less than nine writers contributed.
-Chapman still takes the lead with three more comedies and two tragedies
-of his own. In the comedies he tends somewhat to increase the number
-of his houses, although without any change of general locality.
-_M. d’Olive_ has five houses.[483] _May Day_ has four.[484] _The
-Widow’s Tears_ has four.[485] But in all cases there is a good deal
-of interplay of action between one house and another, and all the
-probabilities are in favour of continuous setting. The tragedies are
-perhaps another matter. The houses are still not numerous; but the
-action is in each play divided between two localities. The _Conspiracy
-of Byron_ is partly at Paris and partly at Brussels; the _Tragedy of
-Byron_ partly at Paris and partly at Dijon.[486] Jonson’s _Case is
-Altered_ has one open-country scene (V. iv) near Milan. The other
-scenes require two houses within the city. One is Farneze’s palace,
-with a _cortile_ where servants come and go, and a colonnade affording
-a private ‘walk’ for his daughters (II. iii; IV. i). Hard by, and
-probably in Italian fashion forming part of the structure of the palace
-itself, is the cobbler’s shop of Farneze’s retainer, Juniper.[487]
-Near, too, is the house of Jaques, with a little walled backside, and
-a tree in it.[488] A link with Paul’s is provided by three Blackfriars
-plays from Marston. Of these, the _Malcontent_ is in his characteristic
-Italian manner. There is a short hunting scene (III. ii) in the middle
-of the play. For nearly all the rest the scene is the ‘great chamber’
-in the palace at Genoa, with a door to the apartment of the duchess at
-the back (II. i. 1) and the chamber of Malevole visible above.[489]
-Part of the last act, however, is before the citadel of Genoa,
-from which the action passes direct to the palace.[490] _The Dutch
-Courtesan_ is a London comedy with four houses, of the same type as
-_What You Will_, but less crowded.[491] In the tragedy of _Sophonisba_,
-on the other hand, we come for the first time at Blackfriars to a
-piece which seems hopelessly unamenable to continuous setting. It
-recalls the structure of such early public plays as the _Battle of
-Alcazar_. ‘The scene is Libya’, the prologue tells us. We get the
-camps of Massinissa (II. ii), Asdrubal (II. iii), and Scipio (III.
-ii; V. iv). We get a battle-field with a ‘mount’ and a ‘throne’ in it
-(V. ii). We get the forest of Belos, with a cave’s mouth (IV. i). The
-city scenes are divided between Carthage and Cirta. At Carthage there
-is a council-chamber (II. i) and also the chamber of Sophonisba (I.
-ii), where her bed is ‘discovered’.[492] At Cirta there is the similar
-chamber of Syphax (III. i; IV. ii) with a trapped altar.[493] A curious
-bit of continuous action, difficult to envisage, comprehends this and
-the forest at the junction of Acts IV and V. From a vault within it, a
-passage leads to the cave. Down this, in III. i, Sophonisba descends,
-followed by Syphax. A camp scene intervenes, and at the beginning of IV
-Sophonisba emerges in the forest, is overtaken by Syphax, and sent back
-to Cirta. Then Syphax remembers that ‘in this desert’ lives the witch
-Erichtho. She enters, and promises to charm Sophonisba to his bed.
-Quite suddenly, and without any _Exit_ or other indication of a change
-of locality, we are back in the chamber at Cirta. Music sounds within
-‘the canopy’ and ‘above’. Erichtho, disguised as Sophonisba, enters the
-canopy, as to bed. Syphax follows, and only discovers his misadventure
-at the beginning of Act V.[494] Even if the play was staged as a whole
-on public theatre methods, it is difficult not to suppose that the two
-entrances to the cave, at Cirta and in the forest, were shown together.
-It is to be added that, in a note to the print, Marston apologizes
-for ‘the fashion of the entrances’ on the ground that the play was
-‘presented by youths and after the fashion of the private stage’.
-Somewhat exceptional also is the arrangement of _Eastward Ho!_, in
-which Chapman, Jonson, and Marston collaborated. The first three acts,
-taken by themselves, are easy enough. They need four houses in London.
-The most important is Touchstone’s shop, which is ‘discovered’.[495]
-The others are the exteriors of Sir Petronel’s house and Security’s
-house, with a window or balcony above, and a room in the Blue Anchor
-tavern at Billingsgate.[496] But throughout most of Act IV the whole
-stage seems to be devoted to a complicated action, for which only one
-of these houses, the Blue Anchor, is required. A place above the stage
-represents Cuckold’s Haven, on the Surrey side of the Thames near
-Rotherhithe, where stood a pole bearing a pair of ox-horns, to which
-butchers did a folk-observance. Hither climbs Slitgut, and describes
-the wreck of a boat in the river beneath him.[497] It is the boat in
-which an elopement was planned from the Blue Anchor in Act III. Slitgut
-sees passengers landed successively ‘even just under me’, and then at
-St. Katharine’s, Wapping, and the Isle of Dogs. These are three places
-on the north bank, all to the east of Billingsgate and on the other
-side of the Tower, but as each rescue is described, the passengers
-enter the stage, and go off again. Evidently a wild foreshortening is
-deliberately involved. Now, although the print obscures the fact, must
-begin a new scene.[498] A night has passed, and Winifred, who landed
-at St. Katharine’s, returns to the stage, and is now before the Blue
-Anchor.[499] From IV. ii onwards the setting is normal again, with
-three houses, of which one is Touchstone’s. But the others are now
-the exterior of the Counter and of the lodging of Gertrude. One must
-conclude that in this play the Blackfriars management was trying an
-experiment, and made complete, or nearly complete, changes of setting,
-at the end of Act III and again after IV. i. Touchstone’s, which was
-discovered, could be covered again. The other houses, except the
-tavern, were represented by mere doors or windows, and gave no trouble.
-The tavern, the introduction of which in the early acts already
-entailed foreshortening, was allowed to stand for IV. i, and was then
-removed, while Touchstone’s was discovered again.
-
-Middleton’s tendency to multiply his houses is noticeable, as at
-Paul’s, in _Your Five Gallants_. There are eight, in London, with an
-open-country scene in Combe Park (III. ii, iii), and one cannot be
-confident of continuous setting.[500] But a group of new writers,
-enlisted at Blackfriars in Jacobean days, conform well enough to the
-old traditions of the house. Daniel’s _Philotas_ has the abstract stage
-characteristic of the closet tragedies to the type of which it really
-belongs. Any Renaissance façade would do; at most a hall in the court
-and the lodging of Philotas need be distinguished. Day’s _Isle of
-Gulls_ is _tout en pastoralle_.[501] His _Law Tricks_ has only four
-houses, in Genoa.[502] Sharpham’s _Fleir_, after a prelude at Florence,
-which needs no house, has anything from three to six in London.[503]
-Fletcher’s _Faithful Shepherdess_, again, is _tout en pastoralle_.[504]
-Finally, _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_ is, in the strict sense, an
-exception which proves the rule. Its shifts of locality are part of the
-burlesque, in which the popular plays are taken off for the amusement
-of the select audience of the Blackfriars. Its legitimate houses are
-only two, Venturewell’s shop and Merrithought’s dwelling, hard by one
-another.[505] But the adventures of the prentice heroes take them not
-only over down and through forest to Waltham, where the Bell Inn must
-serve for a knightly castle, and the barber’s shop for Barbaroso’s
-cave, but also to the court of Moldavia, although the players regret
-that they cannot oblige the Citizen’s Wife by showing a house covered
-with black velvet and a king’s daughter standing in her window all in
-beaten gold, combing her golden locks with a comb of ivory.[506] What
-visible parody of public stage methods heightened the fun, it is of
-course impossible to say.
-
-I do not propose to follow the Queen’s Revels to the Whitefriars, or
-to attempt any investigation into the characteristics of that house.
-It was occupied by the King’s Revels before the Queen’s Revels, and
-probably the Lady Elizabeth’s joined the Queen’s Revels there at a
-later date. But the number of plays which can definitely be assigned
-to it is clearly too small to form the basis of any satisfactory
-induction.[507] So far as the Blackfriars is concerned, my conclusion
-must be much the same as for Paul’s--that, when plays began in 1600,
-the Chapel revived the methods of staging with which their predecessors
-had been familiar during the hey-day of the Court drama under Lyly;
-that these methods held their own in the competition with the public
-theatres, and were handed on to the Queen’s Revels; but that in
-course of time they were sometimes variegated by the introduction,
-for one reason or another, of some measure of scene-shifting in
-individual plays. This reason may have been the nature of the plot
-in _Sophonisba_, the desire to experiment in _Eastward Ho!_, the
-restlessness of the dramatist in _Your Five Gallants_, the spirit of
-raillery in _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_. Whether Chapman’s
-tragedies involved scene-shifting, I am not quite sure. The analogy of
-the Hôtel de Bourgogne, where a continuous setting was not inconsistent
-with the use of widely distant localities, must always be kept in mind.
-On the other hand, what did not appear absurd in Paris, might have
-appeared absurd in London, where the practice of the public theatres
-had taught the spectators to expect a higher degree of consistency.
-I am far from claiming that my theory of the survival of continuous
-setting at Paul’s and the Blackfriars has been demonstrated. Very
-possibly the matter is not capable of demonstration. Many, perhaps
-most, of the plays could be produced, if need be, by alternative
-methods. It is really on taking them in the mass that I cannot resist
-the feeling that ‘the fashion of the private stage’, as Marston called
-it, was something different from the fashion of the public stage. The
-technique of the dramatists corresponds to the structural conditions.
-An increased respect for unity of place is not the only factor,
-although it is the most important. An unnecessary multiplicity of
-houses is, except by Dekker and Middleton, avoided. Sometimes one or
-two suffice. There is much more interior action than in the popular
-plays. One hall or chamber scene can follow upon another more freely.
-A house may be used for a scene which would seem absurdly short if the
-setting were altered for it. More doors are perhaps available, so that
-some can be spared for entrance behind the houses. There is more coming
-and going between one house and another, although I have made it clear
-that even the public stage was not limited to one house at a time.[508]
-One point is, I think, quite demonstrable. Marston has a reference
-to ‘the lower stage’ at Paul’s, but neither at Paul’s nor at the
-Blackfriars was there an upper stage capable of holding the action of
-a complete scene, such as we found at the sixteenth-century theatres,
-and apparently on a still larger scale at the Globe and the Fortune.
-A review of my notes will show that, although there is action ‘above’
-in many private house plays, it is generally a very slight action,
-amounting to little more than the use by one or two persons of a window
-or balcony. Bedchamber scenes or tavern scenes are provided for below;
-the public theatre, as often as not, put them above.[509] I may recall,
-in confirmation, that the importance of the upper stage in the plays
-of the King’s men sensibly diminishes after their occupation of the
-Blackfriars.[510]
-
-There are enigmas still to be solved, and I fear insoluble. Were the
-continuous settings of the type which we find in Serlio, with the unity
-of a consistent architectural picture, or of the type which we find
-at the Hôtel de Bourgogne, with independent and sometimes incongruous
-juxtaposed _mansions_? The taste of the dramatists for Italian cities
-and the frequent recurrence of buildings which fit so well into a
-Serliesque scheme as the tavern, the shop, the house of the _ruffiana_
-or courtesan, may tempt one’s imagination towards the former. But
-Serlio does not seem to contemplate much interior action, and although
-the convention of a half out-of-doors _cortile_ or _loggia_ may help
-to get over this difficulty, the often crowded presences and the masks
-seem to call for an arrangement by which each _mansion_ can at need
-become in its turn the background to the whole of the stage and attach
-to itself all the external doors. How were the open-country scenes
-managed, which we have noticed in several plays, as a prelude, or even
-an interruption, to the strict unity of place?[511] Were these merely
-played on the edge of the stage, or are we to assume a curtain, cutting
-off the background of houses, and perhaps painted with an open-country
-or other appropriate perspective? And what use, if any, can we suppose
-to have been made of title or locality labels? The latter would not
-have had much point where the locality was unchanged; but Envy calls
-out ‘Rome’ three times in the prologue to the _Poetaster_, as if she
-saw it written up in three places. Percy may more naturally use them in
-_Cuckqueans and Cuckolds_, on a stage which represents a foreshortening
-of the distance between three distinct towns. Title-labels seem fairly
-probable. _Cynthia’s Revels_ and _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_
-bear testimony to them at the Blackfriars; _Wily Beguiled_ perhaps at
-Paul’s.[512] And if the prologues none the less thought it necessary
-to announce ‘The scene is Libya’, or ‘The scene Gargaphia, which I do
-vehemently suspect for some fustian country’, why, we must remember
-that there were many, even in a select Elizabethan audience, that could
-not hope to be saved by their book.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK V
-
- PLAYS AND PLAYWRIGHTS
-
- Tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral, pastoral-comical,
- historical-pastoral, tragical-historical,
- tragical-comical-historical-pastoral, scene individable or poem
- unlimited.--_Hamlet._
-
-
-
-
- XXII
-
- THE PRINTING OF PLAYS
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The records of the Stationers’ Company
- were utilized by W. Herbert in _Typographical Antiquities_
- (1785–90), based on an earlier edition (1749) by J. Ames,
- and revised, but not for the period most important to us, by
- T. F. Dibdin (1810–19). They are now largely available at
- first hand in E. Arber, _Transcript of the Registers of the
- Stationers’ Company, 1554–1640_ (1875–94), and G. E. B. Eyre,
- _Transcript of the Registers of the Worshipful Company of
- Stationers, 1640–1708_ (1913–14). Recent investigations are to
- be found in the _Transactions_ and other publications of the
- Bibliographical Society, and in the periodicals _Bibliographica_
- and _The Library_. The best historical sketches are H. R.
- Plomer, _A Short History of English Printing_ (1900), E. G.
- Duff, _The Introduction of Printing into England_ (1908, _C.
- H._ ii. 310), H. G. Aldis, _The Book-Trade, 1557–1625_ (1909,
- _C. H._ iv. 378), and R. B. McKerrow, _Booksellers, Printers,
- and the Stationers’ Trade_ (1916, _Sh. England_, ii. 212). Of
- somewhat wider range is H. G. Aldis, _The Printed Book_ (1916).
- Records of individual printers are in E. G. Duff, _A Century
- of the English Book Trade, 1457–1557_ (1905), R. B. McKerrow,
- _Dictionary of Printers and Booksellers, 1557–1640_ (1910), and
- H. R. Plomer, _Dictionary of Booksellers and Printers, 1641–67_
- (1907). Special studies of value are R. B. McKerrow, _Printers
- and Publishers’ Devices_ (1913), and _Notes on Bibliographical
- Evidence for Literary Students_ (1914). P. Sheavyn, _The
- Literary Profession in the Elizabethan Age_ (1909), is not very
- accurate. The early history of the High Commission (1558–64) is
- studied in H. Gee, _The Elizabethan Clergy and the Settlement of
- Religion_ (1898). The later period awaits fuller treatment than
- that in _An Account of the Courts Ecclesiastical_ by W. Stubbs
- in the _Report of the Commission on Ecclesiastical Courts_
- (1883), i. 21. J. S. Burn, _The High Commission_ (1865), is
- scrappy.
-
- For plays in particular, W. W. Greg, _List of English Plays_
- (1900), gives the title-pages, and Arber the registration
- entries. Various problems are discussed by A. W. Pollard,
- _Shakespeare Folios and Quartos_ (1909) and _Shakespeare’s Fight
- with the Pirates_ (1917, ed. 2, 1920), and in connexion with
- the Shakespearian quartos of 1619 (cf. ch. xxiii). New ground
- is opened by A. W. Pollard and J. D. Wilson, _The ‘Stolne and
- Surreptitious’ Shakespearian Texts_ (_T. L. S._ Jan.–Aug. 1919),
- and J. D. Wilson, _The Copy for Hamlet, 1603, and the Hamlet
- Transcript, 1593_ (1918). Other studies are C. Dewischeit,
- _Shakespeare und die Stenographie_ (1898, _Jahrbuch_, xxxiv.
- 170), B. A. P. van Dam and C. Stoffel, _William Shakespeare,
- Prosody and Text_ (1900), _Chapters in English Printing,
- Prosody, and Pronunciation_ (1902), P. Simpson, _Shakespearian
- Punctuation_ (1911), E. M. Albright, ‘_To be Staied_’ (1915, _M.
- L. A._ xxx. 451; cf. _M. L. N._, Feb. 1919), A. W. Pollard, _Ad
- Imprimendum Solum_ (1919, _3 Library_, x. 57), H. R. Shipheard,
- _Play-Publishing in Elizabethan Times_ (1919, _M. L. A._ xxxiv.
- 580); M. A. Bayfield, _Shakespeare’s Versification_ (1920); cf.
- _T. L. S._ (1919–20).
-
- The nature of stage-directions is considered in many works on
- staging (cf. _Bibl. Note_ to ch. xviii), and in N. Delius,
- _Die Bühnenweisungen in den alten Shakespeare-Ausgaben_ (1873,
- _Jahrbuch_, viii. 171), R. Koppel, _Scenen-Einteilung und
- Orts-Angaben in den Shakespeareschen Dramen_ (1874, _Jahrbuch_,
- ix. 269), _Die unkritische Behandlung dramaturgischer Angaben
- und Anordnungen in den Shakespeare-Ausgaben_ (1904, _E. S._
- xxxiv. 1). The documents printed by Arber are so fundamental as
- to justify a short description. Each of his vols. i-iv gives the
- text, or most of the text, of four books, lettered A-D in the
- Company’s archives, interspersed with illustrative documents
- from other sources; vol. v consists of indices. Another series
- of books, containing minutes of the Court of Assistants from
- 1603 onwards, remains unprinted (ii. 879). Book A contains the
- annual accounts of the wardens from 1554 to 1596. The Company’s
- year began on varying dates in the first half of July. From
- 1557 to 1571 the accounts include detailed entries of the books
- for which fees were received and of the fines imposed upon
- members of the Company for irregularities. Thereafter they are
- abstracts only, and reference is made for the details of fees
- to ‘the register in the clarkes booke’ (i. 451). Unfortunately
- this book is not extant for 1571–6. After the appointment of
- Richard Collins in place of George Wapull as clerk in 1575, a
- new ‘booke of entrances’ was bought for the clerk (i. 475).
- This is Book B, which is divided into sections for records of
- different character, including book entries for 1576–95, and
- fines for 1576–1605. There are also some decrees and ordinances
- of the Court, most of which Arber does not print, and a few
- pages of miscellaneous memoranda at the beginning and end (ii.
- 33–49, 884–6). Book C, bought ‘for the entrance of copies’ in
- 1594–5 (i. 572), has similar memoranda (iii. 35–8, 677–98). It
- continues the book entries, and these alone, for 1595–1620. Book
- D continues them for 1620–45. Arber’s work stops at 1640. Eyre
- prints a transcript by H. R. Plomer of the rest of D and of
- Books E, F, and G, extending to 1708.]
-
-A historian of the stage owes so much of his material to the printed
-copies of plays, with their title-pages, their prefatory epistles, and
-their stage-directions, that he can hardly be dispensed from giving
-some account of the process by which plays got into print. Otherwise
-I should have been abundantly content to have left the subject with a
-reference to the researches of others, and notably of that accomplished
-bibliographer, my friend Mr. A. W. Pollard, to whom in any event the
-debt of these pages must be great. The earliest attempts to control
-the book-trade are of the nature of commercial restrictions, and
-concern themselves with the regulation of alien craftsmanship.[513]
-But when Tudor policy had to deal with expressions of political and
-religious opinion, and in particular when the interlude as well as the
-pamphlet, not without encouragement from Cranmer and Cromwell, became
-an instrument of ecclesiastical controversy, it was not long before the
-State found itself committed to the methods of a literary censorship.
-We have already followed in detail the phases of the control to which
-the spoken play was subjected.[514] The story of the printed play
-was closely analogous; and in both cases the ultimate term of the
-evolution, so far as our period is concerned, was the establishment of
-the authority of the Master of the Revels. The printing and selling
-of plays, however, was of course only one fragment of the general
-business of book-production. Censorship was applied to many kinds of
-books, and was also in practice closely bound up with the logically
-distinct problem of copyright. This to the Elizabethan mind was a
-principle debarring one publisher from producing and selling a book in
-which another member of his trade had already a vested interest. The
-conception of a copyright vested in the author as distinct from the
-publisher of a book had as yet hardly emerged.
-
-The earliest essay in censorship in fact took the form of an extension
-of the procedure, under which protection had for some time past been
-given to the copyright in individual books through the issue of a
-royal privilege forbidding their republication by any other than the
-privileged owner or printer.[515] Three proclamations of Henry VIII
-against heretical or seditious books, in 1529, 1530, and 1536, were
-followed in 1538 by a fourth, which forbade the printing of any English
-book except with a licence given ‘upon examination made by some of his
-gracis priuie counsayle, or other suche as his highnes shall appoynte’,
-and further directed that a book so licensed should not bear the words
-‘Cum priuilegio regali’ without the addition of ‘ad imprimendum solum’,
-and that ‘the hole copie, or els at the least theffect of his licence
-and priuilege be therwith printed’.[516] The intention was apparently
-to distinguish between a merely regulative privilege or licence to
-print, and the older and fuller type of privilege which also conveyed
-a protection of copyright. Finally, in 1546, a fifth proclamation
-laid down that every ‘Englishe boke, balet or playe’ must bear the
-names of the printer and author and the ‘daye of the printe’, and that
-an advance copy must be placed in the hands of the local mayor two
-days before publication.[517] It is not quite clear whether these
-requirements were intended to replace, or merely to reinforce, that of
-a licence. Henry’s proclamations lost their validity upon his death
-in 1547, but the policy of licensing was continued by his successors.
-Under Edward VI we get, first a Privy Council order of 1549, directing
-that all English books printed or sold should be examined and allowed
-by ‘M^r Secretary Peter, M^r Secretary Smith and M^r Cicill, or the
-one of them’, and secondly a proclamation of 1551, requiring allowance
-‘by his maiestie, or his priuie counsayl in writing signed with his
-maiesties most gratious hand or the handes of sixe of his sayd priuie
-counsayl’.[518] Mary in her turn, though with a different emphasis
-on the kind of opinion to be suppressed, issued three proclamations
-against heretical books in 1553, 1555, and 1558, and in the first of
-these limited printers to books for which they had ‘her graces speciall
-licence in writynge’.[519] It is noteworthy that both in 1551 and in
-1553 the printing and the playing of interludes were put upon exactly
-the same footing.
-
-Mary, however, took another step of the first importance for the
-further history of publishing, by the grant on 4 May 1557 a charter of
-incorporation to the London Company of Stationers.[520] This was an
-old organization, traceable as far back as 1404.[521] By the sixteenth
-century it had come to include the printers who manufactured, as
-well as the stationers who sold, books; and many, although not all
-of its members, exercised both avocations. No doubt the issue of the
-charter had its origin in mixed motives. The stationers wanted the
-status and the powers of economic regulation within their trade which
-it conferred; the Government wanted the aid of the stationers in
-establishing a more effective control over the printed promulgation of
-inconvenient doctrines. This preoccupation is clearly manifested in the
-preamble to the charter, with its assertion that ‘seueral seditious
-and heretical books’ are ‘daily published’; and the objects of both
-parties were met by a provision that ‘no person shall practise or
-exercise the art or mystery of printing or stamping any book unless
-the same person is, or shall be, one of the society of the foresaid
-mystery of a stationer of the city aforesaid, or has for that purpose
-obtained our licence’. This practically freed the associated stationers
-from any danger of outside competition, and it immensely simplified
-the task of the heresy hunters by enlisting the help of the Company
-against the establishment of printing-presses by any but well-known
-and responsible craftsmen. Registration is always half-way towards
-regulation. The charter did not, however, dispense, even for the
-members of the Company, with the requirement of a licence; nor did it
-give the Company any specific functions in connexion with the issue of
-licences, and although Elizabeth confirmed her sister’s grant on 10
-November 1559, she had already, in the course of the ecclesiastical
-settlement earlier in the year, taken steps to provide for the
-continuance of the old system, and specifically laid it down that
-the administration of the Company was to be subordinate thereto. The
-licensing authority rested ultimately upon the _Act of Supremacy_, by
-which the power of ecclesiastical jurisdiction for the ‘reformation,
-order, and correction’ of all ‘errors, heresies, schisms, abuses,
-offences, contempts, and enormities’ was annexed to the Crown, and the
-Crown was authorized to exercise its jurisdiction through the agency of
-a commission appointed under letters patent.[522] This Act received the
-royal assent on 8 May 1559, together with the _Act of Uniformity_ which
-established the Book of Common Prayer, and made it an offence ‘in any
-interludes, plays, songs, rhymes, or by other open words’ to ‘declare
-or speak anything in the derogation, depraving, or despising’ of that
-book.[523] In the course of June followed a body of _Injunctions_,
-intended as a code of ecclesiastical discipline to be promulgated at
-a series of diocesan visitations held by commissioners under the _Act
-of Supremacy_. One of these _Injunctions_ is directly concerned with
-the abuses of printers of books.[524] It begins by forbidding any book
-or paper to be printed without an express written licence either from
-the Queen herself or from six of the Privy Council, or after perusal
-from two persons being either the Archbishop of Canterbury or York, the
-Bishop of London, the Chancellor of Oxford or Cambridge, or the Bishop
-or Archdeacon for the place of printing. One of the two must always be
-the Ordinary, and the names of the licensers are to be ‘added in the
-end’ of every book. This seems sufficiently to cover the ground, but
-the _Injunction_ goes on to make a special reference to ‘pamphlets,
-plays and ballads’, from which anything ‘heretical, seditious, or
-unseemly for Christian ears’ ought to be excluded; and for these it
-prescribes a licence from ‘such her majesty’s commissioners, or three
-of them, as be appointed in the city of London to hear and determine
-divers causes ecclesiastical’. These commissioners are also to punish
-breaches of the _Injunction_, and to take and notify an order as
-to the prohibition or permission of ‘all other books of matters of
-religion or policy, or governance’. An exemption is granted for books
-ordinarily used in universities or schools. The Master and Wardens
-of the Stationers’ Company are ‘straitly’ commanded to be obedient
-to the _Injunction_. The commission here referred to was not one of
-those entrusted with the diocesan visitations, but a more permanent
-body sitting in London itself, which came to be known as the High
-Commission. The reference to it in the _Injunction_ reads like an
-afterthought, but as the principal members of this commission were
-the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London, there is not
-so much inconsistency between the two forms of procedure laid down as
-might at first sight appear. The High Commission was not in fact yet in
-existence when the _Injunctions_ were issued, but it was constituted
-under a patent of 19 July 1559, and was renewed from time to time by
-fresh patents throughout the reign.[525] The original members, other
-than the two prelates, were chiefly Privy Councillors, Masters of
-Requests, and other lawyers. The size of the body was considerably
-increased by later patents, and a number of divines were added. The
-patent of 1559 conferred upon the commissioners a general power to
-exercise the royal jurisdiction in matters ecclesiastical. It does not
-repeat in terms the provisions for the ‘allowing’ of books contained
-in the _Injunctions_, but merely recites that ‘divers seditious books’
-have been set forth, and empowers the commissioners to inquire into
-them.
-
-The _Injunctions_ and the Commission must be taken as embodying the
-official machinery for the licensing of books up to the time of
-the well-known Star Chamber order of 1586, although the continued
-anxiety of the government in the matter is shown by a series of
-proclamations and orders which suggest that no absolutely effective
-method of suppressing undesirable publications had as yet been
-attained.[526] Mr. Pollard, who regards the procedure contemplated
-by the _Injunctions_ as ‘impossible’, believes that in practice the
-Stationers’ Company, in ordinary cases, itself acted as a licensing
-authority.[527] Certainly this is the testimony, as regards the
-period 1576–86, of a note of Sir John Lambe, Dean of the Arches, in
-1636, which is based wholly or in part upon information derived from
-Felix Kingston, then Master of the Company.[528] Kingston added the
-detail that in the case of a divinity book of importance the opinion
-of theological experts was taken. Mr. Pollard expresses a doubt
-whether Lambe or Kingston had much evidence before them other than
-the registers of the Company which are still extant, and to these we
-are in a position to turn for confirmation or qualification of their
-statements.[529] Unfortunately, the ordinances or constitutions under
-which the master and wardens acted from the time of the incorporation
-have not been preserved, and any additions made to these by the Court
-of Assistants before the Restoration have not been printed.[530] We
-have some revised ordinances of 1678–82, and these help us by recording
-as of ‘ancient usage’ a practice of entering all publications, other
-than those under letters patent, in ‘the register-book of this
-company’.[531] It is in fact this register, incorporated from 1557 to
-1571 in the annual accounts of the wardens and kept from 1576 onwards
-as a subsidiary book by the clerk, which furnishes our principal
-material. During 1557–71 the entries for each year are collected
-under a general heading, which takes various forms. In 1557–8 it is
-‘The entrynge of all such copyes as be lycensed to be prynted by the
-master and wardyns of the mystery of stacioners’; in 1558–9 simply
-‘Lycense for pryntinge’; in 1559–60, for which year the entries are
-mixed up with others, ‘Receptes for fynes, graunting of coppyes and
-other thynges’; in 1560–1 ‘For takynge of fynes for coppyes’. This
-formula lasts until 1565–6, when ‘The entrynge of coopyes’ takes its
-place. The wording of the individual entries also varies during the
-period, but generally it indicates the receipt of a money payment in
-return for a license.[532] In a very few cases, by no means always
-of divinity books, the licence is said to be ‘by’, or the licence or
-perhaps the book itself, to be ‘authorized’ or ‘allowed’ or ‘perused’
-or ‘appointed’ by the Bishop of London; still more rarely by the
-Archbishop of Canterbury or by both prelates; once by the Archbishops
-of Canterbury and York; once by the Council.[533]
-
-Richard Collins, on his appointment as Clerk of the Company in 1575,
-records that one of his duties was to enter ‘lycences for pryntinge
-of copies’ and one section of his register is accordingly devoted to
-this purpose.[534] It has no general heading, but the summary accounts
-of the wardens up to 1596 continue to refer to the receipts as ‘for
-licencinge of copies’.[535] The character of the individual entries
-between 1576 and 1586 is much as in the account books. The name of
-a stationer is given in the margin and is followed by some such
-formula as ‘Receyved of him for his licence to prynte’ or more briefly
-‘Lycenced vnto him’, with the title of the book, any supplementary
-information which the clerk thought relevant, and a note of the payment
-made. Occasional alternatives are ‘Allowed’, ‘Admitted’, ‘Graunted’
-or ‘Tolerated’ ‘vnto him’, of which the three first appear to have
-been regarded as especially appropriate to transfers of existing
-copyrights;[536] and towards the end of the period appears the more
-important variant ‘Allowed vnto him for his copie’.[537] References
-to external authorizers gradually become rather more frequent,
-although they are still the exception and not the rule; the function
-is fulfilled, not only by the bishop, the archbishop, or the Council,
-but also upon occasion by the Lord Chancellor or the Secretary, by
-individual Privy Councillors, by the Lord Mayor, the Recorder or the
-Remembrancer of the City, and by certain masters and doctors, who
-may be the ministers mentioned by Felix Kingston, and who probably
-held regular deputations from a proper ecclesiastical authority as
-‘correctors’ to the printers.[538] It is certain that such a post was
-held in 1571 by one Talbot, a servant of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
-On the other hand the clerk, at first tentatively and then as a matter
-of regular practice, begins to record the part taken by the master and
-wardens. The first example is a very explicit entry, in which the book
-is said to be ‘licensed to be printed’ by the archbishop and ‘alowed’
-by the master and a warden.[539] But the formula which becomes normal
-does not dwell on any differentiation of functions, and merely states
-the licence as being ‘under the hands of’ the wardens or of one of them
-or the master, or of these and of some one who may be presumed to be
-an external corrector. To the precise significance of ‘under the hands
-of’ I must return. Increased caution with regard to dangerous books
-is also borne witness to during this period by the occasional issue
-of a qualified licence. In 1580 Richard Jones has to sign his name
-in the register to a promise ‘to bring the whole impression’ of _The
-Labyrinth of Liberty_ ‘into the Hall in case it be disliked when it
-is printed’.[540] In 1583 the same stationer undertakes ‘to print of
-his own perill’.[541] In 1584 it is a play which is thus brought into
-question, Lyly’s _Sapho and Phao_, and Thomas Cadman gets no more than
-‘yt is graunted vnto him yat yf he gett ye commedie of Sappho laufully
-alowed vnto him, then none of this cumpanie shall interrupt him to
-enjoye yt’. Other entries direct that lawful authority must be obtained
-before printing, and in one case there is a specific reference to the
-royal _Injunctions_.[542] Conditions of other kinds are also sometimes
-found in entries; a book must be printed at a particular press, or the
-licence is to be voided if it prove to be another man’s copy.[543] The
-caution of the Stationers may have been motived by dissatisfaction
-on the part of the government which finally took shape in the issue
-of the Star Chamber order of 23 June 1586. This was a result of the
-firmer policy towards Puritan indiscipline initiated by Whitgift and
-the new High Commission which he procured on his succession to the
-primacy in 1583.[544] It had two main objects. One, with which we are
-not immediately concerned, was to limit the number of printers and
-their presses; the other, to concentrate the censorship of all ordinary
-books, including plays, in the hands of the archbishop and the bishop.
-It is not clear whether the prelates were to act in their ordinary
-capacity or as High Commissioners; anyhow they had the authority of
-the High Commission, itself backed by the Privy Council, behind them.
-The effect of the order is shown in a bustle amongst the publishers
-to get on to the register a number of ballads and other trifles which
-they had hitherto neglected to enter, and in a considerable increase
-in the submissions of books for approval, either to the prelates
-themselves, or to persons who are now clearly acting as ecclesiastical
-deputies.[545] On 30 June 1588 an official list of deputies was issued
-by the archbishop, and amongst these were several who had already
-authorized books before and after 1586. These deputies, and other
-correctors whose names appear in the register at later dates, are as a
-rule traceable as episcopal chaplains, prebendaries of St. Paul’s, or
-holders of London benefices.[546] Some of them were themselves members
-of the High Commission. Occasionally laymen were appointed.[547] The
-main work of correction now fell to these officials, but books were
-still sometimes allowed by the archbishop or bishop in person, or by
-the Privy Council or some member of that body.
-
-The reaction of the changes of 1586–88 upon the entries in the register
-is on the whole one of degree rather than of kind. Occasionally the
-wording suggests a differentiation between the functions of the wardens
-and those of the ecclesiastical licensers, but more often the clerk
-contents himself with a mere record of what ‘hands’ each book was
-under.[548] Some shifting of the point of view is doubtless involved in
-the fact that ‘Entered vnto him for his copie’ and ‘Allowed vnto him
-for his copie’ now become the normal formulas, and by 1590–1 ‘Licenced
-vnto him’ has disappeared altogether.[549] But a great number of books,
-including most ballads and pamphlets and some plays, are still entered
-without note of any authority other than that of the wardens, and about
-1593 the proportion of cases submitted to the ecclesiastical deputies
-sensibly begins to slacken, although the continuance of conditional
-entries shows that some caution was exercised. An intervention of the
-prelates in 1599 reversed the tendency again.[550] As regards plays
-in particular, the wardens received a sharp reminder, ‘that noe
-playes be printed except they be allowed by suche as haue authority’;
-and although they do not seem to have interpreted this as requiring
-reference to a corrector in every case, conditional entries of plays
-become for a time numerous.[551] They stop altogether in 1607, when the
-responsibility for play correction appears to have been taken over,
-presumably under an arrangement with the prelates, by the Master of
-the Revels.[552] Henceforward and to the end of Buck’s mastership,
-nearly all play entries are under the hands not only of the wardens,
-but of the Master or of a deputy acting on his behalf. Meanwhile, for
-books other than plays, the ecclesiastical authority succeeded more
-and more in establishing itself, although even up to the time of the
-Commonwealth the wardens never altogether ceased to enter ballads and
-such small deer on their own responsibility.
-
-A little more may be gleaned from the ‘Fynes for breakinge of good
-orders’, which like the book entries were recorded by the wardens in
-their annual accounts up to 1571 and by the clerk in his register
-from 1576 to 1605.[553] But many of these were for irregularities in
-apprenticeship and the like, and where a particular book was concerned,
-the book is more often named than the precise offence committed in
-relation to it. The fine is for printing ‘contrary to the orders of
-this howse’, ‘contrary to our ordenaunces’, or merely ‘disorderly’.
-Trade defects, such as ‘stechyng’ of books, are sometimes in question,
-and sometimes the infringement of other men’s copies.[554] But the
-character of the books concerned suggests that some at least of the
-fines for printing ‘without lycense’, ‘without aucthoritie’, ‘without
-alowance’, ‘without entrance’, ‘before the wardyns handes were to yt’
-were due to breaches of the regulations for censorship, and in a few
-instances the information is specific.[555] The book is a ‘lewde’ book,
-or ‘not tolerable’, or has already been condemned to be burnt, or the
-printing is contrary to ‘her maiesties prohibicon’ or ‘the decrees
-of the star chamber’.[556] More rarely a fine was accompanied by the
-sequestration of the offending books, or the breaking up of a press,
-or even imprisonment. In these cases the company may have been acting
-under stimulus from higher powers; in dealing with a culprit in 1579,
-they direct that ‘for his offence, so farre as it toucheth ye same
-house only, he shall paye a fine’.[557]
-
-Putting together the entries and the fines, we can arrive at an
-approximate notion of the position occupied by the Stationers’ Company
-as an intermediary between the individual stationers and the higher
-powers in Church and State. That it is only approximate and that many
-points of detail remain obscure is largely due to the methods of
-the clerk. Richard Collins did not realize the importance, at least
-to the future historian, of set diplomatic formulas, and it is by
-no means clear to what extent the variations in the phrasing of his
-record correspond to variations in the facts recorded. But it is my
-impression that he was in substance a careful registrar, especially as
-regards the authority under which his entries were made, and that if
-he did not note the presence in any case of a corrector’s ‘hand’ to
-a book, it is fair evidence that such a hand was not before him. On
-this assumption the register confirms the inference to be drawn from
-the statements of Lambe and Kingston in 1636, that before 1586 the
-provision of the _Injunctions_ for licensing by the High Commission for
-London was not ordinarily operative, and that as a rule the only actual
-licences issued were those of the Stationers’ Company, who used their
-own discretion in submitting books about which they felt doubtful to
-the bishop or the archbishop or to an authorized corrector.[558] That
-books licensed by the Company without such reference were regarded as
-having been technically licensed under the _Injunctions_, one would
-hesitate to say. Licence is a fairly general term, and as used in the
-Stationers’ Register it does not necessarily cover anything more than
-a permit required by the internal ordinances of the Company itself.
-Certainly its officials claimed to issue licences to its members for
-other purposes than printing.[559] What Lambe and Kingston do not
-tell us, and perhaps ought to have told us, is that, when the master
-and wardens did call in the assistance of expert referees, it was not
-to ‘ministers’ merely chosen by themselves that they applied, but
-to official correctors nominated by the High Commission, or by the
-archbishop or bishop on its behalf. Nor must it be supposed that no
-supervision of the proceedings of the company was exercised by the High
-Commission itself. We find that body writing to the Company to uphold
-a patent in 1560.[560] It was upon its motion in 1566 that the Privy
-Council made a Star Chamber order calling attention to irregularities
-which had taken place, and directing the master and wardens to search
-for the offenders.[561] And its authority, concurrent with that of the
-Privy Council itself, to license books, is confirmed by a letter of
-the Council to the company in 1570.[562] So much for the period before
-1586. Another thing which Lambe and Kingston do not tell us, and which
-the register, if it can be trusted, does, is that the effective change
-introduced by the Star Chamber of that year was only one of degree and
-not of kind. It is true that an increasing number of books came, after
-one set-back, to be submitted to correctors; that the clerk begins to
-lay emphasis in his wording upon entrance rather than upon licence;
-that there are some hints that the direct responsibility of the wardens
-was for a kind of ‘allowance’ distinct from and supplementary to that
-of censorship. But it does not appear to be true that, then or at any
-later time, they wholly refused to enter any book except after taking
-cognizance of an authority beyond their own.
-
-In fact the register, from the very beginning, was not purely, or
-perhaps even primarily, one of allowances. It had two other functions,
-even more important from the point of view of the internal economy
-of the Company. It was a fee-book, subsidiary to the annual accounts
-of the wardens, and showing the details of sums which they had to
-return in those accounts.[563] And it was a register of copyrights.
-A stationer brought his copy to the wardens and paid his fee, in
-order that he might be protected by an official acknowledgement of his
-interest in the book against any infringement by a trade competitor. No
-doubt the wardens would not, and under the ordinances of the company
-might not, give this acknowledgement, unless they were satisfied that
-the book was one which might lawfully be printed. But copyright was
-what the stationer wanted, for after all most books were not dangerous
-in the eyes even of an Elizabethan censorship, whereas there would be
-little profit in publishing, if any rival were at liberty to cut in
-and reprint for himself the result of a successful speculation. It is
-a clear proof of this that the entrances include, not only new books,
-but also those in which rights had been transferred from one stationer
-to another.[564] Obviously no new allowance by a corrector would be
-required in such cases. And as regards copyright and licence alike,
-the entry in the register, although convenient to all concerned, was
-in itself no more than registration, the formal putting upon record
-of action already taken upon responsible authority. This authority
-did not rest with the clerk. In a few cases, indeed, he does seem to
-have entered an unimportant book at his own discretion.[565] But his
-functions were really subordinate to those of the wardens, as is shown
-by his practice from about 1580, of regularly citing the ‘hands’ or
-signed directions of those officers, as well as of the correctors, upon
-which he was acting. These ‘hands’ are not in the register, and there
-is sufficient evidence that they were ordinarily endorsed upon the
-manuscript or a printed copy of the book itself.[566] Exceptionally
-there might be an oral direction, or a separate letter or warrant of
-approval, which was probably preserved in a cupboard at the company’s
-hall.[567] Here too were kept copies of prints, although not, I
-think, the endorsed copies, which seem to have remained with the
-stationers.[568] I take it that the procedure was somewhat as follows.
-The stationer would bring his book to a warden together with the fee or
-some plausible excuse for deferring payment to a later date. The warden
-had to consider the questions both of property and of licence. Possibly
-the title of each book was published in the hall, in order that any
-other stationer who thought that he had an interest in it might make
-his claim.[569] Cases of disputed interest would go for determination
-to the Court of Assistants, who with the master and wardens for the
-year formed the ultimate governing body of the company, and had
-power in the last resort to revoke an authority to print already
-granted.[570] But if no difficulty as to ownership arose, and if the
-book was already endorsed as allowable by a corrector, the warden would
-add his own endorsement, and it was then open to the stationer to take
-the book to the clerk, show the ‘hands’, pay the fee if it was still
-outstanding, and get the formalities completed by registration.[571]
-If, however, the warden found no endorsement by a corrector on the
-copy, then there were three courses open to him. He might take the
-risk of passing an obviously harmless book on his own responsibility.
-He might refuse his ‘hand’ until the stationer had got that of the
-corrector. Or he might make a qualified endorsement, which the clerk
-would note in the register, sanctioning publication so far as copyright
-was concerned, but only upon condition that proper authority should
-first be obtained. The dates on the title-pages of plays, when compared
-with those of the entries, suggest that, as would indeed be natural,
-the procedure was completed before publication; not necessarily before
-printing, as the endorsements were sometimes on printed copies.[572]
-Several cases of re-entry after a considerable interval may indicate
-that copyright lapsed unless it was exercised within a reasonable time.
-As a rule, a play appeared within a year or so after it was entered,
-and was either printed or published by the stationer who had entered
-it, or by some other to whom he is known, or may plausibly be supposed,
-to have transferred his interest. Where a considerable interval exists
-between the date of an entry and that of the first known print, it is
-sometimes possible that an earlier print has been lost.[573]
-
-I do not think that it can be assumed that the absence of an entry in
-the register is evidence that the book was not duly licensed, so far
-as the ecclesiastical authorities were concerned. If its status was
-subsequently questioned, the signed copy could itself be produced.
-Certainly, when a conditional entry had been made, requiring better
-authority to be obtained, the fulfilment of the condition was by
-no means always, although it was sometimes, recorded. Possibly the
-‘better authority’ was shown to the warden rather than the clerk.
-On the other hand, it is certain that, under the ordinances of the
-Company, publication without entrance exposed the stationer to a
-fine, and it is therefore probable that entrance was also necessary
-to secure copyright.[574] Sometimes the omission was repaired on the
-occasion of a subsequent transfer of interest. So far as plays are
-concerned, there seems to have been greater laxity in this respect
-as time went on. Before 1586, or at any rate before 1584, there are
-hardly any unentered plays, if we make the reasonable assumption
-that certain prints of 1573 and 1575 appeared in the missing lists
-for 1571–5.[575] Between 1584 and 1615 the number is considerable,
-being over fifty, or nearly a quarter of the total number of plays
-printed during that period. An examination of individual cases does
-not disclose any obvious reason why some plays should be entered and
-others not. The unentered plays are spread over the whole period
-concerned. They come from the repertories of nearly all the theatres.
-They include ‘surreptitious’ plays, which may be supposed to have been
-printed without the consent of the authors or owners, but they also
-include plays to which prefaces by authors or owners are prefixed. They
-were issued by publishers of good standing as well as by others less
-reputable; and as a rule their publishers appear to have been entering
-or not entering, quite indifferently, at about the same date. To this
-generalization I find an exception, in Thomas Archer, who printed
-six plays without entry between 1607 and 1613 and entered none.[576]
-The large number of unentered plays is rather a puzzle, and I do not
-know the solution. In some cases, as we shall see, the publishers
-may have preferred not to court publicity for their enterprises by
-bringing them before the wardens. In others they may merely have been
-unbusinesslike, or may have thought that the chances of profit hardly
-justified the expenditure of sixpence on acquiring copyright. Yet many
-of the unentered plays went through more than one edition, including
-_Mucedorus_, a book of enduring popularity, and they do not appear to
-have been particularly subject to invasion by rival publishers. I will
-leave it to Mr. Pollard.
-
-These being the conditions, let us consider what number and what kinds
-of plays got into print. It will be convenient to deal separately
-with the two periods 1557–85 and 1586–1616. The operations of the
-Company under their charter had hardly begun before Mary died. The
-Elizabethan printing of plays opens in 1559 and for the first five
-years is of a retrospective character. Half a dozen publishers, led
-by John King, who died about 1561, and Thomas Colwell, who started
-business in the same year, issued or entered seventeen plays. Of these
-one is not extant. One is a ‘May-game’, perhaps contemporary. Five are
-translations; four are Marian farces of the school of Udall, one a
-_débat_ by John Heywood, and five Protestant interludes of the reigns
-of Henry and Edward, roughly edited in some cases so as to adapt them
-to performance under the new queen.[577] One more example of earlier
-Tudor drama, _Ralph Roister Doister_, in addition to mere reprints,
-appeared after 1565.[578] And with that year, after a short lull of
-activity, begins the genuine Elizabethan harvest, which by 1585 had
-yielded forty-two plays, of which thirty-nine are extant, although
-two only in the form of fragments. On analysis, the greater number
-of these, seventeen in all, fall into a group of moral interludes,
-often controversial in tone, and in some cases approximating, through
-the intermingling of concrete with abstract personages, on the one
-hand to classical comedy, on the other to the mediaeval miracle-play.
-There are also twelve translations or adaptations, including two from
-Italian comedy. There is one neo-classical tragedy. And there are
-nine plays which can best be classified as histories, of which seven
-have a classical and two a romantic colouring.[579] It is of interest
-to compare this output of the printing-press with the chronicle of
-Court performances over the same years which is recorded in the Revels
-Accounts.[580] Here we get, so far of course as can be judged from
-a bare enumeration of titles, fourteen morals, twenty-one classical
-histories, mainly shown by boys, twenty-two romantic histories, mainly
-shown by men, and perhaps three farces, two plays of contemporary
-realism, with one ‘antick’ play and two groups of short dramatic
-episodes. It is clear that the main types are the same in both lists.
-But only one of the printed plays, _Orestes_, actually appears in the
-Court records, although _Damon and Pythias_, _Gorboduc_, _Sapho and
-Phao_, _Campaspe_, and _The Arraignment of Paris_ were also given at
-Court, and the Revels Accounts after all only cover comparatively few
-years out of the whole period.[581] And there is a great discrepancy in
-the proportions in which the various types are represented. The morals,
-which were obsolescent at Court, are far more numerous in print than
-the classical and romantic histories, which were already in enjoyment
-of their full vogue upon the boards. My definite impression is that
-these early printed morals, unlike the prints of later date, were in
-the main not drawn from the actual repertories of companies, but were
-literary products, written with a didactic purpose, and printed in the
-hope that they would be bought both by readers and by schoolmasters in
-search of suitable pieces for performance by their pupils. They belong,
-like some similar interludes, both original and translated, of earlier
-date, rather to the tradition of the humanist academic drama, than to
-that of the professional, or even quasi-professional, stage. There are
-many things about the prints which, although not individually decisive,
-tend when taken in bulk to confirm this theory. They are ‘compiled’,
-according to their title-pages; sometimes the author is declared a
-‘minister’ or a ‘learned clerke’.[582] Nothing is, as a rule, said
-to indicate that they have been acted.[583] They are advertised, not
-only as ‘new’, ‘merry’, ‘pretty’, ‘pleasant’, ‘delectable’, ‘witty’,
-‘full of mirth and pastime’, but also as ‘excellent’, ‘worthy’,
-‘godly’, ‘pithy’, ‘moral’, ‘pityfull’, ‘learned’, and ‘fruitfull’,
-and occasionally the precise didactic intention is more elaborately
-expounded either on the title-page or in a prologue.[584] They are
-furnished with analyses showing the number of actors necessary to take
-all the parts, and in one case there is a significant note that the
-arrangement is ‘most convenient for such as be disposed, either to
-shew this comedie in priuate houses, or otherwise’.[585] They often
-conclude with a generalized prayer for the Queen and the estates of
-the realm, which omits any special petition for the individual lord
-such as we have reason to believe the protected players used.[586]
-The texts are much better than the later texts based upon acting
-copies. The stage-directions read like the work of authors rather
-than of book-keepers, notably in the use of ‘out’ rather than of ‘in’
-to indicate exits, and in the occasional insertion both of hints for
-‘business’ and of explanatory comments aimed at a reader rather than
-an actor.[587] It should be added that this type of play begins to
-disappear at the point when the growing Calvinist spirit led to a sharp
-breach between the ministry and the stage, and discredited even moral
-play-writing amongst divines. The latest morals, of which there are
-some even during the second period of play-publication, have much more
-the look of rather antiquated survivals from working repertories.[588]
-The ‘May-game’ of _Robin Hood_ seems to me to be of a literary origin
-similar to that of the contemporary ‘morals’.
-
-Towards the end of the period a new element is introduced with Lyly and
-Peele, who, like Edwardes before them, were not divines but secular
-scholars, and presumably desired a permanent life for their literary
-achievements. The publication of Lyly’s plays for Paul’s carries us
-on into the period 1586–1616, and the vaunting of their performance
-before the Queen is soon followed by that of other plays, beginning
-with _The Troublesome Reign of John_, as publicly acted in the City
-of London. During 1586–1616 two hundred and thirty-seven plays in
-all were published or at least entered on the Stationers’ Register,
-in addition to thirteen printed elsewhere than in London. Of many of
-these, and of some of those earlier published, there were one or more
-reprints. It is not until the last year of the period that the first
-example of a collective edition of the plays of any author makes its
-appearance. This is _The Workes of Benjamin Jonson_, which is moreover
-in folio, whereas the prints of individual plays were almost invariably
-in quarto.[589] A second volume of Jonson’s _Works_ was begun in 1631
-and completed in 1640. Shakespeare’s plays had to wait until 1623
-for collective treatment, Lyly’s until 1632, Marston’s until 1633,
-and Beaumont and Fletcher’s until 1647 and 1679, although a partial
-collection of Shakespearian plays in quarto has been shown to have
-been contemplated and abandoned in 1619.[590] Of the two hundred and
-thirty-seven plays proposed for publication two hundred and fourteen
-are extant. Twenty-three are only known by entries in the Stationers’
-Register, and as plays were not always entered, it is conceivable that
-one or two may have been published, and have passed into oblivion. Of
-the two hundred and fourteen extant plays, six are translations from
-the Latin, Italian, or French, and seven may reasonably be suspected of
-being merely closet plays, intended for the eye of the reader alone.
-The other two hundred and one may be taken to have undergone the
-test of actual performance. Six were given by amateurs, at Court or
-elsewhere, and eleven, of which three are Latin and eight English, are
-University plays. So far as the professional companies are concerned,
-the repertories which have probably been best preserved, owing to
-the fact that the poets were in a position to influence publication,
-are those of the boys. We have thirty-one plays which, certainly or
-probably, came to the press from the Chapel and Queen’s Revels boys,
-twenty-five from the Paul’s boys, and eight from the King’s Revels
-boys. To the Queen’s men we may assign eleven plays, to Sussex’s three,
-to Pembroke’s five, to Derby’s four, to Oxford’s one, to Strange’s or
-the Admiral’s and Henry’s thirty-two, to the Chamberlain’s and King’s
-thirty-four, to Worcester’s and Anne’s sixteen, to Charles’s one.
-Some of these had at earlier dates been played by other companies.
-Fifteen plays remain, not a very large proportion, which cannot be
-safely assigned.[591] There are twenty-seven manuscript English plays
-or fragments of plays or plots of plays, and twenty-one Latin ones,
-mostly of a university type, which also belong to the period 1586–1616.
-There are fifty-one plays which were certainly or probably produced
-before 1616, but were not printed until later, many of them in the
-Shakespeare and Beaumont and Fletcher folios. And there are some
-twenty-two others, which exist in late prints, but may be wholly, or
-more often partially, of early workmanship. The resultant total of
-three hundred and seven is considerable, but there is reason to suppose
-that it only represents a comparatively small fraction of the complete
-crop of these thirty pullulating dramatic years. Of over two hundred
-and eighty plays recorded by Henslowe as produced or commissioned by
-the companies for whom he acted as banker between 1592 and 1603, we
-have only some forty and perhaps revised versions of a few others.[592]
-Thomas Heywood claimed in 1633 to have had ‘an entire hand, or at least
-a maine finger’, in not less than two hundred and twenty plays, and
-of these we can only identify or even guess at about two score, of
-which several are certainly lost. That any substantial number of plays
-got printed, but have failed to reach us, is improbable. From time
-to time an unknown print, generally of early date, turns up in some
-bibliographical backwater, but of the seventy-five titles which I have
-brought together under the head of ‘Lost Plays’ some probably rest
-upon misunderstandings and others represent works which were not plays
-at all, while a large proportion are derived from late entries in the
-Stationers’ Register by Humphrey Moseley of plays which he may have
-possessed in manuscript but never actually proceeded to publish.[593]
-Some of the earlier unfulfilled entries may be of similar type. An
-interesting piece of evidence pointing to the practically complete
-survival at any rate of seventeenth-century prints is afforded in a
-catalogue of his library of plays made by Sir John Harington in or
-about 1610.[594] Harington possessed 129 distinct plays, as well as
-a number of duplicates. Only 9 of these were printed before 1586. He
-had 14 out of 38 printed during 1588–94, and 15 out of 25 printed
-during 1595–99. His absence in Ireland during 1599 probably led him
-to miss several belonging to that year, and his most vigorous period
-as a collector began with 1600. During 1600–10 he secured 90 out of
-105; that is to say exactly six-sevenths of the complete output of
-the London press. I neglect plays printed outside London in these
-figures. There is only one play among the 129 which is not known to us.
-Apparently it bore the title _Belinus and Brennus_.
-
-It is generally supposed, and I think with justice, that the acting
-companies did not find it altogether to their advantage to have
-their plays printed. Heywood, indeed, in the epistle to his _English
-Traveller_ (1633) tells us that this was sometimes the case.[595]
-Presumably the danger was not so much that readers would not become
-spectators, as that other companies might buy the plays and act them;
-and of this practice there are some dubious instances, although at any
-rate by Caroline times it had been brought under control by the Lord
-Chamberlain.[596] At any rate, we find the Admiral’s in 1600 borrowing
-40_s._ ‘to geue vnto the printer, to staye the printing of Patient
-Gresell’.[597] We find the King’s Revels syndicate in 1608 entering
-into a formal agreement debarring its members from putting any of the
-play-books jointly owned by them into print. And we find the editor
-and publisher of _Troilus and Cressida_, although that had in fact
-never been played, bidding his readers in 1609 ‘thanke fortune for the
-scape it hath made amongst you; since by the grand possessors wills I
-beleeue you should have prayd for them rather than beene prayd’. The
-marked fluctuation in the output of plays in different years is capable
-of explanation on the theory that, so long as the companies were
-prosperous, they kept a tight hold on their ‘books’, and only let them
-pass into the hands of the publishers when adversity broke them up, or
-when they had some special need to raise funds. The periods of maximum
-output are 1594, 1600, and 1607. In 1594 the companies were reforming
-themselves after a long and disastrous spell of plague; and in
-particular the Queen’s, Pembroke’s, and Sussex’s men were all ruined,
-and their books were thrown in bulk upon the market.[598] It has been
-suggested that the sales of 1600 may have been due to Privy Council
-restrictions of that year, which limited the number of companies, and
-forbade them to play for more than two days in the week.[599] But it is
-very doubtful whether the limitation of days really became operative,
-and many of the plays published belonged to the two companies, the
-Chamberlain’s and the Admiral’s, who stood to gain by the elimination
-of competitors. An alternative reason might be found in the call for
-ready money involved by the building of the Globe in 1599 and the
-Fortune in 1600. The main factor in 1607 was the closing of Paul’s and
-the sale of the plays acted there.
-
-Sometimes the companies were outwitted. Needy and unscrupulous
-stationers might use illegitimate means to acquire texts for which
-they had not paid as a basis for ‘surreptitious’ or ‘piratical’
-prints.[600] A hired actor might be bribed to disclose his ‘part’ and
-so much as he could remember of the ‘parts’ of others. Dr. Greg has
-made it seem probable that the player of the Host was an agent in
-furnishing the text of the _Merry Wives_.[601] A player of Voltimand
-and other minor parts may have been similarly guilty as regards
-_Hamlet_.[602] Long before, the printer of _Gorboduc_ had succeeded in
-‘getting a copie thereof at some yongmans hand that lacked a little
-money and much discretion’. Or the poet himself might be to blame.
-Thomas Heywood takes credit in the epistle to _The Rape of Lucrece_
-that it had not been his custom ‘to commit my playes to the presse’,
-like others who ‘have vsed a double sale of their labours, first to the
-stage, and after to the presse’. Yet this had not saved his plays from
-piracy, for some of them had been ‘copied only by the eare’ and issued
-in a corrupt and mangled form. A quarter of a century later, in writing
-a prologue for a revival of his _If You Know not Me, You Know Nobody_,
-he tells us that this was one of the corrupt issues, and adds that
-
- Some by Stenography drew
- The plot: put it in print: (scarce one word trew).
-
-Modern critics have sought in shorthand the source of other ‘bad’ and
-probably surreptitious texts of plays, and one has gone so far as to
-trace in them the peculiarities of a particular system expounded in
-the _Characterie_ (1588) of Timothy Bright.[603] The whole question
-of surreptitious prints has naturally been explored most closely in
-connexion with the textual criticism of Shakespeare, and the latest
-investigator, Mr. Pollard, has come to the conclusion that, in spite of
-the general condemnation of the Folio editors, the only Shakespearian
-Quartos which can reasonably be labelled as surreptitious or as
-textually ‘bad’ are the First Quartos of _Romeo and Juliet_, _Henry
-V_, _Merry Wives of Windsor_, _Hamlet_, and _Pericles_, although
-he strongly suspects that there once existed a similar edition of
-_Love’s Labour’s Lost_.[604] I have no ground for dissenting from this
-judgement.
-
-The question whether the actors, in protecting their property from the
-pirates, could look for any assistance from the official controllers
-of the press is one of some difficulty. We may perhaps infer, with the
-help of the conditional entries of _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria_ and
-_The Spanish Tragedy_, and the special order made in the case of _Dr.
-Faustus_, that before assigning a ‘copy’ to one stationer the wardens
-of the Company took some steps to ascertain whether any other stationer
-laid a claim to it. It does not follow that they also inquired whether
-the applicant had come honestly or dishonestly by his manuscript.[605]
-Mr. Pollard seems inclined to think that, although they were under no
-formal obligation to intervene, they would not be likely, as men of
-common sense, to encourage dishonesty.[606] If this argument stood
-alone, I should not have much confidence in it. There is a Publishers’
-Association to-day, doubtless composed of men of common sense, but it
-is not a body to which one would naturally commit interests which
-might come into conflict with those of members of the trade. It would
-be another matter, however, if the actors were in a position to bring
-outside interest to bear against the pirates, through the licensers, or
-through the Privy Council on whom ultimately the licensers depended.
-And this in fact seems to have been the way in which a solution of
-the problem was gradually arrived at. Apart altogether from plays,
-there are instances upon record in which individuals, who were in a
-position to command influence, successfully adopted a similar method.
-We find Fulke Greville in 1586 writing to Sir Francis Walsingham,
-on the information of the stationer Ponsonby, to warn him that the
-publication of the _Arcadia_ was being planned, and to advise him to
-get ‘made stay of that mercenary book’ by means of an application to
-the Archbishop or to Dr. Cosin, ‘who have, as he says, a copy to peruse
-to that end’.[607] Similarly we find Francis Bacon, in the preface to
-his _Essayes_ of 1597, excusing himself for the publication on the
-ground that surreptitious adventurers were at work, and ‘to labour
-the staie of them had bin troublesome and subiect to interpretation’.
-Evidently he had come to a compromise, of which the Stationers’
-Register retains traces in the cancellation by a court of an entry
-of the _Essayes_ to Richard Serger, and a re-entry to H. Hooper, the
-actual publisher, ‘under the handes of Master Francis Bacon, Master
-Doctor Stanhope, Master Barlowe, and Master Warden Lawson’.[608] The
-actors, too, were not wholly without influence. They had their patrons
-and protectors, the Lord Chamberlain and the Lord Admiral, in the Privy
-Council, and although, as Mr. Pollard points out, it certainly would
-not have been good business to worry an important minister about every
-single forty-shilling piracy, it may have been worth while to seek
-a standing protection, analogous to the old-fashioned ‘privilege’,
-against a series of such annoyances. At any rate, this is what, while
-the Admiral’s contented themselves with buying off the printer of
-_Patient Grissell_, the Chamberlain’s apparently attempted, although
-at first with indifferent success, to secure. In 1597 John Danter, a
-stationer of the worst reputation, had printed a surreptitious and
-‘bad’ edition of _Romeo and Juliet_, and possibly, if Mr. Pollard’s
-conjecture is right, another of _Love’s Labour’s Lost_. He had made no
-entry in the Register, and it was therefore open to another publisher,
-Cuthbert Burby, to issue, without breach of copyright, ‘corrected’
-editions of the same plays.[609] This he did, with suitable trumpetings
-of the corrections on the title-pages, and presumably by arrangement
-with the Chamberlain’s men. It was this affair which must, I think,
-have led the company to apply for protection to their lord. On 22 July
-1598 an entry was made in the Stationers’ Register of _The Merchant
-of Venice_ for the printer James Roberts. This entry is conditional
-in form, but it differs from the normal conditional entries in that
-the requirement specified is not an indefinite ‘aucthoritie’ but a
-‘lycence from the Right honorable the lord chamberlen’. Roberts also
-entered _Cloth Breeches and Velvet Hose_ on 27 May 1600, _A Larum
-for London_ on 29 May 1600, and _Troilus and Cressida_ on 7 February
-1603. These also are all conditional entries but of a normal type. No
-condition, however, is attached to his entry of _Hamlet_ on 26 July
-1602. Now comes a significant piece of evidence, which at least shows
-that in 1600, as well as in 1598, the Stationers’ Company were paying
-particular attention to entries of plays coming from the repertory
-of the Chamberlain’s men. The register contains, besides the formal
-entries, certain spare pages upon which the clerk was accustomed to
-make occasional memoranda, and amongst these memoranda we find the
-following:[610]
-
- My lord chamberlens menns plaies Entred
- viz
-
-[Sidenote: 27 May 1600 To Master Robertes]
-
- A moral of ‘clothe breches and velvet hose’
-
-[Sidenote: 27 May To hym]
-
- Allarum to London
-
- 4 Augusti
- As you like yt, a booke }
- Henry the ffift, a booke }
- Every man in his humour, a booke } to be staied
- The commedie of ‘muche A doo about }
- nothing’, a booke }
-
-There are possibly two notes here, but we may reasonably date them both
-in 1600, as _Every Man In his Humour_ was entered to Cuthbert Burby and
-Walter Burre on 14 August 1600 and _Much Ado about Nothing_ to Andrew
-Wise and William Aspley on 23 August 1600, and these plays appeared
-in 1601 and 1600 respectively. _Henry V_ was published, without entry
-and in a ‘bad’ text by Thomas Millington and John Busby, also in 1600,
-while _As You Like It_ remained unprinted until 1623. Many attempts
-have been made to explain the story of 4 August. Mr. Fleay conjectured
-that it was due to difficulties of censorship; Mr. Furness that it was
-directed against James Roberts, whom he regarded on the strength of
-the conditional entries as a man of ‘shifty character’.[611] But there
-is no reason to read Roberts’s name into the August memorandum at all;
-and I agree with Mr. Pollard that the evidence of dishonesty against
-him has been exaggerated, and that the privilege which he held for
-printing all play-bills for actors makes it prima facie unlikely that
-his relations with the companies would be irregular.[612] On the other
-hand, I hesitate to accept Mr. Pollard’s counter-theory that the four
-conditional Roberts entries were of the nature of a deliberate plan
-‘in the interest of the players in order to postpone their publication
-till it could not injure the run of the play and to make the task of
-the pirates more difficult’. One would of course suppose that any
-entry, conditional or not, might serve such a purpose, if the entering
-stationer was in league with the actors and deliberately reserved
-publication. This is presumably what the Admiral’s men paid Cuthbert
-Burby to do for _Patient Grissell_. Mr. Pollard applies the same theory
-to Edward Blount’s unconditional entries of _Pericles_ and _Antony and
-Cleopatra_ in 1608, and it would certainly explain the delays in the
-publication of _Troilus and Cressida_ from 1603 to 1609 and of _Antony
-and Cleopatra_ from 1608 to 1623, and the absence of any edition of
-_Cloth Breeches and Velvet Hose_. But it does not explain why _Hamlet_,
-entered by Roberts in 1602, was issued by others in the ‘bad’ text of
-1603, or why _Pericles_ was issued by Henry Gosson in the ‘bad’ text
-of 1609.[613] Mr. Pollard’s interpretation of the facts appears to be
-influenced by the conditional character of four out of Roberts’s five
-entries during 1598–1603, and I understand him to believe that the
-‘further aucthoritie’ required for _Cloth Breeches and Velvet Hose_
-and _A Larum for London_ and the ‘sufficient aucthoritie’ required
-for _Troilus and Cressida_ were of the same nature as the licence
-from the Lord Chamberlain specifically required for _The Merchant of
-Venice_.[614] It is not inconceivable that this may have been so, but
-one is bound to take the Roberts conditional entries side by side with
-the eight similar entries made between 1601 and 1606 for other men,
-and in three at least of these (_The Dutch Courtesan_, _Sir Giles
-Goosecap_, _The Fleir_) it is obvious that the authority demanded
-was that of the official correctors. Of course, the correctors may
-themselves have had a hint from the Lord Chamberlain to keep an eye
-upon the interests of his servants, but if the eleven conditionally
-entered plays of 1600–6 be looked at as a group, it will be seen that
-they are all plays of either a political or a satirical character,
-which might well therefore call for particular attention from the
-correctors in the discharge of their ordinary functions. I have already
-suggested that the normal conditional entries represent cases in which
-the wardens of the Stationers’ Company, while not prepared to license
-a book on their own responsibility, short-circuited as far as they
-could the procedure entailed. Properly they ought to have seen the
-corrector’s hand before adding their own endorsement. But if this was
-not forthcoming, the applicant may have been allowed, in order to save
-time, to have the purely trade formalities completed by a conditional
-entry, which would be a valid protection against a rival stationer,
-but would not, until the corrector’s hand was obtained, be sufficient
-authority for the actual printing. No doubt the clerk should have
-subsequently endorsed the entry after seeing the corrector’s hand, but
-he did not always do so, although in cases of transfer the transferee
-might ask for a record to be made, and in any event the owner of the
-copy had the book with the ‘hand’ to it. The Lord Chamberlain’s ‘stay’
-was, I think, another matter. I suppose it to have been directed, not
-to the correctors, but to the wardens, and to have taken the form of
-a request not to enter any play of the Chamberlain’s men, otherwise
-entitled to licence or not, without satisfying themselves that the
-actors were assenting parties to the transaction. Common sense would
-certainly dictate compliance with such a request, coming from such a
-source. The plan seems to have worked well enough so far as _As You
-Like It_, _Every Man In his Humour_, and _Much Ado about Nothing_
-were concerned, for we have no reason to doubt that the subsequent
-publication of two of these plays had the assent of the Chamberlain’s
-men, and the third was effectively suppressed. But somehow not only
-_Hamlet_ but also _The Merry Wives of Windsor_ slipped through in
-1602, and although the actors apparently came to some arrangement
-with Roberts and furnished a revised text of _Hamlet_, the other play
-seems to have gone completely out of their control. Moreover, it was
-an obvious weakness of the method adopted, that it gave no security
-against a surreptitious printer who was in a position to dispense with
-an entry. Danter, after all, had published without entry in 1597. He
-had had to go without copyright; but an even more audacious device was
-successfully tried in 1600 with _Henry V_. This was one of the four
-plays so scrupulously ‘staied’ by the Stationers’ clerk on 4 August.
-Not merely, however, was the play printed in 1600 by Thomas Creede for
-Thomas Millington and John Busby, but on 21 August it was entered on
-the Register as transferred to Thomas Pavier amongst other ‘thinges
-formerlye printed and sett ouer to’ him. I think the explanation is
-that the print of 1600 was treated as merely a reprint of the old play
-of _The Famous Victories of Henry V_, which was indeed to some extent
-Shakespeare’s source, and of which Creede held the copyright.[615]
-Similarly, it is conceivable that the same John Busby and Nathaniel
-Butter forced the hands of the Chamberlain’s men into allowing the
-publication of _King Lear_ in 1608 by a threat to issue it as a reprint
-of _King Leir_.[616] Busby was also the enterer of _The Merry Wives_,
-and he and Butter, at whose hands it was that Heywood suffered, seem to
-have been the chief of the surreptitious printers after Danter’s death.
-
-The Chamberlain’s men would have been in a better position if their
-lord had brought his influence to bear, as Sidney’s friends had done,
-upon the correctors instead of the Stationers’ Company. Probably
-the mistake was retrieved in 1607 when the ‘allowing’ of plays for
-publication passed to the Master of the Revels, and he may even
-have extended his protection to the other companies which, like the
-Chamberlain’s, had now passed under royal protection. I do not suggest
-that the convenience of this arrangement was the sole motive for the
-change; the episcopal correctors must have got into a good deal of
-hot water over the affair of _Eastward Ho!_[617] Even the Master of
-the Revels did not prevent the surreptitious issue of _Pericles_ in
-1609. In Caroline times we find successive Lord Chamberlains, to whom
-the Master of the Revels continued to be subordinate, directing the
-Stationers’ Company not to allow the repertories of the King’s men or
-of Beeston’s boys to be printed, and it is implied that there were
-older precedents for these protections.[618]
-
-A point might come at which it was really more to the advantage of the
-actors to have a play published than not. The prints were useful in
-the preparation of acting versions, and they saved the book-keepers
-from the trouble of having to prepare manuscript copies at the demand
-of stage-struck amateurs.[619] The influence of the poets again was
-on the side of publication, and it is perhaps due to the greater
-share which they took in the management of the boys’ companies that
-so disproportionate a number of the plays preserved are of their
-acting. Heywood hints that thereby the poets sold their work twice. It
-is more charitable to assume that literary vanity was also a factor;
-and it is with playwrights of the more scholarly type, Ben Jonson
-and Marston, that a practice first emerges of printing plays at an
-early date after publication, and in the full literary trappings of
-dedicatory epistles and commendatory verses. Actor-playwrights, such
-as Heywood himself and Dekker, followed suit; but not Shakespeare, who
-had long ago dedicated his literary all to Southampton and penned no
-prefaces. The characteristic Elizabethan apologies, on such grounds as
-the pushfulness of publishers or the eagerness of friends to see the
-immortal work in type, need not be taken at their full face value.[620]
-Opportunity was afforded on publication to restore passages which had
-been ‘cut’ to meet the necessities of stage-presentation, and of this,
-in the Second Quarto of _Hamlet_, even Shakespeare may have availed
-himself.[621]
-
-The conditions of printing therefore furnish us with every variety
-of text, from the carefully revised and punctuated versions of
-Ben Jonson’s _Works_ of 1616 to the scrappy notes, from memory or
-shorthand, of an incompetent reporter. The average text lies between
-these extremes, and is probably derived from a play-house ‘book’ handed
-over by the actors to the printer. Mr. Pollard has dealt luminously
-with the question of the nature of the ‘book’, and has disposed of the
-assumption that it was normally a copy made by a ‘play-house’ scrivener
-of the author’s manuscript.[622] For this assumption there is no
-evidence whatever. There is, indeed, little direct evidence, one way or
-other; but what there is points to the conclusion that the ‘original’
-or standard copy of a play kept in the play-house was the author’s
-autograph manuscript, endorsed with the licence of the Master of the
-Revels for performance, and marked by the book-keeper or for his use
-with indications of cuts and the like, and with stage-directions for
-exits and entrances and the disposition of properties, supplementary
-to those which the author had furnished.[623] Most of the actual
-manuscripts of this type which remain in existence are of Caroline,
-rather than Elizabethan or Jacobean, date.[624] But we have one of _The
-Second Maid’s Tragedy_, bearing Buck’s licence of 1611, and one of _Sir
-Thomas More_, belonging to the last decade of the sixteenth century,
-which has been submitted for licence without success, and is marked
-with instructions by the Master for the excision or alteration of
-obnoxious passages. It is a curious document. The draft of the original
-author has been patched and interpolated with partial redrafts in a
-variety of hands, amongst which, according to some palaeographers, is
-to be found that of Shakespeare. One wonders that any licenser should
-have been complaisant enough to consider the play at all in such a
-form; and obviously the instance is a crucial one against the theory of
-scrivener’s copies.[625] It may also be argued on _a priori_ grounds
-that such copies would be undesirable from the company’s point of view,
-both as being costly and as tending to multiply the opportunities
-for ‘surreptitious’ transmission to rivals or publishers. Naturally
-it was necessary to copy out individual parts for the actors, and
-Alleyn’s part in _Orlando Furioso_, with the ‘cues’, or tail ends of
-the speeches preceding his own, can still be seen at Dulwich.[626] From
-these ‘parts’ the ‘original’ could be reconstructed or ‘assembled’ in
-the event of destruction or loss.[627] Apparently the book-keeper also
-made a ‘plot’ or scenario of the action, and fixed it on a peg for
-his own guidance and that of the property-man in securing the smooth
-progress of the play.[628] Nor could the companies very well prevent
-the poets from keeping transcripts or at any rate rough copies, when
-they handed over their ‘papers’, complete or in instalments, as they
-drew their ‘earnests’ or payments ‘in full’.[629] It does not follow
-that they always did so. We know that Daborne made fair copies for
-Henslowe;[630] but the Folio editors tell us that what Shakespeare
-thought ‘he vttered with that easinesse, that we haue scarse receiued
-from him a blot in his papers’, and Mr. Pollard points out that there
-would have been little meaning in this praise if what Shakespeare sent
-in had been anything but his first drafts.[631]
-
-The character of the stage-directions in plays confirm the view that
-many of them were printed from working play-house ‘originals’. They are
-primarily directions for the stage itself; it is only incidentally that
-they also serve to stimulate the reader’s imagination by indicating the
-action with which the lines before him would have been accompanied in
-a representation.[632] Some of them are for the individual guidance of
-the actors, marginal hints as to the ‘business’ which will give point
-to their speeches. These are not very numerous in play-house texts; the
-‘kneeling’ and ‘kisses her’ so frequent in modern editions are merely
-attempts of the editors to show how intelligently they have interpreted
-the quite obvious implications of the dialogue. The more important
-directions are addressed rather to the prompter and the tire-man; they
-prescribe the exits and the entrances, the ordering of a procession or
-a dumb-show, the use of the curtains or other structural devices, the
-introduction of properties, the precise moment for the striking up of
-music or sounds ‘within’. It is by no means always possible, except
-where a manuscript betrays differences of handwriting, to distinguish
-between what the author, often himself an actor familiar with the
-possibilities of the stage, may have originally written, and what
-the book-keeper may have added. Either may well use the indicative
-or the imperative form, or merely an adverbial, participial, or
-substantival expression.[633] But it is natural to trace the hand of
-the book-keeper where the direction reduces itself to the bare name of
-a property noted in the margin; even more so when it is followed by
-some such phrase as ‘ready’, ‘prepared’, or ‘set out’;[634] and still
-more so when the note occurs at the point when the property has to
-be brought from the tire-room, and some lines before it is actually
-required for use.[635] The book-keeper must be responsible, too, for
-the directions into which, as not infrequently happens, the name of an
-actor has been inserted in place of that of the personage whom that
-actor represented.[636] On the other hand, we may perhaps safely assign
-to the author directions addressed to some one else in the second
-person, those which leave something to be interpreted according to
-discretion, and those which contain any matter not really necessary
-for stage guidance.[637] Such superfluous matter is only rarely found
-in texts of pure play-house origin, although even here an author
-may occasionally insert a word or two of explanation or descriptive
-colouring, possibly taken from the source upon which he has been
-working.[638] In the main, however, descriptive stage-directions are
-characteristic of texts which, whether ultimately based upon play-house
-copies or not, have undergone a process of editing by the author or
-his representative, with an eye to the reader, before publication.
-Some literary rehandling of this sort is traceable, for example, in the
-First Folio of Shakespeare, although the hearts of the editors seem
-to have failed them before they had got very far with the task.[639]
-Yet another type of descriptive stage-direction presents itself in
-certain ‘surreptitious’ prints, where we find the reporter eking out
-his inadequately recorded text by elaborate accounts of the details of
-the business which he had seen enacted before him.[640] So too William
-Percy, apparently revising plays some of which had already been acted
-and which he hoped to see acted again, mingles his suggestions to a
-hypothetical manager with narratives in the past tense of how certain
-actors had carried out their parts.[641]
-
-It must not be assumed that, because a play was printed from a stage
-copy, the author had no chance of editing it. Probably the compositors
-treated the manuscript put before them very freely, modifying, if they
-did not obliterate, the individual notions of the author or scribe as
-to orthography and punctuation; and the master printer, or some press
-corrector in his employment, went over and ‘improved’ their work,
-perhaps not always with much reference to the original ‘copy’.[642]
-This process of correction continued during the printing off of the
-successive sheets, with the result that different examples of the same
-imprint often show the same sheet in corrected and in uncorrected
-states.[643] The trend of modern criticism is in the direction of
-regarding Shakespeare’s plays as printed, broadly speaking, without
-any editorial assistance from him; the early quartos from play-house
-manuscripts, the later quartos from the earlier quartos, the folio
-partly from play-house manuscripts, partly from earlier quartos used in
-the play-house instead of manuscripts, and bearing marks of adaptation
-to shifting stage requirements.[644] On this theory, the aberrations
-of the printing-house, even with the author’s original text before
-them, have to account in the main for the unsatisfactory condition in
-which, in spite of such posthumous editing, not very extensive, as was
-done for the folio, even the best texts of the plays have reached us.
-Whether it is sound or not--I think that it probably is--there were
-other playwrights who were far from adopting Shakespeare’s attitude of
-detachment from the literary fate of his works. Jonson was a careful
-editor. Marston, Middleton, and Heywood all apologize for misprints in
-various plays, which they say were printed without their knowledge, or
-when they were urgently occupied elsewhere; and the inference must be
-that in normal circumstances the responsibility would have rested with
-them.[645] Marston, indeed, definitely says that he had ‘perused’ the
-second edition of _The Fawn_, in order ‘to make some satisfaction for
-the first faulty impression’.[646]
-
-The modern editions, with their uniform system of acts and scenes and
-their fanciful notes of locality--‘A room in the palace’, ‘Another
-room in the palace’--are again misleading in their relation to the
-early prints, especially those based upon the play-house. Notes of
-locality are very rare. Occasionally a definite shift from one country
-or town to another is recorded;[647] and a few edited plays, such as
-Ben Jonson’s, prefix, with a ‘dramatis personae’, a general indication
-of ‘The scene’.[648] For the rest, the reader is left to his own
-inferences, with such help as the dialogue and the presenters give him;
-and the modern editors, with a post-Restoration tradition of staging
-in their minds, have often inferred wrongly. Even the shoulder-notes
-appended to the accurate reprints of the Malone Society, although they
-do not attempt localities, err by introducing too many new scenes.
-In the early prints the beginnings of scenes are rarely marked, and
-the beginnings of acts are left unmarked to an extent which is rather
-surprising. The practice is by no means uniform, and it is possible
-to distinguish different tendencies in texts of different origin. The
-Tudor interludes and the early Elizabethan plays of the more popular
-type are wholly undivided, and there was probably no break in the
-continuity of the performances.[649] Acts and scenes, which are the
-outward form of a method of construction derived from the academic
-analysis of Latin comedy and tragedy, make their appearance, with other
-notes of neo-classic influence, in the farces of the school of Udall,
-in the Court tragedies, in translated plays, in Lyly’s comedies, and
-in a few others belonging to the same _milieu_ of scholarship.[650]
-Ben Jonson and a few other later writers adopt them in printing plays
-of theatrical origin.[651] But the great majority of plays belonging
-to the public theatres continue to be printed without any divisions
-at all, while plays from the private houses are ordinarily divided
-into acts, but not into scenes, although the beginning of each act has
-usually some such heading as ‘Actus Primus, Scena prima’.[652] This
-distinction corresponds to the greater significance of the act-interval
-in the performance of the boy companies; but, as I have pointed out
-in an earlier chapter, it is difficult to suppose that the public
-theatres paid no regard to act-intervals, and one cannot therefore
-quite understand why neither the poets nor the book-keepers were in the
-habit of showing them in the play-house ‘originals’ of plays.[653]
-Had they been shown there, they would almost inevitably have got into
-the prints. It is a peculiarity of the surreptitious First Quarto of
-_Romeo and Juliet_, that its later sheets, which differ typographically
-from the earlier ones, although they do not number either acts or
-scenes, insert lines of ornament at the points at which acts and
-scenes may be supposed to begin. It must be added that, so far as an
-Elizabethan playwright looked upon his work as made up of scenes, his
-conception of a scene was not as a rule that familiar to us upon the
-modern stage. The modern scene may be defined as a piece of action
-continuous in time and place between two falls of a drop-curtain. The
-Elizabethans had no drop-curtain, and the drawing of an alcove curtain,
-at any rate while personages remain on the stage without, does not
-afford the same solution of continuity. The nearest analogy is perhaps
-in such a complete clearance of the stage, generally with a shift of
-locality, as enables the imagination to assume a time interval. A few
-texts, generally of the seventeenth century, are divided into scenes
-on this principle of clearance; and it was adopted by the editors
-of the First Folio, when, in a half-hearted way, they attempted to
-divide up the continuous texts of their manuscripts and quartos.[654]
-But it was not the principle of the neo-classic dramatists, or of Ben
-Jonson and his school. For them a scene was a section, not of action,
-but of dialogue; and they started a new scene whenever a speaker, or
-at any rate a speaker of importance, entered or left the stage. This
-is the conception which is in the mind of Marston when he regrets,
-in the preface to _The Malcontent_, that ‘scenes, invented merely to
-be spoken, should be enforcively published to be read’. It is also
-the conception of the French classicist drama, although the English
-playwrights do not follow the French rule of _liaison_, which requires
-at least one speaker from each scene to remain on into the next, and
-thus secures continuity throughout each act by making a complete
-clearance of the stage impossible.[655]
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
-
- PLAYWRIGHTS
-
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The abundant literature of the drama
- is more satisfactorily treated in the appendices to F. E.
- Schelling, _Elizabethan Drama_ (1908), and vols. v and vi (1910)
- of the _Cambridge History of English Literature_, than in R. W.
- Lowe, _Bibliographical Account of English Theatrical Literature_
- (1888), K. L. Bates and L. B. Godfrey, _English Drama: a Working
- Basis_ (1896), or W. D. Adams, _Dictionary of the Drama_ (1904).
- There is an American pamphlet on _Materials for the Study of the
- English Drama, excluding Shakespeare_ (1912, Newbery Library,
- Chicago), which I have not seen. Periodical lists of new books
- are published in the _Modern Language Review_, the _Beiblatt_
- to _Anglia_, and the _Bulletin_ of the English Association,
- and annual bibliographies by the _Modern Humanities Research
- Association_ (from 1921) and in the Shakespeare _Jahrbuch_.
- The bibliography by H. R. Tedder in the _Encyclopaedia
- Britannica_ (11th ed.) s.v. Shakespeare, A. C. Shaw, _Index to
- the Shakespeare Memorial Library_ (1900–3), and W. Jaggard,
- _Shakespeare Bibliography_ (1911), on which, however, cf. C. S.
- Northup in _J. G. P._ xi. 218, are also useful.
-
- W. W. Greg, _Notes on Dramatic Bibliographers_ (1911, _M.
- S. C._ i. 324), traces from the publishers’ advertisements
- of the Restoration a _catena_ of play-lists in E. Phillips,
- _Theatrum Poetarum_ (1675), W. Winstanley, _Lives of the Most
- Famous English Poets_ (1687), G. Langbaine, _Momus Triumphans_
- (1688) and _Account of the English Dramatick Poets_ (1691), C.
- Gildon, _Lives and Characters of the English Dramatick Poets_
- (1698), W. R. Chetwood, _The British Theatre_ (1750), E. Capell,
- _Notitia Dramatica_ (1783), and the various editions of the
- _Biographica Dramatica_ from 1764 to 1812. More recent are J. O.
- Halliwell-Phillipps, _Dictionary of Old English Plays_ (1860),
- and W. C. Hazlitt, _Manual of Old English Plays_ (1892); but
- all are largely superseded by W. W. Greg, _A List of English
- Plays_ (1900) and _A List of Masques, Pageants, &c._ (1902).
- His account of Warburton’s collection in _The Bakings of Betsy_
- (_Library_, 1911) serves as a supplement. A few plays discovered
- later than 1900 appeared in an Irish sale of 1906 (cf.
- _Jahrbuch_, xliii. 310) and in the Mostyn sale of 1919 (cf. t.p.
- facsimiles in Sotheby’s sale catalogue). For the problems of the
- early prints, the _Bibliographical Note_ to ch. xxii should be
- consulted.
-
- I ought to add that the notices of the early prints of plays
- in this and the following chapter lay no claim to minute
- bibliographical erudition, and that all deficiencies in this
- respect are likely to be corrected when the full results of Dr.
- Greg’s researches on the subject are published.
-
- The fundamental works on the history of the drama are A. W.
- Ward, _History of English Dramatic Literature_ (1875, 1899), F.
- G. Fleay, _Biographical Chronicle of the English Drama_ (1891),
- F. E. Schelling, _Elizabethan Drama_ (1908), the _Cambridge
- History of English Literature_, vols. v and vi (1910), and W.
- Creizenach, _Geschichte des neueren Dramas_, vols. iv, v (1909,
- 1916). These and others, with the relevant periodicals, are
- set out in the _General Bibliographical Note_ (vol. i); and to
- them may be added F. S. Boas, _Shakspere and his Predecessors_
- (1896), B. Matthews, _The Development of the Drama_ (1904), F.
- E. Schelling, _English Drama_ (1914), A. Wynne, _The Growth of
- English Drama_ (1914). Less systematic collections of studies
- are L. M. Griffiths, _Evenings with Shakespeare_ (1889), J. R.
- Lowell, _Old English Dramatists_ (1892), A. H. Tolman, _The
- Views about Hamlet_ (1904), C. Crawford, _Collectanea_ (1906–7),
- A. C. Swinburne, _The Age of Shakespeare_ (1908). The older
- critical work of Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, and others
- cannot be neglected, but need not be detailed here.
-
- Special dissertations on individual plays and playwrights
- are recorded in the body of this chapter. A few of wider
- scope may be roughly classified; as dealing with dramatic
- structure, H. Schwab, _Das Schauspiel im Schauspiel zur Zeit
- Shakespeares_ (1896), F. A. Foster, _Dumb Show in Elizabethan
- Drama before 1620_ (1911, _E. S._ xliv. 8); with types of
- drama, H. W. Singer, _Das bürgerliche Trauerspiel in England_
- (1891), J. Seifert, _Wit-und Science Moralitäten_ (1892), J. L.
- McConaughty, _The School Drama_ (1913), E. N. S. Thompson, _The
- English Moral Plays_ (1910), R. Fischer, _Zur Kunstentwickelung
- der englischen Tragödie bis zu Shakespeare_ (1893), A. C.
- Bradley, _Shakespearean Tragedy_ (1904), F. E. Schelling, _The
- English Chronicle Play_ (1902), L. N. Chase, _The English
- Heroic Play_ (1903), C. G. Child, _The Rise of the Heroic Play_
- (1904, _M. L. N._ xix), F. H. Ristine, _English Tragicomedy_
- (1910), C. R. Baskervill, _Some Evidence for Early Romantic
- Plays in England_ (1916, _M. P._ xiv. 229, 467), L. M. Ellison,
- _The Early Romantic Drama at the English Court_ (1917), H.
- Smith, _Pastoral Influence in the English Drama_ (1897, _M.
- L. A._ xii. 355). A. H. Thorndike, _The Pastoral Element in
- the English Drama before 1605_ (1900, _M. L. N._ xiv. 228), J.
- Laidler, _History of Pastoral Drama in England_ (1905, _E. S._
- xxxv. 193), W. W. Greg, _Pastoral Poetry and Pastoral Drama_
- (1906); with types of plot and characterization, H. Graf,
- _Der Miles Gloriosus im englischen Drama_ (1891), E. Meyer,
- _Machiavelli and the Elizabethan Drama_ (1897), G. B. Churchill,
- _Richard the Third up to Shakespeare_ (1900), L. W. Cushman,
- _The Devil and the Vice in the English Dramatic Literature
- before Shakespeare_ (1900), E. Eckhardt, _Die lustige Person
- im älteren englischen Drama_ (1902), F. E. Schelling, _Some
- Features of the Supernatural as Represented in Plays of the
- Reigns of Elizabeth and James_ (1903, _M. P._ i), H. Ankenbrand,
- _Die Figur des Geistes im Drama der englischen Renaissance_
- (1906), F. G. Hubbard, _Repetition and Parallelism in the
- Earlier Elizabethan Drama_ (1905, _M. L. A._ xx), E. Eckhardt,
- _Die Dialekt-und Ausländertypen des älteren englischen Dramas_
- (1910–11), V. O. Freeburg, _Disguise Plots in Elizabethan Drama_
- (1915); with _Quellenforschung_ and foreign influences, E.
- Koeppel, _Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen Jonson’s, Marston’s,
- und Beaumont und Fletcher’s_ (1895), _Quellen-Studien zu
- den Dramen Chapman’s, Massinger’s und Ford’s_ (1897), _Zur
- Quellen-Kunde der Stuarts-Dramen_ (1896, _Archiv_, xcvii),
- _Studien zur Geschichte der italienischen Novelle in der
- englischen Litteratur des sechzehnten Jahrhunderts_ (1892),
- L. L. Schücking, _Studien über die stofflichen Beziehungen
- der englischen Komödie zur italienischen bis Lilly_ (1901),
- A. Ott, _Die italienische Novelle im englischen Drama von
- 1600_ (1904), W. Smith, _The Commedia dell’ Arte_ (1912), M.
- A. Scott, _Elizabethan Translations from the Italian_ (1916),
- A. L. Stiefel, _Die Nachahmung spanischer Komödien in England
- unter den ersten Stuarts_ (1890), _Die Nachahmung spanischer
- Komödien in England_ (1897, _Archiv_, xcix), L. Bahlsen,
- _Spanische Quellen der dramatischen Litteratur besonders
- Englands zu Shakespeares Zeit_ (1893, _Z. f. vergleichende
- Litteraturgeschichte_, N. F. vi), A. S. W. Rosenbach, _The
- Curious Impertinent in English Drama_ (1902, _M. L. N._ xvii),
- J. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, _Cervantes in England_ (1905), J. W.
- Cunliffe, _The Influence of Seneca on Elizabethan Tragedy_
- (1893), O. Ballweg, _Das klassizistische Drama zur Zeit
- Shakespeares_ (1909), O. Ballmann, _Chaucers Einfluss auf das
- englische Drama_ (1902, _Anglia_, xxv), R. M. Smith, _Froissart
- and the English Chronicle Play_ (1915); with the interrelations
- of dramatists, A. H. Thorndike, _The Influence of Beaumont and
- Fletcher on Shakespeare_ (1901), E. Koeppel, _Studien über
- Shakespeares Wirkung auf zeitgenössische Dramatiker_ (1905),
- _Ben Jonson’s Wirkung auf zeitgenössische Dramatiker_ (1906).
-
- The special problem of the authorship of the so-called
- _Shakespeare Apocrypha_ is dealt with in the editions thereof
- described below, and by Halliwell-Phillipps (ii. 413), Ward (ii.
- 209), R. Sachs, _Die Shakespeare zugeschriebenen zweifelhaften
- Stücke_ (1892, _Jahrbuch_, xxvii), and A. F. Hopkinson,
- _Essays on Shakespeare’s Doubtful Plays_ (1900). The analogous
- question of the possible non-Shakespearian authorship of plays
- or parts of plays published as his is too closely interwoven
- with specifically Shakespearian literature to be handled here;
- J. M. Robertson, in _Did Shakespeare Write Titus Andronicus?_
- (1905), _Shakespeare and Chapman_ (1917), _The Shakespeare
- Canon_ (1922), is searching; other dissertations are cited
- under the plays or playwrights concerned. The attempts to use
- metrical or other ‘tests’ in the discrimination of authorship
- or of the chronology of work have been predominantly applied to
- Shakespeare, although Beaumont and Fletcher (_vide infra_) and
- others have not been neglected. The broader discussions of E.
- N. S. Thompson, _Elizabethan Dramatic Collaboration_ (1909, _E.
- S._ xl. 30) and E. H. C. Oliphant, _Problems of Authorship in
- Elizabethan Dramatic Literature_ (1911, _M. P._ viii, 411) are
- of value.
-
- To the general histories of Elizabethan literature named in
- the _General Bibliographical Note_ may be added _Chambers’s
- Cyclopaedia of English Literature_ (1901–3), E. Gosse, _Modern
- English Literature_ (1897), G. Saintsbury, _Short History of
- English Literature_ (1900), A. Lang, _English Literature from
- ‘Beowulf’ to Swinburne_ (1912), W. Minto, _Characteristics of
- English Poets from Chaucer to Shirley_ (1874), G. Saintsbury,
- _Elizabethan Literature_ (1887), E. Gosse, _The Jacobean Poets_
- (1894), T. Seccombe and J. W. Allen, _The Age of Shakespeare_
- (1903), F. E. Schelling, _English Literature during the Lifetime
- of Shakespeare_ (1910); and for the international relations, G.
- Saintsbury, _The Earlier Renaissance_ (1901), D. Hannay, _The
- Later Renaissance_ (1898), H. J. C. Grierson, _The First Half of
- the Seventeenth Century_ (1906), C. H. Herford, _The Literary
- Relations of England and Germany in the Sixteenth Century_
- (1886), L. Einstein, _The Italian Renaissance in England_
- (1902), S. Lee, _The French Renaissance in England_ (1910), J.
- G. Underhill, _Spanish Literature in the England of the Tudors_
- (1899).
-
- I append a chronological list of miscellaneous collections of
- plays, covering those of more than one author. A few of minimum
- importance are omitted.
-
- (_a_) _Shakespeare Apocrypha_
-
- 1664. M^r William Shakespear’s Comedies, Histories, and
- Tragedies. Published according to the true Original Copies.
- The Third Impression. And unto this Impression is added seven
- Playes, never before printed in Folio, viz. Pericles Prince of
- Tyre. The London Prodigall. The History of Thomas L^d Cromwell.
- Sir John Oldcastle Lord Cobham. The Puritan Widow. A Yorkshire
- Tragedy. The Tragedy of Locrine. _For P[hilip] C[hetwinde]._ [A
- second issue of the Third Folio (F_{3}) of Shakespeare. I cite
- these as ‘The 7 Plays’.]
-
- 1685. M^r William Shakespear’s Comedies, Histories, and
- Tragedies.... The Fourth Edition. _For H. Herringman, E.
- Brewster, and R. Bentley._ [The Fourth Folio (F_{4}) of
- Shakespeare, The 7 Plays.]
-
- 1709, 1714. N. Rowe, _The Works of Sh._ [The 7 Plays in vol. vi
- of 1709 and vol. viii of 1714.]
-
- 1728, &c. A. Pope, _The Works of Sh._ [The 7 Plays in vol. ix of
- 1728.]
-
- 1780. [E. Malone], _Supplement to the Edition of Sh.’s Plays
- published in 1778 by S. Johnson and G. Steevens_. [The 7 Plays
- in vol. ii.]
-
- 1848, 1855. W. G. Simms, _A Supplement to the Works of Sh._ (New
- York). [_T. N. K._ and the 7 Plays, except _Pericles_.]
-
- N.D. [1851?]. H. Tyrrell, _The Doubtful Plays of Sh._ [The 7
- Plays, _T. A._, _Edward III_, _Merry Devil of Edmonton_, _Fair
- Em_, _Mucedorus_, _Arden of Feversham_, _Birth of Merlin_, _T.
- N. K._]
-
- 1852, 1887. W. Hazlitt, _The Supplementary Works of Sh._ [The 7
- Plays, _T. A._]
-
- 1854–74. N. Delius, _Pseudo-Shakespere’sche Dramen_. [_Edward
- III_ (1854), _Arden of Feversham_ (1855), _Birth of Merlin_
- (1856), _Mucedorus_ (1874), _Fair Em_ (1874), separately.]
-
- 1869. M. Moltke, _Doubtful Plays of Sh._ (Tauchnitz). [_Edward
- III_, _Thomas Lord Cromwell_, _Locrine_, _Yorkshire Tragedy_,
- _London Prodigal_, _Birth of Merlin_.]
-
- 1883–8. K. Warnke und L. Proescholdt, _Pseudo-Shakespearian
- Plays_. [_Fair Em_ (1883), _Merry Devil of Edmonton_ (1884),
- _Edward III_ (1886), _Birth of Merlin_ (1887), _Arden of
- Feversham_ (1888), separately, with _Mucedorus_ (1878) outside
- the series.]
-
- 1891–1914. A. F. Hopkinson, _Sh.’s Doubtful Plays_ (1891–5).
- _Old English Plays_ (1901–2). _Sh.’s Doubtful Works_ (1910–11).
- [Under the above collective titles were issued some, but not
- all, of a series of plays bearing separate dates as follows:
- _Thomas Lord Cromwell_ (1891, 1899), _Yorkshire Tragedy_ (1891,
- 1910), _Edward III_ (1891, 1911), _Merry Devil of Edmonton_
- (1891, 1914), _Warning for Fair Women_ (1891, 1904), _Locrine_
- (1892), _Birth of Merlin_ (1892, 1901), _London Prodigal_
- (1893), _Mucedorus_ (1893), _Sir John Oldcastle_ (1894),
- _Puritan_ (1894), _T. N. K._ (1894), _Fair Em_ (1895), _Famous
- Victories of Henry V_ (1896), _Contention of York and Lancaster_
- (1897), _Arden of Feversham_ (1898, 1907), _True Tragedy of
- Richard III_ (1901), _Sir Thomas More_ (1902). My list may not
- be complete.]
-
- 1908. C. F. T. Brooke, _The Sh. Apocrypha_. [The 7 Plays except
- _Pericles_, _Arden of Feversham_, _Edward III_, _Mucedorus_,
- _Merry Devil of Edmonton_, _Fair Em_, _T. N. K._, _Birth of
- Merlin_, _Sir Thomas More_.]
-
- (_b_) _General Collections_
-
- 1744. _A Select Collection of Old Plays._ 12 vols. (Dodsley).
- [Cited as _Dodsley_^1.]
-
- 1750. [W. R. Chetwood], _A Select Collection of Old Plays_
- (Dublin).
-
- 1773. T. Hawkins, _The Origin of the English Drama_. 3 vols.
-
- 1779. [J. Nichols], _Six Old Plays_. 2 vols.
-
- 1780. _A Select Collection of Old Plays._ The Second Edition ...
- by I. Reed. 12 vols. (Dodsley). [Cited as Dodsley^2.]
-
- 1810. [Sir W. Scott], _The Ancient British Drama_. 3 vols.
- (W. Miller). [Cited as _A. B. D._]
-
- 1811. [Sir W. Scott], _The Modern British Drama_. 5 vols.
- (W. Miller). [Cited as _M. B. D._]
-
- 1814–15. [C. W. Dilke], _Old English Plays_. 6 vols. [Cited
- as _O. E. P._]
-
- 1825. _The Old English Drama._ 2 vols. (Hurst, Robinson, & Co.,
- and A. Constable). [Most of the plays have the separate imprint
- of C. Baldwyn, 1824.]
-
- 1825–7. _Select Collection of Old Plays._ A new edition ... by
- I. Reed, O. Gilchrist and [J. P. Collier]. 12 vols. [Cited as
- Dodsley^3.]
-
- 1830. _The Old English Drama._ 3 vols. (Thomas White).
-
- 1833. J. P. Collier, _Five Old Plays_ (W. Pickering).
- [Half-title has ‘Old Plays, vol. xiii’, as a supplement to
- Dodsley.]
-
- 1841–53. _Publications of the Shakespeare Society._ [Include,
- besides several plays of T. Heywood (q.v.), Dekker, Chettle,
- and Haughton’s _Patient Grissell_, Munday’s _John a Kent
- and John a Cumber_, Legge’s _Richardus Tertius_, Norton and
- Sackville’s _Gorboduc_, Merbury’s _Marriage between Wit and
- Wisdom_, and _Sir Thomas More_, _True Tragedy of Richard III_,
- _1 Contention_, _True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York_, _Taming
- of A Shrew_, _Timon_, by various editors. Some copies of these
- plays, not including Heywood’s, were bound up in 4 vols., with
- the general date 1853, as a _Supplement_ to Dodsley.]
-
- 1848. F. J. Child, _Four Old Plays_.
-
- 1851. J. P. Collier, _Five Old Plays_ (Roxburghe Club).
-
- 1870. J. S. Keltie, _The Works of the British Dramatists_.
-
- [Many of the collections enumerated above are obsolete, and I
- have not usually thought it worth while to record here the plays
- included in them. Lists of the contents of most of them are
- given in Hazlitt; _Manual_, 267.]
-
- 1874–6. _A Select Collection of Old English Plays_: Fourth
- Edition, now first Chronologically Arranged, Revised and
- Enlarged; with the notes of all the Commentators, and New Notes,
- by W. C. Hazlitt. Vols. i-ix (1874), x-xiv (1875), xv (1876).
- [Cited as Dodsley, or Dodsley^4; incorporates with Collier’s
- edition of Dodsley the collections of 1833, 1848, 1851, and
- 1853.]
-
- 1875. W. C. Hazlitt, _Shakespeare’s Library_. Second Edition.
- Part i, 4 vols.; Part ii, 2 vols. [Part i is based on
- Collier’s _Shakespeare’s Library_ (1844). Part ii, based
- on the collections of 1779 and 1841–53, adds the dramatic
- sources, Warner’s _Menaechmi_, _True Tragedie of Richard
- III_, Legge’s _Richardus Tertius_, _Troublesome Raigne of
- John_, _Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth_, _1 Contention of
- York and Lancaster_, _True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York_,
- Shakespeare’s _Merry Wives of Windsor_ (Q_{1}), Whetstone’s
- _Promos and Cassandra_, _King Leire_, _Timon_, _Taming of A
- Shrew_.]
-
- 1878. R. Simpson, _The School of Shakspere_. 2 vols. [_Captain
- Thomas Stukeley_, _Nobody and Somebody_, _Histriomastix_, _Jack
- Drum’s Entertainment_, _Warning for Fair Women_, _Fair Em_, with
- _A Larum for London_ (1872) separately printed.]
-
- 1882–5. A. H. Bullen, _A Collection of Old English Plays_. 4
- vols. [Cited as Bullen, _O. E. P. Maid’s Metamorphosis_,
- _Noble Soldier_, _Sir Giles Goosecap_, _Wisdom of Doctor
- Dodipoll_, _Charlemagne or The Distracted Emperor_, _Trial of
- Chivalry_, Yarington’s _Two Lamentable Tragedies_, _Costly
- Whore_, _Every Woman in her Humour_, with later plays.]
-
- [1885]-91. _43 Shakspere Quarto Facsimiles._ Issued under the
- superintendence of F. J. Furnivall. [Photographic facsimiles
- by W. Griggs and C. Praetorius, with introductions by various
- editors, including, besides accepted Shakespearian plays,
- _Pericles_ (Q_{1}, Q_{2}), _1 Contention_ (Q_{1}), _True Tragedy
- of Richard Duke of York_ (Q_{1}), _Whole Contention_ (Q_{3}),
- _Famous Victories of Henry V_ (Q_{1}), _Troublesome Raigne of
- John_ (Q_{1}), _Taming of A Shrew_ (Q_{1}).]
-
- 1888. _Nero and other Plays_ (Mermaid Series). [_Nero_ (1624),
- Porter’s _Two Angry Women of Abingdon_, Day’s _Parliament
- of Bees_ and _Humour Out of Breath_, Field’s _Woman is a
- Weathercock_ and _Amends for Ladies_, by various editors.]
-
- 1896–1905. _The Temple Dramatists._ [Cited as _T. D._ Single
- plays by various editors, including, besides plays of Beaumont
- and Fletcher, Dekker, Heywood, Jonson, Kyd, Marlowe, Peele,
- Udall, Webster (q.v.), _Arden of Feversham_, _Edward III_,
- _Merry Devil of Edmonton_, _Selimus_, _T. N. K._, _Return from
- Parnassus_.]
-
- 1897. J. M. Manly, _Specimens of the Pre-Shakspearean Drama_.
- 2 vols. issued. [Udall’s _Roister Doister_, _Gammer Gurton’s
- Needle_, Preston’s _Cambyses_, Norton and Sackville’s
- _Gorboduc_, Lyly’s _Campaspe_, Greene’s _James IV_, Peele’s
- _David and Bethsabe_, Kyd’s _Spanish Tragedy_ in vol. ii;
- earlier plays in vol. i.]
-
- 1897. H. A. Evans, _English Masques_ (Warwick Library). [Ten
- masks by Jonson (q.v.), Daniel’s _Twelve Goddesses_, Campion’s
- _Lords’ Mask_, Beaumont’s _Inner Temple Mask_, _Mask of
- Flowers_, and later masks.]
-
- 1897–1912. _Jahrbuch der deutschen Shakespeare-Gesellschaft_,
- vols. xxxiii-xlviii. [Wilson’s _Cobbler’s Prophecy_ (1897), _1
- Richard II_ (1899), Wager’s _The Longer Thou Livest, the More
- Fool Thou Art_ (1900), _The Wars of Cyrus_ (1901), Jonson’s
- _E. M. I._ (1902), Lupton’s _All for Money_ (1904), Wapull’s
- _The Tide Tarrieth No Man_ (1907), Lumley’s translation of
- _Iphigenia_ (1910), _Caesar and Pompey_, or _Caesar’s Revenge_
- (1911, 1912), by various editors.]
-
- 1898. A. Brandl, _Quellen des weltlichen Dramas in England vor
- Shakespeare_. Ein Ergänzungsband zu Dodsley’s Old English Plays.
- (_Quellen und Forschungen_, lxxx.) [_King Darius_, _Misogonus_,
- _Horestes_, Wilmot’s _Gismond of Salern_, _Common Conditions_,
- and earlier plays.]
-
- 1902–8. _The Belles Lettres Series._ Section iii. _The English
- Drama._ General Editor, G. P. Baker. [Cited as _B. L._ Plays
- of Beaumont and Fletcher, Chapman, Dekker, Gascoigne, Jonson,
- Webster (q.v.), in separate volumes by various editors.]
-
- 1902–14. _Materialien zur Kunde des älteren englischen Dramas_
- ... begründet und herausgegeben von W. Bang. 44 vols. issued.
- (A. Uystpruyst, Louvain.) [Includes, with other ‘material’, text
- facsimile reprints of plays, &c., of Barnes, Brewer, Daniel,
- Chettle and Day, Dekker, Heywood, Jonson, Mason, Sharpham
- (q.v.), with _How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_,
- _Sir Giles Goosecap_, the Latin _Victoria_ of A. Fraunce and
- _Pedantius_, and translations from Seneca.]
-
- 1903, 1913, 1914. C. M. Gayley, _Representative English
- Comedies_. 3 vols. [Plays of Udall, Lyly, Peele, Greene, Porter,
- Jonson, and Dekker, with _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_, _Eastward
- Ho!_, _Merry Devil of Edmonton_, and later plays, by various
- editors.]
-
- 1905–8. J. S. Farmer, _Publications of the Early English Drama
- Society_. [Modernized texts, mainly of little value, but
- including a volume of _Recently Recovered Plays_, from the
- quartos in the Irish sale of 1906.]
-
- 1907–20. _Malone Society Reprints._ 46 vols. issued. [In
- progress; text-facsimile reprints of separate plays, by various
- editors, under general editorship of W. W. Greg; cited as _M. S.
- R._]
-
- 1907–14. J. S. Farmer, _The Tudor Facsimile Texts_, with a Hand
- List (1914). [Photographic facsimiles, mostly by R. B. Fleming;
- cited as _T. F. T._ The Hand List states that 184 vols. are
- included in the collection, but I believe that some were not
- actually issued before the editor’s death. Some or all of these,
- with reissues of others, appear in _Old English Plays, Student’s
- Facsimile Edition_; cited as _S. F. T._]
-
- 1908–14. _The Shakespeare Classics._ General Editor, I.
- Gollancz. (_The Shakespeare Library_). [Includes Warner’s
- _Menaechmi_ and _Leire_, _Taming of A Shrew_, and _Troublesome
- Reign of King John_.]
-
- 1911. W. A. Neilson, _The Chief Elizabethan Dramatists excluding
- Shakespeare_. [Plays by Lyly, Peele, Greene, Marlowe, Kyd,
- Chapman, Jonson, Dekker, Marston, Heywood, Beaumont, Fletcher,
- Webster, Middleton, and later writers; cited as _C. E. D._]
-
- 1911. R. W. Bond, _Early Plays from the Italian_. [Gascoigne’s
- _Supposes_, _Bugbears_, _Misogonus_.]
-
- 1912. J. W. Cunliffe, _Early English Classical Tragedies_.
- [Norton and Sackville’s _Gorboduc_, Gascoigne and Kinwelmersh’s
- _Jocasta_, Wilmot’s _Gismond of Salerne_, Hughes’s _Misfortunes
- of Arthur_.]
-
- 1912. _Masterpieces of the English Drama._ General Editor, F.
- E. Schelling, [Cited as _M. E. D._ Plays of Marlowe, Beaumont
- and Fletcher, Webster and Tourneur (q.v.), with Massinger and
- Congreve, in separate volumes by various editors.]
-
- 1915. C. B. Wheeler, _Six Plays by Contemporaries of
- Shakespeare_ (_World’s Classics_). [Dekker’s _Shoemaker’s
- Holiday_, Beaumont and Fletcher’s _K. B. P._ and _Philaster_,
- Webster’s _White Devil_ and _Duchess of Malfi_, Massinger’s _New
- Way to Pay Old Debts_.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-[In this chapter I give under the head of each playwright (_a_) a
-brief sketch of his life in relation to the stage, (_b_) a list of
-contemporary and later collections of his dramatic works, (_c_) a list
-of dissertations (books, pamphlets, articles in journals) bearing
-generally upon his life and works. Then I take each play, mask, &c., up
-to 1616 and give (_a_) the MSS. if any; (_b_) the essential parts of
-the entry, if any, on the Stationers’ Register, including in brackets
-the name of any licenser other than an official of the Company, and
-occasionally adding a note of any transfer of copyright which seems
-of exceptional interest; (_c_) the essential parts of the title-page
-of the first known print; (_d_) a note of its prologues, epilogues,
-epistles, and other introductory matter; (_e_) the dates and imprints
-of later prints before the end of the seventeenth century with any new
-matter from their t.ps. bearing on stage history; (_f_) lists of all
-important 18th-20th century editions and dissertations, not of the
-collective or general type already dealt with; (_g_) such notes as may
-seem desirable on authorship, date, stage history and the like. Some
-of these notes are little more than compilations; others contain the
-results of such work as I have myself been able to do on the plays
-concerned. Similarly, I have in some cases recorded, on the authority
-of others, editions and dissertations which I have not personally
-examined. The section devoted to each playwright concludes with lists
-of work not extant and of work of which his authorship has, often
-foolishly, been conjectured. I ought to make it clear that many of my
-title-pages are borrowed from Dr. Greg, and that, while I have tried to
-give what is useful for the history of the stage, I have no competence
-in matters of minute bibliographical accuracy.]
-
-
-WILLIAM ALABASTER (1567–1640)
-
-Alabaster, or Alablaster, was born at Hadleigh, Suffolk, in 1567 and
-entered Trinity College, Cambridge, from Westminster in 1583. His Latin
-poem _Eliseis_ is mentioned by Spenser in _Colin Clout’s Come Home
-Again_ (1591). He was incorporated M.A. of Oxford in 1592, and went as
-chaplain to Essex in the Cadiz expedition of 1596. On 22 Sept. 1597
-Richard Percival wrote to Sir Robert Cecil (_Hatfield MSS._ vii. 394),
-‘Alabaster has made a tragedy against the Church of England’. Perhaps
-this is not to be taken literally, but only refers to his conversion
-to Catholicism. Chamberlain, 7, 64, records that he was ‘clapt up for
-poperie’, had escaped from the Clink by 4 May 1598, but was recaptured
-at Rochelle. This was about the beginning of Aug. 1599 (_Hatfield
-MSS._ ix. 282). Later he was reconverted and at his death in 1640 held
-the living of Therfield, Herts. He wrote on mystical theology, and a
-manuscript collection of 43 sonnets, mostly unprinted, is described by
-B. Dobell in _Athenaeum_ (1903), ii. 856.
-
- _Roxana. c. 1592_
-
-[_MSS._] _T. C. C. MS._ (‘Authore Domino Alabaster’); _Camb. Univ. MS._
-Ff. ii. 9; _Lambeth MS._ 838 (‘finis Roxanae Alabastricae’).
-
-_S. R._ 1632, May 9 (Herbert). ‘A Tragedy in Latyn called Roxana &c.’
-_Andrew Crooke_ (Arber, iv. 277).
-
-1632. Roxana Tragædia olim Cantabrigiae, Acta in Col. Trin. Nunc
-primum in lucem edita, summaque cum diligentia ad castigatissimum
-exemplar comparata. _R. Badger for Andrew Crook._ [At end is Herbert’s
-imprimatur, dated ‘1 March, 1632’.]
-
-1632. Roxana Tragædia a plagiarii unguibus vindicata, aucta, & agnita
-ab Authore Gulielmo Alabastro. _William Jones._ [Epistle by Gulielmus
-Alabaster to Sir Ralph Freeman; commendatory verses by Hugo Hollandius
-and Tho. Farnabius; engraved title-page, with representation of a stage
-(cf. ch. xviii, _Bibl. Note_).]
-
-The Epistle has ‘Ante quadraginta plus minus annos, morticinum
-hoc edidi duarum hebdomadarum abortum, et unius noctis spectaculo
-destinatum, non aevi integri’. The play is a Latin version of Luigi
-Groto’s _La Dalida_ (1567).
-
-
-SIR WILLIAM ALEXANDER, EARL OF STIRLING (_c._ 1568–1640).
-
-William Alexander of Menstrie, after an education at Glasgow and Leyden
-and travel in France, Spain, and Italy, was tutor to Prince Henry
-before the accession of James, and afterwards Gentleman extraordinary
-of the Privy Chamber both to Henry and to Charles. He was knighted
-about 1609, appointed a Master of Requests in 1614 and Secretary for
-Scotland in 1626. He was created Earl of Stirling in 1633. He formed
-literary friendships with Michael Drayton and William Drummond of
-Hawthornden, but Jonson complained (Laing, 11) that ‘Sir W. Alexander
-was not half kinde unto him, and neglected him, because a friend to
-Drayton’. His four tragedies read like closet plays, and his only
-connexion with the stage appears to be in some verses to Alleyn after
-the foundation of Dulwich in 1619 (Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_, 178).
-
- _Collections_
-
-_S. R._ 1604, April 30 (by order of Court). ‘A booke Called The Woorkes
-of William Alexander of Menstrie Conteyninge The Monarchicke Tragedies,
-Paranethis to the Prince and Aurora.’ _Edward Blunt_ (Arber, iii. 260).
-
-1604. The Monarchicke Tragedies. By William Alexander of Menstrie. _V.
-S. for Edward Blount._ [_Croesus_ and _Darius_ (with a separate t.p.).]
-
-1607. The Monarchick Tragedies; Croesus, Darius, The Alexandraean,
-Iulius Caesar, Newly enlarged. By William Alexander, Gentleman of the
-Princes priuie Chamber. _Valentine Simmes for Ed. Blount._ [New issue,
-with additions. _Julius Caesar_ has separate t.p. Commendatory verses,
-signed ‘Robert Ayton’.]
-
-1616. The Monarchicke Tragedies. The third Edition. By S^r. W.
-Alexander Knight. _William Stansby._ [_Croesus_, _Darius_, _The
-Alexandraean Tragedy_, _Julius Caesar_, in revised texts, the last
-three with separate t.ps.]
-
-1637. Recreations with the Muses. By William Earle of Sterline. _Tho.
-Harper._ [_Croesus_, _Darius_, _The Alexandraean Tragedy_, _Julius
-Caesar_.]
-
-1870–2. _Poetical Works._ 3 vols.
-
-1921. L. E. Kastner and H. B. Charlton, _The Poetical Works of
-Sir William Alexander, Earl of Stirling_. Vol. i. The Dramatic
-Works.--_Dissertations_: C. Rogers, _Memorials of the Earl of S. and
-the House of A._ (1877); H. Beumelburg, _Sir W. A. Graf von S., als
-dramatischer Dichter_ (1880, Halle _diss._).
-
- _Darius > 1603_
-
-1603. _The Tragedie of Darius._ By William Alexander of Menstrie.
-_Robert Waldegrave. Edinburgh._ [Verses to James VI; Epistle to
-Reader; Commendatory verses by ‘Io Murray’ and ‘W. Quin’.]
-
-1604. _G. Elde for Edward Blount._ [Part of _Coll._ 1604, with separate
-t.p.; also in later _Colls._ Two sets of verses to King at end.]
-
- _Croesus > 1604_
-
-1604. [Part of _Coll._ 1604; also in later _Colls._ Argument; Verses to
-King at end.]
-
- _The Alexandraean Tragedy > 1607_
-
-1605? [Hazlitt, _Manual_, 7, and others cite a print of this date,
-which is not confirmed by Greg, _Plays_, 1.]
-
-1607. (_Running Title_). The Alexandraean Tragedie. [Part of _Coll._
-1607; also in later _Colls._ Argument.]
-
- _Julius Caesar > 1607_
-
-1607. The Tragedie of Iulius Caesar. By William Alexander, Gentleman of
-the Princes priuie Chamber. _Valentine Simmes for Ed. Blount._ [Part of
-_Coll._ 1607, with separate t.p.; also in later _Colls._ Argument.]
-
-_Edition_ in H. H. Furness, _Julius Caesar_ (1913, _New Variorum
-Shakespeare_, xvii).
-
-
-WILLIAM ALLEY (_c._ 1510–70).
-
-Alley’s Πτωχὸμυσεῖον. _The Poore Mans Librarie_ (1565) contains three
-and a half pages of dialogue between Larymos and Phronimos, described
-as from ‘a certaine interlude or plaie intituled _Aegio_. In the which
-playe ij persons interlocutorie do dispute, the one alledging for the
-defence of destenie and fatall necessitie, and the other confuting the
-same’. P. Simpson (_9 N. Q._ iii. 205) suggests that Alley was probably
-himself the author. The book consists of _praelectiones_ delivered in
-1561 at St. Paul’s, of which Alley had been a Prebendary. He became
-Bishop of Exeter in 1560. On his attitude to the public stage, cf. App.
-C. No. viii. It is therefore odd to find the Lord Bishop’s players at
-Barnstaple and Plymouth in 1560–1 (Murray, ii. 78).
-
-
-ROBERT AMERIE (_c._ 1610).
-
-The deviser of the show of _Chester’s Triumph_ (1610). See ch. xxiv (C).
-
-
-ROBERT ARMIN (> 1588–1610 <). For biography see Actors (ch. xv).
-
- _The Two Maids of Moreclacke. 1607–8_ (?)
-
-1609. The History of the two Maids of Moreclacke, With the life and
-simple maner of Iohn in the Hospitall. Played by the Children of the
-Kings Maiesties Reuels. Written by Robert Armin, seruant to the Kings
-most excellent Maiestie. _N. O. for Thomas Archer._ [Epistle to Reader,
-signed ‘Robert Armin’.]
-
-_Editions_ in A. B. Grosart, _Works of R. A. Actor_ (1880, _Choice
-Rarities of Ancient English Poetry_, ii), 63, and J. S. Farmer (1913,
-_S. F. T._). The epistle says that the play was ‘acted by the boyes of
-the Reuels, which perchaunce in part was sometime acted more naturally
-in the Citty, if not in the hole’, that the writer ‘would haue againe
-inacted Iohn my selfe but ... I cannot do as I would’, and that he had
-been ‘requested both of Court and Citty, to show him in priuate’. John
-is figured in a woodcut on the title-page, which is perhaps meant for
-a portrait of Armin. As a King’s man, and no boy, he can hardly have
-played with the King’s Revels; perhaps we should infer that the play
-was not originally written for them. All their productions seem to date
-from 1607–8.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-Armin has been guessed at as the R. A. of _The Valiant Welshman_.
-
-
-THOMAS ASHTON (_ob._ 1578).
-
-Ashton took his B.A. in 1559–60, and became Fellow of Trinity,
-Cambridge. He was appointed Head Master of Shrewsbury School from 24
-June 1561 (G. W. Fisher, _Annals of Shrewsbury School_, 4). To the
-same year a local record, Robert Owen’s _Arms of the Bailiffs_ (17th
-c.), assigns ‘M^r Astons first playe upon the Passion of Christ’,
-and this is confirmed by an entry in the town accounts (Owen and
-Blakeway, _Hist. of Shrewsbury_, i. 353) of 20s. ‘spent upon M^r Aston
-and a other gentellmane of Cambridge over pareadijs’ on 25 May 1561.
-Whitsuntide plays had long been traditional at Shrewsbury (_Mediaeval
-Stage_, ii. 250, 394, where the dates require correction). A local
-chronicle (_Shropshire Arch. Soc. Trans._ xxxvii. 54) has ‘Elizabeth
-1565 [i. e. 1566; cf. App. A], The Queen came to Coventry intending
-for Salop to see M^r Astons Play, but it was ended. The Play was
-performed in the Quarry, and lasted the Whitson [June 2] hollydays’.
-This play is given in _Mediaeval Stage_, from local historians, as
-_Julian the Apostate_, but the same chronicle assigns that to 1556.
-Another chronicle (_Taylor MS._ of 16th-17th c.) records for 1568–9
-(_Shropshire Arch. Soc. Trans._ iii. 268), ‘This yeare at Whytsoontyde
-[29 May] was a notable stage playe playeed in Shrosberie in a place
-there callyd the quarrell which lastid all the hollydayes unto the
-which cam greate number of people of noblemen and others the which
-was praysed greatlye and the chyff aucter therof was one Master Astoon
-beinge the head scoolemaster of the freescole there a godly and lernyd
-man who tooke marvelous greate paynes therin’. Robert Owen, who calls
-this Aston’s ‘great playe’ of the _Passion of Christ_, assigns it
-to 1568, but it is clear from the town accounts that 1569 is right
-(Fisher, 18). This is presumably the play referred to by Thomas
-Churchyard (q.v.) in _The Worthiness of Wales_ (1587, ed. Spenser Soc.
-85), where after describing ‘behind the walles ... a ground, newe
-made Theator wise’, able to seat 10,000, and used for plays, baiting,
-cockfights, and wrestling, he adds:
-
- At Astons Play, who had beheld this then,
- Might well have seene there twentie thousand men.
-
-In the margin he comments, ‘Maister Aston was a good and godly
-Preacher’. A ‘ludus in quarell’ is noted in 1495, and this was ‘where
-the plases [? playes] have bine accustomyd to be usyd’ in 1570
-(_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 251, 255). Ashton resigned his Mastership
-about 1571 and was in the service of the Earl of Essex at Chartley in
-1573. But he continued to work on the Statutes of the school, which as
-settled in 1578, the year of his death, provide that ‘Everie Thursdaie
-the Schollers of the first forme before they goo to plaie shall for
-exercise declame and plaie one acte of a comedie’ (Fisher, 17, 23; E.
-Calvert, _Shrewsbury School Register_). It is interesting to note that
-among Ashton’s pupils were Sir Philip Sidney and Fulke Greville, Lord
-Brooke, who entered the school together on 16 Nov. 1564.
-
-
-JAMES ASKE (_c._ 1588).
-
-Author of _Elizabetha Triumphans_ (1588), an account of Elizabeth’s
-visit to Tilbury. See ch. xxiv (C).
-
-
-THOMAS ATCHELOW (_c._ 1589).
-
-The reference to him in Nashe’s _Menaphon_ epistle (App. C, No. xlii)
-rather suggests that he may have written plays.
-
-
-FRANCIS BACON (1561–1626).
-
-Bacon was son of Sir Nicholas Bacon, Lord Keeper, by Anne, daughter
-of Sir Anthony Cooke. He was at Trinity, Cambridge, from April 1573
-to March 1575, and entered Gray’s Inn in June 1576. He sat in the
-Parliaments of 1584 and 1586, and about 1591 attached himself to the
-rising fortunes of the Earl of Essex, who in 1595 gave him an estate
-at Twickenham. His public employment began as a Queen’s Counsel about
-1596. He was knighted on 23 July 1603, became Solicitor-General on 25
-June 1607, Attorney-General on 27 Oct. 1613, Lord Keeper on 7 March
-1617, and Lord Chancellor on 7 Jan. 1618. He was created Lord Verulam
-on 12 July 1618, and Viscount St. Albans on 27 Jan. 1621. Later in the
-same year he was disgraced for bribery. The edition of his _Works_
-(with his _Letters and Life_) by J. Spedding, R. L. Ellis, and D. D.
-Heath (1857–74) is exhaustive. Many papers of his brother Anthony
-are at Lambeth, and are drawn on by T. Birch, _Memoirs of the Reign
-of Elizabeth_ (1754). F. J. Burgoyne, _Facsimile of a Manuscript at
-Alnwick_ (1904), reproduces the _Northumberland MS._ which contains
-some of his writings, with others that may be his, and seems once to
-have contained more. Apart from philosophy, his chief literary work was
-_The Essayes or Counsels, Civill and Morall_, of which 10 appeared in
-1597, and were increased to 38 in 1612 and 58 in 1625. Essay xxxvii,
-added in 1625, is _Of Masks and Triumphs_, and, although Bacon was not
-a writer for the public stage, he had a hand, as deviser or patron, in
-several courtly shows.
-
-(i) He helped to devise dumb-shows for Thomas Hughes’s _Misfortunes
-of Arthur_ (q.v.) given by Gray’s Inn at Greenwich on 28 Feb. 1588.
-
-(ii) The list of contents of the _Northumberland MS._ (Burgoyne, xii)
-includes an item, now missing from the MS., ‘Orations at Graies Inne
-Revells’, and Spedding, viii. 342, conjectures that Bacon wrote the
-speeches of the six councillors delivered on 3 Jan. 1595 as part of the
-_Gesta Grayorum_ (q.v.).
-
-(iii) Rowland Whyte (_Sydney Papers_, i. 362) describes a device on
-the Queen’s day (17 Nov.), 1595, in which the speeches turned on the
-Earl of Essex’s love for Elizabeth, who said that, ‘if she had thought
-there had been so much said of her, she would not have been there that
-night’. A draft list of tilters, of whom the challengers were led
-by the Earl of Cumberland and the defendants by the Earl of Essex,
-is in _Various MSS._ iv. 163, and a final one, with descriptions of
-their appearance, in the _Anglorum Feriae_ of Peele (q.v.). They were
-Cumberland, Knight of the Crown, Essex, Sussex, Southampton, as Sir
-Bevis, Bedford, Compton, Carew, the three brothers Knollys, Dudley,
-William Howard, Drury, Nowell, John Needham, Skydmore, Ratcliffe,
-Reynolds, Charles Blount, Carey. The device took place partly in the
-tiltyard, partly after supper. Before the entry of the tilters a page
-made a speech and secured the Queen’s glove. A dialogue followed
-between a Squire on one hand, and a Hermit, a Secretary, and a Soldier,
-who on the entry of Essex tried to beguile him from love. A postboy
-brought letters, which the Secretary gave to Essex. After supper,
-the argument between the Squire and the three tempters was resumed.
-Whyte adds, ‘The old man [the Hermit] was he that in Cambridg played
-Giraldy; Morley played the Secretary; and he that plaid Pedantiq was
-the soldior; and Toby Matthew acted the Squires part. The world makes
-many untrue constructions of these speaches, comparing the Hermitt and
-the Secretary to two of the Lords [Burghley and Robert Cecil?]; and the
-soldier to Sir Roger Williams.’ The Cambridge reference is apparently
-to _Laelia_ (q.v.) and the performers of the Hermit and Soldier were
-therefore George Meriton and George Mountaine, of Queen’s. Morley might
-perhaps be Thomas Morley, the musician, a Gentleman of the Chapel.
-
-Several speeches, apparently belonging to this device, are preserved.
-Peele speaks of the balancing of Essex between war and statecraft as
-indicated in the tiltyard by ‘His mute approach and action of his
-mutes’, but they may have presented a written speech.
-
-(_a_) _Lambeth MS._ v. 118 (copied by Birch in _Sloane MS._ 4457, f.
-32) has, in Bacon’s hand, a speech by the Squire in the tiltyard, and
-four speeches by the Hermit, Soldier, Secretary, and Squire ‘in the
-Presence’. These are printed by Birch (1763), Nichols, _Eliz._ iii.
-372, and Spedding, viii. 378.
-
-(_b_) _Lambeth MS._ viii. 274 (copied by Birch in _Addl. MS._ 4164, f.
-167) has, in Bacon’s hand, the beginning of a speech by the Secretary
-to the Squire, which mentions Philautia and Erophilus, and a letter
-from Philautia to the Queen. These are printed in Spedding, viii. 376.
-
-(_c_) The _Northumberland MS._ ff. 47–53 (Burgoyne, 55) has ‘Speeches
-for my Lord of Essex at the tylt’. These deal with the attempts of
-Philautia to beguile Erophilus. Four of them are identical with the
-four speeches ‘in the Presence’ of (_a_); the fifth is a speech by the
-Hermit in the tiltyard. They were printed by Spedding, separately, in
-1870, as _A Conference of Pleasure composed for some festive occasion
-about the year 1592 by Francis Bacon_; but 1592 is merely a guess which
-Whyte’s letter corrects.
-
-(_d_) _S. P. D. Eliz._ ccliv. 67, 68, docketed ‘A Device made by the
-Earl of Essex for the Entertainment of her Majesty’, has a speech
-by the Squire, distinct from any in the other MSS., a speech by the
-Attendant on an Indian Prince, which mentions Philautia, and a draft by
-Edward Reynolds, servant to Essex, of a French speech by Philautia. The
-two first of these are printed by Spedding, viii. 388, and Devereux,
-_Lives of the Earls of Essex_, ii. 501. The references to Philautia are
-rather against Spedding’s view that these belong to some occasion other
-than that of 1595.
-
-Sir Henry Wotton says of Essex (_Reliquiae Wottonianae_, 21), ‘For his
-Writings, they are beyond example, especially in his ... things of
-delight at Court ... as may be yet seen in his Impresses and Inventions
-of entertainment; and above all in his darling piece of love, and self
-love’. This, for what it is worth--and Wotton was secretary to Essex
-in 1595, suggests that the Earl himself, rather than Bacon, was the
-author of the speeches, which in fact none of the MSS. directly ascribe
-to Bacon. But it is hard to distinguish the literary productions of a
-public man from those of his staff.
-
-(iv) The _Northumberland MS._ (Burgoyne, 65) has a speech of apology
-for absence, headed ‘ffor the Earle of Sussex at y^e tilt an: 96’,
-which might be Bacon’s, especially as he wrote from Gray’s Inn to the
-Earl of Shrewsbury on 15 Oct. 1596, ‘to borrow a horse and armour for
-some public show’ (Lodge, _App._ 79).
-
-(v) Beaumont (q.v.) acknowledges his encouragement of the Inner Temple
-and Gray’s Inn mask on 20 Feb. 1613, for the Princess Elizabeth’s
-wedding.
-
-(vi) He bore the expenses of the Gray’s Inn _Mask of Flowers_ (q.v.)
-on 6 Jan. 1614 for the Earl of Somerset’s wedding. To this occasion
-probably belongs an undated letter signed ‘Fr. Bacon’, and addressed
-to an unknown lord (_M. S. C._ i. 214 from _Lansdowne MS._ 107, f.
-13; Spedding, ii. 370; iv. 394), in which he expresses regret that
-‘the joynt maske from the fowr Innes of Cowrt faileth’, and offers a
-mask for ‘this occasion’ by a dozen gentlemen of Gray’s Inn, ‘owt of
-the honor which they bear to your lordship, and my lord Chamberlayne,
-to whome at theyr last maske they were so much bownde’. The last
-mask would be (v) above, and the then Lord Chamberlain was Suffolk,
-prospective father-in-law of Somerset, to whom the letter may be
-supposed to be addressed. But it is odd that the letter is endorsed
-‘M^r’ Fr. Bacon, and bound up with papers of Burghley, and it is just
-possible, although not, I think, likely, that the reference may be to
-some forgotten Elizabethan mask.
-
-(vii) A recent attempt has been made to assign to Bacon the academic
-_Pedantius_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-JOHN BADGER (_c._ 1575).
-
-A contributor to the Kenilworth entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-Gascoigne calls him ‘Master Badger of Oxenforde, Maister of Arte, and
-Bedle in the same Universitie’. A John Badger of Ch. Ch. took his M.A.
-in 1555, and a superior bedel of divinity of the same name made his
-will on 15 July 1577 (Foster, _Alumni Oxonienses_, i. 54).
-
-
-WILLIAM BARKSTED.
-
-For biography, cf. ch. xv (Actors), and for his share in _The Insatiate
-Countess_, s.v. Marston.
-
-There is no reason to regard him as the ‘William Buckstead, Comedian’,
-whose name is at the end of a _Prologue to a playe to the cuntry
-people_ in _Bodl. Ashm. MS._ 38 (198).
-
-
-BARNABE BARNES (_c._ 1569–1609).
-
-Barnes was born in Yorkshire, the son of Richard Barnes, bishop of
-Durham. He entered Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1586, but took no
-degree, accompanied Essex to France in 1591, and dedicated his poems
-_Parthenophil and Parthenophe_ (1593) to William Percy (q.v.). He was
-a friend of Gabriel Harvey and abused by Nashe and Campion. In 1598
-he was charged with an attempt at poison, but escaped from prison
-(_Athenaeum_, 1904, ii. 240). His _Poems_ were edited by A. B. Grosart
-in _Occasional Issues_ (1875). Hazlitt, _Manual_, 23, states that a
-manuscript of a play by him with the title _The Battle of Hexham_ was
-sold with Isaac Reed’s books in 1807, but this, which some writers call
-_The Battle of Evesham_, has not been traced. As Barnes was buried
-at Durham in Dec. 1609, it is probable that _The Madcap_ ‘written by
-Barnes’, which Herbert licensed for Prince Charles’s men on 3 May 1624,
-was by another of the name.
-
- _The Devil’s Charter. 2 Feb. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Oct. 16 (Buck). ‘The Tragedie of Pope Alexander the Sixt
-as it was played before his Maiestie.’ _John Wright_ (Arber, iii. 361).
-
-1607. The Divils Charter: A Tragedie Conteining the Life and Death of
-Pope Alexander the sixt. As it was plaide before the Kings Maiestie,
-vpon Candlemasse night last: by his Maiesties Seruants. But more
-exactly reuewed, corrected and augmented since by the Author, for the
-more pleasure and profit of the Reader. _G. E. for John Wright._
-[Dedication by Barnabe Barnes to Sir William Herbert and Sir William
-Pope; Prologue with dumb-show and Epilogue.]
-
-_Extracts_ by A. B. Grosart in Barnes’s _Poems_ (1875), and editions by
-_R. B. McKerrow_ (1904, _Materialien_, vi) and J. S. Farmer (1913, _S.
-F. T._)--_Dissertation_: A. E. H. Swaen, G. C. Moore Smith, and R. B.
-McKerrow, _Notes on the D. C. by B. B._ (1906, _M. L. R._ i. 122).
-
-
-DAVID, LORD BARRY (1585–1610).
-
-David Barry was the eldest son of the ninth Viscount Buttevant, and
-the ‘Lo:’ on his title-page represents a courtesy title of ‘Lord’,
-or ‘Lording’ as it is given in the lawsuit of _Androwes v. Slater_,
-which arose out of the interest acquired by him in 1608 in the
-Whitefriars theatre (q.v.). Kirkman’s play-lists (Greg, _Masques_,
-ci) and Wood, _Athenae Oxon._ ii. 655, have him as ‘Lord’ Barrey,
-which did not prevent Langbaine (1691) and others from turning him
-into ‘Lodowick’.--_Dissertations_: J. Q. Adams, _Lordinge (alias
-Lodowick) Barry_ (1912, _M. P._ ix. 567); W. J. Lawrence, _The Mystery
-of Lodowick Barry_ (1917, _University of North Carolina Studies in
-Philology_, xiv. 52).
-
- _Ram Alley. 1607–8_
-
-_S. R._ 1610, Nov. 9 (Buck). ‘A booke called, Ramme Alley, or merry
-trickes. _Robert Wilson_ (Arber, iii. 448).
-
-1611. Ram-Alley: Or Merrie-Trickes. A Comedy Diuers times heretofore
-acted. By the Children of the Kings Reuels. Written by Lo: Barrey. _G.
-Eld for Robert Wilson._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1636; 1639.
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^4 (1875, x) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ ii)
-and J. S. Farmer (1913, _S. F. T._).
-
-Fleay, i. 31, attempts to place the play at the Christmas of 1609, but
-it is improbable that the King’s Revels ever played outside 1607–8.
-Archer’s play-list of 1656 gives it to Massinger. There are references
-(ed. Dodsley, pp. 280, 348, 369) to the baboons, which apparently
-amused London about 1603–5 (cf. s.v. _Sir Giles Goosecap_), and to the
-Jacobean knightings (p. 272).
-
-
-FRANCIS BEAUMONT (_c._ 1584–1616).
-
-Beaumont was third son of Francis Beaumont, Justice of Common Pleas,
-sprung from a gentle Leicestershire family, settled at Grace Dieu
-priory in Charnwood Forest. He was born in 1584 or 1585 and had a
-brother, Sir John, also known as a poet. He entered Broadgates Hall,
-Oxford, in 1597, but took no degree, and the Inner Temple in 1600. In
-1614 or 1615 he had a daughter by his marriage, probably recent, to
-Ursula Isley of Sundridge Hall, Kent, and another daughter was born
-after his death on 6 March 1616. He was buried in Westminster Abbey.
-
-Beaumont contributed a humorous grammar lecture (preserved in _Sloane
-MS._ 1709, f. 13; cf. E. J. L. Scott in _Athenaeum_ for 27 Jan. 1894)
-to some Inner Temple Christmas revels of uncertain date. This has
-allusions to ‘the most plodderly plotted shew of Lady Amity’ given
-‘in this ill-instructed hall the last Christmas’, and to seeing a play
-at the Bankside for sixpence. His poetical career probably begins with
-the anonymous _Salmacis and Hermaphroditus_ of 1602. His non-dramatic
-poems, of which the most important is an epistle to Elizabeth Countess
-of Rutland in 1612, appeared after his death in volumes of 1618,
-1640, and 1653, which certainly ascribe to him much that is not
-his. His connexion with the stage seems to have begun about 1606,
-possibly through Michael Drayton, a family friend, in whose _Eglogs_
-of that year he appears as ‘sweet Palmeo’. But his first play, _The
-Woman Hater_, written independently for Paul’s, shows him under the
-influence of Ben Jonson, who wrote him an affectionate epigram (lv),
-told Drummond in 1619 that ‘Francis Beaumont loved too much himself
-and his own verses’ (Laing, 10), and according to Dryden (_Essay on
-Dramatick Poesie_) ‘submitted all his writings to his censure, and,
-’tis thought, used his judgment in correcting, if not contriving, all
-his plots’. To Jonson’s _Volpone_ (1607) commendatory verses were
-contributed both by Beaumont, whose own _Knight of the Burning Pestle_
-was produced in the same year, and by John Fletcher, whose names are
-thus first combined. Jonson and Beaumont, in their turn, wrote verses
-for Fletcher’s _The Faithful Shepherdess_, probably written in 1608 or
-1609 and published in 1609 or 1610. About 1608 or 1609 it may also be
-supposed that the famous literary collaboration began. This, although
-it can only be proved to have covered some half-dozen plays, left the
-two names so closely associated that when, in 1647 and 1679, the actors
-and publishers issued collections of fifty-three pieces, in all or most
-of which Fletcher had had, or was supposed to have had, a hand, they
-described them all as ‘by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher’, and thus
-left to modern scholarship a task with which it is still grappling.
-A contemporary protest by Sir Aston Cockaine pointed out the small
-share of Beaumont and the large share of Massinger in the 1647 volume;
-and the process of metrical analysis initiated by Fleay and Boyle
-may be regarded as fairly successful in fixing the characteristics
-of the very marked style of Fletcher, although it certainly raises
-more questions than it solves as to the possible shares not only of
-Massinger, but of Jonson, Field, Tourneur, Daborne, Middleton, Rowley,
-and Shirley, as collaborators or revisers, in the plays as they have
-come down to us. Since Fletcher wrote up to his death in 1625, much of
-this investigation lies outside my limits, and it is fortunate that
-the task of selecting the plays which may, certainly or possibly,
-fall before Beaumont’s death in 1616 is one in which a fair number of
-definite data are available to eke out the slippery metrical evidence.
-It would seem that the collaboration began about 1608 and lasted in
-full swing for about four or five years, that in it Beaumont was the
-ruling spirit, and that it covered plays, not only for the Queen’s
-Revels, for whom both poets had already written independently, and for
-their successors the Lady Elizabeth’s, but also, and concurrently,
-for the King’s. According to Dryden, two or three plays were written
-‘very unsuccessfully’ before the triumph of _Philaster_, but these may
-include the independent plays, of which we know that the _Knight of
-the Burning Pestle_ and the _Faithful Shepherdess_ failed. The Folios
-contain a copy of verses written by Beaumont to Jonson (ed. Waller,
-x. 199) ‘before he and M^r. Fletcher came to _London_, with two of
-the precedent Comedies then not finish’d, which deferr’d their merry
-meetings at the _Mermaid_’, but this probably relates to a temporary
-_villeggiatura_ and cannot be precisely dated. It is no doubt to this
-period of 1608–13 that we may refer the gossip of Aubrey, i. 96, who
-learnt from Sir James Hales and others that Beaumont and Fletcher
-‘lived together on the Banke-Side, not far from the Play-house, both
-batchelors; lay together; had one wench in the house between them,
-which they did so admire; the same cloathes and cloake, &c., betweene
-them’. Obviously these conditions ended when Beaumont married an
-heiress about 1613, and it seems probable that from this date onwards
-he ceased to be an active playwright, although he contributed a mask to
-the Princess Elizabeth’s wedding at Shrovetide of that year, and his
-hand can be traced, perhaps later still, in _The Scornful Lady_. At any
-rate, about 1613 Fletcher was not merely writing independent plays--a
-practice which, unlike Beaumont, he may never have wholly dropped--but
-also looking about for other contributors. There is some converging
-evidence of his collaboration about this date with Shakespeare; and
-Henslowe’s correspondence (_Henslowe Papers_, 66) shows him quite
-clearly as engaged on a play, possibly _The Honest Man’s Fortune_, with
-no less than three others, Daborne, Field, and Massinger. It is not
-probable that, from 1616 onwards, Fletcher wrote for any company but
-the King’s men. Of the fifty-two plays included in the Ff., forty-four
-can be shown from title-pages, actor-lists, licences by the Master
-of the Revels, and a Lord Chamberlain’s order of 1641 (_M. S. C._ i.
-364) to have belonged to the King’s, six by title-pages and another
-Lord Chamberlain’s order (_Variorum_, iii. 159) to have belonged to
-the Cockpit theatre, and two, _Wit at Several Weapons_ and _Four
-Plays in One_, together with _The Faithful Friends_, which does not
-appear in the Ff., cannot be assigned to any company. But some of the
-King’s men’s plays and some or all of the Cockpit plays had originally
-belonged to Paul’s, the Queen’s Revels, or the Lady Elizabeth’s, and
-it is probable that all these formed part of the Lady Elizabeth’s
-repertory in 1616, and that upon the reorganization of the company
-which then took place they were divided into two groups, of which one
-passed with Field to the King’s, while the other remained with his late
-fellows and was ultimately left with Christopher Beeston when their
-occupation of the Cockpit ended in 1625.
-
-I classify the plays dealt with in these notes as follows: (_a_)
-Plays wholly or substantially by Beaumont--_The Woman Hater_, _The
-Knight of the Burning Pestle_; (_b_) Plays of the Beaumont-Fletcher
-collaboration--_Philaster_, _A Maid’s Tragedy_, _A King and No King_,
-_Four Plays in One_, _Cupid’s Revenge_, _The Coxcomb_, _The Scornful
-Lady_; (_c_) Plays wholly or substantially by Fletcher--_The Woman’s
-Prize_, _The Faithful Shepherdess_, _Monsieur Thomas_, _Valentinian_,
-_Bonduca_, _Wit Without Money_; (_d_) Plays of doubtful authorship
-and, in some cases, period--_The Captain_, _The Honest Man’s
-Fortune_, _The Two Noble Kinsmen_, _The Faithful Friends_, _Thierry
-and Theodoret_, _Wit at Several Weapons_, _Love’s Cure_, _The Night
-Walker_. Full treatment of _The Two Noble Kinsmen_, as of _Henry VIII_,
-in which Fletcher certainly had a hand, is only possible in relation
-to Shakespeare. I have not thought it necessary to include every play
-which, or a hypothetical version of which, an unsupported conjecture,
-generally from Mr. Oliphant, puts earlier than 1616. _The Queen of
-Corinth_, _The Noble Gentleman_, _The Little French Lawyer_, _The Laws
-of Candy_, _The Knight of Malta_, _The Fair Maid of the Inn_, _The
-Chances_, _Beggar’s Bush_, _The Bloody Brother_, _Love’s Pilgrimage_,
-_Nice Valour_, and _Rule a Wife and Have a Wife_ are omitted on
-this principle, and I believe I might safely have extended the same
-treatment to some of those in my class (_d_).
-
- _Collections_
-
-_S. R._ 1646, Sept. 4 (Langley). ‘These severall Tragedies & Comedies
-hereunder mencioned (viz^t.) ... [thirty plays named] ... by M^r.
-Beamont and M^r. Flesher.’ _H. Robinson and H. Moseley_ (Eyre, i. 244).
-
-1660, June 29. ‘The severall Plays following, vizt.... [names] ... all
-six copies written by Fra: Beamont & John Fletcher.’ _H. Robinson and
-H. Moseley_ (Eyre, ii. 268).
-
-F_{1}, 1647. Comedies and Tragedies Written by Francis Beaumont and
-Iohn Fletcher Gentlemen. Never printed before, And now published by
-the Authours Originall Copies. _For H. Robinson and H. Moseley._
-[Twenty-nine plays of the 1646 entry, excluding _The Wildgoose Chase_,
-and the five plays and one mask of the 1660 entry, none but the mask
-previously printed; Portrait of Fletcher by W. Marshall; Epistle to
-Philip Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, signed ‘John Lowin, Richard
-Robinson, Eylaerd Swanston, Hugh Clearke, Stephen Hammerton, Joseph
-Taylor, Robert Benfield, Thomas Pollard, William Allen, Theophilus
-Bird’; Epistle to the Reader, signed ‘Ja. Shirley’; The Stationer to
-the Readers, signed ‘Humphrey Moseley’ and dated ‘Feb. 14^{th} 1646’;
-Thirty-seven sets of Commendatory verses, variously signed; Postscript;
-cf. W. W. Greg in _4 Library_, ii. 109.]
-
-F_{2}, 1679. Fifty Comedies and Tragedies. Written by Francis Beaumont
-and John Fletcher, Gentlemen. All in one Volume. Published by the
-Authors Original Copies, the Songs to each Play being added. _J.
-Macock, for John Martyn, Henry Herringman, Richard Marriot._ [The
-thirty-four plays and one mask of F_{1}, with eighteen other plays,
-all previously printed; Epistle by the Stationers to the Reader; Actor
-Lists prefixed to many of the plays.]
-
-1711. The Works of B. and F. 7 vols. _Jacob Tonson._
-
-_Editions_ by Theobald, Seward and Sympson (1750, 10 vols.), G. Colman
-(1778, 10 vols.; 1811, 3 vols.), H. Weber (1812, 14 vols., adding _The
-Faithful Friends_), G. Darley (1839, 2 vols.; 1862–6, 2 vols.), A. Dyce
-(1843–6, 11 vols.; 1852, 2 vols.).
-
-1905–12. A. Glover and A. R. Waller. _The Works of F. B. and J. F._ 10
-vols. (_C. E. C._). [Text of F_{2}, with collations of F_{1} and Q_{q}.]
-
-1904–12 (in progress). A. H. Bullen, _The Works of F. B. and J. F.
-Variorum Edition._ 4 vols. issued. [Text based on Dyce; editions of
-separate plays by P. A. Daniel, R. W. Bond, W. W. Greg, R. B. McKerrow,
-J. Masefield, M. Luce, C. Brett, R. G. Martin, E. K. Chambers.]
-
- _Selections_
-
-1887. J. S. L. Strachey, _The Best Plays of B. and F._ 2 vols. (Mermaid
-Series). [_Maid’s Tragedy_, _Philaster_, _Thierry and Theodoret_,
-_K. B. P._, _King and No King_, _Bonduca_, _Faithful Shepherdess_,
-_Valentinian_, and later plays.]
-
-1912. F. E. Schelling, _Beaumont and Fletcher_ (_M. E. D._).
-[_Philaster_, _Maid’s Tragedy_, _Faithful Shepherdess_, _Bonduca_.]
-
-_Dissertations_: A. C. Swinburne, _B. and F._ (1875–94, _Studies in
-Prose and Poetry_), _The Earlier Plays of B. and F._ (1910, _English
-Review_); F. G. Fleay, _On Metrical Tests as applied to Dramatic
-Poetry: Part ii, B., F., Massinger_ (1874, _N. S. S. Trans._ 51, 23*,
-61*, reprinted, 1876–8, with alterations in _Shakespeare Manual_, 151),
-_On the Chronology of the Plays of F. and Massinger_ (1886, _E. S._ ix.
-12), and in _B. C._ (1891), i. 164; R. Boyle, _B., F., and Massinger_
-(1882–7, _E. S._ v. 74, vii. 66, viii. 39, ix. 209, x. 383), _B., F.,
-and Massinger_ (1886, _N. S. S. Trans._ 579), _Mr. Oliphant on B. and
-F._ (1892–3, _E. S._ xvii. 171, xviii. 292), _Daborne’s Share in the
-B. and F. Plays_ (1899, _E. S._ xxvi. 352); G. C. Macaulay, _F. B.: a
-Critical Study_ (1883), _B. and F._ (1910, _C. H._ vi. 107); E. H. C.
-Oliphant, _The Works of B. and F._ (1890–2, _E. S._ xiv. 53, xv. 321,
-xvi. 180); E. Koeppel, _Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen Ben Jonson’s,
-John Marston’s und B. und F.’s_ (1895, _Münchener Beiträge_, xi); C.
-E. Norton, _F. B.’s Letter to Ben Jonson_ (1896, _Harvard Studies
-and Notes_, v. 19); A. H. Thorndike, _The Influence of B. and F. on
-Shakspere_ (1901); O. L. Hatcher, _J. F.: a Study in Dramatic Method_
-(1905); R. M. Alden, _Introduction to B.’s Plays_ (1910, _B. L._);
-C. M. Gayley, _F. B.: Dramatist_ (1914); W. E. Farnham, _Colloquial
-Contractions in B., F., Massinger and Shakespeare as a Test of
-Authorship_ (1916, _M. L. A._ xxxi. 326).
-
-_Bibliographies_: A. C. Potter, _A Bibl. of B. and F._ (1890, _Harvard
-Bibl. Contributions_, 39); B. Leonhardt, _Litteratur über B. und F._
-(1896, _Anglia_, xix. 36, 542).
-
- _The Woman Hater, c. 1606_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, May 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called “The Woman Hater” as it
-hath ben lately acted by the Children of Powles.’ _Eleazar Edgar and
-Robert Jackson_ (Arber, iii. 349). [A note ‘Sir George Buckes hand
-alsoe to it’.]
-
-1607. The Woman Hater. As it hath beene lately Acted by the Children of
-Paules. _Sold by John Hodgets._ [Prologue in prose.]
-
-1607. _R. R. sold by John Hodgets._ [A reissue.]
-
-S. R. 1613, April 19. Transfer of Edgar’s share to John Hodgettes
-(Arber, iii. 521).
-
-1648.... As it hath beene Acted by his Majesties Servants with great
-Applause. Written by John Fletcher Gent. _For Humphrey Moseley._
-
-1649. The Woman Hater, or the Hungry Courtier. A Comedy ... Written by
-Francis Beamont and John Fletcher, Gent. _For Humphrey Moseley._ [A
-reissue. Prologue in verse, said by Fleay, i. 177, to be Davenant’s,
-and Epilogue, used also for _The Noble Gentleman_.]
-
-Fleay, i. 177, and Gayley, 73, put the date in the spring of 1607,
-finding a reference in ‘a favourite on the sudden’ (I. iii) to the
-success of Robert Carr in taking the fancy of James at the tilt of 24
-March 1607, to which Fleay adds that ‘another inundation’ (III. i)
-recalls a flood of 20 Jan. 1607. Neither argument is convincing, and
-it is not known that the Paul’s boys went on into 1607; they are last
-heard of in July 1606. The prologue expresses the author’s intention
-not to lose his ears, perhaps an allusion to Jonson’s and Chapman’s
-peril after _Eastward Ho!_ in 1605. Gayley notes in II. iii what
-certainly looks like a reminiscence of _Antony and Cleopatra_, IV. xiv.
-51 and xv. 87, but it is no easier to be precise about the date of
-_Antony and Cleopatra_ than about that of _The Woman Hater_. The play
-is universally regarded as substantially Beaumont’s and the original
-prologue only speaks of a single author, but Davenant in 1649 evidently
-supposed it to be Fletcher’s, saying ‘full twenty yeares, he wore the
-bayes’. Boyle, Oliphant, Alden, and Gayley suggest among them III.
-i, ii; IV. ii; V. i, ii, v as scenes to which Fletcher or some other
-collaborator may have given touches.
-
- _The Knight of the Burning Pestle. 1607_
-
-1613. The Knight of the Burning Pestle. _For Walter Burre._ [Epistle to
-Robert Keysar, signed ‘W. B.’, Induction with Prologue, Epilogue.]
-
-1635.... Full of Mirth and Delight. Written by Francis Beaumont and
-Iohn Fletcher, Gent. As it is now Acted by Her Maiesties Servants at
-the Private house in Drury Lane. _N. O. for I. S._ [Epistle to Readers,
-Prologue (from Lyly’s _Sapho and Phaon_).]
-
-1635.... Francis Beamont....
-
-_Editions_ by F. W. Moorman (1898, _T. D._), H. S. Murch (1908, _Yale
-Studies_, xxxiii), R. M. Alden (1910, _B. L._), W. A. Neilson (1911,
-_C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_: R. Boyle, _B. and F.’s K. B. P._ (1889,
-_E. S._ xiii. 156); B. Leonhardt, _Ueber B. und F.’s K. B. P._ (1885,
-_Annaberg programme_), _Die Text-Varianten von B. und F.’s K. B. P._
-(1896, _Anglia_, xix. 509).
-
-The Epistle tells us that the play was ‘in eight daies ... begot and
-borne’, ‘exposed to the wide world, who ... utterly reiected it’,
-preserved by Keysar and sent to Burre, who had ‘fostred it priuately
-in my bosome these two yeares’. The play ‘hopes his father will beget
-him a yonger brother’. Burre adds, ‘Perhaps it will be thought to bee
-of the race of Don Quixote: we both may confidently sweare, it is his
-elder aboue a yeare’. The references to the actors in the induction
-as boys and the known connexion of Keysar with the Queen’s Revels
-fix the company. The date is more difficult. It cannot be earlier
-than 1607, since the reference to a play at the Red Bull in which the
-Sophy of Persia christens a child (IV. i. 46) is to Day’s _Travels of
-Three English Brothers_ of that year. With other allusions, not in
-themselves conclusive, 1607 would agree well enough, notably with Ind.
-8, ‘This seuen yeares there hath beene playes at this house’, for it
-was just seven years in the autumn of 1607 since Evans set up plays
-at the Blackfriars. The trouble is IV. i. 73, ‘Read the play of the
-_Foure Prentices of London_, where they tosse their pikes so’, for this
-implies that the _Four Prentices_ was not merely produced but in print,
-and the earliest extant edition is of 1615. It is, however, quite
-possible that the play may have been in print, even as far back as
-1594 (cf. s.v. Heywood). Others put it, and with it the _K. B. P._, in
-1610, in which case the production would have been at the Whitefriars,
-the history of which can only be traced back two or three years and
-not seven years before 1610. On the whole, I think the reference to
-_Don Quixote_ in the Epistle is in favour of 1607 rather than 1610.
-It is, of course, conceivable that Burre only meant to claim that the
-_K. B. P._ was a year older than Thomas Shelton’s translation of _Don
-Quixote_, which was entered in _S. R._ on 19 Jan. 1611 and published
-in 1612. Even this brings us back to the very beginning of 1610, and
-the boast would have been a fairly idle one, as Shelton states in his
-preface that the translation was actually made ‘some five or six yeares
-agoe’. Shelton’s editor, Mr. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, has shown that it was
-based on the Brussels edition of 1607. If we put it in 1608 and the _K.
-B. P._ in 1607 the year’s priority of the latter is preserved. Most
-certainly the _K. B. P._ was not prior to the Spanish _Don Quixote_ of
-1605. Its dependence on Cervantes is not such as necessarily to imply
-that Beaumont had read the romance, but he had certainly heard of its
-general drift and of the particular episodes of the inn taken for a
-castle and the barber’s basin. Fleay, Boyle, Moorman, Murch, and Alden
-are inclined to assign to Fletcher some or all of the scenes in which
-Jasper and Luce and Humphrey take part; but Macaulay, Oliphant and
-Gayley regard the play, except perhaps for a touch or two, as wholly
-Beaumont’s. Certainly the Epistle suggests that the play had but one
-‘father’.
-
- _The Faithful Shepherdess. 1608–9_
-
-N.D. The Faithfull Shepherdesse. By John Fletcher. _For R. Bonian and
-H. Walley._ [Commendatory verses by N. F. (‘Nath. Field’, Q_{2}), Fr.
-Beaumont, Ben Jonson, G. Chapman; Dedicatory verses to Sir Walter
-Aston, Sir William Skipwith, Sir Robert Townsend, all signed ‘John
-Fletcher’; Epistle to Reader, signed ‘John Fletcher’.]
-
-_S. R._ 1628, Dec. 8. Transfer from Walley to R. Meighen (Arber, iv.
-206).
-
-1629.... newly corrected ... _T. C. for R. Meighen_.
-
-1634.... Acted at Somerset House before the King and Queene on Twelfe
-night last, 1633. And divers times since with great applause at the
-Private House in Blacke-Friers, by his Majesties Servants.... _A. M.
-for Meighen._ [Verses to Joseph Taylor, signed ‘Shakerley Marmion’,
-and Prologue, both for the performance of 6 Jan. 1634.]
-
-1656; 1665.
-
-_Editions_ by F. W. Moorman (1897, _T. D._), W. W. Greg (1908, Bullen,
-iii), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).
-
-Jonson told Drummond in the winter of 1618–19 (Laing, 17) that
-‘Flesher and Beaumont, ten yeers since, hath written the Faithfull
-Shipheardesse, a Tragicomedie, well done’. This gives us the date
-1608–9, which there is nothing to contradict. The undated Q_{1} may
-be put in 1609 or 1610, as Skipwith died on 3 May 1610 and the short
-partnership of the publishers is traceable from 22 Dec. 1608 to 14 Jan.
-1610. It is, moreover, in Sir John Harington’s catalogue of his plays,
-which was made up in 1609 or 1610 (cf. ch. xxii). The presence of
-Field, Chapman, and Jonson amongst the verse-writers and the mentions
-in Beaumont’s verses of ‘the waxlights’ and of a boy dancing between
-the acts point to the Queen’s Revels as the producers. It is clear also
-from the verses that the play was damned, and that Fletcher alone, in
-spite of Drummond’s report, was the author. This is not doubted on
-internal grounds.
-
- _The Woman’s Prize, or, The Tamer Tamed. 1604 <_
-
-1647. The Womans Prize, or The Tamer Tam’d. A Comedy. [Part of F_{1}.
-Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2}.]
-
-Fleay, i. 198, Oliphant, and Thorndike, 70, accumulate inconclusive
-evidence bearing on the date, of which the most that can be said is
-that an answer to _The Taming of the Shrew_ would have more point the
-nearer it came to the date of the original, and that the references to
-the siege of Ostend in I. iii would be topical during or not long after
-that siege, which ended on 8 Sept. 1604. On the other hand, Gayley
-(_R. E. C._ iii, lxvi) calls attention to possible reminiscences of
-_Epicoene_ (_1609_) and _Alchemist_ (_1610_). I see no justification
-for supposing that a play written in 1605 would undergo revision,
-as has been suggested, in 1610–14. A revival by the King’s in 1633
-got them into some trouble with Sir Henry Herbert, who claimed the
-right to purge even an old play of ‘oaths, prophaness, and ribaldrye’
-(_Variorum_, iii. 208). Possibly the play is also _The Woman is too
-Hard for Him_, which the King’s took to Court on 26 Nov. 1621 (Murray,
-ii. 193). But the original writing was not necessarily for this
-company. There is general agreement in assigning the play to Fletcher
-alone.
-
- _Philaster > 1610_
-
-_S. R._ 1620, Jan. 10 (Taverner). ‘A Play Called Philaster.’ _Thomas
-Walkley_ (Arber, iii. 662).
-
-1620. Phylaster, Or Loue lyes a Bleeding. Acted at the Globe by his
-Maiesties Seruants. Written by Francis Baymont and Iohn Fletcher. Gent.
-_For Thomas Walkley._
-
-1622.... As it hath beene diuerse times Acted, at the Globe, and
-Blacke-friers, by his Maiesties Seruants.... The Second Impression,
-corrected, and amended. _For Thomas Walkley._ [Epistle to the Reader by
-Walkley. Different text of I. i; V. iv, v.]
-
-1628. _A. M. for Richard Hawkins._ [Epistle by the Stationer to the
-Understanding Gentry.]
-
-1634; 1639; 1652; N.D. [1663]; 1687.
-
-_Editions_ by J. S. L. Strachey (1887, _Mermaid_, i), F. S. Boas (1898,
-_T. D._), P. A. Daniel (1904, _Variorum_, i), A. H. Thorndike (1906,
-_B. L._), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_: B.
-Leonhardt, _Über die Beziehungen von B. und F.’s P. zu Shakespeare’s
-Hamlet und Cymbeline_ (1885, _Anglia_, viii. 424) and _Die
-Text-Varianten von B. und F.’s P._ (1896, _Anglia_, xix. 34).
-
-The play is apparently referred to in John Davies of Hereford, _Scourge
-of Folly_ (_S. R._ 8 Oct. 1610), ep. 206:
-
- _To the well deseruing_ M^r John Fletcher.
- _Loue lies ableeding_, if it should not proue
- Her vttmost art to shew why it doth loue.
- Thou being the _Subiect_ (now) It raignes vpon:
- Raign’st in _Arte_, _Iudgement_, and _Inuention_:
- _For this I loue thee: and can doe no lesse_
- _For thine as faire, as faithfull_ Shepheardesse.
-
-If so, the date 1608–10 is suggested, and I do not think that it is
-possible to be more precise. No trustworthy argument can be based with
-Gayley, 342, on the fact that Davies’s epigram follows that praising
-Ostler as ‘Roscius’ and ‘sole king of actors’; and I fear that the
-view of Thorndike, 65, that 1608 is a ‘probable’ conjecture is biased
-by a desire to assume priority to _Cymbeline_. There were two Court
-performances in the winter of 1612–13, and Fleay, i. 189, suggests
-that the versions of I. i and V. iv, v which appear in Q_{1} were
-made for these. The epistle to Q_{2} describes them as ‘dangerous and
-gaping wounds ... received in the first impression’. There is general
-agreement that most of the play, whether Davies knew it or not, is
-Beaumont’s. Most critics assign V. iii, iv and some the whole or parts
-of I. i, ii, II. ii, iv, and III. ii to Fletcher.
-
- _The Coxcomb. 1608 < > 10_
-
-1647. The Coxcomb. [Part of F_{1}. Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2}. ‘The Principal Actors were Nathan Field, Joseph
-Taylor, Giles Gary, Emanuel Read, Rich. Allen, Hugh Atawell, Robert
-Benfeild, Will Barcksted.’]
-
-_Dissertation_: A. S. W. Rosenbach, _The Curious Impertinent in English
-Dramatic Literature_ (1902, _M. L. N._ xvii. 179).
-
-The play was given at Court by the Queen’s Revels on 2 or 3 Nov.
-1612. It passed, doubtless, through the Lady Elizabeth’s, to whom the
-actor-list probably belongs, to the King’s, who took it to Court on 5
-March 1622 (Murray, ii. 193) and again on 17 Nov. 1636 (Cunningham,
-xxiv). There was thus more than one opportunity for the prologue, which
-speaks of the play as having a mixed reception at first, partly because
-of its length, then ‘long forgot’, and now revived and shortened. The
-original date may be between the issue in 1608 of Baudouin’s French
-translation of _The Curious Impertinent_ from _Don Quixote_, which in
-original or translation suggested its plot, and Jonson’s _Alchemist_
-(1610), IV. vii. 39, ‘You are ... a Don Quixote. Or a Knight o’ the
-curious coxcombe’. The prologue refers to ‘makers’, and there is fair
-agreement in giving some or all of I. iv, vi, II. iv, III. iii, and V.
-ii to Beaumont and the rest to Fletcher. Fleay, Boyle, Oliphant, and
-Gayley think that there has been revision by a later writer, perhaps
-Massinger or W. Rowley.
-
- _The Maid’s Tragedy > 1611_
-
-_S. R._ 1619, April 28 (Buck). ‘A play Called The maides tragedy.’
-_Higgenbotham and Constable_ (Arber, iii. 647).
-
-1619. The Maides Tragedy. As it hath beene divers times Acted at the
-Blacke-friers by the King’s Maiesties Seruants. _For Francis Constable._
-
-1622.... Newly perused, augmented, and inlarged, This second
-Impression. _For Francis Constable._
-
-1630.... Written by Francis Beaumont, and Iohn Fletcher Gentlemen. The
-Third Impression, Reuised and Refined. _A. M. for Richard Hawkins._
-
-1638; 1641; 1650 [1660?]; 1661.
-
-_Editions_ by J. S. L. Strachey (1887, _Mermaid_, i), P. A. Daniel
-(1904, _Variorum_, i), A. H. Thorndike (1906, _B. L._), W. A. Neilson
-(1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertation_: B. Leonhardt, _Die Text-Varianten
-in B. und F.’s M. T._ (1900, _Anglia_, xxiii. 14).
-
-The play must have been known by 31 Oct. 1611 when Buck named the
-_Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ (q.v.) after it, and it was given at Court
-during 1612–13. An inferior limit is not attainable and any date within
-_c._ 1608–11 is possible. Gayley, 349, asks us to accept the play as
-more mature than, and therefore later than, _Philaster_. Fleay, i. 192,
-thinks that the mask in I. ii was added after the floods in the winter
-of 1612, but you cannot bring Neptune into a mask without mention of
-floods. As to authorship there is some division of opinion, especially
-on II. ii and IV. iii; subject thereto, a balance of opinion gives I,
-II, III, IV. ii, iv and V. iv to Beaumont, and only IV. i and V. i, ii,
-iii to Fletcher.
-
-An episode (I. ii) consists of a mask at the wedding of Amintor and
-Evadne, with an introductory dialogue between Calianax, Diagoras, who
-keeps the doors, and guests desiring admission. ‘The ladies are all
-placed above,’ says Diagoras, ‘save those that come in the King’s
-troop.’ Calianax has an ‘office’, evidently as Chamberlain. ‘He would
-run raging among them, and break a dozen wiser heads than his own in
-the twinkling of an eye.’
-
-The maskers are Proteus and other sea-gods; the presenters Night,
-Cinthia, Neptune, Aeolus, Favonius, and other winds, who ‘rise’ or come
-‘out of a rock’. There are two ‘measures’ between hymeneal songs, but
-no mention of taking out ladies.
-
-In an earlier passage (I. i. 9) a poet says of masks, ‘They must
-commend their King, and speak in praise Of the Assembly, bless the
-Bride and Bridegroom, In person of some God; th’are tyed to rules Of
-flattery’.
-
- _A King and No King. 1611_
-
-_S. R._ 1618, Aug. 7 (Buck). ‘A play Called A king and noe kinge.’
-_Blount_ (Arber, iii. 631).
-
-1619. A King and no King. Acted at the Globe, by his Maiesties
-Seruants: Written by Francis Beamount and Iohn Flecher. _For Thomas
-Walkley._ [Epistle to Sir Henry Nevill, signed ‘Thomas Walkley’.]
-
-1625.... Acted at the Blacke-Fryars, by his Maiesties Seruants. And now
-the second time Printed, according to the true Copie.... _For Thomas
-Walkley._
-
-1631; 1639; 1655; 1661; 1676.
-
-_Editions_ by R. W. Bond (1904, Bullen, i), R. M. Alden (1910, _B.
-L._).--_Dissertation_: B. Leonhardt, _Die Text-Varianten von B.’s und
-F.’s A K. and No K._ (1903, _Anglia_, xxvi. 313).
-
-This is a fixed point, both for date and authorship, in the history
-of the collaboration. Herbert records (_Var._ iii. 263) that it was
-‘allowed to be acted in 1611’ by Sir George Buck. It was in fact acted
-at Court by the King’s on 26 Dec. 1611 and again during 1612–13. A
-performance at Hampton Court on 10 Jan. 1637 is also upon record
-(Cunningham, xxv). The epistle, which tells us that the publisher
-received the play from Nevill, speaks of ‘the authors’ and of their
-‘future labours’; rather oddly, as Beaumont was dead. There is
-practical unanimity in assigning I, II, III, IV. iv, and V. ii, iv to
-Beaumont and IV. i, ii, iii and V. i, iii to Fletcher.
-
- _Cupid’s Revenge > 1612_
-
-_S. R._ 1615, April 24 (Buck). ‘A play called Cupid’s revenge.’
-_Josias Harrison_ (Arber, iii. 566).
-
-1615. Cupid’s Revenge. As it hath beene diuers times Acted by the
-Children of her Maiesties Reuels. By Iohn Fletcher. _Thomas Creede
-for Josias Harrison._ [Epistle by Printer to Reader.]
-
-1630.... As it was often Acted (with great applause) by the Children
-of the Reuells. Written by Fran. Beaumont & Io. Fletcher. The second
-edition. _For Thomas Jones._
-
-1635.... The third Edition. _A. M._
-
-The play was given by the Queen’s Revels at Court on 5 Jan. 1612, 1
-Jan. 1613, and either 9 Jan. or 27 Feb. 1613. It was revived by the
-Lady Elizabeth’s at Court on 28 Dec. 1624, and is in the Cockpit list
-of 1639. It cannot therefore be later than 1611–12, while no close
-inferior limit can be fixed. Fleay, i. 187, argues that it has been
-altered for Court, chiefly by turning a wicked king, queen, and prince
-into a duke, duchess, and marquis. I doubt if this implies revision
-as distinct from censorship, and in any case it does not, as Fleay
-suggests, imply the intervention of a reviser other than the original
-authors. The suggestion has led to chaos in the distribution of
-authorship, since various critics have introduced Daborne, Field, and
-Massinger as possible collaborators or revisers. The stationer speaks
-of a single ‘author’, meaning Fletcher, but says he was ‘not acquainted
-with him’. And the critics at least agree in finding both Beaumont and
-Fletcher, pretty well throughout.
-
- _The Captain. 1609 < > 12_
-
-1647. The Captain. [Part of F_{1}. Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1679. The Captain. A Comedy. [Part of F_{2}.] ‘The principal Actors
-were, Richard Burbadge, Henry Condel, William Ostler, Alexander Cooke.’
-
-The play was given by the King’s at Court during 1612–13, and
-presumably falls between that date and the admission of Ostler to the
-company in 1609. The 1679 print, by a confusion, gives the scene as
-‘Venice, Spain’, but this hardly justifies the suggestion of Fleay, i.
-195, that we have a version of Fletcher’s work altered for the Court
-by Barnes. He had formerly conjectured collaboration between Fletcher
-and Jonson (_E. S._ ix. 18). The prologue speaks of ‘the author’;
-Fleay thinks that the mention of ‘twelve pence’ as the price of a seat
-indicates a revival. Several critics find Massinger; Oliphant finds
-Rowley; and Boyle and Oliphant find Beaumont, as did Macaulay, 196, in
-1883, but apparently not in 1910 (_C. H._ vi. 137).
-
- _Two Noble Kinsmen. 1613_
-
-_S. R._ 1634, April 8 (Herbert). ‘A Tragicomedy called the two noble
-kinsmen by John Fletcher and William Shakespeare.’ _John Waterson_
-(Arber, iv. 316).
-
-1634. The Two Noble Kinsmen: Presented at the Black-friers by the Kings
-Maiesties servants, with great applause: Written by the memorable
-Worthies of their time; Mr. John Fletcher, and Mr. William Shakspeare.
-Gent. _Tho. Cotes for Iohn Waterson._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2} of Beaumont and Fletcher.]
-
-_Editions_ by W. W. Skeat (1875), H. Littledale (1876–85, _N. S. S._),
-C. H. Herford (1897, _T. D._), J. S. Farmer (1910, _T. F. T._), and
-with _Works_ of Beaumont and Fletcher, _Sh. Apocrypha_, and sometimes
-_Works_ of Shakespeare.--_Dissertations_: W. Spalding, _A Letter on
-Sh.’s Authorship of T. N. K._ (1833; 1876, _N. S. S._); S. Hickson,
-_The Shares of Sh. and F. in T. N. K._ (1847, _Westminster Review_,
-xlvii. 59; 1874, _N. S. S. Trans._ 25*, with additions by F. G. Fleay
-and F. J. Furnivall); N. Delius, _Die angebliche Autorschaft des T. N.
-K._ (1878, _Jahrbuch_, xiii. 16); R. Boyle, _Sh. und die beiden edlen
-Vettern_ (1881, _E. S._ iv. 34), _On Massinger and T. N. K._ (1882,
-_N. S. S. Trans._ 371); T. Bierfreund, _Palamon og Arcite_ (1891);
-E. H. C. Oliphant (1892, _E. S._ xv. 323); B. Leuschner, _Über das
-Verhältniss von T. N. K. zu Chaucer’s Knightes Tale_ (1903, _Halle
-diss._); O. Petersen, _The T. N. K._ (1914, _Anglia_, xxxviii. 213); H.
-D. Sykes, _The T. N. K._ (1916, _M. L. R._ xi. 136); A. H. Cruickshank,
-_Massinger and T. N. K._ (1922).
-
-The date of _T. N. K._ is fairly well fixed to 1613 by its adaptation
-of Beaumont’s wedding mask of Shrovetide in that year; there would be
-a confirmation in Jonson, _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), iv. 3,
-
- _Quarlous._ Well my word is out of the _Arcadia_, then: _Argalus_.
-
- _Win-wife._ And mine out of the play, _Palemon_;
-
-did not the juxtaposition of the _Arcadia_ suggest that the allusion
-may be, not to the Palamon of _T. N. K._ but to the Palaemon of
-Daniel’s _The Queen’s Arcadia_ (1606). In spite of the evidence of
-the t.p. attempts have been made to substitute Beaumont, or, more
-persistently, Massinger, for Shakespeare as Fletcher’s collaborator.
-This question can only be discussed effectively in connexion with
-Shakespeare.
-
- _The Honest Man’s Fortune. 1613_
-
-[_MS._] _Dyce MS._ 9, formerly in Heber collection.
-
-1647. The Honest Mans Fortune. [Part of F_{1}. After play, verses ‘Upon
-an Honest Mans Fortune. By M^r. John Fletcher’, beginning ‘You that can
-look through Heaven, and tell the Stars’.]
-
-1679. The Honest Man’s Fortune. A Tragicomedie. [Part of F_{2}. ‘The
-principal actors were Nathan Field, Joseph Taylor, Rob. Benfield, Will
-Eglestone, Emanuel Read, Thomas Basse.’]
-
-_Dissertation_: K. Richter, _H. M. F. und seine Quellen_ (1905, _Halle
-diss._).
-
-On the fly-leaf of the MS. is ‘The Honest Man’s Fortune, Plaide in
-the yeare 1613’, and in another hand at the end of the text, ‘This
-Play, being an olde one, and the Originall lost was reallow’d by
-mee this 8 Febru. 1624. Att the intreaty of Mr. .’ The last word is
-torn off, but a third hand has added ‘Taylor’. The MS. contains some
-alterations, partly by the licenser, partly by the stage-manager or
-prompter. The latter include the names of three actors, ‘G[eorge]
-Ver[non]’, ‘J: R Cro’ and ‘G. Rick’. The ending of the last scene in
-the MS. differs from that of the Ff. The endorsement is confirmed by
-Herbert’s entry in his diary (_Variorum_, iii. 229), ‘For the King’s
-company. An olde play called The Honest Mans Fortune, the originall
-being lost, was re-allowed by mee at M^r. Taylor’s intreaty, and on
-condition to give mee a booke [The Arcadia], this 8 Februa. 1624.’ The
-actor-list suggests that the original performers were Lady Elizabeth’s
-men, after the Queen’s Revels had joined them in March 1613. Fleay,
-i. 196, suggests that this is the play by Fletcher, Field, Massinger,
-and Daborne which is the subject of some of Henslowe’s correspondence
-and was finally delivered on 5 Aug. 1613 (Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 65,
-90). Attempts to combine this indication with stylistic evidence have
-led the critics to some agreement that Fletcher is only responsible
-for V and that Massinger is to be found in III, and for the rest into
-a quagmire of conjecture amongst the names of Beaumont, Fletcher,
-Massinger, Field, Daborne, Tourneur, and Cartwright. The appended
-verses of the Ff. are not in the _Dyce MS._, but they are in _Addl.
-MS._ 25707, f. 66, and _Bodl. Rawlinson Poet. MS._ 160, f. 20, where
-they are ascribed to Fletcher, and in Beaumont’s _Poems_ (1653).
-
- _Bonduca. 1609 < > 14_
-
-1647. Bonduca, A Tragedy. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2}. ‘The Principal Actors were Richard Burbadge,
-Henry Condel, William Eglestone, Nich. Toolie, William Ostler, John
-Lowin, John Underwood, Richard Robinson.’]
-
-_Dissertations_: B. Leonhardt, _Die Text-Varianten von B. und F.’s B._
-(1898, _Anglia_, xx. 421) and _Bonduca_ (_E. S._ xiii. 36).
-
-The actor-list is of the King’s men between 1609–11 or between 1613–14,
-as these are the only periods during which Ecclestone and Ostler
-can have played together. The authorship is generally regarded as
-substantially Fletcher’s; and the occasional use of rhyme in II. i and
-IV. iv hardly justifies Oliphant’s theory of an earlier version by
-Beaumont, or the ascription by Fleay and Macaulay of these scenes to
-Field, whose connexion with the King’s does not seem to antedate 1616.
-
- _Monsieur Thomas. 1610 < > 16_
-
-_S. R._ 1639, Jan. 22 (Wykes). ‘A Comedy called Monsieur Thomas, by
-master John Fletcher.’ _Waterson_ (Arber, iv. 451).
-
-1639. Monsieur Thomas. A Comedy. Acted at the Private House in Blacke
-Fryers. The Author, Iohn Fletcher, Gent. _Thomas Harper for John
-Waterson._ [Epistle to Charles Cotton, signed ‘Richard Brome’ and
-commendatory verses by the same.]
-
-N.D. [_c._ 1661]. Fathers Own Son. A Comedy. Formerly Acted at the
-Private House in Black Fryers; and now at the Theatre in Vere Street
-by His Majesties Servants. The Author John Fletcher Gent. _For Robert
-Crofts._ [Reissue with fresh t.p.]
-
-_Edition_ by R. G. Martin (1912, Bullen, iv).--_Dissertations_: H.
-Guskar, _Fletcher’s Monsieur Thomas und seine Quellen_ (1905, _Anglia_,
-xxviii. 397; xxix. 1); A. L. Stiefel, _Zur Quellenfrage von John
-Fletcher’s Monsieur Thomas_ (1906, _E. S._ xxxvi. 238); O. L. Hatcher,
-_The Sources of Fletcher’s Monsieur Thomas_ (1907, _Anglia_, xxx. 89).
-
-The title-page printed at the time of the revival by the King’s men
-of the Restoration enables us to identify _Monsieur Thomas_ with the
-_Father’s Own Son_ of the Cockpit repertory in 1639, and like the
-other plays of the Beaumont and Fletcher series in that repertory it
-was probably written by 1616, and either for the Queen’s Revels or
-for the Lady Elizabeth’s. An allusion in II. iii. 104 to ‘all the
-feathers in the Friars’ might indicate production at Porter’s Hall in
-the Blackfriars about that year. The play cannot be earlier than its
-source, Part ii (1610) of H. d’Urfé’s _Astrée_, and by 1610 the more
-permanent Blackfriars house had passed to the King’s, by whom the
-performances referred to on the original title-page must therefore
-have been given. Perhaps the explanation is that there had been some
-misunderstanding about the distribution of the Lady Elizabeth’s men’s
-plays between the King’s and the Cockpit, and that a revival by the
-King’s in 1639 led the Cockpit managers to get the Lord Chamberlain’s
-order of 10 Aug. 1639 (_Variorum_, iii. 159) appropriating their
-repertory to them. The authorship is ascribed with general assent to
-Fletcher alone.
-
- _Valentinian. 1610 < > 14_
-
-1647. The Tragedy of Valentinian. [Part of F_{1}. Epilogue.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2}. ‘The principal Actors were, Richard Burbadge,
-Henry Condel, John Lowin, William Ostler, John Underwood.’]
-
-_Edition_ by R. G. Martin (1912, Bullen, iv).
-
-The actor-list is of the King’s men before the death of Ostler on 16
-Dec. 1614, and the play must fall between this date and the publication
-of its source, Part ii (1610) of H. d’Urfé’s _Astrée_. There is general
-agreement in assigning it to Fletcher alone.
-
- _Wit Without Money, c. 1614_
-
-_S. R._ 1639, April 25 (Wykes). ‘These fiue playes ... Witt without
-money.’ _Crooke and William Cooke_ (Arber, iv. 464).
-
-1639. Wit Without Money. A Comedie, As it hath beene Presented with
-good Applause at the private house in Drurie Lane, by her Majesties
-Servants. Written by Francis Beamount and John Flecher. Gent. _Thomas
-Cotes for Andrew Crooke and William Cooke._
-
-1661.... The Second Impression Corrected. _For Andrew Crooke._
-
-_Edition_ by R. B. McKerrow (1905, Bullen, ii).
-
-Allusions to the New River opened in 1613 (IV. v. 61) and to an alleged
-Sussex dragon of Aug. 1614 (II. iv. 53) suggest production not long
-after the latter date. There is general agreement in assigning the play
-to Fletcher alone. It passed into the Cockpit repertory and was played
-there both by Queen Henrietta’s men and in 1637 by Beeston’s boys
-(_Variorum_, iii. 159, 239). Probably, therefore, it was written for
-the Lady Elizabeth’s.
-
- _The Scornful Lady. 1613 < > 17_
-
-_S. R._ 1616, March 19 (Buck). ‘A plaie called The scornefull ladie
-written by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher.’ _Miles Partriche_
-(Arber, iii. 585).
-
-1616. The Scornful Ladie. A Comedie. As it was Acted (with great
-applause) by the Children of Her Maiesties Reuels in the Blacke-Fryers.
-Written by Fra. Beaumont and Io. Fletcher, Gent. _For Miles Partriche._
-
-1625.... As it was now lately Acted (with great applause) by the Kings
-Maiesties seruants, at the Blacke-Fryers.... _For M. P., sold by Thomas
-Jones._
-
-1630, 1635, 1639, 1651 (_bis_).
-
-_Edition_ by R. W. Bond (1904, Bullen, i).
-
-References to ‘talk of the Cleve wars’ (V. iii. 66) and ‘some cast
-Cleve captain’ (V. iv. 54) cannot be earlier than 1609 when the wars
-broke out after the death of the Duke of Cleves on 25 March, and there
-can hardly have been ‘cast’ captains until some time after July 1610
-when English troops first took part. Fleay, i. 181, calls attention to
-an allusion to the binding by itself of the Apocrypha (I. ii. 46) which
-was discussed for the A. V. and the Douay Version, both completed in
-1610; and Gayley to a reminiscence (IV. i. 341) of _Epicoene_ which,
-however, was acted in 1609, not, as Gayley thinks, 1610. None of these
-indications, however, are of much importance in view of another traced
-by Gayley (III. ii. 17):
-
- I will style thee noble, nay, Don Diego;
- I’ll woo thy infanta for thee.
-
-Don Diego Sarmiento’s negotiations for a Spanish match with Prince
-Charles began on 27 May 1613. The play must therefore be 1613–16. In
-any case the ‘Blackfriars’ of the title-page must be the Porter’s Hall
-house of 1615–17. Even if the end of 1609 were a possible date, Murray,
-i. 153, is wrong in supposing that the Revels were then at Blackfriars.
-There is fair unanimity in assigning I, the whole or part of II, and V.
-ii to Beaumont, and the rest to Fletcher, but Bond and Gayley suggest
-that III. i, at least, might be Massinger’s.
-
- _Thierry and Theodoret (?)_
-
-1621. The Tragedy of Thierry King of France, and his Brother Theodoret.
-As it was diuerse times acted at the Blacke-Friers by the Kings
-Maiesties Seruants. _For Thomas Walkley._
-
-1648.... Written by John Fletcher Gent. _For Humphrey Moseley._
-
-1649.... Written by Fracis Beamont and John Fletcher Gent. _For
-Humphrey Moseley._ [A reissue, with Prologue and Epilogue, not written
-for the play; cf. Fleay, i. 205.]
-
-_Dissertation_: B. Leonhardt, _Die Text-Varianten von B. und F.’s T.
-and T._ (1903, _Anglia_, xxvi. 345).
-
-Fleay, i. 205, dates the play _c._ 1617, supposing it to be a satire
-on the French Court, and the name De Vitry to be that of the slayer
-of the Maréchal d’Ancre. Thorndike, 79, has little difficulty in
-disposing of this theory, although it may be pointed out that the Privy
-Council did in fact intervene to suppress a play about the Maréchal
-in 1617 (Gildersleeve, 113); but he is less successful in attempting
-to show any special plausibility in a date as early as 1607. A former
-conjecture by Fleay (_E. S._ ix. 21) that III and V. i are fragments of
-the anonymous _Branholt_ of the Admiral’s in 1597 may also be dismissed
-with Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 188). Most critics find, in addition to
-Fletcher, Massinger, as collaborator or reviser, according to the
-date given to the play, and some add Field or Daborne. Oliphant and
-Thorndike find Beaumont. So did Macaulay, 196, in 1883, but apparently
-not in 1910 (_C. H._ vi. 138).
-
- _The Nightwalker or The Little Thief (?)_
-
-_S. R._ 25 April 1639 (Wykes). ‘These fiue playes ... Night walters....
-_Crooke and William Cooke_ (Arber, iv. 464).
-
-1640. The Night-Walker, or the Little Theife. A Comedy, As it was
-presented by her Majesties Servants, at the Private House in Drury
-Lane. Written by John Fletcher. Gent. _Tho. Cotes for Andrew Crooke and
-William Cooke._ [Epistle to William Hudson, signed ‘A. C.’.]
-
-1661. _For Andrew Crook._
-
-Herbert licensed this as ‘a play of Fletchers corrected by Sherley’
-on 11 May 1633 and it was played at Court by Queen Henrietta’s men
-on 30 Jan. 1634 (_Variorum_, iii. 236). The only justification for
-placing Fletcher’s version earlier than 1616 is the suspicion that
-the only plays of Beaumont or Fletcher which passed to the Cockpit
-repertory were some of those written for the Queen’s Revels or the Lady
-Elizabeth’s before that date.
-
- _Four Plays in One (?)_
-
-1647. Four Plays, or Moral Representations in One. [Part of F_{1}.
-Induction with 2 Prologues, The Triumph of Honour, the Triumph of Love
-with Prologue, the Triumph of Death with Prologue, the Triumph of Time
-with Prologue, Epilogue.]
-
-_Dissertation_: W. J. Lawrence, _The Date of F. P. in O._ (_T. L. S._
-11 Dec. 1919).
-
-This does not seem to have passed to the King’s men or the Cockpit, and
-cannot be assigned to any particular company. It has been supposed to
-be a boys’ play, presumably because it has much music and dancing. It
-has also much pageantry in dumb-shows and so forth and stage machinery.
-Conceivably it might have been written for private performance in
-place of a mask. _Time_, in particular, has much the form of a mask,
-with antimask. But composite plays of this type were well known on the
-public stage. There is no clear indication of date. Fleay, i. 179,
-suggested 1608 because _The Yorkshire Tragedy_, printed that year, is
-also described in its heading as ‘one of the Four Plays in One’, but
-presumably it belonged to another series. Thorndike, 85, points out
-that the antimask established itself in Court masks in 1608. Gayley,
-301, puts _Death_ and _Time_ in 1610, because he thinks that they fall
-stylistically between _The Faithfull Shepherdess_ and _Philaster_, and
-the rest in 1612, because he thinks they are Field’s and that they
-cannot be before 1611, since they are not mentioned, like _Amends for
-Ladies_, as forthcoming in the epistle to _Woman a Weathercock_ in that
-year. This hardly bears analysis, and indeed Field is regarded as the
-author of the Induction and _Honour_ only by Oliphant and Gayley and
-of _Love_ only by Gayley himself. All these are generally assigned to
-Beaumont, and _Death_ and _Time_ universally to Fletcher. Lawrence’s
-attempt to attach the piece to the wedding festivities of 1612–13 does
-not seem to me at all convincing.
-
- _Love’s Cure; or, The Martial Maid_ (?)
-
-1647. Loves Cure, or the Martial Maid. [Part of F_{1}. A Prologue at
-the reviving of this Play. Epilogue.]
-
-1679. Loves Cure, or the Martial Maid A Comedy. [Part of F_{2}.]
-
-_Dissertation_: A. L. Stiefel, _Die Nachahmung spanischer Komödien in
-England_ (1897, _Archiv_, xcix. 271).
-
-The prologue, evidently later than Fletcher’s death in 1625, clearly
-assigns the authorship to Beaumont and Fletcher, although the epilogue,
-of uncertain date, speaks of ‘our author’. This is the only sound
-reason for thinking that the original composition was in Beaumont’s
-lifetime. The internal evidence for an early date cited by Fleay, i.
-180, and Thorndike, 72, becomes trivial when we eliminate what merely
-fixes the historic time of the play to 1604–9, and proves nothing as to
-the time of composition. On the other hand, II. ii,
-
- the cold Muscovite ...
- That lay here lieger in the last great frost,
-
-points to a date later than the winter of 1621, as I cannot trace any
-earlier great frost in which a Muscovite embassy can have been in
-London (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, cxxiii, 11, 100; cxxiv. 40). Further, the
-critics seem confident that the dominant hand in the play as it exists
-is Massinger’s, and that Beaumont and Fletcher show, if at all, faintly
-through his revision. The play belonged to the repertory of the King’s
-men by 1641 (_M. S. C._ i. 364).
-
- _Wit at Several Weapons_ (?)
-
-1647. Wit at several weapons. A Comedy. [Part of F_{1}. The epilogue at
-the reviving of this Play.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2}.]
-
-The history of the play is very obscure. It is neither in the Cockpit
-repertory of 1639 nor in that of the King’s in 1641, and the guesses
-of Fleay, i. 218, that it may be _The Devil of Dowgate or Usury Put
-to Use_, licensed by Herbert for the King’s on 17 Oct. 1623, and _The
-Buck is a Thief_, played at Court by the same men on 28 Dec. 1623, are
-unsupported and mutually destructive. The epilogue, clearly written
-after the death of Fletcher, tells us that ‘’twas well receiv’d before’
-and that Fletcher ‘had to do in’ it, and goes on to qualify this by
-adding--
-
- that if he but writ
- An Act, or two, the whole Play rose up wit.
-
-The critics find varying amounts of Fletcher, with work of other
-hands, which some of them venture to identify as those of Middleton
-and Rowley. Oliphant, followed by Thorndike, 87, finds Beaumont, and
-the latter points to allusions which are not inconsistent with, but
-certainly do not prove, 1609–10, or even an earlier date. Macaulay,
-196, also found Beaumont in 1883, but seems to have retired upon
-Middleton and Rowley in 1910 (_C. H._ vi. 138).
-
- _The Faithful Friends_ (?)
-
-[_MS._] _Dyce MS._ 10, formerly in the Heber collection.
-
-_S. R._ 1660, June 29. ‘The Faithfull Friend a Comedy, by Francis
-Beamont & John Fletcher’. _H. Moseley_ (Eyre, ii. 271).
-
-_Edition_ by A. Dyce in _Works_ (1812).
-
-Fleay in 1889 (_E. S._ xiii. 32) saw evidence of a date in 1614 in
-certain possible allusions (I. i. 45–52, 123–6) to the Earl of Somerset
-and his wedding on 26 Dec. 1613, and suggested Field and Daborne as the
-authors. In 1891 (i. 81, 201) he gave the whole to Daborne, except IV.
-v, which he thought of later date, and supposed it to be the subject
-of Daborne’s letter of 11 March 1614 to Henslowe, which was in fact
-probably _The Owl_ (Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 82). Oliphant thinks it
-a revision by Massinger and Field in 1614 of a play by Beaumont and
-Fletcher, perhaps as early as 1604. With this exception no critic seems
-much to believe in the presence of Beaumont or Fletcher, and Boyle,
-who suggests Shirley, points out that the allusion in I. i. 124 to the
-relation between Philip III and the Duke of Lerma as in the past would
-come more naturally after Philip’s death in 1621 or at least after
-Lerma’s disgrace in 1618. The MS. is in various hands, one of which has
-made corrections. Some of these seem on internal evidence to have been
-due to suggestions of the censor, others to play-house exigencies.
-
- _Lost Play_
-
-Among plays entered in S. R. by Humphrey Moseley on 29 June 1660 (Eyre,
-ii. 271) is ‘The History of Madon King of Brittain, by F. Beamont’.
-Madan is a character in _Locrine_, but even Moseley can hardly have
-ascribed that long-printed play to Beaumont.
-
- _Inner Temple and Gray’s Inn Mask. 20 Feb. 1613_
-
-_S. R._ 1613, Feb. 27 (Nidd). ‘A booke called the [description] of the
-maske performed before the kinge by the gent. of the Myddle temple and
-Lincolns Inne with the maske of Grayes Inne and the Inner Temple.’
-_George Norton_ (Arber, iii. 516).
-
-N.D. The Masque of the Inner Temple and Grayes Inn: Grayes Inne and
-the Inner Temple, presented before his Maiestie, the Queenes Maiestie,
-the Prince, Count Palatine and the Lady Elizabeth their Highnesses, in
-the Banquetting-house at Whitehall on Saturday the twentieth day of
-Februarie, 1612. _F. K. for George Norton._ [Epistle to Sir Francis
-Bacon and the Benchers.]
-
-N.D. ... By Francis Beaumont, Gent. _F. K. for George Norton._
-
-1647. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-1653. Poems: by Francis Beaumont, Gent. [&c.] _for Laurence Blaiklock_.
-[The Masque is included.]
-
-1653. Poems ... _for William Hope_. [A reissue.]
-
-1660. Poems. The golden remains of those so much admired dramatick
-poets, Francis Beaumont & John Fletcher, Gent. [&c.] _for William
-Hope_. [A reissue.]
-
-1679. [Part of F_{2}.]
-
-The texts of 1647–79 give a shorter description than the original
-Q_{q}, and omit the epistle.
-
-_Edition_ in Nichols, _James_ (1828), ii. 591.
-
-For general notices of the wedding masks, see ch. xxiv and the account
-of Campion’s _Lords’ Mask_; but it may be noted that the narrative
-in the _Mercure François_ gives a very inaccurate description of
-Beaumont’s work as left to us, introducing an Atlas and an Aletheia who
-find no places in the text.
-
-The maskers, in carnation, were fifteen knights of Olympia; the
-musicians twelve priests of Jove; the presenters Mercury and Iris.
-There were two antimasks, Mercury’s of four Naiads, five Hyades, four
-Cupids, and four Statues, ‘not of one kinde or liverie (because
-that had been so much in use heretofore)’, and Iris’s of a ‘rurall
-company’ consisting of a Pedant, a May Lord and Lady, a Servingman and
-Chambermaid, a Country Clown or Shepherd and Country Wench, a Host
-and Hostess, a He Baboon and She Baboon, and a He Fool and She Fool
-‘ushering them in’.
-
-The locality was the Banqueting House at Whitehall. The Hall was
-originally appointed, and on Shrove-Tuesday, 16 Feb., the mask came
-by water from Winchester House in the royal barge, attended by many
-gentlemen of the Inns in other barges. They landed at the Privy Stairs,
-watched by the King and princes from the Privy Gallery, and were
-conducted to the Vestry. But the actual mask was put off until 20 Feb.,
-in view of the press in the Hall, and then given in Banqueting House.
-Beaumont’s description passes lightly over this _contretemps_, but
-cf. _infra_.
-
-The ‘fabricke’ was a mountain, with separate ‘traverses’ discovering
-its lower and its higher slopes. From the former issued the presenters
-and antimasks, whose ‘measures’ were both encored by the King, but
-unluckily ‘one of the Statuaes by that time was undressed’. The latter
-bore the ‘maine masque’ in two pavilions before the altar of Jupiter.
-The maskers descended, danced two measures, then took their ladies to
-dance galliards, durets, corantoes, &c., then danced ‘their parting
-measure’ and ascended.
-
-Phineas Pett, Master of the Shipwrights’ Company in 1613, relates
-(_Archaeologia_, xii. 266) that he was
-
- ‘intreated by divers gentlemen of the inns of business, whereof
- Sir Francis Bacon was chief, to attend the bringing of a mask
- by water in the night from St. Mary Over’s to Whitehall in some
- of the gallies; but the tide falling out very contrary and the
- company attending the maskers very unruly, the project could not
- be performed so exactly as was purposed and expected. But yet
- they were safely landed at the plying stairs at Whitehall, for
- which my paines the gentlemen gave me a fair recompence.’
-
-Chamberlain (Birch, i. 227) says:
-
- ‘On Tuesday it came to Gray’s Inn and the Inner Temple’s turn to
- come with their mask, whereof Sir Francis Bacon was the chief
- contriver; and because the former came on horseback and in open
- chariots, they made choice to come by water from Winchester
- Place, in Southwark, which suited well with their device, which
- was the marriage of the river of Thames to the Rhine; and their
- show by water was very gallant, by reason of infinite store
- of lights, very curiously set and placed, and many boats and
- barges, with devices of light and lamps, with three peals of
- ordnance, one at their taking water, another in the Temple
- garden, and the last at their landing; which passage by water
- cost them better than three hundred pounds. They were received
- at the Privy Stairs, and great expectation there was that they
- should every way excel their competitors that went before them;
- both in device, daintiness of apparel, and, above all, in
- dancing, wherein they are held excellent, and esteemed for the
- properer men. But by what ill planet it fell out, I know not,
- they came home as they went, without doing anything; the reason
- whereof I cannot yet learn thoroughly, but only that the hall
- was so full that it was not possible to avoid it, or make room
- for them; besides that, most of the ladies were in the galleries
- to see them land, and could not get in.
-
- But the worst of all was, that the King was so wearied and
- sleepy, with sitting up almost two whole nights before, that he
- had no edge to it. Whereupon, Sir Francis Bacon adventured to
- entreat of his majesty that by this difference he would not, as
- it were, bury them quick; and I hear the King should answer,
- that then they must bury him quick, for he could last no longer,
- but withal gave them very good words, and appointed them to come
- again on Saturday. But the grace of their mask is quite gone,
- when their apparel hath been already showed, and their devices
- vented, so that how it will fall out God knows, for they are
- much discouraged and out of countenance, and the world says it
- comes to pass after the old proverb, the properer man the worse
- luck.’
-
-In a later letter (Birch, i. 229) Chamberlain concludes the story:
-
- ‘And our Gray’s Inn men and the Inner Templars were nothing
- discouraged, for all the first dodge, but on Saturday last
- performed their parts exceeding well and with great applause and
- approbation, both from the King and all the company.’
-
-In a third letter, to Winwood (iii, 435), he describes the adventures
-of the mask more briefly, and adds the detail that the performance was
-
- ‘in the new bankquetting house, which for a kind of amends was
- granted to them, though with much repining and contradiction of
- their emulators.’
-
-Chamberlain refers to the ‘new’ room of 1607, and not to that just put
-up for the wedding. This was used for the banquet. Foscarini reports
-(_V. P._ xii. 532) that:
-
- ‘After the ballet was over their Majesties and their Highnesses
- passed into a great Hall especially built for the purpose, where
- were long tables laden with comfits and thousands of mottoes.
- After the King had made the round of the tables, everything was
- in a moment rapaciously swept away.’
-
-The records of the Inns throw light on the finance and organization
-of the mask. From those of the Inner Temple (Inderwick, ii. 72, 76,
-81, 92, 99) we learn that the Inn’s share of the cost was ‘not so
-little as 1200^{li}’, that there were payments to Lewis Hele, Nicholas
-Polhill, and Fenner, and for ‘scarlet for the marshal of the mask’,
-that there was a rehearsal for the benchers at Ely House, and that
-funds were raised up to 1616 by assessments of £2 and £1 and by
-assigning the revenue derived from admission fees to chambers. Those
-of Gray’s Inn (Fletcher, 201–8) contain an order for such things to
-be bought ‘as M^r. Solicitor [Bacon] shall thinke fitt’. One Will
-Gerrard was appointed Treasurer, and an assessment of from £1 to £4
-according to status was to be made for a sum equal to that raised by
-the Inner Temple. There was evidently some difficulty in liquidating
-the bills. In May 1613 an order was made ‘that the gent. late actors in
-the maske at the court shall bring in all ther masking apparrel w^{ch}
-they had of the howse charge ... or else the value therof’. In June a
-further order was drafted and then stayed, calling attention to the
-‘sad contempts’ of those affected by the former, ‘albeit none of them
-did contribute anything to the charge’. Each suit had cost 100 marks.
-The offenders were to be discommonsed. In November and again in the
-following February it was found necessary to appropriate admission fees
-towards the debt.
-
-
-RICHARD BERNARD (1568–1641).
-
-The translator was born at Epworth, Lincolnshire, took his M.A. from
-Christ’s, Cambridge, in 1598, and became incumbent successively of
-Worksop, Notts., and Batcombe, Somerset.
-
- _Terence in English > 1598_
-
-1598. Terence in English. Fabulae comici facetissimi et elegantissimi
-poetae Terentii omnes Anglice factae primumque hac nova forma nunc
-editae: opera ac industria R. B. in Axholmiensi insula Lincolnsherii
-Epwortheatis. _John Legat, Cambridge._ [Epistle to Christopher and
-other sons of Sir W. Wray and nephews of Lady Bowes and Lady St. Paul,
-signed by ‘Richard Bernard’, and dated from Epworth, 30 May; Epistle to
-Reader. Includes _Adelphi_, _Andria_, _Eunuchus_, _Heautontimorumenus_,
-_Hecyra_, _Phormio_.]
-
-1607.... Secunda editio multo emendatior ... _John Legat_.
-
-1614, 1629, 1641.
-
-
-WILLIAM BIRD (> 1597–1619 <).
-
-One of the Admiral’s men (cf. ch. xiii), who collaborated with S.
-Rowley (q.v.) in _Judas_ (1601) and in additions to _Dr. Faustus_ in
-1602.
-
-
-RICHARD BOWER (?-1561).
-
-On his Mastership of the Chapel, cf. ch. xii. He has been supposed to
-be the R. B. who wrote _Apius and Virginia_, and his hand has also been
-sought in the anonymous _Clyomon and Clamydes_ and _Common Conditions_.
-
-
-SAMUEL BRANDON (?-?).
-
-Beyond his play, nothing is known of him.
-
- _The Virtuous Octavia. 1594 < > 8_
-
-_S. R._ 1598, Oct. 5. ‘A booke, intituled, The Tragicomoedye of the
-vertuous Octavia, donne by Samuell Brandon.’ _Ponsonby_ (Arber, iii.
-127).
-
-1598. The Tragicomoedi of the vertuous Octauia. Done by Samuel Brandon.
-_For William Ponsonby._ [Verses to Lady Lucia Audelay; _All’autore_,
-signed ‘Mia’; _Prosopopeia al libro_, signed ‘S. B.’; Argument. After
-text, Epistle to Mary Thinne, signed ‘S. B.’; Argument; verse epistles
-_Octavia to Antonius_ and _Antonius to Octavia_.’]
-
-_Editions_ by R. B. McKerrow (1909, _M. S. R._) and J. S. Farmer (1912,
-_S. F. T._).
-
-This is in the manner of Daniel’s _Cleopatra_ (1594), and probably a
-closet drama.
-
-
-NICHOLAS BRETON (_c._ 1545–_c._ 1626).
-
-A poet and pamphleteer, who possibly contributed to the Elvetham
-entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C) in 1591.
-
-
-ANTHONY BREWER (_c._ 1607).
-
-Nothing is known of Brewer beyond his play, unless, as is possible, he
-is the ‘Anth. Brew’ who was acting _c._ 1624 at the Cockpit (cf. F. S.
-Boas, _A Seventeenth Century Theatrical Repertoire_ in _3 Library_ for
-July 1917).
-
- _The Lovesick King. c. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1655, June 20. ‘A booke called The Lovesick King, an English
-tragicall history with the life & death of Cartis Mundy the faire Nunne
-of Winchester. Written by Anthony Brewer, gent.’ _John Sweeting_ (Eyre,
-i. 486).
-
-1655. The Lovesick King, An English Tragical History: With The Life
-and Death of Cartesmunda, the fair Nun of Winchester. Written by Anth.
-Brewer, Gent. _For Robert Pollard, and John Sweeting._
-
-1680. The Perjured Nun.
-
-_Editions_ by W. R. Chetwood (1750, _S. C._) and A. E. H. Swaen (1907,
-_Materialien_, xviii).--_Dissertation_: A. E. H. Swaen, _The Date of
-B.’s L. K._ (1908, _M. L. R._ iv. 87).
-
-There are small bits of evidence, in the use of Danish names from
-_Hamlet_ and other Elizabethan plays, and in a jest on ‘Mondays vein to
-poetize’ (l. 548), to suggest a date of composition long before that of
-publication, but a borrowing from _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_
-makes it improbable that this can be earlier than 1607. The amount
-of Newcastle local colour and a special mention of ‘those Players of
-Interludes that dwels at _Newcastle_’ (l. 534) led Fleay, i. 34, to
-conjecture that it was acted in that town.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Anthony Brewer has been confused with Thomas Brewer, or perhaps with
-more than one writer of that name, who wrote various works of popular
-literature, and to whom yet others bearing only the initials T. B. are
-credited, between 1608 and 1656. Thus _The Country Girl_, printed as
-by T. B. in 1647, is ascribed in Kirkman’s play-lists of 1661 and 1671
-to Antony Brewer, but in Archer’s list of 1656 to Thomas. Oliphant
-(_M. P._ viii. 422) points out that the scene is in part at Edmonton,
-and thinks it a revision by Massinger of an early work by Thomas, who
-published a pamphlet entitled _The Life and Death of the Merry Devil of
-Edmonton_ in 1608.
-
-
-ARTHUR BROOKE (_ob._ 1563).
-
-In 1562 he was admitted to the Inner Temple without fee ‘in
-consideration of certain plays and shows at Christmas last set forth by
-him’ (Inderwick, _Inner Temple Records_, i. 219). Possibly he refers
-to one of these plays when he says in the epistle to his _Romeus and
-Juliet_ (1562), ‘I saw the same argument lately set foorth on stage
-with more commendation then I can looke for: (being there much better
-set forth then I have or can dooe)’; but if so, he clearly was not
-himself the author.
-
-
-SAMUEL BROOKE (_c._ 1574–1631).
-
-Brooke was of a York family, and, like his brother Christopher, the
-poet, a friend of John Donne, whose marriage he earned a prison by
-celebrating in 1601. He entered Trinity, Cambridge, _c._ 1592, took
-his B.A. in 1595 and his M.A. in 1598. He became chaplain to Prince
-Henry, and subsequently Gresham Professor of Divinity and chaplain
-successively to James and Charles. In 1629 he became Master of Trinity,
-and in 1631, just before his death, Archdeacon of Coventry.
-
- _Adelphe. 27 Feb. 1613_
-
-[_MSS._] _T. C. C. MS._ R. 3. 9. ‘Comoedia in Collegii Trin. aula bis
-publice acta. Authore D^{no} D^{re} Brooke, Coll. Trin.’; _T. C. C.
-MS._ R. 10. 4, with prologue dated 1662.
-
-The play was produced on 27 Feb. 1613 and repeated on 2 March 1613
-during the visit of Charles and the Elector Frederick to Cambridge.
-
- _Scyros. 3 March 1613_
-
-[_MSS._] _T. C. C. MS._ R. 3. 9. ‘Fabula Pastoralis acta coram Principe
-Charolo et comite Palatino mensis Martii 30 A. D. 1612. Authore D^{re}
-Brooke Coll. Trin.’; _T. C. C. MSS._ R. 3. 37; R. 10. 4; R. 17. 10; O.
-3. 4; _Emanuel, Cambridge, MS._ iii. i. 17; _Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS._
-Ee. v. 16.
-
-This also was produced during the visit of Charles and Frederick to
-Cambridge. As pointed out by Greg, _Pastoral_, 251, the ‘Martii 30’ of
-the MSS. is an error for ‘Martii 3^o’. The play is a version of the
-_Filli di Sciro_ (1607) of G. Bonarelli della Rovere.
-
- _Melanthe. 10 March 1615_
-
-1615, March 27. Melanthe Fabula pastoralis acta cum Jacobus, Magnae
-Brit. Franc. & Hiberniae Rex, Cantabrigiam suam nuper inviseret,
-ibidemque Musarum atque eius animi gratia dies quinque commoraretur.
-Egerunt Alumni Coll. San. et Individuae Trinitatis. Cantabrigiae.
-_Cantrellus Legge._
-
-The ascription to Brooke is due to the _Dering MS._ (_Gent. Mag._
-1756, p. 223). Chamberlain (Birch, i. 304) says that the play was
-‘excellently well written, and as well acted’.
-
-
-WILLIAM BROWNE (1591–1643?).
-
-Browne was born at Tavistock, educated at the Grammar School there and
-at Exeter College, Oxford, and entered the Inner Temple from Clifford’s
-Inn in Nov. 1611. He is known as a poet, especially by _Britannia’s
-Pastorals_ (1613, 1616), but beyond his mask has no connexion with the
-stage. In later life he was of the household of the Herberts at Wilton.
-
- _Ulysses and Circe. 13 Jan. 1615_
-
-[_MSS._] (_a_) Emmanuel College, Cambridge, with title, ‘The Inner
-Temple Masque. Presented by the gentlemen there. Jan. 13, 1614.’
-[Epistle to Inner Temple, signed ‘W. Browne’.]
-
-(_b_) Collection of H. Chandos Pole-Gell, Hopton Hall, Wirksworth (in
-1894).
-
-_Editions_ with Browne’s _Works_ by T. Davies (1772), W. C. Hazlitt
-(1868), and G. Goodwin (1894).
-
-The maskers, in green and white, were Knights; the first antimaskers,
-with an ‘antic measure’, two Actaeons, two Midases, two Lycaons, two
-Baboons, and Grillus; the second antimaskers, ‘to a softer tune’, four
-Maids of Circe and three Nereids; the musicians Sirens, Echoes, a
-Woodman, and others; the presenters Triton, Circe, and Ulysses.
-
-The locality was the hall of the Inner Temple. Towards the lower end
-was discovered a sea-cliff. The drawing of a traverse discovered a
-wood, in which later two gates flew open, disclosing the maskers asleep
-in an arbour at the end of a glade. Awaked by a charm, they danced
-their first and second measures, took out ladies for ‘the old measures,
-galliards, corantoes, the brawls, etc.’, and danced their last measure.
-
-The Inner Temple records (Inderwick, ii. 99) mention an order of 21
-April 1616 for recompense to the chief cook on account of damage to
-his room in the cloister when it and its chimney were broken down at
-Christmas twelvemonth ‘by such as climbed up at the windows of the hall
-to see the mask’.
-
-
-SIR GEORGE BUCK (_ob._ 1623).
-
-He was Master of the Revels (cf. ch. iii). For a very doubtful
-ascription to him, on manuscript authority alleged by Collier, of the
-dumb-shows to _Locrine_, cf. ch. xxiv.
-
-
-JAMES CALFHILL (1530?-1570).
-
-Calfhill was an Eton and King’s College, Cambridge, man, who migrated
-to Oxford and became Student of Christ Church in 1548 and Canon in
-1560. He was in Orders and was Rector of West Horsley when Elizabeth
-was there in 1559. After various preferments, he was nominated Bishop
-of Worcester in 1570, but died before consecration.
-
-On 6 July 1564 Walter Haddon wrote to Abp. Parker (_Parker
-Correspondence_, 218) deprecating the tone of a sermon by Calfhill
-before the Queen, and said ‘Nunquam in illo loco quisquam minus
-satisfecit, quod maiorem ex eo dolorem omnibus attulit, quoniam admodum
-est illis artibus instructus quas illius theatri celebritas postulat’.
-No play by Calfhill is extant, but his Latin tragedy of _Progne_ was
-given before Elizabeth at Christ Church on 5 Sept. 1566 (cf. ch. iv),
-and appears from Bereblock’s synopsis to have been based on an earlier
-Latin _Progne_ (1558) by Gregorio Corraro.
-
-
-THOMAS CAMPION (1567–1620).
-
-Thomas, son of John Campion, a Chancery clerk of Herts. extraction,
-was born on 12 Feb. 1567, educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge, where he
-took no degree, and admitted on 27 April 1586 to Gray’s Inn, where
-he took part as Hidaspis and Melancholy in the comedy of 16 Jan.
-1588 (cf. ch. vii). He left the law, and probably served in Essex’s
-expedition of 1591 to France. He first appeared as a poet, anonymously,
-in the appendix to Sidney’s _Astrophel and Stella_ (1591), and has
-left several books of songs written as airs for music, often of
-his own composition, as well as a collection of Latin epigrams and
-_Observations in the Art of English Poesie_ (1602). I do not know
-whether he can be the ‘Campnies’ who performed at the Gray’s Inn mask
-of Shrovetide 1595 at Court (cf. s.v. _Gesta Grayorum_), but one of the
-two hymns in that mask, _A Hymn in Praise of Neptune_ is assigned to
-him by Francis Davison, _Poetical Rhapsody_ (1602), sig. K 8, and it is
-possible that the second hymn, beginning ‘Shadows before the shining
-sun do vanish’, which Davison does not himself appear to claim, may
-also be his. By 1607 he had taken the degree of M.D., probably abroad,
-and he practised as a physician. Through Sir Thomas Monson he was
-entangled, although in no very blameworthy capacity, in the Somerset
-scandals of 1613–15. On 1 March 1620 he died, probably of the plague,
-naming as his legatee Philip Rosseter, with whom he had written _A
-Booke of Airs_ in 1601.
-
-Campion is not traceable as a writer for the stage, although his
-connexion with Monson and Rosseter would have made it not surprising
-to find him concerned with the Queen’s Revels syndicate of 1610. But
-his contribution to the _Gesta Grayorum_ foreshadowed his place,
-second only to Jonson’s, who wrote a _Discourse of Poesie_ (Laing,
-1), now lost, against him, in the mask-poetry of the Jacobean period.
-In addition to his acknowledged masks he may also be responsible for
-part or all of the Gray’s Inn _Mountebanks Mask_ of 1618, printed by
-Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 320, as a second part of the _Gesta Grayorum_,
-and by Bullen, _Marston_, iii. 417, although the ascription to Marston
-is extremely improbable.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1828. J. Nichols. _Progresses [&c.] of James the First_, ii. 105, 554,
-630, 707. [The four masks.]
-
-1889. A. H. Bullen, _Works of T. C._ [English and Latin.]
-
-1903. A. H. Bullen, _Works of T. C._ [English only.]
-
-1907. P. Vivian, _Poetical Works (in English) of T. C._ (_Muses’
-Library_).
-
-1909. P. Vivian, _C.’s Works_.
-
-_Dissertation._--T. MacDonagh, _T. C. and the Art of English Poetry_
-(1913).
-
- _Lord Hay’s Mask. 6 Jan. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Jan. 26 (Gwyn). ‘A booke called the discription of A
-maske presented before the Kings maiestie at Whitehall on Twelf-night
-last in honour of the Lord Haies and his bryde Daughter and heire to
-the right honorable the Lord Denny, their mariage havinge ben at Court
-the same day solemnised.’ _John Browne_ (Arber, iii. 337).
-
-1607. The discription of a Maske, Presented before the Kinges Maiestie
-at White-Hall, on Twelfth Night last, in honour of the Lord Hayes,
-and his Bride, Daughter and Heire to the Honourable the Lord Dennye,
-their Marriage hauing been the same Day at Court solemnized. To this
-by occasion other small Poems are adioyned. Inuented and set forth by
-Thomas Campion Doctor of Phisicke. _John Windet for John Browne._
-[Engraving of the maskers’ habit; Verses to James, Lord De Walden and
-Lord and Lady Hay.]
-
-The maskers, in carnation and silver, concealed at first in a ‘false
-habit’ of green leaves and silver, were nine Knights of Apollo; the
-torchbearers the nine Hours of Night; the presenters Flora, Zephyrus,
-Night, and Hesperus; the musicians Sylvans, who, as the mask was
-predominantly musical, were aided by consorts of instruments and voices
-above the scene and on either side of the hall.
-
-The locality was the ‘great hall’ at Whitehall. At the upper end were
-the cloth and chair of state, with ‘scaffolds and seats on either side
-continued to the screen’. Eighteen feet from the screen was a stage,
-which stood three feet higher than the ‘dancing-place’ in front of
-it, and was enclosed by a ‘double veil’ or vertically divided curtain
-representing clouds. The Bower of Flora stood on the right and the
-House of Night on the left at the ends of the screen, and between them
-a grove, behind which, under the window, rose hills with a Tree of
-Diana. In the grove were nine golden trees which performed the first
-dance, and then, at the touch of Night’s wand, were drawn down by an
-engine under the stage, and cleft to reveal the maskers. After two
-more ‘new’ dances, they took out the ladies for ‘measures’. Then they
-danced ‘their lighter dances as corantoes, levaltas and galliards’;
-then a fourth ‘new’ dance; and then ‘putting off their vizards and
-helmets, made a low honour to the King, and attended his Majesty to the
-banqueting place’.
-
-The mask was given, presumably by friends of the bridegroom, in honour
-of the wedding of James Lord Hay and Honora, daughter of Lord Denny.
-The maskers were Lord Walden, Sir Thomas Howard, Sir Henry Carey, Sir
-Richard Preston, Sir John Ashley, Sir Thomas Jarret, Sir John Digby,
-Sir Thomas Badger, and Mr. Goringe. One air for a song and one for a
-song and dance were made by Campion, two for dances by Mr. Lupo, and
-one for a dance by Mr. Thomas Giles.
-
-Few contemporary references to the mask exist. It is probably that
-described in a letter, which I have not seen, from Lady Pembroke to
-Lord Shrewsbury, calendared among other _Talbot MSS._ of 1607 in Lodge,
-App. 121. No ambassadors were invited--‘_Dieu merci_’--says the French
-ambassador, and Anne, declaring herself ill, stayed away (La Boderie,
-ii. 12, 30). Expenditure on preparing the hall appears in the accounts
-of the Treasurer of the Chamber and the Office of Works (Reyher, 520).
-
- _The Lords’ Mask. 14 Feb. 1613_
-
-1613. _For John Budge._ [Annexed to _Caversham Entertainment_ (q.v.).]
-
-This was for the wedding of Elizabeth. The men maskers, in cloth of
-silver, were eight transformed Stars, the women, also in silver,
-eight transformed Statues; the torchbearers sixteen Fiery Spirits; the
-antimaskers six men and six women Frantics; the presenters Orpheus,
-Mania, Entheus, Prometheus, and Sibylla.
-
-The locality was the Banqueting House at Whitehall. The lower part of
-the scene, when discovered, represented a wood, with the thicket of
-Orpheus on the right and the cave of Mania on the left. After the ‘mad
-measure’ of the antimask, the upper part of the scene was discovered
-‘by the fall of a curtain’. Here, amidst clouds, were eight Stars which
-danced, vanishing to give place to the eight men maskers in the House
-of Prometheus. The torchbearers emerged below, and danced. The maskers
-descended on a cloud, behind which the lower part of the scene was
-turned to a façade with four Statues in niches. These and then a second
-four were transformed to women. Then the maskers gave their ‘first new
-entering dance’ and their second dance, and took out the bridal pair
-and others, ‘men women, and women men’. The scene again changed to a
-prospective of porticoes leading to Sibylla’s trophy, an obelisk of
-Fame. A ‘song and dance triumphant’ followed, and finally the maskers’
-‘last new dance’ concluded all ‘at their going out’.
-
-This was a mask of lords and ladies, at the cost of the Exchequer.
-The only names on record are those of the Earls of Montgomery and
-Salisbury, Lord Hay, and Ann Dudley (_vide infra_). Campion notes
-the ‘extraordinary industry and skill’ of Inigo Jones in ‘the whole
-invention’, and particularly his ‘neat artifice’ in contriving the
-‘motion’ of the Stars.
-
-The wedding masks were naturally of special interest to the Court
-gossips. Chamberlain wrote to Winwood (iii. 421) on 9 Jan.: ‘It is
-said the Lords and Ladyes about the court have appointed a maske upon
-their own charge; but I hear there is order given for £1500 to provide
-one upon the King’s cost, and a £1000 for fireworks. The Inns of Court
-are likewise dealt with for two masks against that time, and mean to
-furnish themselves for the service.’ On 29 Jan. he added (iii. 429),
-‘Great preparations here are of braverie, masks and fireworks against
-the marriage.’ On 14 Jan. one G. F. Biondi informed Carleton (_S. P.
-D. Jac. I_, lxxii. 12) that the Earls of Montgomery and Salisbury and
-Lord Hay were practising for the wedding mask. On 20 Jan. Sir Charles
-Montagu wrote to Sir Edward Montagu (_H. M. C. Buccleugh MSS._ i. 239):
-‘Here is not any news stirring, only much preparations at this wedding
-for masks, whereof shall be three, one of eight lords and eight ladies,
-whereof my cousin Ann Dudley one, and two from the Inner Courts, who
-they say will lay it on.’
-
-The Lords’ mask is certainly less prominent than those of the Inns of
-Court (_vide sub_ Beaumont and Chapman) in the actual descriptions
-of the wedding. All three are recorded in Stowe, _Annales_, 916, in
-_Wilbraham’s Journal_ (_Camden Misc._ x), 110, in reports of the
-Venetian ambassador (_V. P._ xii. 499, 532), and in the contemporary
-printed accounts of the whole ceremonies (cf. ch. xxiv). These do not
-add much to the printed descriptions of the mask-writers, on which,
-indeed, they are largely based. The fullest unofficial account was
-given by Chamberlain to Alice and Dudley Carleton in three letters
-(Birch, i. 224, 229; _S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxii. 30, 31, 48). On 18 Feb.
-he wrote: ‘That night [of the wedding] was the Lords’ mask, whereof I
-hear no great commendation, save only for riches, their devices being
-long and tedious, and more like a play than a mask.’ This criticism he
-repeated in a letter to Winwood (iii. 435). To Alice Carleton he added,
-after describing the bravery of the Inns of Court: ‘All this time
-there was a course taken, and so notified, that no lady or gentlewoman
-should be admitted to any of these sights with a vardingale, which was
-to gain the more room, and I hope may serve to make them quite left
-off in time. And yet there were more scaffolds, and more provision
-made for room than ever I saw, both in the hall and banqueting room,
-besides a new room built to dine and dance in.’ On 25 February, when
-all was over, he reported: ‘Our revels and triumphs within doors
-gave great contentment, being both dainty and curious in devices and
-sumptuous in show, specially the inns of court, whose two masks stood
-them in better than £4000, besides the gallantry and expense of private
-gentlemen that were but _ante ambul[at]ores_ and went only to accompany
-them.... The next night [21 Feb.] the King invited the maskers, with
-their assistants, to the number of forty, to a solemn supper in the
-new marriage room, where they were well treated and much graced
-with kissing her majesty’s hand, and every one having a particular
-_accoglienza_ from him. The King husbanded this matter so well that
-this feast was not at his own cost, but he and his company won it upon
-a wager of running at the ring, of the prince and his nine followers,
-who paid £30 a man. The King, queen, prince, Palatine and Lady
-Elizabeth sat at table by themselves, and the great lords and ladies,
-with the maskers, above four score in all, sat at another long table,
-so that there was no room for them that made the feast, but they were
-fain to be lookers on, which the young Lady Rich took no great pleasure
-in, to see her husband, who was one that paid, not so much as drink for
-his money. The ambassadors that were at this wedding and shows were the
-French, Venetian, Count Henry [of Nassau] and Caron for the States.
-The Spaniard was or would be sick, and the archduke’s ambassador being
-invited for the second day, made a sullen excuse; and those that were
-present were not altogether so well pleased but that I hear every one
-had some punctilio of disgust.’ John Finett, in a letter of 22 Feb. to
-Carleton (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxii. 32), says the mask of the Lords
-was ‘rich and ingenious’ and those of the Inns ‘much commended’. His
-letter is largely taken up with the ambassadorial troubles to which
-Chamberlain refers. Later he dealt with these in _Philoxenis_ (1656),
-1 (cf. Sullivan, 79). The chief marfeast was the archiducal ambassador
-Boiscot, who resented an invitation to the second or third day, while
-in the diplomatic absence through sickness of the Spaniard the Venetian
-ambassador was asked with the French for the first day. Finett was
-charged with various plausible explanations. James did not think it
-his business to decide questions of precedence. It was customary to
-group Venice and France. The Venetian had brought an extraordinary
-message of congratulation from his State, and had put his retinue into
-royal liveries at great expense. The wedding was a continuing feast,
-and all its days equally glorious. In fact, whether at Christmas or
-Shrovetide, the last day was in some ways the most honourable, and it
-had originally been planned to have the Lords’ mask on Shrove-Tuesday.
-But Boiscot could not be persuaded to accept his invitation. The
-ambassadors who did attend were troublesome, at supper, rather than at
-the mask. The French ambassador ‘made an offer to precede the prince’.
-His wife nearly left because she was placed below, instead of above,
-the Viscountesses. The Venetian claimed a chair instead of a stool,
-and a place above the carver, but in vain. His rebuff did not prevent
-him from speaking well of the Lords’ mask, which he called ‘very
-beautiful’, specially noting the three changes of scene.
-
-Several financial documents relating to the mask are preserved (Reyher,
-508, 522; Devon, 158, 164; Collier, i. 364; Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 43;
-_Archaeologia_, xxvi. 380). In _Abstract_ 14 the charges are given as
-£400, but the total charges must have been much higher. Chamberlain
-(_vide supra_) spoke of £1,500 as assigned to them. A list of personal
-fees, paid through Meredith Morgan, alone (Reyher, 509) amounts to £411
-6_s._ 8_d._ Campion had £66 13_s._ 4_d._, Jones £50, the dancers Jerome
-Herne, Bochan, Thomas Giles and Confess £30 or £40 each, the musicians
-John Cooper, Robert Johnson, and Thomas Lupo £10 or £20 each. One
-Steven Thomas had £15, ‘he that played to y^e boyes’ £6 13_s._ 4_d._,
-and ‘2 that played to y^e Antick Maske’ £11; while fees of £1 each went
-to 42 musicians, 12 mad folks, 5 speakers, 10 of the King’s violins and
-3 grooms of the chamber. The supervision of ‘emptions and provisions’
-was entrusted to the Lord Chamberlain and the Master of the Horse.
-
- _The Caversham Entertainment. 27–8 April 1613_
-
-1613. A Relation of the late royall Entertainment giuen by the Right
-Honorable the Lord Knowles, at Cawsome-House neere Redding: to our
-most Gracious Queene, Queene Anne, in her Progresse toward the Bathe,
-vpon the seuen and eight and twentie dayes of Aprill. 1613. Whereunto
-is annexed the Description, Speeches and Songs of the Lords Maske,
-presented in the Banquetting-house on the Marriage night of the High
-and Mightie, Count Palatine, and the Royally descended the Ladie
-Elizabeth. Written by Thomas Campion. _For John Budge._
-
-On arrival were speeches, a song, and a dance by a Cynic, a Traveller,
-two Keepers, and two Robin Hood men at the park gate; then speeches in
-the lower garden by a Gardener, and a song by his man and boy; then a
-concealed song in the upper garden.
-
-After supper was a mask in the hall by eight ‘noble and princely
-personages’ in green with vizards, accompanied by eight pages as
-torchbearers, and presented by the Cynic, Traveller, Gardener, and
-their ‘crew’, and Sylvanus. The maskers gave a ‘new dance’; then took
-out the ladies, among whom Anne ‘vouchsafed to make herself the head
-of their revels, and graciously to adorn the place with her personal
-dancing’; ‘much of the night being thus spent with variety of dances,
-the masquers made a conclusion with a second new dance’.
-
-On departure were a speech and song by the Gardeners, and presents of a
-bag of linen, apron, and mantle by three country maids.
-
-Chamberlain wrote of this entertainment to Winwood (iii. 454) on 6 May,
-‘The King brought her on her way to Hampton Court; her next move was
-to Windsor, then to Causham, a house of the Lord Knolles not far from
-Reading, where she was entertained with Revells, and a gallant mask
-performed by the Lord Chamberlain’s four sons, the Earl of Dorset, the
-Lord North, Sir Henry Rich, and Sir Henry Carie, and at her parting
-presented with a dainty coverled or quilt, a rich carrquenet, and a
-curious cabinet, to the value in all of 1500^l.’ He seems to have sent
-a similar account in an unprinted letter of 29 April to Carleton (_S.
-P. D. Jac. I_, lxxii. 120). The four sons of Lord Chamberlain Suffolk
-who appear in other masks are Theophilus Lord Walden, Sir Thomas, Sir
-Henry, and Sir Charles Howard.
-
- _Lord Somerset’s Mask [Squires]. 26 Dec. 1613_
-
-1614. The Description of a Maske: Presented in the Banqueting roome at
-Whitehall, on Saint Stephens night last, At the Mariage of the Right
-Honourable the Earle of Somerset: And the right noble the Lady Frances
-Howard. Written by Thomas Campion. Whereunto are annexed diuers choyse
-Ayres composed for this Maske that may be sung with a single voyce to
-the Lute or Base-Viall. _E. A. for Laurence Lisle._
-
-The maskers were twelve Disenchanted Knights; the first antimaskers
-four Enchanters and Enchantresses, four Winds, four Elements, and four
-Parts of the Earth; the second antimaskers twelve Skippers in red and
-white; the presenters four Squires and three Destinies; the musicians
-Eternity, Harmony, and a chorus of nine.
-
-The locality was the banqueting room at Whitehall, of which the upper
-part, ‘where the state is placed’, and the sides were ‘theatred’ with
-pillars and scaffolds. At the lower end was a triumphal arch, ‘which
-enclosed the whole works’ and behind it the scene, from which a curtain
-was drawn. Above was a clouded sky; beneath a sea bounded by two
-promontories bearing pillars of gold, and in front ‘a pair of stairs
-made exceeding curiously in form of a scallop shell’, between two
-gardens with seats for the maskers. After the first antimask, danced
-‘in a strange kind of confusion’, the Destinies brought the Queen a
-golden tree, whence she plucked a bough to disenchant the Knights,
-who then appeared, six from a cloud, six from the golden pillars.
-The scene changed, and ‘London with the Thames is very artificially
-presented’. The maskers gave the first and second dance, and then
-danced with the ladies, ‘wherein spending as much time as they held
-fitting, they returned to the seats provided for them’. Barges then
-brought the second antimask. After the maskers’ last dance, the Squires
-complimented the royalties and bridal pair.
-
-This was a wedding mask, by lords and gentlemen. The maskers were
-the Duke of Lennox, the Earls of Pembroke, Dorset, Salisbury, and
-Montgomery, the Lords Walden, Scroope, North, and Hay, Sir Thomas, Sir
-Henry, and Sir Charles Howard. The ‘workmanship’ was undertaken by ‘M.
-Constantine’ [Servi], ‘but he being too much of himself, and no way to
-be drawn to impart his intentions, failed so far in the assurance he
-gave that the main invention, even at the last cast, was of force drawn
-into a far narrower compass than was from the beginning intended’. One
-song was by Nicholas Lanier; three were by [Giovanni] Coprario and
-were sung by John Allen and Lanier. G. F. Biondi informed Carleton
-on 24 Nov. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxv. 25) of the ‘costly ballets’
-preparing for Somerset’s wedding. On 25 Nov. Chamberlain wrote to
-Carleton (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxv. 28; Birch, i. 278): ‘All the talk
-is now of masking and feasting at these towardly marriages, whereof
-the one is appointed on St. Stephen’s day, in Christmas, the other for
-Twelfthtide. The King bears the charge of the first, all saving the
-apparel, and no doubt the queen will do as much on her side, which must
-be a mask of maids, if they may be found.... The maskers, besides the
-lord chamberlain’s four sons, are named to be the Earls of Rutland,
-Pembroke, Montgomery, Dorset, Salisbury, the Lords Chandos, North,
-Compton, and Hay; Edward Sackville, that killed the Lord Bruce, was in
-the list, but was put out again; and I marvel he would offer himself,
-knowing how little gracious he is, and that he hath been assaulted once
-or twice since his return.’ The Queen’s entertainment, which did not
-prove to be a mask, was Daniel’s _Hymen’s Triumph_. The actual list of
-performers in the mask of 26 Dec. was somewhat differently made up. On
-18 Nov. Lord Suffolk had sent invitations through Sir Thomas Lake to
-the Earl of Rutland and Lord Willoughby d’Eresby (_S. P. D. Jac. I_,
-lxxv. 15; Reyher, 505), but apparently neither accepted. He also wrote
-to Lake on 8 Dec. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxv. 37) hoping that Sackville
-might be allowed to take part, not in the mask, but in the tilt (as
-in fact he did), at his cousin’s wedding. On 30 Dec. Chamberlain sent
-Alice Carleton an accurate list of the actual maskers (_S. P. D. Jac.
-I_, lxxv. 53; Birch, i. 285), with the comment, ‘I hear little or no
-commendation of the mask made by the lords that night, either for
-device or dancing, only it was rich and costly’. The ‘great bravery’
-and masks at the wedding are briefly recorded by Gawdy, 175, and a
-list of the festivities is given by Howes in Stowe, _Annales_ (1615),
-928. He records five in all: ‘A gallant maske of Lords’ [Campion’s] on
-26 Dec., the wedding night, ‘a maske of the princes gentlemen’ on 29
-Dec. and 3 Jan. [Jonson’s _Irish Mask_], ‘2 seuerall pleasant maskes’
-at Merchant Taylors on 4 Jan. [including Middleton’s lost _Mask of
-Cupid_], and a Gray’s Inn mask on 6 Jan. [_Flowers_].
-
-The ambassadorial complications of the year are described by Finett,
-12 (cf. Sullivan, 84). Spain had been in the background at the
-royal wedding of the previous year, and as there was a new Spanish
-ambassador (Sarmiento) this was made an excuse for asking him with
-the archiducal ambassador on 26 Dec. and the French and Venetian
-ambassadors on 6 Jan. By way of compensation these were also asked to
-the Roxburghe-Drummond wedding on 2 Feb. They received purely formal
-invitations to the Somerset wedding, and returned excuses for staying
-away. The agents of Florence and Savoy were asked, and when they raised
-the question of precedence were told that they were not ambassadors and
-might scramble for places.
-
-I am not quite clear whether the costs of this mask, as well as of
-Jonson’s _Irish Mask_, fell on the Exchequer. Chamberlain’s notice of
-25 Nov. (_vide supra_) is not conclusive. Reyher, 523, assigns most
-of the financial documents to the _Irish Mask_, but an account of the
-Works for an arch and pilasters to the Lords’ mask; and the payment to
-Meredith Morgan in Sept. 1614 (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxvii. 92), which he
-does not cite, appears from the Calendar to be for more than one mask.
-The _Irish Mask_ needed no costly scenery.
-
-J[ohn] B[ruce], (_Camden Misc._ v), describes a late eighteenth or
-early nineteenth century forgery, of unknown origin, purporting to
-describe one of the masks at the Somerset wedding and other events. The
-details used belong partly to 1613–14 and partly to 1614–15.
-
-
-ELIZABETH, LADY CARY (1586–1639).
-
- _Mariam. 1602 < > 5._
-
-I have omitted a notice of this closet play, printed in 1613, by a
-slip, and can only add to the edition (_M. S. C._) of 1914 that Lady
-Cary was married in 1602 (Chamberlain, 199), not 1600. She wrote an
-earlier play on a Syracusan theme.
-
-
-SIR ROBERT CECIL, EARL OF SALISBURY (1563–1612).
-
-But few details of the numerous royal entertainments given by Sir
-William Cecil, Lord Burghley, and his sons Sir Thomas Cecil, Lord
-Burghley and afterwards Earl of Exeter, and Sir Robert Cecil, Earl of
-Salisbury, are upon record. It is, on the whole, convenient to note
-here, rather than in ch. xxiv, those which have a literary element.
-Robert Cecil contributed to that of 1594, and possibly to others.
-
- i. _Theobalds Entertainment of 1571 (William Lord Burghley)._
-
-Elizabeth was presented with verses and a picture of the newly-finished
-house on 21 Sept. 1571 (Haynes-Murdin, ii. 772).
-
- ii. _Theobalds Entertainment of 1591 (William Lord Burghley)._
-
-Elizabeth came for 10–20 May 1591, and knighted Robert Cecil.
-
-(_a_) Strype, _Annals_, iv. 108, and Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 75, print
-a mock charter, dated 10 May 1591, and addressed by Lord Chancellor
-Hatton, in the Queen’s name, ‘To the disconsolate and retired spryte,
-the Heremite of Tybole’, in which he is called upon to return to the
-world.
-
-(_b_) Collier, i. 276, followed by Bullen, _Peele_, ii. 305, prints
-from a MS. in the collection of Frederic Ouvry a Hermit’s speech,
-subscribed with the initials G. P. and said by Collier to be in Peele’s
-hand. This is a petition to the Queen for a writ to cause the founder
-of the hermit’s cell to restore it. This founder has himself occupied
-it for two years and a few months since the death of his wife, and has
-obliged the hermit to govern his house. Numerous personal allusions
-make it clear that the ‘founder’ is Burghley, and as Lady Burghley died
-4 April 1589, the date should be in 1591.
-
-(_c_) Bullen, _Peele_, ii. 309, following Dyce, prints two speeches by
-a Gardener and a Mole Catcher, communicated by Collier to Dyce from
-another MS. The ascription to Peele is conjectural, and R. W. Bond,
-_Lyly_, i. 417, claims them, also by conjecture, for Lyly. However this
-may be, they are addressed to the Queen, who has reigned thirty-three
-years, and introduce the gift of a jewel in a box. Elizabeth had not
-reigned full thirty-three years in May 1591, but perhaps near enough.
-That Theobalds was the locality is indicated by a reference to Pymms
-at Edmonton, a Cecil property 6 miles from Theobalds, as occupied
-by ‘the youngest son of this honourable old man’. One is bound to
-mistrust manuscripts communicated by Collier, but there is evidence
-that Burghley retired to ‘Colling’s Lodge’ near Theobalds in grief at
-his wife’s death in 1589, and also that in 1591, when he failed to
-establish Robert Cecil as Secretary, he made a diplomatic pretence of
-giving up public life (Hume, _The Great Lord Burghley_, 439, 446).
-
- iii. _Theobalds Entertainment of 1594 (William Lord Burghley)_.
-
-The Hermit was brought into play again when Elizabeth next visited
-Theobalds, in 1594 (13–23 June). He delivered an Oration, in which he
-recalled the recovery of his cell at her last coming, and expressed
-a fear that ‘my young master’ might wish to use it. No doubt the
-alternative was that Robert Cecil should become Secretary. The oration,
-‘penned by Sir Robert Cecill’, is printed by Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 241,
-from _Bodl. Rawlinson MS. D_ 692 (_Bodl._ 13464), f. 106.
-
- iv. _Wimbledon Entertainment of 1599 (Thomas Lord Burghley)_.
-
-A visit of 27–30 July 1599 is the probable occasion for an address of
-welcome, not mimetic in character, by a porter, John Joye, preserved in
-_Bodl. Tanner MS._ 306, f. 266, and endorsed ‘The queenes entertainment
-att Wimbledon 99’.
-
- v. _Cecil House Entertainment of 1602 (Sir Robert Cecil)._
-
-Elizabeth dined with Cecil on 6 Dec. 1602.
-
-(_a_) Manningham, 99, records, ‘Sundry devises; at hir entraunce,
-three women, a maid, a widdowe, and a wife, each commending their owne
-states, but the Virgin preferred; an other, on attired in habit of a
-Turke desyrous to see hir Majestie, but as a straunger without hope of
-such grace, in regard of the retired manner of hir Lord, complained;
-answere made, howe gracious hir Majestie in admitting to presence, and
-howe able to discourse in anie language; whiche the Turke admired,
-and, admitted, presents hir with a riche mantle.’ Chamberlain, 169,
-adds, ‘You like the Lord Kepers devises so ill, that I cared not to get
-Mr. Secretaries that were not much better, saving a pretty dialogue
-of John Davies ’twixt a Maide, a widow, and a wife.’ _A Contention
-Betwixt a Wife, a Widdow, and a Maide_ was registered on 2 Apr. 1604
-(Arber iii. 258), appeared with the initials I. D. in Francis Davison’s
-_Poetical Rhapsody_ (ed. 2, 1608) and is reprinted by Grosart in the
-_Poems_ of Sir John Davies (q.v.) from the ed. of 1621, where it is
-ascribed to ‘Sir I. D.’.
-
-(_b_) Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 76, prints from _Harl. MS._ 286, f. 248,
-‘A Conference betweene a Gent. Huisher and a Poet, before the Queene,
-at M^r. Secretaryes House. By John Davies.’ He assigns it to 1591, but
-Cecil was not then Secretary, and it probably belongs to 1602.
-
-(_c_) _Hatfield MSS_. xii. 568 has verses endorsed ‘1602’ and beginning
-‘Now we have present made, To Cynthya, Phebe, Flora’.
-
- vi. _Theobalds Entertainment of 1606 (Earl of Salisbury)._
-
-See s.v. Jonson; also the mask described by Harington (ch. v).
-
- vii. _Theobalds Entertainment of 1607 (Earl of Salisbury)._
-
-See s.v. Jonson.
-
-
-GEORGE CHAPMAN (_c._ 1560–1634).
-
-Chapman was born in 1559 or 1560 near Hitchin in Hertfordshire.
-Anthony Wood believed him to have been at Oxford, and possibly also at
-Cambridge, but neither residence can be verified. It is conjectured
-that residence at Hitchin and soldiering in the Low Countries may have
-helped to fill the long period before his first appearance as a writer,
-unless indeed the isolated translation _Fedele and Fortunio_ (1584)
-is his, with _The Shadow of Night_ (1594). This shows him a member of
-the philosophical circle of which the centre was Thomas Harriot. The
-suggestion of W. Minto that he was the ‘rival poet’ of Shakespeare’s
-_Sonnets_ is elaborated by Acheson, who believes that Shakespeare drew
-him as Holophernes and as Thersites, and accepted by Robertson; it
-would be more plausible if any relation between the Earl of Southampton
-and Chapman, earlier than a stray dedication shared with many others
-in 1609, could be established. By 1596, and possibly earlier, Chapman
-was in Henslowe’s pay as a writer for the Admiral’s. His plays,
-which proved popular, included, besides the extant _Blind Beggar of
-Alexandria_ and _Humorous Day’s Mirth_, five others, of which some and
-perhaps all have vanished. These were _The Isle of a Woman_, afterwards
-called _The Fount of New Fashions_ (May–Oct. 1598), _The World Runs
-on Wheels_, afterwards called _All Fools but the Fool_ (Jan.–July
-1599), _Four Kings_ (Oct. 1598–Jan. 1599), a ‘tragedy of Bengemens
-plotte’ (Oct.–Jan. 1598; cf. s.v. Jonson) and a pastoral tragedy (July
-1599). His reputation both for tragedy and for comedy was established
-when Meres wrote his _Palladis Tamia_ in 1598. During 1599 Chapman
-disappears from Henslowe’s diary, and in 1600 or soon after began his
-series of plays for the Chapel, afterwards Queen’s Revels, children.
-This lasted until 1608, when his first indiscretion of _Eastward Ho!_
-(1605), in reply to which he was caricatured as Bellamont in Dekker
-and Webster’s _Northward Ho!_, was followed by a second in _Byron_.
-He now probably dropped his connexion with the stage, at any rate for
-many years. After completing Marlowe’s _Hero and Leander_ in 1598, he
-had begun his series of Homeric translations, and these Prince Henry,
-to whom he had been appointed sewer in ordinary at the beginning of
-James’s reign, now bade him pursue, with the promise of £300, to which
-on his death-bed in 1612 he added another of a life-pension. These
-James failed to redeem, and Chapman also lost his place as sewer. His
-correspondence contains complaints of poverty, probably of this or a
-later date, and indications of an attempt, with funds supplied by a
-brother, to mend his fortunes by marriage with a widow. He found a new
-patron in the Earl of Somerset, wrote one of the masks for the wedding
-of the Princess Elizabeth in 1613, and went on with Homer, completing
-his task in 1624. He lived until 12 May 1634, and his tomb by Inigo
-Jones still stands at St. Giles-in-the-Fields. In his later years he
-seems to have touched up some of his dramatic work and possibly to have
-lent a hand to the younger dramatist Shirley. Jonson told Drummond in
-1619 that ‘next himself, only Fletcher and Chapman could make a mask’,
-and that ‘Chapman and Fletcher were loved of him’ (Laing, 4, 12), and
-some of Jonson’s extant letters appear to confirm the kindly relations
-which these phrases suggest. But a fragment of invective against Jonson
-left by Chapman on his death-bed suggests that they did not endure for
-ever.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1873. [R. H. Shepherd.] _The Comedies and Tragedies of George Chapman._
-3 vols. (_Pearson reprints_). [Omits _Eastward Ho!_]
-
-1874–5. R. H. Shepherd. _The Works of George Chapman._ 3 vols. [With
-Swinburne’s essay. Includes _The Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ and _Two Wise
-Men and All the Rest Fools_.]
-
-1895. W. L. Phelps. _The Best Plays of George Chapman_ (_Mermaid
-Series_). [_All Fools_, the two _Bussy_ and the two _Byron_ plays.]
-
-1910–14. T. M. Parrott. _The Plays and Poems of George Chapman._ 3
-vols. [Includes _Sir Giles Goosecap_, _The Ball_, _Alphonsus Emperor of
-Germany_, and _Revenge for Honour_. The _Poems_ not yet issued.]
-
-_Dissertations_: F. Bodenstedt, _C. in seinem Verhältniss zu
-Shakespeare_ (1865, _Jahrbuch_, i. 300); A. C. Swinburne, _G. C.: A
-Critical Essay_ (1875); E. Koeppel, _Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen G.
-C.’s, &c._ (1897, _Quellen und Forschungen_, lxxxii); B. Dobell, _Newly
-discovered Documents of the Elizabethan and Jacobean Periods_ (1901,
-_Ath._ i. 369, 403, 433, 465); A. Acheson, _Shakespeare and the Rival
-Poet_ (1903); E. E. Stoll, _On the Dates of some of C.’s Plays_ (1905,
-_M. L. N._ xx. 206); T. M. Parrott, _Notes on the Text of C.’s Plays_
-(1907, _Anglia_, xxx. 349, 501); F. L. Schoell, _Chapman as a Comic
-Writer_ (1911, _Paris diss._, unprinted, but used by Parrott); J. M.
-Robertson, _Shakespeare and C._ (1917).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria. 1596_
-
-_S. R._ 1598, Aug. 15. ‘A booke intituled The blynde begger of
-Alexandrya, vppon Condicon thatt yt belonge to noe other man.’ _William
-Jones_ (Arber, iii. 124).
-
-1598. The Blinde begger of Alexandria, most pleasantly discoursing his
-variable humours in disguised shapes full of conceite and pleasure.
-As it hath beene sundry times publickly acted in London, by the right
-honorable the Earle of Nottingham, Lord high Admirall his seruantes. By
-George Chapman: Gentleman. _For William Jones._
-
-The play was produced by the Admiral’s on 12 Feb. 1596; properties
-were bought for a revival in May and June 1601. P. A. Daniel shows in
-_Academy_ (1888), ii. 224, that five of the six passages under the head
-of _Irus_ in _Edward Pudsey’s Notebook_, taken in error by R. Savage,
-_Stratford upon Avon Notebooks_, i. 7 (1888) to be from an unknown play
-of Shakespeare, appear with slight variants in the 1598 text. This,
-which is very short, probably represents a ‘cut’ stage copy. Pudsey is
-traceable as an actor (cf. ch. xv) in 1626.
-
- _An Humorous Day’s Mirth. 1597_
-
-1599. A pleasant Comedy entituled: An Numerous dayes Myrth. As it hath
-beene sundrie times publikely acted by the right honourable the Earle
-of Nottingham Lord high Admirall his seruants. By G. C. _Valentine
-Syms_.
-
-The 1598 inventories of the Admiral’s (Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 115,
-119) include Verone’s son’s hose and Labesha’s cloak, which justifies
-Fleay, i. 55, in identifying the play with the comedy of _Humours_
-produced by that company on 1 May 1597. It is doubtless also the play
-of which John Chamberlain wrote to Dudley Carleton (Chamberlain, 4) on
-11 June 1597, ‘We have here a new play of humors in very great request,
-and I was drawne along to it by the common applause, but my opinion of
-it is (as the fellow saide of the shearing of hogges), that there was a
-great crie for so litle wolle.’
-
- _The Gentleman Usher. 1602_ (?)
-
-[_MS._] For an unverified MS. cf. s.v. _Monsieur D’Olive._
-
-_S. R._ 1605, Nov. 26 (Harsnett). ‘A book called Vincentio and
-Margaret.’ _Valentine Syms_ (iii. 305).
-
-1606. The Gentleman Usher. By George Chapman. _V. S. for Thomas Thorpe._
-
-_Edition_ by T. M. Parrott (1907, _B. L._).--_Dissertation_: O. Cohn,
-_Zu den Quellen von C.’s G. U._ (1912, _Frankfort Festschrift_, 229).
-
-There is no indication of a company, but the use of a mask and songs
-confirm the general probability that the play was written for the
-Chapel or Revels. It was later than _Sir Giles Goosecap_ (q.v.), to
-the title-rôle of which II. i. 81 alludes, but of this also the date
-is uncertain. Parrott’s ‘1602’ is plausible enough, but 1604 is also
-possible.
-
- _All Fools. 1604_ (?)
-
-1605. Al Fooles A Comedy, Presented at the Black Fryers, And lately
-before his Maiestie. Written by George Chapman. _For Thomas Thorpe._
-[Prologue and Epilogue. The copies show many textual variations.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{2, 3} (1780–1827) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ ii) and T. M. Parrott (1907, _B. L._).--_Dissertation_: M. Stier,
-_C.’s All Fools mit Berücksichtigung seiner Quellen_ (1904, _Halle
-diss._).
-
-The Court performance was on 1 Jan. 1605 (cf. App. B), and the play
-was therefore probably on the Blackfriars stage in 1604. There is a
-reminiscence of Ophelia’s flowers in II. i. 232, and the prologue seems
-to criticize the _Poetomachia_.
-
- Who can show cause why th’ ancient comic vein
- Of Eupolis and Cratinus (now reviv’d
- Subject to personal application)
- Should be exploded by some bitter spleens.
-
-But in Jan.–July 1599 Henslowe paid Chapman £8 10_s._ on behalf of
-the Admiral’s for _The World Runs on Wheels_. The last entry is for
-‘his boocke called the world Rones a whelles & now all foolles but the
-foolle’. This seems to me, more clearly than to Greg (_Henslowe_, ii.
-203), to indicate a single play and a changed title. I am less certain,
-however, that he is right in adopting the view of Fleay, i. 59, that
-it was an earlier version of the Blackfriars play. It may be so, and
-the date of ‘the seventeenth of November, fifteen hundred and so forth’
-used for a deed in IV. i. 331 lends some confirmation. But the change
-of company raises a doubt, and there is no ‘fool’ in _All Fools_. An
-alternative conjecture is that the Admiral’s reverted to the original
-title for their play, leaving a modification of the amended one
-available for Chapman in 1604. Collier (Dodsley^3) printed a dedicatory
-sonnet to Sir Thomas Walsingham. This exists only in a single copy, in
-which it has been printed on an inserted leaf. T. J. Wise (_Ath._ 1908,
-i. 788) and Parrott, ii. 726, show clearly that it is a forgery.
-
- _Monsieur D’Olive. 1604_
-
-[_MS._] See _infra_.
-
-1606. Monsieur D’Olive. A Comedie, as it was sundrie times acted by her
-Majesties children at the Blacke-Friers. By George Chapman. _T. C. for
-William Holmes_.
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ iii).
-
-The title-page suggests a Revels rather than a Chapel play, and Fleay,
-i. 59, Stoll, and Parrott all arrive at 1604 for the date, which is
-rendered probable by allusions to the Jacobean knights (I. i. 263;
-IV. ii. 77), to the calling in of monopolies (I. i. 284), to the
-preparation of costly embassies (IV. ii. 114), and perhaps to the royal
-dislike of tobacco (II. ii. 164). There is a reminiscence of _Hamlet_,
-III. ii. 393, in II. ii. 91:
-
- our great men
- Like to a mass of clouds that now seem like
- An elephant, and straightways like an ox,
- And then a mouse.
-
-On the inadequate ground that woman’s ‘will’ is mentioned in II. i.
-89, Fleay regarded the play as a revision of one written by Chapman
-for the Admiral’s in 1598 under the title of _The Will of a Woman_.
-But Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 194) interprets Henslowe’s entry ‘the iylle
-of a woman’ as _The Isle of Women_. The 1598 play seems to have been
-renamed _The Fount of New Fashions_. Hazlitt, _Manual_, 89, 94, says
-part Heber’s sale included MSS. both of _The Fount of New Fashions_,
-and of _The Gentleman Usher_ under the title of _The Will of a Woman_,
-but Greg could not find these in the sale catalogue.
-
- _Bussy D’Ambois. 1604_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, June 3 (Buck). ‘The tragedie of Busye D’Amboise. Made by
-George Chapman.’ _William Aspley_ (Arber, iii. 350).
-
-1607. Bussy D’Ambois. A Tragedie: As it hath been often presented at
-Paules. _For William Aspley._
-
-1608. _For William Aspley._ [Another issue.]
-
-1641. As it hath been often Acted with great Applause. Being much
-corrected and amended by the Author before his death. _A. N. for
-Robert Lunne._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1646. _T. W. for Robert Lunne._ [Another issue.]
-
-1657.... the Author, George Chapman, Gent. Before his death. _For
-Joshua Kirton._ [Another issue.]
-
-_Editions_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ iii), F. S. Boas (1905, _B.
-L._), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertation_: T. M. Parrott,
-_The Date of C.’s B. d’A._ (1908, _M. L. R._ iii. 126).
-
-The play was acted by Paul’s, who disappear in 1606. It has been
-suggested that it dates in some form from 1598 or earlier, because Pero
-is a female character, and an Admiral’s inventory of 1598 (_Henslowe
-Papers_, 120) has ‘Perowes sewt, which W^m Sley were’. As Sly had
-been a Chamberlain’s man since 1594, this must have been a relic of
-some obsolete play. But the impossible theory seems to have left a
-trace on the suggestion of Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 198) that Chapman may
-have worked on the basis of the series of plays on _The Civil Wars
-of France_ written by Dekker (q.v.) and others for the Admiral’s at
-a later date in 1598 than that of the inventories. From one of these
-plays, however, might come the reminiscence of a ‘trusty Damboys’
-in _Satiromastix_ (1601), IV. i. 174. For _Bussy_ itself a jest on
-‘leap-year’ (I. ii. 82) points to either 1600 or 1604, and allusions
-to Elizabeth as an ‘old queen’ (I. ii. 12), to a ‘knight of the new
-edition’ (I. ii. 124), with which may be compared Day, _Isle of Gulls_
-(1606), i. 3, ‘gentlemen ... of the best and last edition, of the Dukes
-own making’, and to a ‘new denizened lord’ (I. ii. 173) point to 1604
-rather than 1600. The play was revived by the King’s men and played at
-Court on 7 April 1634 (_Variorum_, iii. 237), and to this date probably
-belongs the prologue in the edition of 1641. Here the actors declare
-that the piece, which evidently others had ventured to play, was
-
- known,
- And still believed in Court to be our own.
-
-They add that
-
- Field is gone,
- Whose action first did give it name,
-
-and that his successor (perhaps Taylor) is prevented by his grey beard
-from taking the young hero, which therefore falls to a ‘third man’ who
-has been liked as Richard. Gayton, _Festivous Notes on Don Quixote_
-(1654), 25, tells us that Eliard Swanston played Bussy; doubtless
-he is the third man. The revision of the text, incorporated in the
-1641 edition, may obviously date either from this or for some earlier
-revival. It is not necessary to assume that the performances by Field
-referred to in the prologue were earlier than 1616, when he joined the
-King’s. Parrott, however, makes it plausible that they might have been
-for the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars in 1609–12, about the time when
-the _Revenge_ was played by the same company. If so, the Revels must
-have acquired _Bussy_ after the Paul’s performances ended in 1606. It
-is, of course, quite possible that they were only recovering a play
-originally written for them, and carried by Kirkham to Paul’s in 1605.
-
- _Eastward Ho! 1605_
-
-With Jonson and Marston.
-
-_S. R._ 1605, Sept. 4 (Wilson). ‘A Comedie called Eastward Ho:’
-_William Aspley and Thomas Thorp_ (Arber, iii. 300).
-
-1605. Eastward Hoe. As It was playd in the Black-friers. By The
-Children of her Maiesties Reuels. Made by Geo: Chapman. Ben Ionson.
-Ioh: Marston. _For William Aspley._ [Prologue and Epilogue. Two issues
-(_a_) and (_b_). Of (_a_) only signatures E_{3} and E_{4} exist,
-inserted between signatures E_{2} and E_{3} of a complete copy of (_b_)
-in the Dyce collection; neither Greg, _Masques_, cxxii, nor Parrott,
-_Comedies_, 862, is quite accurate here.]
-
-1605. _For William Aspley._ [Another edition, reset.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1, 2, 3} (1744–1825), by W. R. Chetwood in
-_Memoirs of Ben Jonson_ (1756), W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ ii),
-F. E. Schelling (1903, _B. L._), J. W. Cunliffe (1913, _R. E. C._
-ii), J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F. T._); and with Marston’s _Works_
-(q.v.).--_Dissertations_: C. Edmonds, _The Original of the Hero in the
-Comedy of E. H._ (_Athenaeum_, 13 Oct. 1883); H. D. Curtis, _Source of
-the Petronel-Winifred Plot in E. H._ (1907, _M. P._ v. 105).
-
-Jonson told Drummond in 1619 (Laing, 20): ‘He was dilated by Sir James
-Murray to the King, for writing something against the Scots, in a
-play Eastward Hoe, and voluntarly imprissoned himself with Chapman
-and Marston, who had written it amongst them. The report was, that
-they should then [have] had their ears cut and noses. After their
-delivery, he banqueted all his friends; there was Camden, Selden, and
-others; at the midst of the feast his old Mother dranke to him, and
-shew him a paper which she had (if the sentence had taken execution) to
-have mixed in the prisson among his drinke, which was full of lustie
-strong poison, and that she was no churle, she told, she minded first
-to have drunk of it herself.’ The _Hatfield MSS._ contain a letter
-(i) from Jonson (Cunningham, _Jonson_, i. xlix), endorsed ‘1605’, to
-the Earl of Salisbury, created 4 May 1605. Another copy is in the
-MS. described by B. Dobell, with ten other letters, of which Dobell,
-followed by Schelling, prints three by Jonson, (ii) to an unnamed
-lord, probably Suffolk, (iii) to an unnamed earl, (iv) to an unnamed
-‘excellentest of Ladies’, and three by Chapman, (v) to the King, (vi)
-to Lord Chamberlain Suffolk, (vii) to an unnamed lord, probably also
-Suffolk. These, with four others by Chapman not printed, have no dates,
-but all, with (i), seem to refer to the same joint imprisonment of
-the two poets. In (i) Jonson says that he and Chapman are in prison
-‘unexamined and unheard’. The cause is a play of which ‘no man can
-justly complain’, for since his ‘first error’ and its ‘bondage’ [1597]
-Jonson has ‘attempered my style’ and his books have never ‘given
-offence to a nation, to a public order or state, or to any person of
-honour or authority’. The other letters add a few facts. In (v) Chapman
-says that the ‘chief offences are but two clawses, and both of them
-not our owne’; in (vi) that ‘our unhappie booke was presented without
-your Lordshippes allowance’; and in (vii) that they are grateful
-for an expected pardon of which they have heard from Lord Aubigny.
-Castelain, _Jonson_, 901, doubts whether this correspondence refers
-to _Eastward Ho!_, chiefly because there is no mention of Marston,
-and after hesitating over _Sejanus_, suggests _Sir Giles Goosecap_
-(q.v.), which is not worth consideration. Jonson was in trouble for
-_Sejanus_ (q.v.), but on grounds not touched on in these letters, and
-Chapman was not concerned. I feel no doubt that the imprisonment was
-that for _Eastward Ho!_ Probably Drummond was wrong about Marston, who
-escaped. His ‘absence’ is noted in the t.p. of Q_{2} of _The Fawn_
-(1606), and chaffed by A. Nixon, _The Black Year_ (1606): ‘Others ...
-arraign other mens works ... when their own are sacrificed in Paul’s
-Churchyard, for bringing in the Dutch Courtesan to corrupt English
-conditions and sent away westward for carping both at court, city, and
-country.’ Evidently Jonson and Chapman, justly or not, put the blame
-of the obnoxious clauses upon him, and renewed acrimony against Jonson
-may be traced in his Epistles of 1606. I am inclined to think that it
-was the publication of the play in the autumn of 1605, rather than its
-presentation on the stage, that brought the poets into trouble. This
-would account for the suppression of a passage reflecting upon the
-Scots (III. iii. 40–7) which appeared in the first issue of Q_{1} (cf.
-Parrott, ii. 862). Other quips at the intruding nation, at James’s
-liberal knightings, and even at his northern accent (I. ii. 50, 98; II.
-iii. 83; IV. i. 179) appear to have escaped censure. Nor was the play
-as a whole banned. It passed to the Lady Elizabeth’s, who revived it in
-1613 (_Henslowe Papers_, 71) and gave it at Court on 25 Jan. 1614 (cf.
-App. B). There seems to be an allusion to Suffolk’s intervention in
-Chapman’s gratulatory verses to _Sejanus_ (1605):
-
- Most Noble Suffolke, who by Nature Noble,
- And judgement vertuous, cannot fall by Fortune,
- Who when our Hearde, came not to drink, but trouble
- The Muses waters, did a Wall importune,
- (Midst of assaults) about their sacred River.
-
-The imprisonment was over by Nov. 1605, when Jonson (q.v.) was employed
-about the Gunpowder plot. I put it and the correspondence in Oct. or
-Nov. The play may have been staged at any time between that and the
-staging of Dekker and Webster’s _Westward Hoe_, late in 1604, to which
-its prologue refers. Several attempts have been made to divide up the
-play. Fleay, ii. 81, gives Marston I. i-II. i, Chapman II. ii-IV. i,
-Jonson IV. ii-V. iv. Parrott gives Marston I. i-II. ii, IV. ii, V. i,
-Chapman II. iii-IV. i, Jonson the prologue and V. ii-v. Cunliffe gives
-Marston I, III. iii and V. i, the rest to Chapman, and nothing to
-Jonson but plotting and supervision. All make III. iii a Chapman scene,
-so that, if Chapman spoke the truth, Marston must have interpolated the
-obnoxious clauses.
-
- _May Day. c. 1609_
-
-1611. May Day. A witty Comedie, diuers times acted at the Blacke
-Fryers. Written by George Chapman. _For John Browne._
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ iv).--_Dissertation_: A. L.
-Stiefel, _G. C. und das italienische Drama_ (1899, _Jahrbuch_, xxxv.
-180).
-
-The _chorus iuvenum_ with which the play opens fixes it to the
-occupancy of the Blackfriars by the Chapel and Revels in 1600–9.
-Parrott suggests 1602 on the ground of reminiscences of 1599–1601
-plays, of which the most important is a quotation in IV. i. 18 of
-Marston’s _2 Antonio and Mellida_ (1599), V. ii. 20. But the force of
-this argument is weakened by the admission of a clear imitation in I.
-i. 378 _sqq._ of ch. v. of Dekker’s _Gull’s Hornbook_ (1609), which
-it seems to me a little arbitrary to explain by a revision. The other
-reasons given by Fleay, i. 57, for a date _c._ 1601 are fantastic. So
-is his suggestion that the play is founded on the anonymous _Disguises_
-produced by the Admiral’s on 2 Oct. 1595, which, as pointed out by Greg
-(_Henslowe_, ii. 177), rests merely on the fact that the title would be
-appropriate.
-
- _The Widow’s Tears. 1603 < > 9_
-
-_S. R._ 1612, Apr. 17. _John Browne_ [see _The Revenge of Bussy
-D’Ambois_].
-
-1612. The Widdowes Teares. A Comedie. As it was often presented in the
-blacke and white Friers. Written by Geor: Chap. _For John Browne._
-[Epistle to Jo. Reed of Mitton, Gloucestershire, signed ‘Geo. Chapman’.]
-
-_Edition_ in Dodsley^{1, 2, 3} (1744–1827).
-
-The play was given at Court on 27 Feb. 1613, but the reference on the
-title-page to Blackfriars shows that it was originally produced by
-the Chapel or Revels not later than 1609 and probably before _Byron_
-(1608). Wallace, ii. 115, identifies it with the Chapel play seen by
-the Duke of Stettin in 1602 (cf. ch. xii), but Gerschow’s description
-in no way, except for the presence of a widow, fits the plot. The
-reference to the ‘number of strange knights abroad’ (iv. 1. 28) and
-perhaps also that to the crying down of monopolies (I. i. 125) are
-Jacobean, rather than Elizabethan (cf. _M. d’Olive_). Fleay, i. 61,
-and Parrott think that the satire of justice in the last act shows
-resentment at Chapman’s treatment in connexion with _Eastward Ho!_, and
-suggest 1605. It would be equally sound to argue that this is just the
-date when Chapman would have been most careful to avoid criticism of
-this kind. The Epistle says, ‘This poor comedy (of many desired to see
-printed) I thought not utterly unworthy that affectionate design in me’.
-
- _Charles, Duke of Byron. 1608_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, June 5 (Buck). ‘A booke called The Conspiracy and
-Tragedie of Charles Duke of Byronn written by Georg Chapman.’ _Thomas
-Thorp_ (Arber, iii. 380).
-
-1608. The Conspiracie, And Tragedie of Charles Duke of Byron, Marshall
-of France. Acted lately in two playes, at the Black-Friers. Written by
-George Chapman. _G. Eld for Thomas Thorpe._ [Epistle to Sir Thomas and
-Thomas Walsingham, signed ‘George Chapman’, and Prologue. Half-title to
-Part II, ‘The Tragedie of Charles Duke of Byron. By George Chapman.’]
-
-1625.... at the Blacke-Friers, and other publique Stages.... _N. O. for
-Thomas Thorpe._ [Separate t.p. to Part II.]
-
-_Dissertation_: T. M. Parrott, _The Text of C.’s Byron_ (1908, _M. L.
-R._ iv. 40).
-
-There can be no doubt (cf. vol. ii, p. 53) that this is the play
-denounced by the French ambassador, Antoine Lefèvre de la Boderie, in
-the following letter to Pierre Brulart de Puisieux, Marquis de Sillery,
-on 8 April 1608 (printed by J. J. Jusserand in _M. L. R._ vi. 203, from
-_Bibl. Nat. MS. Fr._ 15984):
-
- ‘Environ la micaresme ces certains comédiens à qui j’avois
- fait deffendre de jouer l’histoire du feu mareschal de Biron,
- voyant toutte la cour dehors, ne laissèrent de le faire, et non
- seulement cela, mais y introduisirent la Royne et Madame de
- Verneuil, la première traitant celle-cy fort mal de paroles,
- et luy donnant un soufflet. En ayant eu advis de-là à quelques
- jours, aussi-tost je m’en allay trouver le Comte de Salsbury
- et luy fis plainte de ce que non seulement ces compaignons-là
- contrevenoient à la deffense qui leur avoit esté faicte, mais
- y adjoustoient des choses non seulement plus importantes, mais
- qui n’avoient que faire avec le mareschal de Biron, et au partir
- de-là estoient toutes faulses, dont en vérité il se montra
- fort courroucé. Et dès l’heure mesme envoya pour les prendre.
- Toutteffois il ne s’en trouva que trois, qui aussi-tost furent
- menez en la prison où ilz sont encore; mais le principal qui
- est le compositeur eschapa. Un jour ou deux devant, ilz avoient
- dépêché leur Roy, sa mine d’Escosse et tous ses Favorits d’une
- estrange sorte; [_in cipher_ car apres luy avoir fait dépiter
- le ciel sur le vol d’un oyseau, et faict battre un gentilhomme
- pour avoir rompu ses chiens, ilz le dépeignoient ivre pour le
- moins une fois le jour. Ce qu’ayant sçu, je pensay qu’il seroit
- assez en colère contre lesdits commédiens, sans que je l’y
- misse davantage, et qu’il valoit mieux référer leur châtiment
- à l’irrévérence qu’ilz lui avoient portée, qu’à ce qu’ilz
- pourroient avoir dit desdites Dames], et pour ce, je me résolus
- de n’en plus parler, mais considérer ce qu’ilz firent. Quand
- ledit Sieur Roy a esté icy, il a tesmoigné estre extrèmement
- irrité contre ces maraults-là, et a commandé qu’ilz soient
- chastiez et surtout qu’on eust à faire diligence de trouver le
- compositeur. Mesme il a fait deffense que l’on n’eust plus à
- jouer de Comédies dedans Londres, pour lever laquelle deffense
- quatre autres compagnies qui y sont encore, offrent desja
- cent mille francs, lesquels pourront bien leur en redonner la
- permission; mais pour le moins sera-ce à condition qu’ilz ne
- représenteront plus aucune histoire moderne ni ne parleront des
- choses du temps à peine de la vie. Si j’eusse creu qu’il y eust
- eu de la suggestion en ce qu’avoient dit lesdits comédiens, j’en
- eusse fait du bruit davantage; mais ayant tout subjet d’estimer
- le contraire, j’ay pensay que le meilleur estoit de ne point le
- remuer davantage, et laisser audit Roy la vengeance de son fait
- mesme. Touttefois si vous jugez de-là, Monsieur; que je n’y aye
- fait assez, il est encore temps.’
-
-In _M. L. Review_, iv. 158, I reprinted a less good text from
-_Ambassades de M. De La Boderie_ (1750), iii. 196. The letter is
-often dated 1605 and ascribed to De La Boderie’s predecessor, M. de
-Beaumont, on the strength of a summary in F. L. G. von Raumer, _History
-of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries_, ii. 219. The text has
-been ruthlessly censored; in particular the peccant scene has been
-cut out of Act II of Part ii, and most of Act IV of Part i, dealing
-with Byron’s visit to England, has been suppressed or altered. The
-Epistle offers ‘these poor dismembered poems’, and they are probably
-the subject of two undated and unsigned letters printed by Dobell in
-_Ath._ (1901), i. 433. The first, to one Mr. Crane, secretary to the
-Duke of Lennox, inquires whether the writer can leave a ‘shelter’ to
-which ‘the austeritie of this offended time’ has sent him. The other
-is by ‘the poor subject of your office’ and evidently addressed to the
-Master of the Revels, and complains of his strictness in revising for
-the press what the Council had passed for presentment. Worcester’s men
-had an anonymous play of _Byron_ (_Burone_ or _Berowne_) in 1602, and
-Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 231) thinks that to this Chapman’s may have borne
-some relation. But Chapman’s source was Grimeston, _General Inventorie
-of the History of France_ (1607).
-
- _The Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois. c. 1610_
-
-_S. R._ 1612, Apr. 17 (Buck). ‘Twoo play bookes, th’ one called, The
-revenge of Bussy D’Amboys, beinge a tragedy, thother called, The
-wydowes teares, beinge a Comedy, bothe written by George Chapman.’
-_Browne_ (Arber, iii. 481). [Only a 6_d._ fee charged for the two.]
-
-1613. The Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois. A Tragedie. As it hath beene often
-presented at the priuate Play-house in the White-Fryers. Written by
-George Chapman, Gentleman. _T. S., sold by Iohn Helme._ [Epistle to Sir
-Thomas Howard, signed ‘Geo. Chapman’.]
-
-_Edition_ by F. S. Boas (1905, _B. L._).
-
-Boas has shown that Chapman used Grimeston, _General Inventorie of
-the History of France_ (1607). Probably the play was written for the
-Queen’s Revels to accompany _Bussy_. But whether it was first produced
-at Whitefriars in 1609–12, or at Blackfriars in 1608–9, can hardly
-be settled. The title-page and the probability that the _Byron_
-affair would render it judicious to defer further plays by Chapman
-rather point to the Whitefriars. The Epistle commends the play because
-‘Howsoever therefore in the scenical presentation it might meet with
-some maligners, yet considering even therein it passed with approbation
-of more worthy judgments’.
-
- _Chabot Admiral of France, c. 1613_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1638, Oct. 24 (Wykes). ‘A Booke called Phillip Chalbott
-Admirall of France and the Ball. By James Shirley. vj^d.’ _Crooke and
-William Cooke_ (Arber, iv. 441).
-
-1639. The Tragedie of Chabot Admirall of France. As it was presented by
-her Majesties Servants, at the private House in Drury Lane. Written by
-George Chapman, and James Shirly. _Tho. Cotes for Andrew Crooke and
-William Cooke._
-
-_Edition_ by E. Lehman (1906, _Pennsylvania Univ. Publ._).
-
-The play was licensed by Herbert as Shirley’s on 29 April 1635
-(_Variorum_, iii. 232). But critics agree in finding much of Chapman
-in it, and suppose Shirley to have been a reviser rather than a
-collaborator. Parrott regards I. i, II. iii, and V. ii as substantially
-Chapman; II. i and III. i as substantially Shirley; and the rest
-as Chapman revised. He suggests that Chapman’s version was for the
-Queen’s Revels _c._ 1613. Fleay, ii. 241, put it in 1604, but it cannot
-be earlier than the 1611 edition of its source, E. Pasquier, _Les
-Recherches de la France_.
-
- _Caesar and Pompey, c. 1613_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1631, May 18 (Herbert). ‘A Playe called Caesar and Pompey by
-George Chapman.’ _Harper_ (Arber, iv. 253).
-
-1631. The Warres of Pompey and Caesar. Out of whose euents is euicted
-this Proposition. Only a iust man is a freeman. By G. C. _Thomas
-Harper, sold by Godfrey Emondson, and Thomas Alchorne._ [Epistle to the
-Earl of Middlesex, signed ‘Geo. Chapman’.]
-
-1631.... Caesar and Pompey: A Roman Tragedy, declaring their Warres....
-By George Chapman. _Thomas Harper_ [&c.]. [Another issue.]
-
-1653.... As it was Acted at the Black Fryers.... [Another issue.]
-
-Chapman says that the play was written ‘long since’ and ‘never touched
-at the stage’. Various dates have been conjectured; the last, Parrott’s
-1612–13, ‘based upon somewhat intangible evidence of style and rhythm’
-will do as well as another. Parrott is puzzled by the 1653 title-page
-and thinks that, in spite of the Epistle, the play was acted. Might it
-not have been acted by the King’s after the original publication in
-1631? Plays on Caesar were so common that it is not worth pursuing the
-suggestion of Fleay, i. 65, that fragments of the Admiral’s anonymous
-_Caesar and Pompey_ of 1594–5 may survive here.
-
- _Doubtful and Lost Plays_
-
-Chapman’s lost plays for the Admiral’s men of 1598–9 have already been
-noted. Two plays, ‘The Fatall Love, a French Tragedy’, and ‘A Tragedy
-of a Yorkshire Gentlewoman and her sonne’, were entered as his in the
-_S. R._ by Humphrey Moseley on 29 June 1660 (Eyre, ii. 271). They
-appear, without Chapman’s name, in Warburton’s list of burnt plays
-(W. W. Greg in _3 Library_, ii. 231). The improbable ascriptions to
-Chapman of _The Ball_ (1639) and _Revenge for Honour_ (1654) on their
-t.ps. and of _Two Wise Men and All the Rest Fools_ (1619) by Kirkman
-in 1661 do not inspire confidence in this late entry, and even if they
-were Chapman’s, the plays were not necessarily of our period. But it
-has been suggested that _Fatal Love_ may be the anonymous _Charlemagne_
-(q.v.). J. M. Robertson assigns to Chapman _A Lover’s Complaint_,
-accepts the conjecture of Minto and Acheson that he was the ‘rival
-poet’ of Shakespeare’s _Sonnets_, believes him to be criticized in the
-Holophernes of _L. L. L._ and regards him as the second hand of _Timon
-of Athens_, and with varying degrees of assurance as Shakespeare’s
-predecessor, collaborator or reviser, in _Per._, _T. C._, _Tp._,
-_Ham._, _Cymb._, _J. C._, _T. of S._, _Hen. VI_, _Hen. V_, _C. of E._,
-_2 Gent._, _All’s Well_, _M. W._, _K. J._, _Hen. VIII_. These are
-issues which cannot be discussed here. The records do not suggest any
-association between Chapman and the Chamberlain’s or King’s men, except
-possibly in Caroline days.
-
-For other ascriptions to Chapman, see in ch. xxiv, _Alphonsus_, _Fedele
-and Fortunio_, _Sir Giles Goosecap_, _Histriomastix_, and _Second
-Maiden’s Tragedy_.
-
- MASK
-
- _Middle Temple and Lincoln’s Inn Mask. 15 Feb. 1613_
-
-_S. R._ 1613, 27 Feb. (Nidd). ‘A booke called the [description] of
-the maske performed before the kinge by the gent. of the Myddle temple
-and Lincolns Inne with the maske of Grayes Inne and the Inner Temple.’
-_George Norton_ (Arber, iii. 516).
-
-N.D. The Memorable Maske of the two Honorable Houses or Inns of Court;
-the Middle Temple, and Lyncolnes Inne. As it was performed before
-the King, at White-Hall on Shroue Munday at night; being the 15. of
-February 1613. At the princely Celebration of the most Royall Nuptialls
-of the Palsgraue, and his thrice gratious Princesse Elizabeth, &c.
-With a description of their whole show; in the manner of their march
-on horse-backe to the Court from the Maister of the Rolls his house:
-with all their right Noble consorts, and most showfull attendants.
-Inuented, and fashioned, with the ground, and speciall structure
-of the whole worke, By our Kingdomes most Artfull and Ingenious
-Architect Innigo Iones. Supplied, Aplied, Digested, and Written, By
-Geo. Chapman. _G. Eld for George Norton._ [Epistle by Chapman to Sir
-Edward Philips, Master of the Rolls, naming him and Sir Henry Hobart,
-the Attorney-General, as furtherers of the mask; after text, _A Hymne
-to Hymen_. R. B. McKerrow, _Bibl. Evidence_ (_Bibl. Soc. Trans._ xii.
-267), shows the priority of this edition. Parts of the description are
-separated from the speeches to which they belong, with an explanation
-that Chapman was ‘prevented by the unexpected haste of the printer,
-which he never let me know, and never sending me a proofe till he had
-past their speeches, I had no reason to imagine hee could have been so
-forward’.]
-
-N.D. _F. K. for George Norton._
-
-_Edition_ in Nichols, _James_ (1828), ii. 566.
-
-The maskers, in cloth of silver embroidered with gold, olive-coloured
-vizards, and feathers on their heads, were Princes of Virginia; the
-torchbearers also Virginians; the musicians Phoebades or Priests of
-Virginia; the antimaskers a ‘mocke-maske’ of Baboons; the presenters
-Plutus, Capriccio a Man of Wit, Honour, Eunomia her Priest, and Phemis
-her Herald.
-
-The locality was the Hall at Whitehall, whither the maskers rode
-from the house of the Master of the Rolls, with their musicians
-and presenters in chariots, Moors to attend their horses, and a
-large escort of gentlemen and halberdiers. They dismounted in the
-tiltyard, where the King and lords beheld them from a gallery. The
-scene represented a high rock, which cracked to emit Capriccio, and
-had the Temple of Honour on one side, and a hollow tree, ‘the bare
-receptacle of the baboonerie’, on the other. After ‘the presentment’
-and the ‘anticke’ dance of the ‘ante-maske’, the top of the rock
-opened to disclose the maskers and torchbearers in a mine of gold
-under the setting sun. They descended by steps within the rock. First
-the torchbearers ‘performed another ante-maske, dancing with torches
-lighted at both ends’. Then the maskers danced two dances, followed by
-others with the ladies, and finally a ‘dance, that brought them off’ to
-the Temple of Honour.
-
-For general notices of the wedding masks, see ch. xxiv and the account
-of Campion’s Lords’ mask. The German _Beschreibung_ (1613) gives a
-long abstract of Chapman’s (extract in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxix. 172), but
-this is clearly paraphrased from the author’s own description. It was
-perhaps natural for Sir Edward Philips to write to Carleton on 25 Feb.
-(_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxii. 46) that this particular mask was ‘praised
-above all others’. But Chamberlain is no less laudatory (Birch, i. 226):
-
- ‘On Monday night, was the Middle Temple and Lincoln’s Inn mask
- prepared in the hall at court, whereas the Lords’ was in the
- banqueting room. It went from the Rolls, all up Fleet Street
- and the Strand, and made such a gallant and glorious show,
- that it is highly commended. They had forty gentlemen of best
- choice out of both houses, and the twelve maskers, with their
- torchbearers and pages, rode likewise upon horses exceedingly
- well trapped and furnished, besides a dozen little boys, dressed
- like baboons, that served for an antimask, and, they say,
- performed it exceedingly well when they came to it; and three
- open chariots, drawn with four horses apiece, that carried their
- musicians and other personages that had parts to speak. All
- which, together with their trumpeters and other attendants, were
- so well set out, that it is generally held for the best show
- that hath been seen many a day. The King stood in the gallery
- to behold them, and made them ride about the Tilt-yard, and
- then they were received into St. James’ Park, and so out, all
- along the galleries, into the hall, where themselves and their
- devices, which they say were excellent, made such a glittering
- show, that the King and all the company were exceedingly
- pleased, and especially with their dancing, which was beyond all
- that hath been seen yet. The King made the masters [? maskers]
- kiss his hand on parting, and gave them many thanks, saying, he
- never saw so many proper men together, and himself accompanied
- them at the banquet, and took care it should be well ordered,
- and speaks much of them behind their backs, and strokes the
- Master of the Rolls and Dick Martin, who were chief doers and
- undertakers.’
-
-Chamberlain wrote more briefly, but with equal commendation, to Winwood
-(iii. 435), while the Venetian ambassador reported that the mask was
-danced ‘with such finish that it left nothing to be desired’ (_V.
-P._ xii. 532).
-
-The mask is but briefly noticed in the published records of the Middle
-Temple (Hopwood, 40, 42); more fully in those of Lincoln’s Inn (Walker,
-ii. 150–6, 163, 170, 198, 255, 271). The Inn’s share of the cost was
-£1,086 8_s._ 11_d._ and presumably that of the Middle Temple as much. A
-levy was made of from £1 10_s._ to £4, according to status, and some of
-the benchers and others advanced funds. A dispute about the repayment
-of an advance by Lord Chief Justice Richardson was still unsettled in
-1634. An account of Christopher Brooke as ‘Expenditour for the maske’
-includes £100 to Inigo Jones for works for the hall and street, £45 to
-Robert Johnson for music and songs, £2 to Richard Ansell, matlayer, £1
-to the King’s Ushers of the Hall, and payments for a pair of stockings
-and other apparel to ‘Heminge’s boy’, and for the services of John
-and Robert Dowland, Philip Rosseter and Thomas Ford as musicians. The
-attitude of the young lawyer may be illustrated from a letter of Sir
-S. Radcliffe on 1 Feb. (_Letters_, 78), although I do not know his
-Inn: ‘I have taken up 30^s of James Singleton, which or y^e greater
-part thereof is to be paid toward y^e great mask at y^e marriage at
-Shrovetide. It is a duty for y^e honour of our Inn, and unto which I
-could not refuse to contribute with any credit.’
-
-A letter by Chapman, partly printed by B. Dobell in _Ath._ (1901), i.
-466, is a complaint to an unnamed paymaster about his reward for a mask
-given in the royal presence at a date later than Prince Henry’s death.
-While others of his faculty got 100 marks or £50, he is ‘put with
-taylors and shoomakers, and such snipperados, to be paid by a bill of
-particulars’. Dobell does not seem to think that this was the wedding
-mask, but I see no clear reason why it should not have been.
-
-
-HENRY CHEKE (_c._ 1561).
-
-If the translator, as stated in _D. N. B._, was Henry the son of Sir
-John Cheke and was born _c._ 1548, he must have been a precocious
-scholar.
-
- _Free Will > 1561_
-
-_S. R._ 1561, May 11. ‘ij. bokes, the one called ... and the other of
-Frewill.’ _John Tysdayle_ (Arber, i. 156).
-
-N.D. A certayne Tragedie wrytten fyrst in Italian, by F. N. B.
-entituled, Freewyl, and translated into Englishe, by Henry Cheeke.
-_John Tisdale._ [Epistles to Lady Cheyne, signed H. C., and to the
-Reader. Cheyne arms on v^o of t.p.]
-
-The translation is from the _Tragedia del Libero Arbitrio_ (1546) of
-Francesco Nigri de Bassano. It is presumably distinct from that which
-Sir Thomas Hoby in his _Travaile and Life_ (_Camden Misc._ x. 63) says
-he made at Augsburg in Aug.–Nov. 1550, and dedicated to the Marquis of
-Northampton.
-
-
-HENRY CHETTLE (_c._ 1560–> 1607).
-
-Chettle was apprenticed, as the son of Robert Chettle of London, dyer,
-to Thomas East, printer, on 29 Sept. 1577, and took up the freedom
-of the Stationers’ Company on 6 Oct. 1584. During 1589–91 he was in
-partnership as a printer with John Danter and William Hoskins. The
-partnership was then dissolved, and Chettle’s imprint is not found
-on any book of later date (McKerrow, _Dictionary_, 68, 84, 144). But
-evidently his connexion with the press and with Danter continued,
-for in 1596 Nashe inserted into _Have With You to Saffron Walden_
-(_Works_, iii. 131) a letter from him offering to set up the book and
-signed ‘Your old Compositer, Henry Chettle’. Nashe’s _Strange News_
-(1592) and _Terrors of the Night_ (1594) had come, like _Have With
-You to Saffron Walden_ itself, from Danter’s press. The object of
-the letter was to defend Nashe against a charge in Gabriel Harvey’s
-_Pierce’s Supererogation_ (1593) of having abused Chettle. He had in
-fact in _Pierce Penilesse_ (1592) called _Greenes Groats-worth of Wit_
-‘a scald triuial lying pamphlet’, and none of his doing. And of the
-_Groats-worth_ Chettle had acted as editor, as he himself explains
-in the Epistle to his _Kind Hearts Dream_ (cf. App. C, No. xlix), in
-which, however, he exculpates Nashe from any share in the book. By
-1595 he was married and had lost a daughter Mary, who was buried at
-St. John’s, Windsor (E. Ashmole, _Antiquities of Berkshire_, iii. 75).
-By 1598 he had taken to writing for the stage, and in his _Palladis
-Tamia_ of that year Meres includes him in ‘the best for Comedy amongst
-vs’. Of all Henslowe’s band of needy writers for the Admiral’s and
-Worcester’s from 1598 to 1603, he was the most prolific and one of the
-neediest. Of the forty-eight plays in which he had a hand during this
-period, no more than five, or possibly six, survive. His personal loans
-from Henslowe were numerous and often very small. Some were on account
-of the Admiral’s; others on a private account noted in the margin of
-Henslowe’s diary. On 16 Sept. 1598 he owed the Admiral’s £8 9_s._
-in balance, ‘al his boockes & recknynges payd’. In Nov. 1598 he had
-loans ‘for to areste one with Lord Lester’. In Jan. 1599 he was in the
-Marshalsea, and in May borrowed to avoid arrest by one Ingrome. On 25
-Mar. 1602 he was driven, apparently in view of a payment of £3, to seal
-a bond to write for the Admiral’s. This did not prevent him from also
-writing for Worcester’s in the autumn. More than once his manuscript
-had to be redeemed from pawn (Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 250). His
-_England’s Mourning Garment_, a eulogy of Elizabeth, is reprinted in
-C. M. Ingleby, _Shakespere Allusion-Books_, Part i (_N. S. S._ 1874),
-77. Herein he speaks of himself as ‘courting it now and than’, when he
-was ‘yong, almost thirtie yeeres agoe’, and calls on a number of poets
-under fanciful names to sing the dead queen’s praise. They are Daniel,
-Warner, Chapman (Coryn), Jonson (our English Horace), Shakespeare
-(Melicert), Drayton (Coridon), Lodge (Musidore), Dekker (Antihorace),
-Marston (Moelibee), and Petowe (?). Chettle was therefore alive in
-1603, but he is spoken of as dead in Dekker’s _Knight’s Conjuring_
-(1607).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _The Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598_
-
- _The Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598_
-
-For Chettle’s relation to these two plays, see s.v. Munday.
-
- _Patient Grissel. 1600_
-
-With Dekker (q.v.) and Haughton.
-
- _1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green. 1600_
-
-With Day (q.v.).
-
- _Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602_
-
-With Dekker (q.v.), Heywood, Smith, and Webster, as _Lady Jane, or The
-Overthrow of Rebels_, but whether anything of Chettle’s survives in the
-extant text is doubtful.
-
- _Hoffman_ or _A Revenge for a Father. 1602 <_
-
-_S. R._ 1630, Feb. 26 (Herbert). ‘A play called Hoffman the Revengfull
-ffather.’ _John Grove_ (Arber, iv. 229).
-
-1631. The Tragedy of Hoffman or A Reuenge for a Father, As it hath bin
-diuers times acted with great applause, at the Phenix in Druery-lane.
-_I. N. for Hugh Perry._ [Epistle to Richard Kiluert, signed ‘Hvgh
-Perry’.]
-
-_Editions_ by H. B. L[eonard] (1852), R. Ackermann (1894), and J. S.
-Farmer (1913, _S. F. T._).--_Dissertations_: N. Delius, _C.’s H. und
-Shakespeare’s Hamlet_ (1874, _Jahrbuch_, ix. 166); A. H. Thorndike,
-_The Relations of Hamlet to Contemporary Revenge Plays_ (1902, _M. L.
-A._ xvii. 125).
-
-Henslowe paid Chettle, on behalf of the Admiral’s, £1 in earnest of
-‘a Danyshe tragedy’ on 7 July 1602, and 5_s._ in part payment for a
-tragedy of ‘Howghman’ on 29 Dec. It seems natural to take the latter,
-and perhaps also the former, entry as relating to this play, although
-it does not bear Chettle’s name on the title-page. But its completion
-was presumably later than the termination of Henslowe’s record in 1603.
-Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 226) rightly repudiates the suggestion of Fleay,
-i. 70, 291, that we are justified in regarding _Hoffman_ the unnamed
-tragedy of Chettle and Heywood in Jan. 1603, for which a blank can of
-course afford no evidence. But ‘the Prince of the burning crowne’ is
-referred to in Kempe’s _Nine Daies Wonder_, 22, not as a ‘play’, but as
-a suggested theme for a ballad writer.
-
- _Doubtful and Lost Plays_
-
-Chettle’s hand has been suggested in the anonymous _Trial of Chivalry_
-(_vide infra_) and _The Weakest Goeth to the Wall_.
-
-The following is a complete list of the plays, wholly or partly by
-Chettle, recorded in Henslowe’s diary.
-
- (_a_) _Plays for the Admiral’s, 1598–1603_
-
-(i), (ii) _1, 2 Robin Hood._
-
-With Munday (q.v.), Feb.–Mar. and Nov. 1598.
-
-(iii) _The Famous Wars of Henry I and the Prince of Wales._
-
-With Dekker (q.v.) and Drayton, Mar. 1598.
-
-(iv), (v) _1, 2 Earl Godwin and His Three Sons._
-
-With Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson, March-June 1598.
-
-(vi) _Pierce of Exton._
-
-With Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson, April 1598, but apparently not
-finished.
-
-(vii), (viii) _1, 2 Black Bateman of the North._
-
-With Wilson, and for Part 1, Dekker and Drayton, May–July 1598.
-
-(ix) _The Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-Lion._
-
-With Drayton, Munday, and Wilson, June 1598.
-
-(x) _A Woman’s Tragedy._
-
-July 1598, but apparently unfinished.
-
-(xi) _Hot Anger Soon Cold._
-
-With Jonson and Porter, Aug. 1598.
-
-(xii) _Chance Medley._
-
-By Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, Munday, and Wilson, Aug. 1598.
-
-(xiii) _Catiline’s Conspiracy._
-
-With Wilson, Aug. 1598, but apparently not finished.
-
-(xiv) _Vayvode._
-
-Apparently an old play revised by Chettle, Aug. 1598.
-
-(xv) _2 Brute._
-
-Sept.–Oct. 1598.
-
-(xvi) _’Tis no Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver._
-
-Nov. 1598, but apparently not finished.
-
-(xvii) _Polyphemus, or Troy’s Revenge._
-
-Feb. 1599.
-
-(xviii) _The Spencers._
-
-With Porter, March 1599.
-
-(xix) _Troilus and Cressida._
-
-With Dekker (q.v.), April 1599.
-
-(xx) _Agamemnon, or Orestes Furious._
-
-With Dekker, May 1599.
-
-(xxi) _The Stepmother’s Tragedy._
-
-With Dekker, Aug.–Oct. 1599.
-
-(xxii) _Robert II or The Scot’s Tragedy._
-
-With Dekker, Jonson, and possibly Marston (q.v.), Sept. 1599.
-
-(xxiii) _Patient Grissell._
-
-With Dekker (q.v.) and Haughton, Oct.–Dec. 1599.
-
-(xxiv) _The Orphan’s Tragedy._
-
-Nov. 1599–Sept. 1601, but apparently not finished, unless Greg rightly
-traces it in Yarington’s _Two Lamentable Tragedies_ (q.v.).
-
-(xxv) _The Arcadian Virgin._
-
-With Haughton, Dec. 1599, but apparently not finished.
-
-(xxvi) _Damon and Pythias._
-
-Feb.–May 1600.
-
-(xxvii) _The Seven Wise Masters._
-
-With Day, Dekker, and Haughton, March 1600.
-
-(xxviii) _The Golden Ass_, or _Cupid and Psyche_.
-
-With Day and Dekker, April-May 1600; on possible borrowings from this,
-cf. s.v. Heywood, _Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas_.
-
-(xxix) _The Wooing of Death._
-
-May 1600, but apparently not finished.
-
-(xxx) _1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green._
-
-With Day (q.v.), May 1600.
-
-(xxxi) _All Is Not Gold That Glisters._
-
-March-April 1601.
-
-(xxxii) _King Sebastian of Portingale._
-
-With Dekker, April-May 1601.
-
-(xxxiii), (xxxiv) _1, 2 Cardinal Wolsey._
-
-Apparently Chettle wrote a play on _The Life of Cardinal Wolsey_ in
-June–Aug. 1601, to which was afterwards prefixed a play on _The Rising
-of Cardinal Wolsey_, by Chettle, Drayton, Munday, and Smith, written in
-Aug.–Nov. 1601 (cf. Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 218). Chettle was ‘mendynge’
-_The Life_ in May–June 1602, and on 25 July Richard Hadsor wrote to Sir
-R. Cecil of the attainder of the Earl of Kildare’s grandfather ‘by the
-policy of Cardinal Wolsey, as it is set forth and played now upon the
-stage in London’ (_Hatfield MSS._ xii. 248).
-
-(xxxv) _Too Good To Be True._
-
-With Hathway and Smith, Nov. 1601–Jan. 1602; the alternative title ‘or
-Northern Man’ in one of Henslowe’s entries is a forgery by Collier (cf.
-Greg, _Henslowe_, i. xliii).
-
-(xxxvi) _Friar Rush and the Proud Women of Antwerp._
-
-Written by Day and Haughton in 1601 and mended by Chettle in Jan. 1602.
-
-(xxxvii) _Love Parts Friendship._
-
-With Smith, May 1602; identified by Bullen with the anonymous _Trial of
-Chivalry_ (q.v.).
-
-(xxxviii) _Tobias._
-
-May–June 1602.
-
-(xxxix) _Hoffman._
-
-July–Dec. 1602, but apparently not finished. _Vide supra._
-
-(xl) _Felmelanco._
-
-With Robensone (q.v.), Sept. 1602.
-
-(xli), (xlii) _1, 2 The London Florentine._
-
-Part 1 with Heywood, Dec. 1602–Jan. 1603; one payment had been made to
-Chettle for Part 2 before the diary entries stopped.
-
-(xliii) [Unnamed play].
-
-‘for a prologe & a epyloge for the corte’, 29 Dec. 1602.
-
- (_b_) _Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3_
-
-(xliv) [Unnamed play. Collier’s _Robin Goodfellow_ is forged].
-
-A tragedy, Aug. 1602, but perhaps not finished, unless identical, as
-suggested by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 229), with the anonymous _Byron_.
-
-(xlv) _1 Lady Jane_, or _The Overthrow of Rebels_.
-
-With Dekker (q.v.), Heywood, Smith, and Webster, Oct. 1602.
-
-(xlvi) _Christmas Comes but Once a Year._
-
-With Dekker, Heywood, and Webster, Nov. 1602.
-
-(xlvii) [Unnamed play. Collier’s _Like Quits Like_ is forged].
-
-With Heywood, Jan. 1603, but apparently not finished, or possibly
-identical, as suggested by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 235), with (xlviii).
-
-(xlviii) _Shore._
-
-With Day, May 1603, but not finished before the diary ended.
-
-
-THOMAS CHURCHYARD (1520?-1604).
-
-The best account of Churchyard is that by H. W. Adnitt in _Shropshire
-Arch. Soc. Trans._ iii (1880), 1, with a bibliography of his numerous
-poems. For his share in the devices of the Bristol entertainment
-(_1574_) and the Suffolk and Norfolk progress (_1578_), of both of
-which he published descriptions, cf. ch. xxiv. He was also engaged
-by the Shrewsbury corporation to prepare a show for an expected but
-abandoned royal visit in 1575 (_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 255). His _A
-Handful of Gladsome Verses given to the Queenes Maiesty at Woodstocke
-this Prograce_ (1592) is reprinted in H. Huth and W. C. Hazlitt,
-_Fugitive Tracts_ (1875), i. It is not mimetic. His own account of
-his work in _Churchyard’s Challenge_ (1593) suggests that he took a
-considerable part in Elizabethan pageantry. He says that he wrote:
-
- ‘The deuises of warre and a play at Awsterley. Her Highnes being
- at Sir Thomas Greshams’,
-
-and
-
- ‘The deuises and speeches that men and boyes shewed within many
- prograces’.
-
-And amongst ‘Workes ... gotten from me of some such noble friends as I
-am loath to offend’ he includes:
-
- ‘A book of a sumptuous shew in Shrouetide, by Sir Walter Rawley,
- Sir Robart Carey, M. Chidley, and M. Arthur Gorge, in which book
- was the whole seruice of my L. of Lester mencioned that he and
- his traine did in Flaunders, and the gentlemen Pencioners proued
- to be a great peece of honor to the Court: all which book was in
- as good verse as euer I made: an honorable knight, dwelling in
- the Black-Friers, can witness the same, because I read it vnto
- him.’
-
-The natural date for this ‘shew’ is Shrovetide 1587. I do not know why
-Nichols, _Eliz._ ii. 279, dates the Osterley device 1579. Elizabeth was
-often there, but I find no evidence of a visit in 1579. Lowndes speaks
-of the work as in print, but I doubt whether he has any authority
-beyond Churchyard’s own notice, which does not prove publication.
-
-
-ANTHONY CHUTE (_ob. c._ 1595).
-
-Nashe in his _Have With You to Saffron Walden_ (1596, _Works_, iii.
-107), attacking Chute as a friend of Gabriel Harvey, says, ‘he hath
-kneaded and daub’d vp a Commedie, called The transformation of the
-King of _Trinidadoes_ two Daughters, Madame _Panachaea_ and the Nymphe
-_Tobacco_; and, to approue his Heraldrie, scutchend out the honorable
-Armes of the smoakie Societie’. I hesitate to take this literally.
-
-
-GEORGE CLIFFORD (1558–1605).
-
-George Clifford was born 8 Aug. 1558, succeeded as third Earl of
-Cumberland 8 Jan. 1570, and died 30 Oct. 1605. A recent biography
-is G. C. Williamson, _George, Third Earl of Cumberland_ (1920). He
-married Margaret Russell, daughter of Francis, second Earl of Bedford,
-on 24 June 1577. His daughter, Anne Clifford, who left an interesting
-autobiography, married firstly Richard, third Earl of Dorset, and
-secondly Philip, fourth Earl of Pembroke. Cumberland was prominent in
-Elizabethan naval adventure and shone in the tilt. He is recorded as
-appearing on 17 Nov. 1587 (Gawdy, 25) and 26 Aug. 1588 (_Sp. P._ iv.
-419). On 17 Nov. 1590 he succeeded Sir Henry Lee (q.v.) as Knight of
-the Crown. Thereafter he was the regular challenger for the Queen’s
-Day tilt, often with the assistance of the Earl of Essex. On 17 Nov.
-1592 they came together armed into the privy chamber, and issued a
-challenge to maintain against all comers on the following 26 Feb. ‘that
-ther M. is most worthyest and most fayrest Amadis de Gaule’ (Gawdy,
-67). Cumberland’s tiltyard speeches, as Knight of Pendragon Castle, in
-1591 (misdated 1592) and 1593 are printed by Williamson, 108, 121, from
-manuscripts at Appleby Castle.
-
-His appearance as Knight of the Crown on 17 Nov. 1595 is noted in
-Peele’s (q.v.) _Anglorum Feriae_. In F. Davison’s _Poetical Rhapsody_
-(1602, ed. Bullen, ii. 128) is an ode _Of Cynthia_, with the note ‘This
-Song was sung before her sacred Maiestie at a shew on horse-backe,
-wherwith the right Honorable the Earle of Cumberland presented her
-Highnesse on Maie day last’. This is reprinted by R. W. Bond (_Lyly_,
-i. 414) with alternative ascriptions to Lyly and to Sir John Davies.
-But Cumberland himself wrote verses. I do not know why Bullen and
-Bond assume that the show was on 1 May 1600. The _Cumberland MSS._
-at Bolton, Yorkshire, once contained a prose speech, now lost, in
-the character of a melancholy knight, headed ‘A Copie of my Lord of
-Combrlandes Speeche to y^e Queene, upon y^e 17 day of November, 1600’.
-This was printed by T. D. Whitaker, _History of Craven_ (1805, ed.
-Morant, 1878, p. 355), and reprinted by Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 522, and
-by Bond, _Lyly_, i. 415, with a conjectural attribution to Lyly. In
-1601 Cumberland conveyed to Sir John Davies a suggestion from Sir R.
-Cecil that he should write a ‘speech for introduction of the barriers’
-(_Hatfield MSS._ xi. 544), and in letters of 1602 he promised Cecil to
-appear at the tilt on Queen’s Day, but later tried to excuse himself
-on the ground that a damaged arm would not let him carry a staff
-(_Hatfield MSS._ xii. 438, 459, 574). Anne Clifford records ‘speeches
-and delicate presents’ at Grafton when James and Anne visited the Earl
-there on 27 June 1603 (Wiffen, ii. 71).
-
-
-JO. COOKE (_c._ 1612).
-
-Beyond his play, practically nothing is known of Cooke. It is not even
-clear whether ‘Jo.’ stands for John, or for Joshua; the latter is
-suggested by the manuscript ascription on a copy of the anonymous _How
-a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_ (q.v.). Can Cooke be identical
-with the I. Cocke who contributed to Stephens’s _Characters_ in 1615
-(cf. App. C, No. lx)? Collier, iii. 408, conjectures that he was a
-brother John named, probably as dead, in the will (3 Jan. 1614) of
-Alexander Cooke the actor (cf. ch. xv). There is an entry in S. R. on
-22 May 1604 of a lost ‘Fyftie epigrams written by J. Cooke Gent’, and a
-‘I. Cooke’ wrote commendatory verses to Drayton’s _Legend of Cromwell_
-(1607).
-
- _Greenes Tu Quoque or The City Gallant. 1611_
-
-1614. Greene’s Tu quoque, or, The Cittie Gallant. As it hath beene
-diuers times acted by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by Io.
-Cooke, Gent. _For John Trundle._ [Epistle to the Reader, signed ‘Thomas
-Heywood’, and a couplet ‘Upon the Death of Thomas Greene’, signed ‘W.
-R.’]
-
-1622. _For Thomas Dewe._
-
-N.D. _M. Flesher._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, _S. F. T._).
-
-Heywood writes ‘to gratulate the love and memory of my worthy friend
-the author, and my entirely beloved fellow the actor’, both of whom
-were evidently dead. Satire of Coryat’s _Crudities_ gives a date
-between its publication in 1611 and the performances of the play by the
-Queen’s men at Court on 27 Dec. 1611 and 2 Feb. 1612 (cf. App. B). In
-Aug. 1612 died Thomas Greene, who had evidently played Bubble at the
-Red Bull (ed. Dodsley, p. 240):
-
- _Geraldine._ Why, then, we’ll go to the Red Bull: they say
- Green’s a good clown.
-
- _Bubble._ Green! Green’s an ass.
-
- _Scattergood._ Wherefore do you say so?
-
- _Bubble._ Indeed I ha’ no reason; for they say he is as
- like me as ever he can look.
-
-Chetwood’s assertion of a 1599 print is negligible. The Queen of
-Bohemia’s men revived the play at Court on 6 Jan. 1625 (_Variorum_,
-iii. 228).
-
-
-AQUILA CRUSO (_c._ 1610).
-
-Author of the academic _Euribates Pseudomagus_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-ROBERT DABORNE (?-1628).
-
-Daborne claimed to be of ‘generous’ descent, and it has been
-conjectured that he belonged to a family at Guildford, Surrey. Nothing
-is known of him until he appears with Rosseter and others as a patentee
-for the Queen’s Revels in 1610. Presumably he wrote for this company,
-and when they amalgamated with the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1613 came into
-relations with Henslowe, who acted as paymaster for the combination.
-The Dulwich collection contains between thirty and forty letters,
-bonds, and receipts bearing upon these relations. A few are undated;
-the rest extend from 17 April 1613 to 4 July 1615. Most of them were
-printed by Malone (_Variorum_, iii. 336), Collier (_Alleyn Papers_,
-56), and Swaen (_Anglia_, xx. 155), and all, with a stray fragment from
-_Egerton MS._ 2623, f. 24, are in Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 65, 126.
-There and in _Henslowe_, ii. 141, Dr. Greg attempts an arrangement
-of them and of the plays to which they relate, which seems to me
-substantially sound. They show Daborne, during the twelve months from
-April 1613, to which they mainly belong, writing regularly for the Lady
-Elizabeth’s, but prepared at any moment to sell a play to the King’s
-if he can get a better bargain. Lawsuits and general poverty made him
-constantly desirous of obtaining small advances from Henslowe, and on
-one occasion he was in the Clink. In the course of the year he was at
-work on at least five plays (_vide infra_), alone or in co-operation
-now with Tourneur, now with Field, Massinger, and Fletcher. Modern
-conjectures have assigned him some share in plays of the Beaumont
-and Fletcher series which there is no external evidence to connect
-with his name. However this may be, it is clear that, unless his
-activity in 1613–14 was abnormal, he must have written much of which
-we know nothing. He is still traceable in connexion with the stage up
-to 1616, giving a joint bond with Massinger in Aug. 1615, receiving
-an acquittance of debts through his wife Francisce from Henslowe on
-his death-bed in Jan. 1616 (_Henslowe_, ii. 20), and witnessing the
-agreement between Alleyn and Meade and Prince Charles’s men on the
-following 20 March. But he must have taken orders by 1618, when he
-published a sermon, and he became Chancellor of Waterford in 1619,
-Prebendary of Lismore in 1620, and Dean of Lismore in 1621. On 23 March
-1628 he ‘died amphibious by the ministry’ according to _The Time Poets_
-(_Choice Drollery_, 1656, sig. B).
-
- _Collection_
-
-1898–9. A. E. H. Swaen in _Anglia_, xx. 153; xxi. 373.
-
-_Dissertation_: R. Boyle, _D.’s Share in the Beaumont and Fletcher
-Plays_ (1899, _E. S._ xxvi. 352).
-
- _A Christian Turned Turk. 1609 < > 12_
-
-_S. R._ 1612, Feb. 1 (Buck). ‘A booke called A Christian turned Turke,
-or the tragicall lyffes and deathes of the 2 famous pyrates Ward and
-Danseker, as it hath bene publiquely acted written by Robert Daborn
-gent.’ _William Barrenger_ (Arber, iii. 476).
-
-1612. A Christian turn’d Turke: or, The Tragicall Liues and Deaths
-of the two Famous Pyrates, Ward and Dansiker. As it hath beene
-publickly Acted. Written by Robert Daborn, Gentleman. _For William
-Barrenger._ [Epistle by Daborne to the Reader, Prologue and
-Epilogue.]
-
-This may, as Fleay, i. 83, says, be a Queen’s Revels play, but he gives
-no definite proof, and if it is the ‘unwilling error’ apologized for in
-the epilogue to _Mucedorus_ (1610), it is more likely to proceed from
-the King’s men. It appears to be indebted to pamphlets on the career
-of its heroes, printed in 1609. The Epistle explains the publishing
-of ‘this oppressed and much martird Tragedy, not that I promise to my
-selfe any reputation hereby, or affect to see my name in Print, vsherd
-with new praises, for feare the Reader should call in question their
-iudgements that giue applause in the action; for had this wind moued
-me, I had preuented others shame in subscribing some of my former
-labors, or let them gone out in the diuels name alone; which since
-impudence will not suffer, I am content they passe together; it is then
-to publish my innocence concerning the wrong of worthy personages,
-together with doing some right to the much-suffering Actors that hath
-caused my name to cast it selfe in the common rack of censure’. I do
-not know why the play should have been ‘martir’d’, but incidentally
-Daborne seems to be claiming a share in Dekker’s _If It be not Good,
-the Devil is in It_ (1612).
-
- _The Poor Man’s Comfort, c. 1617_ (?)
-
-[_MS._] _Egerton MS._ 1994, f. 268.
-
-[Scribal signature ‘By P. Massam’ at end.]
-
-_S. R._ 1655, June 20. ‘A booke called The Poore Mans comfort, a
-Tragicomedie written by Robert Dawborne, M^r of Arts.’ _John Sweeting_
-(Eyre, i. 486).
-
-1655. The Poor-Mans Comfort. A Tragi-Comedy, As it was diuers times
-Acted at the Cockpit in Drury Lane with great applause. Written by
-Robert Dauborne Master of Arts. _For Rob: Pollard and John Sweeting._
-[Prologue, signed ‘Per E. M.’]
-
-The stage-direction to l. 186 is ‘Enter 2 Lords, Sands, Ellis’. Perhaps
-we have here the names of two actors, Ellis Worth, who was with Anne’s
-men at the Cockpit in 1617–19, and Gregory Sanderson, who joined
-the same company before May, 1619. But there is also a James Sands,
-traceable as a boy of the King’s in 1605. The performances named on the
-title-page are not necessarily the original ones and the play may have
-been produced by the Queen’s at the Red Bull, but 1617 is as likely a
-date as another, and when a courtier says of a poor man’s suit (l. 877)
-that it is ‘some suit from porters hall, belike not worth begging’,
-there may conceivably be an allusion to attempts to preserve the
-Porter’s Hall theatre from destruction in the latter year. In any case,
-Daborne is not likely to have written the play after he took orders.
-
- _Doubtful and Lost Plays_
-
-The Henslowe correspondence appears to show Daborne as engaged between
-17 April 1613 and 2 April 1614 on the following plays:
-
-(_a_) _Machiavel and the Devil_ (17 April-_c._ 25 June 1613), possibly,
-according to Fleay and Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 152, based on the old
-_Machiavel_ revived by Strange’s men in 1592.
-
-(_b_) _The Arraignment of London_, probably identical with _The Bellman
-of London_ (5 June–9 Dec. 1613), with Cyril Tourneur, possibly, as
-Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 75, suggests, based on Dekker’s tract, _The
-Bellman of London_ (1608).
-
-(_c_) An unnamed play with Field, Massinger, and Fletcher, the subject
-of undated correspondence (_Henslowe Papers_, 65 and possibly 70, 84)
-and possibly also of dated letters of July 1613 (_H. P._ 74).
-
-(_d_) _The Owl_ (9 Dec. 1613–28 March 1614). A comedy of this name
-is in Archer’s list of 1656, but Greg, _Masques_, xcv, thinks that
-Jonson’s _Mask of Owls_ may be meant.
-
-(_e_) _The She Saint_ (2 April 1614).
-
-Daborne has been suggested as a contributor to the _Cupid’s Revenge_,
-_Faithful Friends_, _Honest Man’s Fortune_, _Thierry and Theodoret_,
-and later plays of the Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher series, and
-attempts have been made to identify more than one of these with (_c_)
-above.
-
-
-SAMUEL DANIEL (_c._ 1563–1619).
-
-Daniel was born in Somerset, probably near Taunton, about 1563. His
-father is said to have been John Daniel, a musician; he certainly had
-a brother John, of the same profession. In 1579 he entered Magdalen
-Hall, Oxford, but took no degree. He visited France about January 1585
-and sent an account of political affairs from the Rue St. Jacques to
-Walsingham in the following March (_S. P. F._ xix. 388). His first
-work was a translation of the _Imprese_ of Paulus Jovius (1585). In
-1586 he served Sir Edward Stafford, the English ambassador in Paris,
-and as a young man visited Italy. He was domesticated at Wilton, and
-under the patronage of Mary, Lady Pembroke, wrote his sonnets to Delia,
-the publication of which, partial in 1591 and complete in 1592, gave
-him a considerable reputation as a poet. The attempt of Fleay, i. 86,
-to identify Delia with Elizabeth Carey, daughter of Sir George Carey,
-afterwards Lord Hunsdon, breaks down. Nashe in _The Terrors of the
-Night_ (1594, ed. McKerrow, i. 342) calls her a ‘second Delia’, and
-obviously the first was not, as Fleay suggests, Queen Elizabeth, but
-the heroine of the sonnets. Delia dwelt on an Avon, but the fact that
-in 1602 Lord Hunsdon took the waters at Bath does not give him a seat
-on the Avon there. Lady Pembroke’s _Octavia_ (q.v.) inspired Daniel’s
-book-drama _Cleopatra_ (1594). Other poems, notably _The History of
-the Civil Wars_ (1595), followed. Tradition makes Daniel poet laureate
-after Spenser’s death in 1599. There was probably no such post, but it
-is clear from verses prefixed to a single copy (B.M.C. 21, 2, 17) of
-the _Works_ of 1601, which are clearly addressed to Elizabeth, and not,
-as Grosart, i. 2, says, Anne, that he had some allowance at Court:
-
- I, who by that most blessed hand sustain’d,
- In quietnes, do eate the bread of rest.
- (Grosart, i. 9.)
-
-Possibly, however, this grant was a little later than 1599. Daniel
-acted as tutor to Anne Clifford, daughter of the Earl of Cumberland,
-at Skipton Castle, probably by 1599, when he published his _Poetical
-Essays_, which include an _Epistle_ to Lady Cumberland. It might have
-been either Herbert or Clifford influence which brought him into favour
-with Lady Bedford and led to his selection as poet for the first
-Queen’s mask at the Christmas of 1603. No doubt this preference aroused
-jealousies, and to about this date one may reasonably assign Jonson’s
-verse-letter to Lady Rutland (_The Forest_, xii) in which he speaks of
-his devotion to Lady Bedford:
-
- though she have a better verser got,
- (Or Poet, in the court-account), than I,
- And who doth me, though I not him envy.
-
-In 1619 Jonson told Drummond that he had answered Daniel’s _Defence
-of Ryme_ (?1603), that ‘Samuel Daniel was a good honest man, had no
-children; but no poet’, and that ‘Daniel was at jealousies with him’
-(Laing, 1, 2, 10). All this suggests to me a rivalry at the Jacobean,
-rather than the Elizabethan Court, and I concur in the criticisms of
-Small, 181, upon the elaborate attempts of Fleay, i. 84, 359, to trace
-attacks on Daniel in Jonson’s earlier comedies. Fleay makes Daniel
-Fastidious Brisk in _Every Man Out of his Humour_, Hedon in _Cynthia’s
-Revels_, and alternatively Hermogenes Tigellius and Tibullus in _The
-Poetaster_, as well as Emulo in the _Patient Grissel_ of Dekker and
-others. In most of these equations he is followed by others, notably
-Penniman, who adds (_Poetaster_, xxxvii) Matheo in _Every Man In his
-Humour_ and Gullio in the anonymous _1 Return from Parnassus_. For
-all this the only basis is that Brisk, Matheo, and Gullio imitate or
-parody Daniel’s poetry. What other poetry, then, would affected young
-men at the end of the sixteenth century be likely to imitate? Some
-indirect literary criticism on Daniel may be implied, but this does
-not constitute the imitators portraits of Daniel. Fleay’s further
-identifications of Daniel with Littlewit in _Bartholomew Fair_ and
-Dacus in the _Epigrams_ of Sir John Davies are equally unsatisfactory.
-To return to biography. In 1604 Daniel, for the first time so far as
-is known, became connected with the stage, through his appointment as
-licenser for the Queen’s Revels by their patent of 4 Feb. Collier, _New
-Facts_, 47, prints, as preserved at Bridgewater House, two undated
-letters from Daniel to Sir Thomas Egerton. One, intended to suggest
-that Shakespeare was a rival candidate for the post in the Queen’s
-Revels, is a forgery, and this makes it impossible to attach much
-credit to the other, in which the writer mentions the ‘preferment
-of my brother’ and that he himself has ‘bene constrayned to live
-with children’. Moreover, the manuscript was not forthcoming in 1861
-(Ingleby, 247, 307). Daniel evidently took a part in the management of
-the Revels company; the indiscretion of his _Philotas_ did not prevent
-him from acting as payee for their plays of 1604–5. But his connexion
-with them probably ceased when _Eastward Ho!_ led, later in 1605, to
-the withdrawal of Anne’s patronage. The irrepressible Mr. Fleay (i.
-110) thinks that they then satirized him as Damoetas in Day’s _Isle
-of Gulls_ (1606). Daniel wrote one more mask and two pastorals, all
-for Court performances. By 1607 he was Groom of Anne’s Privy Chamber,
-and by 1613 Gentleman Extraordinary of the same Chamber. In 1615 his
-brother John obtained through his influence a patent for the Children
-of the Queen’s Chamber of Bristol (cf. ch. xii). He is said to have had
-a wife Justina, who was probably the sister of John Florio, whom he
-called ‘brother’ in 1611. The suggestion of Bolton Corney (_3 N. Q._
-viii. 4, 40, 52) that this only meant fellow servant of the Queen is
-not plausible; this relation would have been expressed by ‘fellow’. He
-had a house in Old Street, but kept up his Somerset connexion, and was
-buried at Beckington, where he had a farm named Ridge, in Oct. 1619.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1599. The Poeticall Essayes of Sam. Danyel. Newly corrected and
-augmented. _P. Short for Simon Waterson._ [Includes _Cleopatra_.]
-
-1601. The Works of Samuel Daniel Newly Augmented. _For Simon Waterson._
-[_Cleopatra._]
-
-1602. [Reissue of 1601 with fresh t.p.]
-
-1605. Certaine Small Poems Lately Printed: with the Tragedie of
-Philotas. Written by Samuel Daniel. _G. Eld for Simon Waterson._
-[_Cleopatra_, _Philotas_.]
-
-1607. Certain Small Workes Heretofore Divulged by Samuel Daniel one of
-the Groomes of the Queenes Maiesties priuie Chamber, and now againe by
-him corrected and augmented. _I. W. for Simon Waterson._ [Two issues.
-_Cleopatra_, _Philotas_, _The Queen’s Arcadia_.]
-
-1611. Certain Small Workes.... _I. L. for Simon Waterson._ [Two issues.
-_Cleopatra_, _Philotas_, _The Queen’s Arcadia_.]
-
-1623. The Whole Workes of Samuel Daniel Esquire in Poetrie. _Nicholas
-Okes for Simon Waterson._ [_Cleopatra_, _Philotas_, _The Queen’s
-Arcadia_, _Hymen’s Triumph_, _The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses_. This
-was edited by John Daniel.]
-
-1635. Drammaticke Poems, written by Samuel Danniell Esquire, one of the
-Groomes of the most Honorable Privie Chamber to Queene Anne. _T. Cotes
-for John Waterson._ [Reissue of 1623 with fresh t.p.]
-
-1718. _For R. G. Gosling, W. Mears, J. Browne._
-
-1885–96. The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Samuel Daniel. Edited
-by A. B. Grosart. 5 vols. [Vol. iii (1885) contains the plays and
-masks.]
-
- PLAYS
-
- _Cleopatra > 1593_
-
-_S. R._ 1593, Oct. 19. ‘A booke intituled The Tragedye of Cleopatra.’
-_Symond Waterson_ (Arber, ii. 638).
-
-1594. Delia and Rosamond augmented. Cleopatra. By Samuel Daniel. _James
-Roberts and Edward Allde for Simon Waterson._ [Two editions. Verse
-Epistle to Lady Pembroke.]
-
-1595. _James Roberts and Edward Allde for Simon Waterson._
-
-1598. _Peter Short for Simon Waterson._
-
-Also in _Colls._ 1599–1635.
-
-_Edition_ by M. Lederer (1911, _Materialien_, xxxi).
-
-The play is in the classical manner, with choruses. The Epistle speaks
-of the play as motived by Lady Pembroke’s ‘well grac’d _Antony_’;
-the Apology to _Philotas_ shows that it was not acted. In 1607 it
-is described as ‘newly altered’, and is in fact largely rewritten,
-perhaps under the stimulus of the production of Shakespeare’s _Antony
-and Cleopatra_. The 1607 text is repeated in 1611, and the Epistle to
-Lady Pembroke is rewritten. But the text of 1623 is the earlier version
-again.
-
- _Philotas. 1604_
-
-_S. R._ 1604, Nov. 29 (Pasfield). ‘A Booke called the tragedie of
-Philotus wrytten by Samuel Daniell.’ _Waterson and Edward Blunt_
-(Arber, iii. 277).
-
-1605. [Part of _Coll._ 1605. Verse Epistle to Prince Henry, signed
-‘Sam. Dan.’; Apology.]
-
-1607. The Tragedie of Philotas. By Sam. Daniel. _Melch. Bradwood for
-Edward Blount._ [Shortened version of Epistle to Henry.]
-
-Also in _Colls._ 1607–35.
-
-The play is in the classical manner, with choruses. From the Apology,
-motived by ‘the wrong application and misconceiving’ of it, I extract:
-
- ‘Above eight yeares since [1596], meeting with my deare friend
- D. Lateware, (whose memory I reverence) in his Lords Chamber
- and mine, I told him the purpose I had for _Philotas_: who
- sayd that himselfe had written the same argument, and caused
- it to be presented in St. John’s Colledge in Oxford; where
- as I after heard, it was worthily and with great applause
- performed.... And living in the Country, about foure yeares
- since, and neere halfe a yeare before the late Tragedy of ours
- (whereunto this is now most ignorantly resembled) unfortunately
- fell out heere in England [Sept., 1600], I began the same,
- and wrote three Acts thereof,--as many to whom I then shewed
- it can witnesse,--purposing to have had it presented in Bath
- by certaine Gentlemens sonnes, as a private recreation for
- the Christmas, before the Shrovetide of that unhappy disorder
- [Feb. 1601]. But by reason of some occasion then falling out,
- and being called upon by my Printer for a new impression of my
- workes, with some additions to the Civill Warres, I intermitted
- this other subject. Which now lying by mee, and driven by
- necessity to make use of my pen, and the Stage to bee the
- mouth of my lines, which before were never heard to speake
- but in silence, I thought the representing so true a History,
- in the ancient forme of a Tragedy, could not but have had
- an unreproveable passage with the time, and the better sort
- of men; seeing with what idle fictions, and grosse follies,
- the Stage at this day abused mens recreations.... And for any
- resemblance, that thorough the ignorance of the History may be
- applied to the late Earle of Essex, it can hold in no proportion
- but only in his weaknesses, which I would wish all that love
- his memory not to revive. And for mine owne part, having beene
- perticularly beholding to his bounty, I would to God his errors
- and disobedience to his Sovereigne might be so deepe buried
- underneath the earth, and in so low a tombe from his other
- parts, that hee might never be remembered among the examples
- of disloyalty in this Kingdome, or paraleld with Forreine
- Conspirators.’
-
-The Apology is fixed by its own data to the autumn of 1604, and the
-performance was pretty clearly by the Queen’s Revels in the same year.
-Daniel was called before the Privy Council on account of the play, and
-used the name of the Earl of Devonshire in his defence. The earl was
-displeased and a letter of excuse from Daniel is extant (Grosart, i.
-xxii, from _S. P. D. Jac. I, 1603–10_, p. 18) in which, after asserting
-that he had satisfied Lord Cranborne [Robert Cecil], he says:
-
- ‘First I tolde the Lordes I had written 3 Acts of this tragedie
- the Christmas before my L. of Essex troubles, as diuers in the
- cittie could witnes. I saide the maister of the Revells had
- pervsed it. I said I had read some parte of it to your honour,
- and this I said having none els of powre to grace mee now in
- Corte & hoping that you out of your knowledg of bookes, or
- fauour of letters & mee, might answere that there is nothing
- in it disagreeing nor any thing, as I protest there is not,
- but out of the vniuersall notions of ambition and envie, the
- perpetuall argumentes of books or tragedies. I did not say you
- incouraged me vnto the presenting of it; yf I should I had beene
- a villayne, for that when I shewd it to your honour I was not
- resolud to haue had it acted, nor should it haue bene had not my
- necessities ouermaistred mee.’
-
- _The Queen’s Arcadia. 1605_
-
-_S. R._ 1605, Nov. 26 (Pasfield). ‘A book called The Quenes Arcadia.
-Presented by the university of Oxon in Christchurch.’ _Waterson_
-(Arber, iii. 305).
-
-1606. The Queenes Arcadia. A Pastorall Trage-comedie presented to
-her Maiestie and her Ladies, by the Vniuersitie of Oxford in Christs
-Church, In August last. _G. Eld for Simon Waterson._ [Dedicatory verses
-to the Queen.]
-
-See _Collections_.
-
-The performance was by Christ Church men on 30 Aug. 1605 during the
-royal visit to Oxford (cf. ch. iv). The original title appears to have
-been _Arcadia Reformed_. Chamberlain told Winwood (ii. 140) that the
-other plays were dull, but Daniel’s ‘made amends for all; being indeed
-very excelent, and some parts exactly acted’.
-
- _Hymen’s Triumph. 1614_
-
-[_MS._] _Drummond MS._ in Edinburgh Univ. Library. [Sonnet to Lady
-Roxborough, signed ‘Samuel Danyel’. The manuscript given to the library
-by William Drummond of Hawthornden, a kinsman of Lady Roxborough, in
-1627, is fully described by W. W. Greg in _M. L. Q._ vi. 59. It is
-partly holograph, and represents an earlier state of the text than
-the quarto of 1615. A letter of 1621 from Drummond to Sir Robert Ker,
-afterwards Earl of Ancrum, amongst the _Lothian MSS._ (_Hist. MSS._ i.
-116), expresses an intention of printing what appears to have been the
-same manuscript.]
-
-_S. R._ 1615, Jan. 13 (Buck). ‘A play called Hymens triumphes.’
-_Francis Constable_ (iii. 561), [The clerk first wrote ‘Hymens
-pastoralls’.]
-
-1615. Hymens Triumph. A Pastorall Tragicomaedie. Presented at the
-Queenes Court in the Strand at her Maiesties magnificent intertainement
-of the Kings most excellent Maiestie, being at the Nuptials of the Lord
-Roxborough. By Samuel Daniel. _For Francis Constable._ [Dedicatory
-verses to the Queen, signed ‘Sam. Daniel’, and Prologue.]
-
-See _Collections_.
-
-Robert Ker, Lord Roxborough, was married to Jean Drummond, daughter
-of Patrick, third Lord Drummond, and long a lady of Anne’s household.
-The wedding was originally fixed for 6 Jan. 1614, and the Queen meant
-to celebrate it with ‘a masque of maids, if they may be found’ (Birch,
-i. 279). It was, however, put off until Candlemas, doubtless to avoid
-competition with Somerset’s wedding, and appears from the dedication
-also to have served for a house-warming, to which Anne invited James
-on the completion of some alterations to Somerset House. Finett
-(_Philoxenis_, 16), who describes the complications caused by an
-invitation to the French ambassador, gives the date as 2 Feb., which is
-in itself the more probable; but John Chamberlain gives 3 Feb., unless
-there is an error in the dating of the two letters to Carleton, cited
-by Greg from _Addl. MS._ 4173, ff. 368, 371, as of 3 and 10 Feb. In
-the first he writes, ‘This day the Lord of Roxburgh marries M^{rs}.
-Jane Drummond at Somerset House, whither the King is invited to lie
-this night; & shall be entertained with shews & devices, specially a
-Pastoral, that shall be represented in a little square paved Court’;
-and in the second, ‘This day sevennight the Lord of Roxburgh married
-M^{rs}. Jane Drummond at Somerset House or Queen’s Court (as it must
-now be called). The King tarried there till Saturday after dinner. The
-Entertainment was great, & cost the Queen, as she says, above 3000£.
-The Pastoral made by Samuel Daniel was solemn & dull; but perhaps
-better to be read than represented.’ Gawdy, 175, also mentions the
-‘pastoral’. There is nothing to show who were the performers.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-Daniel has been suggested as the author of the anonymous _Maid’s
-Metamorphosis_.
-
- MASKS
-
- _The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses. 8 Jan. 1604_
-
-1604. The true discription of a Royall Masque. Presented at Hampton
-Court, vpon Sunday night, being the eight of Ianuary, 1604. And
-Personated by the Queenes most Excellent Majestie, attended by Eleuen
-Ladies of Honour. _Edward Allde._
-
-1604. The Vision of the 12. Goddesses, presented in a Maske the 8 of
-Ianuary, at Hampton Court: By the Queenes most Excellent Maiestie, and
-her Ladies. _T. C. for Simon Waterson._ [A preface to Lucy, Countess
-of Bedford, is signed by Daniel, who states that the publication was
-motived by ‘the unmannerly presumption of an indiscreet Printer, who
-without warrant hath divulged the late shewe ... and the same very
-disorderly set forth’. Lady Bedford had ‘preferred’ Daniel to the Queen
-‘in this imployment’.]
-
-See _Collections_.
-
-_Editions_ by Nichols, _James_, i. 305 (1828), E. Law (1880), and H. A.
-Evans (1897, _English Masques_).
-
-The maskers, in various colours and with appropriate emblems, were
-twelve Goddesses, and were attended by torchbearers (cf. Carleton,
-_infra_); the presenters, ‘for the introducing this show’, Night,
-Sleep, Iris, Sibylla, and the Graces; the cornets, Satyrs.
-
-The locality was the Hall at Hampton Court. At the lower end was a
-mountain, from which the maskers descended, and in which the cornets
-played; at the upper end the cave of Sleep and, on the left (Carleton),
-a temple of Peace, in the cupola of which was ‘the consort music’,
-while viols and lutes were ‘on one side of the hall’.
-
-The maskers presented their emblems, which Sibylla laid upon the altar
-of the temple. They danced ‘their own measures’, then took out the
-lords for ‘certain measures, galliards, and corantoes’, and after a
-‘short departing dance’ reascended the mountain.
-
-This was a Queen’s mask, danced, according to manuscript notes in a
-copy of the Allde edition (B.M. 161, a. 41) thought by Mr. Law to
-be ‘in a hand very like Lord Worcester’s’ (_vide infra_), and
-possibly identical with the ‘original MS. of this mask’ from which the
-same names are given in Collier, i. 347, by the Queen (Pallas), the
-Countesses of Suffolk (Juno), Hertford (Diana), Bedford (Vesta), Derby
-(Proserpine), and Nottingham (Concordia), and the Ladies Rich (Venus),
-Hatton (Macaria), Walsingham (Astraea), Susan Vere (Flora), Dorothy
-Hastings (Ceres), and Elizabeth Howard (Tethys).
-
-Anticipations of masks at Court during the winter of 1603–4 are to
-be found in letters to Lord Shrewsbury from Arabella Stuart on 18
-Dec. (Bradley, ii. 193), ‘The Queene intendeth to make a Mask this
-Christmas, to which end my Lady of Suffolk and my Lady Walsingham hath
-warrants to take of the late Queenes best apparell out of the Tower at
-theyr discretion. Certain Noblemen (whom I may not yet name to you,
-because some of them have made me of theyr counsell) intend another.
-Certain gentlemen of good sort another’; from Cecil on 23 Dec. (Lodge,
-iii. 81), ‘masks and much more’; and from Sir Thomas Edmondes on 23
-Dec. (Lodge, iii. 83):
-
- ‘Both the King’s and Queen’s Majesty have a humour to have some
- masks this Christmas time, and therefore, for that purpose, both
- the young lords and chief gentlemen of one part, and the Queen
- and her ladies of the other part, do severally undertake the
- accomplishment and furnishing thereof; and, because there is
- use of invention therein, special choice is made of Mr. Sanford
- to direct the order and course for the ladies’;
-
-also in the letters of Carleton to Chamberlain on 27 Nov. (Birch, i.
-24; _Hardwicke Papers_, i. 383), ‘many plays and shows are bespoken, to
-give entertainment to our ambassadors’, and 22 Dec. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_,
-v. 20; Law, 9):
-
- ‘We shall have a merry Christmas at Hampton Court, for both
- male and female maskes are all ready bespoken, whereof the Duke
- [of Lennox] is _rector chori_ of th’ one side and the La:
- Bedford of the other.’
-
-I suppose Mr. Sanford to be Henry Sanford, who, like Daniel, had been
-of the Wilton household (cf. Aubrey, i. 311) and may well have lent him
-his aid.
-
-The masks of lords on 1 Jan. and of Scots on 6 Jan. are not preserved.
-The latter is perhaps most memorable because Ben Jonson and his friend
-Sir John Roe were thrust out from it by the Lord Chamberlain (cf. ch.
-vi). Arabella Stuart briefly told Shrewsbury on 10 Jan. that there were
-three masks (Bradley, ii. 199). _Wilbraham’s Journal_ (_Camden
-Misc._ x), 66, records:
-
- ‘manie plaies and daunces with swordes: one mask by English
- and Scottish lords: another by the Queen’s Maiestie and eleven
- more ladies of her chamber presenting giftes as goddesses.
- These maskes, especialli the laste, costes 2000 or 3000^l, the
- aparells: rare musick, fine songes: and in jewels most riche
- 20000^l, the lest to my judgment: and her Maiestie 100,000^l.
- After Christmas was running at the ring by the King and 8 or
- 9 lordes for the honour of those goddesses and then they all
- feasted together privatelie.’
-
-But the fullest description was given by Carleton to Chamberlain on 15
-Jan. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, vi. 21, printed by Law, 33, 45; Sullivan, 192).
-
- ‘On New yeares night we had a play of Robin goode-fellow
- and a maske brought in by a magicien of China. There was a
- heaven built at the lower end of the hall, owt of which our
- magicien came downe and after he had made a long sleepy speech
- to the King of the nature of the cuntry from whence he came
- comparing it with owrs for strength and plenty, he sayde he had
- broughte in cloudes certain Indian and China Knights to see
- the magnificency of this court. And theruppon a trauers was
- drawne and the maskers seen sitting in a voulty place with theyr
- torchbearers and other lights which was no vnpleasing spectacle.
- The maskers were brought in by two boyes and two musitiens who
- began with a song and whilst that went forward they presented
- themselves to the King. The first gave the King an Impresa in
- a shield with a sonet in a paper to exprese his deuice and
- presented a jewell of 40,000£ valew which the King is to buy of
- Peter Van Lore, but that is more than euery man knew and it made
- a faire shew to the French Ambassadors eye whose master would
- have bin well pleased with such a maskers present but not at
- that prise. The rest in theyr order deliuered theyr scutchins
- with letters and there was no great stay at any of them saue
- only at one who was putt to the interpretacion of his deuise. It
- was a faire horse colt in a faire greene field which he meant
- to be a colt of Busephalus race and had this virtu of his sire
- that none could mount him but one as great at lest as Alexander.
- The King made himself merry with threatening to send this colt
- to the stable and he could not breake loose till he promised to
- dance as well as Bankes his horse. The first measure was full
- of changes and seemed confused but was well gone through with
- all, and for the ordinary measures they tooke out the Queen,
- the ladies of Derby, Harford, Suffolke, Bedford, Susan Vere,
- Suthwell th’ elder and Rich. In the corantoes they ran over
- some other of the young ladies, and so ended as they began with
- a song; and that done, the magicien dissolved his enchantment,
- and made the maskers appear in theyr likenes to be th’ Erle of
- Pembroke, the Duke, Mons^r. d’Aubigny, yong Somerset, Philip
- Harbert the young Bucephal, James Hayes, Richard Preston,
- and Sir Henry Godier. Theyr attire was rich but somewhat too
- heavy and cumbersome for dancers which putt them besides ther
- galliardes. They had loose robes of crimsen sattin embrodered
- with gold and bordered with brood siluer laces, dublets and
- bases of cloth of siluer; buskins, swordes and hatts alike and
- in theyr hats ech of them an Indian bird for a fether with
- some jewells. The twelfe-day the French Ambassador was feasted
- publikely; and at night there was a play in the Queens presence
- with a masquerado of certaine Scotchmen who came in with a sword
- dance not vnlike a matachin, and performed it clenly.... The
- Sunday following was the great day of the Queenes maske.’
-
-This Carleton describes at length; I only note points which supplement
-Daniel’s description.
-
- ‘The Hale was so much lessened by the workes that were in it,
- so as none could be admitted but men of apparance, the one end
- was made into a rock and in several places the waightes placed;
- in attire like savages. Through the midst from the top came a
- winding stayre of breadth for three to march; and so descended
- the maskers by three and three; which being all seene on the
- stayres at once was the best presentacion I have at any time
- seene. Theyre attire was alike, loose mantles and petticotes but
- of different colors, the stuffs embrodered sattins and cloth
- of gold and silver, for which they were beholding to Queen
- Elizabeth’s wardrobe.... Only Pallas had a trick by herself for
- her clothes were not so much below the knee, but that we might
- see a woman had both feete and legs which I never knew before.’
-
-He describes the torchbearers as pages in white satin loose gowns,
-although Daniel says they were ‘in the like several colours’ to the
-maskers. The temple was ‘on the left side of the hall towards the upper
-end’. For the ‘common measures’ the lords taken out were Pembroke,
-Lennox, Suffolk, Henry Howard, Southampton, Devonshire, Sidney,
-Nottingham, Monteagle, Northumberland, Knollys, and Worcester.
-
- ‘For galliardes and corantoes they went by discretion, and the
- yong Prince was tost from hand to hand like a tennis bal. The
- Lady Bedford and Lady Susan tooke owt the two ambassadors; and
- they bestirred themselfe very liuely: speceally the Spaniard for
- the Spanish galliard shewed himself a lusty old reueller.... But
- of all for goode grace and goode footmanship Pallas bare the
- bell away.’
-
-The dancers unmasked about midnight, and then came a banquet in the
-presence-chamber, ‘which was dispatched with the accustomed confusion’.
-
-Carleton also mentions the trouble between the Spanish and French
-ambassadors, which is also referred to in a letter of O. Renzo to G.
-A. Frederico (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, vi. 37; cf. Sullivan, 195), and is
-the subject of several dispatches by and to the Comte de Beaumont
-(_King’s MSS._ cxxiv, ff. 328, 359^v, 363, 373, 381, 383^v, 389; cf.
-Reyher, 519, Sullivan, 193–5). was the object of the Court not to
-invite both ambassadors together, as this would entail an awkward
-decision as to precedence. Beaumont was asked first, to the mask on 1
-Jan. He hesitated to accept, expressing a fear that it was intended to
-ask De Taxis to the Queen’s mask on Twelfth Night, ‘dernier jour des
-festes de Noël selon la facon d’Angleterre et le plus honnorable de
-tout pour la cérémonie qui s’y obserue de tout temps publiquement’.
-After some negotiation he extracted a promise from James that, if the
-Spaniard was present at all, it would be in a private capacity, and he
-then dropped the point, and accepted his own invitation, threatening to
-kill De Taxis in the presence if he dared to dispute precedence with
-him. On 5 Jan. he learnt that Anne had refused to dance if De Taxis was
-not present, and that the promise would be broken. He protested, and
-his protest was met by an invitation for the Twelfth Night to which he
-had attached such importance. But the Queen’s mask was put off until
-8 Jan., a Scottish mask substituted on 6 Jan., and on 8 Jan. De Taxis
-was present, revelling it in red, while Anne paid him the compliment of
-wearing a red favour on her costume.
-
-Reyher, 519, cites references to the Queen’s mask in the accounts of
-the Treasurer of the Chamber and of the Office of Works. E. Law (_Hist.
-of Hampton Court_, ii. 10) gives, presumably from one of these, ‘making
-readie the lower ende with certain roomes of the hall at Hampton Court
-for the Queenes Maiestie and ladies against their mask by the space of
-three dayes’.
-
-Allde’s edition must have been quickly printed. On 2 Feb. Lord
-Worcester wrote to Lord Shrewsbury (Lodge, iii. 87): ‘Whereas your
-Lordship saith you were never particularly advertised of the mask, I
-have been at sixpence charge with you to send you the book, which will
-inform you better than I can, having noted the names of the ladies
-applied to each goddess; and for the other, I would likewise have sent
-you the ballet, if I could have got it for money, but these books, as
-I hear, are all called in, and in truth I will not take upon me to set
-that down which wiser than myself do not understand.’
-
- _Tethys’ Festival. 5 June 1610_
-
-1610. Tethys Festiual: or the Queenes Wake. Celebrated at Whitehall,
-the fifth day of June 1610. Deuised by Samuel Daniel, one of the
-Groomes of her Maiesties most Honourable priuie Chamber. _For John
-Budge._ [Annexed with separate title-page to _The Creation of Henry
-Prince of Wales_ (q.v.). A Preface to the Reader criticizes, though not
-by name, Ben Jonson’s descriptions of his masks.]
-
-_Edition_ in Nichols, _James_ (1828), ii. 346.
-
-The maskers, in sky-blue and cloth of silver, were Tethys and thirteen
-Nymphs of as many English Rivers; the antimaskers, in light robes
-adorned with flowers, eight Naiads; the presenters Zephyrus and two
-Tritons, whom with the Naiads Daniel calls ‘the Ante-maske or first
-shew’, and Mercury. Torchbearers were dispensed with, for ‘they would
-have pestered the roome, which the season would not well permit’.
-
-The locality was probably the Banqueting Room at Whitehall. The scene
-was supplemented by a Tree of Victory on a mount to the right of ‘the
-state’. A ‘travers’ representing a cloud served for a curtain, and was
-drawn to discover, within a framework borne on pilasters, in front
-of which stood Neptune and Nereus on pedestals, a haven, whence the
-‘Ante-maske’ issued. They presented on behalf of Tethys a trident to
-the King, and a sword and scarf to Henry, and the Naiads danced round
-Zephyrus. The scene was then changed, under cover of three circles of
-moving lights and glasses, to show five niches, of which the central
-one represented a throne for Tethys, with Thames at her feet, and the
-others four caverns, each containing three Nymphs.
-
-The maskers marched to the Tree of Victory, at which they offered their
-flowers, and under which Tethys reposed between the dances. Of these
-they gave two; then took out the Lords for ‘measures, corantos, and
-galliardes’; and then gave their ‘retyring daunce’. Apparently as an
-innovation, ‘to avoid the confusion which usually attendeth the desolve
-of these shewes’, the presenters stayed the dissolve, and Mercury sent
-the Duke of York and six young noblemen to conduct the Queen and ladies
-back ‘in their owne forme’.
-
-This was a Queen’s mask, and Daniel notes ‘that there were none of
-inferior sort mixed among these great personages of state and honour
-(as usually there have been); but all was performed by themselves
-with a due reservation of their dignity. The maskers were the
-Queen (Tethys), the Lady Elizabeth (Thames), Lady Arabella Stuart
-(Trent), the Countesses of Arundel (Arun), Derby (Darwent), Essex
-(Lee), Dorset (Air), and Montgomery (Severn), Viscountess Haddington
-(Rother), and the Ladies Elizabeth Gray (Medway), Elizabeth Guilford
-(Dulesse), Katherine Petre (Olwy), Winter (Wye), and Windsor (Usk).
-The antimaskers were ‘eight little Ladies’. The Duke of York played
-Zephyrus, and two gentlemen ‘of good worth and respect’ the Tritons.
-‘The artificiall part’, says Daniel, ‘only speakes Master Inago Jones.’
-
-On 13 Jan. 1610 Chamberlain wrote to Winwood (iii. 117, misdated
-‘February’) that ‘the Queen would likewise have a mask against
-Candlemas or Shrovetide’. Doubtless it was deferred to the Creation,
-for which on 24 May the same writer (Winwood, iii. 175) mentions Anne
-as preparing and practising a mask. Winwood’s papers (iii. 179) also
-contain a description, unsigned, but believed by their editor to be
-written by John Finett, as follows:
-
- ‘The next day was graced with a most glorious Maske, which
- was double. In the first, came first in the little Duke of
- Yorke between two great Sea Slaves, the cheefest of Neptune’s
- servants, attended upon by twelve [eight] little Ladies, all
- of them the daughters of Earls or Barons. By one of these
- men a speech was made unto the King and Prince, expressing
- the conceipt of the maske; by the other a sword worth 20,000
- crowns at the least was put into the Duke of York’s hands,
- who presented the same unto the Prince his brother from the
- first of those ladies which were to follow in the next maske.
- This done, the Duke returned into his former place in midst
- of the stage, and the little ladies performed their dance to
- the amazement of all the beholders, considering the tenderness
- of their years and the many intricate changes of the dance;
- which was so disposed, that which way soever the changes went
- the little Duke was still found to be in the midst of these
- little dancers. These light skirmishers having done their
- _devoir_, in came the Princesses; first the Queen, next the
- Lady Elizabeth’s Grace, then the Lady Arbella, the Countesses
- of Arundell, Derby, Essex, Dorset, and Montgomery, the Lady
- Hadington, the Lady Elizabeth Grey, the Lady Windsor, the Lady
- Katherine Peter, the Lady Elizabeth Guilford, and the Lady Mary
- [Anne] Wintour. By that time these had done, it was high time
- to go to bed, for it was within half an hour of the sun’s, not
- setting, but rising. Howbeit, a farther time was to be spent in
- viewing and scrambling at one of the most magnificent banquets
- that I have seen. The ambassadors of Spaine, of Venice, and of
- the Low Countries were present at this and all the rest of these
- glorious sights, and in truth so they were.’
-
-Brief notices in Stowe’s _Annales_ (902, paged 907 in error) and in
-letters by Carleton to Sir Thomas Edmondes (Birch, i. 114) and by
-John Noies to his wife (_Hist. MSS. Various Colls._ iii. 261) add
-nothing to Finett’s account. There were no very serious ambassadorial
-complications, as the death of Henri IV put an invitation to the
-French ambassador out of the question (cf. Sullivan, 59). Correr notes
-with satisfaction that, as ambassador from Venice, he had as good
-a box as that of the Spanish ambassador, while, to please Spanish
-susceptibilities, that of the Dutch ambassador was less good (_V. P._
-xi. 507).
-
-The mask was ‘excessively costly’ (_V. P._ xii. 86). Several financial
-documents relating to it are on record (Reyher, 507, 521; Devon, 105,
-127; Sullivan, 219, 221; _S. P. D. Jac. I_, liii. 4, 74; lix. 12),
-including a warrant of 4 March, which recites the Queen’s pleasure that
-the Lord Chamberlain and Master of the Horse ‘shall take some paines
-to look into the emptions and provisions of all things necessarie’,
-another of 25 May for an imprest to Inigo Jones, an embroiderer’s
-bill for £55, and a silkman’s for £1,071 5_s._, with an endorsement
-by Lord Knyvet, referring the prices to the Privy Council, and
-counter-signatures by the Lord Chamberlain and the Master of the Horse.
-In this case the dresses of the maskers seem to have been provided
-for them. An allusion in a letter of Donne to Sir Henry Goodyere
-(_Letters_, i. 240) makes a sportive suggestion for a source of revenue
-‘if Mr. Inago Jones be not satisfied for his last masque (because I
-hear say it cannot come to much)’.
-
-
-JOHN DAVIDSON (1549?-1603).
-
-A Regent of St. Leonard’s College, St. Andrew’s, and afterwards
-minister of Liberton and a bitter satirist on behalf of the extreme
-Kirk party in Scotland.
-
- _The Siege of Edinburgh Castle. 1571_
-
-James Melville writes s.a. 1571: ‘This yeir in the monethe of July,
-Mr. Jhone Davidsone an of our Regents maid a play at the mariage of
-Mr. Jhone Coluin, quhilk I saw playit in Mr. Knox presence, wherin,
-according to Mr. Knox doctrine, the castell of Edinbruche was besiged,
-takin, and the Captan, with an or two with him, hangit in effigie.’[656]
-
-This was in intelligent anticipation of events. Edinburgh Castle was
-held by Kirkcaldy of Grange for Mary in 1571. On 28 May 1573 it was
-taken by the English on behalf of the party of James VI, and Kirkcaldy
-was hanged.
-
-Melville also records plays at the ‘Bachelor Act’ of 1573 at St.
-Andrews.
-
-
-SIR JOHN DAVIES (1569–1626).
-
-Davies was a Winchester and Queen’s College, Oxford, man, who
-entered the Middle Temple on 3 Feb. 1588, served successively as
-Solicitor-General (1603–6) and Attorney-General (1606–19) in Ireland,
-and was Speaker of the Irish Parliament in 1613. His principal poems
-are _Orchestra_ (1594) and _Nosce Teipsum_ (1599). He was invited by
-the Earl of Cumberland (q.v.) to write verses for ‘barriers’ in 1601,
-and contributed to the entertainments of Elizabeth by Sir Thomas
-Egerton (cf. ch. xxiv) and Sir Robert Cecil (q.v.) in 1602.
-
- _Collections_
-
-_Works_ by A. B. Grosart (1869–76, _Fuller Worthies Library_.
-3 vols.).
-
-_Poems_ by A. B. Grosart (1876, _Early English Poets_. 2
-vols.).
-
-_Dissertation_: M. Seemann, _Sir J. D., sein Leben und seine Werke_
-(1913, _Wiener Beiträge_, xli).
-
-
-R. DAVIES (_c._ 1610).
-
-Contributor to _Chester’s Triumph_ (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-FRANCIS DAVISON (_c._ 1575–_c._ 1619).
-
-He was son of William Davison, Secretary of State, and compiler of _A
-Poetical Rapsody_ (1602), of which the best edition is that of A. H.
-Bullen (1890–1). He entered Gray’s Inn in 1593: for his contribution to
-the Gray’s Inn mask of 1595, see s.v. ANON. _Gesta Grayorum_.
-
-
-JOHN DAY (_c._ 1574–_c._ 1640).
-
-Day was described as son of Walter Dey, husbandman, of Cawston,
-Norfolk, when at the age of eighteen he became a sizar of Gonville
-and Caius, Cambridge, on 24 Oct. 1592; on 4 May 1593 he was expelled
-for stealing a book (Venn, _Caius_, i. 146). He next appears in
-Henslowe’s diary, first as selling an old play for the Admiral’s in
-July 1598, and then as writing busily for that company in 1599–1603
-and for Worcester’s in 1602–3. Most of this work was in collaboration,
-occasionally with Dekker, frequently with Chettle, Hathway, Haughton,
-or Smith. From this period little or nothing survives except _The Blind
-Beggar of Bethnal Green_. Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 126, doubts whether
-an acrostic on Thomas Downton signed ‘John Daye’, contributed by J.
-F. Herbert to _Sh. Soc. Papers_, i. 19, and now at Dulwich, is to be
-ascribed to the dramatist. Day’s independent plays, written about
-1604–8, and his _Parliament of Bees_ are of finer literary quality
-than this early record would suggest. But Ben Jonson classed him to
-Drummond in 1619 amongst the ‘rogues’ and ‘base fellows’ who were ‘not
-of the number of the faithfull, i.e. Poets’ (Laing, 4, 11). He must
-have lived long, as John Tatham, who included an elegy on him as his
-‘loving friend’ in his _Fancies Theater_ (1640), was then only about
-twenty-eight. He appears to have been still writing plays in 1623, but
-there is no trace of any substantial body of work after 1608. Fleay, i.
-115, suggests from the tone of his manuscript pamphlet _Peregrinatio
-Scholastica_ that he took orders.
-
- _Collection_
-
-1881. A. H. Bullen, _The Works of John Day_.
-
- _The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green. 1600_
-
-_S. R._ 1657, Sept. 14. ‘A booke called The pleasant history of the
-blind beggar of Bednall Greene, declaring his life and death &c.’
-_Francis Grove_ (Eyre, ii. 145).
-
-1659. The Blind Beggar of Bednal-Green, with The merry humor of Tom
-Strowd the Norfolk Yeoman, as it was divers times publickly acted by
-the Princes Servants. Written by John Day. _For R. Pollard and Tho.
-Dring._
-
-_Editions_ by W. Bang (1902, _Materialien_, i) and J. S.
-Farmer (1914, _S. F. T._).
-
-The Prince’s men of the title are probably the later Prince Charles’s
-(1631–41), but these were the ultimate successors of Prince Henry’s,
-formerly the Admiral’s, who produced, between May 1600 and Sept. 1601,
-three parts of a play called indifferently by Henslowe _The Blind
-Beggar of Bethnal Green_ and _Thomas Strowd_. Payments were made for
-the first part to Day and Chettle and for the other two to Day and
-Haughton. On the assumption that the extant play is Part i, Bullen,
-_Introd._ 8 and Fleay, i. 107, make divergent suggestions as to the
-division of responsibility between Day and Chettle. At l. 2177 is the
-s.d. ‘Enter Captain Westford, Sill Clark’; probably the performance in
-which this actor took part was a Caroline one.
-
- _Law Tricks, or Who Would Have Thought It. 1604_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, March 28 (Buck). ‘A booke called A most wytty and merry
-conceited comedie called who would a thought it or Lawetrykes.’
-_Richard Moore_ (Arber, iii. 372).
-
-1608. Law-Trickes or, who would have Thought it. As it hath bene diuers
-times Acted by the Children of the Reuels. Written by John Day. _For
-Richard More._ [Epistle by the Book to the Reader; Epilogue.]
-
-The name given to the company suggests that the play was on the stage
-in 1605–6. But I think the original production must have been in 1604,
-as the dispute between Westminster and Winchester for ‘terms’, in which
-Winchester is said to have been successful, ‘on Saint Lukes day, coming
-shalbe a twelue-month’ (ed. Bullen, p. 61) can only refer to the term
-held at Winchester in 1603. An inundation in July is also mentioned (p.
-61), and Stowe, _Annales_ (1615), 844, has a corresponding record for
-1604, but gives the day as 3 Aug.
-
- _The Isle of Gulls. 1606_
-
-1606. The Ile of Guls. As it hath been often playd in the blacke
-Fryars, by the Children of the Reuels. Written by Iohn Day. _Sold by
-John Hodgets._ [Induction and Prologue.]
-
-1606. _For John Trundle, sold by John Hodgets._
-
-1633. _For William Sheares._
-
-The play is thus referred to by Sir Edward Hoby in a letter of 7 March
-1606 to Sir Thomas Edmondes (Birch, i. 59): ‘At this time (_c._ 15
-Feb.) was much speech of a play in the Black Friars, where, in the
-“Isle of Gulls”, from the highest to the lowest, all men’s parts were
-acted of two divers nations: as I understand sundry were committed to
-Bridewell.’ A passage in iv. 4 (Bullen, p. 91), probably written with
-_Eastward Ho!_ in mind, refers to the ‘libelling’ ascribed to poets by
-‘some Dor’ and ‘false informers’; and the Induction defends the play
-itself against the charge that a ‘great mans life’ is ‘charactred’
-in Damoetas. Nevertheless, Damoetas, the royal favourite, ‘a little
-hillock made great with others ruines’ (p. 13) inevitably suggests
-Sir Robert Carr, and Fleay, i. 109, points out that the ‘Duke’ and
-‘Duchess’ of the dramatis personae have been substituted for a ‘King’
-and ‘Queen’. It may not be possible now to verify all the men whose
-‘parts’ were acted; evidently the Arcadians and Lacedaemonians stand
-for the two ‘nations’ of English and Scotch. I do not see any ground
-for Fleay’s attempt to treat the play, not as a political, but as
-a literary satire, identifying Damoetas with Daniel, and tracing
-allusions to Jonson, Marston, and Chapman in the Induction. Hoby’s
-indication of date is confirmed by references to the ‘Eastward,
-Westward or Northward hoe’ (p. 3; cf. s.vv. Chapman, Dekker), to the
-quartering for treason on 30 Jan. 1606 (pp. 3, 51), and conceivably to
-Jonson’s _Volpone_ of 1605 or early 1606 (p. 88, ‘you wil ha my humor
-brought ath stage for a vserer’).
-
- _The Travels of Three English Brothers. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, June 29 (Buck). ‘A playe called the trauailles of the
-Three Englishe brothers as yt was played at the Curten.’ _John Wright_
-(Arber, iii. 354).
-
-1607. The Travailes of The three English Brothers.
-
- Sir Thomas }
- Sir Anthony } Shirley.
- Mr. Robert }
-
-As it is now play’d by her Maiesties Seruants. _For John Wright._
-[Epistle to the Family of the Sherleys, signed ‘Iohn Day, William
-Rowley, George Wilkins’, Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-The source was a pamphlet on the Sherleys by A. Nixon (S. R. 8 June
-1607) and the play seems to have been still on the stage when it
-was printed. Some suggestions as to the division of authorship are
-in Fleay, ii. 277, Bullen, _Introd._ 19, and C. W. Stork, _William
-Rowley_, 57. A scene at Venice (Bullen, p. 55) introduces Will Kempe,
-who mentions Vennar’s _England’s Joy_ (1602), and prepares to play an
-‘extemporall merriment’ with an Italian Harlaken. He has come from
-England with a boy. The Epilogue refers to ‘some that fill up this
-round circumference’.
-
- _Humour out of Breath. 1607–8_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, April 12 (Buck). ‘A booke called Humour out of breathe.’
-_John Helme_ (Arber, iii. 374).
-
-1608. Humour out of breath. A Comedie Diuers times latelie acted, By
-the Children Of The Kings Reuells. Written by Iohn Day. _For John
-Helme._ [Epistle to Signior Nobody, signed ‘Iohn Daye’.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. O. Halliwell (1860), A. Symons in _Nero and Other
-Plays_ (1888, _Mermaid Series_).
-
-The date must be taken as 1607–8, since the King’s Revels are not
-traceable before 1607. Fleay, i. 111, notes a reference in iii. 4 to
-the ‘great frost’ of that Christmas. The Epistle speaks of the play
-as ‘sufficiently featur’d too, had it been all of one man’s getting’,
-which may be a hint of divided authorship.
-
- _The Parliament of Bees. 1608 < > 16_
-
-[_MS._] _Lansdowne MS._ 725, with title. ‘An olde manuscript conteyning
-the Parliament of Bees, found in a Hollow Tree in a garden at Hibla, in
-a Strange Languadge, And now faithfully Translated into Easie English
-Verse by John Daye, Cantabridg.’ [Epistles to William Augustine, signed
-‘John Day, Cant.’ and to the Reader, signed ‘Jo: Daye’.]
-
-_S. R._ 1641, March 23 (Hansley). ‘A booke called The Parliam^t of
-Bees, &c., by John Day.’ _Will Ley_ (Eyre, i. 17).
-
-1641. The Parliament of Bees, With their proper Characters. Or A
-Bee-hive furnisht with twelve Honycombes, as Pleasant as Profitable.
-Being an Allegoricall description of the actions of good and bad men
-in these our daies. By John Daye, Sometimes Student of Caius Colledge
-in Cambridge. _For William Lee._ [Epistle to George Butler, signed
-‘John Day’, The Author’s Commission to his Bees, similarly signed, and
-The Book to the Reader. The text varies considerably from that of the
-manuscript.]
-
-_Edition_ by A. Symons in _Nero and Other Plays_ (1888, _Mermaid
-Series_).
-
-This is neither a play nor a mask, but a set of twelve short
-‘Characters’ or ‘Colloquies’ in dialogue. The existence of an edition
-of 1607 is asserted in Gildon’s abridgement (1699) of Langbaine, but
-cannot be verified, and is most improbable, since the manuscript
-Epistle refers to an earlier work already dedicated by Day, as ‘an
-unknowing venturer’, to Augustine, and this must surely be the
-allegorical treatise _Peregrinatio Scholastica_ printed by Bullen
-(_Introd._ 35) from _Sloane MS._ 3150 with an Epistle by Day to William
-Austin, who may reasonably be identified with Augustine. But the
-_Peregrinatio_, although Day’s first venture in dedication, was not a
-very early work, for Day admits that ‘I boast not that gaudie spring
-of credit and youthfull florish of opinion as some other filde in the
-same rancke with me’. Moreover, it describes (p. 50) an ‘ante-maske’,
-and this term, so far as we know, first came into use about 1608 (cf.
-ch. vi). The _Bees_ therefore must be later still. On the other hand,
-it can hardly be later than about 1616, when died Philip Henslowe, whom
-it is impossible to resist seeing with Fleay, i. 115, in the Fenerator
-or Usuring Bee (p. 63). Like Henslowe he is a ‘broaker’ and ‘takes up’
-clothes; and
-
- Most of the timber that his state repairs,
- He hew’s out o’ the bones of foundred players:
- They feed on Poets braines, he eats their breath.
-
-Now of the twelve Characters of the _Bees_, five (2, 3, 7, 8, 9) are
-reproduced, in many parts verbatim, subject to an alteration of names,
-in _The Wonder of a Kingdom_, printed as Dekker’s (q.v.) in 1636,
-but probably identical with _Come See a Wonder_, licensed by Herbert
-as Day’s in 1623. Two others (4, 5) are similarly reproduced in _The
-Noble Soldier_, printed in 1634 under the initials ‘S. R.’, probably
-indicating Samuel Rowley, but possibly also containing work by Dekker.
-The precise relation of Day to these plays is indeterminate, but the
-scenes more obviously ‘belong’ to the _Bees_ than to the plays, and if
-the _Bees_ was written but not printed in 1608–16, the chances are that
-Day used it as a quarry of material when he was called upon to work,
-as reviser or collaborator, on the plays. Meanwhile, Austin, if he
-was the Southwark and Lincoln’s Inn writer of that name (_D. N. B._),
-died in 1634, and when the _Bees_ was ultimately printed in 1641 a new
-dedicatee had to be found.
-
- _Lost and Doubtful Plays_
-
-For the Admiral’s, 1598–1603.
-
-Day appears to have sold the company an old play _1 The Conquest
-of Brute_ in July 1598, and to have subsequently written or
-collaborated in the following plays:
-
-1599–1600: _Cox of Collumpton_, with Haughton; _Thomas Merry_, or
-_Beech’s Tragedy_, with Haughton; _The Seven Wise Masters_, with
-Chettle, Dekker, and Haughton; _Cupid and Psyche_, with Chettle and
-Dekker; _1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_, with Chettle; and the
-unfinished _Spanish Moor’s Tragedy_, with Dekker and Haughton.
-
-1600–1: _2 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_, with Haughton; _Six Yeomen
-of the West_, with Haughton.
-
-1601–2: _The Conquest of the West Indies_, with Haughton and Smith;
-_3 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_, with Haughton; _Friar Rush and
-The Proud Woman of Antwerp_, with Chettle and Haughton; _The Bristol
-Tragedy_; and the unfinished _2 Tom Dough_, with Haughton.
-
-1602–3: _Merry as May Be_, with Hathway and Smith; _The Boss of
-Billingsgate_, with Hathway and another.
-
-
-For Worcester’s men.
-
-1602–3: _1 and 2 The Black Dog of Newgate_, with Hathway, Smith, and
-another; _The Unfortunate General_, with Hathway, Smith, and a third;
-and the unfinished _Shore_, with Chettle.
-
-Of the above only _The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ and a note
-of _Cox of Collumpton_ (cf. ch. xiii, s.v. Admiral’s) survive; for
-speculations as to others see Heywood, _Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas_
-(_Cupid and Psyche_), Marlowe, _Lust’s Dominion_ (_Spanish Moor’s
-Tragedy_), Yarington, _Two Lamentable Tragedies_ (_Thomas Merry_),
-and the anonymous _Edward IV_ (_Shore_) and _Fair Maid of Bristol_
-(_Bristow Tragedy_).
-
-Henslowe’s correspondence (_Henslowe Papers_, 56, 127) contains notes
-from Day and others about some of the Admiral’s plays and a few lines
-which may be from _The Conquest of the Indies_.
-
-Day’s _Mad Pranks of Merry Mall of the Bankside_ (S. R. 7 Aug. 1610)
-was probably a pamphlet (cf. Dekker, _The Roaring Girl_). Bullen,
-_Introd._ 11, thinks the _Guy Earl of Warwick_ (1661), printed as
-‘by B. J.’, too bad to be Day and Dekker’s _Life and Death of Guy of
-Warwick_ (S. R. 15 Jan. 1620). On 30 July 1623 Herbert licensed a
-_Bellman of Paris_ by Day and Dekker for the Prince’s (Herbert, 24).
-_The Maiden’s Holiday_ by Marlowe (q.v.) and Day (S. R. 8 April 1654)
-appears in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (_3 Library_, ii. 231) as
-Marlowe’s.
-
-For other ascriptions to Day see _The Maid’s Metamorphosis_ and
-_Parnassus_ in ch. xxiv.
-
-
-THOMAS DEKKER (_c._ 1572–_c._ 1632).
-
-Thomas Dekker was of London origin, but though the name occurs in
-Southwark, Cripplegate, and Bishopsgate records, neither his parentage
-nor his marriage, if he was married, can be definitely traced. He
-was not unlettered, but nothing is known of his education, and the
-conjecture that he trailed a pike in the Netherlands is merely based
-on his acquaintance with war and with Dutch. The Epistle to his
-_English Villanies_, with its reference to ‘my three score years’,
-first appeared in the edition of 1632; he was therefore born about
-1572. He first emerges, in Henslowe’s diary, as a playwright for
-the Admiral’s in 1598, and may very well have been working for them
-during 1594–8, a period for which Henslowe records plays only and
-not authors. The further conjecture of Fleay, i. 119, that this
-employment went as far back as 1588–91 is hazardous, and in fact led
-Fleay to put his birth-date as far back as 1567. It was based on the
-fact that the German repertories of 1620 and 1626 contain traces of
-his work, and on Fleay’s erroneous belief (cf. ch. xiv) that all the
-plays in these repertories were taken to Germany by Robert Browne as
-early as 1592. But it is smiled upon by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 256)
-as regards _The Virgin Martyr_ alone. Between 1598 and 1602 Dekker
-wrote busily, and as a rule in collaboration, first for the Admiral’s
-at the Rose and Fortune, and afterwards for Worcester’s at the Rose.
-He had a hand in some forty-four plays, of which, in anything like
-their original form, only half a dozen survive. _Satiromastix_,
-written for the Chamberlain’s men and the Paul’s boys in 1601, shows
-that his activities were not limited to the Henslowe companies.
-This intervention in the _Poetomachia_ led Jonson to portray him
-as Demetrius Fannius ‘the dresser of plays’ in _The Poetaster_;
-that he is also Thersites in _Troilus and Cressida_ is a not very
-plausible conjecture. Long after, in 1619, Jonson classed him among
-the ‘rogues’ (Laing, 4). In 1604, however, he shared with Jonson the
-responsibility for the London devices at James’s coronation entry.
-About this time began his career as a writer of popular pamphlets, in
-which he proved the most effective successor of Thomas Nashe. These,
-and in particular _The Gull’s Hornbook_ (1609), are full of touches
-drawn from his experience as a dramatist. Nor did he wholly desert the
-stage, collaborating with Middleton for the Prince’s and with Webster
-for Paul’s, and writing also, apparently alone, for the Queen’s. In
-1612 he devised the Lord Mayor’s pageant. In 1613 he fell upon evil
-days. He had always been impecunious, and Henslowe (i. 83, 101, 161)
-had lent him money to discharge him from the Counter in 1598 and from
-an arrest by the Chamberlain’s in 1599. Now he fell into the King’s
-Bench for debt, and apparently lay there until 1619. The relationship
-of his later work to that of Ford, Massinger, Day, and others, lies
-rather beyond the scope of this inquiry, but in view of the persistent
-attempts to find early elements in all his plays, I have made my list
-comprehensive. He is not traceable after 1632, and is probably the
-Thomas Decker, householder, buried at St. James’s, Clerkenwell, on 25
-Aug. 1632. A Clerkenwell recusant of this name is recorded in 1626 and
-1628 (_Middlesex County Records_, iii. 12, 19).
-
- _Collections_
-
-1873. [R. H. Shepherd], _The Dramatic Works of Thomas Dekker_. 4 vols.
-(_Pearson Reprints_). [Contains 15 plays and 4 Entertainments.]
-
-1884–6. A. B. Grosart, _The Non-Dramatic Works of Thomas Dekker_. 5
-vols. (Huth Library). [Contains nearly all the pamphlets, with _Patient
-Grissell_. A better edition of _The Gull’s Hornbook_ is that by R. B.
-McKerrow (1904); a chapter is in App. H.]
-
-1887. E. Rhys, _Thomas Dekker_ (_Mermaid Series_). [Contains _The
-Shoemaker’s Holiday_, _1, 2 The Honest Whore_, _Old Fortunatus_, _The
-Witch of Edmonton_.]
-
-_Dissertations_: M. L. Hunt, _Thomas Dekker: A Study_ (1911, _Columbia
-Studies in English_); W. Bang, _Dekker-Studien_ (1900, _E. S._ xxviii.
-208); F. E. Pierce, _The Collaboration of Webster with Dekker_ (1909,
-_Yale Studies_, xxxvii) and _The Collaboration of Dekker and Ford_
-(1912, _Anglia_, xxxvi, 141, 289); E. E. Stoll, _John Webster_ (1905),
-ch. ii, and _The Influence of Jonson on Dekker_ (1906, _M. L. N._ xxi.
-20); R. Brooke, _John Webster and the Elizabethan Drama_ (1916); F. P.
-Wilson, _Three Notes on Thomas Dekker_ (1920, _M. L. R._ xv. 82).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _Old Fortunatus. 1599_
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Feb. 20. ‘A commedie called old Fortunatus in his newe
-lyuerie.’ _William Aspley_ (Arber, iii. 156).
-
-1600. The Pleasant Comedie of Old Fortunatus. As it was plaied before
-the Queenes Maiestie this Christmas, by the Right Honourable the Earle
-of Nottingham, Lord high Admirall of England his Seruants. _S. S. for
-William Aspley_. [Prologue at Court, another Prologue, and Epilogue
-at Court; signed at end Tho. Dekker.]
-
-_Editions_ by Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ iii), H. Scherer (1901,
-_Münchener Beiträge_, xxi), O. Smeaton (1904, _T. D._).
-
-The Admiral’s revived, from 3 Feb. to 26 May 1596, ‘the 1 parte of
-Forteunatus’. Nothing is heard of a second part, but during 9–30 Nov.
-1599 Dekker received £6 on account of the Admiral’s for ‘the hole
-history of Fortunatus’, followed on 1 Dec. by £1 for altering the book
-and on 12 Dec. £2 ‘for the eande of Fortewnatus for the corte’. The
-company were at Court on 27 Dec. 1599 and 1 Jan. 1600. _The Shoemaker’s
-Holiday_ was played on 1 Jan.; _Fortunatus_ therefore on 27 Dec. The
-Prologue (l. 21) makes it ‘a iust yeere’ since the speaker saw the
-Queen, presumably on 27 Dec. 1598. The S. R. entry suggests that the
-1599 play was a revision of the 1596 one. Probably Dekker boiled the
-old two parts down into one play; the juncture may, as suggested by
-Fleay, i. 126, and Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 179), come about l. 1315.
-The Court additions clearly include, besides the Prologue and the
-Epilogue with its reference to Elizabeth’s forty-second regnal year
-(1599–1600), the compliment of ll. 2799–834 at the ‘eande’ of the play.
-The ‘small circumference’ of the theatrical prologue was doubtless
-the Rose. Dekker may or may not have been the original author of the
-two-part play; probably he was not, if Fleay is right in assigning
-it to _c._ 1590 on the strength of the allusions to the Marprelate
-controversy left in the 1600 text, e.g. l. 59. I should not wonder if
-Greene, who called his son Fortunatus, were the original author. A
-Fortunatus play is traceable in German repertories of 1608 and 1626
-and an extant version in the collection of 1620 owes something to
-Dekker’s (Herz, 97; cf. P. Harms, _Die deutschen Fortunatus-Dramen_
-in _Theatergeschichtliche Forschungen_, v). But Dekker’s own source,
-directly or indirectly, was a German folk-tale, which had been
-dramatized by Hans Sachs as early as 1553.
-
- _The Shoemaker’s Holiday. 1599_
-
-_S. R._ 1610, April 19. Transfer from Simmes to J. Wright of ‘A booke
-called the shoomakers holyday or the gentle crafte’ subject to an
-agreement for Simmes to ‘haue the workmanshipp of the printinge thereof
-for the vse of the sayd John Wrighte duringe his lyfe, yf he haue a
-printinge house of his owne’ (Arber, iii. 431).
-
-1600. The Shomakers Holiday. Or The Gentle Craft. With the humorous
-life of Simon Eyre, shoomaker, and Lord Maior of London. As it was
-acted before the Queenes most excellent Maiestie on New yeares day at
-night last, by the right honourable the Earle of Notingham, Lord high
-Admirall of England, his seruants. _Valentine Simmes_. [Epistle to
-Professors of the Gentle Craft and Prologue before the Queen.]
-
-1610, 1618, 1624, 1631, 1657.
-
-_Editions_ by E. Fritsche (1862), K. Warnke and E. Proescholdt (1886),
-W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), and A. F. Lange (1914, _R. E. C._
-iii).
-
-Henslowe advanced £3 ‘to bye a boocke called the gentle Craft of Thomas
-Dickers’ on 15 July 1599. Probably the hiatus in the Diary conceals
-other payments for the play, and there is nothing in the form of the
-entry to justify the suspicions of Fleay, i. 124, that it was not new
-and was not by Dekker himself. Moreover, the source was a prose tract
-of _The Gentle Craft_ by T. D[eloney], published in 1598. The Admiral’s
-were at Court on 1 Jan. 1600, but not on 1 Jan. 1601. A writer signing
-himself Dramaticus, in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 110, describes a copy in
-which a contemporary hand has written the names ‘T. Dekker, R. Wilson’
-at the end of the Epistle, together with the names of the actors in the
-margin of the text. A few of these are not otherwise traceable in the
-Admiral’s. Fleay and Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 203) unite in condemning
-this communication as an obvious forgery; but I rather wish they had
-given their reasons.
-
- _Patient Grissell. 1600_
-
- _With_ Chettle and Haughton.
-
-_S. R._ 1600, March 28. ‘The Plaie of Patient Grissell.’ _Cuthbert
-Burby_ (Arber, iii. 158).
-
-1603. The Pleasant Comodie of Patient Grissill. As it hath beene
-sundrie times lately plaid by the right honorable the Earle of
-Nottingham (Lord high Admirall) his seruants. _For Henry Rocket._
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1841, _Sh. Soc._), A. B. Grosart (1886,
-_Dekker_, v. 109), G. Hübsch (1893, _Erlanger Beiträge_, xv), J. S.
-Farmer (1911, _T. F. T._).--_Dissertations_ by A. E. H. Swaen in
-_E. S._ xxii. 451, Fr. v. Westenholz, _Die Griseldis-Sage in der
-Literaturgeschichte_ (1888).
-
-Henslowe paid £10 10_s._ to Dekker, Chettle, and Haughton for the
-play between 16 Oct. and 29 Dec. 1599, also £1 for Grissell’s gown
-on 26 Jan. 1600 and £2 ‘to staye the printing’ on 18 March 1600. The
-text refers to ‘wonders of 1599’ (l. 2220) and to ‘this yeare’ as
-‘leap yeare’ (l. 157). The production was doubtless _c._ Feb.–March
-1600. Fleay, i. 271, attempts to divide the work amongst the three
-contributors; cf. Hunt, 60. I see nothing to commend the theory of
-W. Bang (_E. S._ xxviii. 208) that the play was written by Chettle
-_c._ 1590–4 and revised with Dekker, Haughton, and Jonson. No doubt
-the dandy’s duel, in which clothes alone suffer, of Emulo-Sir Owen
-resembles that of Brisk-Luculento in _Every Man Out of his Humour_,
-but this may be due to a common origin in fact (cf. Fleay, i. 361;
-Penniman, _War_, 70; Small, 43). Fleay, followed by Penniman,
-identifies Emulo with Samuel Daniel, but Small, 42, 184, satisfactorily
-disposes of this suggestion. There seems no reason to regard _Patient
-Grissell_ as part of the _Poetomachia_. A ‘Comoedia von der Crysella’
-is in the German repertory of 1626; the theme had, however, already
-been dealt with in a play of _Griseldis_ by Hans Sachs (Herz, 66, 78).
-
- _Satiromastix. 1601_
-
- _With_ Marston?
-
-_S. R._ 1601, Nov. 11. ‘Vppon condicon that yt be lycensed to be
-printed, A booke called the vntrussinge of the humorous poetes by
-Thomas Decker.’ _John Barnes_ (Arber, iii. 195).
-
-1602. Satiromastix. Or The vntrussing of the Humorous Poet. As it hath
-bin presented publikely, by the Right Honorable, the Lord Chamberlaine
-his Seruants; and priuately, by the Children of Paules. By Thomas
-Dekker. _For Edward White._ [Epistle to the World, note _Ad Lectorem_
-of _errata_, and Epilogue. Scherer, xiv, distinguishes two editions,
-but T. M. Parrott’s review in _M. L. R._ vi. 398 regards these as only
-variant states of one edition.]
-
-_Editions_ by T. Hawkins (1773, _O. E. D._ iii), H. Scherer (1907,
-_Materialien_, xx), J. H. Penniman (1913, _B. L._).
-
-The Epistle refers to the _Poetomachia_ between ‘Horace’ and ‘a band
-of leane-witted Poetasters’, and on the place of _Satiromastix_
-in this fray there is little to be added to Small, 119. Jonson is
-satirized as Horace. Asinius Bubo is some unknown satellite of his,
-probably the same who appears as Simplicius Faber in Marston’s _What
-You Will_ (q.v.). Crispinus, Demetrius, and Tucca are taken over from
-Jonson’s _Poetaster_ (q.v.). The satirical matter is engrafted on to
-a play with a tragic plot and comic sub-plot, both wholly unconcerned
-with the _Poetomachia_. Jonson must have known that the attack was
-in preparation, when he made Tucca abuse Histrio for threatening to
-‘play’ him, and Histrio say that he had hired Demetrius [Dekker] ‘to
-abuse Horace, and bring him in, in a play’ (_Poetaster_, III. iv.
-212, 339). But obviously Dekker cannot have done much of his satire
-until he had seen _Poetaster_, to many details of which it retorts.
-It is perhaps rather fantastic to hold that, as he chaffs Jonson for
-the boast that he wrote _Poetaster_ in fifteen weeks (_Satiromastix_,
-641), he must himself have taken less. In any case a date of production
-between that of _Poetaster_ in the spring of 1601 and the S. R. entry
-on 11 Nov. 1601 is indicated. The argument of Scherer, x, for a date
-about Christmas 1601, and therefore after the S. R. entry, is rebutted
-by Parrott. It is generally held that Marston helped Dekker with the
-play, in spite of the single name on the title-page. No doubt Tucca
-in _Poetaster_, III. iv. 352, suggests to Histrio that Crispinus
-shall help Demetrius, and the plural is used in _Satiromastix_
-(_Epistle_, 12, and _Epilogue_, 2700) and in Jonson’s own _Apologetical
-Dialogue_ to _Poetaster_ (l. 141) of the ‘poetasters’ who were
-Jonson’s ‘untrussers’. Small, 122, finds Marston in the plot and
-characterization, but not in the style.
-
- _Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602_
-
- _With_ Webster, and possibly Chettle, Heywood, and Smith.
-
-1607. The Famous History of Sir Thomas Wyat. With the Coronation of
-Queen Mary, and the coming in of King Philip. As it was plaied by the
-Queens Maiesties Seruants. Written by Thomas Dickers and Iohn Webster.
-_E. A. for Thomas Archer._
-
-1612. _For Thomas Archer._
-
-_Editions_ by J. Blew (1876), and J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F. T._) and
-with _Works_ of Webster (q.v.).
-
-Henslowe, on behalf of Worcester’s men, paid Chettle, Dekker, Heywood,
-Smith, and Webster, for _1 Lady Jane_ in Oct. 1602. He then bought
-properties for _The Overthrow of Rebels_, almost certainly the same
-play, and began to pay Dekker for a _2 Lady Jane_, which apparently
-remained unfinished, at any rate at the time. One or both of these
-plays, or possibly only the shares of Dekker and Webster in one or both
-of them, may reasonably be taken to survive in _Sir Thomas Wyatt_.
-Stoll, 49, thinks the play, as we have it, is practically Dekker’s and
-that there is ‘no one thing’ that can be claimed ‘with any degree of
-assurance’ for Webster. But this is not the general view. Fleay, ii.
-269, followed in the main by Hunt, 76, gives Webster scc. i-ix, Greg
-(_Henslowe_, ii. 233) scc. i-x and xvi (with hesitation as to iii-v),
-Pierce, after a careful application of a number of ‘tests’ bearing both
-on style and on matter, scc. ii, v, vi, x, xiv, xvi; but he thinks that
-some or all of these were retouched by Dekker. Brooke inclines to trace
-Webster in scc. ii, xvi, Heywood in scc. vi, x, and a good deal of
-Dekker. Hunt thinks the planning due to Chettle.
-
- _The Honest Whore. 1604, c. 1605_
-
- _With_ Middleton.
-
-_S. R._ 1604, Nov. 9 (Pasfield). ‘A Booke called The humors of the
-patient man, The longinge wyfe and the honest whore.’ _Thomas Man the
-younger_ (Arber, iii. 275).
-
-1608, April 29 (Buck). ‘A booke called the second parte of the
-conuerted Courtisan or honest Whore.’ _Thomas Man Junior_ (Arber,
-iii. 376). [No fee entered.]
-
-1630, June 29 (Herbert). ‘The second parte of the Honest Hoore by
-Thomas Dekker.’ _Butter_ (Arber, iv. 238).
-
-1604. The Honest Whore, With, The Humours of the Patient Man, and the
-Longing Wife. Tho: Dekker. _V. S. for John Hodgets._ [Part i.]
-
-1605, 1615, 1616, N.D. [All Part i.]
-
-1630. The Second Part of the Honest Whore, With the Humors of the
-Patient Man, the Impatient Wife: the Honest Whore, perswaded by strong
-Arguments to turne Curtizan againe: her braue refuting those Arguments.
-And lastly, the Comicall Passages of an Italian Bridewell, where the
-Scaene ends. Written by Thomas Dekker. _Elizabeth Allde for Nathaniel
-Butter._ [Part ii.]
-
-1635. The Honest Whore, With, The Humours of the Patient Man, and the
-Longing Wife, Written by Thomas Dekker, As it hath beene Acted by her
-Maiesties Servants with great Applause. _N. Okes, sold by Richard
-Collins._ [Part i.]
-
-_Editions_ by W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ i) and W. A. Neilson
-(1911, _C. E. D._).
-
-Henslowe made a payment to Dekker and Middleton for ‘the pasyent man
-& the onest hore’ between 1 Jan. and 14 March 1604, on account of the
-Prince’s men, and the mention of Towne in a stage-direction to Part i
-(ed. Pearson, ii. 78) shows that it was in fact acted by this company.
-Fleay, i. 132, and Hunt, 94, cite some allusions in Part ii suggesting
-a date soon after that of Part i, and this would be consistent with
-Henslowian methods. There is more difference of opinion about the
-partition of the work. Of Part i Fleay gives scc. i, iii, and xiii-xv
-alone to Dekker, and Hunt finds the influence of Middleton in the theme
-and plot of both Parts. Bullen, however (_Middleton_, i. xxv), thinks
-Middleton’s share ‘inconsiderable’, giving him only I. v and III. i,
-with a hand in II. i and in a few comic scenes of Part ii. Ward, ii.
-462, holds a similar view.
-
- _Westward Ho! 1604_
-
- _With_ Webster.
-
-_S. R._ 1605, March 2. ‘A commodie called westward Hoe presented by the
-Children of Paules provided yat he get further authoritie before yt
-be printed.’ _Henry Rocket_ (Arber, iii. 283). [Entry crossed out and
-marked ‘vacat’.]
-
-1607. Westward Hoe. As it hath beene diuers times Acted by the
-Children of Paules. Written by Tho: Decker, and Iohn Webster. _Sold by
-John Hodgets._
-
-_Editions_ with _Works_ of Webster (q.v.).
-
-The allusions cited by Fleay, ii. 269, Stoll, 14, Hunt, 101, agree
-with a date of production at the end of 1604. Fleay assigns Acts I-III
-and a part of IV. ii to Webster; the rest of Acts IV, V to Dekker. But
-Stoll, 79, thinks that Webster only had ‘some slight, undetermined part
-in the more colourless and stereotyped portions ... under the shaping
-and guiding hand of Dekker’, and Pierce, 131, after an elaborate
-application of tests, can only give him all or most of I. i and III.
-iii and a small part of I. ii and III. ii. Brooke finds traces of
-Webster in I. i and III. iii and Dekker in II. i, ii and V. iii, and
-has some useful criticism of the ‘tests’ employed by Pierce.
-
- _Northward Ho! 1605_
-
- _With_ Webster.
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Aug. 6 (Buck). ‘A booke Called Northward Ho.’ _George
-Elde_ (Arber, iii. 358).
-
-1607. North-Ward Hoe. Sundry times Acted by the Children of Paules. By
-Thomas Decker, and Iohn Webster. _G. Eld._
-
-_Editions_ by J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F. T._) and in _Works_ of Webster
-(q.v.).
-
-The play is a reply to _Eastward Ho!_ which was itself a reply to
-_Westward Ho!_ and was on the stage before May 1605, and it is referred
-to with the other two plays in Day’s _Isle of Gulls_, which was on
-the stage in Feb. 1606. This pretty well fixes its date to the end
-of 1605. I do not think that Stoll, 16, is justified in his argument
-for a date later than Jan. 1606, since, even if the comparison of the
-life of a gallant to a squib is a borrowing from Marston’s _Fawn_, it
-seems probable that the _Fawn_ itself was originally written by 1604,
-although possibly touched up early in 1606. Fleay, ii. 270, identifies
-Bellamont with Chapman, one of the authors of _Eastward Ho!_ and Stoll,
-65, argues in support of this. It is plausible, but does not carry with
-it Fleay’s identification of Jenkins with Drayton. Fleay gives Webster
-I. ii, II. i, III. i, and IV. i, but Stoll finds as little of him as in
-_Westward Ho!_ and Pierce, 131, only gives him all or most of I. i, II.
-ii, and the beginning of v and a small part of III. i. Brooke traces
-Webster in I. i and III. i and Dekker in IV. i.
-
- _The Whore of Babylon 1605 < > 7_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, April 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called the Whore of Babilon.’
-_Nathanael Butter and John Trundell_ (Arber, iii. 347).
-
-1607. The Whore of Babylon. As it was Acted by the Princes Seruants.
-Written by Thomas Dekker. _For N. Butter._ [Epistle to the Reader and
-Prologue.]
-
-Fleay, i. 133, and Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 210) regard the play as a
-revision of _Truth’s Supplication to Candlelight_, for which Henslowe,
-on behalf of the Admiral’s, was paying Dekker in Jan. 1600 and buying
-a robe for Time in April 1600. Truth and Time, but not Candlelight,
-are characters in the play, which deals with Catholic intrigues
-against Elizabeth, represented as Titania, and her suitors. I do not
-feel sure that it would have been allowed to be staged in Elizabeth’s
-lifetime. In any case it must have been revised _c._ 1605–7, in view of
-the references, not only to the death of Essex (ed. Pearson, p. 246)
-and the reign of James (p. 234), but to the _Isle of Gulls_ of 1605
-(p. 214). The Cockpit, alluded to (p. 214) as a place where follies
-are shown in apes, is of course that in the palace, where Henry saw
-plays. The Epistle and Prologue have clear references to a production
-in ‘Fortune’s dial’ and the ‘square’ of the Fortune, and the former
-criticizes players; but hardly proves the definite breach with the
-Prince’s suggested by Fleay and Greg.
-
- _The Roaring Girl. c. 1610_
-
- _With_ Middleton.
-
-1611. The Roaring Girle. Or Moll Cut-Purse, As it hath lately beene
-Acted on the Fortune-stage by the Prince his Players. Written by T.
-Middleton and T. Dekkar. _For Thomas Archer._ [Epistle to the Comic
-Play-Readers, signed ‘Thomas Middleton’, Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-_Editions_ by W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ ii), A. H. Bullen (1885,
-_Middleton_, iv. 1), and J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F. T._).
-
-Fleay, i, 132, thinks the play written about 1604–5, but not produced
-until 1610. This is fantastic and Bullen points out that Mary Frith,
-the heroine, born not earlier than _c._ 1584–5, had hardly won her
-notoriety by 1604. By 1610 she certainly had, and the ‘foule’ book of
-her ‘base trickes’ referred to in the Epilogue was probably John Day’s
-_Mad Pranks of Merry Mall of the Bankside_, entered on S. R. 7 Aug.
-1610, but not extant. The Epilogue also tells the audience that, if
-they are dissatisfied,
-
- The Roring Girle her selfe some few dayes hence,
- Shall on this Stage, give larger recompence.
-
-I think this can only refer to a contemplated personal appearance
-of Mary Frith on the stage; it has been interpreted as referring to
-another forthcoming play. Moll Cutpurse appears in Field’s _Amends for
-Ladies_, but this was not a Fortune play. Bullen (_Middleton_, i. xxxv)
-regards the play as an example of collaboration, and gives Dekker I.
-II. ii, and V; Middleton, with occasional hesitation, the rest. Fleay,
-i. 132, only gives Middleton II. ii, IV. i, V. ii.
-
- _If It be not Good, the Devil is in It. 1610 < > 12_
-
-1612. If It Be Not Good, the Diuel is in it. A New Play, As it hath bin
-lately Acted, with great applause, by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants:
-At the Red Bull. Written by Thomas Dekker. _For I. T. sold by Edward
-Marchant._ [Epistle to the Queen’s men signed Tho: Dekker, Prologue,
-and Epilogue. The running title is ‘If this be not a good Play, the
-Diuell is in it’.]
-
-The Epistle tells us that after ‘Fortune’ (the Admiral’s) had ‘set her
-foote vpon’ the play, the Queen’s had ‘raised it up ... the Frontispice
-onely a little more garnished’. Fleay, i. 133, attempts to fix the
-play to 1610, but hardly proves more than that it cannot be earlier
-than 14 May 1610, as the murder on that day of Henri IV is referred to
-(ed. Pearson, p. 354). The Epistle also refers to a coming new play by
-Dekker’s ‘worthy friend’, perhaps Webster (q.v.). In the opening scene
-the devil Lurchall is addressed as Grumball, which suggests the actor
-Armin (cf. ch. xv). Daborne (q.v.) in the Epistle to his _Christian
-Turned Turk_ seems to claim a share in this play.
-
- _Match Me in London_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1630, 8 Nov. (Herbert). ‘A Play called Mach mee in London by
-Thomas Decker.’ _Seile_ (Arber, iv. 242).
-
-1631. A Tragi-Comedy: Called, Match mee in London. As it hath beene
-often presented; First, at the Bull in St. Iohns-street; And lately,
-at the Priuate-House in Drury Lane, called the Phoenix. Written by
-Tho: Dekker. _B. Alsop and T. Fawcet for H. Seile._ [Epistle to
-Lodowick Carlell signed ‘Tho: Dekker’.]
-
-Herbert’s diary contains the entry on 21 Aug. 1623, ‘For the L.
-Elizabeth’s servants of the Cockpit. An old play called Match me in
-London which had been formerly allowed by Sir G. Bucke.’ On this, some
-rather slight evidence from allusions, and a general theory that Dekker
-did not write plays during his imprisonment of 1613–19, Fleay, i. 134,
-puts the original production by Queen Anne’s men _c._ 1611 and Hunt,
-160, in 1612–13. As there are some allusions to cards and the game of
-maw, Fleay thinks the play a revision of _The Set at Maw_ produced
-by the Admiral’s on 15 Dec. 1594. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 172) points
-out the weakness of the evidence, but finds some possible traces of
-revision in the text.
-
- _The Virgin Martyr. c. 1620_
-
- _With_ Massinger.
-
-_S. R._ 1621, 7 Dec. (Buck). ‘A Tragedy called The Virgin Martir.’
-_Thomas Jones_ (Arber, iv. 62).
-
-1622. The Virgin Martir, A Tragedie, as it hath bin divers times
-publickely Acted with great Applause, By the seruants of his Maiesties
-Reuels. Written by Phillip Messenger and Thomas Deker. _B. A. for
-Thomas Jones._
-
-1631, 1651, 1661.
-
-The play is said to have been ‘reformed’ and licensed by Buck for the
-Red Bull on 6 Oct. 1620 (Herbert, 29). An additional scene, licensed
-on 7 July 1624 (_Var._ i. 424), did not find its way into print.
-Fleay, i. 135, 212, asserts that the 1620 play was a refashioning by
-Massinger of a play by Dekker for the Queen’s about 1611, itself a
-recast of _Diocletian_, produced by the Admiral’s on 16 Nov. 1594,
-but ‘dating from 1591 at the latest’. He considers II. i, iii, III.
-iii, and IV. ii of the 1620 version to be still Dekker’s. Ward, iii.
-12, and Hunt, 156, give most of the play to Dekker. But all these
-views are impressionistic, and there is no special reason to suppose
-that Massinger revised, rather than collaborated with, Dekker, or to
-assume a version of _c._ 1611. As for an earlier version still, Fleay’s
-evidence is trivial. In any case 1591 is out of the question, as
-Henslowe marked the _Diocletian_ of 1594 ‘n.e.’ Nor does he say it was
-by Dekker. A play on Dorothea the Martyr had made its way into Germany
-by 1626, but later German repertories disclose that there was also
-a distinct play on Diocletian (Herz, 66, 103; Greg, _Henslowe_, ii.
-172). Greg, however, finds parts of _The Virgin Martyr_, ‘presumably
-Dekker’s’, to be ‘undoubtedly early’. Oliphant (_E. S._ xvi. 191)
-makes the alternative suggestion that _Diocletian_ was the basis of
-Fletcher’s _Prophetess_, in which he believes the latter part of IV. i
-and V. i to be by an older hand, which he cannot identify. All this is
-very indefinite.
-
- _The Witch of Edmonton. 1621_
-
- _With_ Ford and W. Rowley.
-
-_S. R._ 1658, May 21. ‘A booke called The witch of Edmonton, a
-Tragicomedy by Will: Rowley, &c.’ _Edward Blackmore_ (Eyre, ii. 178).
-
-1658. The Witch of Edmonton, A known true Story. Composed into a
-Tragi-Comedy By divers well-esteemed Poets; William Rowley, Thomas
-Dekker, John Ford, &c. Acted by the Princes Servants; often at the
-Cock-Pit in Drury Lane, once at Court, with singular Applause. Never
-printed till now. _J. Cottrel for Edward Blackmore._ [Prologue signed
-‘Master Bird’.]
-
-_Editions_ with _Works_ of John Ford, by H. Weber (1811), W. Gifford
-(1827), H. Coleridge (1840, 1848, 1851), A. Dyce (1869), A. H. Bullen
-(1895).
-
-I include this for the sake of completeness, but it is based upon a
-pamphlet published in 1621 and was played at Court by the Prince’s men
-on 29 Dec. 1621 (Murray, ii. 193). It is generally regarded as written
-in collaboration. Views as to its division amongst the writers are
-summarized by Hunt, 178, and Pierce (_Anglia_, xxxvi. 289). The latter
-finds Dekker in nearly all the scenes, Ford in four, Rowley perhaps in
-five.
-
- _The Wonder of a Kingdom. 1623_
-
- _Possibly with_ Day.
-
-_S. R._ 1631, May 16 (Herbert). ‘A Comedy called The Wonder of a
-Kingdome by Thomas Decker.’ _John Jackman_ (Arber, iv. 253).
-
-1636, Feb. 24. ‘Vnder the hands of Sir Henry Herbert and Master
-Kingston Warden (dated the 7th of May 1631) a Play called The Wonder of
-a Kingdome by Thomas Decker.’ _Nicholas Vavasour_ (Arber, iv. 355).
-
-1636. The Wonder of a Kingdome. Written by Thomas Dekker. _Robert
-Raworth for Nicholas Vavasour._
-
-Herbert’s diary for 18 Sept. 1623 has the entry: ‘For a company of
-strangers. A new comedy called Come see a wonder, written by John
-Daye. It was acted at the Red Bull and licensed without my hand to
-it because they were none of the 4 companies.’ As _The Wonder of a
-Kingdom_ contains scenes which are obviously from Day’s _Parliament of
-Bees_ (_1608–16_) it is possible either to adopt the simple theory of
-a collaboration between Day and Dekker in 1623, or to hold with Fleay,
-i. 136, and Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 174, that Day’s ‘new’ play of 1623
-was a revision of an earlier one by Dekker. The mention of cards in the
-closing lines seems an inadequate ground for Fleay’s further theory,
-apparently approved by Greg, that the original play was _The Mack_,
-produced by the Admiral’s on 21 Feb. 1595.
-
- _The Sun’s Darling. 1624_
-
- _With_ Ford.
-
-1656. The Sun’s-Darling: A Moral Masque: As it hath been often
-presented at Whitehall, by their Majesties Servants; and after at the
-Cockpit in Drury Lane, with great Applause. Written by John Foard and
-Tho. Decker Gent. _J. Bell for Andrew Penneycuicke._
-
-1657. Reissue with same imprint.
-
-1657. Reissue with same imprint.... ‘As it hath been often presented by
-their Majesties Servants; at the Cockpit in Drury Lane’....
-
-_Editions_ with _Works_ of John Ford, by H. Weber (1811), W.
-Gifford (1827), H. Coleridge (1840, 1848, 1851), A. Dyce (1869), A. H.
-Bullen (1895).
-
-The play was licensed by Herbert for the Lady Elizabeth’s at the
-Cockpit on 3 March 1624 (Chalmers, _S. A._ 217; Herbert, 27) and
-included in a list of Cockpit plays in 1639 (_Variorum_, iii. 159).
-Fleay, i. 232, Ward, ii. 470, and Pierce (_Anglia_, xxxvi. 141) regard
-it as a revision by Ford of earlier work by Dekker, and the latter
-regards the last page of Act I, Acts II and III, and the prose of Acts
-IV and V as substantially Dekker’s. It is perhaps a step from this
-to the theory of Fleay and Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 190) that the play
-represents the _Phaethon_, which Dekker wrote for the Admiral’s in
-Jan. 1598 and afterwards altered for a Court performance at Christmas
-1600. There are allusions to ‘humours’ and to ‘pampered jades of Asia’
-(ed. Pearson, pp. 316, 318) which look early, but Phaethon is not a
-character, nor is the story his. A priest of the Sun appears in Act I:
-I am surprised that Fleay did not identify him, though he is not mad,
-with the ‘mad priest of the sun’ referred to in Greene’s (q.v.) Epistle
-to _Perimedes_. The play is not a ‘masque’ in the ordinary sense.
-
- _The Noble Soldier > 1631_
-
- _With_ Day and S. Rowley?
-
-_S. R._ 1631, May 16 (Herbert). ‘A Tragedy called The noble Spanish
-Souldier by Thomas Deckar.’ _John Jackman_ (Arber, iv. 253).
-
-1633, Dec. 9. ‘Entred for his Copy vnder the handes of Sir Henry
-Herbert and Master Kingston warden _Anno Domini_ 1631. a Tragedy called
-_The Noble Spanish soldior_ written by master Decker.’ _Nicholas
-Vavasour_ (Arber, iv. 310).
-
-1634. The Noble Souldier, Or, A Contract Broken, justly reveng’d. A
-Tragedy. Written by S. R. _For Nicholas Vavasour._
-
-_Editions_ by A. H. Bullen (1882, _O. E. P._ i) and J. S. Farmer (1913,
-_S. F. T._).
-
-The printer tells us that the author was dead in 1634.
-
-The initials may indicate Samuel Rowley of the Admiral’s and Prince
-Henry’s. Bullen and Hunt, 187, think that Dekker revised work by
-Rowley. But probably Day also contributed, for II. i, ii; III. ii;
-IV. i; V. i, ii, and parts of I. ii and V. iv are drawn like scenes
-in _The Wonder of a Kingdom_ from his _Parliament of Bees_ (1608–16).
-Fleay, i. 128, identifies the play with _The Spanish Fig_ for which
-Henslowe made a payment on behalf of the Admiral’s in Jan. 1602. This
-Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 220) thinks ‘plausible’, regarding the play as
-‘certainly an old play of about 1600, presumably by Dekker and Rowley
-with later additions by Day’. He notes that the King is not, as Fleay
-alleged, poisoned with a Spanish fig, but a Spanish fig is mentioned,
-‘and it is quite possible that such may have been the mode of poisoning
-in the original piece’. Henslowe does not name the payee for _The
-Spanish Fig_, and it was apparently not finished at the time.
-
- _Lost and Doubtful Plays_
-
-It will be convenient to set out all the certain or conjectured work by
-Dekker mentioned in Henslowe’s Diary.
-
- (a) _Conjectural anonymous Work before 1598_
-
-(i) _Philipo and Hippolito._
-
-Produced as a new play by the Admiral’s on 9 July 1594. The ascription
-to Dekker, confident in Fleay, i. 213, and regarded as possible
-by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 165), appears to be due to the entry of a
-_Philenzo and Hypollita_ by Massinger, who revised other early work of
-Dekker, in the S. R. on 29 June 1660, to the entry of a _Philenzo and
-Hipolito_ by Massinger in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (_3 Library_,
-ii. 231), and to the appearance of a _Julio and Hyppolita_ in the
-German collection of 1620. A copy of Massinger’s play is said (Collier,
-_Henslowe_, xxxi) to be amongst the _Conway MSS._
-
-(ii) _The Jew of Venice._
-
-Entered as a play by Dekker in the S. R. on 9 Sept. 1653 (_3 Library_,
-ii. 241). It has been suggested (Fleay, i. 121, and _Sh._ 30, 197; Greg
-in _Henslowe_, ii. 170) that it was the source of a German play printed
-from a Vienna MS. by Meissner, 131 (cf. Herz, 84). In this a personage
-disguises himself as a French doctor, which leads to the conjectural
-identification of its English original both with _The Venetian Comedy_
-produced by the Admiral’s on 27 Aug. 1594 and with _The French Doctor_
-performed by the same men on 19 Oct. 1594 and later dates and bought by
-them from Alleyn in 1602. The weakest point in all this guesswork is
-the appearance of common themes in the German play and in _The Merchant
-of Venice_, which Fleay explains to his own satisfaction by the
-assumption that Shakespeare based _The Merchant of Venice_ on Dekker’s
-work.
-
-(iii) _Dr. Faustus._
-
-Revived by the Admiral’s on 30 Sept. 1594. On the possibility that the
-1604 text contains comic scenes written by Dekker for this revival, cf.
-s.v. Marlowe.
-
-(iv) _Diocletian._
-
-Produced by the Admiral’s, 16 Nov. 1599; cf. s.v. _The Virgin Martyr_
-(_supra_).
-
-(v) _The Set at Maw._
-
-Produced by the Admiral’s on 14 Dec. 1594; cf. s.v. _Match Me in
-London_ (_supra_).
-
-(vi) _Antony and Valia._
-
-Revived by the Admiral’s, 4 Jan. 1595, and ascribed by Fleay, i. 213,
-with some encouragement from Greg in _Henslowe_, ii. 174, to Dekker, on
-the ground of entries in the S. R. on 29 June 1660 and in Warburton’s
-list of burnt plays (_3 Library_, ii. 231) of an _Antonio and Vallia_
-by Massinger, who revised other early work by Dekker.
-
-(vii) _The Mack._
-
-Produced by the Admiral’s on 21 Feb. 1595; cf. s.v. _The Wonder of a
-Kingdom_ (_supra_).
-
-(viii) _1 Fortunatus._
-
-Revived by the Admiral’s on 3 Feb. 1596; cf. s.v. _Old Fortunatus_
-(_supra_).
-
-(ix) _Stukeley._
-
-Produced by the Admiral’s on 11 Dec. 1596. On Fleay’s ascription to
-Dekker, cf. s.v. _Captain Thomas Stukeley_ (Anon.).
-
-(x) _Prologue to Tamberlaine._
-
-This rests on a forged entry in Henslowe’s Diary for 20 Dec. 1597; cf.
-s.v. Marlowe.
-
- (b) _Work for Admiral’s, 1598–1602_
-
-(i) _Phaethon._
-
-Payments in Jan. 1598 and for alterations for the Court in Dec. 1600;
-cf. s.v. _The Sun’s Darling_ (_supra_).
-
-(ii) _The Triplicity or Triangle of Cuckolds._
-
-Payment in March 1598.
-
-(iii) _The Wars of Henry I or The Welshman’s Prize._
-
-Payment, with Chettle and Drayton, March 1598. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii.
-192) speculates on possible relations of the plays to others on a
-Welshman and on Henry I.
-
-(iv) _1 Earl Godwin._
-
-Payment, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, March 1598.
-
-(v) _Pierce of Exton._
-
-Payment, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, April 1598. Apparently the
-play was not finished.
-
-(vi) _1 Black Bateman of the North._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, May 1598.
-
-(vii) _2 Earl Godwin._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, May–June 1598.
-
-(viii) _The Madman’s Morris._
-
-Payments, with Drayton and Wilson, July 1598.
-
-(ix) _Hannibal and Hermes._
-
-Payments, with Drayton and Wilson, July 1598.
-
-(x) _2 Hannibal and Hermes._
-
-Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 195) gives this name to (xiii).
-
-(xi) _Pierce of Winchester._
-
-Payments, with Drayton and Wilson, July–Aug. 1598.
-
-(xii) _Chance Medley._
-
-Payments to Dekker (or Chettle), with Munday, Drayton, and Wilson, Aug.
-1598.
-
-(xiii) _Worse Afeared than Hurt._
-
-Payments, with Drayton, Aug.–Sept. 1598.
-
-(xiv) _1 Civil Wars of France._
-
-Payment, with Drayton, Sept. 1598.
-
-(xv) _Connan Prince of Cornwall._
-
-Payments, with Drayton, Oct. 1598.
-
-(xvi) _2 Civil Wars of France._
-
-Payment, with Drayton, Nov. 1598.
-
-(xvii) _3 Civil Wars of France._
-
-Payments, with Drayton, Nov.–Dec. 1598.
-
-(xviii) _Introduction to Civil Wars of France._
-
-Payments, Jan. 1599.
-
-(xix) _Troilus and Cressida._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, April 1599. A fragmentary ‘plot’ (cf. ch. xxiv)
-may belong to this play.
-
-(xx) _Agamemnon or Orestes Furious._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, May 1599.
-
-(xxi) _The Gentle Craft._
-
-Payment, July 1599; cf. _The Shoemaker’s Holiday_ (_supra_).
-
-(xxii) _The Stepmother’s Tragedy._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Aug.–Oct. 1599.
-
-(xxiii) _Bear a Brain._
-
-Payment, Aug. 1599; cf. s.vv. _The Shoemaker’s Holiday_ (_supra_) and
-_Look About You_ (Anon.).
-
-(xxiv) _Page of Plymouth._
-
-Payments, with Jonson, Aug.–Sept. 1599.
-
-(xxv) _Robert II or The Scot’s Tragedy._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Jonson, ‘& other Jentellman’ (? Marston, q.v.),
-Sept. 1599.
-
-(xxvi) _Patient Grissell._
-
-Payments, with Chettle and Haughton, Oct.–Dec. 1599; cf. _supra_.
-
-(xxvii) _Fortunatus._
-
-Payments, Nov.–Dec. 1599; cf. s.v. _Old Fortunatus_ (_supra_).
-
-(xxviii) _Truth’s Supplication to Candlelight._
-
-Payments, Jan. 1600. Apparently the play was not finished; cf. s.v.
-_The Whore of Babylon_ (_supra_).
-
-(xxix) _The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy._
-
-Payment, with Day and Haughton, Feb. 1600. Apparently the play was not
-finished; cf. s.v. _Lust’s Dominion_ (Marlowe).
-
-(xxx) _The Seven Wise Masters._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Day, and Haughton, March 1600.
-
-(xxxi) _The Golden Ass_ or _Cupid and Psyche_.
-
-Payments, with Chettle and Day, April-May 1600; on borrowings from
-this, cf. s.v. Heywood, _Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas_.
-
-(xxxii) _1 Fair Constance of Rome._
-
-Payments, with Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson (q.v.), June 1600.
-
-(xxxiii) _[1] Fortune’s Tennis._
-
-Payment, Sept. 1600. A fragmentary plot (cf. ch. xxiv) is perhaps less
-likely to belong to this than to Munday’s _Set at Tennis_.
-
-(xxxiv) _King Sebastian of Portugal._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, April-May 1601.
-
-(xxxv) _The Spanish Fig._
-
-Payment, Jan. 1602. The payee is unnamed; cf. _The Noble Soldier_
-(_supra_).
-
-(xxxvi) Prologue and Epilogue to _Pontius Pilate_.
-
-Payment, Jan. 1602.
-
-(xxxvii) Alterations to _Tasso’s Melancholy_.
-
-Payments, Jan.–Dec. 1602.
-
-(xxxviii) _Jephthah_.
-
-Payments, with Munday, May 1602.
-
-(xxxix) _Caesar’s Fall, or The Two Shapes_.
-
-Payments, with Drayton, Middleton, Munday, and Webster, May 1602.
-
- (c) _Work for Worcester’s, 1602_
-
-(i) _A Medicine for a Curst Wife._
-
-Payments, July–Sept. 1602. The play was begun for the Admiral’s and
-transferred to Worcester’s.
-
-(ii) _Additions to Sir John Oldcastle._
-
-Payments, Aug.–Sept. 1602; cf. s.v. Drayton.
-
-(iii) _1 Lady Jane_, or _The Overthrow of Rebels_.
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Heywood, Smith, and Webster, Oct. 1602; cf.
-s.v. _Sir Thomas Wyatt_ (_supra_).
-
-(iv) _2 Lady Jane._
-
-Payment, Oct. 1602. Apparently the play was not finished; cf. s.v.
-_Sir Thomas Wyatt_ (_supra_).
-
-(v) _Christmas Comes but Once a Year._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Heywood, and Webster, Nov. 1602.
-
- (d) _Work for Prince’s, 1604_
-
-_The Patient Man and the Honest Whore._
-
-Payments, with Middleton, Jan.–March 1602; cf. s.v. _The Honest Whore_
-(_supra_).
-
-The following plays are assigned to Dekker in S. R. but are now lost:
-
-_The Life and Death of Guy of Warwick_, with Day (S. R. 15 Jan.
-1620).
-
-_Gustavus King of Swethland_ (S. R. 29 June 1660).
-
-_The Tale of Ioconda and Astolso_, a Comedy (S. R. 29 June 1660).
-
-The two latter are also in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (_3
-Library_, ii. 231).
-
-The following are assigned to Dekker in Herbert’s licence entries:
-
-A French Tragedy of _The Bellman of Paris_, by Dekker and Day, for
-the Prince’s, on 30 July 1623.
-
-_The Fairy Knight_, by Dekker and Ford, for the Prince’s, on 11 June
-1624.
-
-_The Bristow Merchant_, by Dekker and Ford, for the Palsgrave’s, on 22
-Oct. 1624.
-
-Fleay, i. 232, seems to have nothing but the names to go upon in
-suggesting identifications of the two latter with the _Huon of
-Bordeaux_, revived by Sussex’s on 28 Dec. 1593, and Day’s _Bristol
-Tragedy_ (q.v.) respectively.
-
-For other ascriptions to Dekker see _Capt. T. Stukeley_, _Charlemagne_,
-_London Prodigal_, _Sir Thomas More_, _The Weakest Goeth to the Wall_
-in ch. xxiv. He has also been conjectured to be the author of the songs
-in the 1632 edition of Lyly’s plays.
-
- ENTERTAINMENTS
-
- _Coronation Entertainment. 1604_
-
-See ch. xxiv, C.
-
- _Troia Nova Triumphans. 29 Oct. 1612_
-
-_S. R._ 1612, Oct. 21. ‘To be prynted when yt is further Aucthorised, A
-Booke called Troia Nova triumphans. London triumphinge. or the solemne
-receauinge of Sir John Swynerton knight into the citye at his Retourne
-from Westminster after the taking his oathe written by Thomas Decker.’
-_Nicholas Okes_ (Arber, iii. 500).
-
-1612. Troia-Noua Triumphans. London Triumphing, or, The Solemne,
-Magnificent, and Memorable Receiuing of that worthy Gentleman, Sir Iohn
-Swinerton Knight, into the Citty of London, after his Returne from
-taking the Oath of Maioralty at Westminster, on the Morrow next after
-Simon and Iudes day, being the 29. of October, 1612. All the Showes,
-Pageants, Chariots of Triumph, with other Deuices (both on the Water
-and Land) here fully expressed. By Thomas Dekker. _Nicholas Okes, sold
-by John Wright._
-
-_Edition_ in Fairholt (1844), ii. 7.
-
-The opening of the description refers to ‘our best-to-be-beloved
-friends, the noblest strangers’. John Chamberlain (Birch, i. 202) says
-that the Palsgrave was present and Henry kept away by his illness,
-that the show was ‘somewhat extraordinary’ and the water procession
-wrecked by ‘great winds’. At Paul’s Chain the Mayor was met by the
-‘first triumph’, a sea-chariot, bearing Neptune and Luna, with a
-ship of wine. Neptune made a speech. At Paul’s Churchyard came ‘the
-second land-triumph’, the throne or chariot of Virtue, drawn by four
-horses on which sat Time, Mercury, Desire, and Industry. Virtue made
-a speech, and both pageants preceded the Mayor down Cheapside. At the
-little Conduit in Cheapside was the Castle of Envy, between whom and
-Virtue there was a dialogue, followed by fireworks from the castle. At
-the Cross in Cheapside was another ‘triumph’, the House of Fame, with
-representations of famous Merchant Tailors, ‘a perticular roome being
-reserved for one that represents the person of Henry, the now Prince
-of Wales’. After a speech by Fame, the pageant joined the procession,
-and from it was heard a song on the way to the Guildhall. On the way
-to Paul’s after dinner, Virtue and Envy were again beheld, and at the
-Mayor’s door a speech was made by Justice.
-
-
-THOMAS DELONEY (_c._ 1543–_c._ 1600).
-
-A ballad writer and pamphleteer, who wrote a ballad on the visit to
-Tilbury in 1588. See ch. xxiv, C.
-
-
-ROBERT DEVEREUX, EARL OF ESSEX (1566–1601).
-
-It is possible that Essex, who sometimes dabbled in literature, had
-himself a hand in the device of _Love and Self-Love_, with which
-he entertained Elizabeth on 17 Nov. 1595, and of which some of the
-speeches are generally credited to Bacon (q.v.).
-
-
-WILLIAM DODD (_c._ 1597–1602).
-
-A Scholar and Fellow of St. John’s, Cambridge, and a conjectured author
-of _Parnassus_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-MICHAEL DRAYTON (_c._ 1563–1631).
-
-Drayton was born at Hartshill in Warwickshire, and brought up in the
-household of Sir Henry Goodyere of Polesworth, whose daughter Anne,
-afterwards Lady Rainsford, is the Idea of his pastorals and sonnets.
-With _The Harmony of the Church_ (1591) began a life-long series of
-ambitious poems, in all the characteristic Elizabethan manners, for
-which Drayton found many patrons, notably Lucy Lady Bedford, Sir Walter
-Aston of Tixall, Prince Henry and Prince Charles, and Edward Earl of
-Dorset. The guerdons of his pen were not sufficient to keep him from
-having recourse to the stage. Meres classed him in 1598 among the
-‘best for tragedy’, and Henslowe’s diary shows him a busy writer for
-the Admiral’s men, almost invariably in collaboration with Dekker and
-others, from Dec. 1597 to Jan. 1599, and a more occasional one from
-Oct. 1599 to May 1602. At a later date he may possibly have written for
-Queen Anne’s men, since commendatory verses by T. Greene are prefixed
-to his _Poems_ of 1605. In 1608 he belonged to the King’s Revels
-syndicate at Whitefriars. No later connexion with the stage can be
-traced, and he took no steps to print his plays with his other works.
-His Elegy to Henry Reynolds of _Poets and Poesie_ (C. Brett, _Drayton’s
-Minor Poems_, 108) does honour to Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson, and
-Beaumont, and tradition makes him a partaker in the drinking-bout that
-led to Shakespeare’s end. Jonson wrote commendatory verses for him in
-1627, but in 1619 had told Drummond (Laing, 10) that ‘Drayton feared
-him; and he esteemed not of him’. The irresponsible Fleay, i. 361;
-ii. 271, 323, identifies him with Luculento of _E. M. O._, Captain
-Jenkins of Dekker and Webster’s _Northward Ho!_, and the eponym of the
-anonymous _Sir Giles Goosecap_; Small, 98, with the Decius criticized
-in the anonymous _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_, who may also be Dekker.
-
-The collections of Drayton’s _Poems_ do not include his
-plays.--_Dissertations_: O. Elton, _M. D._ (1895, _Spenser Soc._,
-1905); L. Whitaker, _M. D. as a Dramatist_ (1903, _M. L. A._ xviii.
-378).
-
- _Sir John Oldcastle. 1599_
-
- _With_ Hathaway, Munday, and Wilson.
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Aug. 11 (Vicars). ‘The first parte of the history of the
-life of Sir John Oldcastell lord Cobham. Item the second and last parte
-of the history of Sir John Oldcastell lord Cobham with his martyrdom,’
-_Thomas Pavier_ (Arber, iii. 169).
-
-1600. The first part Of the true and honorable historie, of the life of
-Sir John Oldcastle, the good Lord Cobham. As it hath been lately acted
-by the right honorable the Earle of Notingham Lord high Admirall of
-England his seruants. _V. S. for Thomas Pavier._ [Prologue.]
-
-1600.... Written by William Shakespeare. _For T. P._ [Probably a
-forgery of later date than that given in the imprint; cf. p. 479.]
-
-1664. In Third Folio Shakespeare.
-
-1685. In Fourth Folio Shakespeare.
-
-_Editions_ in collections of the Shakespeare _Apocrypha_, and by W.
-Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ i), P. Simpson (1908, _M. S. R._), J. S. Farmer
-(1911, _T. F. T._).
-
-Henslowe advanced £10 to the Admiral’s as payment to Munday, Drayton,
-Wilson, and Hathway for the first part of ‘the lyfe of S^r Jhon
-Ouldcasstell’ and in earnest for the second part on 16 Oct. 1599,
-and an additional 10_s._ for the poets ‘at the playnge of S^r John
-Oldcastell the ferste tyme as a gefte’ between 1 and 8 Nov. 1599.
-Drayton had £4 for the second part between 19 and 26 Dec. 1599, and
-properties were being bought for it in March 1600. It is not preserved.
-By Aug. 1602 the play had been transferred to Worcester’s men. More
-properties were bought, doubtless for a revival, and Dekker had £2
-10_s._ for ‘new a dicyons’. Fleay, ii. 116, attempts to disentangle the
-work of the collaborators. Clearly the play was an answer to _Henry
-IV_, in which Sir John Falstaff was originally Sir John Oldcastle, and
-this is made clear in the prologue:
-
- It is no pampered glutton we present,
- Nor aged Councellour to youthfull sinne.
-
- _Doubtful and Lost Plays_
-
-For ascriptions see _Edward IV_, _London Prodigal_, _Merry Devil of
-Edmonton_, _Sir T. More_, and _Thomas Lord Cromwell_ in ch. xxiv.
-
-The complete series of his work for the Admiral’s during 1597–1602 is
-as follows:
-
-(i) _Mother Redcap._
-
-Payments, with Munday, Dec. 1597–Jan. 1598.
-
-(ii) _The Welshman’s Prize, or The Famous Wars of Henry I and the
-Prince of Wales._
-
-Payments, with Chettle and Dekker, March 1598. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii.
-192) thinks that the play may have had some relation to Davenport’s
-_Henry I_ of 1624 entered as by Shakespeare and Davenport in S. R. on 9
-Sept. 1653.
-
-(iii) _1 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, March 1598.
-
-(iv) _2 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, May to June 1598.
-
-(v) _Pierce of Exton._
-
-Payment of £2, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, April 1598; but
-apparently not finished.
-
-(vi) _1 Black Bateman of the North._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, May 1598.
-
-(vii) _Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-lion._
-
-Payments, with Chettle, Munday, and Wilson, June 1598.
-
-(viii) _The Madman’s Morris._
-
-Payments, with Dekker and Wilson, July 1598.
-
-(ix) _Hannibal and Hermes._
-
-Payments, with Dekker and Wilson, July 1598.
-
-(x) _Pierce of Winchester._
-
-Payments, with Dekker and Wilson, July–Aug. 1598.
-
-(xi) _Chance Medley._
-
-Payments, with Chettle or Dekker, Munday, and Wilson, Aug. 1598.
-
-(xii) _Worse Afeared than Hurt._
-
-Payments, with Dekker, Aug.–Sept. 1598.
-
-(xiii-xv) _1, 2, 3 The Civil Wars of France._
-
-Payments, with Dekker, Sept.–Dec. 1598. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 198)
-suggests some relation with Chapman’s _Bussy D’Ambois_ (q.v.).
-
-(xvi) _Connan Prince of Cornwall._
-
-Payments, with Dekker, Oct. 1598.
-
-(xvii) _William Longsword._
-
-Apparently Drayton’s only unaided play and unfinished. His autograph
-receipt for a payment in Jan. 1599 is in Henslowe, i. 59.
-
-[There is now a break in Drayton’s dramatic activities, but not in his
-relations with Henslowe, for whom he acted as a witness on 8 July 1599.
-On 9 Aug. 1598 he had stood security for the delivery of a play by
-Munday (Henslowe, i. 60, 93).]
-
-(xviii-xix) _1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle._
-
-See above.
-
-(xx) _Owen Tudor._
-
-Payments, with Hathway, Munday, and Wilson, Jan. 1600; but apparently
-not finished.
-
-(xxi) _1 Fair Constance of Rome._
-
-Payments, with Dekker, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson (q.v.), June 1600.
-
-(xxii) _The Rising of Cardinal Wolsey._
-
-Payments, with Chettle (q.v.), Munday, and Smith, Aug.–Nov. 1601.
-
-(xxiii) _Caesar’s Fall, or The Two Shapes._
-
-Payments, with Dekker, Middleton, Munday, and Webster, May 1602.
-
-
-GILBERT DUGDALE (_c._ 1604).
-
-Author of _Time Triumphant_, an account of the entry and coronation of
-James I (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-JOHN DUTTON (_c._ 1598–1602).
-
-Perhaps only a ‘ghost-name’, but conceivably the author of _Parnassus_
-(cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-JOHN DYMMOCKE (_c._ 1601).
-
-Possibly the translator of _Pastor Fido_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-RICHARD EDES (1555–1604).
-
-Edes, or Eedes, entered Christ Church, Oxford, from Westminster in
-1571, took his B.A. in 1574, his M.A. in 1578, and was University
-Proctor in 1583. He took orders, became Chaplain to the Queen, and was
-appointed Canon of Christ Church in 1586 and Dean of Worcester in 1597.
-Some of his verse, both in English and Latin, has survived, and Meres
-includes him in 1598 amongst ‘our best for Tragedie’. The Epilogue,
-in Latin prose, of a play called _Caesar Interfectus_, which was both
-written and spoken by him, is given by F. Peck in _A Collection of
-Curious Historical Pieces_, appended to his _Memoirs of Cromwell_
-(1740), and by Boas, 163, from _Bodl. MS. Top. Oxon._ e. 5, f. 359. A
-later hand has added the date 1582, from which Boas infers that _Caesar
-Interfectus_, of which Edes was probably the author, was one of three
-tragedies recorded in the Christ Church accounts for Feb.–March 1582.
-Edes appears to have written or contributed to Sir Henry Lee’s (q.v.)
-Woodstock Entertainment of 1592.
-
-
-RICHARD EDWARDES (_c._ 1523–1566).
-
-Edwardes was a Somersetshire man. He entered Corpus Christi College,
-Oxford, on 11 May 1540, and became Senior Student of Christ Church in
-1547. Before the end of Edward’s reign he was seeking his fortune at
-Court and had a fee or annuity of £6 13_s._ 4_d._ (Stopes, _Hunnis_,
-147). He must not be identified with the George Edwardes of Chapel
-lists, _c._ 1553 (ibid. 23; _Shakespeare’s Environment_, 238; Rimbault,
-x), but was of the Chapel by 1 Jan. 1557 (Nichols, _Eliz._ i. xxxv;
-_Illustrations_, App. 14), when he made a New Year’s gift of ‘certeigne
-verses’, and was confirmed in office by an Elizabethan patent of 27
-May 1560. He succeeded Bower as Master of the Children, receiving his
-patent of appointment on 27 Oct. 1561 and a commission to take up
-children on 4 Dec. 1561 (Wallace, i. 106; ii. 65; cf. ch. xii). Barnabe
-Googe in his _Eglogs, Epytaphes and Sonettes_ (15 March 1563) puts his
-‘doyngs’ above those of Plautus and Terence. In addition to plays at
-Court, he took his boys on 2 Feb. 1565 and 2 Feb. 1566 to Lincoln’s Inn
-(cf. ch. vii), of which he had become a member on 25 Nov. 1564 (_L. I.
-Admission Register_, i. 72). He appeared at Court as a ‘post’ on behalf
-of the challengers for a tilt in Nov. 1565 (cf. ch. iv). In 1566 he
-helped in the entertainment of Elizabeth at Oxford, and on Oct. 31 of
-that year he died. His reputation as poet and dramatist is testified
-to in verses by Barnabe Googe, George Turberville, Thomas Twine, and
-others and proved enduring. The author [Richard Puttenham?] of _The
-Arte of English Poesie_ (1589) couples him with the Earl of Oxford as
-deserving the highest price for comedy and enterlude, and Francis Meres
-in his _Palladis Tamia_ (1598) includes him amongst those ‘best for
-comedy’. Several of his poems are in _The Paradise of Dainty Devices_
-(1576). Warton, iv. 218, says that William Collins (the poet) had a
-volume of prose stories printed in 1570, ‘sett forth by maister Richard
-Edwardes mayster of her maiesties revels’. One of these contained
-a version of the jest used in the _Induction_ of _The Taming of the
-Shrew_ (q.v.). There is nothing else to connect Edwardes with the
-Revels office, and probably ‘revels’ in Warton’s account is a mistake
-for ‘children’ or ‘chapel’.
-
-_Dissertations_: W. Y. Durand, _Notes on R. E._ (1902, _J. G. P._ iv.
-348), _Some Errors concerning R. E._ (1908, _M. L. N._ xxiii. 129).
-
- _Damon and Pythias. 1565_
-
-_S. R._ 1567–8. ‘A boke intituled ye tragecall comodye of Damonde and
-Pethyas.’ _Rycharde Jonnes_ (Arber, i. 354).
-
-Warton, iv. 214, describes an edition, not now known, as printed by
-William How in Fleet Street. The Tragical comedie of Damon and Pythias,
-newly imprinted as the same was playde before the queenes maiestie by
-the children of her grace’s chapple. Made by Mayster Edwards, then
-being master of the children. _William How._ [Only known through
-the description of Warton, iv. 214.]
-
-1571. The excellent Comedie of two the moste faithfullest Freendes,
-Damon and Pithias. Newly Imprinted, as the same was shewed before the
-Queenes Maiestie, by the Children of her Graces Chappell, except the
-Prologue that is somewhat altered for the proper vse of them that
-hereafter shall haue occasion to plaie it, either in Priuate, or open
-Audience. Made by Maister Edwards, then beynge Maister of the Children.
-_Richard Jones._
-
-1582. _Richard Jones._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^4, iv (1874), and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._
-i) and J. S. Farmer (1908, _T. F. T._).--_Dissertation_: W. Y. Durand,
-_A Local Hit in E.’s D. and P._ (_M. L. N._ xxii. 236).
-
-The play is not divided into acts or scenes; the characters include
-Carisophus a parasite, and Grim the Collier. The prologue [not that
-used at Court] warns the audience that they will be ‘frustrate quite
-of toying plays’ and that the author’s muse that ‘masked in delight’
-and to some ‘seemed too much in young desires to range’ will leave such
-sports and write a ‘tragical comedy ... mixed with mirth and care’.
-Edwardes adds (cf. App. C, No. ix):
-
- Wherein, talking of courtly toys, we do protest this flat,
- We talk of Dionysius court, we mean no court but that.
-
-A song at the end wishes Elizabeth joy and describes her as ‘void of
-all sickness, in most perfect health’. Durand uses this reference to
-date the play in the early months of 1565, since a letter of De Silva
-(_Sp. P._ i. 400) records that Elizabeth had a feverish cold since
-8 Dec. 1564, but was better by 2 Jan. 1565. He identifies the play
-with the ‘Edwardes tragedy’ of the Revels Accounts for 1564–5 (cf.
-App. B), and points out that there is an entry in those accounts for
-‘rugge bumbayst and cottone for hosse’, and that in _Damon and Pythias_
-(Dodsley, iv. 71) the boys have stuffed breeches with ‘seven ells of
-rug’ to one hose. A proclamation of 6 May 1562 (_Procl._ 562) had
-forbidden the use of more than a yard and three-quarters of stuff in
-the ‘stockes’ of hose, and an enforcing proclamation (_Procl._ 619) was
-required on 12 Feb. 1566. Boas, 157, notes a revival at Merton in 1568.
-
-Fleay, 60, thinks that the play contains attacks on the Paul’s boys
-in return for satire of Edwardes as Ralph Roister in Ulpian Fulwell’s
-_Like Will to Like_ (q.v.).
-
- _Lost Play_
-
- _Palamon and Arcite. 1566_
-
-This play was acted in two parts on 2 and 4 Sept. 1566, before
-Elizabeth in the Hall of Christ Church, Oxford (cf. ch. iv). The first
-night was made memorable by the fall of part of the staircase wall,
-by which three persons were killed. The Queen was sorry, but the play
-went on. She gave Edwardes great thanks for his pains. The play was
-in English. Several contemporary writers assign it to Edwardes, and
-Nicholas Robinson adds that he and other Christ Church men translated
-it out of Latin, and that he remained two months in Oxford working at
-it. Bereblock gives a long analysis of the action, which shows that,
-even if there is no error as to the intervening Latin version, the
-original source was clearly Chaucer’s _Knight’s Tale_. W. Y. Durand,
-_Journ. Germ. Phil._ iv. 356, argues that Edwardes’s play was not a
-source of _Two Noble Kinsmen_, on the ground of the divergence between
-that and Bereblock’s summary.
-
-There is no evidence of any edition of the play, although Plummer, xxi,
-says that it ‘has been several times printed’.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Fleay, ii. 295, assigns to Edwardes _Godly Queen Hester_, a play of
-which he had only seen a few lines, and which W. W. Greg, in his
-edition in _Materialien_, v, has shown with great probability to date
-from about 1525–9. His hand has also been sought in R. B.’s _Apius and
-Virginia_ and in _Misogonus_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-ELIZABETH (1533–1603).
-
-H. H. E. Craster (_E. H. R._ xxix. 722) includes in a list of
-Elizabeth’s English translations a chorus from Act II of the
-pseudo-Senecan _Hercules Oetaeus_, extant in _Bodl. MS. e Museo_, 55,
-f. 48, and printed in H. Walpole, _Royal and Noble Authors_ (ed. Park,
-1806), i. 102. It probably dates later than 1561. But he can find no
-evidence for a Latin version of a play of Euripides referred to by
-Walpole, i. 85.
-
-
-RICHARD FARRANT (?-1580).
-
-Farrant’s career as Master of the Children of Windsor and Deputy Master
-of the Children of the Chapel and founder of the first Blackfriars
-theatre has been described in chh. xii and xvii. It is not improbable
-that he wrote plays for the boys, and W. J. Lawrence, _The Earliest
-Private Theatre Play_ (_T. L. S._, 11 Aug. 1921), thinks that one of
-these was _Wars of Cyrus_ (cf. ch. xxiv), probably based on W. Barker’s
-translation (1567) of Xenophon’s _Cyropaedia_, and that the song of
-Panthea ascribed to Farrant in a Christ Church manuscript (cf. vol.
-ii, p. 63) has dropped out from the extant text of this. Farrant’s
-song, ‘O Jove from stately throne’, mentioning Altages, may be from
-another play. I think that _Wars of Cyrus_, as it stands, is clearly
-post-_Tamburlaine_, and although there are indications of lost songs
-at ll. 985, 1628, there is none pointing to a lament of Panthea. But
-conceivably the play was based on one by Farrant.
-
-
-GEORGE FEREBE (_c._ 1573–1613 <)
-
-A musician and Vicar of Bishop’s Cannings, Wilts.
-
- _The Shepherd’s Song. 1613_
-
-_S. R._ 1613, June 16. ‘A thinge called The Shepeherdes songe before
-Queene Anne in 4. partes complete Musical vpon the playnes of Salisbury
-&c.’ _Walter Dight_ (Arber, iii. 526).
-
-Aubrey, i. 251, says ‘when queen Anne came to Bathe, her way lay to
-traverse the famous Wensdyke, which runnes through his parish. He
-made severall of his neighbours good musitians, to play with him in
-consort, and to sing. Against her majesties comeing, he made a pleasant
-pastorall, and gave her an entertaynment with his fellow songsters
-in shepherds’ weeds and bagpipes, he himself like an old bard. After
-that wind musique was over, they sang their pastorall eglogues
-(which I have, to insert into Liber B).’ Wood’s similar account in
-_Fasti_ (1815), i. 270, is probably based on Aubrey’s. He dates the
-entertainment June 11 (cf. ch. iv. and App. A, s. ann. 1613), and gives
-the opening of the song as
-
- Shine, O thou sacred Shepherds Star,
- On silly shepherd swaines.
-
-Aubrey has a shorter notice in another manuscript and adds, ‘He gave
-another entertaynment in Cote-field to King James, with carters
-singing, with whipps in their hands; and afterwards, a footeball play’.
-
-
-GEORGE FERRERS (_c._ 1500–79).
-
-A Lincoln’s Inn lawyer, son of Thomas Ferrers of St. Albans, who
-was Page of the Chamber to Henry VIII, and acted as Lord of Misrule
-to Edward VI at the Christmases of 1551–2 and 1552–3 (_Mediaeval
-Stage_, i. 405; Feuillerat, _Edw. and M._ 56, 77, 90). He sat in
-Parliaments of both Mary and Elizabeth, and wrote some of the poems
-in _The Mirror for Magistrates_ (1559–78). He contributed verses to
-the Kenilworth entertainment of 1575, must then have been a very old
-man, and died in 1579. Puttenham says of Edward VI’s time, ‘Maister
-_Edward Ferrys_ ... wrate for the most part to the stage, in Tragedie
-and sometimes in Comedie or Enterlude’, and again, ‘For Tragedie, the
-Lord of Buckhurst & Maister _Edward Ferrys_, for such doings as I
-haue sene of theirs, do deserue the hyest price’; and is followed by
-Meres, who places ‘Master Edward Ferris, the author of the _Mirror for
-Magistrates_’ amongst ‘our best for Tragedie’ (cf. App. C, Nos. xli,
-lii). Obviously George Ferrers is meant, but Anthony Wood hunted out an
-Edward Ferrers, belonging to another family, of Baddesley Clinton, in
-Warwickshire, and took him for the dramatist. He died in 1564 and had a
-son Henry, amongst whose papers were found verses belonging to certain
-entertainments, mostly of the early ‘nineties, which an indiscreet
-editor thereupon ascribed to George Ferrers (cf. s.v. Sir H. Lee).
-
-
-NATHAN FIELD (1587–?).
-
-For life _vide supra_ Actors (ch. xv).
-
- _A Woman is a Weathercock. 1609_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1611, Nov. 23 (Buck). ‘A booke called, A woman is a
-weather-cocke, beinge a Comedye.’ _John Budge_ (Arber, iii. 471).
-
-1612. A Woman is a Weather-cocke. A New Comedy, As it was acted before
-the King in White-Hall. And diuers times Priuately at the White-Friers,
-By the Children of her Maiesties Reuels. Written by Nat: Field. _For
-John Budge._ [Epistles to Any Woman that hath been no Weathercock and
-to the Reader, both signed ‘N. F.’, and Commendatory verses ‘To his
-loved son, Nat. Field, and his Weathercock Woman’, signed ‘George
-Chapman’.]
-
-_Editions_ in _O. E. D._ (1830, ii), by J. P. Collier (1833, _Five Old
-Plays_), in Dodsley^4 (1875, xi), and by A. W. Verity in _Nero and
-Other Plays_ (1888, _Mermaid Series_).
-
-This must, I suppose, have been one of the five plays given at Court
-by the Children of the Whitefriars in the winter of 1609–10. Fleay, i.
-185, notes that I. ii refers to the Cleve wars, which began in 1609.
-The Revels children were not at Court in 1610–11. In his verses to _The
-Faithful Shepherdess_ (1609–10) Field hopes for his ‘muse in swathing
-clouts’, to ‘perfect such a work as’ Fletcher’s. The first Epistle
-promises that when his next play is printed, any woman ‘shall see what
-amends I have made to her and all the sex’; the second ends, ‘If thou
-hast anything to say to me, thou know’st where to hear of me for a year
-or two, and no more, I assure thee’, as if Field did not mean to spend
-his life as a player.
-
- _Amends for Ladies. > 1611_
-
-1618. Amends for Ladies. A Comedie. As it was acted at the
-Blacke-Fryers, both by the Princes Seruants, and the Lady Elizabeths.
-By Nat. Field. _G. Eld for Math. Walbancke._
-
-1639.... With the merry prankes of Moll Cut-Purse: Or, the humour of
-roaring A Comedy full of honest mirth and wit.... _Io. Okes for Math.
-Walbancke._
-
-_Editions_, with _A W. is a W._ (q.v.).
-
-The title-page points to performances in Porter’s Hall (_c._ 1615–16)
-by the combined companies of the Prince and Princess; but the Epistle
-to _A W. is a W._ (q.v.) makes it clear that the play was at least
-planned, and probably written, by the end of 1611. Collier, iii. 434,
-and Fleay, i. 201, confirm this from an allusion to the play in A.
-Stafford’s _Admonition to a Discontented Romanist_, appended to his
-_Niobe Dissolved into a Nilus_ (S. R. 10 Oct. 1611). Fleay is less
-happy in fixing an inferior limit of date by the publication of the
-version of the _Curious Impertinent_ story in Shelton’s _Don Quixote_
-(1612), since that story was certainly available in Baudouin’s French
-translation as early as 1608. The introduction of Moll Cutpurse
-suggests rivalry with Dekker and Middleton’s _Roaring Girl_ (also _c._
-1610–11) at the Fortune, which theatre is chaffed in ii. 1 and iii. 4.
-
- _Later Play_
-
-_The Fatal Dowry_ (1632), a King’s men’s play, assigned on the
-title-page to P. M. and N. F., probably dates from 1616–19. C. Beck,
-_Philip Massinger, The Fatall Dowry, Einleitung zu einer neuen Ausgabe_
-(1906, _Erlangen diss._), assigns the prose of II. ii and IV. i to
-Field. There is an edition by C. L. Lockert (1918).
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Attempts have been made to trace Field’s hand in _Bonduca_, _Cupid’s
-Revenge_, _Faithful Friends_, _Honest Man’s Fortune_, _Thierry and
-Theodoret_, and _Four Plays in One_, all belonging to the Beaumont
-(q.v.) and Fletcher series, and in _Charlemagne_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-JOHN FLETCHER (1579–1625).
-
-Fletcher was born in Dec. 1579 at Rye, Sussex, the living of his father
-Richard Fletcher, who became Bishop of Bristol, Worcester, and in 1594
-London. His cousins, Giles and Phineas, are known as poets. He seems
-too young for the John Fletcher of London who entered Corpus Christi,
-Cambridge, in 1591. After his father’s death in 1596, nothing is heard
-of him until his emergence as a dramatist, and of this the date cannot
-be precisely fixed. Davenant says that ‘full twenty yeares, he wore
-the bayes’, which would give 1605, but this is in a prologue to _The
-Woman Hater_, which Davenant apparently thought Fletcher’s, although
-it is Beaumont’s; and Oliphant’s attempt to find his hand, on metrical
-grounds, in _Captain Thomas Stukeley_ (1605) rests only on one not
-very conclusive scene. But he had almost certainly written for the
-Queen’s Revels before the beginning, about 1608, of his collaboration
-with Beaumont, under whom his later career is outlined. It is possible
-that he is the John Fletcher who married Joan Herring on 3 Nov. 1612
-at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, and had a son John about Feb. 1620 in St.
-Bartholomew’s the Great (Dyce, i. lxxiii), and if so one may put the
-fact with Aubrey’s gossip (cf. s.v. Beaumont), and with Oldwit’s speech
-in Shadwell’s _Bury-Fair_ (1689): ‘I knew Fletcher, my friend Fletcher,
-and his maid Joan; well, I shall never forget him: I have supped with
-him at his house on the Bankside; he loved a fat loin of pork of all
-things in the world; and Joan his maid had her beer-glass of sack;
-and we all kissed her, i’ faith, and were as merry as passed.’ I have
-sometimes wondered whether Jonson is chaffing Beaumont and Fletcher
-in _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), V. iii, iv, as Damon and Pythias, ‘two
-faithfull friends o’ the Bankside’, that ‘have both but one drabbe’,
-and enter with a gammon of bacon under their cloaks. I do not think
-this can refer to Francis Bacon. Fletcher died in Aug. 1625 and was
-buried in St. Saviour’s (_Athenaeum_, 1886, ii. 252).
-
-For Plays _vide_ s.v. Beaumont, and for the ascribed lost play of
-_Cardenio_, s.v. Shakespeare.
-
-
-PHINEAS FLETCHER (1582–1650).
-
-Phineas Fletcher, son of Giles, a diplomatist and poet, brother of
-Giles, a poet, and first cousin of John (q.v.), was baptized at
-Cranbrook, Kent, on 8 April 1582. From Eton he passed to King’s
-College, Cambridge, where he took his B.A. in 1604, his M.A. in 1608,
-and became a Fellow in 1611. He was Chaplain to Sir Henry Willoughby of
-Risley from 1616 to 1621, and thereafter Rector of Hilgay, Norfolk, to
-his death in 1650. He wrote much Spenserian poetry, but his dramatic
-work was purely academic. In addition to _Sicelides_, he may have
-written an English comedy, for which a payment was made to him by
-King’s about Easter 1607 (Boas, i. xx).
-
- _Collections_
-
-1869. A. B. Grosart, _The Poems of P. F._ 4 vols. (_Fuller Worthies
-Library_).
-
-1908–9. F. S. Boas, _The Poetical Works of Giles Fletcher and P. F._ 2
-vols. (_Cambridge English Classics_).
-
- _Sicelides. 1615_
-
-[_MSS._] _Bodl. Rawl. Poet. MS._ 214.
-
-_Addl. MS. 4453._ ‘Sicelides: a Piscatorie made by Phinees Fletcher and
-acted in Kings Colledge in Cambridge.’ [A shorter version than that of
-Q. and the _Rawl. MS._]
-
-_S. R._ 1631, April 25 (Herbert). ‘A play called Scicelides, acted
-at Cambridge.’ _William Sheeres_ (Arber, iv. 251).
-
-1631. Sicelides A Piscatory, As it hath been Acted in Kings Colledge,
-in Cambridge. _I. N. for William Sheares._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-A reference (III. iv) to the shoes hung up by Thomas Coryat in
-Odcombe church indicates a date of composition not earlier than 1612.
-The play was intended for performance before James at Cambridge, but
-was actually given before the University after his visit, on 13 March
-1615 (cf. ch. iv).
-
-
-FRANCIS FLOWER (_c._ 1588).
-
-A Gray’s Inn lawyer, one of the devisers of dumb-shows and directors
-for the _Misfortunes of Arthur_ of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588, for
-which he also wrote two choruses.
-
-
-JOHN FORD (1586–1639 <).
-
-Ford’s dramatic career, including whatever share he may have had
-with Dekker (q.v.) in _Sun’s Darling_ and _Witch of Edmonton_, falls
-substantially outside my period. But amongst plays entered as his by
-Humphrey Moseley on 29 June 1660 (Eyre, ii. 271) are:
-
- ‘An ill begining has A good end, and a bad begining may have a
- good end, a Comedy.’
-
- ‘The London Merchant, a Comedy.’
-
-These ascriptions recur in Warburton’s list of lost plays (_3 Library_,
-ii. 231), where the first play has the title ‘A good beginning may
-have A good end’. It is possible, therefore, that Ford either wrote or
-revised the play of ‘A badd beginininge makes a good endinge’, which
-was performed by the King’s men at Court during 1612–13 (cf. App. B).
-One may suspect the _London Merchant_ to be a mistake for the _Bristow
-Merchant_ of Ford and Dekker (q.v.) in 1624. The offer of the title in
-_K. B. P._ ind. 11 hardly proves that there was really a play of _The
-London Merchant_. Ford’s _Honor Triumphant: or The Peeres Challenge,
-by Armes defensible at Tilt, Turney, and Barriers_ (1606; ed. _Sh.
-Soc._ 1843) is a thesis motived by the jousts in honour of Christian of
-Denmark (cf. ch. iv). It has an Epistle to the Countesses of Pembroke
-and Montgomery, and contains four arguments in defence of amorous
-propositions addressed respectively to the Duke of Lennox and the Earls
-of Arundel, Pembroke, and Montgomery.
-
-
-EDWARD FORSETT (_c._ 1553–_c._ 1630).
-
-A political writer (_D. N. B._) and probable author of the academic
-_Pedantius_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-ABRAHAM FRAUNCE (_c._ 1558–1633 <).
-
-Fraunce was a native of Shrewsbury, and passed from the school of
-that place, where he obtained the friendship of Philip Sidney, to
-St. John’s, Cambridge, in 1576. He took his B.A. in 1580, played in
-Legge’s academic _Richardus Tertius_ and in _Hymenaeus_ (Boas, 394),
-which he may conceivably have written (cf. App. K), became Fellow of
-the college in 1581, and took his M.A. in 1583. He became a Gray’s Inn
-man, dedicated various treatises on logic and experiments in English
-hexameters to members of the Sidney and Herbert families during
-1583–92, and appears to have obtained through their influence some
-office under the Presidency of Wales. He dropped almost entirely out of
-letters, but seems to have been still alive in 1633.
-
- _Latin Play_
-
- _Victoria. 1580 < > 3_
-
-[_MS._] In possession of Lord De L’Isle and Dudley at Penshurst, headed
-‘Victoria’. [Lines ‘Philippo Sidneio’, signed ‘Abrahamus Fransus’.
-Prologue.]
-
-_Edition_ by G. C. Moore Smith (1906, _Materialien_, xiv).
-
-The play is an adaptation of _Il Fedele_ (1575) by Luigi Pasqualigo,
-which is also the foundation of the anonymous _Two Italian Gentlemen_
-(q.v.). As Sidney was knighted on 13 Jan. 1583, the play was probably
-written, perhaps for performance at St. John’s, Cambridge, before that
-date and after Fraunce took his B.A. in 1580.
-
- _Translation_
-
- _Phillis and Amyntas. 1591_
-
-_S. R._ 1591, Feb. 9 (Bp. of London). ‘A book intituled The Countesse
-of Pembrookes Ivye churche, and Emanuel.’ _William Ponsonby_ (Arber,
-ii. 575).
-
-1591. The Countesse of Pembrokes Yuychurch. Containing the affectionate
-life, and vnfortunate death of Phillis and Amyntas: That in a
-Pastorall; This in a Funerall; both in English Hexameters. By Abraham
-Fraunce. _Thomas Orwin for William Ponsonby._
-
-_Dissertation_: E. Köppel, _Die englischen Tasso-Übersetzungen des 16.
-Jahrhunderts_ (1889, _Anglia_, xi).
-
-This consists of a slightly altered translation of the _Aminta_ (1573)
-of Torquato Tasso, followed by a reprint of Fraunce’s English version
-(1587) of Thomas Watson’s _Amyntas_ (1585), which is not a play, but a
-collection of Latin eclogues. There is nothing to show that Fraunce’s
-version of _Aminta_ was ever acted.
-
-
-WILLIAM FULBECK (1560–1603?).
-
-He entered Gray’s Inn in 1584, contributed two speeches to the
-_Misfortunes of Arthur_ of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588, and wrote
-various legal and historical books.
-
-
-ULPIAN FULWELL (_c._ 1568).
-
-Fulwell was born in Somersetshire and educated at St. Mary’s
-Hall, Oxford. On 14 April 1577 he was of the parish of Naunton,
-Gloucestershire, and married Mary Whorewood of Lapworth,
-Warwickshire.[657]
-
- _Like Will to Like. c. 1568_
-
-_S. R._ 1568–9. ‘A play lyke Wyll to lyke quod the Devell to the
-Collyer.’ _John Alde_ (Arber, i. 379).
-
-1568. An Enterlude Intituled Like wil to like quod the Deuel to the
-Colier, very godly and ful of pleasant mirth.... Made by Vlpian
-Fulwell. _John Allde._
-
-1587. _Edward Allde._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^4, iii (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1909, _T. F.
-T._).
-
-A non-controversial moral. The characters, allegorical and typical,
-are arranged for five actors, and include Ralph Roister, and ‘Nicholas
-Newfangle the Vice’, who ‘rideth away upon the Devil’s back’ (Dodsley,
-iii. 357). There is a prayer for the Queen at the end.
-
-This might be _The Collier_ played at Court in 1576. Fleay, 60; i.
-235, puts it in 1561–3, assigns it to the Paul’s boys, and suggests
-that Richard Edwardes (q.v.) is satirized as Ralph Roister. Greg
-(_Henslowe_, ii. 228) suggests that Fulwell’s may be the play revived
-by Pembroke’s at the Rose on 28 Oct. 1600 as ‘the [devell] licke vnto
-licke’.
-
-
-WILLIAM GAGER (> 1560–1621).
-
-Gager entered Christ Church, Oxford, from Westminster in 1574, and took
-his B.A. in 1577, his M.A. in 1580, and his D.C.L. in 1589. In 1606 he
-became Chancellor of the diocese of Ely. He had a high reputation for
-his Latin verses, many of which are contained in _Exequiae D. Philippi
-Sidnaei_ (1587) and other University volumes. A large collection
-in _Addl. MS._ 22583 includes lines to George Peele (q.v.). Meres
-in 1598 counts him as one of ‘the best for comedy amongst vs’. His
-correspondence with John Rainolds affords a summary of the controversy
-on the ethics of the stage in its academic aspect.
-
- _Latin Plays_
-
- _Meleager. Feb. 1582_
-
-1592. Meleager. Tragoedia noua. Bis publice acta in aede Christi
-Oxoniae. _Oxoniae. Joseph Barnes._ [Epistle to Earl of Essex, ‘ex
-aede Christi Oxoniae, Calendis Ianuarij MDXCII. Gulielmus Gagerus’;
-Commendatory verses by Richard Edes, Alberico Gentili, and I.
-C[ase?]; Epistle _Ad lectorem Academicum_; _Prologus ad academicos_;
-_Argumentum_; _Prologus ad illustrissimos Penbrochiae ac Lecestriae
-Comites_. At end, _Epilogus ad Academicos_; _Epilogus ad clarissimos
-Comites Penbrochiensem ac Lecestrensem_; _Panniculus Hippolyto ...
-assutus_ (_vide infra_); _Apollo_ προλογίζει _ad serenissimam Reginam
-Elizabetham 1592_; _Prologus in Bellum Grammaticale ad eandem sacram
-Maiestatem_; _Epilogus in eandem Comoediam ad Eandem_.]
-
-The dedication says ‘Annus iam pene vndecimus agitur ... ex quo
-Meleager primum, octauus ex quo iterum in Scenam venit’, and adds that
-Pembroke, Leicester, and Sidney were present on the second occasion.
-_Meleager_ is ‘primogenitus meus’. The first production was doubtless
-one of those recorded in the Christ Church accounts in Feb. 1582 (Boas,
-162), and the second during Leicester’s visit as Chancellor in Jan.
-1585 (Boas, 192).
-
- _Dido. 12 June 1583_
-
-[_MSS._] _Christ Church, Oxford, MS_. [complete text].
-
-_Addl. MS._ 22583. [Acts II, III only, with Prologue, Argument, and
-Epilogue.]
-
-_Edition_ of B.M. fragment by A. Dyce (1850, _Marlowe’s Works_).
-_Abstract_ from _Ch. Ch. MS._ in Boas, 183.
-
-The play was produced before Alasco at Christ Church on 12 June 1583.
-It is unlikely that it influenced Marlowe’s play.
-
- _Ulysses Redux. 6 Feb. 1592_
-
-1592. Vlysses Redux Tragoedia Nova. In Aede Christi Oxoniae Publice
-Academicis Recitata, Octavo Idus Februarii. 1591. _Oxoniae. Joseph
-Barnes._ [_Prologus ad Academicos_; Epistle to Lord Buckhurst, ‘ex
-aede Christi Oxoniae sexto Idus Maij, 1592 ... Gulielmus Gagerus’;
-Commendatory verses by Thomas Holland, Alberico Gentili, Richard Edes,
-Henry Bust, Matthew Gwinne, Richard Late-warr, Francis Sidney, John
-Hoschines (Hoskins), William Ballowe, James Weston; Verses _Ad Zoilum_;
-Epistle _Ad Criticum_. At end, _Prologus in Rivales Comoediam_;
-_Prologus in Hippolytum Senecae Tragoediam_; _Epilogus in eundem_;
-_Momus_; _Epilogus Responsiuus_.]
-
-The play was produced on Sunday, 6 Feb. 1592, and an indiscreet
-invitation to John Rainolds opened the flood-gates of controversy upon
-Gager’s head (cf. vol. i, p. 251 and App. C, No. 1). Gager’s _Rivales_
-was revived on 7 Feb. and the pseudo-Senecan _Hippolytus_, with Gager’s
-_Panniculus_, on 8 Feb. followed by a speech in the character of Momus
-as a carper at plays, and a reply to Momus by way of Epilogue. The
-latter was printed in an enlarged form given to it during the course of
-the controversy (Boas, 197, 234, with dates which disregard leap-year).
-
- _Additions to Hippolytus. 8 Feb. 1592_
-
-1592. Panniculus Hippolyto Senecae assutus, 1591. [Appended to
-_Meleager_; for Gager’s prologue, &c., cf. s.v. _Ulysses Redux_.]
-
-These consist of two scenes, one of the nature of an opening, the other
-an insertion between Act I and Act II, written for a performance of the
-play at Christ Church on 8 Feb. 1592.
-
- _Oedipus_
-
-_Addl. MS._ 22583, f. 31, includes with other poems by Gager five
-scenes from a tragedy on _Oedipus_, of which nothing more is known.
-
- _Lost Play_
-
- _Rivales. 11 June 1583_
-
-This comedy was produced before Alasco at Christ Church, on 11 June
-1583. It is assigned to Gager by A. Wood, _Annals_, ii. 216, and
-referred to as his in the controversy with Rainolds (Boas, 181), who
-speaks of it as ‘the vnprinted Comedie’, and criticizes its ‘filth’.
-It contained scenes of country wooing, drunken sailors, a _miles
-gloriosus_, a _blanda lena_. The prologue to _Dido_ says of it:
-
- Hesterna Mopsum scena ridiculum dedit.
-
-It was revived at Christ Church on 7 Feb. 1592 (Boas, 197) and again at
-the same place before Elizabeth on 26 Sept. 1592, when, according to a
-Cambridge critic, it was ‘but meanely performed’. Presumably it is the
-prologue for this revival which is printed with _Ulysses Redux_ (q.v.).
-
-
-BERNARD GARTER (_c._ 1578).
-
-A London citizen, whose few and mainly non-dramatic writings were
-produced from 1565 to 1579. For his description of the Norwich
-entertainment (_1578_), cf. ch. xxiv.
-
-
-THOMAS GARTER (_c._ 1569).
-
-He may conceivably be identical with Bernard Garter, since Thomas and
-Bernard are respectively given from different sources (cf. _D. N. B._)
-as the name of the father of Bernard Garter of Brigstocke, Northants,
-whose son was alive in 1634.
-
- _Susanna, c. 1569_
-
-_S. R._ 1568–9. ‘Ye playe of Susanna.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i. 383).
-
-1578?
-
-No copy is known, but S. Jones, _Biographica Dramatica_ (1812), iii.
-310, says: ‘Susanna. By Thomas Garter 4^{to} 1578. The running title of
-this play is, _The Commody of the moste vertuous and godlye Susanna_.’
-According to Greg, _Masques_, cxxiii, the original authority for the
-statement is a manuscript note by Thomas Coxeter (_ob._ 1747) in a copy
-of G. Jacob’s _Lives of the Dramatic Poets_ (1719–20). ‘Susanna’ is in
-Rogers and Ley’s list, and an interlude ‘Susanna’s Tears’ in Archer’s
-and Kirkman’s.
-
-
-GEORGE GASCOIGNE (_c._ 1535–77).
-
-George Gascoigne was son of Sir John Gascoigne of Cardington,
-Bedfordshire. He was probably born between 1530 and 1535, and was
-educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and Gray’s Inn. He misspent
-his youth as a dissipated hanger-on at Court, under the patronage of
-Arthur, Lord Grey of Wilton and others, and won some reputation as
-a versifier. About 1566 he married Elizabeth Breton of Walthamstow,
-widow of a London merchant, and mother of Nicholas Breton, the poet.
-From March 1573 to Oct. 1574 he served as a volunteer under William of
-Orange in the Netherlands. In 1575 he was assisting in preparing shows
-before Elizabeth at Kenilworth and Woodstock. It is possible that he
-was again in the Netherlands and present at the sack of Antwerp in
-1576. On 7 Oct. 1577 he died at Stamford.
-
- _Collections_
-
-N.D. [1573] A Hundreth sundrie Flowres bounde up in one small
-Poesie.... _For Richard Smith._ [Datable by a prefatory epistle of 20
-Jan. 1573, signed ‘H. W.’ and a reference in Gascoigne’s own epistle of
-31 Jan. 1575 to Q_{2}. Includes _Jocasta_, _Supposes_, and the Mask.]
-
-1575. The Posies of George Gascoigne Esquire. Corrected, perfected, and
-augmented by the Authour. _H. Bynneman for Richard Smith._ [A second
-issue, _For Richard Smith_.]
-
-1587. The whole workes of George Gascoigne Esquyre: Newlye compyled
-into one Volume.... _Abel Jeffes._ [Adds the _Princely Pleasures_. A
-second issue, ‘The pleasauntest workes....’]
-
-1869–70. W. C. Hazlitt, _The Complete Poems of George Gascoigne_. 2
-vols. (_Roxburghe Library_). [Adds _Glass of Government_ and _Hemetes_.]
-
-1907–10. J. W. Cunliffe, _The Complete Works of George Gascoigne_. 2
-vols. (_C. E. C._).
-
-_Dissertation_: F. E. Schelling, _The Life and Writings of George
-Gascoigne_ (1893, _Pennsylvania Univ. Publ._).
-
- _Jocasta. 1566_
-
- _With_ Francis Kinwelmershe.
-
-[_MS._] _B.M. Addl. MS._ 34063, formerly the property of Roger, second
-Lord North, whose name and the motto ‘Durum Pati [15]68’ are on the
-title.
-
-1573. Iocasta: A Tragedie written in Greke by Euripides, translated
-and digested into Acte by George Gascoyne, and Francis Kinwelmershe
-of Grayes Inne, and there by them presented. 1566. _Henry Bynneman
-for Richard Smith._ [Part of _Collection_, 1573; also in 1575, 1587.
-Argument; Epilogue ‘Done by Chr. Yeluerton’.]
-
-_Editions_ by F. J. Child (1848, _Four Old Plays_) and J. W. Cunliffe
-(1906, _B. L._, and 1912, _E. E. C. T._).--_Dissertation_: M. T. W.
-Foerster, _Gascoigne’s J. a Translation from the Italian_ (1904, _M.
-P._ ii. 147).
-
-A blank-verse translation of Lodovico Dolce’s _Giocasta_ (1549),
-itself a paraphrase or adaptation of the _Phoenissae_ of Euripides
-(Creizenach, ii. 408). After Acts I and IV appears ‘Done by F.
-Kinwelmarshe’ and after II, III, V ‘Done by G. Gascoigne’. Before each
-act is a description of a dumb-show and of its accompanying music.
-
- _Supposes. 1566_
-
-1573. Supposes: A Comedie written in the Italian tongue by Ariosto,
-and Englished by George Gascoyne of Grayes Inne Esquire, and there
-presented. [Part of _Collection_, 1573; also in 1575 (with addition of
-‘1566’ to title) and 1587. Prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by T. Hawkins (1773, _O. E. D._ iii), J. W. Cunliffe (1906,
-_B. L._), and R. W. Bond (1911, _E. P. I._).
-
-A prose translation of Ludovico Ariosto’s _I Suppositi_ (1509). There
-was probably a revival at Trinity, Oxford, on 8 Jan. 1582, when Richard
-Madox records, ‘We supt at y^e presidents lodging and after had y^e
-supposes handeled in y^e haul indifferently’ (Boas, 161).
-
- _The Glass of Government. c. 1575_
-
-1575. The Glasse of Governement. A tragicall Comedie so entituled,
-bycause therein are handled aswell the rewardes for Vertues, as also
-the punishment for Vices. Done by George Gascoigne Esquier. 1575. Seen
-and allowed, according to the order appointed in the Queenes Maiesties
-Injunctions. _For C. Barker._ [Colophon] _H. M. for Christopher
-Barker._ [Epistle to Sir Owen Hopton, by ‘G. Gascoigne’, dated 26 Apr.
-1575; Commendatory verses by B. C.; Argument; Prologue; Epilogue. A
-reissue has a variant colophon (_Henry Middleton_) and Errata.]
-
-_Edition_ by J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F._).--_Dissertation_: C. H.
-Herford, _G.’s G. of G._ (_E. S._ ix. 201).
-
-This, perhaps only a closet drama, is an adaptation of the ‘Christian
-Terence’ (cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 216), with which Gascoigne may
-have become familiar in Holland during 1573–4. The prologue (cf. App.
-C, No. xiv) warns that the play is not a mere ‘worthie jest’, and that
-
- Who list laye out some pence in such a marte,
- Bellsavage fayre were fittest for his purse.
-
- MASK
-
- _Montague Mask. 1572_
-
-1573. A Devise of a Maske for the right honourable Viscount Mountacute.
-[Part of _Collection_, 1573; also in 1575, 1587.]
-
-Anthony and Elizabeth Browne, children of Anthony, first Viscount
-Montague, married Mary and Robert, children of Sir William Dormer of
-Eythorpe, Bucks., in 1572 (cf. ch. v).
-
- ENTERTAINMENTS
-
-See s.v. Lee, _Woodstock Entertainment_ (_1575_) and ch. xxiv, s.v.
-_Kenilworth Entertainment_ (_1575_).
-
-
-THOMAS GOFFE (1591–1629).
-
-_Selimus_ and the _Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ have been ascribed to
-him, but as regards the first absurdly, and as regards the second not
-plausibly, since he only took his B.A. degree in 1613. His known plays
-are later in date than 1616.
-
-
-ARTHUR GOLDING (1536–1605 <).
-
-Arthur was son of John Golding of Belchamp St. Paul, Essex, and
-brother-in-law of John, 16th Earl of Oxford. He was a friend of Sidney
-and known to Elizabethan statesmen of puritanical leanings. Almost his
-only original work was a _Discourse upon the Earthquake_ (1580), but
-he was a voluminous translator of theological and classical works,
-including Ovid’s _Metamorphoses_ (1565, 1567). Beza’s tragedy was
-written when he was Professor at Lausanne in 1550 (Creizenach, ii. 456).
-
- _Abraham’s Sacrifice. 1575_
-
-1577. A Tragedie of Abrahams Sacrifice, Written in french, by Theodore
-Beza, and translated into Inglish by A. G. Finished at Powles Belchamp
-in Essex, the xj of August, 1575. _Thomas Vautrollier._ [Woodcuts,
-which do not suggest a scenic representation.]
-
-_Edition_ by M. W. Wallace (1907, _Toronto Philological Series_).
-
-
-HENRY GOLDINGHAM (_c._ 1575).
-
-A contributor to the Kenilworth and Norwich entertainments (cf. ch.
-xxiv, C) and writer of _The Garden Plot_ (1825, _Roxburghe Club_).
-Gawdy, 13, mentions ‘a yonge gentleman touard my L. of Leycester called
-Mr. Goldingam’, as concerned _c._ 1587 in a street brawl.
-
-
-WILLIAM GOLDINGHAM (_c._ 1567).
-
-Author of the academic _Herodes_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-HENRY GOLDWELL (_c._ 1581).
-
-Describer of _The Fortress of Perfect Beauty_ (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-STEPHEN GOSSON (1554–1624).
-
-Gosson was born in Kent during 1554, was at Corpus Christi, Oxford,
-1572 to 1576, then came to London, where he obtained some reputation
-as playwright and poet. Meres in _Palladis Tamia_ (1598) commends his
-pastorals, which are lost. Lodge speaks of him also as a ‘player’.[658]
-In 1579 he forsook the stage, became a tutor in the country and
-published _The School of Abuse_ (App. C, No. xxii). This he dedicated
-to Sidney, but ‘was for his labour scorned’. He was answered the same
-year in a lost pamphlet called _Strange News out of Afric_ and also
-by Lodge (q.v.), and rejoined with _A Short Apology of the School of
-Abuse_ (App. C, No. xxiv). The players revived his plays to spite
-him and on 23 Feb. 1582 produced _The Play of Plays and Pastimes_ to
-confute him. In the same year he produced his final contribution to
-the controversy in _Plays Confuted in Five Actions_ (App. C, No. xxx).
-In 1591 Gosson became Rector of Great Wigborough, Essex, and in 1595
-published the anonymous pamphlet _Pleasant Quips for Upstart Newfangled
-Gentlewomen_. In 1600 he became Rector of St. Botolph’s, Bishopsgate.
-In 1616 and 1617 he wrote to Alleyn (q.v.) as his ‘very loving and
-ancient friend’.[659] He died 13 Feb. 1624.
-
-Gosson claims to have written both tragedies and comedies,[660] but
-no play of his is extant. He names three of them. Of _Catiline’s
-Conspiracies_ he says that it was ‘usually brought into the Theater
-and that ‘because it is known to be a pig of mine own sow, I will
-speak the less of it; only giving you to understand, that the whole
-mark which I shot at in that work was to show the reward of traitors
-in Catiline, and the necessary government of learned men in the person
-of Cicero, which foresees every danger that is likely to happen and
-forestalls it continually ere it take effect’.[661] Lodge disparages
-the originality of this play and compares it unfavourably with Wilson’s
-_Short and Sweet_[662] (q.v.). Of two other plays Gosson says: ‘Since
-my publishing the _School of Abuse_ two plays of my making were brought
-to the stage; the one was a cast of Italian devices, called, The Comedy
-of _Captain Mario_; the other a Moral, _Praise at Parting_. These they
-very impudently affirm to be written by me since I had set out my
-invective against them. I can not deny they were both mine, but they
-were both penned two years at the least before I forsook them, as by
-their own friends I am able to prove.’[663] It is conceivable that
-Gosson may be the translator of _Fedele and Fortunio_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-ROBERT GREENE (1558–92).
-
-Robert Greene was baptized at Norwich on 11 July 1558. He entered St.
-John’s College, Cambridge, as a sizar in 1575 and took his B.A. in
-1578 and his M.A. by 1583, when he was residing in Clare Hall. The
-addition of an Oxford degree in July 1588 enabled him to describe
-himself as _Academiae Utriusque Magister in Artibus_. He has been
-identified with a Robert Greene who was Vicar of Tollesbury, Essex,
-in 1584–5, but there is no real evidence that he took orders. The
-earlier part of his career may be gathered from his autobiographic
-pamphlet, _The Repentance of Robert Greene_ (1592), eked out by the
-portraits, also evidently in a measure autobiographic, of Francesco
-in _Never Too Late_ (1590) and of Roberto in _Green’s Groats-worth
-of Wit bought with a Million of Repentance_ (1592). It seems that he
-travelled in youth and learnt much wickedness; then married and lived
-for a while with his wife and had a child by her. During this period
-he began his series of euphuistic love-romances. About 1586, however,
-he deserted his wife, and lived a dissolute life in London with the
-sister of Cutting Ball, a thief who ended his days at Tyburn, as his
-mistress. By her he had a base-born son, Fortunatus. He does not seem
-to have been long in London before he ‘had wholly betaken me to the
-penning of plays which was my continual exercise’.[664] His adoption
-of his profession seems to be described in _The Groats-worth of Wit_.
-Roberto meets a player, goes with him, and soon becomes ‘famozed
-for an arch-plaimaking poet’.[665] Similarly, in _Never Too Late_,
-Francesco ‘fell in amongst a company of players, who persuaded him to
-try his wit in writing of comedies, tragedies, or pastorals, and if he
-could perform anything worthy of the stage, then they would largely
-reward him for his pains’. Hereupon Francesco ‘writ a comedy, which so
-generally pleased the audience that happy were those actors in short
-time, that could get any of his works, he grew so exquisite in that
-faculty’.[666] Greene’s early dramatic efforts seem to have brought
-him into rivalry with Marlowe (q.v.). In the preface to _Perimedes the
-Blacksmith_ (S. R. 29 March 1588) he writes: ‘I keep my old course to
-palter up something in prose, using mine old poesie still, Omne tulit
-punctum, although lately two Gentlemen Poets made two mad men of Rome
-beat it out of their paper bucklers: and had it in derision for that I
-could not make my verses jet upon the stage in tragical buskins, every
-word filling the mouth like the faburden of Bo-Bell, daring God out
-of heaven with that Atheist _Tamburlan_, or blaspheming with the mad
-priest of the Sun.... Such mad and scoffing poets that have poetical
-spirits, as bred of Merlin’s race, if there be any in England that set
-the end of scholarism in an English blank-verse, I think either it is
-the humour of a novice that tickles them with self-love, or too much
-frequenting the hot-house (to use the German proverb) hath sweat out
-all the greatest part of their wits.... I but answer in print what
-they have offered on the stage.’[667] The references here to Marlowe
-are unmistakable. His fellow ‘gentleman poet’ is unknown; but the
-‘mad priest of the Sun’ suggests the play of ‘the lyfe and deathe of
-Heliogabilus’, entered on S. R. to John Danter on 19 June 1594, but now
-lost.[668] In 1589 Greene published his _Menaphon_ (S. R. 23 Aug.),
-in which he further alluded to Marlowe as the teller of ‘a Canterbury
-tale; some prophetical full-mouth that as he were a Cobler’s eldest
-son, would by the last tell where anothers shoe wrings’.[669] Doron,
-in the same story, appears to parody a passage in the anonymous play
-of _The Taming of A Shrew_, which is further alluded to in a prefatory
-epistle _To the Gentlemen Students of Both Universities_ contributed to
-Greene’s book by Thomas Nashe. Herein Nashe, while praising Peele and
-his _Arraignment of Paris_, satirizes Marlowe, Kyd, and particularly
-the players (cf. App. C, No. xlii). To _Menaphon_ are also prefixed
-lines by Thomas Brabine which tells the ‘wits’ that ‘strive to thunder
-from a stage-man’s throat’ how the novel is beyond them. ‘Players,
-avaunt!’[670] In the following year, 1590, Greene continued the attack
-on the players in the autobiographic romance, already referred to,
-of _Never Too Late_ (cf. App. C, No. xliii). In 1590 Greene, whose
-publications had hitherto been mainly toys of love and romance, began
-a series of moral pamphlets, full of professions of repentance and
-denunciations of villainy. To these belong, as well as _Never Too
-Late_, _Greene’s Mourning Garment_ (1590) and _Greene’s Farewell
-to Folly_ (1591). A preface to the latter contains some satirical
-references to the anonymous play of _Fair Em_ (cf. ch. xxiv.) One R. W.
-retorted upon Greene in a pamphlet called _Martine Mar-Sextus_ (S. R. 8
-Nov. 1591), in which he abuses lascivious authors who finally ‘put on a
-mourning garment and cry Farewell’.[671] Similarly, Greene’s exposures
-of ‘cony-catching’ or ‘sharping’ provoked the following passage in
-the _Defence of Cony-catching_ (S. R. 21 April 1592) by one Cuthbert
-Conycatcher: ‘What if I should prove you a cony-catcher, Master R. G.,
-would it not make you blush at the matter?... Ask the Queen’s players
-if you sold them not Orlando Furioso for twenty nobles, and when they
-were in the country sold the same play to the Lord Admiral’s men for
-as many more.... I hear, when this was objected, that you made this
-excuse; that there was no more faith to be held with players than with
-them that valued faith at the price of a feather; for as they were
-comedians to act, so the actions of their lives were camelion-like;
-that they were uncertain, variable, time-pleasers, men that measured
-honesty by profit, and that regarded their authors not by desert but
-by necessity of time.’[672] It is probable that the change in the tone
-of Greene’s writings did not correspond to any very thorough-going
-reformation of life. There is nothing to show that Greene had any share
-in the Martinist controversy. But he became involved in one of the
-personal animosities to which it led. Richard Harvey, the brother of
-Gabriel, in his _Lamb of God_ (S. R. 23 Oct. 1589), while attacking
-Lyly as Paphatchet, had ‘mistermed all our other poets and writers
-about London, piperly make-plaies and make-bates. Hence Greene, beeing
-chiefe agent for the companie [i.e. the London poets] (for hee writ
-more than foure other, how well I will not say: but _sat citò, si
-sat benè_) tooke occasion to canuaze him a little.’[673] Apparently
-he called the Harveys, in his _A Quip for an Upstart Courtier_ (S.
-R. 21 July 1592, cf. App. C, No. xlvii), the sons of a ropemaker,
-which is what they were.[674] In August Greene partook freely of
-Rhenish wine and pickled herrings at a supper with Nashe and one Will
-Monox, and fell into a surfeit. On 3 September he died in a squalid
-lodging, after writing a touching letter to his deserted wife, and
-begging his landlady, Mrs. Isam, to lay a wreath of bays upon him.
-These details are recorded by Gabriel Harvey, who visited the place
-and wrote an account of his enemy’s end in a letter to a friend, which
-he published in his _Four Letters and Certain Sonnets: especially
-Touching Robert Greene, and Other Parties by him Abused_ (S. R. 4
-Dec. 1592).[675] This brought Nashe upon him in the _Strange News of
-the Intercepting of Certain Letters_[676] (S. R. 12 Jan. 1593) and
-began a controversy between the two which lasted for several years. In
-_Pierce’s Supererogation_ (27 Apr. 1593) Harvey spoke of ‘Nash, the ape
-of Greene, Greene the ape of Euphues, Euphues the ape of Envy’, and
-declared that Nashe ‘shamefully and odiously misuseth every friend or
-acquaintance as he hath served ... Greene, Marlowe, Chettle, and whom
-not?’[677] In _Have With You to Saffron Walden_ (1596), Nashe defends
-himself against these accusations. ‘I never abusd Marloe, Greene,
-Chettle in my life.... He girds me with imitating of Greene.... I
-scorne it ... hee subscribing to me in anything but plotting Plaies,
-wherein he was his crafts master.’[678] The alleged abuse of Marlowe,
-Greene, and Chettle belongs to the history of another pamphlet. This is
-_Green’s Groats-worth of Wit, Bought with a Million of Repentance_ (S.
-R. 20 Sept. 1592, ‘upon the peril of Henry Chettle’[679]). According
-to the title-page, it was ‘written before his death and published at
-his dying request’. To this is appended the famous address _To those
-Gentlemen, his Quondam Acquaintance, that spend their wits in making
-Plays_.[680] The reference here to Shakespeare is undeniable. Of the
-three playwrights warned, the first and third are almost certainly
-Marlowe and Peele; the third may be Lodge, but on the whole is far more
-likely to be Nashe (q.v.). It appears, however, that Nashe himself was
-supposed to have had a hand in the authorship. Chettle did his best
-to take the responsibility off Nashe’s shoulders in the preface to
-his _Kind-Hart’s Dream_ (S. R. 8 Dec. 1592; cf. App. C, No. xlix). In
-the epistle prefixed to the second edition of _Pierce Penniless his
-Supplication to the Devil_ (_Works_, i. 154), written early in 1593,
-Nashe denies the charge for himself and calls _The Groats-worth_ ‘a
-scald trivial lying pamphlet’; and it is perhaps to this that Harvey
-refers as abuse of Greene, Marlowe, and Chettle, although it is not
-clear how Marlowe comes in. There is an echo of Greene’s hit at the
-‘upstart crow, beautified with our feathers’ in the lines of R. B.,
-_Greene’s Funerals_ (1594, ed. McKerrow, 1911, p. 81):
-
- Greene, gaue the ground, to all that wrote upon him.
- Nay more the men, that so eclipst his fame:
- Purloynde his plumes, can they deny the same?
-
-It should be added that the theory that Greene himself was actor as
-well as playwright rests on a misinterpretation of a phrase of Harvey’s
-and is inconsistent with the invariable tone of his references to the
-profession.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1831. A. Dyce, _The Dramatic Works of R. G._ 2 vols.
-
-1861, &c. A. Dyce, _The Dramatic and Poetical Works of R. G. and George
-Peele_.
-
-1881–6. A. B. Grosart, _The Complete Works in Prose and Verse of R. G._
-15 vols. (_Huth Library_).
-
-1905. J. C. Collins, _The Plays and Poems of R. G._ 2 vols.
-
-1909. T. H. Dickinson, _The Plays of R. G._ (_Mermaid Series_).
-
-_Dissertations_: W. Bernhardi, _R. G.’s Leben und Schriften_ (1874);
-J. M. Brown, _An Early Rival of Shakespeare_ (1877); N. Storojenko,
-_R. G.: His Life and Works_ (1878, tr. E. A. B. Hodgetts, in Grosart,
-i); R. Simpson, _Account of R. G., his Life and Works, and his Attacks
-on Shakspere_, in _School of Sh._ (1878), ii; C. H. Herford, _G.’s
-Romances and Shakespeare_ (1888, _N. S. S. Trans._ 181); K. Knauth,
-_Ueber die Metrik R. G.’s_ (1890, Halle diss.); H. Conrad, _R. G. als
-Dramatiker_ (1894, _Jahrbuch_, xxix. 210); W. Creizenach, _G. über
-Shakespeare_ (1898, _Wiener Festschrift_); G. E. Woodberry, _G.’s Place
-in Comedy_, and C. M. Gayley, _R. G., His Life and the Order of his
-Plays_ (1903, _R. E. C._ i); K. Ehrke, _R. G.’s Dramen_ (1904); S. L.
-Wolff, _R. G. and the Italian Renaissance_ (1907, _E. S._ xxxvii. 321);
-F. Brie, _Lyly und G._ (1910, _E. S._ xlii. 217); J. C. Jordan, _R. G._
-(1915).
-
- _Alphonsus. c. 1587_
-
-1599. The Comicall Historie of Alphonsus King of Aragon. As it hath
-bene sundrie times Acted. Made by R. G. _Thomas Creede_.
-
-There is general agreement that, on grounds of style, this should be
-the earliest of Greene’s extant plays. In IV. 1444 is an allusion to
-‘mighty Tamberlaine’, and the play reads throughout like an attempt to
-emulate the success of Marlowe’s play of 1587 (?). In IV. i Mahomet
-speaks out of a brazen head. The play may therefore be alluded to in
-the ‘Mahomet’s poo [pow]’ of Peele’s (q.v.) _Farewell_ of April 1589,
-although Peele may have intended his own lost play of _The Turkish
-Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek_. There is no reference in _Alphonsus_
-to the Armada of 1588. On the whole, the winter of 1587 appears the
-most likely date for it, and if so, it is possibly the play whose ill
-success is recorded by Greene in the preface to _Perimedes_ (1588).
-The Admiral’s revived a _Mahomet_ on 16 Aug. 1594, inventoried ‘owld
-Mahemetes head’ in 1598, and revived the play again in Aug. 1601,
-buying the book from Alleyn, who might have brought it from Strange’s,
-or bought it from the Queen’s (Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 167; _Henslowe
-Papers_, 116). Collins dates _Alphonsus_ in 1591, on a theory,
-inconsistent with the biographical indications of the pamphlets,
-that Greene’s play-writing did not begin much before that year. A
-‘Tragicomoedia von einem Königk in Arragona’ played at Dresden in 1626
-might be either this play or _Mucedorus_ (Herz, 66, 78).
-
- _A Looking Glass for London and England. c. 1590_
-
- _With_ Lodge.
-
-_S. R._ 1594, March 5. ‘A booke intituled the lookinge glasse for
-London by Thomas Lodg and Robert Greene gent.’ _Thomas Creede_ (Arber,
-ii. 645).
-
-1594. A Looking Glasse for London and England. Made by Thomas Lodge
-Gentleman, and Robert Greene. In Artibus Magister. _Thomas Creede, sold
-by William Barley._
-
-1598. _Thomas Creede, sold by William Barley._
-
-1602. _Thomas Creede, for Thomas Pavier._
-
-1617. _Bernard Alsop._
-
-_Edition_ by J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F. T._).
-
-The facts of Lodge’s (q.v.) life leave 1588, before the Canaries
-voyage, or 1589–91, between that voyage and Cavendish’s expedition,
-as possible dates for the play. In favour of the former is Lodge’s
-expressed intention in 1589 to give up ‘penny-knave’s delight’. On
-the other hand, the subject is closely related to that of Greene’s
-moral pamphlets, the series of which begins in 1590, and the fall of
-Nineveh is referred to in _The Mourning Garment_ of that year. Fleay,
-ii. 54, and Collins, i. 137, accept 1590 as the date of the play.
-Gayley, 405, puts it in 1587, largely on the impossible notion that
-its ‘priest of the sun’ (IV. iii. 1540) is that referred to in the
-_Perimedes_ preface, but partly also from the absence of any reference
-to the Armada. It is possible that ‘pleasing Alcon’ in Spenser’s _Colin
-Clout’s Come Home Again_ (1591) may refer to Lodge as the author of
-the character Alcon in this play. _The Looking Glass_ was revived by
-Strange’s men on 8 March 1592. The clown is sometimes called Adam in
-the course of the dialogue (ll. 1235 sqq., 1589 sqq., 2120 sqq.), and
-a comparison with _James IV_ suggests that the original performer was
-John Adams of the Queen’s men, from whom Henslowe may have acquired
-the play. Fleay, ii. 54, and Gayley, 405, make attempts to distinguish
-Greene’s share from Lodge’s, but do not support their results by
-arguments. Crawford, _England’s Parnassus_, xxxii, 441, does not regard
-Allot’s ascription of the passages he borrowed to Greene and Lodge
-respectively as trustworthy. Unnamed English actors played a ‘comedia
-auss dem propheten Jona’ at Nördlingen in 1605 (Herz, 78).
-
- _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_, _c. 1589_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, May 14. ‘A booke entituled the Historye of ffryer Bacon
-and ffryer Boungaye.’ _Adam Islip_ (Arber, ii. 649). [Against this and
-other plays entered on the same day, Adam Islip’s name is crossed out
-and Edward White’s substituted.]
-
-1594. The Honorable Historie of frier Bacon, and frier Bongay. As it
-was plaid by her Maiesties seruants. Made by Robert Greene Maister of
-Arts. _For Edward White._ [Malone dated one of his copies of the 1630
-edition ‘1599’ in error; cf. Gayley, 430.]
-
-1630.... As it was lately plaid by the Prince Palatine his Seruants....
-_Elizabeth Allde_. [The t.p. has a woodcut representing Act II, sc.
-iii.]
-
-1655. _Jean Bell._
-
-_Editions_ by A. W. Ward (1878, &c.), C. M. Gayley (1903, _R. E. C._
-i), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), and J. S. Farmer (1914, _S. F.
-T._).--_Dissertation_: O. Ritter, _De R. G. Fabula: F. B. and F. B._
-(1866, _Thorn diss._).
-
-Fleay, in _Appendix B_ to Ward’s ed., argues from I. i. 137, ‘next
-Friday is S. James’, that the date of the play is 1589, in which year
-St. James’s Day fell on a Friday. This does not seem to me a very
-reliable argument. Probably the play followed not long after Marlowe’s
-_Doctor Faustus_ (q.v.), itself probably written in 1588–9. The date of
-1589, which Ward, i. 396, and Gayley, 411, accept, is likely enough.
-Collins prefers 1591–2, and notes (ii. 4) a general resemblance in tone
-and theme to _Fair Em_, but there is nothing to indicate the priority
-of either play, and no charge of plagiarism in the pamphlets (_vide
-supra_) to which _Fair Em_ gave rise. _Friar Bacon_ was revived by
-Strange’s men on 19 Feb. 1592, and again by the Queen’s and Sussex’s
-men together on 1 April 1594. Doubtless it was Henslowe’s property,
-as Middleton wrote a prologue and epilogue for a performance by the
-Admiral’s men at Court at Christmas 1602 (Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 149).
-
- _Orlando Furioso. c. 1591_
-
-[_MS._] The Dulwich MSS. contain an actor’s copy with cues of Orlando’s
-part. Doubtless it belonged to Alleyn. The fragment covers ll. 595–1592
-of the Q_{q}, but contains passages not in those texts. It is printed
-by Collier, _Alleyn Papers_, 198, Collins, i. 266, and Greg, _Henslowe
-Papers_, 155.
-
-_S. R._ 1593, Dec. 7. ‘A plaie booke, intituled, the historye of
-Orlando ffurioso, one of the xij peeres of Ffraunce.’ _John Danter_
-(Arber, ii. 641).
-
-1594, May 28. ‘Entred for his copie by consent of John Danter.... A
-booke entytuled The historie of Orlando furioso, &c. Prouided alwaies,
-and yt is agreed that soe often as the same booke shalbe printed, the
-saide John Danter to haue thimpryntinge thereof.’ _Cuthbert Burby_
-(Arber, ii. 650).
-
-1594. The Historie of Orlando Furioso One of the twelve Pieres of
-France. As it was plaid before the Queenes Maiestie. _John Danter for
-Cuthbert Burby._
-
-1599. _Simon Stafford for Cuthbert Burby._
-
-_Edition_ by W. W. Greg (1907, _M. S. R._).
-
-The Armada (1588) is referred to in I. i. 87. Two passages are common
-to the play and Peele’s _Old Wive’s Tale_ (before 1595), and were
-probably borrowed by Peele with the name Sacripant, which Greene got
-from Ariosto. The play cannot be the ‘King Charlemagne’ of Peele’s
-(q.v.) _Farewell_ (April 1589), as Charlemagne does not appear in
-it. The appearance of Sir John Harington’s translation of Ariosto’s
-_Orlando Furioso_ in 1591 suggests that as a likely date. This also
-would fit the story (_vide supra_) of the second sale to the Admiral’s
-men, when the Queen’s ‘were in the country’ (cf. vol. ii, p. 112).
-Strange’s men played _Orlando_ for Henslowe on 22 Feb. 1592. Collins,
-i. 217, seems to accept 1591 as the date, but Fleay, i. 263, Ward, i.
-395, and Gayley, 409, prefer 1588–9. So does Greg (_Henslowe_, ii.
-150) on the assumption that _Old Wive’s Tale_ (q.v.) ‘must belong to
-1590’. A ‘Comoedia von Orlando Furioso’ was acted at Dresden in 1626
-(Herz, 66, 77).
-
- _James the Fourth. c. 1591_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, May 14. ‘A booke intituled the Scottishe story of James
-the Ffourth slayne at Fflodden intermixed with a plesant Comedie
-presented by Oboron Kinge of ffayres.’ _Thomas Creede_ (Arber, ii. 648.)
-
-1598. The Scottish Historie of Iames the fourth, slaine at Flodden.
-Entermixed with a pleasant Comedie, presented by Oboram, King of
-Fayeries: As it hath bene sundrie times publikely plaide. Written by
-Robert Greene, Maister of Arts. _Thomas Creede._
-
-_Editions_ by J. M. Manly (1897, _Specimens_, ii. 327) and A. E.
-H. Swaen and W. W. Greg (1921, _M. S. R._).--_Dissertation_: W.
-Creizenach, _Zu G.’s J. IV_ (1885, _Anglia_, viii. 419).
-
-There is very little to date the play. Its comparative merit perhaps
-justifies placing it, as Greene’s maturest drama, in 1591. Collins, i.
-44, agrees; but Fleay, i. 265; Ward, i. 400; Gayley, 415, prefer 1590.
-Fleay finds traces of a second hand, whom he believes to be Lodge, but
-he is not convincing. In l. 2269 the name Adam appears for Oberon in a
-stage-direction, which, when compared with _A Looking-Glass_, suggests
-that the actor was John Adams of the Queen’s.
-
- _Lost Play_
-
-Warburton’s list of burnt plays (_3 Library_, ii. 231) contains the
-duplicate entries ‘His^t of Jobe by Rob. Green’ and ‘The Trag^d of
-Jobe. Good.’ Greg suggests a confusion with Sir Robert Le Grys, who
-appears in the list as ‘S^r Rob. le Green’.
-
-The statement that Greene had a share in a play on Henry VIII
-(_Variorum_, xix. 500) seems to be based on a confusion with a Robert
-Greene named by Stowe as an authority for his _Annales_ (Collins, i.
-69).
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Greene’s hand has been sought in _Contention of York and Lancaster_,
-_Edward III_, _Fair Em_, _George a Greene_, _Troublesome Reign of King
-John_, _Knack to Know a Knave_, _Thracian Wonder_, _Leire_, _Locrine_,
-_Mucedorus_, _Selimus_, _Taming of A Shrew_, _Thomas Lord Cromwell_
-(cf. ch. xxiv), and Shakespeare’s _Titus Andronicus_ and _Henry VI_.
-
-
-FULKE GREVILLE, LORD BROOKE (_c._ 1554–1628).
-
-Greville’s father, Sir Fulke, was a cadet of the Grevilles of Milcote,
-and held great estates in Warwickshire. The son was born at Beauchamp
-Court ten years before he entered Shrewsbury School on 17 Oct. 1564
-with Philip Sidney, of whom he wrote, _c._ 1610–12, a _Life_ (ed.
-Nowell Smith, 1907). In 1568 he went to Jesus College, Cambridge, and
-from 1577 was a courtier in high favour with Elizabeth, and entrusted
-with minor diplomatic and administrative tasks. He took part in the
-great tilt of 15 May 1581 (cf. ch. xxiv) and was a steady patron of
-learning and letters. His own plays were for the closet. He was
-knighted in 1597. James granted him Warwick Castle in 1605, but he was
-no friend of Robert Cecil, and took no great part in affairs until
-1614, when he became Chancellor of the Exchequer. In 1621 he was
-created Lord Brooke. On 1 Sept. 1628 he was stabbed to death by his
-servant Ralph Haywood. D. Lloyd, _Statesmen of England_ (1665), 504,
-makes him claim to have been ‘master’ to Shakespeare and Jonson.
-
- _Collections_
-
-_S. R._ 1632, Nov. 10 (Herbert). ‘A booke called Certaine learned
-and elegant Workes of Fulke Lord Brooke the perticular names are as
-followeth (viz^t) ... The Tragedy of Alaham. The Tragedy of Mustapha
-(by assignment from Master Butter).... _Seile_ (Arber, iv. 288).
-
-1633. Certaine Learned and Elegant Workes of the Right Honorable
-Fulke Lord Brooke, Written in his Youth, and familiar exercise with
-Sir Philip Sidney. The seuerall Names of which Workes the following
-page doth declare. _E. P. for Henry Seyle._ [Contains _Alaham_ and
-_Mustapha_.]
-
-1670. The Remains of Sir Fulk Grevill Lord Brooke: Being Poems
-of Monarchy and Religion: Never before Printed. _T. N. for Henry
-Herringham._ [Contains _Alaham_ and _Mustapha_.]
-
-1870. A. B. Grosart, _The Works in Verse and Prose Complete of the Lord
-Brooke_. 4 vols. (_Fuller Worthies Library_).
-
-_Dissertations_: M. W. Croll, _The Works of F. G._ (1903, _Pennsylvania
-thesis_); R. M. Cushman (_M. L. N._ xxiv. 180).
-
- _Alaham. c. 1600_ (?)
-
-[_MS._] Holograph at Warwick Castle (cf. Grosart, iv. 336).
-
-1633. [Part of _Coll._ 1633. Prologue and Epilogue; at end, ‘This
-Tragedy, called Alaham, may be printed, this 13 day of June 1632, Henry
-Herbert.’]
-
-Croll dates 1586–1600 on metrical grounds, and Cushman 1598–1603, as
-bearing on Elizabethan politics after Burghley’s death.
-
- _Mustapha. 1603 < > 8_
-
-[_MSS._] Holograph at Warwick Castle (cf. Grosart, iv. 336). _Camb.
-Univ. MS._ F. f. 2. 35.
-
-_S. R._ 1608, Nov. 25 (Buck). ‘A booke called the Tragedy of Mustapha
-and Zangar.’ _Nathanaell Butter_ (Arber, iii. 396).
-
-1609. The Tragedy of Mustapha. _For Nathaniel Butter._
-
-_S. R._ 1632, Nov. 10. Transfer from Butter to Seile (Arber, iv. 288)
-(_vide Collections_, _supra_).
-
-Cushman dates 1603–9, as bearing on the Jacobean doctrine of divine
-right.
-
-
-MATTHEW GWINNE (_c._ 1558–1627).
-
-Gwinne, the son of a London grocer of Welsh descent, entered St.
-John’s, Oxford, from Merchant Taylors in 1574, and became Fellow of the
-College, taking his B.A. in 1578, his M.A. in 1582, and his M.D. in
-1593. In 1592 he was one of the overseers for the plays at the visit of
-Elizabeth (Boas, 252). He became Professor of Physic at Gresham College
-in 1597 and afterwards practised as a physician in London.
-
- LATIN PLAYS
-
- _Nero > 1603_
-
-_S. R._ 1603, Feb. 23 (Buckerydge). ‘A booke called Nero Tragedia nova
-Matheo Gwyn medicine Doctore Colegij Divi Johannis precursoris apud
-Oxonienses socio Collecta.’ _Edward Blunt_ (Arber, iii. 228).
-
-1603. Nero Tragoedia Nova; Matthaeo Gwinne Med. Doct. Collegii Diui
-Joannis Praecursoris apud Oxonienses Socio collecta è Tacito, Suetonio,
-Dione, Seneca. _Ed. Blount._ [Epistle to James, ‘Londini ex aedibus
-Greshamiis Cal. Jul. 1603’, signed ‘Matthaeus Gvvinne’; commendatory
-verses to Justus Lipsius, signed ‘Io. Sandsbury Ioannensis’; Prologue
-and Epilogue.]
-
-1603. _Ed. Blount._ [Epistle to Thomas Egerton and Francis Leigh,
-‘Londini ex aedibus Greshamiis in festo Cinerum 1603’; Epilogue.]
-
-1639. _M. F. Prostant apud R. Mynne._
-
-Boas, 390, assigns the play to St. John’s, Oxford, _c._ Easter 1603,
-but the S. R. entry and the ‘Elisa regnat’ of the Epilogue point to an
-Elizabethan date.
-
- _Vertumnus. 29 Aug. 1605_
-
-[_MS._] _Inner Temple Petyt MS._ 538, 43, f. 293, has a _scenario_,
-with the title ‘The yeare about’.
-
-1607. Vertumnus sive Annus Recurrens Oxonii, xxix Augusti, Anno. 1605.
-Coram Iacobo Rege, Henrico Principe, Proceribus. A Joannensibus in
-Scena recitatus ab vno scriptus, Phrasi Comica propè Tragicis Senariis.
-_Nicholas Okes, impensis Ed. Blount._ [Epistle to Henry, signed
-‘Matthaeus Gwinne’; Verses to Earl of Montgomery; commendatory verses,
-signed ‘Guil. Paddy’, ‘Ioa. Craigius’, ‘Io. Sansbery Ioannensis’,
-‘Θώμας ὁ Φρεάῤῥεος’; _Author ad Librum_. Appended are verses, signed
-‘M. G.’ and headed ‘Ad Regis introitum, è Ioannensi Collegio extra
-portam Vrbis Borealem sito, tres quasi Sibyllae, sic (ut e sylua)
-salutarunt’, which are thought to have given a hint for _Macbeth_.]
-
-This was shown to James during his visit to Oxford, and it sent him to
-sleep. The performance was at Christ Church by men of St. John’s.
-
-
-STEPHEN HARRISON (_c._ 1604).
-
-Designer and describer of the arches at the coronation of James I (cf.
-ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-RICHARD HATHWAY (_c._ 1600).
-
-Practically nothing is known of Hathway outside Henslowe’s diary,
-although he was included by Meres amongst the ‘best for comedy’ in
-1598, and wrote commendatory verses for Bodenham’s _Belvedere_ (1600).
-It is only conjecture that relates him to the Hathaways of Shottery in
-Warwickshire, of whom was Shakespeare’s father-in-law, also a Richard.
-He has left nothing beyond an undetermined share of _1 Sir John
-Oldcastle_, but the following plays by him are traceable in the diary:
-
- (a) _Plays for the Admiral’s, 1598–1602_
-
-(i) _King Arthur._
-
-April 1598.
-
-(ii) _Valentine and Orson._
-
-With Munday, July 1598. It is uncertain what relation, if any, this
-bore to an anonymous play of the same name which was twice entered in
-the S. R. on 23 May 1595 and 31 March 1600 (Arber, ii. 298, iii. 159),
-was ascribed in both entries to the Queen’s and not the Admiral’s, and
-is not known to be extant.
-
-(iii, iv) _1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle._
-
-With Drayton (q.v.), Munday, and Wilson, Oct.–Dec. 1599.
-
-(v) _Owen Tudor._
-
-With Drayton, Munday, and Wilson, Jan. 1600; but apparently not
-finished.
-
-(vi) _1 Fair Constance of Rome._
-
-With Dekker, Drayton, Munday, and Wilson (q.v.), June 1600.
-
-(vii) _2 Fair Constance of Rome._
-
-June 1600; but apparently not finished.
-
-(viii) _Hannibal and Scipio._
-
-With Rankins, Jan. 1601. Greg, ii. 216, bravely suggests that Nabbes’s
-play of the same name, printed as a piece of Queen Henrietta’s men in
-1637, may have been a revision of this.
-
-(ix) _Scogan and Skelton._
-
-With Rankins, Jan.–March 1601.
-
-(x) _The Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt._
-
-With Rankins, Mar.–Apr. 1601, but never finished, as shown by a letter
-to Henslowe from S. Rowley, bidding him let Hathway ‘have his papars
-agayne’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 56).
-
-(xi, xii) _1, 2 The Six Clothiers._
-
-With Haughton and Smith, Oct.–Nov. 1601; but the second part was
-apparently unfinished.
-
-(xiii) _Too Good To Be True._
-
-With Chettle (q.v.) and Smith, Nov. 1601–Jan. 1602.
-
-(xiv) _Merry as May Be._
-
-With Day and Smith, Nov. 1602.
-
- (b) _Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3_
-
-(xv, xvi) _1, 2 The Black Dog of Newgate._
-
-With Day, Smith, and an anonymous ‘other poete’, Nov. 1602–Feb. 1603.
-
-(xvii) _The Unfortunate General._
-
-With Day, Smith, and a third, Jan. 1603.
-
- (c) _Play for the Admiral’s, 1603_
-
-(xviii) _The Boss of Billingsgate._
-
-With Day and one or more other ‘felowe poetes’, March 1603.
-
-
-CHRISTOPHER HATTON (1540–91).
-
-Christopher Hatton, of Holdenby, Northants, entered the Inner Temple
-in Nov. 1559. He was Master of the Game at the Grand Christmas of
-1561, and the mask to which he is said to have owed his introduction
-to Elizabeth’s favour was probably that which the revellers took to
-Court, together with Norton (q.v.) and Sackville’s _Gorboduc_ on 18
-Jan. 1562. He became a Gentleman Pensioner in 1564, Gentleman of the
-Privy Chamber, Captain of the Guard in 1572, Vice-Chamberlain and
-Privy Councillor in 1578, when he was knighted, and Lord Chancellor
-on 25 April 1587. He was conspicuous at Court in masks and tilts, and
-is reported, even as Lord Chancellor, to have laid aside his gown and
-danced at the wedding of his nephew and heir, Sir William Newport,
-alias Hatton, to Elizabeth Gawdy at Holdenby in June 1590.
-
-His only contribution to the drama is as writer of an act of _Gismond
-of Salerne_ at the Inner Temple in 1568 (cf. s.v. Wilmot).
-
-
-WILLIAM HAUGHTON (_c._ 1575–1605).
-
-Beyond his extant work and the entries in Henslowe’s diary, in the
-earliest of which, on 5 Nov. 1597, he appears as ‘yonge’ Haughton,
-little is known of Haughton. Cooper, _Ath. Cantab._ ii. 399, identified
-him with an alleged Oxford M.A. of the same name who was incorporated
-at Cambridge in 1604, but turns out to have misread the name, which is
-‘Langton’ (Baugh, 15). He worked for the Admiral’s during 1597–1602,
-and found himself in the Clink in March 1600. Baugh, 22, prints his
-will, made on 6 June 1605, and proved on 20 July. He left a widow Alice
-and children. Wentworth Smith (q.v.) and one Elizabeth Lewes were
-witnesses. He was then of Allhallows, Stainings. He cannot be traced
-in the parish, but the name, which in his will is Houghton, is also
-spelt by Henslowe Harton, Horton, Hauton, Hawton, Howghton, Haughtoun,
-Haulton, and Harvghton, and was common in London. He might be related
-to a William Houghton, saddler, who held a house in Turnmill Street in
-1577 (Baugh, 11), since in 1601 (_H. P._ 57) Day requested that a sum
-due to Haughton and himself might be paid to ‘Will Hamton sadler’.
-
- _Englishmen for My Money_, or _A Woman Will Have
- Her Will. 1598_
-
-_S. R._ 1601, Aug. 3. ‘A comedy of A woman Will haue her Will.’
-_William White_ (Arber, iii. 190).
-
-1616. English-Men For my Money: or, A pleasant Comedy, called, A Woman
-will haue her Will. _W. White._
-
-1626.... As it hath beene diuers times Acted with great applause. _I.
-N., sold by Hugh Perry._
-
-1631. _A. M., sold by Richard Thrale._
-
-_Editions_ in _O. E. D._ (1830, i) and Dodsley^4, x (1875), and by J.
-S. Farmer (1911, _T. F. T._), W. W. Greg (1912, _M. S. R._), and A. C.
-Baugh, (1917).
-
-The evidence for Haughton’s evidence is in two payments in Henslowe’s
-diary of 18 Feb. and early in May 1598 on behalf of the Admiral’s. The
-sum of these is only £2, but it seems possible that at least one, and
-perhaps more than one, other payment was made for the book in 1597 (cf.
-Henslowe, ii. 191).
-
- _Patient Grissell. 1599_
-
- _With_ Chettle and Dekker (q.v.).
-
- _Lost and Doubtful Plays_
-
-The following plays by Haughton, all for the Admiral’s, are traceable
-in Henslowe’s diary:
-
-(i) _A Woman Will Have Her Will._
-
-See _supra_.
-
-(ii) _The Poor Man’s Paradise._
-
-Aug. 1599; apparently not finished.
-
-(iii) _Cox of Collumpton._
-
-With Day, Nov. 1599; on a ‘note’ of the play by Simon Forman, cf. ch.
-xiii (Admiral’s).
-
-(iv) _Thomas Merry_, or _Beech’s Tragedy_.
-
-With Day, Nov.–Dec. 1599, on the same theme as one of Yarington’s _Two
-Lamentable Tragedies_ (q.v.).
-
-(v) _The Arcadian Virgin._
-
-With Chettle, Dec. 1599; apparently not finished.
-
-(vi) _Patient Grissell._
-
-With Chettle and Dekker (q.v.), Oct.–Dec. 1599.
-
-(vii) _The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy._
-
-With Day and Dekker, Feb. 1600; but apparently then unfinished;
-possibly identical with _Lust’s Dominion_ (cf. s.v. Marlowe).
-
-(viii) _The Seven Wise Masters._
-
-With Chettle, Day, and Dekker, March 1600.
-
-(ix) _Ferrex and Porrex._
-
-March-April 1600.
-
-(x) _The English Fugitives._
-
-April 1600, but apparently not finished.
-
-(xi) _The Devil and His Dame._
-
-6 May 1600; probably the extant anonymous _Grim the Collier of Croydon_
-(q.v.).
-
-(xii) _Strange News Out of Poland._
-
-With ‘M^r. Pett’, May 1600.
-
-(xiii) _Judas._
-
-Haughton had 10_s._ for this, May 1600; apparently the play was
-finished by Bird and S. Rowley, Dec. 1601.
-
-(xiv) _Robin Hood’s Pennorths._
-
-Dec. 1600–Jan. 1601; but apparently not finished.
-
-(xv, xvi) _2, 3 The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green._
-
-With Day (q.v.), Jan.–July 1600.
-
-(xvii) _The Conquest of the West Indies._
-
-With Day and Smith, April-Sept. 1601.
-
-(xviii) _The Six Yeomen of the West._
-
-With Day, May–June 1601.
-
-(xix) _Friar Rush and the Proud Woman of Antwerp._
-
-With Chettle and Day, July 1601–Jan. 1602.
-
-(xx) _2 Tom Dough._
-
-With Day, July–Sept. 1601; but apparently not finished.
-
-(xxi, xxii) _1, 2 The Six Clothiers._
-
-With Hathway and Smith, Oct.–Nov. 1601; but apparently the second part
-was not finished.
-
-(xxiii) _William Cartwright._
-
-Sept. 1602; perhaps never finished.
-
-
-WALTER HAWKESWORTH (?-1606).
-
-A Yorkshireman by birth, Hawkesworth entered Trinity College,
-Cambridge, in 1588, and became a Fellow, taking his B.A. in 1592 and
-his M.A. in 1595. In 1605 he went as secretary to the English embassy
-in Madrid, where he died.
-
- LATIN PLAYS
-
- _Leander. 1599_
-
-[_MSS._] _T. C. C. MS._ R. 3. 9. _Sloane MS._ 1762. [‘Authore M^{ro}
-Haukesworth, Collegii Trinitatis olim Socio Acta est secundo A. D. 1602
-comitiis Baccalaureorum ... primo acta est A. D. 1598.’ Prologue, ‘ut
-primo acta est’; Additions for revival; Actor-lists.]
-
-_St. John’s, Cambridge, MS._ J. 8. [Dated at end ‘7 Jan. 1599’.]
-
-_Emmanuel, Cambridge, MS._ I. 2. 30.
-
-_Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS._ Ee. v. 16.
-
-_Bodl. Rawl. Misc. MS._ 341.
-
-_Lambeth MS._ 838.
-
-The production in 1599 and 1603 indicated by the MSS. agrees with the
-Trinity names in the actor-lists (Boas, 399).
-
- _Labyrinthus. 1603_ (?)
-
-[_MSS._] _T. C. C. MS._ R. 3. 6.
-
-_Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS._ Ee. v. 16. [Both ‘M^{ro} Haukesworth’.
-Prologue. Actor-list in _T. C. C. MS._]
-
-_St. John’s, Cambridge, MS._ J. 8. _T. C. C. MS._ R. 3. 9. _Bodl. Douce
-MSS._ 43, 315. _Lambeth MS._ 838.
-
-_S. R._ 1635, July 17 (Weekes). ‘A Latyn Comedy called Laborinthus
-&c.’ _Robinson_ (Arber, iv. 343).
-
-1636. Labyrinthus Comoedia, habita coram Sereniss. Rege Iacobo in
-Academia Cantabrigiensi. _Londini, Excudebat H. R._ [Prologue.]
-
-An allusion in the text (v. 5) to the marriage ‘_heri_’ of Leander
-and Flaminia has led to the assumption that production was on the day
-after the revival of _Leander_ in 1603; the actor-list has some
-inconsistencies, and is not quite conclusive for any year of the period
-1603–6 (Boas, 317, 400).
-
-
-MARY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE (1561–1621).
-
-Mary, daughter of Sir Henry, and sister of Sir Philip, Sidney, married
-Henry, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, in 1577. She had literary tastes and was
-a liberal patroness of poets, notably Samuel Daniel. Most of her time
-appears to have been spent at her husband’s Wiltshire seats of Wilton,
-Ivychurch, and Ramsbury, but in the reign of James she rented Crosby
-Hall in Bishopsgate, and in 1615 the King granted her for life the
-manor of Houghton Conquest, Beds.
-
-_Dissertation_: F. B. Young, _Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke_ (1912).
-
- TRANSLATION
-
- _Antony. 1590_
-
-_S. R._ 1592, May 3. ‘Item Anthonius a tragedie wrytten also in French
-by Robert Garnier ... donne in English by the Countesse of Pembrok.’
-_William Ponsonby_ (Arber, ii. 611).
-
-1592. A Discourse of Life and Death. Written in French by Ph. Mornay.
-Antonius, A Tragoedie written also in French by Ro. Garnier Both done
-in English by the Countesse of Pembroke. _For William Ponsonby._
-
-1595. The Tragedie of Antonie. Doone ... _For William Ponsonby_.
-
-_Edition_ by A. Luce (1897). The _Marc-Antoine_ (1578) of Robert
-Garnier was reissued in his _Huit Tragédies_ (1580).
-
- ENTERTAINMENT
-
- _Astraea. 1592_ (?)
-
-In Davison’s _Poetical Rapsody_ (1602, S. R. 28 May 1602) is ‘A
-Dialogue betweene two Shepheards, Thenot and Piers, in Praise of
-Astrea. Made by the excellent Lady the Lady Mary Countesse of Pembrook
-at the Queenes Maiesties being at her house at ---- Anno 15--’.
-
-S. Lee (_D. N. B._) puts the visit at Wilton ‘late in 1599’. But there
-was no progress in 1599, and progresses to Wilts. planned in 1600,
-1601, and 1602 were abandoned. Presumably the verses were written for
-the visit to Ramsbury of 27–9 Aug. 1592 (cf. App. A).
-
-
-JASPER HEYWOOD (1535–98).
-
-Translator of Seneca (q.v.).
-
-
-THOMAS HEYWOOD (_c._ 1570–1641).
-
-Heywood regarded Lincolnshire as his ‘country’ and had an uncle
-Edmund, who had a friend Sir Henry Appleton. K. L. Bates has found
-Edmund Heywood’s will of 7 Oct. 1624 in which Thomas Heywood and
-his wife are mentioned, and has shown it to be not improbable that
-Edmund was the son of Richard Heywood, a London barrister who had
-manors in Lincolnshire. If so, Thomas was probably the son of Edmund’s
-disinherited elder brother Christopher who was aged 30 in 1570. And if
-Richard Heywood is the same who appears in the circle of Sir Thomas
-More, a family connexion with the dramatist John Heywood may be
-conjectured. The date of Thomas’s birth is unknown, but he tells us
-that he was at Cambridge, although a tradition that he became Fellow
-of Peterhouse cannot be confirmed, and is therefore not likely to have
-begun his stage career before the age of 18 or thereabouts. Perhaps
-we may conjecture that he was born _c._ 1570, for a Thomas Heywood is
-traceable in the St. Saviour’s, Southwark, token-books from 1588 to
-1607, and children of Thomas Heywood ‘player’ were baptized in the
-same parish from 28 June 1590 to 5 Sept. 1605 (Collier, in _Bodl. MS._
-29445). This is consistent with his knowledge (App. C, No. lvii) of
-Tarlton, but not of earlier actors. He may, therefore, so far as dates
-are concerned, easily have written _The Four Prentices_ as early as
-1592; but that he in fact did so, as well as his possible contributions
-to the Admiral’s repertory of 1594–7, are matters of inference (cf.
-Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 284). The editors of the _Apology for Actors_
-(Introd. v) say that in his _Funeral Elegy upon James I_ (1625) he
-claims to have been ‘the theatrical servant of the Earl of Southampton,
-the patron of Shakespeare’. I have never seen the Elegy. It is not in
-the B. M., but a copy passed from the Bindley to the Brown collection.
-There is no other evidence that Southampton ever had a company of
-players. The first dated notice of Heywood is in a payment of Oct.
-1596 on behalf of the Admiral’s ‘for Hawodes bocke’. On 25 March 1598
-he bound himself to Henslowe for two years as an actor, doubtless for
-the Admiral’s, then in process of reconstitution. Between Dec. 1598
-and Feb. 1599 he wrote two plays for this company, and then disappears
-from their records. He was not yet out of his time with Henslowe, but
-if _Edward IV_ is really his, he may have been enabled to transfer his
-services to Derby’s men, who seem to have established themselves in
-London in the course of 1599. By the autumn of 1602 he was a member
-of Worcester’s, for whom he had probably already written _How a Man
-may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_. He now reappears in Henslowe’s
-diary both as actor and as playwright. On 1 Sept, he borrowed 2_s._
-6_d._ to buy garters, and between 4 Sept, and 6 March 1603 he wrote
-or collaborated in not less than seven plays for the company. During
-the same winter he also helped in one play for the Admiral’s. It seems
-probable that some of his earlier work was transferred to Worcester’s.
-He remained with them, and in succession to them Queen Anne’s, until
-the company broke up soon after the death of the Queen in 1619. Very
-little of his work got into print. Of the twelve plays at most which
-appeared before 1619, the first seven were unauthorized issues; from
-1608 onwards, he himself published five with prefatory epistles.
-About this date, perhaps in the enforced leisure of plague-time, he
-also began to produce non-dramatic works, both in prose and verse,
-of which the _Apology for Actors_, published in 1612, but written
-some years earlier (cf. App. C, No. lvii), is the most important. The
-loss of his _Lives of All the Poets_, apparently begun _c._ 1614 and
-never finished, is irreparable. After 1619 Heywood is not traceable
-at all as an actor; nor for a good many years, with the exception
-of one play, _The Captives_, for the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1624, as a
-playwright, either on the stage or in print. In 1623 a Thomas Heywarde
-lived near Clerkenwell Hill (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlvi. 345) and is probably
-the dramatist. In 1624 he claims in the Epistle to _Gynaikeion_ the
-renewed patronage of the Earl of Worcester, since ‘I was your creature,
-and amongst other your servants, you bestowed me upon the excellent
-princesse Q. Anne ... but by her lamented death, your gift is returned
-againe into your hands’. But about 1630 he emerges again. Old plays of
-his were revived and new ones produced both by Queen Henrietta’s men
-at the Cockpit and the King’s at the Globe and Blackfriars. He wrote
-the Lord Mayor’s pageants for a series of years. He sent ten more
-plays to the press, and included a number of prologues, epilogues,
-and complimentary speeches of recent composition in his _Pleasant
-Dialogues and Dramas_ of 1637. This period lies outside my survey. I
-have dealt with all plays in which there is a reasonable prospect of
-finding early work, but have not thought it necessary to discuss _The
-English Traveller_, or _A Maidenhead Well Lost_, merely because of
-tenuous attempts by Fleay to connect them with lost plays written for
-Worcester’s or still earlier anonymous work for the Admiral’s, any
-more than _The Fair Maid of the West_, _The Late Lancashire Witches_,
-or _A Challenge for Beauty_, with regard to which no such suggestion
-is made. As to _Love’s Mistress_, see the note on _Pleasant Dialogues
-and Dramas_. The Epistle to _The English Traveller_ (1633) is worth
-quoting. Heywood describes the play as ‘one reserued amongst two
-hundred and twenty, in which I haue had either an entire hand, or
-at the least a maine finger’, and goes on to explain why his pieces
-have not appeared as _Works_. ‘One reason is, that many of them by
-shifting and change of Companies, haue beene negligently lost, Others
-of them are still retained in the hands of some Actors, who thinke
-it against their peculiar profit to haue them come in Print, and a
-third, That it neuer was any great ambition in me, to bee in this kind
-Volumniously read.’ Heywood’s statement would give him an average of
-over five plays a year throughout a forty years’ career, and even if
-we assume that he included every piece which he revised or supplied
-with a prologue, it is obvious that the score or so plays that we have
-and the dozen or so others of which we know the names must fall very
-short of his total output. ‘Tho. Heywood, Poet’, was buried at St.
-James’s, Clerkenwell, on 16 Aug. 1641 (_Harl. Soc. Reg._ xvii. 248),
-and therefore the alleged mention of him as still alive in _The Satire
-against Separatists_ (1648) must rest on a misunderstanding.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1842–51. B. Field and J. P. Collier, _The Dramatic Works of Thomas
-Heywood_. 2 vols. (_Shakespeare Society_). [Intended for a complete
-edition, although issued in single parts; a title-page for vol. i was
-issued in 1850 and the 10th Report of the Society treats the plays for
-1851 as completing vol. ii. Twelve plays were issued, as cited _infra_.]
-
-1874. _The Dramatic Works of Thomas Heywood._ 6 vols. (_Pearson
-Reprints_). [All the undoubted plays, with _Edward IV_ and _Fair Maid
-of the Exchange_; also Lord Mayors’ Pageants and part of _Pleasant
-Dialogues and Dramas_.]
-
-1888. A. W. Verity, _The Best Plays of Thomas Heywood_ (_Mermaid
-Series_). [_Woman Killed with Kindness_, _Fair Maid of the West_,
-_English Traveller_, _Wise Woman of Hogsdon_, _Rape of Lucrece._]
-
-_Dissertations_: K. L. Bates, _A Conjecture as to Thomas Heywood’s
-Family_ (1913, _J. G. P._ xii. 1); P. Aronstein, _Thomas Heywood_
-(1913, _Anglia_, xxxvii. 163).
-
- _The Four Prentices of London. 1592_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1594, June 19. ‘An enterlude entituled Godfrey of Bulloigne
-with the Conquest of Jerusalem.’ _John Danter_ (Arber, ii. 654).
-
-1615. The Foure Prentises of London. With the Conquest of Ierusalem.
-As it hath bene diuerse times Acted, at the Red Bull, by the Queenes
-Maiesties Seruants. Written by Thomas Heywood. _For I. W._ [Epistle
-to the Prentices, signed ‘Thomas Heywood’ and Prologue, really an
-Induction.]
-
-1632.... Written and newly reuised by Thomas Heywood. _Nicholas Okes._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{2, 3} (1780–1827) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ iii).
-
-The Prologue gives the title as _True and Strange, or The Four
-Prentises of London_. The Epistle speaks of the play as written ‘many
-yeares since, in my infancy of iudgment in this kinde of poetry,
-and my first practice’ and ‘some fifteene or sixteene yeares agoe’.
-This would, by itself, suggest a date shortly after the publication
-of Fairfax’s translation from Tasso under the title of _Godfrey of
-Bulloigne, or The Recouerie of Ierusalem_ in 1600. But the Epistle
-also refers to a recent revival of ‘the commendable practice of long
-forgotten armes’ in ‘the Artillery Garden’. This, according to Stowe,
-_Annales_ (1615), 906, was in 1610, which leads Fleay, i. 182, followed
-by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 166), to assume that the Epistle was written
-for an edition, now lost, of about that date. In support they cite
-Beaumont’s _K. B. P._ iv. 1 (dating it 1610 instead of 1607), ‘Read
-the play of the _Foure Prentices of London_, where they tosse their
-pikes so’. Then, calculating back sixteen years, they arrive at the
-anonymous _Godfrey of Bulloigne_ produced by the Admiral’s on 19 July
-1594, and identify this with _The Four Prentices_, in which Godfrey
-is a character. But this _Godfrey of Bulloigne_ was a second part,
-and it is difficult to suppose that the first part was anything but
-the play entered on the S. R. earlier in 1594. This, from its title,
-clearly left no room for a second part covering the same ground as _The
-Four Prentices_, which ends with the capture of Jerusalem. If then
-Heywood’s play is as old as 1594 at all, it must be identified with
-the first part of _Godfrey of Bulloigne_. And is not this in its turn
-likely to be the _Jerusalem_ played by Strange’s men on 22 March and
-25 April 1592? If so, Heywood’s career began very early, and, as we
-can hardly put his Epistle earlier than the opening of the Artillery
-Garden in 1610, his ‘fifteene or sixteene yeares’ must be rather an
-understatement. There is of course nothing in the Epistle itself to
-suggest that the play had been previously printed, but we know from the
-Epistle to _Lucrece_ that the earliest published plays by Heywood were
-surreptitious.
-
-Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 230, hesitatingly suggests that a purchase by
-Worcester’s of ‘iiij lances for the comody of Thomas Hewedes & M^r.
-Smythes’ on 3 Sept. 1602 may have been for a revival of _The Four
-Prentices_, ‘where they tosse their pikes so’, transferred from the
-Admiral’s. But I think his afterthought, that the comedy was Heywood
-and Smith’s _Albere Galles_, paid for on the next day, is sound.
-
- _Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602_
-
-See s.v. Dekker.
-
- _The Royal King and the Loyal Subject. 1602_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1637, March 25 (Thomas Herbert, deputy to Sir Henry Herbert).
-‘A Comedy called the Royall king and the Loyall Subiects by Master
-Heywood.’ _James Beckett_ (Arber, iv. 376).
-
-1637. The Royall King, and the Loyall Subject. As it hath beene Acted
-with great Applause by the Queenes Maiesties Servants. Written by
-Thomas Heywood. _Nich. and John Okes for James Becket._ [Prologue
-to the Stage and Epilogue to the Reader.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1850, _Sh. Soc._) and K. W. Tibbals
-(1906, _Pennsylvania Univ. Publ._).--_Dissertation_: O. Kämpfer, _Th.
-Heywood’s The Royal King and Painter’s Palace of Pleasure_ (1903,
-_Halle diss._).
-
-The Epilogue describes the play as ‘old’, and apparently relates it to
-a time when rhyme, of which it makes considerable use, was more looked
-after than ‘strong lines’, and when stuffed and puffed doublets and
-trunk-hose were worn, which would fit the beginning of the seventeenth
-century. An anonymous Marshal is a leading character, and the
-identification by Fleay, i. 300, with the _Marshal Osric_ written
-by Heywood and Smith for Worcester’s in Sept. 1602 is not the worst of
-his guesses.
-
- _A Woman Killed With Kindness. 1603_
-
-1607. A Woman Kilde with Kindnesse. Written by Tho: Heywood. _William
-Jaggard, sold by John Hodgets._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1617.... As it hath beene oftentimes Acted by the Queenes Maiest.
-Seruants.... The third Edition. _Isaac Jaggard._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1, 2, 3} (1744–1827) and by W. Scott (1810, _A.
-B. D._ ii), J. P. Collier (1850, _Sh. Soc._), A. W. Ward (1897, _T.
-D._), F. J. Cox (1907), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), K. L. Bates
-(1919).--_Dissertation_: R. G. Martin, _A New Source for a Woman Killed
-with Kindness_ (1911, _E. S._ xliii. 229).
-
-Henslowe, on behalf of Worcester’s, paid Heywood £6 for this play in
-Feb. and March 1603 and also bought properties for it. It is mentioned
-in T. M., _The Black Book of London_ (1604), sig. E3.
-
- _The Wise Woman of Hogsdon. c. 1604_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1638, Mar. 12 (Wykes). ‘A Play called The wise woman of Hogsden
-by Thomas Haywood.’ _Henry Sheapard_ (Arber, iv. 411).
-
-1638. The Wise Woman of Hogsdon. A Comedie. As it hath been sundry
-times Acted with great Applause. Written by Tho: Heywood. _M. P. for
-Henry Shephard._
-
-Fleay, i. 291, suggested a date _c._ 1604 on the grounds of allusions
-to other plays of which _A Woman Killed with Kindness_ is the latest
-(ed. Pearson, v. 316), and a conjectural identification with Heywood’s
-_How to Learn of a Woman to Woo_, played by the Queen’s at Court on
-30 Dec. 1604. The approximate date is accepted by Ward, ii. 574, and
-others. It may be added that there are obvious parallelisms with
-the anonymous _How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_ (1602)
-generally assigned to Heywood.
-
- _If You Know not Me, You Know Nobody. 1605_
-
-_S. R._ 1605, July 5 (Hartwell). ‘A booke called yf you knowe not me
-you knowe no body.’ _Nathaniel Butter_ (Arber, iii. 295).
-
-1605, Sept. 14 (Hartwell). ‘A Booke called the Second parte of Yf you
-knowe not me you knowe no bodie with the buildinge of the exchange.’
-_Nathaniel Butter_ (Arber, iii. 301).
-
- [_Part i_]
-
-1605. If you Know not me, You Know no bodie: Or, The troubles of Queene
-Elizabeth. _For Nathaniel Butter._
-
-1606, 1608, 1610, 1613, 1623, 1632, 1639.
-
- [_Part ii_]
-
-1606. The Second Part of, If you Know not me, you know no bodie. With
-the building of the Royall Exchange: And the famous Victorie of Queene
-Elizabeth, in the Yeare 1588. _For Nathaniell Butter._
-
-1609.... With the Humors of Hobson and Tawny-cote. _For Nathaniell
-Butter._
-
-N.D. [1623?].
-
-1632. _For Nathaniel Butter._ [With different version of Act V.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1851, _Sh. Soc._) and J. Blew
-(1876).--_Dissertation_: B. A. P. van Dam and C. Stoffel, _The
-Fifth Act of Thomas Heywood’s Queen Elizabeth: Second Part_ (1902,
-_Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. 153).
-
-_Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas_, 248, has ‘A Prologue to the Play
-of Queene Elizabeth as it was last revived at the Cockpit, in which
-the Author taxeth the most corrupted copy now imprinted, which was
-published without his consent’. It says:
-
- This: (by what fate I know not) sure no merit,
- That it disclaimes, may for the age inherit.
- Writing ’bove one and twenty; but ill nurst,
- And yet receiv’d, as well perform’d at first,
- Grac’t and frequented, for the cradle age,
- Did throng the Seates, the Boxes, and the Stage
- So much; that some by Stenography drew
- The plot: put it in print: (scarce one word trew:)
-
-There is also an Epilogue, which shows that both parts were revived.
-The piracy may serve to date the original production in 1605 and the
-Caroline revival probably led to the reprints of 1632. As the play
-passed to the Cockpit, it was presumably written for Queen Anne’s. Greg
-(_Henslowe_, ii. 223) rightly resists the suggestion that it was the
-old _Philip of Spain_ bought by the Admiral’s from Alleyn in 1602. It
-is only Part i which has characteristics attributable to stenography,
-and this remained unrevised. According to Van Dam and Stoffel, the 1606
-and 1632 editions of Part ii represent the same original text, in the
-first case shortened for representation, in the second altered by a
-press-corrector.
-
- _Fortune by Land and Sea. c. 1607_ (?)
-
- _With_ W. Rowley.
-
-_S. R._ 1655, June 20. ‘Fortune by Land & sea, a tragicomedie, written
-by Tho: Heywood & Wm. Rowley.’ _John Sweeting_ (Eyre, i. 486).
-
-1655. Fortune by Land and Sea. A Tragi-Comedy. As it was Acted with
-great Applause by the Queens Servants. Written by Tho. Haywood and
-William Rowly. _For John Sweeting and Robert Pollard._
-
-_Edition_ by B. Field (1846, _Sh. Soc._).--_Dissertation_: Oxoniensis,
-_Illustration of Fortune by Land and Sea_ (1847, _Sh. Soc. Papers_,
-iii. 7).
-
-The action is placed in the reign of Elizabeth (cf. ed. Pearson, vi,
-pp. 409, 431), but this may be due merely to the fact that the source
-is a pamphlet (S. R. 15 Aug. 1586) dealing with Elizabethan piracy.
-Rowley’s co-operation suggests the date 1607–9 when he was writing for
-Queen Anne’s men, and other trifling evidence (Aronstein, 237) makes
-such a date plausible.
-
- _The Rape of Lucrece. 1603 < > 8_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, June 3 (Buck). ‘A Booke called A Romane tragedie called
-The Rape of Lucrece.’ _John Busby and Nathanael Butter_ (Arber, iii.
-380).
-
-1608. The Rape of Lucrece. A True Roman Tragedie. With the seuerall
-Songes in their apt places, by Valerius, the merrie Lord amongst the
-Roman Peeres. Acted by her Maiesties Seruants at the Red Bull, neare
-Clarkenwell. Written by Thomas Heywood. _For I. B._ [Epistle to the
-Reader, signed ‘T. H.’]
-
-1609. _For I. B._
-
-1630.... The fourth Impression.... _For Nathaniel Butter._
-
-1638.... The copy revised, and sundry Songs before omitted, now
-inserted in their right places.... _John Raworth for Nathaniel Butter._
-[Note to the Reader at end.]
-
-_Edition_ in 1825 (_O. E. D._ i).
-
-Fleay, i. 292, notes the mention of ‘the King’s head’ as a tavern sign
-for ‘the Gentry’, which suggests a Jacobean date. The play was given at
-Court, apparently by the King’s and Queen’s men together, on 13 Jan.
-1612. The Epistle says that it has not been Heywood’s custom ‘to commit
-my Playes to the Presse’, like others who ‘have used a double sale of
-their labours, first to the Stage, and after to the Presse’. He now
-does so because ‘some of my Playes have (unknowne to me, and without
-any of my direction) accidentally come into the Printers hands (and
-therefore so corrupt and mangled, copied only by the eare) that I have
-beene as unable to knowe them, as ashamed to challenge them’. A play on
-the subject seems to have been on tour in Germany in 1619 (Herz, 98).
-_The Rape of Lucrece_ was on the Cockpit stage in 1628, according to a
-newsletter in _Athenaeum_ (1879), ii. 497, and to the 1638 edition are
-appended songs ‘added by the stranger that lately acted Valerius his
-part’. It is in the Cockpit list of plays in 1639 (_Variorum_, iii.
-159).
-
- _The Golden Age > 1611_
-
-_S. R._ 1611, Oct. 14 (Buck). William Barrenger, ‘A booke called, The
-golden age with the liues of Jupiter and Saturne.’ _William Barrenger_
-(Arber, iii. 470).
-
-1611. The Golden Age. Or The liues of Iupiter and Saturne, with the
-defining of the Heathen Gods. As it hath beene sundry times acted at
-the Red Bull, by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by Thomas
-Heywood. _For William Barrenger._ [Epistle to the Reader, signed ‘T.
-H.’ Some copies have ‘defining’ corrected to ‘deifying’ in the title.]
-
-_Edition_ by J. P. Collier (1851, _Sh. Soc._).
-
-The Epistle describes the play as ‘the eldest brother of three Ages,
-that haue aduentured the Stage, but the onely yet, that hath beene
-iudged to the presse’, and promises the others. It came to the press
-‘accidentally’, but Heywood, ‘at length hauing notice thereof’,
-prefaced it, as it had ‘already past the approbation of auditors’.
-Fleay, i. 283, followed hesitatingly by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 175),
-thinks it a revision of the _Olympo_ or _Seleo & Olempo_, which he
-interprets _Coelo et Olympo_, produced by the Admiral’s on 5 March
-1595. The Admiral’s inventories show that they had a play with Neptune
-in it, but it is only at the very end of _The Golden Age_ that the
-sons of Saturn draw lots and Jupiter wins Heaven or Olympus. Fleay’s
-assumption that the play was revised _c._ 1610, because of Dekker,
-_If it be not Good_, i. 1, ‘The Golden Age is moulding new again’, is
-equally hazardous.
-
- _The Silver Age > 1612_
-
-1613. The Silver Age, Including. The loue of Iupiter to Alcmena: The
-birth of Hercules. And the Rape of Proserpine. Concluding, With the
-Arraignement of the Moone. Written by Thomas Heywood. _Nicholas Okes,
-sold by Beniamin Lightfoote._ [Epistle to the Reader, signed ‘T. H,’;
-Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-_Edition_ by J. P. Collier (1851, _Sh. Soc._).
-
-The Epistle says, ‘Wee begunne with _Gold_, follow with _Siluer_,
-proceede with _Brasse_, and purpose by Gods grace, to end with _Iron_’.
-Fleay, i. 283, and Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 175) take this and _The Brazen
-Age_ to be the two parts of the anonymous _Hercules_, produced by the
-Admiral’s men on 7 and 23 May 1595 respectively. It may be so. But the
-text presumably represents the play as given at Court, apparently by
-the King’s and Queen’s men together, on 12 Jan. 1612. An Anglo-German
-_Amphitryo_ traceable in 1626 and 1678 may be based on Heywood’s work
-(Herz, 66; _Jahrbuch_, xli. 201).
-
- _The Brazen Age > 1613_
-
-1613. The Brazen Age, The first Act containing, The death of the
-Centaure Nessus, The Second, The Tragedy of Meleager: The Third The
-Tragedy of Iason and Medea. The Fourth. Vulcans Net. The Fifth. The
-Labours and death of Hercules: Written by Thomas Heywood. _Nicholas
-Okes for Samuel Rand._ [Epistle to the Reader; Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-Cf. s.v. _The Silver Age_.
-
- _The Iron Age. c. 1613_ (?)
-
-1632. [_Part i_] The Iron Age: Contayning the Rape of Hellen: The siege
-of Troy: The Combate betwixt Hector and Aiax: Hector and Troilus slayne
-by Achilles: Achilles slaine by Paris: Aiax and Vlesses contend for the
-Armour of Achilles: The Death of Aiax, &c. Written by Thomas Heywood.
-_Nicholas Okes._ [Epistles to Thomas Hammon and to the Reader, signed
-‘Thomas Heywood’.]
-
-1632. [_Part ii_] The Second Part of the Iron Age. Which contayneth the
-death of Penthesilea, Paris, Priam, and Hecuba: The burning of Troy:
-The deaths of Agamemnon, Menelaus, Clitemnestra, Hellena, Orestes,
-Egistus, Pillades, King Diomed, Pyrhus, Cethus, Synon, Thersites, &c.
-Written by Thomas Heywood. _Nicholas Okes._ [Epistles to the Reader and
-to Thomas Mannering, signed ‘Thomas Heywood’.]
-
-_Dissertation_: R. G. Martin, _A New Specimen of the Revenge Play_
-(1918, _M. P._ xvi. 1).
-
-The Epistles tell us that ‘these were the playes often (and not with
-the least applause,) Publickely Acted by two Companies, vppon one Stage
-at once, and haue at sundry times thronged three seuerall Theaters,
-with numerous and mighty Auditories’; also that they ‘haue beene long
-since Writ’. This, however, was in 1632, and I can only read the
-Epistles to the earlier _Ages_ as indicating that the _Iron Age_ was
-contemplated, but not yet in existence, up to 1613. I should therefore
-put the play _c._ 1613, and take the three theatres at which it was
-given to be the Curtain, Red Bull, and Cockpit. Fleay, i. 285, thinks
-that Part i was the anonymous _Troy_ produced by the Admiral’s on 22
-June 1596. More plausible is the conjecture of Greg (_Henslowe_, ii.
-180) that this was ‘an earlier and shorter version later expanded into
-the two-part play’. Spencer had a play on the Destruction of Troy at
-Nuremberg in 1613 (Herz, 66).
-
- _Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas. 1630–6_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1635, Aug. 29 (Weekes). ‘A booke called Pleasant Dialogues
-and Dramma’s selected out of Lucian Erasmus Textor Ovid &c. by Thomas
-Heywood.’ _Richard Hearne_ (Arber, iv. 347).
-
-1637. Pleasant Dialogues and Dramma’s, selected out of Lucian, Erasmus,
-Textor, Ovid, &c. With sundry Emblems extracted from the most elegant
-Iacobus Catsius. As also certaine Elegies, Epitaphs, and Epithalamions
-or Nuptiall Songs; Anagrams and Acrosticks; With divers Speeches (upon
-severall occasions) spoken to their most Excellent Majesties, King
-Charles, and Queene Mary. With other Fancies translated from Beza,
-Bucanan, and sundry Italian Poets. By Tho. Heywood. _R. O. for R. H.,
-sold by Thomas Slater._ [Epistle to the Generous Reader, signed ‘Tho.
-Heywood’, and Congratulatory Poems by Sh. Marmion, D. E., and S. N.]
-
-_Edition_ by W. Bang (1903, _Materialien_, iii).
-
-The section called ‘Sundry Fancies writ upon severall occasions’ (Bang,
-231) includes a number of Prologues and Epilogues, of which those which
-are datable fall between 1630 and 1636. Bang regards all the contents
-of the volume as of about this period. Fleay, i. 285, had suggested
-that _Deorum Judicium_, _Jupiter and Io_, _Apollo and Daphne_,
-_Amphrisa_, and possibly _Misanthropos_ formed the anonymous _Five
-Plays in One_ produced by the Admiral’s on 7 April 1597, and also that
-_Misanthropos_, which he supposed to bear the name _Time’s Triumph_,
-was played with _Faustus_ on 13 April 1597 and carelessly entered by
-Henslowe as ‘times triumpe & fortus’. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 183) says
-of the _Dialogues and Dramas_, ‘many of the pieces in that collection
-are undoubtedly early’. He rejects Fleay’s views as to _Misanthropos_
-on the grounds that it is ‘unrelieved tediousness’ and has no claim to
-the title _Time’s Triumph_, and is doubtful as to _Deorum Judicium_.
-The three others he seems inclined to accept as possibly belonging to
-the 1597 series, especially _Jupiter and Io_, where the unappropriated
-head of Argus in one of the Admiral’s inventories tempts him. He is
-also attracted by an alternative suggestion of Fleay’s that one of the
-_Five Plays in One_ may have been a _Cupid and Psyche_, afterwards
-worked up into _Love’s Mistress_ (1636). This he says, ‘if it existed’,
-would suit very well. Unfortunately, there is no evidence that it
-did exist. Moreover, P. A. Daniel has shown that certain lines found
-in _Love’s Mistress_ are assigned to Dekker in _England’s Parnassus_
-(1600, ed. Crawford, xxxi. 509, 529) and must be from the _Cupid and
-Psyche_ produced by the Admiral’s _c._ June 1600 (_Henslowe_, ii. 212).
-There is no indication that Heywood collaborated with Dekker, Chettle,
-and Day in this; but it occurs to me that, if he was still at the Rose,
-he may have acted in the play and cribbed years afterwards from the
-manuscript of his part. I will only add that _Misanthropos_ and _Deorum
-Judicium_ seem to me out of the question. They belong to the series of
-‘dialogues’ which Heywood in his Epistle clearly treats as distinct
-from the ‘dramas’, for after describing them he goes on, ‘For such as
-delight in Stage-poetry, here are also divers Dramma’s, never before
-published: Which, though some may condemne for their shortnesse, others
-againe will commend for their sweetnesse’. It is only _Jupiter and Io_
-and _Apollo and Daphne_, which are based on Ovid, and _Amphrisa_, for
-which there is no known source, that can belong to this group; and
-Heywood gives no indication as to their date.
-
- _Lost and Doubtful Plays_
-
-On _How to Learn of a Woman to Woo_, see s.v. _The Wise Woman of
-Hogsden_. The author of _The Second Part of Hudibras_ (1663) names
-Heywood as the author of _The Bold Beauchamps_, which is mentioned with
-_Jane Shore_ in _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_, Ind. 59.
-
-The following is a complete list of the plays, by Heywood or
-conjecturally assigned to him, which are recorded in Henslowe’s diary:
-
- _Possible plays for the Admiral’s, 1594–7_
-
-For conjectures as to the authorship by Heywood of _Godfrey of
-Bulloigne_ (1594), _The Siege of London_ (>1594), _Wonder of a Woman_
-(1595), _Seleo and Olympo_ (1595), _1, 2 Hercules_ (1595), _Troy_
-(1596), _Five Plays in One_ (1597), _Time’s Triumph_ (>1597), see _The
-Four Prentices_, the anonymous _Edward IV_, W. Rowley’s _A New Wonder_,
-_The Golden Age_, _The Silver Age_, _The Iron Age_, _Pleasant Dialogues
-and Dramas_.
-
- _Plays for the Admiral’s, 1598–1603_
-
-(i) _War without Blows and Love without Suit._
-
-Dec. 1598–Jan. 1599; identified, not plausibly, by Fleay, i. 287, with
-the anonymous _Thracian Wonder_ (q.v.).
-
-(ii) _Joan as Good as my Lady._
-
-Feb. 1599, identified, conjecturally, by Fleay, i. 298, with _A
-Maidenhead Well Lost_, printed as Heywood’s in 1634.
-
-(iii) _1 The London Florentine._
-
-With Chettle, Dec. 1602–Jan. 1603.
-
- _Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3_
-
-(iv) _Albere Galles._
-
-With Smith, Sept. 1602, possibly identical with the anonymous _Nobody
-and Somebody_ (q.v.).
-
-(v) _Cutting Dick_ (additions only).
-
-Sept. 1602, identified by Fleay, ii. 319, with the anonymous _Trial of
-Chivalry_, but not plausibly (Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 231).
-
-(vi) _Marshal Osric._
-
-With Smith, Sept. 1602, conceivably identical with _The Royal King and
-the Loyal Subject_ (q.v.).
-
-(vii) _1 Lady Jane._
-
-With Chettle, Dekker, Smith, and Webster, Oct. 1602, doubtless
-represented by the extant _Sir Thomas Wyatt_ of Dekker (q.v.) and
-Webster, in which, however, Heywood’s hand has not been traced.
-
-(viii) _Christmas Comes but Once a Year_.
-
-With Chettle, Dekker, and Webster, Nov. 1602.
-
-(ix) _The Blind Eats many a Fly_.
-
-Nov. 1602–Jan. 1603.
-
-(x) [Unnamed play.]
-
-With Chettle, Jan. 1603, but apparently not finished, or possibly
-identical with the _Shore_ of Chettle (q.v.) and Day. The title _Like
-Quits Like_, inserted into one entry for this play, is a forgery (Greg,
-_Henslowe_, i. xliii).
-
-(xi) _A Woman Killed With Kindness_.
-
-Feb.–March 1603. _Vide supra._
-
-Heywood’s hand or ‘finger’ has also been suggested in the _Appius and
-Virginia_ printed as Webster’s (q.v.), in _Pericles_, and in _Fair Maid
-of the Exchange_, _George a Greene_, _How a Man May Choose a Good Wife
-from a Bad_, _Thomas Lord Cromwell_, and _Work for Cutlers_ (cf. ch.
-xxiv).
-
-
-GRIFFIN HIGGS (1589–1659).
-
-A student at St. John’s, Oxford (1606), afterwards Fellow of Merton
-(1611), Chaplain to Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia (1627), and Dean of
-Lichfield (1638). The MS. of _The Christmas Prince_ (_1607_) was once
-thought to be in his handwriting (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-THOMAS HUGHES (_c._ 1588).
-
-A Cheshire man, who matriculated from Queens’ College, Cambridge, in
-Nov. 1571 and became Fellow of the College on 8 Sept. 1576.
-
- _The Misfortunes of Arthur. 28 Feb. 1588_
-
-1587. Certain deuises and shewes presented to her Maiestie by the
-Gentlemen of Grayes Inne at her Highnesse Court in Greenewich, the
-twenty-eighth day of Februarie in the thirtieth yeare of her Maiesties
-most happy Raigne. _Robert Robinson._ [‘An Introduction penned by
-Nicholas Trotte Gentleman one of the society of Grayes Inne’; followed
-by ‘The misfortunes of Arthur (Vther Pendragons Sonne) reduced into
-Tragicall notes by Thomas Hughes one of the societie of Grayes Inne.
-And here set downe as it past from vnder his handes and as it was
-presented, excepting certaine wordes and lines, where some of the
-Actors either helped their memories by brief omission: or fitted their
-acting by some alteration. With a note at the ende, of such speaches
-as were penned by others in lue of some of these hereafter following’;
-Arguments, Dumb-Shows, and Choruses between the Acts; at end, two
-substituted speeches ‘penned by William Fulbecke gentleman, one of the
-societie of Grayes Inne’; followed by ‘Besides these speaches there was
-also penned a Chorus for the first act, and an other for the second
-act, by Maister Frauncis Flower, which were pronounced accordingly.
-The dumbe showes were partly deuised by Maister Christopher Yeluerton,
-Maister Frauncis Bacon, Maister Iohn Lancaster and others, partly by
-the saide Maister Flower, who with Maister Penroodocke and the said
-Maister Lancaster directed these proceedings at Court.’]
-
-_Editions_ in Collier, _Five Old Plays_ (1833), and Dodsley^4 (1874,
-iv), and by H. C. Grumbine (1900), J. S. Farmer (1911, _T. F. T._), and
-J. W. Cunliffe (1912, _E. E. C. T._).
-
-Of the seven collaborators, three--Bacon, Yelverton, and
-Fulbecke--subsequently attained distinction. It is to be wished that
-editors of more important plays had been as communicative as offended
-dignity, or some other cause, made Thomas Hughes.
-
-
-WILLIAM HUNNIS (?-1597).
-
-[Nearly all that is known of Hunnis, except as regards his connexion
-with the Blackfriars, and much that is conjectural has been gathered
-and fully illustrated by Mrs. C. C. Stopes in _Athenaeum_ and
-_Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_ papers, and finally in _William Hunnis and the
-Revels of the Chapel Royal_ (1910, _Materialien_, xxix).]
-
-The date of Hunnis’s birth is unknown, except as far as it can be
-inferred from the reference to him as ‘in winter of thine age’ in 1578.
-He is described on the title-page of his translation of _Certayne
-Psalmes_ (1550) as ‘seruant’ to Sir William Herbert, who became
-Earl of Pembroke. He is in the lists of the Gentlemen of the Chapel
-about 1553, but he took part in plots against Mary and in 1556 was
-sent to the Tower. He lost his post, but this was restored between
-Elizabeth’s accession in 1558 and the opening of the extant _Cheque
-Book_ of the Chapel in 1561, and on 15 Nov. 1566 he was appointed
-Master of the Children in succession to Richard Edwardes (q.v.). For
-the history of his Mastership, cf. ch. xii (Chapel). Early in 1559 he
-married Margaret, widow of Nicholas Brigham, Teller of the Exchequer,
-through whom he acquired a life-interest in the secularized Almonry at
-Westminster. She died in June 1559, and about 1560 Hunnis married Agnes
-Blancke, widow of a Grocer. He took out the freedom of the Grocers’
-Company, and had a shop in Southwark. He was elected to the livery of
-the Company in 1567, but disappears from its records before 1586. In
-1569 he obtained a grant of arms, and is described as of Middlesex.
-From 1576–85, however, he seems to have had a house at Great Ilford,
-Barking, Essex. His only known child, Robin, was page to Walter Earl
-of Essex in Ireland, and is said in _Leicester’s Commonwealth_ to have
-tasted the poison with which Leicester killed Essex in 1576 and to have
-lost his hair. But he became a Rider of the Stable under Leicester as
-Master of the Horse during 1579–83, and received payments for posting
-services in later years up to 1593. In 1562 William Hunnis became
-Keeper of the Orchard and Gardens at Greenwich, and held this post
-with his Mastership to his death. He supplied greenery and flowers
-for the Banqueting Houses of 1569 and 1571 (cf. ch. i). In 1570 the
-Queen recommended him to the City as Taker of Tolls and Dues on London
-Bridge, and his claim was bought off for £40. In 1583 he called
-attention to the poor remuneration of the Mastership, and in 1585 he
-received grants of land at Great Ilford and elsewhere. He died on 6
-June 1597.
-
-Hunnis published several volumes of moral and religious verse, original
-and translated: _Certayne Psalmes_ (1550); _A Godly new Dialogue of
-Christ and a Sinner_ (S. R. 1564, if this is rightly identified with
-the _Dialogue_ of Hunnis’s 1583 volume); _A Hive Full of Honey_ (1578,
-S. R. 1 Dec. 1577, dedicated to Leicester); _A Handful of Honnisuckles_
-(N.D., S. R. 11 Dec. 1578, a New Year’s gift to the Ladies of the Privy
-Chamber); _Seven Sobbes of a Sorrowful Soule for Sinne_ (1583, S. R.
-7 Nov. 1581, with the _Handful of Honnisuckles_, _The Widow’s Mite_,
-and _A Comfortable Dialogue between Christ and a Sinner_, dedicated to
-Lady Sussex); _Hunnies Recreations_ (1588, S. R. 4 Dec. 1587, dedicated
-to Sir Thomas Heneage). Several poems by Hunnis are also with those of
-Richard Edwardes and others in _The Paradyse of Daynty Deuises_ (1567);
-one, the _Nosegay_, in Clement Robinson’s _A Handfull of Pleasant
-Delites_ (1584); and it is usual to assign to him two bearing the
-initials W. H., _Wodenfride’s Song in Praise of Amargana_ and _Another
-of the Same_, in _England’s Helicon_ (1600).
-
-The name of no play by Hunnis has been preserved, although he may
-probably enough have written some of those produced by the Chapel boys
-during his Mastership. That he was a dramatist is testified to by the
-following lines contributed by Thomas Newton, one of the translators of
-Seneca, to his _Hive Full of Honey_.
-
- In prime of youth thy pleasant Penne depaincted Sonets sweete,
- Delightfull to the greedy Eare, for youthfull Humour meete.
- Therein appeared thy pregnant wit, and store of fyled Phraze
- Enough t’ astoune the doltish Drone, and lumpish Lout amaze,
- Thy Enterludes, thy gallant Layes, thy Rond’letts and thy Songes,
- Thy Nosegay and thy Widowes’ Mite, with that thereto belonges....
- ... Descendinge then in riper years to stuffe of further reache,
- Thy schooled Quill by deeper skill did graver matters teache,
- And now to knit a perfect Knot; In winter of thine age
- Such argument thou chosen hast for this thy Style full sage.
- As far surmounts the Residue.
-
-Newton’s account of his friend’s poetic evolution seems to assign his
-‘enterludes’ to an early period of mainly secular verse; but if this
-preceded his _Certayne Psalmes_ of 1550, which are surely of ‘graver
-matters’, it must have gone back to Henry VIII’s reign, far away from
-his Mastership. On the other hand, Hunnis was certainly contributing
-secular verse and devices to the Kenilworth festivities (cf. s.v.
-Gascoigne) only three years before Newton wrote. Mrs. Stopes suggests,
-with some plausibility, that the Amargana songs of _England’s Helicon_
-may come from an interlude. She also assigns to Hunnis, by conjecture,
-_Godly Queen Hester_, in which stress is laid on Hester’s Chapel Royal,
-and _Jacob and Esau_ (1568, S. R. 1557–8), which suggests gardens.
-
-
-LEONARD HUTTEN (_c._ 1557–1632).
-
-Possibly the author of the academic _Bellum Grammaticale_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-THOMAS INGELEND.
-
-Lee (_D. N. B._) conjecturally identifies Ingelend with a man of the
-same name who married a Northamptonshire heiress.
-
- _The Disobedient Child, c. 1560_
-
-_S. R._ 1569–70. ‘An enterlude for boyes to handle and to passe tyme
-at christinmas.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i. 398). [The method of
-exhaustions points to this as the entry of the play.]
-
-N.D. A pretie and Mery new Enterlude: called the Disobedient Child.
-Compiled by Thomas Ingelend late Student in Cambridge. _Thomas Colwell._
-
-_Editions_ by J. O. Halliwell (1848, _Percy Soc._ lxxv), in Dodsley^4
-(1874, ii), and by J. S. Farmer (1908, _T. F. T._).--_Dissertation_: F.
-Holthausen, _Studien zum älteren englischen Drama_ (1902, _E. S._ xxxi.
-90).
-
-J. Bolte, _Vahlen-Festschrift_, 594, regards this as a translation of
-the _Iuvenis, Pater, Uxor_ of J. Ravisius Textor (_Dialogi_, ed. 1651,
-71), which Holthausen reprints, but which is only a short piece in one
-scene. Brandl, lxxiii, traces the influence of the _Studentes_ (1549)
-of Christopherus Stymmelius (Bahlmann, _Lat. Dr._ 98). The closing
-prayer is for Elizabeth.
-
-
-JAMES I (1566–1625).
-
- _An Epithalamion on the Marquis of Huntly’s Marriage.
- 21 July 1588_
-
-R. S. Rait, _Lusus Regis_ (1901), 2, printed from _Bodleian MS._ 27843
-verses by James I, which he dated _c._ 1581. The occasion and correct
-date are supplied by another text, with a title, in A. F. Westcott,
-_New Poems of James I_ (1911). The bridal pair were George Gordon,
-6th Earl and afterwards 1st Marquis of Huntly, and Henrietta Stuart,
-daughter of Esme, Duke of Lennox. The verses consist of a hymeneal
-dialogue, with a preliminary invocation by the writer, and speeches by
-Mercury, Nimphes, Agrestis, Skolar, Woman, The Vertuouse Man, Zani,
-The Landvart Gentleman, The Soldat. The earlier lines seem intended to
-accompany a tilting at the ring or some such contest, but at l. 74 is a
-reference to the coming of ‘strangers in a maske’.
-
-Westcott, lviii, says that James helped William Fowler in devising a
-mimetic show for the banquet at the baptism of Prince Henry on 23 Aug.
-1594.
-
-
-JOHN JEFFERE (?-?).
-
-Nothing is known of him, beyond his possible authorship of the
-following play:
-
- _The Bugbears. 1563 <_
-
-[_MS._] _Lansdowne MS._ 807, f. 57. [The MS. contains the relics
-of John Warburton’s collection, and on a slip once attached to the
-fly-leaf is his famous list of burnt plays, which includes ‘Bugbear
-C. Jo^n. Geffrey’ (Greg in _3 Library_, ii. 232). It appears to be
-the work of at least five hands, of which one, acting as a corrector,
-as well as a scribe, may be that of the author. The initials J. B.
-against a line or two inserted at the end do not appear to be his, but,
-as there was no single scribe, he may be writer of a final note to
-the text, written in printing characters, ‘Soli deo honor et gloria
-Johannus Jeffere scribebat hoc’. This note is followed by the songs and
-their music, and at the top of the first is written ‘Giles peperel for
-Iphiginia’. On the last page are the names ‘Thomas Ba ...’ and ‘Frances
-Whitton’, which probably do not indicate authorship. A title-page may
-be missing, and a later hand has written at the head of the text, ‘The
-Buggbears’.]
-
-_Editions_ by C. Grabau (1896–7, _Archiv_, xcviii. 301; xcix. 311) and
-R. W. Bond (1911, _E. P. I._).--_Dissertation_: W. Dibelius (_Archiv_,
-cxii. 204).
-
-The play is an adaptation of A. F. Grazzini, _La Spiritata_ (1561), and
-uses also material from J. Weier (_De Praestigiis Daemonum_) (1563) and
-from the life of Michel de Nôtredame (Nostradamus), not necessarily
-later than his death in 1566. Bond is inclined to date the play, partly
-on metrical grounds, about 1564 or 1565. Grabau and Dibelius suggest a
-date after 1585, apparently under the impression that the name Giles
-in the superscription to the music may indicate the composition of
-Nathaniel Giles, of the Chapel Royal, who took his Mus. Bac. in 1585.
-But the name, whether of a composer, or of the actor of the part of
-Iphigenia, is Giles Peperel. The performers were ‘boyes’, but the
-temptation to identify the play with the _Effiginia_ shown by Paul’s at
-Court on 28 Dec. 1571 is repressed by the description of _Effiginia_ in
-the Revels account as a ‘tragedye’, whereas _The Bugbears_ is a comedy.
-Moreover, Iphigenia is not a leading part, although one added by the
-English adapter.
-
-
-LAURENCE JOHNSON (_c._ 1577).
-
-A possible author of _Misogonus_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-BENJAMIN JONSON (1572–1637).
-
-Benjamin Johnson, or Jonson, as he took the fancy to spell his name,
-was born, probably on 11 June 1572, at Westminster, after the death
-of his father, a minister, of Scottish origin. He was withheld, or
-withdrawn, from the University education justified by his scholastic
-attainments at Westminster to follow his step-father’s occupation
-of bricklaying, and when this proved intolerable, he served as a
-soldier in the Netherlands. In a prologue to _The Sad Shepherd_, left
-unfinished at his death in August 1637, he describes himself as ‘He
-that has feasted you these forty years’, and by 1597 at latest his
-connexion with the stage had begun. Aubrey tells us (ii. 12, 226) that
-he ‘acted and wrote, but both ill, at the Green Curtaine, a kind of
-nursery or obscure play-house, somewhere in the suburbes (I thinke
-towards Shoreditch or Clarkenwell)’, and again that he ‘was never a
-good actor, but an excellent instructor’. The earliest contemporary
-records, however, show Jonson not at the Curtain, but on the Bankside.
-On 28 July 1597 Henslowe (i. 200) recorded a personal loan to ‘Bengemen
-Johnson player’ of £4 ‘to be payd yt agayne when so euer ether I or any
-for me shall demande yt’, and on the very same day he opened on another
-page of his diary (i. 47) an account headed ‘Received of Bengemenes
-Johnsones share as ffoloweth 1597’ and entered in it the receipt of
-a single sum of 3_s._ 9_d._, to which no addition was ever made. Did
-these entries stand alone, one would infer, on the analogy of other
-transactions of Henslowe’s and from the signatures of two Admiral’s
-men as witnesses to the loan, that Jonson had purchased a share in
-the Admiral’s company for £4, that he borrowed the means to do this
-from Henslowe, and that Henslowe was to recoup himself by periodical
-deductions from the takings of the company as they passed through his
-hands. But there is no other evidence that Jonson ever had an interest
-in the Admiral’s, and there are facts which, if one could believe that
-Henslowe would regard the takings of any company but the Admiral’s as
-security for a loan, would lead to the conclusion that Jonson’s ‘share’
-was with Pembroke’s men at the Swan. The day of Henslowe’s entries,
-28 July 1597, is the very day on which the theatres were suppressed
-as a result of the performance of _The Isle of Dogs_ (cf. App. D, No.
-cx), and it is hardly possible to doubt that Jonson was one of the
-actors who had a hand with Nashe (q.v.) in that play. The Privy Council
-registers record his release, with Shaw and Spencer of Pembroke’s
-men, from the Marshalsea on 3 Oct. 1597 (Dasent, xxviii. 33; cf. App.
-D, No. cxii); while Dekker in _Satiromastix_ (l. 1513) makes Horace
-admit that he had played Zulziman in Paris Garden, and Tucca upbraid
-him because ‘when the Stagerites banisht thee into the Ile of Dogs,
-thou turn’dst Bandog (villanous Guy) & ever since bitest’. The same
-passage confirms Aubrey’s indication that Jonson was actor, and a bad
-actor, as well as poet. ‘Thou putst vp a supplication’, says Tucca, ‘to
-be a poor iorneyman player, and hadst beene still so, but that thou
-couldst not set a good face vpon ’t: thou hast forgot how thou amblest
-(in leather pilch) by a play-wagon, in the high way, and took’st mad
-Ieronimoes part, to get seruice among the mimickes.’ Elsewhere (l. 633)
-Tucca taunts him that ‘when thou ranst mad for the death of Horatio,
-thou borrowedst a gowne of Roscius the stager, (that honest Nicodemus)
-and sentst it home lowsie’. This imprisonment for the _Isle of Dogs_
-is no doubt the ‘bondage’ for his ‘first error’ to which Jonson refers
-in writing to Salisbury about _Eastward Ho!_ in 1605, and the ‘close
-imprisonment, under Queen Elizabeth’, during which he told Drummond he
-was beset by spies (Laing, 19). Released, Jonson borrowed 5_s._ more
-from Henslowe (i. 200) on 5 Jan. 1598, and entered into a relationship
-with him and the Admiral’s as a dramatist, which lasted intermittently
-until 1602. It was broken, not only by plays for the King’s men,
-whose employment of him, which may have been at the Curtain, was due,
-according to Rowe, to the critical instinct of Shakespeare (H.-P.
-ii. 74), and for the Chapel children when these were established at
-Blackfriars in 1600, but also by a quarrel with Gabriel Spencer, whose
-death at his hands during a duel with swords in Hoxton Fields on 22
-Sept. 1598 was ‘harde & heavey’ news to Henslowe (_Henslowe Papers_,
-48) and brought Jonson to trial for murder, from which he only escaped
-by reading his neck-verse (Jeaffreson, _Middlesex County Records_,
-i. xxxviii; iv. 350; cf. Laing, 19). Jonson’s pen was critical, and
-to the years 1600–2 belongs the series of conflicts with other poets
-and with the actors generically known as the _Poetomachia_ or Stage
-Quarrel (cf. ch. xi). Meanwhile Jonson, perhaps encouraged by his
-success in introducing a mask into _Cynthia’s Revels_ (1601), seems to
-have conceived the ambition of becoming a Court poet. At first he was
-not wholly successful, and the selection of Daniel to write the chief
-Christmas mask of 1603–4 appears to have provoked an antagonism between
-the two poets, which shows itself in Jonson’s qualified acknowledgement
-to Lady Rutland of the favours done him by Lady Bedford (_Forest_, xii):
-
- though she have a better verser got,
- (Or poet, in the court-account) than I,
- And who doth me, though I not him envy,
-
-and long after in the remark to Drummond (Laing, 10) that ‘Daniel was
-at jealousies with him’. But the mask was a form of art singularly
-suited to Jonson’s genius. In the next year he came to his own, and
-of ten masks at Court during 1605–12 not less than eight are his.
-This employment secured him a considerable vogue as a writer of
-entertainments and complimentary verses, and a standing with James
-himself, with the Earl of Salisbury, and with other persons of honour,
-which not only brought him pecuniary profit, but also enabled him to
-withstand the political attacks made upon _Sejanus_, for which he was
-haled before the Council, and upon _Eastward Ho!_, for which he was
-once more imprisoned. During this period he continued to write plays,
-with no undue frequency, both for the King’s men and for the Queen’s
-Revels and their successors, the Lady Elizabeth’s. As a rule, he had
-published his plays, other than those bought by Henslowe, soon after
-they were produced, and in 1612 he seems to have formed the design of
-collecting them, with his masks and occasional verses, into a volume
-of Works. Probably the design was deferred, owing to his absence in
-France as tutor to the son of Sir Walter Raleigh, from the autumn of
-1612 (_M. P._ xi. 279) to some date in 1613 earlier than 29 June, when
-he witnessed the burning of the Globe (_M. L. R._ iv. 83). For the
-same reason he took no part in the masks for the Princess Elizabeth’s
-wedding at Shrovetide. But he returned in time for that of the Earl of
-Somerset at Christmas 1613, and wrote three more masks before his folio
-_Works_ actually appeared in 1616. In the same year he received a royal
-pension of 100 marks.
-
-Jonson’s later life can only be briefly summarized. During a visit to
-Scotland he paid a visit to William Drummond of Hawthornden in January
-1619, and of his conversation his host took notes which preserve many
-biographical details and many critical utterances upon the men, books,
-and manners of his time. In 1621 (cf. ch. iii) he obtained a reversion
-of the Mastership of the Revels, which he never lived to enjoy. His
-masks continued until 1631, when an unfortunate quarrel with Inigo
-Jones brought them to an end. His play-writing, dropped after 1616,
-was resumed about 1625, and to this period belong his share in _The
-Bloody Brother_ of the Beaumont and Fletcher series, _The Staple of
-News_, _The New Inn_, _The Magnetic Lady_, and _The Tale of a Tub_.
-In 1637, probably on 6 August, he died. He had told Drummond ‘that
-the half of his comedies were not in print’, as well as that ‘of all
-his playes he never gained two hundreth pounds’ (Laing, 27, 35), and
-in 1631 he began the publication, by instalments, of a second volume
-of his Works. This was completed after his death, with the aid of Sir
-Kenelm Digby, in 1640 and 1641. But it did not include _The Case is
-Altered_, the printing of which in 1609 probably lacked his authority,
-or the Henslowe plays, of which his manuscripts, if he had any, may
-have perished when his library was burnt in 1623.
-
- _Collections_
-
- _F_{1}_ (_1616_)
-
-_S. R._ 1615, Jan. 20 (Tavernour). William Stansbye, ‘Certayne Masques
-at the Court never yet printed written by Ben Johnson’ (Arber, iii.
-562).
-
-1616. The Workes of Beniamin Jonson. _W. Stansby, sold by Rich.
-Meighen._ [Contains (_a_) commendatory verses, some reprinted from Qq,
-signed ‘I. Selden I.C.’, ‘Ed. Heyward’, ‘Geor. Chapman’, ‘H. Holland’,
-‘I. D.’, ‘E. Bolton’, and for three sets ‘Franc. Beaumont’; (_b_) nine
-plays, being all printed in Q, except _The Case is Altered_; (_c_)
-the five early entertainments; (_d_) the eleven early masks and two
-barriers, with separate title-page ‘Masques at Court, London, 1616’;
-(_e_) non-dramatic matter. For bibliographical details on both Ff.,
-see B. Nicholson, _B. J.’s Folios and the Bibliographers_ (1870, _4 N.
-Q._ v. 573); Greg, _Plays_, 55, and _Masques_, xiii, 11; G. A. Aitken,
-_B. J.’s Works_ (_10 N. Q._ xi. 421); the introductions to the Yale
-editions; and B. A. P. van Dam and C. Stoffel, _The Authority of the B.
-J. Folio of 1616_ (1903, _Anglia_, xxvi. 377), whose conclusion that
-Jonson did not supervise F_{1} is not generally accepted. It is to be
-noted that, contrary to the usual seventeenth-century practice, some,
-and possibly all, of the dates assigned to productions in F_{1} follow
-the Circumcision and not the Annunciation style; cf. Thorndike, 17,
-whose demonstration leaves it conceivable that Jonson only adopted the
-change of style from a given date, say, 1 Jan. 1600, when it came into
-force in Scotland.]
-
- _F_{2}_ (_1631–41_)
-
-1640. The Workes of Beniamin Jonson. _Richard Bishop, sold by Andrew
-Crooke._ [Same contents as F_{1}.]
-
-1640. The Workes of Benjamin Jonson. The second volume. Containing
-these Playes, Viz. 1 Bartholomew Fayre. 2 The Staple of Newes. 3 The
-Divell is an Asse. _For Richard Meighen._ [Contains (_a_) reissue of
-folio sheets of three plays named with separate title-pages of 1631;
-(_b_) _The Magnetic Lady_, _A Tale of a Tub_, _The Sad Shepherd_,
-_Mortimer his Fall_; (_c_) later masks; (_d_) non-dramatic matter. The
-editor is known to have been Sir Kenelm Digby.]
-
-_S. R._ 1658, Sept. 17. ‘A booke called Ben Johnsons Workes ye 3^d
-volume containing these peeces, viz^t. Ffifteene masques at court and
-elsewhere. Horace his art of Poetry Englished. English Gramar. Timber
-or Discoveries. Underwoods consisting of divers poems. The Magnetick
-Lady. A Tale of a Tub. The sad shephard or a tale of Robin hood. The
-Devill is an asse. Salvo iure cuiuscunque. _Thomas Walkley_ (Eyre,
-ii. 196).
-
-1658, Nov. 20. Transfer of ‘Ben Johnsons workes ye 3^d vol’ from
-Walkley to Humphrey Moseley (Eyre, ii. 206). [Neither Walkley nor
-Moseley ever published the _Works_.]
-
- _F_{3}_ (_1692_)
-
-1692. The Works of Ben Jonson, Which were formerly Printed in Two
-Volumes, are now Reprinted in One. To which is added a Comedy, called
-the New Inn. With Additions never before Published. _Thomas Hodgkin,
-for H. Herringham_ [&c.].
-
-The more important of the later collections are:
-
-1756. P. Whalley, _The Works of B. J._ 7 vols. [Adds _The Case is
-Altered_.]
-
-1816, 1846. W. Gifford, _The Works of B. J._ 9 vols.
-
-1828. J. Nichols, _The Progresses, Processions and Magnificent
-Festivities of King James the First_. 4 vols. [Prints the masks.]
-
-1871, &c. W. Gifford, edited by F. Cunningham, _The Works of B. J._ 3
-vols.
-
-1875. W. Gifford, edited by F. Cunningham, _The Works of B. J._ 9 vols.
-
-1893–5. B. Nicholson, _The Best Plays of B. J._ 3 vols. (_Mermaid
-Series_). [The nine plays of F_{1}.]
-
-1905–8 (_in progress_). W. Bang, _B. J.’s Dramen in Neudruck
-herausgegeben nach der Folio 1616_. (_Materialien_, vi.)
-
-1906. H. C. Hart, _The Plays of B. J._ 2 vols. (_Methuen’s Standard
-Library_). [_Case is Altered_, _E. M. I._, _E. M. O._, _Cynthia’s
-Revels_, _Poetaster_.]
-
-In the absence of a complete modern critical edition, such as is
-promised by C. H. Herford and P. Simpson from the Clarendon Press,
-reference must usually be made to the editions of single plays in the
-_Yale Studies_ and _Belles Lettres Series_.
-
-_Select Dissertations_: W. R. Chetwood, _Memoirs of the Life and
-Writings of B. J._ (1756); O. Gilchrist, _An Examination of the
-Charges of B. J.’s Enmity to Shakespeare_ (1808), _A Letter to W.
-Gifford_ (1811); D. Laing, _Notes of B. J.’s Conversations with
-Drummond of Hawthornden_ (1842, _Sh. Soc._); B. Nicholson, _The
-Orthography of B. J.’s Name_ (1880, _Antiquary_, ii. 55); W. Wilke,
-_Metrische Untersuchungen zu B. J._ (1884, _Halle diss._), _Anwendung
-der Rhyme-test und Double-endings test auf. B. J.’s Dramen_ (1888,
-_Anglia_, x. 512); J. A. Symonds, _B. J._ (1888, _English Worthies_);
-A. C. Swinburne, _A Study of B. J._ (1889); P. Aronstein, _B. J.’s
-Theorie des Lustspiels_ (1895, _Anglia_, xvii. 466), _Shakespeare and
-B. J._ (1904, _E. S._ xxxiv. 193); _B. J._ (1906, _Literarhistorische
-Forschungen_, xxxiv); E. Koeppel, _Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen B.
-J.’s, John Marston’s, und Beaumont und Fletcher’s_ (1895, _Münchener
-Beiträge_, xi), _B. J.’s Wirkung auf zeitgenössische Dramatiker_ (1906,
-_Anglistische Forschungen_, xx); J. H. Penniman, _The War of the
-Theatres_ (1897, _Pennsylvania Univ. Series_, iv. 3); E. Woodbridge,
-_Studies in J.’s Comedy_ (1898, _Yale Studies_, v); R. A. Small, _The
-Stage-Quarrel between B. J. and the so-called Poetasters_ (1899); B.
-Dobell, _Newly Discovered Documents_ (1901, _Athenaeum_, i. 369, 403,
-433, 465); J. Hofmiller, _Die ersten sechs Masken B. J.’s in ihrem
-Verhältnis zur antiken Literatur_ (1901, _Freising progr._); H. C.
-Hart, _B. J., Gabriel Harvey and Nash_, &c. (1903–4, _9 N. Q._ xi. 201,
-281, 343, 501; xii. 161, 263, 342, 403, 482; _10 N. Q._ i. 381); G.
-Sarrazin, _Nym und B. J._ (1904, _Jahrbuch_, xl. 212); M, Castelain,
-_B. J., l’Homme et l’Œuvre_ (1907); _Shakespeare and B. J._ (1907,
-_Revue Germanique_, iii. 21, 133); C. R. Baskervill, _English Elements
-in J.’s Early Comedy_ (1911, _Texas Univ. Bulletin_, 178); W. D.
-Briggs, _Studies in B. J._ (1913–14, _Anglia_, xxxvii. 463; xxxviii.
-101), _On Certain Incidents in B. J.’s Life_ (1913, _M. P._ xi. 279),
-_The Birth-date of B. J._ (1918, _M. L. N._ xxxiii. 137); G. Gregory
-Smith, _Ben Jonson_ (1919, _English Men of Letters_); J. Q. Adams, _The
-Bones of Ben Jonson_ (1919, _S. P._ xvi. 289). For fuller lists, see
-Castelain, xxiii, and _C. H._ vi. 417.
-
- PLAYS
-
- _The Case is Altered. 1597 (?)-1609_
-
-_S. R._ 1609, Jan. 26 (Segar, ‘deputy to Sir George Bucke’). ‘A booke
-called The case is altered.’ _Henry Walley_, _Richard Bonion_ (Arber,
-iii. 400).
-
-1609, July 20. ‘Entred for their copie by direction of master Waterson
-warden, a booke called the case is altered whiche was entred for H.
-Walley and Richard Bonyon the 26 of January last.’ _Henry Walley_,
-_Richard Bonyon_, _Bartholomew Sutton_ (Arber, iii. 416).
-
-1609. [Three issues, with different t.ps.]
-
-(_a_) Ben: Ionson, His Case is Alterd. As it hath beene sundry times
-Acted by the Children of the Blacke-friers. _For Bartholomew Sutton._
-[B.M. 644, b. 54.]
-
-(_b_) A Pleasant Comedy, called: The Case is Alterd. As it hath beene
-sundry times acted by the children of the Black-friers. Written by Ben.
-Ionson. _For Bartholomew Sutton and William Barrenger._ [B.M. T. 492
-(9); Bodl.; W. A. White.]
-
-(_c_) A Pleasant Comedy, called: The Case is Alterd. As it hath
-been sundry times acted by the children of the Black-friers. _For
-Bartholomew Sutton and William Barrenger._ [Devonshire.]
-
-_Edition_ by W. E. Selin (1917, _Yale Studies_, lvi).--_Dissertation_:
-C. Crawford, _B. J.’s C. A.: its Date_ (1909, _10 N. Q._ xi. 41).
-
-As Nashe, _Lenten Stuff_ (_Works_, iii. 220), which was entered in S.
-R. on 11 Jan. 1599, refers to ‘the merry coblers cutte in that witty
-play of _the Case is altered_’, and as I. i chaffs Anthony Munday as
-‘in print already for the best plotter’, alluding to the description of
-him in Francis Meres’s _Palladis Tamia_ (S. R. 7 Sept. 1598), the date
-would seem at first sight to be closely fixed to the last few months of
-1598. But I. i has almost certainly undergone interpolation. Antonio
-Balladino, who appears in this scene alone, and whose dramatic function
-is confused with that later (II. vii) assigned to Valentine, is only
-introduced for the sake of a satirical portrait of Munday. He is
-‘pageant poet to the City of Milan’, at any rate ‘when a worse cannot
-be had’. He boasts that ‘I do use as much stale stuff, though I say it
-myself, as any man does in that kind’, and again, ‘An they’ll give me
-twenty pound a play, I’ll not raise my vein’. Some ‘will have every
-day new tricks, and write you nothing but humours’; this pleases the
-gentlemen, but he is for ‘the penny’. Crawford points out that there
-are four quotations from the play in Bodenham’s _Belvedere_ (1600), of
-which Munday was the compiler, and suggests that he would have left it
-alone had the ridicule of himself then been a part of it. I should put
-the scene later still. Antonio makes an offer of ‘one of the books’
-of his last pageant, and as far as is known, although Munday may have
-been arranging city pageants long before, the first which he printed
-was that for 1605. Nor does the reference to plays of ‘tricks’ and
-‘humours’ necessarily imply proximity to Jonson’s own early comedies,
-for Day’s _Law Tricks_ and his _Humour out of Breath_, as well as
-probably the anonymous _Every Woman in her Humour_, belong to 1604–8.
-Moreover, the play was certainly on the stage about this time, since
-the actors are called ‘Children of Blackfriars’, although of course
-this would not be inconsistent with their having first produced it when
-they bore some other name. The text is in an odd state. Up to the end
-of Act III it has been arranged in scenes, on the principle usually
-adopted by Jonson; after ‘Actus 3 [an error for 4] Scaene 1’ there is
-no further division, and in Act V verse and prose are confused. As
-Jonson was careful about the printing of his plays, as there is no
-epistle, and as _C. A._ was left out of the Ff., there is some reason
-to suppose that the publication in this state was not due to him. Is
-it possible that Day, whom Jonson described to Drummond as a ‘rogue’
-and a ‘base fellow’, was concerned in this transaction? It is obvious
-that, if I. i is a later addition, the original production may have
-been earlier than 1598. And the original company is unknown. The mere
-fact that the Children of the Blackfriars revived it shortly before
-1609 does not in the least prove that it was originally written for
-the Children of the Chapel. If Chapman’s _All Fools_ is a Blackfriars
-revival of an Admiral’s play, _C. A._ might even more easily be a
-Blackfriars revival of a play written, say, for the extinct Pembroke’s.
-With the assumption that _C. A._ was a Chapel play disappears the
-assumption that the Chapel themselves began their renewed dramatic
-activities at a date earlier than the end of 1600. Selin shows a fair
-amount of stylistic correspondence with Jonson’s other work, but it is
-quite possible that, as suggested by Herford (_R. E. C._ ii. 9), he had
-a collaborator. If so, Chapman seems plausible.
-
-_C. A._ has nothing to do with the _Poetomachia_. Hart (_9 N. Q._ xi.
-501, xii. 161, 263) finds in the vocabulary of Juniper a parody of the
-affected phraseology of Gabriel Harvey, and in the critical attitude of
-Valentine a foreshadowing of such autobiographical studies as that of
-Asper in _E. M. O._ His suggestion that the cudgel-play between Onion
-and Martino in II. vii represents the controversy between Nashe and
-Martin Marprelate is perhaps less plausible. Nashe would be very likely
-to think the chaff of Harvey ‘witty’.
-
- _Every Man In his Humour. 1598_
-
-_S. R._ [1600], Aug. 4. ‘Euery man in his humour, a booke ... to be
-staied’ (Arber, iii. 37). [_As You Like It_, _Henry V_, and _Much
-Ado about Nothing_ are included in the entry, which appears to be an
-exceptional memorandum. The year 1600 is conjectured from the fact that
-the entry follows another of May 1600.]
-
-1600, Aug. 14 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called Euery man in his humour.’
-_Burby and Walter Burre_ (Arber, iii. 169).
-
-1609, Oct. 16. Transfer of Mrs. Burby’s share to Welby (Arber, iii.
-421).
-
-1601. Every Man In his Humor. As it hath beene sundry times publickly
-acted by the right Honorable the Lord Chamberlaine his seruants.
-Written by Ben. Iohnson. _For Walter Burre._
-
-1616. Euery Man In His Humour. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere 1598.
-By the then Lord Chamberlaine his Seruants. The Author B. I. _By
-William Stansby._ [Part of F_{1}. Epistle to William Camden, signed
-‘Ben. Ionson’, and Prologue. After text: ‘This Comoedie was first
-Acted, in the yeere 1598. By the then L. Chamberlayne his Seruants.
-The principall Comœdians were, Will. Shakespeare, Ric. Burbadge,
-Aug. Philips, Ioh. Hemings, Hen. Condel, Tho. Pope, Will. Slye, Chr.
-Beeston, Will. Kempe, Ioh. Duke. With the allowance of the Master of
-Revells.’]
-
-_Editions_ by W. Scott (1811, _M. B. D._ iii), H. B. Wheatley (1877),
-W. M. Dixon (1901, _T. D._), H. Maas (1901, _Rostock diss._), W. A.
-Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), C. H. Herford (1913, _R. E. C._ ii), P.
-Simpson (1919), H. H. Carter (1921, _Yale Studies_, lii), and facsimile
-reprints of Q_{1} by C. Grabau (1902, _Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. 1), W.
-Bang and W. W. Greg (1905, _Materialien_, x).--_Dissertations_: A.
-Buff, _The Quarto Edition of B. J.’s E. M. I._ (1877, _E. S._ i. 181),
-B. Nicholson, _On the Dates of the Two Versions of E. M. I._ (1882,
-_Antiquary_, vi. 15, 106).
-
-The date assigned by F_{1} is confirmed by an allusion (IV. iv. 15) to
-the ‘fencing Burgullian’ or Burgundian, John Barrose, who challenged
-all fencers in that year, and was hanged for murder on 10 July (Stowe,
-_Annales_, 787). The production must have been shortly before 20 Sept,
-when Toby Mathew wrote to Dudley Carleton (_S. P. D. Eliz._ cclxviii.
-61; Simpson, ix) of an Almain who lost 300 crowns at ‘a new play
-called, Euery mans humour’. Two short passages were taken from the
-play in R. Allot’s _England’s Parnassus_ (1600, ed. Crawford, xxxii.
-110, 112, 436) which is earlier than Q_{1}. The Q_{1} text (I. i. 184)
-contains a hit at Anthony Munday in ‘that he liue in more penurie of
-wit and inuention, then eyther the Hall-Beadle, or Poet Nuntius’.
-This has disappeared from F_{1}, which in other respects represents a
-complete revision of the Q_{1} text. Many passages have been improved
-from a literary point of view; the scene has been transferred from
-Italy to London and the names anglicized; the oaths have all been
-expunged or softened. Fleay, i. 358, finding references to a ‘queen’ in
-F_{1} for the ‘duke’ of Q_{1} and an apparent dating of St. Mark’s Day
-on a Friday, assigned the revision to 1601, and conjectured that it was
-done by Jonson for the Chapel, that the Chamberlain’s published the Q
-in revenge, and that Jonson tried to stay it. Here he is followed by
-Castelain. But Q_{1} is a good edition and there is no sign whatever
-that it had not Jonson’s authority, and as the entry in S. R. covers
-other Chamberlain’s plays, it is pretty clear that the company caused
-the ‘staying’. St. Mark’s Day did not, as Fleay thought, fall on a
-Friday in 1601, and if it had, the dating is unchanged from Q_{1} and
-the references to a queen may, as Simpson suggests, be due to Jonson’s
-conscientious desire to preserve consistency with the original date of
-1598. Nor is the play likely to have passed to the Chapel, since the
-King’s men played it before James on 2 Feb. 1605 (cf. App. B). This
-revival would be the natural time for a revision, and in fact seems to
-me on the whole the most likely date, in spite of two trifling bits
-of evidence which would fit in rather better a year later. These are
-references to the siege of Strigonium or Graan (1595) as ten years
-since (III. i. 103), and to a present by the Turkey company to the
-Grand Signior (I. ii. 78), which was perhaps the gift worth £5,000
-sent about Christmas 1605 (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xv. 3; xvii. 35; xx.
-27). No doubt also the revision of oaths in Jacobean plays is usually
-taken as due to the _Act against Abuses of Players_ (1606), although
-it is conceivable that the personal taste of James may have required
-a similar revision of plays selected for Court performance at an
-earlier date. Or this particular bit of revision, which was done for
-other plays before F_{1}, may be of later date than the rest. Simpson
-is in favour, largely on literary grounds, for a revision in 1612,
-in preparation for F_{1}. The Prologue, which is not in Q, probably
-belongs to the revision, or at any rate to a revival later than 1598,
-since it criticizes not only ‘Yorke, and Lancasters long jarres’, but
-also plays in which ‘Chorus wafts you ore the seas’, as in _Henry V_
-(1599). These allusions would not come so well in 1612; on the other
-hand, Simpson’s date would enable us to suppose that the play in which
-the public ‘grac’d monsters’ was the _Tempest_ (cf. the similar jibe
-in _Bartholomew Fair_). The character Matheo or Mathew represents a
-young gull of literary tendencies, and is made to spout passages from,
-or imitations of, Daniel’s verses. Perhaps this implies some indirect
-criticism of Daniel, but it can hardly be regarded as a personal attack
-upon him.
-
- _Every Man Out of his Humour. 1599_
-
-_S. R._ 1600, April 8 (Harsnett). ‘A Comicall Satyre of euery man out
-of his humour.’ _William Holme_ (Arber, iii. 159).
-
-1638, April 28. Transfer by Smethwicke to Bishop (Arber, iv. 417).
-
-Q_{1}, 1600. The Comicall Satyre of Every Man Out Of His Humor. As
-it was first composed by the Author B. I. Containing more than hath
-been Publickely Spoken or Acted. With the seuerall Character of euery
-Person. _For William Holme._ [Names and description of Characters;
-Publisher’s note, ‘It was not neere his thoughts that hath publisht
-this, either to traduce the Authour; or to make vulgar and cheape, any
-the peculiar & sufficient deserts of the Actors; but rather (whereas
-many Censures flutter’d about it) to giue all leaue, and leisure, to
-iudge with Distinction’; Induction, by Asper, who becomes Macilente
-and speaks Epilogue, Carlo Buffone who speaks in lieu of Prologue, and
-Mitis and Cordatus, who remain on stage as Grex or typical spectators.]
-
-Q_{2}, 1600. [_Peter Short_] _For William Holme_. [W. W. Greg (1920,
-_4 Library_, i. 153) distinguished Q_{1}, of which he found a copy in
-Brit. Mus. C. 34, i. 29, from Q_{2}, (Bodl. and Dyce).]
-
-Q_{3}, 1600. _For Nicholas Linge._ [‘A careless and ignorant reprint’
-(Greg) of Q_{1}.]
-
-F_{1}, 1616. Euery Man Out Of His Humour. A Comicall Satyre. Acted
-in the yeere 1599. By the then Lord Chamberlaine his Seruants. The
-Author B. I. _William Stansby for Iohn Smithwicke._ [Epistle to the
-Inns of Court, signed ‘Ben. Ionson’. After text: ‘This Comicall Satyre
-was first acted in the yeere 1599. By the then Lord Chamberlaine his
-Seruants. The principall Comœdians were, Ric. Burbadge, Ioh. Hemings,
-Aug. Philips, Hen. Condel, Wil. Sly, Tho. Pope. With the allowance of
-the Master of Revels.’]
-
-_Facsimile reprints_ of Q_{1} by W. W. Greg and F. P. Wilson (1920, _M.
-S. R._) and of Q_{2, 3} by W. Bang and W. W. Greg (1907, _Materialien_,
-xvi, xvii).--_Dissertations_: C. A. Herpich, _Shakespeare and B. J. Did
-They Quarrel?_ (1902, _9 N. Q._ ix. 282); Van Dam and C. Stoffel, _The
-Authority of the B. J. Folio of 1616_ (1903, _Anglia_, xxvi. 377); W.
-Bang, _B. J. und Castiglione’s Cortegiano_ (1906, _E. S._ xxxvi. 330).
-
-In the main the text of F_{1} follows that of Q_{1} with some slight
-revision of wording and oaths. The arrangement of the epilogues is
-somewhat different, but seems intended to represent the same original
-stage history. In Q_{1} Macilente speaks an epilogue, ‘with Aspers
-tongue (though not his shape)’, evidently used in the theatre as it
-begs ‘The happier spirits in this faire-fild Globe’ to confirm applause
-
- as their pleasures Pattent: which so sign’d,
- Our leane and spent Endeuours shall renue
- Their Beauties with the _Spring_ to smile on you.
-
-Then comes a ‘Finis’ and on the next page, ‘It had another
-_Catastrophe_ or Conclusion at the first Playing: which (διὰ τὸ
-τὴν βασίλισσαν προσωποποιεῖσθαι) many seem’d not to relish it: and
-therefore ’twas since alter’d: yet that a right-ei’d and solide
-_Reader_ may perceiue it was not so great a part of the Heauen awry,
-as they would make it; we request him but to looke downe vpon these
-following Reasons.’ There follows an apology, from which it is clear
-that originally Macilente was cured of his envious humour by the
-appearance on the stage of the Queen; and this introduces a different
-epilogue of the nature of an address to her. At the end of all comes
-a short dialogue between Macilente, as Asper, and the _Grex_. There
-is no mention of the Globe, but as the whole point of the objection
-to this epilogue, which it is not suggested that Elizabeth herself
-shared, lay in the miming of the Queen, one would take it, did the
-Q_{1} stand alone, to have been, like its substitute, a theatre and
-not a Court epilogue. In F_{1}, however, we get successively (_a_) a
-shortened version of the later epilogue, (_b_) the dialogue with the
-_Grex_, followed by ‘The End’, and (_c_) a version of the original
-epilogue, altered so as to make it less of a direct address and headed
-‘Which, in the presentation before Queen E. was thus varyed’. It seems
-to me a little difficult to believe that the play was given at Court
-before it had been ‘practised’ in public performances, and I conclude
-that, having suppressed the address to a mimic Elizabeth at the Globe,
-Jonson revived it in a slightly altered form when he took the play
-to Court at Christmas. As to the date of production, Fleay, i. 361,
-excels himself in the suggestion that ‘the mention of “spring” and the
-allusion to the company’s new “patent” for the Globe in the epilogue’
-fix it to _c._ April 1599. Even if this were the original epilogue,
-it alludes to a coming and not a present spring, and might have been
-written at any time in the winter, either before or after the New Year.
-Obviously, too, there can be no allusion to an Elizabethan patent for
-the Globe, which never existed. I do not agree with Small, 21, that
-the Globe was not opened until early in 1600, nor do I think that any
-inference can be drawn from the not very clear notes of dramatic time
-in I. iii and III. ii. At first sight it seems natural to suppose that
-the phrase ‘would I had one of Kempes shooes to throw after you’ (IV.
-v) was written later than at any rate the planning of the famous morris
-to Norwich, which lasted from 11 Feb. to 11 March 1600 and at the end
-of which Kempe hung his shoes in Norwich Guildhall. Certainly it cannot
-refer, as Fleay thinks, merely to Kempe’s leaving the Chamberlain’s
-men. Conceivably it might be an interpolation of later date than the
-original production. Creizenach, 303, however, points out that in 1599
-Thomas Platter saw a comedy in which a servant took off his shoe and
-threw it at his master, and suggests that this was a bit of common-form
-stage clownery, in which case the Norwich dance would not be concerned.
-The performance described by Platter was in September or October, and
-apparently at the Curtain (cf. ch. xvi, introd.). Kempe may quite
-well have been playing then at the Curtain with a fresh company after
-the Chamberlain’s moved to the Globe. Perhaps the episode had already
-found a place in Phillips’s _Jig of the Slippers_, printed in 1595
-and now lost (cf. ch. xviii). If 1600 is the date of _E. M. O._, the
-Court performance may have been that of 3 February, or perhaps more
-probably may have fallen in the following winter, which would explain
-the divergence between Q_{1} and F_{1} as to the epilogues. But it
-must be remembered that the F_{1} date is 1599, and that most, if not
-quite all, of the F_{1} dates follow Circumcision style, although
-Jonson may not have adopted this style as early as 1600. On the whole,
-I think that the balance of probability is distinctly in favour of
-1599. If so, the production must have been fairly late in that year,
-as there is a hit (III. i) at the _Histriomastix_ of the same autumn.
-The play has been hunted through and through for personalities, most
-of which are effectively refuted by Small. Most of the characters are
-types rather than individuals, and social types rather than literary
-or stage types. I do not think there are portraits of Daniel, Lyly,
-Drayton, Donne, Chapman, Munday, Shakespeare, Burbadge, in the play or
-its induction at all. Nor do I think there are portraits in the strict
-sense of Marston and Dekker, although no doubt some parody of Marston’s
-‘fustian’ vocabulary is put into the mouth of Clove (iii. 1), and, on
-the other hand, the characters of Carlo Buffone and Fastidious Brisk
-have analogies with the Anaides and Hedon of _Cynthia’s Revels_, and
-these again with the Demetrius and Crispinus of _Poetaster_, who are
-undoubtedly Dekker and Marston. But we know from Aubrey, ii. 184, that
-Carlo was Charles Chester, a loose-tongued man about town, to whom
-there are many contemporary references. To those collected by Small and
-Hart (_10 N. Q._ i. 381) I may add Chamberlain, 7, Harington, _Ulysses
-upon Ajax_ (1596), 58, and _Hatfield Papers_, iv. 210, 221; x. 287.
-The practical joke of sealing up Carlo’s mouth with wax (V. iii) was,
-according to Aubrey, played upon Chester by Raleigh, and there may be
-traits of Raleigh in Puntarvolo, perhaps combined with others of Sir
-John Harington, while Hart finds in the mouths both of Puntarvolo and
-of Fastidious Brisk the vocabulary of Gabriel Harvey. The play was
-revived at Court on 8 Jan. 1605.
-
- _Cynthia’s Revels. 1600–1_
-
-_S. R._ 1601, May 23 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called Narcissus the
-fountaine of self-love.’ _Walter Burre_ (Arber, iii. 185).
-
-1601. The Fountaine of Selfe-Loue. Or Cynthias Reuels. As it hath beene
-sundry times priuately acted in the Black-Friers by the Children of
-her Maiesties Chappell. Written by Ben: Iohnson. _For Walter Burre._
-[Induction, Prologue, and Epilogue.]
-
-1616. Cynthias Revels, Or The Fountayne of selfe-loue. A Comicall
-Satyre. Acted in the yeere 1600. By the then Children of Queene
-Elizabeth’s Chappel. The Author B. I. _William Stansby._ [Part of
-F_{1}. Epistle to the Court, signed ‘Ben Ionson’, Induction, Prologue,
-and Epilogue. After text: ‘This Comicall Satyre was first acted, in
-the yeere 1600. By the then Children of Queene Elizabeths Chappell.
-The principall Comœdians were, Nat. Field, Ioh. Underwood, Sal. Pavy,
-Rob. Baxter, Tho. Day, Ioh. Frost. With the allowance of the Master of
-Revells.’]
-
-_Edition_ by A. C. Judson (1912, _Yale Studies_, xlv), and facsimile
-reprint of Q by W. Bang and L. Krebs (1908, _Materialien_, xxii).
-
-The difference between the Q and F_{1} texts amounts to more than mere
-revision of wording and of oaths. _Criticus_ is renamed _Crites_, and
-the latter half of the play is given in a longer form, parts of IV. i
-and IV. iii, and the whole of V. i-iv appearing in F_{1} alone. I think
-the explanation is to be found in a shortening of the original text
-for representation, rather than in subsequent additions. Jonson’s date
-for the play is 1600. This Small, 23, would translate as Feb. or March
-1601, neglecting the difficulty due to the possibility that Jonson’s
-date represents Circumcision style. He relies on V. xi, where Cynthia
-says:
-
- For so Actaeon, by presuming farre,
- Did (to our griefe) incurre a fatall doome;
- ... But are we therefore judged too extreme?
- Seemes it no crime, to enter sacred bowers,
- And hallowed places, with impure aspect,
- Most lewdly to pollute?
-
-Rightly rejecting the suggestion of Fleay, i. 363, that this alludes to
-Nashe and the _Isle of Dogs_, Small refers it to the disgrace of Essex,
-and therefore dates the play after his execution on 25 Feb. 1601.
-But surely the presumption which Jonson has in mind is not Essex’s
-rebellion, but his invasion of Elizabeth’s apartment on his return from
-Ireland in 1599, and the ‘fatall doome’ is merely his loss of offices
-in June 1600. I do not believe that a Court dramatist would have dared
-to refer to Essex at all after 25 Feb. 1601. I feel little doubt that
-the play was the subject of the Chapel presentation on 6 Jan. 1601, and
-the description of this by the Treasurer of the Chamber as including
-a ‘show’, which puzzled Small, is explained by the presence of a
-full-blown Court mask in V. vii-x. The original production will have
-been in the winter of 1600, soon after Evans set up the Chapel plays.
-As to personalities, Small rightly rejects the identifications of Hedon
-with Daniel, Anaides with Marston, and Asotus with Lodge. Amorphus
-repeats the type of Puntarvolo from _E. M. O._ and like Puntarvolo
-may show traces of the Harveian vocabulary. As _Satiromastix_, I. ii.
-191, applies to Crispinus and Demetrius the descriptions (III. iii)
-of Hedon as ‘a light voluptuous reveller’ and Anaides as ‘a strange
-arrogating puff’, it seems clear that Marston and Dekker, rightly or
-wrongly, fitted on these caps. Similarly, there is a clear attempt in
-_Satiromastix_, I. ii. 376, ‘You must be call’d Asper, and Criticus,
-and Horace’, to charge Jonson with lauding himself as Criticus. But
-the description of the ‘creature of a most perfect and diuine temper’
-in II. iii surely goes beyond even Jonson’s capacity of self-praise. I
-wonder whether he can have meant Donne, whom he seems from a remark to
-Drummond (Laing, 6) to have introduced as Criticus in an introductory
-dialogue to the _Ars Poetica_.
-
-Of the three children who appear in the induction, both Q and F_{1}
-name one as Jack. He might be either Underwood or Frost. Q alone
-(l. 214) names another, who played Anaides, as Sall, i.e. Salathiel
-Pavy. An interesting light is thrown on the beginnings of the Chapel
-enterprise by the criticism (_Ind._ 188), ‘They say, the _Vmbrae_, or
-Ghosts of some three or foure Playes, departed a dozen yeares since,
-haue been seene walking on your Stage here.’
-
- _The Poetaster. 1601_
-
-_S. R._ 1601, Dec. 21 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called Poetaster or his
-arrainement.’ _Matthew Lownes_ (Arber, iii. 198).
-
-1602. Poetaster or The Arraignment: As it hath beene sundry times
-priuately acted in the Blacke-Friers, by the Children of her Maiesties
-Chappell. Composed by Ben. Iohnson. _For M. L._ [Prologue; after text,
-Note to Reader: ‘Here (Reader) in place of the Epilogue, was meant to
-thee an Apology from the Author, with his reasons for the publishing of
-this booke: but (since he is no lesse restrain’d, then thou depriv’d of
-it by Authoritie) hee praies thee to think charitably of what thou hast
-read, till thou maist heare him speake what hee hath written.’]
-
-1616. Poëtaster, Or His Arraignement. A Comicall Satyre, Acted, in the
-yeere 1601. By the then Children of Queene Elizabeths Chappel. The
-Author B. I. _W. Stansby for M. Lownes._ [Part of F_{1}. Epistle to
-Richard Martin, by ‘Ben. Ionson’; Prologue. After text, Note to Reader,
-with ‘an apologeticall Dialogue: which was only once spoken vpon the
-stage, and all the answere I euer gaue, to sundry impotent libells then
-cast out (and some yet remayning) against me, and this Play’. After the
-dialogue: ‘This comicall Satyre was first acted, in the yeere 1601.
-By the then Children of Queene Elizabeths Chappell. The principall
-Comœdians were, Nat. Field, Ioh. Vnderwood, Sal. Pavy, Will. Ostler,
-Tho. Day, Tho. Marton. With the allowance of the Master of Revells.’]
-
-_Editions_ by H. S. Mallory (1905, _Yale Studies_, xxvii), J. H.
-Penniman (1913, _B. L._).
-
-The play is admittedly an attack upon the poetaster represented as
-Crispinus, and his identity is clear from Jonson’s own statement
-to Drummond (Laing, 20) that ‘he had many quarrells with Marston,
-beat him, and took his pistol from him, wrote his Poetaster on him’.
-Marston’s vocabulary is elaborately ridiculed in V. iii. Nor is there
-any reason to doubt that Demetrius Fannius, ‘a dresser of plaies about
-the towne, here’, who has been ‘hir’d to abuse Horace, and bring him
-in, in a play’ (III. iv. 367), is Dekker, who certainly associated
-himself with Marston as a victim of Jonson’s arraignment, and wrote
-_Satiromastix_ (q.v.) in reply. At the same time these characters
-continue the types of Hedon and Anaides from _Cynthia’s Revels_,
-although these were not literary men. Horace is Jonson himself, as the
-rival portrait of Horace in _Satiromastix_ shows, while Dekker tells
-us that Tucca is ‘honest Capten Hannam’, doubtless the Jack Hannam
-traceable as a Captain under Drake in 1585; cf. the reference to him
-in a letter of that year printed by F. P. Wilson in _M. L. R._ xv. 81.
-Fleay, i. 367, has a long list of identifications of minor personages,
-Ovid with Donne, Tibullus with Daniel, and so forth, all of which may
-safely be laid aside, and in particular I do not think that the fine
-eulogies of Virgil (V. i) are meant for Chapman, or for Shakespeare,
-applicable as some of them are to him, or for any one but Virgil. On
-the matter of identifications there is little to add to the admirable
-treatment of Small, 25. But in addition to the personal attacks,
-the play clearly contains a more generalized criticism of actors,
-the challenge of which seems to have been specially taken up by the
-Chamberlain’s men (cf. ch. xi), while there is evidence that Tucca
-and, I suppose, Lupus were taken amiss by the soldiers and the lawyers
-respectively. The latter at least were powerful, and in the epistle
-to Martin Jonson speaks of the play as one ‘for whose innocence,
-as for the Authors, you were once a noble and timely undertaker, to
-the greatest Iustice of this Kingdome’, and on behalf of posterity
-acknowledges a debt for ‘the reading of that ... which so much
-ignorance, and malice of the times, then conspir’d to haue supprest’.
-Evidently Jonson had not made matters better by his Apologetical
-Dialogue, the printing of which with the play was restrained. In this
-he denies that he
-
- tax’d
- The Law, and Lawyers; Captaines; and the Players
- By their particular names;
-
-but admits his intention to try and shame the
-
- Fellowes of practis’d and most laxative tongues,
-
-of whom he says, that during
-
- three yeeres,
- They did provoke me with their petulant stiles
- On every stage.
-
-Now he has done with it, will not answer the ‘libells’, or the
-‘untrussers’ (i. e. _Satiromastix_), and is turning to tragedy.
-
-Jonson gives the date of production as 1601. The play followed
-_Cynthia’s Revels_, criticisms on the epilogue of which inspired its
-‘armed Prologue’, who sets a foot on Envy. Envy has been waiting
-fifteen weeks since the plot was an ‘embrion’, and this is chaffed in
-_Satiromastix_, I. ii. 447, ‘What, will he bee fifteene weekes about
-this cockatrice’s egge too?’ Later (V. ii. 218) Horace is told, ‘You
-and your itchy poetry breake out like Christmas, but once a yeare’.
-This stung Jonson, who replied in the Apologetical Dialogue,
-
- _Polyposus._ They say you are slow,
- And scarse bring forth a play a yeere.
- _Author._ ’Tis true.
- I would they could not say that I did that.
-
-The year’s interval must not be pressed too closely. On the other
-hand, I do not know why Small, 25, assumes that the fifteen weeks
-spent on the _Poetaster_ began directly after _Cynthia’s Revels_ was
-produced, whatever that date may be. It must have come very near that
-of _Satiromastix_, for Horace knows that Demetrius has been hired to
-write a play on him. On the other hand, _Satiromastix_ cannot possibly
-have been actually written until the contents of _Poetaster_ were known
-to Dekker. The S. R. entry of _Satiromastix_ is 11 Nov. 1601, and the
-two dates of production may reasonably be placed in the late spring or
-early autumn of the same year. The Note to the Reader in Q shows that
-the Dialogue had been restrained before _Poetaster_ itself appeared in
-1602. Probably it was spoken in December between the two S. R. entries.
-Hart (_9 N. Q._ xi. 202) assuming that the contemplated tragedy was
-_Sejanus_ (q.v.) put it in 1603, but this is too late.
-
- _Sejanus. 1603_
-
-_S. R._ 1604, Nov. 2 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called the tragedie of
-Seianus written by Beniamin Johnson.’ _Edward Blunt_ (Arber, iii. 273).
-
-1605, Aug. 6. Transfer from Blount to Thomas Thorpe (Arber, iii. 297).
-
-1610, Oct. 3. Transfer from Thorpe to Walter Burre (Arber, iii. 445).
-
-1605. Seianus his fall. Written by Ben: Ionson. _G. Eld for Thomas
-Thorpe._ [Epistle to Readers, signed ‘Ben. Jonson’; Commendatory
-Verses, signed ‘Georgius Chapmannus’, ‘Hugh Holland’, ‘Cygnus’, ‘Th.
-R.’, ‘Johannes Marstonius’, ‘William Strachey’, ‘ΦΙΛΟΣ’, ‘Ev. B.’;
-Argument.]
-
-1616. Seianus his Fall. A Tragœdie. Acted, in the yeere 1603. By the
-K. Maiesties Servants. The Author B. I. _William Stansby._ [Part of
-F_{1}. Epistle to Esmé, Lord Aubigny, signed ‘Ben. Ionson’. After
-text: ‘This Tragœdie was first acted, in the yeere 1603. By the Kings
-Maiesties Servants. The principall Tragœdians were, Ric. Burbadge,
-Will. Shake-Speare, Aug. Philips, Ioh. Hemings, Will. Sly, Hen. Condel,
-Ioh. Lowin, Alex. Cooke. With the allowance of the Master of Revells.’]
-
-_Editions_ by W. D. Briggs (1911, _B. L._) and W. A. Neilson (1911,
-_C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_: B. Nicholson, _Shakespeare not the
-Part-Author of B. J.’s S._ (1874, _Acad._ ii. 536); W. A. Henderson,
-_Shakespeare and S._ (1894, _8 N. Q._ v. 502).
-
-As the theatres were probably closed from Elizabeth’s death to March
-1604, the production may have been at Court in the autumn or winter
-of 1603, although, if _Sejanus_ is the something ‘high, and aloofe’
-contemplated at the end of the Apologetical Dialogue to _Poetaster_
-(q.v.), it must have been in Jonson’s mind since 1601. The epistle to
-Aubigny admits the ‘violence’ which the play received in public, and
-‘Ev. B.’s’ verses indicate that this ‘beastly rage’ was at the Globe.
-Marston’s verses were presumably written before his renewed quarrel
-with Jonson over _Eastward Ho!_ (q.v.), and there appears to be an
-unkindly reference to _Sejanus_ in the epistle to his _Sophonisba_
-(1606). But either _Eastward Ho!_ or something else caused publication
-to be delayed for nearly a year after the S. R. entry, since Chapman’s
-verses contain a compliment to the Earl of Suffolk,
-
- Who when our Hearde came not to drink, but trouble
- The Muses waters, did a Wall importune,
- (Midst of assaults) about their sacred River,
-
-which seems to refer to his share in freeing Jonson and Chapman from
-prison about Sept. or Oct. 1605. Chapman also has compliments to the
-Earls of Northampton and Northumberland. It must therefore be to a
-later date that Jonson referred, when he told Drummond (Laing, 22) that
-‘Northampton was his mortall enimie for beating, on a St. George’s
-day, one of his attenders; He was called before the Councell for his
-Sejanus, and accused both of poperie and treason by him’. Fleay, i.
-372, suggests that the reference at the end of the Q version of the
-Argument to treason against princes, ‘for guard of whose piety and
-vertue, the _Angels_ are in continuall watch, and _God_ himselfe
-miraculously working’, implies publication after the discovery of the
-Plot. On the other hand, one would have expected Chapman’s reference
-to Northumberland, if not already printed, to be suppressed, in view
-of the almost immediate suspicion of a connexion with the Plot that
-fell upon him. Castelain, 907, considers, and rightly rejects, another
-suggestion by Fleay that _Sejanus_ and not _Eastward Ho!_ was the cause
-of the imprisonment of Jonson and Chapman in 1605. Fleay supposed that
-Chapman was the collaborator of whom Jonson wrote in the Q epistle, ‘I
-would informe you, that this Booke, in all numbers, is not the same
-with that which was acted on the publike Stage, wherein a second pen
-had good share; in place of which I have rather chosen, to put weaker
-(and no doubt lesse pleasing) of mine own, then to defraud so happy
-a _Genius_ of his right, by my lothed usurpation’. Shakespeare also
-has been guessed at. If Jonson’s language was seriously meant, there
-were not, of course, many contemporaries of whom he would have so
-spoken. Probably the problem is insoluble, as the subject-matter of
-it has disappeared. It is difficult to believe that the collaborator
-was Samuel Sheppard, who in his _The Times Displayed in Six Sestyads_
-(1646) claims to have ‘dictated to’ Ben Jonson ‘when as Sejanus’ fall
-he writ’. Perhaps he means ‘been amanuensis to’.
-
- _Eastward Ho!_ (_1605_)
-
-_With_ Chapman (q.v.) _and_ Marston.
-
- _Volpone_ or _The Fox. 1606_
-
-[_MS._] J. S. Farmer (_Introd._ to _Believe As You List_ in _T. F. T._)
-states that a holograph MS. is extant. He may have heard of a modern
-text by L. H. Holt, used by J. D. Rea. If so, App. N is in error.
-
-_S. R._ 1610, Oct. 3. Transfer from Thomas Thorpe to Walter Burre of
-‘2 bookes the one called, Seianus his fall, the other, Vulpone or the
-ffoxe’ (Arber, iii. 445).
-
-1607. Ben: Ionson his Volpone Or The Foxe. _For Thomas Thorpe._
-[Dedicatory epistle by ‘Ben. Ionson’ to the two Universities, dated
-‘From my House in the Black Friars, the 11^{th} day of February, 1607’;
-Commendatory Verses, signed ‘I. D[onne]’, ‘E. Bolton’, ‘F[rancis]
-B[eaumont]’, ‘T. R.’, ‘D. D.’, ‘I. C.’, ‘G. C.’, ‘E. S.’, ‘I. F.’;
-Argument; Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1616. Volpone, or The Foxe. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere 1605. By
-the K. Maiesties Servants. The Author B. I. _William Stansby._ [Part
-of F_{1}. After text: ‘This Comoedie was first acted, in the yeere
-1605. By the Kings Maiesties Servants. The principall Comœdians were,
-Ric. Burbadge, Ioh. Hemings, Hen. Condel, Ioh. Lowin, Will. Sly, Alex.
-Cooke. With the allowance of the Master of Revells.’]
-
-_Editions_ by W. Scott (1811, _M. B. D._ iii) in _O. E. D._ (1830,
-i) and by H. B. Wilkins (1906), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), J.
-D. Rea (1919, _Yale Studies_).--_Dissertations_: F. Holthausen, _Die
-Quelle von B. J.’s V._ (1889, _Anglia_, xii. 519); J. Q. Adams, _The
-Sources of B. J.’s V._ (1904, _M. P._ ii. 289); L. H. Holt, _Notes on
-J.’s V._ (1905, _M. L. N._ xx. 63).
-
-Jonson dates the production 1605, and the uncertainty as to the style
-he used leaves it possible that this may cover the earlier part of
-1606. Fleay, i. 373, attempts to get nearer with the help of the news
-from London brought to Venice by Peregrine in II. i. Some of this does
-not help us much. The baboons had probably been in London as early as
-1603 at least (cf. s.v. _Sir Giles Goosecap_). The Tower lioness had a
-whelp on 5 Aug. 1604, another on 26 Feb. 1605, and two more on 27 July
-1605 (Stowe, ed. 1615, 844, 857, 870). The ‘another whelp’ of _Volpone_
-would suggest Feb.–July 1605. On the other hand, the whale at Woolwich
-is recorded by Stowe, 880, a few days after the porpoise at West Ham
-(not ‘above the bridge’ as in _Volpone_) on 19 Jan. 1606. Holt argues
-from this that, as Peregrine left England seven weeks before, the play
-must have been produced in March 1606, but this identification of
-actual and dramatic time can hardly be taken for granted. There are
-also allusions to meteors at Berwick and a new star, both in 1604, and
-to the building of a raven in a royal ship and the death of Stone the
-fool, which have not been dated and might help. Gawdy, 146, writes on
-18 June 1604 that ‘Stone was knighted last weeke, I meane not Stone the
-foole, but Stone of Cheapsyde’. Stone the fool was whipped about March,
-1605 (Winwood, ii. 52). The suggested allusion to _Volpone_ in Day’s
-_Isle of Gulls_ (q.v.) of Feb. 1606 is rather dubious. The ambiguity of
-style must also leave us uncertain whether Q and its dedication belong
-to 1607 or 1608, and therefore whether ‘their love and acceptance
-shewn to his poeme in the presentation’ by the Universities was in
-1606 or 1607. This epistle contains a justification of Jonson’s comic
-method. He has had to undergo the ‘imputation of sharpnesse’, but has
-never provoked a ‘nation, societie, or generall order, or state’, or
-any ‘publique person’. Nor has he been ‘particular’ or ‘personall’,
-except to ‘a mimick, cheater, bawd, or buffon, creatures (for their
-insolencies) worthy to be tax’d’. But that he has not wholly forgotten
-the _Poetomachia_ is clear from a reference to the ‘petulant stiles’ of
-other poets, while in the prologue he recalls the old criticism that he
-was a year about each play, and asserts that he wrote _Volpone_ in five
-weeks. The commendatory verses suggest that the play was successful.
-Fleay’s theory that it is referred to in the epilogue to the anonymous
-_Mucedorus_ (q.v.), as having given offence, will not bear analysis.
-The passage in III. iv about English borrowings from Guarini and
-Montaigne is too general in its application to be construed as a
-specific attack on Daniel. But the gossip of Aubrey, ii. 246, on Thomas
-Sutton, the founder of the Charterhouse, relates that ‘’Twas from him
-that B. Johnson took his hint of the fox, and by Seigneur Volpone is
-meant Sutton’.
-
- _Epicoene. 1609_
-
-_S. R._ 1610, Sept. 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called, Epicoene or the silent
-woman by Ben Johnson.’ _John Browne and John Busby_ (Arber, iii. 444).
-
-1612, Sept. 28. Transfer from Browne to Walter Burre (Arber, iii. 498).
-
-1609, 1612. Prints of both dates are cited, but neither is now
-traceable. The former, in view of the S. R. date, can hardly have
-existed; the latter appears to have been seen by Gifford, and for it
-the commendatory verses by Beaumont, found at the beginning of F_{1},
-were probably written.
-
-1616. Epicoene, Or The silent Woman. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere
-1609. By the Children of her Maiesties Revells. The Author B. I.
-_W. Stansby._ [Part of F_{1}. Epistle to Sir Francis Stuart, signed
-‘Ben. Ionson’; Two Prologues, the second ‘Occasion’d by some persons
-impertinent exception’; after text: ‘This Comœdie was first acted,
-in the yeere 1609. By the Children of her Maiesties Revells. The
-principall Comœdians were, Nat. Field, Will. Barksted, Gil. Carie,
-Will. Pen, Hug. Attawel, Ric. Allin, Ioh. Smith, Ioh. Blaney. With the
-allowance of the Master of Revells.’]
-
-1620. _William Stansby, sold by John Browne._
-
-_Editions_ in _O. E. D._ (1830, iii) and by A. Henry (1906, _Yale
-Studies_, xxxi) and C. M. Gayley (1913, _R. E. C._ ii).
-
-The first prologue speaks of the play as fit for ‘your men, and
-daughters of _white-Friars’_, and at Whitefriars the play was probably
-produced by the Revels children, either at the end of 1609, or, if
-Jonson’s chronology permits, early in 1610. Jonson told Drummond
-(Laing, 41) that, ‘When his play of a Silent Woman was first acted,
-ther was found verses after on the stage against him, concluding that
-that play was well named the Silent Woman, ther was never one man to
-say _Plaudite_ to it’. Fleay, i. 374, suggests an equation between Sir
-John Daw and Sir John Harington. In I. i. 86 Clerimont says of Lady
-Haughty, the President of the Collegiates, ‘A poxe of her autumnall
-face, her peec’d beautie’. I hope that this was not, as suggested by
-H. J. C. Grierson, _Poems of Donne_, ii. 63, a hit at Lady Danvers, on
-whom Donne wrote (Elegy ix):
-
- No _Spring_, nor _Summer_ Beauty hath such grace,
- As I have seen in one _Autumnall_ face.
-
-In any case, I do not suppose that these are the passages which led to
-the ‘exception’ necessitating the second prologue. This ends with the
-lines:
-
- If any, yet, will (with particular slight
- Of application) wrest what he doth write;
- And that he meant or him, or her, will say:
- They make a libell, which he made a play.
-
-Jonson evidently refers to the same matter in the Epistle, where
-he says: ‘There is not a line, or syllable in it changed from the
-simplicity of the first copy. And, when you shall consider, through the
-certaine hatred of some, how much a mans innocency may bee indanger’d
-by an vn-certaine accusation; you will, I doubt not, so beginne to
-hate the iniquitie of such natures, as I shall loue the contumely done
-me, whose end was so honorable, as to be wip’d off by your sentence.’
-I think the explanation is to be found in a dispatch of the Venetian
-ambassador on 8 Feb. 1610 (_V. P._ xi. 427), who reports that Lady
-Arabella Stuart ‘complains that in a certain comedy the playwright
-introduced an allusion to her person and the part played by the Prince
-of Moldavia. The play was suppressed.’ The reference may be to V. i. 17
-of the play:
-
- _La Foole._ He [_Daw_] has his boxe of instruments ...
- to draw maps of euery place, and person, where he comes.
-
- _Clerimont._ How, maps of persons!
-
- _La Foole._ Yes, sir, of Nomentack, when he was here, and
- of the Prince of _Moldauia_, and of his mistris, mistris
- _Epicoene_.
-
- _Clerimont._ Away! he has not found out her latitude, I
- hope.
-
-The Prince of Moldavia visited London in 1607 and is said to have been
-a suitor for Arabella, but if Jonson’s text is really not ‘changed
-from the simplicity of the first copy’, it is clear that Arabella
-misunderstood it, since Epicoene was Daw’s mistress.
-
- _The Alchemist. 1610_
-
-_S. R._ 1610, Oct. 3 (Buck). ‘A Comoedy called The Alchymist made by
-Ben: Johnson.’ _Walter Burre_ (Arber, iii. 445).
-
-1612. The Alchemist. Written by Ben Ionson. _Thomas Snodham for Walter
-Burre, sold by John Stepneth._ [Epistles to Lady Wroth, signed ‘Ben.
-Jonson’ and to the Reader; Commendatory Verses, signed ‘George Lucy’;
-Argument and Prologue.]
-
-1616. The Alchemist. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere 1610. By the Kings
-Maiesties Seruants. The author B. I. _W. Stansby._ [Part of F_{1}.
-After text: ‘This Comoedie was first acted, in the yeere 1610. By the
-Kings Maiesties Servants. The principall Comœdians were, Ric. Burbadge,
-Ioh. Hemings, Ioh. Lowin, Will. Ostler, Hen. Condel, Ioh. Vnderwood,
-Alex. Cooke, Nic. Tooley, Rob. Armin, Will. Eglestone. With the
-allowance of the Master of Revells.’]
-
-_Editions_ by W. Scott (1811, _M. B. D._ iii), C. M. Hathaway (1903,
-_Yale Studies_, xvii), H. C. Hart (1903, _King’s Library_), F. E.
-Schelling (1903, _B. L._), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), G. A.
-Smithson (1913, _R. E. C._).
-
-Jonson’s date is confirmed by the references in II. vi. 31 and IV. iv.
-29 to the age of Dame Pliant, who is 19 and was born in 1591. In view
-of the S. R. entry, one would take the production to have fallen in
-the earlier half of the year, before the plague reached forty deaths,
-which it did from 12 July to 29 Nov. The action is set in plague-time,
-but obviously the experience of 1609 and early years might suggest
-this. Fleay, i. 375, and others following him argue that the action
-of the play is confined to one day, that this is fixed by V. v. 102
-to ‘the second day of the fourth week in the eighth month’, and that
-this must be 24 October. They are not deterred by the discrepancy
-of this with III. ii. 129, which gives only a fifteen-days interval
-before ‘the second day, of the third weeke, in the ninth month’, i. e.
-on their principles 17 November. And they get over the S.R. entry by
-assuming that Jonson planned to stage the play on 24 October and then,
-finding early in October that the plague continued, decided to publish
-it at once. This seems to me extraordinarily thin, in the absence of
-clearer knowledge as to the system of chronology employed by Ananias
-of Amsterdam. Aubrey, i. 213, says that John Dee ‘used to distill
-egge-shells, and ’twas from hence that Ben Johnson had his hint of the
-alkimist, whom he meant’. The play was given by the King’s men at Court
-during 1612–13.
-
- _Catiline his Conspiracy. 1611_
-
-1611. Catiline his Conspiracy. Written by Ben: Ionson. _For Walter
-Burre._ [Epistles to William Earl of Pembroke, and to the Reader, both
-signed ‘Ben. Jonson’; Commendatory Verses, signed ‘Franc: Beaumont’,
-‘John Fletcher’, ‘Nat. Field’.]
-
-1616. Catiline his Conspiracy. A Tragoedie. Acted in the yeere 1611. By
-the Kings Maiesties Seruants. The Author B. I. _William Stansby._ [Part
-of F_{1}. After text: ‘This Tragœdie was first Acted, in the yeere
-1611. By the Kings Maiesties Servants. The principall Tragœdians were,
-Ric. Burbadge, Ioh. Hemings, Alex. Cooke, Hen. Condel, Ioh. Lowin, Ioh.
-Underwood, Wil. Ostler, Nic. Tooly, Ric. Robinson, Wil. Eglestone.’]
-
-1635.... ‘now Acted by his Maiesties Servants’.... _N. Okes for I. S._
-
-_Edition_ by L. H. Harris (1916, _Yale Studies_,
-liii).--_Dissertation_: A. Vogt, _B. J.’s Tragödie C. und ihre Quellen_
-(1905, _Halle diss._).
-
- _Bartholomew Fair. 1614_
-
-1631. Bartholomew Fayre: A Comedie, Acted in the Yeare, 1614. By the
-Lady Elizabeths Seruants. And then dedicated to King Iames of most
-Blessed Memorie; By the Author, Beniamin Iohnson. _I. B. for Robert
-Allot._ [Part of F_{2}. Prologue to the King; Induction; Epilogue.
-Jonson wrote (n.d.) to the Earl of Newcastle (_Harl. MS._ 4955, quoted
-in Gifford’s memoir and by Brinsley Nicholson in _4 N. Q._ v. 574): ‘It
-is the lewd printer’s fault that I can send ... no more of my book. I
-sent you one piece before, The Fair, ... and now I send you this other
-morsel, The fine gentleman that walks the town, The Fiend; but before
-he will perfect the rest I fear he will come himself to be a part under
-the title of The Absolute Knave, which he hath played with me.’]
-
-_Edition_ by C. S. Alden (1904, _Yale Studies_, xxv).--_Dissertation_:
-C. R. Baskervill, _Some Parallels to B. F._ (1908, _M. P._ vi. 109).
-
-No dedication to James, other than the prologue and epilogue, appears
-to be preserved, but Aubrey, ii. 14, says that ‘King James made
-him write against the Puritans, who began to be troublesome in his
-time’. The play was given at Court on 1 Nov. 1614 (App. B), and a
-mock indenture between the author and the spectators at the Hope, on
-31 Oct. 1614, is recited in the Induction and presumably fixes the
-date of production. One must not therefore assume that a ballad of
-_Rome for Company in Bartholomew Faire_, registered on 22 Oct. 1614
-(Arber, iii. 554), was aimed at Jonson. Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 78,
-follows Malone and Fleay, i. 80, in inferring from a mention of a
-forthcoming ‘Johnsons play’ in a letter of 13 Nov. 1613 from Daborne
-to Henslowe that the production may have been intended for 1613, but
-I think that Daborne refers to the revival of _Eastward Ho!_ The
-Induction describes the locality of the Hope as ‘being as durty as
-_Smithfield_, and as stinking euery whit’, and possibly glances at
-the _Winter’s Tale_ and _Tempest_ in disclaiming the introduction of
-‘a _Seruant-monster_’ and ‘a nest of _Antiques_’, since the author
-is ‘loth to make Nature afraid in his _Playes_, like those that
-beget _Tales_, _Tempests_, and such like _Drolleries_’. There is
-no actor-list, but in V. iii ‘Your best _Actor_. Your _Field_?’ is
-referred to on a level with ‘your _Burbage_’. Similarly the puppet
-Leander is said to shake his head ‘like an hostler’ and it is declared
-that ‘one _Taylor_, would goe neere to beat all this company, with
-a hand bound behinde him’. Field and Taylor were both of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men in 1614, while the allusion to Ostler of the King’s men
-is apparently satirical. The suggestion of Ordish, 225, that Taylor
-is the water poet, who had recently appeared on the Hope stage, is
-less probable. The ‘word out of the play, _Palemon_’ (IV. iii) is set
-against another, _Argalus_ ‘out of the _Arcadia_’, and might therefore,
-as Fleay, i. 377, thinks, refer to Daniel’s _Queen’s Arcadia_ (1605),
-but the Palamon of _T. N. K._ was probably quite recent. I see no
-reason to accept Fleay’s identification of Littlewit with Daniel; that
-of Lanthorn Leatherhead with Inigo Jones is more plausible. Gifford
-suggested that the burlesque puppet-play of Damon and Pythias in
-V. iv may have been retrieved by Jonson from earlier work, perhaps
-for the real puppet-stage, since ‘Old Cole’ is a character, and in
-_Satiromastix_ Horace is called ‘puppet-teacher’ (1980) and in another
-passage (607) ‘olde Coale’, and told that Crispinus and Demetrius ‘shal
-be thy Damons and thou their Pithyasse’.
-
- _The Devil Is An Ass 1616_
-
-1631. The Diuell is an Asse: A Comedie Acted in the yeare, 1616. By
-His Maiesties Seruants. The Author Ben: Ionson. _I. B. for Robert
-Allot._ [Part of F_{2}. Prologue and Epilogue. The play is referred to
-in Jonson’s letter to the Earl of Newcastle, quoted under _Bartholomew
-Fair_.]
-
-1641. _Imprinted at London._
-
-_Edition_ by W. S. Johnson (1905, _Yale Studies_,
-xxix).--_Dissertation_: E. Holstein, _Verhältnis von B. J.’s D. A. und
-John Wilson’s Belphegor zu Machiavelli’s Novelle vom Belfagor_ (1901).
-
-In the play itself are introduced references to a performance of _The
-Devil_ as a new play, to its playbill, to the Blackfriars as the house,
-and to Dick Robinson as a player of female parts (I. iv. 43; vi. 31;
-II. viii. 64; III. v. 38). Probably the production was towards the end
-rather than the beginning of 1616.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-I do not feel able to accept the view, expounded by Fleay, i. 370, 386,
-and adopted by some later writers, that _A Tale of a Tub_, licensed
-by Herbert on 7 May 1633, was only a revision of one of Jonson’s
-Elizabethan plays. It appears to rest almost wholly upon references
-to a ‘queen’. These are purely dramatic, and part of an attempt to
-give the action an old-fashioned setting. The queen intended is not
-Elizabeth, but Mary. There are also references to ‘last King Harry’s
-time’ (I. ii), ‘King Edward, our late liege and sovereign lord’ (I. v).
-A character says, ‘He was King Harry’s doctor and my god-phere’ (IV.
-i). The priest is ‘Canon’ or ‘Sir’ Hugh, and has a ‘Latin tongue’ (III.
-vii). ‘Old John Heywood’ is alive (V. ii).
-
-In 1619 Jonson told Drummond (Laing, 27) ‘That the half of his Comedies
-were not in print’. The unprinted ones of course included _Bartholomew
-Fair_ and _The Devil is an Ass_. He went on to describe ‘a pastorall
-intitled The May Lord’, in which he figured himself as Alkin. As it
-had a ‘first storie’, it may not have been dramatic. But Alkin appears
-in _The Sad Shepherd_, a fragment of a dramatic pastoral, printed in
-F_{2} with a prologue in which Jonson describes himself as ‘He that
-hath feasted you these forty yeares’, and which therefore cannot have
-been written long before his death in 1637. This is edited by W. W.
-Greg (1905, _Materialien_, xi) with an elaborate discussion in which
-he arrives at the sound conclusions that the theory of its substantial
-identity with _The May Lord_ must be rejected, and that there is no
-definite evidence to oppose to the apparent indication of its date in
-the prologue.
-
-It is doubtful whether any of Jonson’s early work for Pembroke’s and
-the Admiral’s, except perhaps _The Case is Altered_, ever found its way
-into print. The record of all the following plays, except the first, is
-in Henslowe’s diary (cf. Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 288).
-
-(_a_) _The Isle of Dogs._
-
-See s.v. Nashe.
-
-(_b_) On 3 Dec. 1597 he received £1 ‘vpon a boocke w^{ch} he showed the
-plotte vnto the company w^{ch} he promysed to dd vnto the company at
-crysmas’. It is just possible that this was _Dido and Aeneas_, produced
-by the Admiral’s on 8 Jan. 1598. But no further payment to Jonson is
-recorded, and it is more likely that _Dido and Aeneas_ was taken over
-from Pembroke’s repertory; and it may be that Jonson had not carried
-out his contract before the fray with Spencer in Sept. 1598, and that
-this is the ‘Bengemens plotte’ on which Chapman was writing a tragedy
-on the following 23 Oct. The theory that it is the _Fall of Mortimer_,
-still little more than a plot when Jonson died, may safely be rejected
-(Henslowe, ii. 188, 199, 224).
-
-(_c_) _Hot Anger Soon Cold._
-
-Written with Chettle and Porter in Aug. 1598 (Henslowe, ii. 196).
-
-(_d_) _Page of Plymouth._
-
-Written with Dekker in Aug. and Sept. 1599 (Henslowe, ii. 205).
-
-(_e_) _Robert the Second, King of Scots._
-
-A tragedy, written with Chettle, Dekker, ‘& other Jentellman’ (probably
-Marston) in Sept. 1599 (Henslowe, ii. 205).
-
-(_f_) Additions to _Jeronimo_.
-
-See s.v. Kyd, _Spanish Tragedy_.
-
-(_g_) _Richard Crookback._
-
-For this Jonson received a sum ‘in earnest’ on 22 June 1602, but it is
-not certain that it was ever finished (Henslowe, ii, 222).
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Jonson’s hand has been sought in _The Captain_ of the Beaumont (q.v.)
-and Fletcher series, and the anonymous _Puritan_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
- MASKS
-
- _Mask of Blackness. 6 Jan. 1605_
-
-[_MS._] _Brit. Mus. Royal MS._ 17 B. xxxi. [‘The Twelvth Nights
-Reuells.’ Not holograph, but signed ‘Hos ego versiculos feci. Ben.
-Jonson.’ A shorter text than that of the printed descriptions, in
-present tense, as for a programme.]
-
-_S. R._ 1608, April 21 (Buck). ‘The Characters of Twoo Royall Maskes.
-Invented by Ben. Johnson.’ _Thomas Thorpe_ (Arber, iii. 375).
-
-N.D. The Characters of Two royall Masques. The one of Blacknesse, The
-other of Beautie. personated By the most magnificent of Queenes Anne
-Queene of Great Britaine, &c. With her honorable Ladyes, 1605. and
-1608. at Whitehall: and Inuented by Ben: Ionson. _For Thomas Thorp._
-
-1616. The Queenes Masques. The first, Of Blacknesse: Personated at the
-Court, at White-Hall, on the Twelu’th night, 1605. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-_Edition_ in J. P. Collier, _Five Court Masques_ (1848, _Sh. Soc._ from
-MS.).
-
-The maskers, in azure and silver, were twelve nymphs, ‘negroes and
-the daughters of Niger’; the torchbearers, in sea-green, Oceaniae;
-the presenters Oceanus, Niger, and Aethiopia the Moon; the musicians
-Tritons, Sea-maids, and Echoes.
-
-The locality was the old Elizabethan banqueting-house at Whitehall
-(Carleton; Office of Works). The curtain represented a ‘landtschap’ of
-woods with hunting scenes, ‘which falling’, according to the Quarto,
-‘an artificial sea was seen to shoot forth’. The MS. describes the
-landscape as ‘drawne uppon a downe right cloth, strayned for the scene,
-... which openinge in manner of a curtine’, the sea shoots forth. On
-the sea were the maskers in a concave shell, and the torchbearers borne
-by sea-monsters.
-
-The maskers, on landing, presented their fans. They gave ‘their own
-single dance’, and then made ‘choice of their men’ for ‘several
-measures and corantoes’. A final dance took them back to their shell.
-
-This was a Queen’s mask, danced by the Queen, the Countesses of
-Bedford, Derby, and Suffolk, the Ladies Rich, Bevill, Howard of
-Effingham, Wroth, and Walsingham, Lady Elizabeth Howard, Anne Lady
-Herbert, and Susan Lady Herbert. The ‘bodily part’ was the ‘design and
-act’ of Inigo Jones.
-
-Sir Thomas Edmondes told Lord Shrewsbury on 5 Dec. that the mask was to
-cost the Exchequer £3,000 (Lodge, iii. 114). The same sum was stated by
-Chamberlain to Winwood on 18 Dec. to have been ‘delivered a month ago’
-(Winwood, ii. 41). Molin (_V. P._ x. 201) reported the amount on 19
-Dec. as 25,000 crowns. On 12 Dec. John Packer wrote to Winwood of the
-preparations, and after naming some of the maskers added, ‘The Lady of
-Northumberland is excused by sickness, Lady Hartford by the measles.
-Lady of Nottingham hath the polypus in her nostril, which some fear
-must be cut off. The Lady Hatton would feign have had a part, but some
-unknown reason kept her out’ (Winwood, ii. 39). The performance was
-described by Carleton to Winwood, as following the creation of Prince
-Charles as Duke of York on 6 Jan. (Winwood, ii. 44): ‘At night we had
-the Queen’s maske in the Banquetting-House, or rather her pagent. There
-was a great engine at the lower end of the room, which had motion,
-and in it were the images of sea-horses with other terrible fishes,
-which were ridden by Moors: The indecorum was, that there was all
-fish and no water. At the further end was a great shell in form of a
-skallop, wherein were four seats; on the lowest sat the Queen with my
-Lady Bedford; on the rest were placed the Ladies Suffolk, Darby, Rich,
-Effingham, Ann Herbert, Susan Herbert, Elizabeth Howard, Walsingham,
-and Bevil. Their apparell was rich, but too light and curtizan-like for
-such great ones. Instead of vizzards, their faces, and arms up to the
-elbows, were painted black, which was disguise sufficient, for they
-were hard to be known; but it became them nothing so well as their
-red and white, and you cannot imagine a more ugly sight, then a troop
-of lean-cheek’d Moors. The Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were both
-present, and sate by the King in state, at which Monsieur Beaumont
-quarrells so extreamly, that he saith the whole court is Spanish. But
-by his favour, he should fall out with none but himself, for they were
-all indifferently invited to come as private men, to a private sport;
-which he refusing, the Spanish ambassador willingly accepted, and
-being there, seeing no cause to the contrary, he put off Don Taxis,
-and took upon him El Señor Embaxadour, wherein he outstript our little
-Monsieur. He was ... taken out to dance, and footed it like a lusty old
-gallant with his country woman. He took out the Queen, and forgot not
-to kiss her hand, though there was danger it would have left a mark on
-his lips. The night’s work was concluded with a banquet in the great
-Chamber, which was so furiously assaulted, that down went table and
-tressels before one bit was touched.’ Carleton gives some additional
-information in another account, which he sent to Chamberlain on 7 Jan.
-(_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xii. 6, quoted by Sullivan, 28), as that the ‘black
-faces and hands, which were painted and bare up to the elbowes, was a
-very lothsome sight’, and he was ‘sory that strangers should see owr
-court so strangely disguised’; that ‘the confusion in getting in was
-so great, that some Ladies lie by it and complain of the fury of the
-white stafes’; that ‘in the passages through the galleries they were
-shutt up in several heapes betwixt dores and there stayed till all was
-ended’; and that there were losses ‘of chaynes, jewels, purces and such
-like loose ware’. References in letters to one Benson and by the Earl
-of Errol to Cecil (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xii. 16; xix. 25) add nothing
-material. Carleton’s account of the triumph of the Spanish ambassador
-is confirmed by reports of the Venetian (_V. P._ x. 212) and French
-(_B. M. King’s MS._ cxxvii, ff. 117, 127^v, 177^v; cf. Sullivan, 196–8)
-ambassadors. Beaumont had pleaded illness in order to avoid attending a
-mask on 27 Dec. 1604 in private, and the Court chose to assume that he
-was still ill on 6 Jan. This gave De Taxis and Molin an opening to get
-their private invitations converted into public ones. Beaumont lost his
-temper and accused Sir Lewis Lewknor and other officials of intriguing
-against him, but he had to accept his defeat.
-
-The Accounts of the Master of the Revels (Cunningham, 204) record
-‘The Queens Ma^{tis} Maske of Moures with Aleven Laydies of honnour’
-as given on 6 Jan. Reyher, 358, 520, notes references to the mask in
-accounts of the Treasurer of the Chamber and of the Office of Works,
-and quotes from the latter items for ‘framinge and settinge vpp of a
-great stage in the banquettinge house xl foote square and iiij^{or}
-foote in heighte with wheeles to goe on ... framinge and settinge vpp
-an other stage’.
-
-Many of the notices of the Queen’s mask also refer to another mask
-which was performed ‘among the noblemen and gentlemen’ (Lodge, iii.
-114) on 27 Dec. 1604, at the wedding of Sir Philip Herbert and Lady
-Susan Vere, daughter of the Earl of Oxford. The bride was herself a
-dancer in the Queen’s mask. The wedding mask, the subject of which
-was Juno and Hymenaeus, is unfortunately lost. The Revels Accounts
-(Cunningham, 204) tell us that it was ‘presented by the Earl of
-Pembroke, the Lord Willowbie and 6 Knightes more of the Court’, and
-Stowe’s _Chronicle_, 856, briefly records ‘braue Masks of the most
-noble ladies’. Carleton gave Winwood details of the wedding, and said
-(Winwood, ii. 43): ‘At night there was a mask in the Hall, which for
-conceit and fashion was suitable to the occasion. The actors were the
-Earle of Pembrook, the Lord Willoby, Sir Samuel [James?] Hays, Sir
-Thomas Germain, Sir Robert Cary, Sir John Lee, Sir Richard Preston,
-and Sir Thomas Bager. There was no smal loss that night of chaines and
-jewells, and many great ladies were made shorter by the skirts, and
-were well enough served that they could keep cut no better.’ Carleton
-wrote to Chamberlain (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xii. 6, quoted by Sullivan,
-25): ‘Theyre conceit was a representacion of Junoes temple at the lower
-end of the great hall, which was vawted and within it the maskers
-seated with staves of lights about them, and it was no ill shew.
-They were brought in by the fower seasons of the yeare and Hymeneus:
-which for songs and speaches was as goode as a play. Theyre apparel
-was rather costly then cumly; but theyr dancing full of life and
-variety; onely S^r Tho: Germain had lead in his heales and sometimes
-forgott what he was doing.’ There was a diplomatic contretemps on this
-occasion. At the wedding dinner the Venetian ambassador Molin was
-given precedence of the Queen’s brother, the Duke of Holstein, to the
-annoyance of the latter. But after dinner Molin was led to a closet and
-forgotten there until supper was already begun. Meanwhile the Duke took
-his place. There was a personal apology from the King, and at the mask
-Molin was given a stool in the royal box to the right of the King, and
-the Duke one to the left of the Queen. He preferred to stand for three
-hours rather than make use of it (Winwood, ii. 43; Sullivan, 25; _V.
-P._ x. 206).
-
-Carleton wrote to Winwood (ii. 44), ‘They say the Duke of Holst will
-come upon us with an after reckoning, and that we shall see him on
-Candlemas night in a mask, as he hath shewed himself a lusty reveller
-all this Christmas’. But if this mask ever took place, nothing is known
-of it.
-
- _Hymenaei. 5 Jan. 1606_
-
-1606. Hymenaei: or The Solemnities of Masque, and Barriers,
-Magnificently performed on the eleventh, and twelfth Nights,
-from Christmas; At Court: To the auspicious celebrating of the
-Marriage-vnion, betweene Robert, Earle of Essex, and the Lady Frances,
-second Daughter to the most noble Earle of Suffolke. By Ben: Ionson.
-_Valentine Sims for Thomas Thorp._
-
-1616. Hymenaei, or The solemnities of Masque and Barriers at a
-Marriage. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-This was a double mask of eight men and eight women. The men, in
-carnation cloth of silver, with variously coloured mantles and watchet
-cloth of silver bases, were Humours and Affections; the women, in white
-cloth of silver, with carnation and blue undergarments, the Powers of
-Juno; the presenters Hymen, with a bride, bridegroom, and bridal train,
-Reason, and Order; the musicians the Hours.
-
-The locality was probably the Elizabethan banqueting-house, which seems
-to have been repaired in 1604 (Reyher, 340). ‘The scene being drawn’
-discovered first an altar for Hymen and ‘a microcosm or globe’, which
-turned and disclosed the men maskers in a ‘mine’ or ‘grot’. On either
-side of the globe stood great statues of Hercules and Atlas. They bore
-up the ‘upper part of the scene’, representing clouds, which opened to
-disclose the upper regions, whence the women descended on _nimbi_.
-
-Each set of maskers had a dance at entry. They then danced together a
-measure with strains ‘all notably different, some of them formed into
-letters very signifying to the name of the bridegroom’. This done,
-they ‘dissolved’ and took forth others for measures, galliards, and
-corantoes. After these ‘intermixed dances’ came ‘their last dances’,
-and they departed in a bridal procession with an epithalamion.
-
-The mask was in honour of the wedding of the Earl of Essex and Frances
-Howard, daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, and was probably given by
-their friends. The only Household expenses appear to have been for
-the making ready of the room (Reyher, 520), but Lady Rutland’s share
-seems to have cost the Earl over £100 (_Hist. MSS. Rutland Accounts_,
-iv. 457). The dancers were the Countesses of Montgomery, Bedford, and
-Rutland, the Ladies Knollys, Berkeley, Dorothy Hastings, and Blanch
-Somerset, and Mrs. A. Sackville, with the Earls of Montgomery and
-Arundel, Lords Willoughby and Howard de Walden, Sir James Hay, Sir
-Thomas Howard, Sir Thomas Somerset, and Sir John Ashley. The ‘design
-and act’ and the device of the costumes were by Inigo Jones, the songs
-by Alphonso Ferrabosco, and the dances by Thomas Giles.
-
-On the next day followed a Barriers, in which, after a dialogue by
-Jonson between Truth and Opinion, sixteen knights fought on the side of
-either disputant (cf. vol. i, p. 146).
-
-The following account was sent by John Pory to Sir Robert Cotton on 7
-Jan. (_B.M. Cotton MS. Julius_ C. iii. 301, printed in Goodman, ii.
-124; Collier, i. 350; Birch, i. 42; Sullivan, 199):
-
- ‘I haue seen both the mask on Sunday and the barriers on Mundy
- night. The Bridegroom carried himself as grauely and gracefully
- as if he were of his fathers age. He had greater guiftes giuen
- him then my lord Montgomery had, his plate being valued at
- 3000£ and his jewels, mony and other guiftes at 1600£ more.
- But to returne to the maske; both Inigo, Ben, and the actors
- men and women did their partes with great commendation. The
- conceite or soule of the mask was Hymen bringing in a bride
- and Juno pronuba’s priest a bridegroom, proclaiming those two
- should be sacrificed to nuptial vnion, and here the poet made
- an apostrophe to the vnion of the kingdoms. But before the
- sacrifice could be performed, Ben Jonson turned the globe of
- the earth standing behind the altar, and within the concaue
- sate the 8 men maskers representing the 4 humours and the fower
- affections which leapt forth to disturb the sacrifice to vnion;
- but amidst their fury Reason that sate aboue them all, crowned
- with burning tapers, came down and silenced them. These eight
- together with Reason their moderatresse mounted aboue their
- heades, sate somewhat like the ladies in the scallop shell the
- last year. Aboue the globe of erth houered a middle region of
- cloudes in the center wherof stood a grand consort of musicians,
- and vpon the cantons or hornes sate the ladies 4 at one corner,
- and 4 at another, who descended vpon the stage, not after the
- stale downright perpendicular fashion, like a bucket into a
- well; but came gently sloping down. These eight, after the
- sacrifice was ended, represented the 8 nuptial powers of Juno
- pronuba who came downe to confirme the vnion. The men were clad
- in crimzon and the weomen in white. They had euery one a white
- plume of the richest herons fethers, and were so rich in jewels
- vpon their heades as was most glorious. I think they hired and
- borrowed all the principal jewels and ropes of perle both in
- court and citty. The Spanish ambassador seemed but poore to
- the meanest of them. They danced all variety of dances, both
- seuerally and promiscue; and then the women took in men as
- namely the Prince (who danced with as great perfection and as
- setled a maiesty as could be deuised) the Spanish ambassador,
- the Archdukes, Ambassador, the Duke, etc., and the men gleaned
- out the Queen, the bride, and the greatest of the ladies. The
- second night the barriers were as well performed by fifteen
- against fifteen; the Duke of Lennox being chieftain on the one
- side, and my Lord of Sussex on the other.’
-
- _Mask of Beauty. 10 Jan. 1608_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, 21 April. [See _Mask of Blackness_.]
-
-N.D. [See _Mask of Blackness_.]
-
-1616. The Second Masque. Which was of Beautie; Was presented in the
-same Court, at White-Hall, on the Sunday night after the Twelfth Night.
-1608. [Part of F_{1}.] The maskers, in orange-tawny and silver and
-green and silver, were the twelve Daughters of Niger of the Mask of
-Blackness, now laved white, with four more; the torchbearers Cupids;
-the presenters January, Boreas, Vulturnus, Thamesis; the musicians
-Echoes and Shades of old Poets.
-
-The locality was the new banqueting-house at Whitehall. January was
-throned in midst of the house. The curtain, representing Night,
-was drawn to discover the maskers on a Throne of Beauty, borne by a
-floating isle.
-
-The maskers gave two dances, which were repeated at the King’s request,
-and then danced ‘with the lords’. They danced galliards and corantoes.
-They then gave a third dance, and a fourth, which took them into their
-throne again.
-
-This was a Queen’s mask, danced by the Queen, Arabella Stuart, the
-Countesses of Arundel, Derby, Bedford, and Montgomery, and the Ladies
-Elizabeth Guildford, Katherine Petre, Anne Winter, Windsor, Anne
-Clifford, Mary Neville, Elizabeth Hatton, Elizabeth Gerard, Chichester,
-and Walsingham. The torchbearers were ‘chosen out of the best and
-ingenious youth of the Kingdom’. The scene was ‘put in act’ by the
-King’s master carpenter. Thomas Giles made the dances and played
-Thamesis.
-
-The mask was announced by 9 Dec. (_V. P._ xi. 74). On 10 Dec. La
-Boderie (ii. 490) reported that it would cost 6,000 or 7,000 crowns,
-and that nearly all the ladies invited by the Queen to take part in
-it were Catholics. Anne’s preparations were in swing before 17 Dec.
-(_V. P._ xi. 76). On 22 Dec. La Boderie reported (iii. 6) that he had
-underestimated the cost, which would not be less than 30,000 crowns,
-and was causing much annoyance to the Privy Council. On 31 Dec. Donne
-(_Letters_, i. 182) intended to deliver a letter ‘when the rage of the
-mask is past’. Lord Arundel notes his wife’s practising early in Jan.
-(Lodge, App. 124). The original date was 6 Jan. ‘The Mask goes forward
-for Twelfth-day’, wrote Chamberlain to Carleton on 5 Jan. (_S. P. D.
-Jac. I_, xxxi. 2; Birch, i. 69), ‘though I doubt the new room will be
-scant ready’. But on 8 Jan. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xxxi. 4; Birch, i. 71)
-he wrote again:
-
- ‘We had great hopes of having you here this day, and then I
- would not have given my part of the mask for any of their
- places that shall be present, for I suppose you and your lady
- would find easily passage, being so befriended; for the show is
- put off till Sunday, by reason that all things are not ready.
- Whatsoever the device may be, and what success they may have in
- their dancing, yet you would have been sure to have seen great
- riches in jewels, when one lady, and that under a baroness, is
- said to be furnished far better then a hundred thousand pounds.
- And the Lady Arabella goes beyond her; and the queen must not
- come behind.’
-
-The delay was really due to ambassadorial complications, which are
-reported by Giustinian (_V. P._ xi. 83, 86) and very fully by La
-Boderie (iii. 1–75; cf. Sullivan, 35, 201). The original intention was
-to invite the Spanish and Venetian, but not the French and Flemish
-ambassadors. This, according to Giustinian, offended La Boderie,
-because Venice was ‘the nobler company’. But the real sting lay in
-the invitation to Spain. This was represented to La Boderie about 23
-Dec. as the personal act of Anne, in the face of a remonstrance by
-James on the ground of the preference already shown to Spain in 1605.
-La Boderie replied that he had already been slighted at the King of
-Denmark’s visit, that the mask was a public occasion, and that Henri
-would certainly hold James responsible. A few days later he was told
-that James was greatly annoyed at his wife’s levity, and would ask
-him and the Venetian ambassador to dinner; but La Boderie refused to
-accept this as a compliment equivalent to seeing the Queen dance,
-and supping with the King before 10,000 persons. He urged that both
-ambassadors or neither should be invited, and hinted that, if Anne was
-so openly Spanish in her tendencies, Henri might feel obliged to leave
-the mission in charge of a secretary. An offer was made to invite La
-Boderie’s wife, but this he naturally refused. The Council tried in
-vain to make Anne hear reason, but finally let the mask proceed, and
-countered Henri diplomatically by calling his attention to the money
-debts due from France to England. Meanwhile Giustinian had pressed for
-his own invitation in place of the Flemish ambassador, and obtained it.
-The Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were therefore present. La Boderie
-reported that much attention was paid to Giustinian, and little to the
-Spanish ambassador, and also that James was so angry with Anne that he
-left for a hunting trip the next day without seeing her. Giustinian
-admired the mask, which was, James told him (_V. P._ xi. 86), ‘to
-consecrate the birth of the Great Hall, which his predecessors had
-left him built merely in wood, but which he had converted into stone’.
-Probably this is the mask described in a letter of Lady Pembroke to
-Lord Shrewsbury calendared without date among letters of 1607–8 in
-Lodge, iii, App. 121. On 28 Jan. the Spanish ambassador invited the
-fifteen ladies who had danced to dinner (Lodge, iii. 223; La Boderie,
-iii. 81). On 29 Jan. Lord Lisle wrote to the Earl of Shrewsbury
-regretting that he could not send him the verses, because Ben Jonson
-was busy writing more for the Haddington wedding (Lodge, App. 102).
-
-A warrant for expenses was signed 11 Dec. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xxviii).
-A payment was made to Bethell (Reyher, 520).
-
- _Lord Haddington’s Mask_ [_The Hue and Cry after Cupid_].
- _9 Feb. 1608_
-
-N.D. The Description of the Masque. With the Nuptiall Songs.
-Celebrating the happy Marriage of Iohn, Lord Ramsey, Viscount
-Hadington, with the Lady Elizabeth Ratcliffe, Daughter to the right
-Honor: Robert, Earle of Sussex. At Court On the Shroue-Tuesday at
-night. 1608. Deuised by Ben: Ionson. [_No imprint._]
-
-1616. [Part of F_{1}.] The maskers were the twelve Signs of the Zodiac
-in carnation and silver; the antimaskers Cupid and twelve Joci and
-Risus, who danced ‘with their antic faces’; the presenters Venus, the
-Graces and Cupid, Hymen, Vulcan and the Cyclopes; the musicians Priests
-of Hymen, while the Cyclopes beat time with their sledges.
-
-Pilasters hung with amorous trophies supported gigantic figures of
-Triumph and Victory ‘in place of the arch, and holding a gyrlond of
-myrtle for the key’. The scene was a steep red cliff (Radcliffe), over
-which clouds broke for the issue of the chariot of Venus. After the
-antimasque, the cliff parted, to discover the maskers in a turning
-sphere of silver. The maskers gave four dances, interspersed with
-verses of an epithalamion. The mask was given by the maskers, seven
-Scottish and five English lords and gentlemen, the Duke of Lennox,
-the Earls of Arundel, Pembroke, and Montgomery, Lords D’Aubigny, De
-Walden, Hay, and Sanquhar, the Master of Mar, Sir Robert Rich, Sir John
-Kennedy, and Mr. Erskine. (Quarto and Lodge, iii. 223.) The ‘device and
-act of the scene’ were supplied by Inigo Jones, the tunes by Alphonso
-Ferrabosco, and two dances each by Hierome Herne and Thomas Giles, who
-also beat time as Cyclopes.
-
-Rowland White told Lord Shrewsbury on 26 Jan. that the mask was ‘now
-the only thing thought upon at court’, and would cost the maskers about
-£300 a man (Lodge, iii. 223). Jonson was busy with the verses on 29
-Jan. (Lodge, App. 102).
-
-Sussex and Haddington intended to ask the French ambassador both
-to the wedding dinner and to the mask and banquet, but the Lord
-Chamberlain, having Spanish sympathies, would not consent. In the end
-he was asked by James himself to the mask and banquet, at which Prince
-Henry would preside. He accepted, and suggested that Henri should
-present Haddington with a ring, but this was not done. He thought the
-mask ‘assez maigre’, but Anne was very gracious, and James regretted
-that etiquette did not allow him to sit at the banquet in person. La
-Boderie’s wife and daughter, who danced with the Duke of York, were
-also present. Unfortunately he did not receive in time an instruction
-from Paris to keep away if the Flemish ambassador was asked, and did
-not protest against this invitation on his own responsibility, partly
-out of annoyance with the Venetian for attending the Queen’s mask
-without him, and partly for fear of losing his own invitation. The
-Fleming had had far less consideration than himself (La Boderie, iii.
-75–144). So both the French and the Flemish ambassador were present,
-with two princes of Saxony (_V. P._ xi. 97).
-
-English criticisms were more kindly than La Boderie’s. Sir Henry
-Saville described it to Sir Richard Beaumont on the same night as a
-‘singular brave mask’, at which he had been until three in the morning
-(_Beaumont Papers_, 17), and Chamberlain wrote to Carleton on 11 Feb.
-(_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xxxi. 26; Birch, i. 72): ‘I can send you no perfect
-relation of the marriage nor mask on Tuesday, only they say all,
-but especially the motions, were well performed; as Venus, with her
-chariot drawn by swans, coming in a cloud to seek her son; who with his
-companions, Lusus, Risus, and Janus [? Jocus], and four or five more
-wags, were dancing a matachina, and acted it very antiquely, before the
-twelve signs, who were the master maskers, descended from the zodiac,
-and played their parts more gravely, being very gracefully attired.’
-
- _Mask of Queens. 2 Feb. 1609_
-
-[_MSS._] (a) _B.M. Harl. MS._ 6947, f. 143 (printed Reyher, 506).
-[Apparently a short descriptive analysis or programme, without the
-words of the dialogue and songs.]
-
-(b) _B.M. Royal MS._ 18 A. xlv. [Holograph. Epistle to Prince Henry.]
-
-_S. R._ 1609, Feb. 22 (Segar). ‘A booke called, The maske of Queenes
-Celebrated, done by Beniamin Johnson.’ _Richard Bonion and Henry
-Walley_ (Arber, iii. 402).
-
-1609. The Masque of Queenes Celebrated From the House of Fame: By the
-most absolute in all State, And Titles. Anne, Queene of Great Britaine,
-&c. With her Honourable Ladies. At White-Hall, Febr. 2. 1609. Written
-by Ben: Ionson. _N. Okes for R. Bonian and H. Wally._ [Epistle to
-Prince Henry.]
-
-1616. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-_Edition_ in J. P. Collier, _Five Court Masques_ (1848, _Sh. Soc._ from
-_Royal MS._).
-
-Jonson prefaces that ‘because Her Majesty (best knowing that a
-principal part of life in these spectacles lay in their variety) had
-commanded me to think on some dance, or shew, that might precede
-hers, and have the place of a foil, or false masque: I was careful
-to decline, not only from others, but mine own steps in that kind,
-since the last year, I had an antimasque of boys; and therefore now
-devised that twelve women, in the habit of hags or witches, sustaining
-the persons of Ignorance, Suspicion, Credulity, &c., the opposites to
-good Fame, should fill that part, not as a masque, but as a spectacle
-of strangeness’ [it is called a ‘maske’ in the programme] ‘producing
-multiplicity of gesture, and not unaptly sorting with the current and
-whole fall of the device’.
-
-The maskers, in various habits, eight designs for which are in _Sh.
-England_, ii. 311, were Bel-Anna and eleven other Queens, who were
-attended by torchbearers; the antimaskers eleven Hags and their dame
-Ate; the presenters Perseus or Heroic Virtue and Fame.
-
-The locality was the new banqueting-house at Whitehall (_T. of C.
-Acct._, quoted by Sullivan, 54). The scene at first represented a
-Hell, whence the antimask issued. In the middle of a ‘magical dance’
-it vanished at a blast of music, ‘and the whole face of the scene
-altered’, becoming the House of Fame, a ‘_machina versatilis_’, which
-showed first Perseus and the maskers and then Fame. Descending, the
-maskers made their entry in three chariots, to which the Hags were
-bound. They danced their first and second dances; then ‘took out the
-men, and danced the measures’ for nearly an hour. After an interval for
-a song, came their third dance, ‘graphically disposed into letters,
-and honouring the name of the most sweet and ingenious Prince, Charles
-Duke of York’. Galliards and corantoes followed, and after their ‘last
-dance’ they returned in their chariots to the House of Fame.
-
-This was a Queen’s mask, danced by the Queen, the Countesses of
-Arundel, Derby, Huntingdon, Bedford, Essex, and Montgomery, the
-Viscountess Cranborne, and the Ladies Elizabeth Guildford, Anne Winter,
-Windsor, and Anne Clifford. Inigo Jones was responsible for the attire
-of the Hags, and ‘the invention and architecture of the whole scene and
-machine’; Alphonso Ferrabosco for the airs of the songs; Thomas Giles
-for the third dance, and Hierome Herne for the dance of Hags. John
-Allen, ‘her Majesty’s servant’, sang a ditty between the measures and
-the third dance.
-
-As early as 14 Nov. Donne wrote to Sir Henry Goodyere (_Letters_, i.
-199), ‘The King ... hath left with the Queen a commandment to meditate
-upon a masque for Christmas, so that they grow serious about that
-already’. The performance was originally intended for 6 Jan. (_V. P._
-xi. 219), but on 10 Jan. Chamberlain wrote to Carleton (Birch, i.
-87), ‘The mask at court is put off till Candlemas, as it is thought
-the Spaniard may be gone, for the French ambassador hath been so long
-and so much neglected, that it is doubted more would not be well
-endured’. The intrigues which determined this delay are described in
-the diplomatic correspondence of the French and Venetian ambassadors
-(La Boderie, iv. 104, 123, 136, 145, 175, 228; _V. P._ xi. 212, 219,
-222, 231, 234; cf. Sullivan, 47, 212). Hints of a _rapprochement_
-between France and Spain had made James anxious to conciliate Henri IV.
-Even Anne had learnt discretion, and desired that La Boderie should
-be present at the mask. He was advised by Salisbury to ask for an
-invitation, which he did, through his wife and Lady Bedford. He had
-instructions from Henri to retire from Court and leave a secretary
-in charge if his master’s dignity was compromised. Unfortunately
-the Spanish ambassador leiger was reinforced by an ambassador
-extraordinary, Don Fernandez de Girone, and took advantage of this
-to press on his side for an invitation. Etiquette gave a precedence
-to ambassadors extraordinary, and all that could be done was to wait
-until Don Fernandez was gone. This was not until 1 Feb. La Boderie was
-at the mask, and treated with much courtesy. He excused himself from
-dancing, but the Duke of York took out his daughter, and he supped
-with the King and the princes. He found the mask ‘fort riche, et s’il
-m’est loisible de le dire, plus superbe qu’ingenieux’. He also thought
-that of the ‘intermédes’ there were ‘trop et d’assez tristes’. The
-Spanish influence, however, was sufficiently strong, when exercised on
-behalf of Flanders, to disappoint the Venetian ambassador of a promised
-invitation, and La Boderie was the only diplomatic representative
-present. Anne asked Correr to come privately, but this he would not do,
-and she said she should trouble herself no more about masks.
-
-It was at first intended to limit the cost of the mask to £1,000, but
-on 27 Nov. Sir Thomas Lake wrote to Salisbury that the King would
-allow a ‘reasonable encrease’ upon this, and had agreed that certain
-lords should sign and allow bills for the charges (_S. P. D. Jac. I_,
-xxxvii. 96, printed and misdated 1607 in Sullivan, 201). This duty
-was apparently assigned to Lord Suffolk as Lord Chamberlain and Lord
-Worcester as Master of the Horse, in whose names a warrant was issued
-on 1 Dec. (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, xxxviii. 1). The financial documents
-cited by Reyher, 520, suggest that the actual payments passed through
-the hands of Inigo Jones and Henry Reynolds. Reyher, 72, reckons the
-total cost at near £5,000. This seems very high. A contemporary writer,
-W. Ffarrington (_Chetham Soc._ xxxix. 151), gives the estimate of ‘them
-that had a hand in the business as “at the leaste two thousand pounde”’.
-
- _Oberon, the Faery Prince. 1 Jan. 1611_
-
-1616. Oberon the Faery Prince. A Masque of Prince Henries. _W. Stansby,
-sold by Richard Meighen._ [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-The maskers were Oberon and his Knights, accompanied by the Faies,
-‘some bearing lights’; the antimaskers Satyrs; the presenters Sylvans;
-some of the musicians Satyrs and Faies.
-
-This was ‘a very stately maske ... in the beautifull roome at
-Whitehall, which roome is generally called the Banquetting-house; and
-the King new builded it about foure yeeres past’ (Stowe, _Annales_,
-910). ‘The first face of the scene’ was a cliff, from which the
-antimask issued. The scene opened to discover the front of a palace,
-and this again, after ‘an antick dance’ ended by the crowing of the
-cock, to disclose ‘the nation of Faies’, with the maskers on ‘sieges’
-and Oberon in a chariot drawn by two white bears. ‘The lesser Faies’
-danced; then came a first and second ‘masque-dance’, then ‘measures,
-corantos, galliards, etc.’, and finally a ‘last dance into the work’.
-
-This was a Prince’s mask, and clearly Henry was Oberon, but the names
-of the other maskers are not preserved.
-
-Henry’s preparation for a mask is mentioned on 15 Nov. by Correr, who
-reports that he would have liked it to be on horseback, if James had
-consented (_V. P._ xii. 79), on 3 Dec. by Thomas Screven (_Rutland
-MSS._ iv. 211), ‘The Prince is com to St. James and prepareth for a
-mask’, and on 15 Dec. by John More (Winwood, iii. 239), ‘Yet doth the
-Prince make but one mask’.
-
-The diplomatic tendency at this time was to detach France from growing
-relations from Spain, and it was intended that both the masks of the
-winter 1610–11 should serve to entertain the Marshal de Laverdin,
-expected as ambassador extraordinary from Paris for the signature of a
-treaty. But the Regent Marie de Médicis was not anxious to emphasize
-the occasion, and the Marshal did not arrive in time for the Prince’s
-mask, which took place on 1 Jan. ‘It looked’, says Correr, ‘as though
-he did not understand the honour done him by the King and the Prince.’
-The Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were therefore invited, and were
-present. The Dutch ambassador was invited, but professed illness, to
-avoid complications with the Spaniard. Correr found the mask ‘very
-beautiful throughout, very decorative, but most remarkable for the
-grace of the Prince’s every movement’ (_Rutland MSS._ i. 426; _V. P._
-xii. 101, 106; cf. Sullivan, 61).
-
-None of the above notices in fact identify Henry’s mask of 1 Jan. 1611
-with the undated _Oberon_, but proof is forthcoming from an Exchequer
-payment of May 1611 for ‘the late Princes barriers and masks’ (text in
-Reyher, 511) which specifies ‘the Satires and faeries’. The amount was
-£247 9_s._, and the items include payments to composers, musicians, and
-players. We learn that [Robert] Johnson and [Thomas] Giles provided
-the dances, and Alphonse [Ferrabosco] singers and lutenists, that the
-violins were Thomas Lupo the elder, Alexander Chisan, and Rowland
-Rubidge, and that ‘xiij^n Holt boyes’ were employed, presumably as
-fays. There is a sum of £15 for ‘players imployed in the maske’ and
-£15 more for ‘players imployed in the barriers’, about which barriers
-no more is known. This account, subscribed by Sir Thomas Chaloner, by
-no means exhausts the expense of the mask. Other financial documents
-(Devon, 131, 134, 136; cf. Reyher, 521) show payments of £40 each to
-Jonson and Inigo Jones, and £20 each to Ferrabosco, Jerome Herne, and
-Confess. These were from the Exchequer. An additional £16 to Inigo
-Jones ‘devyser for the saide maske’ fell upon Henry’s privy purse,
-together with heavy bills to mercers and other tradesmen, amounting
-to £1,076 6_s._ 10_d._ (Cunningham, viii, from _Audit Office Declared
-Accts._). Correr had reported on 22 Nov. that neither of the masks of
-this winter was to ‘be so costly as last year’s, which to say sooth
-was excessively costly’ (_V. P._ xii. 86). The anticipation can hardly
-have been fulfilled. I suppose that ‘last year’s’ means the _Tethys’
-Festival_ of June 1610, as no mask during the winter of 1609–10 is
-traceable.
-
- _Love Freed from Ignorance and Folly. 3 Feb. 1611_
-
-1616. A Masque of her Maiesties. Love freed from Ignorance and Folly.
-_W. Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen._ [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-The maskers were eleven Daughters of the Morn, led by the Queen of the
-Orient; the antimaskers twelve Follies or She-Fools; the presenters
-Cupid and Ignorance, a Sphinx; the musicians twelve Priests of the
-Muses, who also danced a measure, and three Graces, with others.
-
-The locality was probably the banqueting-hall. The scene is not
-described. There were two ‘masque-dances’, with ‘measures and revels’
-between them. This was a Queen’s mask, but the names of the maskers are
-not preserved.
-
-John More wrote on 15 Dec. (Winwood, iii. 239), ‘Yet doth the Prince
-make but one mask, and the Queen but two, which doth cost her majesty
-but £600.’ Perhaps the writer was mistaken. Anne had not given more
-than one mask in any winter, nor is there any trace of a second in that
-of 1610–11. Correr, on 22 Nov., anticipates one only, not to be so
-costly as last year’s. It was to precede the Prince’s. It was, however,
-put off to Twelfth Night, and then again to Candlemas, ‘either because
-the stage machinery is not in order, or because their Majesties thought
-it well to let the Marshal depart first’. This was Marshal de Laverdin,
-whose departure from France as ambassador extraordinary was delayed
-(cf. _Mask of Oberon_). He was present at the mask when it actually
-took place on 3 Feb., the day after Candlemas. Apparently the Venetian
-ambassador was also invited. (_V. P._ xii. 86, 101, 106, 110, 115.)
-
-Several financial documents bearing on the mask exist (_S. P. D.
-Jac. I_, lvii, Nov.; Devon, 135; Reyher, 509, 521), and show that
-the contemplated £600 was in fact exceeded. An account signed by the
-Earls of Suffolk and Worcester, to whom the oversight of the charges
-was doubtless assigned as Household officers, shows that in addition
-to £600 14_s._ 3_d._ spent in defraying the bills of Inigo Jones and
-others and in rewards, there was a further expenditure of £118 7_s._
-by the Wardrobe, and even then no items are included for the dresses
-of the main maskers, which were probably paid for by the wearers. The
-rewards include £2 each to five boys who played the Graces, Sphinx, and
-Cupid, and £1 each to the twelve Fools. This enables us to identify
-Jonson’s undated mask with that of 1611. Ben Jonson and Inigo Jones had
-£40 each; Alphonso [Ferrabosco] £20 for the songs; [Robert] Johnson
-and Thomas Lupo £5 each for setting the songs to lutes and setting the
-dances to violins, and Confess and Bochan £50 and £20 for teaching the
-dances.
-
- _Love Restored. 6 Jan. 1612_
-
-1616. Love Restored, In a Masque at Court, by Gentlemen the Kings
-Seruants. _W. Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen._ [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-The maskers were the ten Ornaments of Court--Honour, Courtesy, Valour,
-Urbanity, Confidence, Alacrity, Promptness, Industry, Hability,
-Reality; the presenters Masquerado, Plutus, Robin Goodfellow, and
-Cupid, who entered in a chariot attended by the maskers. There were
-three dances. Jonson’s description is exceptionally meagre.
-
-The dialogue finds its humour in the details of mask-presentation
-themselves. Masquerado, in his vizard, apologizes for the absence of
-musicians and the hoarseness of ‘the rogue play-boy, that acts Cupid’.
-Plutus criticizes the expense and the corruption of manners involved in
-masks. Robin Goodfellow narrates his difficulties in obtaining access.
-He has tried in vain to get through the Woodyard on to the Terrace, but
-the Guard pushed him off a ladder into the Verge. The Carpenters’ way
-also failed him. He has offered, or thought of offering, himself as an
-‘enginer’ belonging to the ‘motions’, but they were ‘ceased’; as an
-old tire-woman; as a musician; as a feather-maker of Blackfriars; as a
-‘bombard man’, carrying ‘bouge’ to country ladies who had fasted for
-the fine sight since seven in the morning; as a citizen’s wife, exposed
-to the liberties of the ‘black-guard’; as a wireman or a chandler; and
-finally in his own shape as ‘part of the Device’.
-
-There are several financial documents relating to a mask at Christmas
-1611, for which funds were issued to one Meredith Morgan (_S. P. D.
-Jac. I_, lxvii, Dec.; lxviii, Jan.; Reyher, 521). The Revels Account
-(Cunningham, 211) records a ‘princes Mask performed by Gentelmen of his
-High [ ]’ on 6 Jan. 1612. According to Chamberlain, the Queen was at
-Greenwich ‘practising for a new mask’ on 20 Nov., but this was put off
-in December as ‘unseasonable’ so soon after the death of the Queen of
-Spain (Birch, i. 148, 152). Jonson does not date _Love Restored_, but
-Dr. Brotanek has successfully assigned it to 1611–12 on the ground of
-its reference to ‘the Christmas cut-purse’, of whom Chamberlain wrote
-to Carleton on 31 Dec. 1611 that ‘a cut-purse, taken in the Chapel
-Royal, will be executed’ (Brotanek, 347; cf. _S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxvii.
-117, and _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), III. v. 132). This was one John
-Selman, executed on 7 Jan. 1612 for picking the pocket of Leonard
-Barry, servant to Lord Harington, on Christmas Day (Rye, 269). I may
-add that Robin Goodfellow, when pretending to be concerned with the
-motions, was asked if he were ‘the fighting bear of last year’, and
-that the chariot of Oberon on 1 Jan. 1611 was drawn by white bears.
-There is, of course, nothing inconsistent in a Prince’s mask being
-performed by King’s servants, and the ‘High[ness]’ of the Revels
-Account may mean James, just as well as Henry. Simpson (_E. M._ 1.
-xxxiv) puts _Love Restored_ in 1613–14, as connected with the tilt (cf.
-p. 393), but there is no room for it (cf. p. 246).
-
- _The Irish Mask. 29 Dec. 1613_
-
-1616. The Irish Masque at Court, by Gentlemen the Kings Servants. _W.
-Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen._ [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-The maskers were twelve Irish Gentlemen, first in mantles, then
-without; the antimaskers their twelve Footmen; the presenters a Citizen
-and a Gentleman; one of the musicians an Irish bard. The Footmen dance
-‘to the bag-pipe and other rude music’, after which the Gentlemen
-‘dance forth’ twice.
-
-The antimaskers say that their lords have come to the bridal of ‘ty
-man Robyne’ to the daughter of ‘Toumaish o’ Shuffolke’, who has
-knocked them on the pate with his ‘phoyt stick’, as they came by.
-There are also compliments to ‘King Yamish’, ‘my Mistresh tere’, ‘my
-little Maishter’, and ‘te vfrow, ty daughter, tat is in Tuchland’. It
-is therefore easy to supply the date which Jonson omits, as the mask
-clearly belongs to the series presented in honour of the wedding of
-Robert Earl of Somerset with the Earl of Suffolk’s daughter during
-the Christmas of 1613–14. The list in Stowe, _Annales_, 928 (cf.
-s.v. Campion), includes one on 29 Dec. by ‘the Prince’s Gentlemen,
-which pleased the King so well that hee caused them to performe it
-againe uppon the Monday following’. This was 3 Jan.; the 10 Jan. in
-Nichols, ii. 718, is a misreading of the evidence in Chamberlain’s
-letters, which identify the mask as Jonson’s by a notice of the Irish
-element. On 30 Dec. Chamberlain wrote to Alice Carleton (Birch, i.
-285), ‘yesternight there was a medley mask of five English and five
-Scots, which are called the high dancers, amongst whom Sergeant Boyd,
-one Abercrombie, and Auchternouty, that was at Padua and Venice, are
-esteemed the most principal and lofty, but how it succeeded I know
-not’. Later in the letter he added, probably in reference to this and
-not Campion’s mask, ‘Sir William Bowyer hath lost his eldest son, Sir
-Henry. He was a fine dancer, and should have been of the masque, but
-overheating himself with practising, he fell into the smallpox and
-died.’ On 5 Jan. he wrote to Dudley Carleton (Birch, i. 287), ‘The----
-maskers were so well liked at court the last week that they were
-appointed to perform again on Monday: yet their device, which was a
-mimical imitation of the Irish, was not pleasing to many, who think it
-no time, as the case stands, to exasperate that nation, by making it
-ridiculous’. On the finance cf. s.v. Campion.
-
- _Mercury Vindicated from the Alchemists. 6 Jan. 1615_
-
-1616. Mercury Vindicated from the Alchemists at Court by Gentlemen the
-Kings Seruants. _W. Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen._ [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-The maskers were twelve Sons of Nature; the first antimaskers
-Alchemists, the second Imperfect Creatures, in helms of limbecs; the
-presenters Vulcan, Cyclops, Mercury, Nature, and Prometheus, with a
-chorus of musicians.
-
-The locality was doubtless Whitehall. The scene first discovered was
-a laboratory. After the antimasks it changed to a bower, whence the
-maskers descended for ‘the first dance’, ‘the main dance’, and, after
-dancing with the ladies, ‘their last dance’. Donne (_Letters_, ii. 65)
-wrote to Sir Henry Goodyere on 13 Dec. [1614], ‘They are preparing
-for a masque of gentlemen, in which M^r. Villiers is and M^r. Karre
-whom I told you before my Lord Chamberlain had brought into the
-bedchamber’. On 18 Dec. [1614] (ii. 66) he adds, ‘M^r. Villiers ...
-is here, practising for the masque’. The year-dates can be supplied
-by comparison with Chamberlain’s letters to Carleton. On 1 Dec. 1614
-(_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxviii. 65) Chamberlain wrote, ‘And yet for all
-this penurious world we speake of a maske this Christmas toward which
-the King gives 1500£ the principall motiue wherof is thought to be the
-gracing of younge Villers and to bring him on the stage’. It should
-be borne in mind that there was at this time an intrigue amongst the
-Court party opposed to Somerset and the Howards, including Donne’s
-patroness Lady Bedford, to put forward George Villiers, afterwards Duke
-of Buckingham, as a rival to the Earl of Somerset in the good graces of
-James I. On 5 Jan. Chamberlain wrote again (_S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxx. 1;
-Birch, i. 290, but there misdated), ‘Tomorrow night there is a mask at
-court, but the common voice and preparations promise so little, that
-it breeds no great expectation’; and on 12 Jan. (_S. P. D._ lxxx. 4;
-Birch, i. 356), ‘The only matter I can advertise ... is the success
-of the mask on Twelfth Night, which was so well liked and applauded,
-that the King had it represented again the Sunday night after [8
-Jan.] in the very same manner, though neither in device nor show was
-there anything extraordinary, but only excellent dancing; the choice
-being made of the best, both English and Scots’. He then describes an
-ambassadorial incident, which is also detailed in a report by Foscarini
-(_V. P._ xiii. 317) and by Finett, 19 (cf. Sullivan, 95). The Spanish
-ambassador refused to appear in public with the Dutch ambassador,
-although it was shown that his predecessor had already done so, and in
-the end both withdrew. The Venetian ambassador and Tuscan agent were
-alone present. An invitation to the French ambassador does not appear
-to have been in question.
-
-Financial documents (Reyher, 523; _S. P. D._ lxxx, Mar.) show that one
-Walter James received Exchequer funds for the mask.
-
-I am not quite sure that Brotanek, 351, is right in identifying
-_Mercury Vindicated_ with the mask of January 1615 and _The Golden
-Age Restored_ with that of January 1616, but the evidence is so
-inconclusive that it is not worth while to disturb his chronology.
-_Mercury Vindicated_ is not dated in the Folio, but it is printed next
-before _The Golden Age Restored_, which is dated ‘1615’. Now it is true
-that the order of the Folio, as Brotanek points out, appears to be
-chronological; but it is also true that, at any rate for the masks, the
-year-dates, by a practice characteristic of Jonson, follow Circumcision
-and not Annunciation style. One or other principle seems to have been
-disregarded at the end of the Folio, and who shall say which? Brotanek
-attempts to support his arrangement by tracing topical allusions (_a_)
-in _Mercury Vindicated_ to Court ‘brabbles’ of 1614–15, (_b_) in _The
-Golden Age Restored_ to the Somerset _esclandre_. But there are always
-‘brabbles’ in courts, and I can find no references to Somerset at all.
-Nor is it in the least likely that there would be any. _Per contra_, I
-may note that Chamberlain’s description of the ‘device’ in 1615 as not
-‘extraordinary’ applies better to _The Golden Age Restored_ than to
-_Mercury Vindicated_.
-
- _The Golden Age Restored. 1 Jan. 1616_
-
-1616. The Golden Age Restor’d. In a Maske at Court, 1615. by the Lords,
-and Gentlemen, the Kings Seruants. _W. Stansby, sold by Richard
-Meighen._ [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-The maskers were Sons of Phoebus, Chaucer, Gower, Lydgate, Spenser, and
-presumably others; the antimaskers twelve Evils; the presenters Pallas,
-Astraea, the Iron Age, and the Golden Age, with a chorus of musicians.
-
-The locality was doubtless Whitehall. Pallas descended, and the Evils
-came from a cave, danced to ‘two drums, trumpets, and a confusion of
-martial music’, and were turned to statues. The scene changed, and
-later the scene of light was discovered. After ‘the first dance’ and
-‘the main dance’, the maskers danced with the ladies, and then danced
-‘the galliards and corantos’.
-
-Finett, 31 (cf. Sullivan, 237), tells us that ‘The King being desirous
-that the French, Venetian, and Savoyard ambassadors should all be
-invited to a maske at court prepared for New-years night, an exception
-comming from the French, was a cause of deferring their invitation
-till Twelfe night, when the Maske was to be re-acted, ... [They] were
-received at eight of the clock, the houre assigned (no supper being
-prepared for them, as at other times, to avoid the trouble incident)
-and were conducted to the privy gallery by the Lord Chamberlaine and
-the Lord Danvers appointed (an honour more than had been formerly
-done to Ambassadors Ordinary) to accompany them, the Master of the
-Ceremonies being also present. They were all there placed at the maske
-on the Kings right hand (not right out, but byas forward) first and
-next to the King the French, next him the Venetian, and next him the
-Savoyard. At his Majesties left hand sate the Queen, and next her the
-Prince. The maske being ended, they followed his Majesty to a banquet
-in the presence, and returned by the way they entered: the followers
-of the French were placed in a seate reserved for them above over
-the Kings right hand; the others in one on the left. The Spanish
-ambassadors son, and the agent of the Arch-Duke (who invited himselfe)
-were bestowed on the forme where the Lords sit, next beneath the
-Barons, English, Scotish, and Irish as the sonns of the Ambassador of
-Venice, and of Savoy had been placed the maske night before, but were
-this night placed with their countreymen in the gallery mentioned.’
-
-Financial documents (Reyher, 523; _S. P. D._ lxxxix. 104) show
-Exchequer payments for the mask to Edmund Sadler and perhaps Meredith
-Morgan.
-
-On the identification of the mask of 1 and 6 Jan. 1616 with _The Golden
-Age Restored_, s.v. _Mercury Vindicated_.
-
- ENTERTAINMENTS
-
- _Althorp Entertainment_ [_The Satyr_]. _1603_
-
-_S. R._ 1604, March 19. [See _Coronation Entertainment_.]
-
-1604. A particular Entertainment of the Queene and Prince their
-Highnesse to Althrope, at the Right Honourable the Lord Spencers,
-on Saterday being the 25. of Iune 1603. as they come first into the
-Kingdome; being written by the same Author [B. Jon:], and not before
-published. _V.S. for Edward Blount._ [Appended to the _Coronation
-Entertainment_.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ and by Nichols, _James_ (1828), i. 176.
-
-The host, Sir Robert Spencer, of Althorp, Northants, was created Lord
-Spencer of Wormleighton on 21 July 1603. On arrival (25 June) the Queen
-and Prince were met in the park by a Satyr, Queen Mab, and a bevy of
-Fairies, who after a dialogue and song, introduced Spencer’s son John,
-as a huntsman, to Henry; and a hunt followed. On Monday afternoon (27
-June) came Nobody with a speech to introduce ‘a morris of the clowns
-thereabout’, but this and a parting speech by a youth could not be
-heard for the throng.
-
- _Coronation Entertainment. 1604_
-
-_S. R._ 1604, March 19 (Pasfield). ‘A Parte of the Kinges Maiesties ...
-Entertainement ... done by Beniamin Johnson.’ _Edward Blunt_ (Arber,
-iii. 254).
-
-1604. B. Jon: his part of King James his Royall and Magnificent
-Entertainement through his Honorable Cittie of London, Thurseday
-the 15. of March, 1603. So much as was presented in the first and
-last of their Triumphall Arch’s. With his speach made to the last
-Presentation, in the Strand, erected by the inhabitants of the Dutchy,
-and Westminster. Also, a briefe Panegyre of his Maiesties first and
-well auspicated entrance to his high Court of Parliament, on Monday,
-the 19. of the same Moneth. With other Additions. _V.S. for Edward
-Blount._ [This also includes the _Althorp Entertainment_.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ of Jonson, and by Nichols, _James_
-(1828), i. 377.
-
-For other descriptions of the triumph and Jonson’s speeches cf. ch.
-xxiv, C.
-
- _Highgate Entertainment_ [_The Penates_]. _1604_
-
-1616. [Head-title] A Priuate Entertainment of the King and Queene,
-on May Day in the Morning, At Sir William Cornwalleis his house, at
-Highgate. 1604. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ and by Nichols, _James_ (1828), i. 431.
-
-The host was Sir William Cornwallis, son of Sir Thomas, of Brome Hall,
-Suffolk. On arrival, in the morning (1 May), the King and Queen were
-received by the Penates, and led through the house into the garden,
-for speeches by Mercury and Maia, and a song by Aurora, Zephyrus, and
-Flora. In the afternoon was a dialogue in the garden by Mercury and
-Pan, who served wine from a fountain.
-
- _Entertainment of King of Denmark. 1606_
-
-1616. [Head-title] The entertainment of the two Kings of Great
-Brittaine and Denmarke at Theobalds, Iuly 24, 1606. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ and by Nichols, _James_, ii. 70.
-
-This consists only of short speeches by the three Hours to James
-(in English) and Christian (in Latin) on their entry into the Inner
-Court at Lord Salisbury’s house of Theobalds, Herts. (24 July), and
-some Latin inscriptions and epigrams hung on the walls. But the visit
-lasted until 28 July, and further details are given, not only in the
-well-known letter of Sir John Harington (cf. ch. vi) but also in _The
-King of Denmarkes Welcome_ (1606; cf. ch. xxiv), whose author, while
-omitting to describe ‘manie verie learned, delicate and significant
-showes and deuises’, because ‘there is no doubt but the author thereof
-who hath his place equall with the best in those Artes, will himselfe
-at his leasurable howers publish it in the best perfection’, gives a
-Song of Welcome, sung under an artificial oak of silk at the gates.
-Probably this was not Jonson’s, as he did not print it. Bond, i. 505,
-is hardly justified in reprinting it as Lyly’s.
-
- _Theobalds Entertainment. 1607_
-
-1616. An Entertainment of King Iames and Queene Anne, at Theobalds,
-When the House was deliuered vp, with the posession, to the Queene, by
-the Earle of Salisburie, 22. of May, 1607. The Prince Ianvile, brother
-to the Duke of Guise, being then present. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ and by Nichols, _James_ (1828), ii. 128.
-
-The Genius of the house mourns the departure of his master, but is
-consoled by Mercury, Good Event, and the three Parcae, and yields the
-keys to Anne. The performance took place in a gallery, known later as
-the green gallery, 109 feet long by 12 wide. Boderie, ii. 253, notes
-the ‘espéce de comedie’, and the presence of Prince de Joinville.
-
- _Prince Henry’s Barriers. 6 Jan. 1610_
-
-1616. The Speeches at Prince Henries Barriers. [Part of F_{1}.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ and by Nichols, _James_ (1828), ii. 271.
-
-The barriers had a spectacular setting. The Lady of the Lake is
-‘discovered’ and points to her lake and Merlin’s tomb. Arthur is
-‘discovered as a star above’. Merlin rises from his tomb. Their
-speeches lament the decay of chivalry, and foretell its restoration,
-now that James ‘claims Arthur’s seat’, through a knight, for whom
-Arthur gives the Lady a shield. The Knight, ‘Meliadus, lord of the
-isles’, is then ‘discovered’ with his six assistants in a place
-inscribed ‘St. George’s Portico’. Merlin tells the tale of English
-history. Chivalry comes forth from a cave, and the barriers take place,
-after which Merlin pays final compliments to the King and Queen, Henry,
-Charles, and Elizabeth.
-
-Jonson does not date the piece, but it stands in F_{1} between the
-_Masque of Queens_ (2 Feb. 1609) and _Oberon_ (1 Jan. 1611), and
-this, with the use of the name Meliadus, enables us to attach it to
-the barriers of 6 Jan. 1610, of which there is ample record (Stowe,
-_Annales_, 574; Cornwallis, _Life of Henry_, 12; Birch, i. 102;
-Winwood, iii. 117; _V. P._ xi. 400, 403, 406, 410, 414). It was
-Henry’s first public appearance in arms, and he had some difficulty
-in obtaining the King’s consent, but His Majesty did not wish to
-cross him. The challenge, speeches for which are summarized by
-Cornwallis, was on 31 Dec. in the presence-chamber, and until 6 Jan.
-Henry kept open table at St. James’s at a cost of £100 a day. With
-him as challengers were the Duke of Lennox, the Earls of Arundel and
-Southampton, Lord Hay, Sir Thomas Somerset, and Sir Richard Preston.
-There were fifty-eight defendants, of whom prizes were adjudged to the
-Earl of Montgomery, Thomas Darcy, and Sir Robert Gordon. Each bout
-consisted of two pushes with the pike and twelve sword-strokes, and the
-young prince gave or received that night thirty-two pushes and about
-360 strokes. Drummond of Hawthornden, who called his elegy on Henry
-_Tears on the Death of Moeliades_, explains the name as an anagram,
-_Miles a Deo_.
-
- _A Challenge at Tilt. 1 Jan. 1614_
-
-1616. A Challenge at Tilt, at a Marriage. [Part of F_{1} where it
-follows upon the mask _Love Restored_ (q.v.), and the type is perhaps
-arranged so as to suggest a connexion, which can hardly have existed.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Works_ and by Nichols, _James_ (1828),
-ii. 716.
-
-On the day after the marriage, two Cupids, as pages of the bride and
-bridegroom, quarrelled and announced the tilt. On 1 Jan. each came in
-a chariot, with a company of ten knights, of whom the Bride’s were
-challengers, and introduced and followed the tilting with speeches.
-Finally, Hymen resolved the dispute.
-
-This tilt was on 1 Jan. 1614, after the wedding of the Earl of Somerset
-on 26 Dec. 1613, as is clearly shown by a letter of Chamberlain (Birch,
-i. 287). The bride’s colours were murrey and white, the bridegroom’s
-green and yellow. The tilters included the Duke of Lennox, the
-Earls of Rutland, Pembroke, Montgomery, and Dorset, Lords Chandos,
-Scrope, Compton, North, Hay, Norris, and Dingwall, Lord Walden and his
-brothers, and Sir Henry Cary.
-
- _Lost Entertainment_
-
-When James dined with the Merchant Taylors on 16 July 1607 (cf. ch.
-iv), Jonson wrote a speech of eighteen verses, for recitation by an
-Angel of Gladness. This ‘pleased his Majesty marvelously well’, but
-does not seem to have been preserved (Nichols, _James_, ii. 136; Clode,
-i. 276).
-
-
-FRANCIS KINWELMERSHE (>1577–?1580).
-
-A Gray’s Inn lawyer, probably of Charlton, Shropshire, verses by whom
-are in _The Paradise of Dainty Devices_ (1576).
-
- _Jocasta. 1566_
-
-Translated with George Gascoigne (q.v.).
-
-
-THOMAS KYD (1558–94).
-
-Kyd was baptized on 6 Nov. 1558. His father, Francis Kyd, was a London
-citizen and a scrivener. John Kyd, a stationer, may have been a
-relative. Thomas entered the Merchant Taylors School in 1565, but there
-is no evidence that he proceeded to a university. It is possible that
-he followed his father’s profession before he drifted into literature.
-He seems to be criticized as translator and playwright in Nashe’s
-Epistle to Greene’s _Menaphon_ in 1589 (cf. App. C), and a reference
-there has been rather rashly interpreted as implying that he was the
-author of an early play on Hamlet. About the same time his reputation
-was made by _The Spanish Tragedy_, which came, with _Titus Andronicus_,
-to be regarded as the typical drama of its age. Ben Jonson couples
-‘sporting Kyd’ with ‘Marlowe’s mighty line’ in recording the early
-dramatists outshone by Shakespeare. Towards the end of his life Kyd’s
-relations with Marlowe brought him into trouble. During the years
-1590–3 he was in the service of a certain noble lord for whose players
-Marlowe was in the habit of writing. The two sat in the same room
-and certain ‘atheistic’ papers of Marlowe’s got mixed up with Kyd’s.
-On 12 May 1593 Kyd was arrested on a suspicion of being concerned in
-certain ‘lewd and mutinous libels’ set up on the wall of the Dutch
-churchyard; the papers were discovered and led to Marlowe (q.v.) being
-arrested also. Kyd, after his release, wrote to the Lord Keeper, Sir
-John Puckering, to repudiate the charge of atheism and to explain away
-his apparent intimacy with Marlowe. It is not certain who the ‘lord’
-with whom the two writers were connected may have been; possibly
-Lord Pembroke or Lord Strange, for whose players Marlowe certainly
-wrote; possibly also Henry Radcliffe, fourth Earl of Sussex, to whose
-daughter-in-law Kyd dedicated his translation of _Cornelia_, after
-his disgrace, in 1594. Before the end of 1594 Kyd had died intestate
-in the parish of St. Mary Colchurch, and his parents renounced the
-administration of his goods.
-
- _Collection_
-
-1901. F. S. Boas, _The Works of T. K._ [Includes _1 Jeronimo_ and
-_Soliman and Perseda_.]
-
-_Dissertations_: K. Markscheffel, _T. K.’s Tragödien_ (1886–7,
-_Jahresbericht des Realgymnasiums zu Weimar_); A. Doleschal,
-_Eigenthümlichkeiten der Sprache in T. K.’s Dramen_ (1888), _Der
-Versbau in T. K.’s Dramen_ (1891); E. Ritzenfeldt, _Der Gebrauch des
-Pronomens, Artikels und Verbs bei T. K._; G. Sarrazin, _T. K. und sein
-Kreis_ (1892, incorporating papers in _Anglia_ and _E. S._); J. Schick,
-_T. K.’s Todesjahr_ (1899, _Jahrbuch_, xxxv. 277); O. Michael, _Der
-Stil in T. K.’s Originaldramen_ (1905, _Berlin diss._); C. Crawford,
-_Concordance to the Works of T. K._ (1906–10, _Materialien_, xv); F. C.
-Danchin, _Études critiques sur C. Marlowe_ (1913, _Revue Germanique_,
-ix. 566); _T. L. S._ (June, 1921).
-
- _The Spanish Tragedy, c. 1589_
-
-_S. R._ 1592, Oct. 6 (Hartwell). ‘A booke whiche is called the
-_Spanishe tragedie_ of Don Horatio and Bellmipeia.’ _Abel Jeffes_
-(Arber, ii. 621). [Against the fee is a note ‘Debitum hoc’.
-Herbert-Ames, _Typographical Antiquities_, ii. 1160, quotes from a
-record in Dec. 1592 of the Stationers’ Company, not given by Arber:
-‘Whereas Edw. White and Abell Jeffes have each of them offended, viz.
-E. W. in having printed the Spanish tragedie belonging to A. J. And A.
-J. in having printed the Tragedie of Arden of Kent, belonginge to E. W.
-It is agreed that all the bookes of each impression shalbe confiscated
-and forfayted according to thordonances to thuse of the poore of the
-company ... either of them shall pay for a fine 10_s._ a pece.’]
-
-N.D. The Spanish Tragedie, Containing the lamentable end of Don
-Horatio, and Bel-Imperia: with the pittiful death of olde Hieronimo.
-Newly corrected, and amended of such grosse faults as passed in the
-first impression. _Edward Allde for Edward White._ [Induction. Greg,
-_Plays_, 61, and Boas, xxvii, agree in regarding this as the earliest
-extant edition. Boas suggests that either it may be White’s illicit
-print, or, if that print was the ‘first impression’, a later one
-printed for him by arrangement with Jeffes.]
-
-1594. _Abell Jeffes, sold by Edward White._
-
-_S. R._ 1599, Aug. 13. Transfer ‘salvo iure cuiuscunque’ from Jeffes to
-W. White (Arber, iii. 146).
-
-1599. _William White._
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Aug. 14. Transfer to Thomas Pavier (Arber, iii. 169).
-
-1602.... Newly corrected, amended, and enlarged with new additions of
-the Painters part, and others, as it hath of late been diuers times
-acted. _W. White for Thomas Pavier._
-
-1602 (colophon 1603); 1610 (colophon 1611); 1615 (two issues); 1618;
-1623 (two issues); 1633.
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1874, v), and by T. Hawkins (1773,
-_O. E. D._ ii), W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ i), J. M. Manly (1897,
-_Specimens_, ii), J. Schick (1898, _T. D._; 1901, _Litterarhistorische
-Forschungen_, xix). _Dissertations_: J. A. Worp, _Die Fabel der Sp.
-T._ (1894, _Jahrbuch_, xxix, 183); G. O. Fleischer, _Bemerkungen über
-Thomas Kyd’s Spanish Tragedy_ (1896).
-
-Kyd’s authorship of the play is recorded by Heywood, _Apology_, 45
-(cf. App. C, No. lvii). The only direct evidence as to the date is Ben
-Jonson’s statement in the Induction to _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), ‘He
-that will swear _Ieronimo_ or _Andronicus_ are the best plays yet,
-shall pass unexcepted at here as a man whose judgment shows it is
-constant, and hath stood still these five and twenty or thirty years’.
-This yields 1584–9. Boas, xxx, argues for 1585–7; W. Bang in _Englische
-Studien_, xxviii. 229, for 1589. The grounds for a decision are slight,
-but the latter date seems to me the more plausible in the absence of
-any clear allusion to the play in Nashe’s (q.v.) _Menaphon_ epistle of
-that year.
-
-Strange’s men revived _Jeronymo_ on 14 March 1592 and played it
-sixteen times between that date and 22 Jan. 1593. I agree with Greg
-(_Henslowe_, ii. 150, 153) that by _Jeronymo_ Henslowe meant _The
-Spanish Tragedy_, and that the performances of it are distinguishable
-from those which the company was concurrently giving of a related piece
-called _Don Horatio_ or ‘the comedy of Jeronimo’, which is probably
-not to be identified with the extant anonymous _1 Jeronimo_ (q.v.).
-On 7 Jan. 1597 the play was revived by the Admiral’s and given twelve
-times between that date and 19 July. Another performance, jointly with
-Pembroke’s, took place on 11 Oct. Finally, on 25 Sept. 1601 and 22 June
-1602, Henslowe made payments to Jonson, on behalf of the Admiral’s,
-for ‘adicyons’ to the play. At first sight, it would seem natural to
-suppose that these ‘adicyons’ are the passages (II. v. 46–133; III. ii.
-65–129; III. xii^a. 1–157; IV. iv. 168–217) which appear for the first
-time in the print of 1602. But many critics have found it difficult
-to see Jonson’s hand in these, notably Castelain, 886, who would
-assign them to Webster. And as Henslowe marked the play as ‘n. e.’ in
-1597, it is probable that there was some substantial revision at that
-date. There is a confirmation of this view in Jonson’s own mention
-of ‘the old Hieronimo (as it was first acted)’ in the induction to
-_Cynthia’s Revels_ (1600). Perhaps the 1597 revival motived Jonson’s
-quotation of the play by the mouth of Matheo in _E. M. I._ I. iv, and
-in _Satiromastix_, 1522, Dekker suggests that Jonson himself ‘took’st
-mad Ieronimoes part, to get service among the Mimickes’. Lines from
-the play are also recited by the page in _Poetaster_, III. iv. 231. In
-the Induction, 84, to Marston’s _Malcontent_ (1604) Condell explains
-the appropriation of that play by the King’s from the Chapel with
-this retort, ‘Why not Malevole in folio with us, as well as Jeronimo
-in decimo sexto with them’. Perhaps _1 Jeronimo_ is meant; in view of
-the stage history of _The Spanish Tragedy_, as disclosed by Henslowe’s
-diary, the King’s could hardly have laid claim to it.
-
-The play was carried by English actors to Germany (Boas, xcix;
-Creizenach, xxxiii; Herz, 66, 76), and a German adaptation by Jacob
-Ayrer is printed by Boas, 348, and with others in German and Dutch, in
-R. Schönwerth, _Die niederländischen und deutschen Bearbeitungen von
-T. K.’s Sp. T._ (1903, _Litterarhistorische Forschungen_, xxvi).
-
- _Cornelia. 1593_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, Jan. 26 (Dickins). ‘A booke called Cornelia, Thomas Kydd
-beinge the Authour.’ _Nicholas Ling and John Busbye_ (Arber, ii. 644).
-
-1594. Cornelia. _James Roberts for N. L. and John Busby._ [‘Tho. Kyd’
-at end of play.]
-
-1595. Pompey the Great, his fair Corneliaes Tragedie. Effected by her
-Father and Husbandes downe-cast, death, and fortune. Written in French,
-by that excellent Poet Ro: Garnier; and translated into English by
-Thomas Kid. _For Nicholas Ling._ [A reissue of the 1594 sheets
-with a new title-page.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^4, iv. 5 (1874) and by H. Gassner (1894).
-
-A translation of the _Cornélie_ (1574) of Robert Garnier, reissued
-in his _Huit Tragédies_ (1580). In a dedication to the Countess of
-Sussex Kyd expressed his intention of also translating the _Porcie_
-(1568) of the same writer, but this he did not live to do. He speaks of
-‘bitter times and privy broken passions’ endured during the writing of
-_Cornelia_ which suggests a date after his arrest on 12 May 1593.
-
- _Lost and Doubtful Plays_
-
- _The ‘Ur-Hamlet’_
-
-_Dissertations_: J. Corbin, _The German H. and Earlier English
-Versions_ (1896, _Harvard Studies_, v); J. Schick, _Die Entstehung des
-H._ (1902, _Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. xiii); M. B. Evans, _Der bestrafte
-Brudermord, sein Verhältniss zu Shakespeare’s H._ (1902); K. Meier
-(1904, _Dresdner Anzeiger_); W. Creizenach, _Der bestrafte Brudermord
-and its Relation to Shakespeare’s H._ (1904, _M. P._ ii. 249), _Die
-vorshakespearesche Hamlettragödie_ (1906, _Jahrbuch_, xlii. 76); A. E.
-Jack, _Thomas Kyd and the Ur-Hamlet_ (1905, _M. L. A._ xx. 729); J. W.
-Cunliffe, _Nash and the Earlier Hamlet_ (1906, _M. L. A._ xxi. 193); J.
-Allen, _The Lost H. of K._ (1908, _Westminster Review_); J. Fitzgerald,
-_The Sources of the H. Tragedy_ (1909); M. J. Wolff, _Zum Ur-Hamlet_
-(1912, _E. S._ xlv. 9); J. M. Robertson, _The Problem of Hamlet_ (1919).
-
-The existence of a play on Hamlet a decade or more before the end
-of the sixteenth century is established by Henslowe’s note of its
-revival by the Admiral’s and Chamberlain’s on 11 June 1594 (cf. Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 164), and some corroborative allusions, but its
-relationship to Shakespeare’s play is wholly conjectural. The possible
-coupling of ‘Kidde’ and ‘Hamlet’ in Nashe’s epistle to _Menaphon_ has
-led to many speculations as to Kyd’s authorship and as to the lines
-on which the speculators think he would have treated the theme. Any
-discussion of these is matter for an account of _Hamlet_.
-
-Kyd’s hand has also been sought in _Arden of Feversham_, _Contention
-of York and Lancaster_, _Edward III_, _1 Jeronimo_, _Leire_, _Rare
-Triumphs of Love and Fortune_, _Soliman and Perseda_, _Taming of A
-Shrew_, and _True Tragedy of Richard III_ (cf. ch. xxiv), and in
-Shakespeare’s _Titus Andronicus_.
-
-
-MAURICE KYFFIN (?-1599).
-
-A Welshman by birth, he left the service of John Dee, with whom he
-afterwards kept up friendly relations, on 25 Oct. 1580 (_Diary_,
-10, 15, 48). His epistles suggest that in 1587 he was tutor to Lord
-Buckhurst’s sons. In 1592 he was vice-treasurer in Normandy. His
-writings, other than the translation, are unimportant.
-
- _Andria of Terence > 1587_
-
-1588. Andria The first Comoedie of Terence, in English. A furtherance
-for the attainment vnto the right knowledge, & true proprietie, of
-the Latin Tong. And also a commodious meane of help, to such as
-haue forgotten Latin, for their speedy recouering of habilitie, to
-vnderstand, write, and speake the same. Carefully translated out of
-Latin, by Maurice Kyffin. _T. E. for Thomas Woodcocke._ [Epistle by
-Kyffin to Henry and Thomas Sackville; commendatory verses by ‘W.
-Morgan’, ‘Th. Lloid’, ‘G. Camdenus’, ‘Petrus Bizarus’, ‘R. Cooke’;
-Epistle to William Sackville, dated ‘London, Decemb. 3, 1587’, signed
-‘Maurice Kyffin’; Preface to the Reader; Preface by Kyffin to all young
-Students of the Latin Tongue, signed ‘M. K.’; Argument.]
-
-_S. R._ 1596, Feb. 9. Transfer of Woodcock’s copies to Paul Linley
-(Arber, iii. 58).
-
-_S. R._ 1597, Apr. 21 (Murgetrode). ‘The second Comedy of Terence
-called Eunuchus.’ _Paul Lynley_ (Arber, iii. 83).
-
-_S. R._ 1600, June 26. Transfer of ‘The first and second commedie of
-Terence in Inglishe’ from Paul Linley to John Flasket (Arber, iii. 165).
-
-Presumably the _Andria_ is the ‘first’ comedy of the 1600 transfer, and
-if so the lost _Eunuchus_ may also have been by Kyffin. The _Andria_ is
-in prose; Kyffin says he had begun seven years before, nearly finished,
-and abandoned a version in verse.
-
-
-JOHN LANCASTER (_c._ 1588).
-
-A Gray’s Inn lawyer, one of the devisers of dumb-shows and director for
-the _Misfortunes of Arthur_ of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588.
-
-
-SIR HENRY LEE (1531–1611).
-
-[The accounts of Lee in _D. N. B._ and by Viscount Dillon in _Bucks.,
-Berks. and Oxon. Arch. Journ._, xii (1906) 65, may be supplemented from
-Aubrey, ii. 30, J. H. Lea, _Genealogical Notes on the Family of Lee of
-Quarrendon_ (_Genealogist_, n.s. viii-xiv), and F. G. Lee in _Bucks.
-Records_, iii. 203, 241; iv. 189, _The Lees of Quarrendon_ (_Herald and
-Genealogist_, iii. 113, 289, 481), and _Genealogy of the Family of Lee_
-(1884).]
-
-Lee belonged to a family claiming a Cheshire origin, which had long
-been settled in Bucks. From 1441 they were constables and farmers of
-Quarrendon in the same county, and the manor was granted by Henry
-VIII to Sir Robert Lee, who was Gentleman Usher of the Chamber and
-afterwards Knight of the Body. His son Sir Anthony married Margaret,
-sister of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the poet. Their son Henry was born in
-1531, and Aubrey reports the scandal that he was ‘supposed brother to
-Elizabeth’. He was page of honour to the King, and by 1550 Clerk of
-the Armoury. He was knighted in 1553. By Sept. 1575 he was Master of
-the Game at Woodstock (Dasent, ix. 23), and by 1577 Lieutenant of the
-manor and park (Marshall, _Woodstock_, 160), holding ‘le highe lodge’
-and other royal houses in the locality. Probably he was concerned with
-the foundation of Queen’s Day (cf. ch. i) in 1570, which certainly
-originated near Oxford, and when the annual tilting on this day at
-Whitehall was instituted, Lee acted as Knight of the Crown until his
-retirement in 1590. He used as his favourite device a crowned pillar.
-He took some part in the military enterprises of the reign, and in
-1578 became Master of the Armoury. In 1597 he was thought of as
-Vice-Chamberlain, and on 23 April was installed as K.G. He was a great
-sheep-farmer and encloser of land, and a great builder or enlarger of
-houses, including Ditchley Hall, four or five miles from Woodstock, in
-the parish of Spelsbury, where he died on 12 Feb. 1611. By his wife,
-Anne, daughter of William Lord Paget, who died in 1590, he had two
-sons and a daughter, who all predeceased him. His will of 6 Oct. 1609
-provides for the erection of a tomb in Quarrendon Chapel near his own
-for ‘M^{rs}. Ann Vavasor alias Finch’. There are no tombs now, but the
-inscriptions on Lee’s tomb and on a tablet in the chancel, also not
-preserved, are recorded. The former says:
-
- ‘In courtly justs his Soveraignes knight he was’,
-
-and the latter adds:
-
- ‘He shone in all those fayer partes that became his profession
- and vowes, honoring his highly gracious Mistris with reysing
- those later Olympiads of her Courte, justs and tournaments ...
- wherein still himself lead and triumphed.’
-
-The writer is William Scott, who also, with Richard Lee, witnessed
-the will. Anne Vavasour does not in fact appear to have been buried
-at Quarrendon. Aubrey describes her as ‘his dearest deare’, and says
-that her effigy was placed at the foot of his on the tomb, and that the
-bishop threatened to have it removed. Anne’s tomb was in fact defaced
-as early as 1611. Anne was daughter of Sir Henry and sister of Sir
-Thomas Vavasour of Copmanthorpe, Yorks. She was a new maid of honour
-who ‘flourished like the lily and the rose’ in 1590 (Lodge, ii. 423).
-Another Anne Vavasour came to Court as ‘newly of the beddchamber’
-after being Lady Bedford’s ‘woman’, about July 1601 (Gawdy, 112,
-conjecturally dated; cf. vol. iv, p. 67). Anne Clifford tells us that
-‘my cousin Anne Vavisour’ was going with her mother Lady Cumberland and
-Lady Warwick and herself to meet Queen Anne in 1603, and married Sir
-Richard Warburton the same year (Wiffen, ii. 69, 72). The Queen is said
-to have visited Sir Henry and his mistress at a lodge near Woodstock
-called ‘Little Rest’, now ‘Lee’s Rest’, in 1608. After Lee’s death his
-successor brought an action against Anne and her brother for illegal
-detention of his effects (_5 N. Q._ iii. 294), and the feud was
-still alive and Anne had added other sins to her score in 1618, when
-Chamberlain wrote (Birch, ii. 86):
-
- ‘M^{rs}. Vavasour, old Sir Henry Lee’s woman, is like to be
- called in question for having two husbands now alive. Young
- Sir Henry Lee, the wild oats of Ireland, hath obtained the
- confiscation of her, if he can prove it without touching her
- life.’
-
-Aubrey’s story that Lee’s nephew was disinherited in favour of ‘a
-keeper’s sonne of Whitchwood-forest of his owne name, a one-eied young
-man, no kinne to him’, is exaggerated gossip. Lee entailed his estate
-on a second cousin.
-
-I have brought together under Lee’s name two entertainments and
-fragments of at least one other, which ought strictly to be classed
-as anonymous, but with which he was certainly concerned, and to which
-he may have contributed some of the ‘conceiptes, Himmes, Songes &
-Emblemes’, of which one of the fragments speaks.
-
- _The Woodstock Entertainment. Sept. 1575_
-
-[_MS._] _Royal MS._ 18 A. xlviii (27). ‘The Tale of Hemetes the
-Heremyte.’ [The tale is given in four languages, English, Latin,
-Italian, and French. It is accompanied by pen-and-ink drawings, and
-preceded by verses and an epistle to Elizabeth. The latter is dated
-‘first of January, 1576’ and signed ‘G. Gascoigne’. The English text
-is, with minor variations, that of the tale as printed in 1585. Its
-authorship is not claimed by Gascoigne, who says that he has ‘turned
-the eloquent tale of _Hemetes the Heremyte_ (wherw^{th} I saw yo^r
-lerned judgment greatly pleased at Woodstock) into latyne, Italyan and
-frenche’, and contrasts his own ignorance with ‘thaucto^{rs} skyll’.]
-
-_S. R._ 1579, Sept. 22. ‘A paradox provinge by Reason and Example that
-Baldnes is muche better than bushie heare.’ _H. Denham_ (Arber, ii.
-360).
-
-1579. A Paradoxe, Proving by reason and example, that Baldnesse is much
-better than bushie haire.... Englished by Abraham Fleming. Hereunto is
-annexed the pleasant tale of Hemetes the Heremite, pronounced before
-the Queenes Majestie. Newly recognized both in Latine and Englishe, by
-the said A. F. _H. Denham._ [Contains the English text of the Tale
-and Gascoigne’s Latin version.]
-
-1585. _Colophon_: ‘Imprinted at London for Thomas Cadman, 1585.’
-[Originally contained a complete description of an entertainment,
-of which the tale of Hemetes only formed part; but sig. A, with the
-title-page, is missing. The unique copy, formerly in the Rowfant
-library, is now in the B.M. The t.p. is a modern type-facsimile, based
-on the head-line and colophon (McKerrow, _Bibl. Evidence_, 306).]
-
-_Editions_ (_a_) from 1579, by J. Nichols, _Eliz._ i. 553 (1823), and
-W. C. Hazlitt, _Gascoigne_, ii. 135 (1870); (_b_) from _MS._ by J.
-W. Cunliffe, _Gascoigne_, ii. 473 (1910); (_c_) from 1585, by A. W.
-Pollard (1910, partly printed 1903) and J. W. Cunliffe (1911, _M. L.
-A._ xxvi. 92).
-
-Gascoigne’s manuscript is chiefly of value as fixing the locality of
-the entertainment, which is not mentioned in the mutilated print of
-1585. The date can hardly be doubtful. Elizabeth spent considerable
-periods at Woodstock in 1572, 1574, and 1575, but it so happens that
-only in 1575 was she there on the 20th of a month (_vide infra_ and
-App. B). Moreover, Laurence Humphrey’s _Oratio_ delivered at Woodstock
-on 11 Sept. 1575 (Nichols, i. 590) refers to the entertainment in the
-phrase ‘an ... Gandina spectacula ... dabit’. The description takes
-the form of a letter from an eyewitness, evidently not the deviser,
-and professing ignorance of Italian; not, therefore, Gascoigne, as
-pointed out by Mr. Pollard. At the beginning of sig. B, Hemetes, a
-hermit, has evidently just interrupted a fight between Loricus and
-Contarenus. He brings them, with the Lady Caudina, to a bower, where
-Elizabeth is placed, and tells his Tale, of which the writer says,
-‘hee shewed a great proofe of his audacity, in which tale if you marke
-the woords with this present world, or were acquainted with the state
-of the deuises, you should finde no lesse hidden then vttered, and no
-lesse vttered then shoulde deserue a double reading ouer, euen of those
-(with whom I finde you a companion) that haue disposed their houres to
-the study of great matters’. The Tale explains how the personages have
-come together. Contarenus loved Caudina, daughter of Occanon Duke of
-Cambia. At Occanon’s request, an enchantress bore him away, and put him
-in charge of the blind hermit, until after seven years he should fight
-the hardiest knight and see the worthiest lady in the world. Caudina,
-setting out with two damsels to seek him, met at the grate of Sibilla
-with Loricus, a knight seeking renown as a means to his mistress’s
-favour. Sibilla bade them wander, till they found a land in all things
-best, and with a Princess most worthy. Hemetes himself has been blinded
-by Venus for loving books as well as a lady, and promised by Apollo the
-recovery of his sight, where most valiant knights fight, most constant
-lovers meet, and the worthiest lady looks on. Obviously it is all a
-compliment to the worthiest lady. Thus the Tale ends. The Queen is
-now led to the hermit’s abode, an elaborate sylvan banqueting-house,
-built on a mound forty feet high, roofed by an oak, and hung with
-pictures and posies of ‘the noble or men of great credite’, some of
-which the French ambassador made great suit to have. Here Elizabeth was
-visited by ‘the Queen of the Fayry drawen with 6 children in a waggon
-of state’, who presented her with an embroidered gown. Couplets or
-‘posies’ set in garlands were also given to the Queen, to the Ladies
-Derby, Warwick, Hunsdon, Howard, Susan and Mary Vere, and to Mistresses
-Skidmore, Parry, Abbington, Sidney, Hopton, Katherine Howard, Garret,
-Bridges, Burrough, Knowles, and Frances Howard. After a speech from
-Caudina, Elizabeth departed, as it was now dark, well pleased with her
-afternoon, and listening to a song from an oak tree as she went by.
-A somewhat cryptic passage follows. Elizabeth is said to have left
-‘earnest command that the whole in order as it fell, should be brought
-her in writing, which being done, as I heare, she vsed, besides her
-owne skill, the helpe of the deuisors, & how thinges were made I know
-not, but sure I am her Maiesty hath often in speech some part hereof
-with mirth at the remembrance.’ Then follows a comedy acted on ‘the 20
-day of the same moneth’, which ‘was as well thought of, as anye thing
-ever done before her Maiestie, not onely of her, but of the rest: in
-such sort that her Graces passions and other the Ladies could not [?
-but] shew it selfe in open place more than euer hath beene seene’. The
-comedy, in 991 lines of verse, is in fact a sequel to the Tale. In it
-Occanon comes to seek Caudina, who is persuaded by his arguments and
-the mediation of Eambia, the Fairy Queen, to give up her lover for her
-country’s sake.
-
-Pollard suggests Gascoigne as the author of the comedy, but of this
-there is no external evidence. He also regards the intention of the
-whole entertainment as being the advancement of Leicester’s suit.
-Leicester was no doubt at Woodstock, even before the Queen, for he
-wrote her a letter from there on 4 Sept. (_S. P. D. Eliz_. cv. 36);
-but the undated letter which Pollard cites (cv. 38), and in which
-Leicester describes himself as ‘in his survey to prepare for her
-coming’, probably precedes the Kenilworth visit. Pollard dates it 6
-Sept., but Elizabeth herself seems to have reached Woodstock by that
-date. Professor Cunliffe, on the other hand, thinks that the intention
-was unfavourable to Leicester’s suit, and thus explains the stress
-laid on Caudina’s renunciation of her lover for political reasons. I
-doubt if there is any reference to the matter at all; it would have
-been dangerous matter for a courtly pen. Doubtless the writer of the
-description talks of ‘audacity’, in the Tale, not the comedy. But has
-he anything more in mind than Sir Henry Lee, whom we are bound to find,
-here as elsewhere, in Loricus, and his purely conventional worship of
-Elizabeth?
-
- _The Tilt Yard Entertainment. 17 Nov. 1590_
-
-There are two contemporary descriptions, viz.:
-
-1590. Polyhymnia Describing, the Honourable Triumph at Tylt, before her
-Maiestie, on the 17 of Nouember last past, being the first day of the
-three and thirtith yeare of her Highnesse raigne. With Sir Henrie Lea,
-his resignation of honour at Tylt, to her Maiestie, and receiued by the
-right honorable, the Earle of Cumberland. _R. Jones._ [Dedication by
-George Peele to Lord Compton on verso of t.p.]
-
-1602. W. Segar, Honor, Military and Ciuill, Book iii, ch. 54, ‘The
-Originall occasions of the yeerely Triumphs in England’.
-
-Segar’s account is reproduced by Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 41, and both
-in the editions of Peele (q.v.) by Dyce and Bullen. A manuscript copy
-with variants from the Q. is at St. John’s College, Oxford (F. S. Boas
-in _M. L. R._ xi. 300). _Polyhymnia_ mainly consists of a blank verse
-description and eulogy of the twenty-six tilters, in couples according
-to the order of the first running of six courses each, viz. Sir Henry
-Lee and the Earl of Cumberland, Lord Strange and Thomas Gerrard, Lord
-Compton and Henry Nowell, Lord Burke and Sir Edward Denny, the Earl of
-Essex and Fulk Greville, Sir Charles Blount and Thomas Vavasor, Robert
-Carey and William Gresham, Sir William Knowles and Anthony Cooke, Sir
-Thomas Knowles and Sir Philip Butler, Robert Knowles and Ralph Bowes,
-Thomas Sidney and Robert Alexander, John Nedham and Richard Acton,
-Charles Danvers and Everard Digby. The colours and in some cases the
-‘device’ or ‘show’ are indicated. Lee is described as
-
- Knight of the crown, in rich embroidery,
- And costly fair caparison charged with crowns,
- O’ershadowed with a withered running vine,
- As who would say, ‘My spring of youth is past’,
- In corselet gilt of curious workmanship.
-
-Strange entered ‘in costly ship’, with the eagle for his device; Essex
-
- In stately chariot full of deep device,
- Where gloomy Time sat whipping on the team,
- Just back to back with this great champion.
-
-Blount’s badge was the sun, Carey’s a burning heart, Cooke’s a hand and
-heart,
-
- And Life and Death he portray’d in his show.
-
-The three Knowles brothers bore golden boughs. A final section of the
-poem describes how, after the running, Sir Henry Lee, ‘knight of the
-Crown’, unarmed himself in a pavilion of Vesta, and petitioned the
-Queen to allow him to yield his ‘honourable place’ to Cumberland, to
-whom he gave his armour and lance, vowing to betake himself to orisons.
-
-Segar gives a fuller account of Lee’s fantasy. He had vowed, ‘in the
-beginning of her happy reigne’, to present himself yearly in arms
-on the day of Elizabeth’s accession. The courtiers, incited by his
-example, had yearly assembled, ‘not vnlike to the antient Knighthood
-della Banda in Spaine’, but in 1590, ‘being now by age ouertaken’,
-Lee resigned his office to Cumberland. The ceremony took place ‘at
-the foot of the staires vnder her gallery-window in the Tilt-yard at
-Westminster’, where Elizabeth sat with the French ambassador, Viscount
-Turenne. A pavilion, representing the Temple of the Vestal Virgins,
-arose out of the earth. Within was an altar, with gifts for the queen;
-before the door a crowned pillar, embraced by an eglantine, and bearing
-a complimentary inscription. As the knights approached, ‘M. Hales her
-maiesties seruant’ sang verses beginning:
-
- My golden locks time hath to siluer turned.
-
-The vestals then gave the Queen a veil and a cloak and safeguard,
-the buttons of which bore the ‘emprezes’ or ‘badges’ of many nobles,
-friends of Lee, each fixed to an embroidered pillar, the last being
-‘like the character of _&c._’ Finally Lee doffed his armour, presented
-Cumberland, armed and horsed him, and himself donned a side-coat of
-black velvet and a buttoned cap of the country fashion. ‘After all
-these ceremonies, for diuers dayes hee ware vpon his cloake a crowne
-embrodered, with a certaine motto or deuice, but what his intention
-therein was, himselfe best knoweth.’
-
-The Queen appointed Lee to appear yearly at the exercises, ‘to see,
-suruey, and as one most carefull and skilfull to direct them’. Segar
-dwells on Lee’s virtues and valour, and concludes by stating that the
-annual actions had been performed by 1 Duke, 19 Earls, 27 Barons, 4
-Knights of the Garter, and above 150 other Knights and Esquires.
-
-On 20 Nov. 1590 Richard Brakinbury wrote to Lord Talbot (Lodge,
-ii. 419): ‘These sports were great, and done in costly sort, to her
-Majesty’s liking, and their great cost. To express every part, with
-sundry devices, is more fit for them that delight in them, than for me,
-who esteemeth little such vanities, I thank God.’
-
-P. A. Daniel (_Athenaeum_ for 8 Feb. 1890) notes that a suit of armour
-in Lord Hothfield’s collection, which once belonged to Cumberland and
-is represented in certain portraits of him, is probably the identical
-suit given him by Lee, as it bears a monogram of Lee’s name.
-
-There has been some controversy about the authorship of the verses sung
-by ‘M. Hales’, who was Robert Hales, a lutenist. They appear, headed ‘A
-Sonnet’, and unsigned, on a page at the end of _Polyhymnia_, and have
-therefore been ascribed to Peele. The evidence, though inconclusive, is
-better than the wanton conjecture which led Mr. Bond to transfer them
-to Lyly (_Works_, i. 410). But a different version in _Rawl. Poet. MS._
-148, f. 19, is subscribed ‘q^d S^r Henry Leigh’, and some resemblances
-of expression are to be found in other verses assigned to Lee in R.
-Dowland, _Musicall Banquet_ (1610), No. 8 (Bond, i. 517; Fellowes,
-459). It is not impossible that Lee himself may have been the author.
-One of the pieces in the _Ferrers MS._ (_vide_ p. 406 _infra_) refers
-to his ‘himmes & songes’. If the verses, which also appear anonymously
-in J. Dowland, _First Booke of Songs or Ayres_ (1597, Fellowes, 418),
-are really Lee’s, Wyatt’s nephew was no contemptible poet. Finally,
-there are echoes of the same theme in yet another set of anonymous
-verses in J. Dowland, _Second Book of Airs_ (1600, Fellowes, 422),
-which are evidently addressed to Lee.
-
- _The Second Woodstock Entertainment, 20 Sept. 1592, and
- Other Fragments_
-
-[_MSS._] (_a_) _Ferrers MS._, a collection made by Henry Ferrers of
-Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire (1549–1633).
-
-(_b_) _Inner Temple Petyt MS._ 538, 43, ff. 284–363.
-
-[A collection of verses by Lady Pembroke, Sir John Harington, Francis
-Bacon (q.v.) and others, bound as part of a composite MS.]
-
-(_c_) Viscount Dillon kindly informs me that a part of the
-entertainment, dated ‘20 Sept.’, is in his possession.
-
-_Editions_ (_Ferrers MS._ only) by W. Hamper, _Masques: Performed
-before Queen Elizabeth_ (1820), and in _Kenilworth Illustrated_ (1821),
-Nichols, _Eliz._^2 iii. 193 (1828), and R. W. Bond, _Lyly_, i. 412, 453
-(1902).
-
-The Ferrers MS. seems to contain ten distinct pieces, separated from
-each other only by headings, to which I have prefixed the numbers.
-
-(i) ‘A Cartell for a Challeng.’
-
-Three ‘strange forsaken knightes’ offer to maintain ‘that Loue is worse
-than hate, his Subiectes worse than slaues, and his Rewarde worse than
-naught: And that there is a Ladie that scornes Loue and his power, of
-more vertue and greater bewtie than all the Amorouse Dames that be
-at this day in the worlde’. This cannot be dated. Sir Robert Carey
-(_Memoirs_, 33) tilted as a ‘forsaken knight’ on 17 Nov. 1593 (not
-1592, as stated by Brotanek, 60), but he was not a challenger, and was
-alone. The tone resembles that of Sir Henry Lee, and if he took part,
-the date must be earlier than 1590.
-
-(ii) ‘Sir Henry Lee’s challenge before the Shampanie.’
-
-A ‘strange knight that warres against hope and fortune’ will maintain
-the cause of Despair in a green suit.
-
-Hamper explained ‘Shampanie’ as ‘the lists or field of contention, from
-the French _campagne_’; but Segar, _Honor, Military and Ciuill_, 197,
-records, from an intercepted letter of ‘Monsieur de Champany ... being
-ambassador in England for causes of the Low Countreys’, an occasion
-on which Sir Henry Lee, ‘the most accomplished cavaliero I had euer
-seene’, broke lances with other gentlemen in his honour at Greenwich.
-M. de Champagny was an agent of the native Flemish Catholics, and
-visited England in 1575 and 1585 (Froude, x. 360; xii. 39). As his
-letter named ‘Sir’ C. Hatton, who was knighted in 1578, the visit of
-1585 must be in question. The Court was at Greenwich from March to July
-of that year.
-
-(iii) ‘The Supplication of the Owld Knight.’
-
-A speech to the ‘serveres of this English Holiday, or rather Englandes
-Happie Daye’, in which a knight disabled by age, ‘yet once (thowe
-unwoorthie) your fellowe in armes, and first celebrator, in this kinde,
-of this sacred memorie of that blessed reigne’, begs them to ‘accepte
-to your fellowshippe this oneley sonne of mine’.
-
-This is evidently a speech by Lee, on some 17 Nov. later than 1590.
-Lee’s own sons died in childhood; probably the ‘son’ introduced was a
-relative, but possibly only a ‘son’ in chivalry.
-
-(iv) ‘The Message of the Damsell of the Queene of Fayries.’
-
-An ‘inchanted knight’ sends the Queen an image of Cupid. She is
-reminded how ‘at the celebrating the joyfull remembraunce of the most
-happie daye of your Highnes entrance into Gouerment of this most
-noble Islande, howe manie knightes determined, not far hence, with
-boulde hartes and broken launces, to paye there vowes and shewe theire
-prowes’. The ‘inchanted knight’ could not ‘chardge staffe, nor strike
-blowe’, but entered the jousts, and bore the blows of others.
-
-If this has reference to the first celebration of 17 Nov., it may
-be of near date to the Woodstock Entertainment of 1575 in which the
-fairy queen appeared. The knight, ‘full hardie and full haples’, is
-enchanted, but is not said to be old.
-
-(v) ‘The Olde Knightes Tale.’
-
-‘Not far from hence, nor verie long agoe,’ clearly in 1575, ‘the fayrie
-Queene the fayrest Queene saluted’, and the pleasures included ‘justes
-and feates of armed knightes’, and ‘enchaunted pictures’ in a bower.
-The knight was bidden by the fairy queen to guard the pictures and keep
-his eyes on the crowned pillar. He became ‘a stranger ladies thrall’,
-neglected this duty, and was cast into a deadly sleep. Now he is freed,
-apparently through the intervention of Elizabeth, to whom the verses
-are addressed.
-
-(vi) ‘The Songe after Dinner at the two Ladies entrance.’
-
-Celebrates the setting free by a prince’s grace, of captive knights and
-ladies, and bids farewell to inconstancy.
-
-(vii) ‘The Ladies Thankesgeuing for theire Deliuerie from Unconstancie.’
-
-A speech to the Queen, in the same vein as (vi), followed by a dialogue
-between Li[berty], or Inconstancy, and Constancy. This is datable in
-1592 from another copy printed in _The Phoenix Nest_ (1593), with
-the title ‘An Excellent Dialogue betweene Constancie and Inconstancie:
-as it was by speech presented to her maiestie, in the last Progresse
-at Sir Henrie Leighes house’. Yet another copy, in _Inner Temple
-Petyt MS._ 538, 43, f. 299. ‘A Dialogue betweene Constancie and
-Inconstancie spoken before the Queenes Majestie at Woodstock’ is
-ascribed to ‘Doctor Edes’.
-
-(viii) ‘The last Songe.’
-
-A rejoicing on the coming of Eliza, with references to constancy and
-inconstancy, the aged knight, and the pillar and crown.
-
-(ix) ‘The second daies woorke where the Chaplayne maketh this
- Relation.’
-
-An Oration to the Queen by the chaplain of Loricus, ‘an owlde Knight,
-now a newe religiouse Hermite’. The story of Loricus was once told [in
-1575] ‘by a good father of his owne coate, not farr from this coppies’.
-Once he ‘rann the restles race of desire.... Sometymes he consorted
-with couragious gentelmen, manifesting inward joyes by open justes, the
-yearly tribute of his dearest Loue. Somtimes he summoned the witnesse
-of depest conceiptes, Himmes & Songes & Emblemes, dedicating them to
-the honor of his heauenlye mistres’. Retiring, through envy and age,
-to the country, he found the speaker at a homely cell, made him his
-chaplain, and built for their lodging and that of a page ‘the Crowne
-Oratory’, with a ‘Piller of perpetual remembraunce’ as his device
-on the entrance. Here he lies, at point of death, and has addressed
-his last testament to the Queen. This is in verse, signed ‘Loricus,
-columnae coronatae custos fidelissimus’, and witnessed by ‘Stellatus,
-rectoriae coronatae capellanus’, and ‘Renatus, equitis coronatae servus
-obseruantissimus’.
-
-(x) ‘The Page bringeth tydings of his Maister’s Recouerie & presenteth
- his Legacie.’
-
-A further address to the Queen, with a legacy in verse of the whole
-Mannor of Loue, signed by Loricus and witnessed by Stellatus and
-Renatus.
-
-This exhausts the _Ferrers MS._, but I can add from the _Petyt
-MS._ f. 300^v--
-
-(xi) ‘The melancholie Knights complaint in the wood.’
-
-This, like (vii), is ascribed in the MS. to ‘Doctor Edes’. It consists
-of 35 lines in 6 stanzas of 6 lines each (with one line missing) and
-begins:
-
- What troupes are theis, which ill aduised, presse
- Into this more than most vnhappie place.
-
-Allusions to the freeing of enchanted knights and ladies and to
-constancy and inconstancy connect it closely with (vi)-(viii).
-
-Obviously most of these documents, and therefore probably all, belong
-to devices presented by Sir Henry Lee. But they are of different dates,
-and not demonstrably in chronological order. A single occasion accounts
-for (vi)-(viii) and (xi), and a single occasion, which the mention of
-‘the second daie’ suggests may have been the same, for (ix) and (x);
-and probably Mr. Bond is justified in regarding all these as forming
-part with (vii) of the entertainment at Lee’s house in the progress of
-1592. But I do not see his justification for attaching (iv) and (v) to
-them, and I think that these are probably fragments of the Woodstock
-Entertainment of 1575, or not far removed from that in time. Nor has
-he any evidence for locating the entertainment of 1592 at Quarrendon,
-which was only one of several houses belonging to Sir Henry Lee, and
-could not be meant by the ‘coppies’ near Woodstock of (ix). It was
-doubtless, as the Petyt MS. version of (vii) tells us, at Woodstock,
-either at one of Lee’s lodges, or at Ditchley, during the royal visit
-to Woodstock of 18–23 Sept. 1592. I learn from Viscount Dillon that
-a MS. of part of this entertainment, dated 20 Sept., is still at
-Ditchley. Finally, Bond’s attribution of all the pieces (i)-(x) to Lyly
-is merely guesswork. Hamper assigned them to George Ferrers, probably
-because the owner of his MS. was a Ferrers. George Ferrers did in fact
-help in the Kenilworth Entertainment of 1575, and might therefore
-have helped in that at Woodstock; but he died in 1579, too early for
-(vi)-(xi). No doubt (vii) and (xi) are by Richard Edes (q.v.). He may
-have written the whole of this Woodstock Entertainment. On the other
-hand, a phrase in (ix) suggests that Lee may have penned some of his
-own conceits. Brotanek, 62, suggests that the two ladies of (vi) are
-Lee’s wife and his mistress Anne Vavasour, and that Elizabeth came
-to Lee’s irregular household to set it in order. This hardly needs
-refuting, but in fact Lee’s wife died in 1590 and his connexion with
-Anne Vavasour was probably of later date.
-
-
-ROBERT LEE.
-
-For his career as an actor, see ch. xv.
-
-He may have been, but was not necessarily, the author of _The Miller_
-which the Admiral’s bought from him for £1 on 22 Feb. 1598 (Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 191).
-
-
-THOMAS LEGGE (1535–1607).
-
-Of Norwich origin, Legge entered Corpus Christi, Cambridge, in 1552,
-and took his B.A. in 1557, his M.A. in 1560, and his LL.D. in 1575.
-After migration to Trinity and Jesus, he had become Master of Caius
-in 1573. In 1593 he was Vice-Chancellor, and in that capacity took
-part in the negotiations of the University with the Privy Council for
-a restraint of common plays in Cambridge (_M. S. C._ i. 200). His
-own reputation as a dramatist is acknowledged by Meres, who in 1598
-placed him among ‘our best for Tragedie’, and added that, ‘as M. Anneus
-Lucanus writ two excellent Tragedies, one called _Medea_, the other
-_de Incendio Troiae cum Priami calamitate_: so Doctor _Leg_ hath penned
-two famous tragedies, y^e one of _Richard the 3_, the other of _The
-destruction of Ierusalem_’.
-
- _Richardus Tertius. March 1580_
-
-[_MSS._] _Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS._ M^m iv. 40, ‘Thome Legge legum
-doctoris Collegij Caiogonevilensis in Academia Cantabrigiensi magistri
-ac Rectoris Richardus tertius Tragedia trivespera habita Collegij divi
-Johannis Evangeliste Comitiis Bacchelaureorum Anno Domini 1579 Tragedia
-in tres acciones diuisa.’ [_Argumentum_ to each _Actio_; Epilogue.]
-
-_Emmanuel, Cambridge, MS._ 1. 3. 19, with date ‘1579’ and actor-list.
-
-_Clare, Cambridge, MS._ Kk, 3, 12, with date ‘1579’.
-
-_Caius, Cambridge, MS._ 62, ‘tragoedia trium vesperum habita in
-collegio Divi Johannis Evangelistae, Comitiis Bacchalaureorum Anno
-1573.’
-
-_Bodl. Tanner MS._ 306, including first _Actio_ only, with
-actor-list and note, ‘Acted in St. John’s Hall before the Earle of
-Essex’, to which has been apparently added later, ‘17 March, 1582’.
-
-_Bodl. MS._ 29448, dated α, φ, π, γ (= 1583).
-
-_Harl. MS._ 6926, a transcript by Henry Lacy, dated 1586.
-
-_Harl. MS._ 2412, a transcript dated 1588.
-
-_Hatton MS._ (cf. _Hist. MSS._ i. 32).
-
-_Editions_ by B. Field (1844, _Sh. Soc._) and W. C. Hazlitt (1875,
-_Sh. L._ ii. 1).--_Dissertation_: G. B. Churchill, _Richard III bis
-Shakespeare_ (1897, 1900).
-
-The names in the actor-lists, which agree, confirm those MSS. which
-date a production in March 1580 (Boas, 394), and as Essex left
-Cambridge in 1581, the date in the _Tanner MS._, in so far as it
-relates to a performance before him, is probably an error. It does not
-seem so clear to me that the _Caius MS._ may not point to an earlier
-production in 1573. And it is quite possible that there may have been
-revivals in some or all of the later years named in the MSS. The
-reputation of the play is indicated, not only by the notice of it by
-Meres (_vide supra_), but also by allusions in Harington’s _Apologie
-of Poetrie_ (1591); cf. App. C, No. xlv. and Nashe’s _Have With You
-to Saffron Walden_ (1596, _Works_, iii. 13). It may even, directly or
-indirectly, have influenced _Richard III_. The argument to the first
-_Actio_ is headed ‘Chapman, Argumentum primae actionis’, but it seems
-difficult to connect George Chapman with the play.
-
- _Lost Play_
-
- _The Destruction of Jerusalem_
-
-Meres calls this tragedy ‘famous’. Fuller, _Worthies_ (1662), ii. 156,
-says that ‘Having at last refined it to the purity of the publique
-standard, some Plageary filched it from him, just as it was to be
-acted’. Apparently it was in English and was printed, as it appears
-in the lists of Archer and Kirkman (Greg, _Masques_, lxii). It can
-hardly have been the _Jerusalem_ revived by Strange’s in 1592 (Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 155). Can any light be thrown on Fuller’s story by the
-fact that in 1584 a ‘new Play of the Destruction of Jerusalem’ was
-adopted by the city of Coventry as a craft play in place of the old
-Corpus Christi cycle, and a sum of £13 6_s._ 8_d._ paid to John Smythe
-of St. John’s, Oxford, ‘for hys paynes for writing of the tragedye’
-(_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 361; H. Craig, _Coventry Corpus Christi Plays_
-(_E. E. T. S._), 90, 92, 93, 102, 103, 109)?
-
-
-THOMAS LODGE (_c._ 1557–1625).
-
-Lodge, who uses the description ‘gentleman’, was son of Sir Thomas
-Lodge, a Lord Mayor of London. His elder brother, William, married
-Mary, daughter of Thomas Blagrave, Clerk of the Revels (cf. ch. iii).
-He entered Merchant Taylors in 1571, Trinity College, Oxford, in 1573,
-whence he took his B.A. in 1577, and Lincoln’s Inn in 1578. In 1579
-(cf. App. C, No. xxiii) he plunged into controversy with a defence
-of the stage in reply to Stephen Gosson’s _Schoole of Abuse_. Gosson
-speaks slightingly of his opponent as ‘hunted by the heavy hand of
-God, and become little better than a vagrant, looser than liberty,
-lighter than vanity itself’, and although Lodge took occasion to defend
-his moral character from aspersion, it is upon record that he was
-called before the Privy Council ‘to aunswere certen maters to be by
-them objected against him’, and was ordered on 27 June 1581 to give
-continued attendance (Dasent, xiii. 110). By 1583 he had married. His
-literary work largely took the form of romances in the manner of Lyly
-and Greene. _Rosalynde: Euphues’ Golden Legacy_, published (S. R. 6
-Oct. 1590) on his return from a voyage to Terceras and the Canaries
-with Captain Clarke, is typical and was Shakespeare’s source for _As
-You Like It_. His acknowledged connexion with the stage is slight; and
-the attempt of Fleay, ii. 43, to assign to him a considerable share in
-the anonymous play-writing of his time must be received with caution,
-although he was still controverting Gosson in 1583 (cf. App. C, No.
-xxxv), and too much importance need not be attached to his intention
-expressed in _Scylla’s Metamorphosis_ (S. R. 22 Sept. 1589):
-
- To write no more of that whence shame doth grow,
- Or tie my pen to penny knaves’ delight,
- But live with fame, and so for fame to write.
-
-He is less likely than Nashe to be the ‘young Juvenal, that biting
-satirist, that lastly with me together writ a Comedy’ of Greene’s
-_Groats-worth of Wit_ epistle in 1592 (cf. App. C, No. xlviii). I
-should not cavil at the loose description of _A Looking Glass for
-London and England_ as a comedy; but ‘biting satirist’ hardly suits
-Lodge; and at the time of Greene’s last illness he was out of England
-on an expedition led by Thomas Cavendish to South America and the
-Pacific, which started on 26 Aug. 1591 and returned on 11 June 1593.
-After his return Lodge essayed lyric in _Phillis_ (1593) and satire
-in _A Fig for Momus_ (1595); but he cannot be shown to have resumed
-writing for the stage, although the Dulwich records make it clear
-that he had relations with Henslowe, who had in Jan. 1598 to satisfy
-the claims which Richard Topping, a tailor, had made against him
-before three successive Lord Chamberlains, as Lodge’s security for a
-long-standing debt (Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 44, 172). Lodge himself
-was then once more beyond the seas. One of the documents was printed by
-Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_, 45, with forged interpolations intended
-to represent Lodge as an actor, for which there is no other evidence.
-Subsequently Lodge took a medical degree at Avignon, was incorporated
-at Oxford in 1602, and obtained some reputation as a physician. He also
-became a Catholic, and had again to leave the country for recusancy,
-but was allowed to return in Jan. 1610 (cf. F. P. Wilson in _M. L. R._
-ix. 99). About 1619 he was engaged in legal proceedings with Alleyn,
-and for a time practised in the Low Countries, returning to London
-before his death in 1625. Small, 50, refutes the attempts of Fleay,
-i. 363, and Penniman, _War_, 55, 85, to identify him with Fungoso in
-_E. M. O._ and Asotus in _Cynthia’s Revels_. Fleay, ii. 158, 352, adds
-Churms and Philomusus in the anonymous _Wily Beguiled_ and _Return from
-Parnassus_.
-
- _Collection_
-
-1878–82. E. Gosse, _The Works of Thomas Lodge_ (_Hunterian Club_).
-[Introduction reprinted in E. Gosse, _Seventeenth Century Studies_
-(1883).]
-
-_Dissertations_: D. Laing, _L.’s Defence of Poetry, Music, and Stage
-Plays_ (1853, _Sh. Soc._); C. M. Ingleby, _Was T. L. an Actor?_
-(1868) and _T. L. and the Stage_ (1885, _6 N. Q._ xi, 107, 415); R.
-Carl, _Ueber T. L.’s Leben und Werke_ (1887, _Anglia_, x. 235); E. C.
-Richard, _Ueber T. L.’s Leben und Werke_ (1887, _Leipzig diss._).
-
- _The Wounds of Civil War. c. 1588_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, May 24. ‘A booke intituled the woundes of Civill warre
-lively sett forthe in the true Tragedies of Marius and Scilla.’ _John
-Danter_ (Arber, ii. 650).
-
-1594. The Wounds of Ciuill War. Liuely set forth in the true Tragedies
-of Marius and Scilla. As it hath beene publiquely plaide in London, by
-the Right Honourable the Lord high Admirall his Seruants. Written by
-Thomas Lodge Gent. _John Danter._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{3, 4} (1825–75) and by J. D. Wilson (1910, _M.
-S. R._).
-
-The play contains a clear imitation of Marlowe’s _Tamburlaine_ in
-the chariot drawn by four Moors of Act III, and both Fleay, ii. 49,
-and Ward, i. 416, think that it was written shortly after its model,
-although not on very convincing grounds. No performance of it is
-recorded in Henslowe’s diary, which suggests a date well before 1592.
-
- _A Looking Glass for London and England, c. 1590_
-
- _With_ Robert Greene (q.v.).
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Lodge’s hand has been sought in _An Alarum for London_, _Contention
-of York and Lancaster_, _George a Greene_, _Leire_, _Mucedorus_,
-_Selimus_, _Sir Thomas More_, _Troublesome Reign of King John_, and
-_Warning for Fair Women_ (cf. ch. xxiv), and in Greene’s _James IV_ and
-Shakespeare’s _Henry VI_.
-
-
-JANE, LADY LUMLEY (_c._ 1537–77).
-
-Jane, daughter of Henry Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel, married John,
-Lord Lumley, _c._ 1549.
-
- _Iphigenia_ (?)
-
-[_MS._] _Brit. Mus. MS. Reg._ 15 A. ix, ‘The doinge of my Lady Lumley
-dowghter to my L. Therle of Arundell ... [f. 63] The Tragedie of
-Euripides called Iphigeneia translated out of Greake into Englisshe.’
-
-_Editions_ by H. H. Child (1909, _M. S. R._) and G. Becker (1910,
-_Jahrbuch_, xlvi. 28).
-
-The translation is from the _Iphigenia in Aulis_. It is likely to be
-pre-Elizabethan, but I include it here, as it is not noticed in _The
-Mediaeval Stage_.
-
-
-THOMAS LUPTON (?-?).
-
-Several miscellaneous works by Lupton appeared during 1572–84. He may
-be the ‘Mr. Lupton’ whom the Corporation of Worcester paid during the
-progress of 1575 (Nichols, i. 549) ‘for his paynes for and in devising
-[and] instructing the children in their speeches on the too Stages’.
-
- _All For Money. 1558 < > 77_
-
-_S. R._ 1577, Nov. 25. ‘An Enterlude intituled all for money.’ _Roger
-Ward_ (Arber, ii. 321).
-
-1578. A Moral and Pitieful Comedie, Intituled, All for Money. Plainly
-representing the manners of men, and fashion of the world noweadayes.
-Compiled by T. Lupton. _Roger Ward and Richard Mundee._
-
-_Editions_ by J. O. Halliwell (1851, _Literature of Sixteenth and
-Seventeenth Centuries_), E. Vogel (1904, _Jahrbuch_, xl. 129), J. S.
-Farmer (1910, _T. F. T._).
-
-A final prayer for the Queen who ‘hath begon godly’ suggests an
-earlier date than that of Lupton’s other recorded work. Fleay, ii. 56,
-would identify the play with _The Devil and Dives_ named in the
-anonymous _Histriomastix_, but Dives only appears once, and not
-with Satan.
-
-
-JOHN LYLY (1554?-1606).
-
-Lyly was of a gentle Hampshire family, the grandson of William, high
-master of St. Paul’s grammar school, and son of Peter, a diocesan
-official at Canterbury, where he was probably born some seventeen
-years before 8 Oct. 1571, when he matriculated from Magdalen College,
-Oxford. He took his B.A. in 1573 and his M.A. in 1575, after a vain
-attempt in 1574 to secure a fellowship through the influence of
-Burghley. He went to London and dwelt in the Savoy. By 1578, when he
-published _Euphues_, _The Anatomy of Wit_, he was apparently in the
-service of Lord Delawarr, and by 1580 in that of Burghley’s son-in-law,
-Edward, Earl of Oxford. It is a pleasing conjecture that he may have
-been the author of ‘the two prose books played at the Belsavage,
-where you shall find never a word without wit, never a line without
-pith, never a letter placed in vain’, thus praised in _The Schoole of
-Abuse_ (1579) of his fellow euphuist, Stephen Gosson. He incurred the
-enmity of Gabriel Harvey by suggesting to Oxford that he was aimed at
-in the _Speculum Tuscanismi_ of Harvey’s _Three Letters_ (1580). In
-1582 he had himself incurred Oxford’s displeasure, but the trouble
-was surmounted, and about 1584 he held leases in the Blackfriars (cf.
-ch. xvii), one at least of which he obtained through Oxford, for the
-purposes of a theatrical speculation, in the course of which he took to
-Court a company which bore Oxford’s name, but was probably made up of
-boys from the Chapel and St. Paul’s choirs. Presumably the speculation
-failed, for in June 1584 Lyly, who on 22 Nov. 1583 had married Beatrice
-Browne of Mexborough, Yorks., was in prison for debt, whence he was
-probably relieved by a gift from Oxford, in reward for his service,
-of a rent-charge which he sold for £250. His connexion with the stage
-was not, however, over, for he continued to write for the Paul’s
-boys until they stopped playing about 1591. Harvey calls Lyly the
-‘Vicemaster of Paules and the Foolemaster of the Theatre’. From this
-it has been inferred that he held an ushership at the Paul’s choir
-school. But ‘vice’ is a common synonym for ‘fool’ and ‘vicemaster’,
-like ‘foolemaster’, probably only means ‘playwright’. Nothing written
-by Lyly for the Theater in particular or for any adult stage is known
-to exist, but he seems to have taken part with Nashe in the retorts of
-orthodoxy during 1589 and 1590 to the Martin Marprelate pamphleteers,
-probably writing the tract called _Pappe with a Hatchett_ (1589), and
-he may have been responsible for some of the plays which certainly
-formed an element in that retort. Lyly’s ambitions were in the
-direction of courtly rather than of academic preferment. He seems to
-have had some promise of favour from Elizabeth about 1585 and to have
-been more definitely ‘entertained her servant’ as Esquire of the Body,
-probably ‘extraordinary’, in or about 1588, with a hint to ‘aim his
-courses at the Revels’, doubtless at the reversion of the Mastership,
-then held by Edmund Tilney. Mr. R. W. Bond bases many conjectures about
-Lyly’s career on a theory that he actually held the post of Clerk
-Comptroller in the Revels Office, but the known history of the post
-(cf. ch. iii) makes this impossible. From 1596 he is found living in
-the parish of St. Bartholomew the Less. He seems to have ceased writing
-plays for some while in 1590, and may be the ‘pleasant Willy’ spoken
-of as ‘dead of late’ and sitting ‘in idle Cell’ in Spenser’s _Tears
-of the Muses_ (1591), although it is possible that Tarlton (q.v.) is
-intended. But _The Woman in the Moon_ at least is of later date, and it
-is possible that both the Chapel and the Paul’s boys were again acting
-his old plays by the end of the century. In 1595 he was lamenting the
-overthrow of his fortunes, and by about 1597 the reversion of the
-Mastership of the Revels had been definitely promised to George Buck.
-There exist several letters written by Lyly to the Queen and to Sir
-Robert Cecil between 1597 and 1601, in which he complains bitterly of
-the wrong done him. Later letters of 1603 and 1605 suggest that at
-last he had obtained his reward, possibly something out of the Essex
-forfeitures for which he was asking in 1601. In any case, he did not
-live to enjoy it long, as the register of St. Bartholomew’s the Less
-records his burial on 30 Nov. 1606.
-
- _Collections_
-
-_S. R._ 1628, Jan. 9 (by order of a full court). ‘Sixe playes of Peter
-Lillyes to be printed in one volume ... viz^t. Campaste, Sapho, and
-Phao. Galathea: Endimion Midas and Mother Bomby.’ _Blount_ (Arber, iv.
-192). [‘Peter’ is due to a confusion with Lyly’s brother, a chaplain of
-the Savoy, who had acted as licenser for the press.]
-
-1632. Sixe Court Comedies. Often Presented and Acted before Queene
-Elizabeth, by the Children of her Maiesties Chappell, and the Children
-of Paules. Written by the onely Rare Poet of that Time. The Witie,
-Comicall, Facetiously-Quicke and vnparalelld: Iohn Lilly, Master of
-Arts. _William Stansby for Edward Blount._ [Epistles to Viscount Lumley
-and to the Reader, both signed ‘Ed. Blount’. This edition adds many
-songs not in the Qq, and W. W. Greg (_M. L. R._ i. 43) argues that
-they are not by Lyly, but mid-seventeenth-century work and possibly by
-Dekker.]
-
-1858. F. W. Fairholt, _The Dramatic Works of J. L._ 2 vols. (_Library
-of Old Authors_).
-
-1902. R. W. Bond, _The Complete Works of J. L._ 3 vols.
-
-_Dissertations_: H. Morley, _Euphuism_ (1861, _Quarterly Review_,
-cix); W. L. Rushton, _Shakespeare’s Euphuism_ (1871); R. F. Weymouth,
-_On Euphuism_ (1870–2, _Phil. Soc. Trans._); C. C. Hense, _J. L. und
-Shakespeare_ (1872–3, _Jahrbuch_, vii. 238; viii. 224); F. Landmann,
-_Der Euphuismus, sein Wesen, seine Quelle, seine Geschichte_ (1881),
-_Shakespeare and Euphuism_ (1880–5, _N. S. S. Trans._ 241); J. Goodlet,
-_Shakespeare’s Debt to J. L._ (1882, _E. S._ v. 356); K. Steinhäuser,
-_J. L. als Dramatiker_ (1884); J. M. Hart, _Euphuism_ (1889, _Ohio
-College Trans._); C. G. Child, _J. L. and Euphuism_ (1894); J. D.
-Wilson, _J. L._ (1905); W. W. Greg, _The Authorship of the Songs in
-L.’s Plays_ (1905, _M. L. R._ i. 43); A. Feuillerat, _J. L._ (1910); F.
-Brie, _L. und Greene_ (1910, _E. S._ xlii. 217).
-
- _Campaspe. 1584_
-
-(_a_) 1584. A moste excellent Comedie of Alexander, Campaspe, and
-Diogenes. Played before the Queenes Maiestie on twelfe day at night
-by her Maiesties Children and the Children of Poules. _For Thomas
-Cadman._ [Huth Collection. Prologue and Epilogue at the Blackfriars;
-Prologue and Epilogue at Court. Running title, ‘A tragical Comedie of
-Alexander and Campaspe’.]
-
-(_b_) 1584. Campaspe, Played ... on newyeares day at night, by her
-Maiesties Children.... _For Thomas Cadman._ [Dyce Collection.]
-
-(_c_) 1584. Campaspe, Played ... on newyeares day at night, by her
-Maiesties Childrẽ.... _For Thomas Cadman._ [B.M.; Bodleian.]
-
-1591. Campaspe, Played ... on twelfe day.... _Thomas Orwin for William
-Broome._
-
-_S. R._ 1597, Apr. 12 (in full court). ‘Sapho and Phao and Campaspe ...
-the which copies were Thomas Cadmans.’ _Joan Broome_ (Arber, iii. 82).
-
-1601, Aug. 23 (in full court). ‘Copies ... which belonged to Mystres
-Brome ... viz. Sapho and Phao, Campaspe, Endimion, Mydas, Galathea.’
-_George Potter_ (Arber, iii. 191).
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–3} (1825, ii), and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ i), J. M. Manly (1897, _Specimens_, ii. 273), G. P. Baker (1903,
-_R. E. C._)--_Dissertations_: R. Sprenger, _Zu J. L.’s C._ (1892, _E.
-S._ xvi. 156); E. Koeppel, _Zu J. L.’s A. und C._ (1903, _Archiv_, cx).
-
-The order of the 1584 prints is not quite clear; (_c_) follows (_b_),
-but the absence of any collation of (_a_) leaves its place conjectural.
-I conjecture that it came first, partly because a correction in the
-date of Court performance is more likely to have been made after one
-inaccurate issue than after two, partly because its abandoned t.p.
-title serves as running title in all three issues. I do not think
-the reversion to ‘twelfe day’ in 1591, when the facts may have been
-forgotten, carries much weight. If so, the Court production was on a
-1 Jan., and although the wording of the t.p. suggests, rather than
-proves, that it was 1 Jan. in the year of publication, this date fits
-in with the known facts of Lyly’s connexion with the Blackfriars
-(cf. ch. xvii). The _Chamber Accounts_ (App. B) give the performers
-on this day as Lord Oxford’s servants, but I take this company to
-have been a combination of Chapel and Paul’s children (cf. chh. xii,
-xiii). Fleay, ii. 39, and Bond, ii. 310, with imperfect lists of Court
-performances before them, suggest 31 Dec. 1581, taking ‘newyeares day
-at night’, rather lamely, for New Year’s Eve. So does Feuillerat, 574,
-but I am not sure that his view will have survived his Blackfriars
-investigations. In any case, the play must have been written later than
-Jan. 1580, as Lyly uses Sir T. North’s English translation of Plutarch,
-of which the preface is dated in that month. In a prefatory note by N.
-W. to S. Daniel, _The Worthy Tract of Paulus Jovius_ (1585), that work
-is commended above ‘Tarlton’s toys or the silly enterlude of Diogenes’
-(Grosart, _Daniel_, iv. 8).
-
- _Sapho and Phao. 3 Mar. 1584_
-
-_S. R._ 1584, Apr. 6. ‘Yt is graunted vnto him yat yf he gett ye
-comedie of Sappho laufully alowed vnto him, then none of this cumpanie
-shall interrupt him to enjoye yt’ (_in margin_ ‘Lyllye’). _Thomas
-Cadman_ (Arber, ii. 430).
-
-1584. Sapho and Phao, Played beefore the Queenes Maiestie on
-Shrouetewsday, by her Maiesties Children, and the Boyes of Paules.
-_Thomas Dawson for Thomas Cadman._ [Prologues ‘at the Black fryers’ and
-‘at the Court’, and Epilogue.]
-
-1591. _Thomas Orwin for William Broome._
-
- _S. R._ 1597, Apr. 12 }
- 1601, Aug. 23 } _vide supra_ s.v. _Campaspe_.
-
-I date the Court production on the Shrove-Tuesday before the S. R.
-entry, on which day Oxford’s boys, whom I regard as made up of Chapel
-and Paul’s boys, played under Lyly (cf. App. B). Fleay, ii. 40, Bond,
-ii. 367, and Feuillerat, 573, prefer Shrove-Tuesday (27 Feb.) 1582.
-
- _Galathea. 1584 < > 88_
-
-_S. R._ 1585, Apr. 1. ‘A Commoedie of Titirus and Galathea’ (no fee
-recorded). _Gabriel Cawood_ (Arber, ii. 440).
-
-1591, Oct. 4 (Bp. of London). ‘Three Comedies plaied before her
-maiestie by the Children of Paules thone called Endimion, thother
-Galathea and thother Midas.’ _Widow Broome_ (Arber, ii. 596).
-
-1592. Gallathea. As it was playde before the Queenes Maiestie at
-Greenewiche, on Newyeeres day at Night. By the Chyldren of Paules.
-_John Charlwood for Joan Broome._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-The only performance by Paul’s, on a 1 Jan. at Greenwich, which can be
-referred to in the t.p. is that of 1588 (cf. App. B), and in III. iii.
-41 is an allusion to the approaching year _octogesimus octavus_, which
-would of course begin on 25 March 1588. Fleay, ii. 40, and Feuillerat,
-575, accept this date. Bond, ii. 425, prefers 1586 or 1587, regardless
-of the fact that the New Year plays in these years were by the Queen’s
-men. A phrase in V. iii. 86 proves it later than _Sapho and Phao_. But
-if, as seems probable, the 1585 entry in the Stationers’ Register was
-of this play, the original production must have been at least as early
-as 1584–5, and that of 1588 a revival.
-
- _Endymion. 1588_
-
-_S. R._ 1591, Oct. 4. _Vide supra_ s.v. _Galathea_.
-
-1591. Endimion, The Man in the Moone. Playd before the Queenes Maiestie
-at Greenewich on Candlemas Day at night, by the Chyldren of Paules.
-_John Charlwood for Joan Broome._ [Epistle by the Printer to the
-Reader; Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-_Editions_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ ii), G. P. Baker (1894)
-and W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_: N. J. Halpin,
-_Oberon’s Vision in M. N. D. Illustrated by a Comparison with L.’s
-E._ (1843, _Sh. Soc._); J. E. Spingarn, _The Date of L.’s E._ (1894,
-_Athenaeum_, ii. 172, 204); P. W. Long, _The Purport of L.’s E._ (1909,
-_M. L. A._ xxiv. 1), _L.’s E., an Addendum_ (1911, _M. P._ viii. 599).
-
-The prologue and epilogue were evidently for the Court. The epistle
-describes this as the first of certain comedies which had come into
-the printer’s hands ‘since the plays in Pauls were dissolved’. Baker,
-lxxxiii, suggested a date of composition in the autumn of 1579, while
-Spingarn, Bond, iii. 11, and Feuillerat, 577, take the Candlemas of the
-t.p. to be that of 1586, but the only available Candlemas performance
-by the Paul’s boys is that of 1588 (cf. App. B). With Long I find no
-conviction in the attempts of Halpin, Baker, Bond, and Feuillerat to
-trace Elizabeth’s politics and amours in the play. If Lyly had meant
-half of what they suggest, he would have ruined his career in her
-service at the outset.
-
- _Midas. 1589–90_
-
-_S. R._ 1591, Oct. 4. _Vide supra_, s.v. _Galathea_.
-
-1592. Midas. Plaied before the Queenes Maiestie upon Twelfe day at
-night. By the Children of Paules. _Thomas Scarlet for J. B._ [Prologue
-‘in Paules’.]
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ i).
-
-Internal allusions suggest a date as late as 1589, and the Twelfth
-Night of the t.p. must therefore be 6 Jan. 1590. Fleay, ii. 42, and
-Bond, iii. 111, accept this date. Feuillerat, 578, prefers 6 Jan. 1589,
-because Gabriel Harvey alludes to the play in his _Advertisement to
-Pap-Hatchet_, dated 5 Nov. 1589. But there was no Court performance
-on that day, and Harvey may have seen the play ‘in Paules’.
-
- _Mother Bombie. 1587 < > 90_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, June 18. ‘A booke intituled mother Bumbye beinge an
-enterlude.’ _Cuthbert Burby_ (Arber, ii. 654).
-
-1594. Mother Bombie. As it was sundrie times plaied by the Children of
-Powles. _Thomas Scarlet for Cuthbert Burby._
-
-1598. _Thomas Creede for Cuthbert Burby._
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ i).
-
-The play doubtless belongs to the Paul’s series of 1587–90. It seems
-hardly possible to date it more closely. Feuillerat, 578, thinks it
-later in style than _Midas_.
-
- _Love’s Metamorphosis. 1589–90_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Nov. 25 (Pasfield). ‘A booke Called Loves metamorphesis
-wrytten by master John Lylly and playd by the Children of Paules.’
-_William Wood_ (Arber, iii. 176).
-
-1601. Loves Metamorphosis. A Wittie and Courtly Pastorall. Written by
-M^r Iohn Lyllie. First playd by the Children of Paules, and now by the
-Children of the Chapell. _For William Wood._
-
-F. Brie (_E. S._ xlii. 222) suggests that the play borrowed from
-Greene’s _Greenes Metamorphosis_ (S. R. 9 Dec. 1588). Probably the
-Paul’s boys produced it _c._ 1589–90, and the Chapel revived it in
-1600–1.
-
- _The Woman in the Moon. 1590 < > 5_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1595, Sept. 22. ‘A booke intituled a woman in the moone.’
-_Robert Fynche_ (Arber, iii. 48).
-
-1597. The Woman in the Moone. As it was presented before her Highnesse.
-By Iohn Lyllie Maister of Arts. _William Jones._ [Prologue.]
-
-The prologue says:
-
- Remember all is but a poet’s dream,
- The first he had in Phoebus holy bower,
- But not the last, unless the first displease.
-
-This has been taken as indicating that the play was Lyly’s first; but
-it need only mean that it was his first in verse. All the others are
-in prose. The blank verse is that of the nineties, rather than that
-of the early eighties. There is nothing to show who were the actors,
-but it is not unlikely that, after the plays in Paul’s were dissolved,
-Lyly tried his hand in a new manner for a new company. Feuillerat, 232,
-580, suggests that Elizabeth may have taken the satire of women amiss
-and that the ‘overthwartes’ of Lyly’s fortunes of which he complained
-in Jan. 1595 may have been the result. He puts the date, therefore, in
-1593–4.
-
- _Doubtful Work_
-
-Lyly has been suggested as the author of _Maid’s Metamorphosis_ and
-_A Warning for Fair Women_ (cf. ch. xxiv) and of several anonymous
-entertainments and fragments of entertainments (ibid., and _supra_,
-s.vv. Cecil, Clifford, Lee).
-
-
-LEWIS MACHIN (_fl. c._ 1608).
-
-Nothing is known of Machin’s personality. He is probably the L. M. who
-contributed ‘eglogs’ to the _Mirrha_ (1607) of the King’s Revels actor
-William Barksted (q.v.). A Richard Machin was an actor in Germany,
-1600–6. There is no traceable connexion between either Richard or Lewis
-and Henry Machyn the diarist.
-
-Machin collaborated with Gervase Markham in _The Dumb Knight_
-(q.v.).
-
-The anonymous _Every Woman in Her Humour_ and _Fair Maid of the
-Exchange_ have also been ascribed to him (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-GERVASE MARKHAM (_c._ 1568–1637).
-
-There were two Gervase Markhams, as to both of whom full details are
-given in C. R. Markham, _Markham Memorials_ (1913). The dramatist was
-probably the third son of Robert Markham of Cotham, Notts., a soldier
-and noted horseman, whose later life was devoted to an industrious
-output of books, verses, romance, translations, and treatises on
-horsemanship, farming, and sport. He was, said Jonson to Drummond in
-1619, ‘not of the number of the faithfull, i.e. Poets, and but a base
-fellow’ (Laing, 11). Fleay, ii. 58, suggested, on the basis of certain
-phrases in his _Tragedy of Sir Richard Grenville_ (1595), which has a
-dedication, amongst others, to the Earl of Southampton, that he might
-be the ‘rival poet’ of Shakespeare’s _Sonnets_. The other Gervase
-Markham was of Sedgebrook and later of Dunham, Notts., and is not known
-to have been a writer. C. W. Wallace thinks he has found a third in
-an ‘adventurer’ whose wagers with actors and others on the success
-of an intended walk to Berwick in 1618 led to a suit in the Court of
-Requests (_Jahrbuch_, xlvi. 345). But as he, like Markham of Cotham,
-had served in Ireland, the two may conceivably be identical, although
-the adventurer had a large family, and it is not known that Markham of
-Cotham had any. Markham of Dunham, who had also served in Ireland, had
-but two bastards. Conceivably Markham wrote for the Admiral’s in 1596–7
-(cf. vol. ii, p. 145). Beyond the period dealt with, he collaborated
-with William Sampson in _Herod and Antipater_ (1622) acted by the
-Revels company at the Red Bull.
-
- _The Dumb Knight. 1607–8_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, Oct. 6 (Buck). ‘A playe of the Dumbe Knight.’ _John
-Bache_ (Arber, iii. 392).
-
-1610. Nov. 19. Transfer from Bache to Robert Wilson (Arber, iii. 449).
-
-1608. The dumbe Knight. A pleasant Comedy, acted sundry times by the
-children of his Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iaruis Markham. _N. Okes
-for J. Bache._ [Epistle to Reader, signed ‘Lewes Machin’. There were
-two reissues of 1608 with altered t.ps. Both omit the ascription
-to Markham. One has ‘A historicall comedy’; the other omits the
-description.]
-
-1633. _A. M. for William Sheares._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ ii).--_Dissertation_: J. Q. Adams, _Every Woman in Her Humour and
-The Dumb Knight_ (1913, _M. P._ x. 413).
-
-The Epistle says that ‘Rumour ... hath made strange constructions
-on this Dumb Knight’, and that ‘having a partner in the wrong whose
-worth hath been often approved ... I now in his absence make this
-apology, both for him and me’. Presumably these ‘constructions’ led to
-the withdrawal of Markham’s name from the title-page. Fleay, ii. 58,
-assigned him the satirical comedy of the underplot, but Adams points
-out that Markham’s books reveal no humour, and that the badly linked
-underplot was probably inserted by Machin. It borrows passages from the
-anonymous unprinted _Every Woman in Her Humour_ (q.v.). The production
-of a King’s Revels play is not likely to be before 1607, but Herz, 102,
-thinks that an earlier version underlies the _Vom König in Cypern_ of
-Jacob Ayrer, who died 1605. A later German version also exists, and was
-perhaps the _Philole und Mariana_ played at Nuremberg in 1613.
-
-
-CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564–93).
-
-Marlowe, whose name was also spelt Marley and Marlin, was the son of
-John and Catherine Marlowe of Canterbury. He was born 6 Feb. 1564. John
-Marlowe was a shoemaker and subsequently became parish clerk of St.
-Mary’s. He entered the King’s School, Canterbury, in 1579 and in March
-1581 matriculated with a pension on Abp. Parker’s foundation at Corpus
-Christi or Benet’s College, Cambridge. He took his B.A. in 1584 and
-his M.A. in 1587. In this year he probably began his literary career
-in London, with _Tamburlaine_. A ballad, printed by Collier, which
-represents him as a player and breaking his leg in a lewd scene on the
-stage of the Curtain, is now discredited. There are satirical allusions
-to him in the preface to the _Perimedes_ (S. R. 29 March 1588) and in
-the _Menaphon_ (23 Aug. 1589) of Robert Greene, but it is very doubtful
-whether, as usually assumed, Nashe had him especially in mind when
-he criticized certain tragic poets of the day in his epistle to the
-latter pamphlet (cf. App. C, No. xlii). On 1 Oct. 1588 ‘Christofer
-Marley, of London, gentleman,’ had to give bail to appear at the
-next Middlesex Sessions. The exact nature of the charge is unknown;
-but it cannot be doubted that his personal reputation, even in the
-free-living Elizabethan London, did not stand high. He is clearly
-the ‘famous gracer of tragedians’ reproved for atheism in Greene’s
-_Groats-worth of Wit_ (1592) and it is probably to him that Chettle
-alludes in his apology when he says, ‘With neither of them that take
-offence was I acquainted and with one of them I care not if I never
-be’ (cf. App. C, Nos. xlviii, xlix). The charge of atheism doubtless
-arose from Marlowe’s association with the group of freethinkers which
-centred round Sir Walter Raleigh. In 1593 these speculative tendencies
-brought him into trouble. About 1591, while writing for the players of
-a certain lord, as yet unidentified, he had shared a room with Thomas
-Kyd (q.v.), who was then in the service of the same lord. Certain
-theological notes of his got amongst Kyd’s papers and were found there
-when Kyd was arrested on a charge of libel on 12 May 1593. On 18 May
-the Privy Council sent a messenger to the house of Thomas Walsingham,
-at Scadbury in Kent, to arrest Marlowe, and on 20 May he was ordered to
-remain in attendance on the Council. There exists a ‘Note’ drawn up at
-this time by one Richard Baines or Bame, containing a report of some
-loose conversation of Marlowe’s which their Lordships could hardly be
-expected to regard as anything but blasphemous. But, so far as Marlowe
-was concerned, the proceedings were put a stop to by his sudden death.
-The register of St. Nicholas, Deptford, records that he was ‘slain
-by Francis Archer’ and buried there on 1 June 1593. Francis Meres’s
-_Palladis Tamia_ (1598) tells us that he was ‘stabbed to death by a
-bawdy servingman, a rival of his in his lewde love’. Somewhat different
-versions of the story are given by Thomas Beard, _The Theater of God’s
-Judgments_ (1597), and William Vaughan, _The Golden Grove_ (1600), both
-of whom use Marlowe’s fate to point the moral against atheism. There
-are some rather incoherent allusions to the event in verses affixed
-by Gabriel Harvey to his _A New Letter of Notable Contents_, which is
-dated 16 Sept. 1593:
-
- Sonet
-
- Gorgon, or the Wonderfull yeare
-
- ... The fatall yeare of yeares is Ninety Three:
- ... Weepe Powles, thy Tamberlaine voutsafes to dye.
-
- L’envoy
-
- The hugest miracle remaines behinde,
- The second Shakerley Rash-swash to binde.
-
- * * * * *
-
- The Writer’s Postscript; or a friendly Caveat to the Second
- Shakerley of Powles.
-
- Slumbring I lay in melancholy bed
- Before the dawning of the sanguin light:
- When Eccho shrill, or some Familiar Spright,
- Buzzed an Epitaph into my hed.
-
- Magnifique Mindes, bred of Gargantuas race.
- In grisly weedes His Obsequies waiment
- Whose Corps on Powles, whose mind triumph’d on Kent,
- Scorning to bate Sir Rodomont an ace.
-
- I mus’d awhile: and having mus’d awhile,
- Iesu, (quoth I) is that Gargantua minde
- Conquerd, and left no Scanderbeg behinde?
- Vowed he not to Powles A Second bile?
- What bile or kibe (quoth that same early Spright)
- Have you forgot the Scanderbegging wight?
-
- Glosse
-
- Is it a Dreame? or is it the Highest Minde
- That ever haunted Powles, or hunted winde,
- Bereaft of that same sky-surmounting breath,
- That breath, that taught the Tempany to swell?
- He, and the Plague contested for the game:
-
- * * * * *
-
- The grand Dissease disdain’d his toade Conceit,
- And smiling at his tamberlaine contempt,
- Sternely struck-home the peremptory stroke....
-
-Harvey seems to have thought in error that Marlowe died of the plague.
-I do not infer from the allusions to ‘Powles’ that Marlowe wrote for
-the Paul’s boys; but rather that _Tamburlaine_, like Nashe’s pamphlets,
-was sold by the booksellers in St. Paul’s Churchyard. The ‘second
-Shakerley’ is certainly Nashe. Surely ‘Scanderbeg’, who is ‘left
-behinde’, must also be Nashe, and I do not see how Fleay, ii. 65, draws
-the inference that Marlowe was the author of the lost play entered on
-the Stationers’ Register by Edward Allde on 3 July 1601 as ‘the true
-historye of George Scanderbarge, as yt was lately playd by the right
-honorable the Earle of Oxenford his servantes’ (Arber, iii. 187). There
-is much satire both of Marlowe and of Nashe in the body of _A New
-Letter_ (Grosart, _Harvey_, i. 255).
-
- _Collections_
-
-1826. [G. Robinson] _The Works of C. M._ 3 vols.
-
-1850. A. Dyce, _The Works of C. M._ 3 vols. [Revised 1858, and in 1
-vol. 1865, &c.]
-
-1870. F. Cunningham, _The Works of C. M._
-
-1885. A. H. Bullen, _The Works of C. M._ 3 vols.
-
-1885–9. H. Breymann and A. Wagner, _C. M. Historisch-kritische
-Ausgabe._ 3 parts. [_Tamburlaine_, _Dr. Faustus_, _Jew of Malta_ only
-issued.]
-
-1887. H. Ellis, _The Best Plays of C. M._ (_Mermaid Series_).
-[_Tamburlaine_, _Dr. Faustus_, _Jew of Malta_, _Edward II_.]
-
-1910. C. F. Tucker Brooke, _The Works of C. M._ [Larger edition in
-progress.]
-
-1912. W. L. Phelps. _Marlowe_ [_M. E. D._]. [_Tamburlaine_, _Dr.
-Faustus_, _Jew of Malta_, _Edward II_.]
-
-_Dissertations_: H. Ulrici, _C. M. und Shakespeare’s Verhältniss zu
-ihm_ (1865, _Jahrbuch_, i. 57); J. Schipper, _De versu Marlowii_
-(1867); T. Mommsen, _M. und Shakespeare_ (1886); A. W. Verity, _M.’s
-Influence on Shakespeare_ (1886); E. Faligan, _De Marlovianis Fabulis_
-(1887); O. Fischer, _Zur Charakteristik der Dramen M.’s_ (1889); J. G.
-Lewis, _C. M.: Outlines of his Life and Works_ (1891); F. S. Boas,
-_New Light on M._ (1899, _Fortnightly Review_, lxxi, 212); J. H.
-Ingram, _C. M. and his Associates_ (1904); H. Jung, _Das Verhältniss
-M.’s zu Shakespeare_ (1904); W. L. Courtney, _C. M._ (_Fortnightly
-Review_, 1905, ii. 467, 678); A. Marquardsen, _C. M.’s Kosmologie_
-(1905, _Jahrbuch_, xli. 54); J. Le G. Brereton, _The Case of Francis
-Ingram_ (_Sydney Univ. Publ._ v); G. C. Moore Smith, _Marlowe at
-Cambridge_ (1909, _M. L. R._ iv. 167); F. C. Danchin, _Études critiques
-sur C. M._ (1912–13, _Revue Germanique_, viii. 23; ix. 566); C.
-Crawford, _The Marlowe Concordance_ (1911, _Materialien_, xxxiv, pt. i
-only); F. K. Brown, _M. and Kyd_ (_T. L. S._, 2 June, 1921).
-
- _Tamburlaine. c. 1587_
-
-_S. R._ 1590, Aug. 14 (Hartwell). ‘The twooe commicall discourses of
-Tomberlein the Cithian shepparde.’ _Richard Jones_ (Arber, ii. 558).
-
-1590. Tamburlaine the Great. Who, from a Scythian Shephearde by his
-rare and wonderfull Conquests became a most puissant and mightye
-Monarque. And (for his tyranny, and terrour in Warre) was tearmed, The
-Scourge of God. Deuided into two Tragicall Discourses, as they were
-sundrie times shewed vpon Stages in the Citie of London, By the right
-honorable the Lord Admyrall, his seruantes. Now first, and newlie
-published. _Richard Jones_ [8vo]. [Epistle to the Readers, signed ‘R.
-I. Printer’; Prologues to both Parts. See Greg, _Plays_, 66; _Masques_,
-cxxv. Ingram, 281, speaks of two 4tos and one 8vo of 1590, probably
-through some confusion.]
-
-1592. _R. Jones._ [Greg, _Masques_, cxxv, thinks that the date may have
-been altered in the B.M. copy from 1593. Langbaine mentions an edition
-of 1593.]
-
-1597. [An edition apparently known to Collier; cf. Greg, _Masques_,
-cxxv.]
-
-1605. _For Edward White._ [Part i.]
-
-1606. _E. A. for E. White._ [Part ii.]
-
-_Editions_ by A. Wagner (1885) and K. Vollmöller (1885) and of Part i
-by W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_: C. H. Herford,
-_The Sources of M.’s T._ (_Academy_, 20 Oct. 1883); L. Frankel, _Zum
-Stoffe von M.’s T._ (1892, _E. S._ xvi. 459); E. Köppel in _Englische
-Studien_, xvi. 357; E. Hübner, _Der Einfluss von M.’s Tamburlaine auf
-die zeitgenössischen und folgenden Dramatiker_ (_Halle diss._ 1901); F.
-G. Hubbard, _Possible Evidence for the Date of T._ (1918, _M. L. A._
-xxxiii. 436).
-
-There is no real doubt as to Marlowe’s authorship of _Tamburlaine_,
-but the direct evidence is very slight, consisting chiefly of Greene’s
-(q.v.) _Perimedes_ coupling of ‘that atheist Tamburlan’ with ‘spirits
-as bred of Merlin’s race’, and Harvey’s allusion to its author as dying
-in 1593. Thomas Heywood, in his prologue to _The Jew of Malta_, speaks
-of Alleyn’s performance in the play. The entry printed by Collier in
-Henslowe’s _Diary_ of a payment to Dekker in 1597 ‘for a prolog to
-Marloes tambelan’ is a forgery (Warner, 159; Greg, _Henslowe_, i.
-xxxix). The Admiral’s produced ‘Tamberlan’ on 30 Aug. 1594. Henslowe
-marks the entry ‘j’, which has been taken as equivalent to ‘n. e.’,
-Henslowe’s symbol for a new play, and as pointing to a revision of
-the play. I feel sure, however (cf. _M. L. R._ iv. 408), that ‘j’ only
-means ‘First Part’. ‘Tamberlen’ was given fifteen times from 30 Aug.
-1594 to 12 Nov. 1595, and the ‘2 pt. of tamberlen’ seven times from
-19 Dec. 1594 to 13 Nov. 1595 (Henslowe, ii. 167). Tamburlaine’s cage,
-bridle, coat, and breeches are included in the inventories of the
-Admiral’s men in 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 116).
-
-Greene’s _Perimedes_ reference suggests 1587 or early 1588 as the
-probable date of _Tamburlaine_. In his preface to the 1590 edition
-Richard Jones says that he has omitted ‘some fond and frivolous
-gestures’, but does not say whether these were by the author of the
-tragic stuff. The numerous references to the play in contemporary
-literature often indicate its boisterous character; e.g. T. M. _The
-Black Book_ (Bullen, _Middleton_, viii. 25), ‘The spindle-shank
-spiders ... went stalking over his head as if they had been conning of
-Tamburlaine’; T. M. _Father Hubburd’s Tales_ (ibid. viii. 93), ‘The
-ordnance playing like so many Tamburlaines’.
-
- _Dr. Faustus, c. 1588_
-
-_S. R._ 1592, Dec. 18. Herbert-Ames, _Typographical Antiquities_, ii.
-1160, records the following decision of the Stationers’ Company not
-printed by Arber, ‘If the book of D^r. Faustus shall not be found in
-the Hall Book entered to R^d. Oliff before Abell Jeffes claymed the
-same, which was about May last, That then the said copie shall remayne
-to the said Abell his proper copie from the tyme of his first clayme’.
-[This can hardly refer to the prose _History of Faustus_, of which the
-earliest extant, but probably not the first, edition was printed by T.
-Orwin for Edward White in 1592.]
-
-1601, Jan. 7 (Barlowe). ‘A booke called the plaie of Doctor Faustus.’
-_Thomas Bushell_ (Arber, iii. 178).
-
-1610, Sept. 13. Transfer from Bushell to John Wright of ‘The tragicall
-history of the horrible life and Death of Doctor Faustus, written by C.
-M.’ (Arber, iii. 442).
-
-1604. The tragicall History of D. Faustus. As it hath bene Acted by the
-Right Honorable the Earle of Nottingham his seruants. Written by Ch.
-Marl. _V. S. for Thomas Bushell._
-
-1609. _G. E. for John Wright._
-
-1616. _For John Wright._ [An enlarged and altered text.]
-
-1619.... With new Additions. _For John Wright._
-
-1620; 1624; 1631.
-
-1663.... Printed with New Additions as it is now Acted. With several
-New Scenes, together with the Actors names. _For W. Gilbertson._ [A
-corrupt text.]
-
-Breymann mentions an edition of 1611 not now known, and Heinemann
-quotes from foreign writers mentions of editions of 1622, 1626, 1636,
-1651, 1690 (1884, _Bibliographer_).
-
-_Editions_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ i), A. Reidl (N.D.
-[1874]), W. Wagner (1877), A. W. Ward (1878, 1887, 1891, 1901), Anon.
-(1881, Zurich), H. Morley (1883), H. Breymann (1889), I. Gollancz
-(1897, _T. D._), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), J. S. Farmer
-(1914, _S. F. T._).--_Dissertations_: G. Herzfeld, _Zu M.’s Dr. F._
-(1905, _Jahrbuch_, xli. 206); H. R. O. De Vries, _Die Überlieferung
-und Entstehungsgeschichte von M.’s Dr. F._ (1909); K. R. Schröder,
-_Textverhältnisse und Entstehungsgeschichte von M.’s F._ (1909); R.
-Rohde, _Zu M.’s D. F._ (1913, _Morsbach-Festschrift_); P. Simpson, _The
-1604 Text of M.’s D. F._ (1921, _Essays and Studies_, vii); with much
-earlier literature summarized in Ward’s edition, to which also (1887,
-ed. 2) Fleay’s excursus on _The Date and Authorship of Dr. F._ was
-contributed.
-
-The Admiral’s men played ‘Docter ffostose’ for Henslowe twenty-four
-times from 2 Oct. 1594 to Oct. 1597 (Henslowe, ii. 168). Their 1598
-inventories include ‘j dragon in fostes’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 118).
-Alleyn (q.v.) played the title-rôle. The entry printed by Collier
-from Henslowe’s _Diary_ of a payment to Dekker on 20 Dec. 1597 ‘for
-adycyons to ffostus’ is a forgery (Warner, 159; Greg, _Henslowe_, i.
-xxxix), but Henslowe did pay £4 to William Bird and Samuel Rowley ‘for
-ther adicyones in doctor fostes’ on 22 Nov. 1602 (Henslowe, i. 172).
-Probably, therefore, the Admiral’s revived the play about 1602–3. These
-additions are doubtless the comic passages which appear for the first
-time in the 1616 text, although that may also contain fragments of the
-original text omitted from the 1,485 lines of 1604. The source of the
-play seems to be the German _Faustbuch_ (1587) through the English
-_History of Dr. Johann Faustus_, of which an edition earlier than the
-extant 1592 one is conjectured. A probable date is 1588–9. On 28 Feb.
-1589 ‘a ballad of the life and deathe of Doctor Faustus the great
-Cungerer’ was entered on S. R. (Arber, ii. 516). There are apparent
-imitations of the play in _Taming of A Shrew_ (q.v.).
-
-The reference in _The Black Book_ (_vide infra_) can hardly be taken as
-evidence that the original production was at the Theatre.
-
-Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 168) gives some support to the view of Fleay
-(Ward, clxvii) that Marlowe is only responsible for part even of the
-1604 text, and that the rest, including the comic matter, may have been
-contributed by Dekker. But he doubts whether Dekker worked upon the
-play before the date of a revision in 1594, for which there is some
-evidence, such as an allusion in xi. 46 to Dr. Lopez. Fleay thought
-Dekker to have been also an original collaborator, which his age hardly
-permits.
-
-The play seems to have formed part of the English repertories in
-Germany in 1608 and 1626 (Herz, 66, 74).
-
-It became the centre of a curious _mythos_, which was used to point
-a moral against the stage (cf. ch. viii). Of this there are several
-versions:
-
-(_a_) 1604. T. M. _The Black Book_ (Bullen, _Middleton_, viii. 13),
-‘Hee had a head of hayre like one of my Diuells in Dr. Faustus when the
-old Theater crackt and frighted the audience.’
-
-(_b_) 1633. Prynne, _Histriomastix_, f. 556, ‘The visible apparition
-of the Devill on the stage at the Belsavage Play-house, in Queen
-Elizabeths dayes (to the great amazement both of the actors and
-spectators) while they were there prophanely playing the History of
-Faustus (the truth of which I have heard from many now alive, who well
-remember it) there being some distracted with that feareful sight.’
-
-(_c_) N.D. ‘J. G. R.’ from manuscript note on ‘the last page of a book
-in my possession, printed by Vautrollier’ (1850, _2 Gent. Mag._ xxxiv.
-234), ‘Certaine Players at Exeter, acting upon the stage the tragical
-storie of Dr. Faustus the Conjurer; as a certain nomber of Devels kept
-everie one his circle there, and as Faustus was busie in his magicall
-invocations, on a sudden they were all dasht, every one harkning other
-in the eare, for they were all perswaded, there was one devell too
-many amongst them; and so after a little pause desired the people to
-pardon them, they could go no further with this matter; the people
-also understanding the thing as it was, every man hastened to be first
-out of dores. The players (as I heard it) contrarye to their custome
-spending the night in reading and in prayer got them out of the town
-the next morning.’
-
-(_d_) _c._ 1673. John Aubrey, _Natural History and Antiquities of
-Surrey_ (1718–19), i. 190, ‘The tradition concerning the occasion of
-the foundation [of Dulwich College] runs thus: that Mr. Alleyne, being
-a Tragedian and one of the original actors in many of the celebrated
-Shakespear’s plays, in one of which he played a Demon, with six others,
-and was in the midst of the play surpriz’d by an apparition of the
-Devil, which so work’d on his Fancy, that he made a Vow, which he
-perform’d at this Place’.
-
- _The Jew of Malta, c. 1589_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, May 17. ‘The famouse tragedie of the Riche Jewe of
-Malta.’ _Nicholas Ling and Thomas Millington_ (Arber, ii. 650). [On 16
-May ‘a ballad intituled the murtherous life and terrible death of the
-riche Jew of Malta’ had been entered to John Danter.]
-
-1632, Nov. 20 (Herbert). ‘A Tragedy called the Jew of Malta.’
-_Nicholas Vavasour_ (Arber, iv. 288).
-
-1633. The Famous Tragedy of the Rich Iew of Malta. As it was played
-before the King and Queene, in his Majesties Theatre at White-Hall, by
-her Majesties Servants at the Cockpit. Written by Christopher Marlo.
-_I. B. for Nicholas Vavasour._ [Epistle to Thomas Hammon of Gray’s
-Inn, signed ‘Tho. Heywood’; Prologues and Epilogues at Court and at
-Cockpit by Heywood; Prologue by Machiavel as presenter.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{2, 3}, viii (1780–1827), and by W. Scott (1810,
-_A. B. D._ i), Reynell and Son (publ. 1810), S. Penley (1813), A.
-Wagner (1889), and W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_:
-J. Kellner, _Die Quelle von M.’s J. of M._ (1887, _E. S._ x. 80); M.
-Thimme, _M.’s J. of M._ (1921).
-
-An allusion in Marlowe’s prologue to the death of the Duc de Guise
-gives a date of performance later than 23 Dec. 1588. Strange’s men
-gave the play for Henslowe seventeen times from 26 Feb. 1592 to 1 Feb.
-1593. Probably it belonged to Henslowe, as it was also played for him
-by Sussex’s men on 4 Feb. 1594, by Sussex and the Queen’s together on
-3 and 8 April 1594, by the Admiral’s on 14 May 1594, by either the
-Admiral’s or the Chamberlain’s on 6 and 15 June 1594, and thirteen
-times by the Admiral’s from 25 June 1594 to 23 June 1596 (Henslowe, ii.
-151). The 1598 inventories of the latter company include ‘j cauderm for
-the Jewe’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 118). On 19 May 1601 Henslowe advanced
-them money to buy ‘things’ for a revival of the play (Henslowe, i.
-137). Heywood’s epistle and Cockpit prologue name Marlowe and Alleyn
-as writer and actor of the play. Fleay, i. 298, suggests that Heywood
-wrote the Bellamira scenes (III. i; IV. iv, v; V. i), the motive of
-which he used for the plot of his _Captives_, and Greg agrees that the
-play shows traces of two hands, one of which may be Heywood’s. The
-Dresden repertory of 1626 included a ‘Tragödie von Barabas, Juden von
-Malta’, but this was not necessarily the play ‘von dem Juden’ given by
-English actors at Passau in 1607 and Graz in 1608 (Herz, 66, 75).
-
- _Edward the Second. c. 1592_
-
-_S. R._ 1593, July 6 (Judson). ‘A booke, Intituled The troublesom
-Reign and Lamentable Death of Edward the Second, king of England, with
-the tragicall fall of proud Mortymer.’ _William Jones_ (Arber, ii.
-634).
-
-1593? [C. F. Tucker Brooke (1909, _M. L. N._ xxiv. 71) suggests that a
-manuscript t.p. dated 1593 and sig. A inserted in Dyce’s copy of 1598
-may be from a lost edition, as they contain textual variants.]
-
-1594. The troublesome raigne and lamentable death of Edward the second,
-King of England: with the tragicall fall of proud Mortimer. As it was
-sundrie times publiquely acted in the honourable citie of London, by
-the right honourable the Earl of Pembroke his servants. Written by
-Chri. Marlow. Gent. _For William Jones._
-
-1598. _Richard Bradocke for William Jones._ [With an additional scene.]
-
-1612. _For Roger Barnes._
-
-1622.... As it was publikely Acted by the late Queenes Maiesties
-Servants at the Red Bull in S. Iohns streete.... _For Henry Bell._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–3}, ii (1744–1825), and by W. Scott (1810, _A.
-B. D._ i), W. Wagner (1871), F. G. Fleay (1873, 1877), O. W. Tancock
-(1877, etc.), E. T. McLaughlin (1894), A. W. Verity (1896, _T. D._),
-and W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_: C. Tzschaschel,
-_M.’s Edward II und seine Quellen_ (1902, _Halle diss._); M. Dahmetz,
-_M.’s Ed. II und Shakespeares Rich. II_ (1904).
-
-Pembroke’s men seem only to have had a footing at Court in the winter
-of 1592–3, and this is probably the date of the play. Greg (_Henslowe_,
-ii. 224) suggests that it may have had some ‘distant connexion’ with
-Chettle and Porter’s _The Spencers_ and an anonymous _Mortimer_ of the
-Admiral’s men in 1599 and 1602 respectively. But I think _Mortimer_ is
-a slip of Henslowe’s for _Vortigern_.
-
- _The Massacre at Paris. 1593_
-
-[_MS._] Collier, ii. 511, prints a fragment of a fuller text than that
-of the edition, but it is suspect (cf. Tucker Brooke, 483).
-
-N.D. The Massacre at Paris: With the Death of the Duke of Guise. As it
-was plaide by the right honourable the Lord high Admirall his Seruants.
-Written by Christopher Marlow. _E. A. for Edward White._
-
-Strange’s men produced ‘the tragedey of the gvyes’ as ‘n.e.’ on 26 Jan.
-1593. The Admiral’s men also played it for Henslowe as ‘the Gwies’ or
-‘the masacer’ ten times from 21 June to 27 Sept. 1594. Possibly in Nov.
-1598 and certainly in Nov. 1601 Henslowe advanced sums for costumes
-for a revival of the play by the Admiral’s. The insertion by Collier
-of Webster’s name in one of these entries is a forgery and whether
-the lost _Guise_ of this writer (q.v.) bore any relation to Marlowe’s
-play is wholly unknown. On 18 Jan. 1602 Henslowe paid Alleyn £2 for
-the ‘boocke’ of ‘the massaker of france’ on behalf of the company
-(Henslowe, i. xlii; ii. 157). For the offence given in France by this
-play, cf. ch. x.
-
- _Dido Queen of Carthage > 1593_
-
- _With_ Thomas Nashe.
-
-1594. The Tragedie of Dido Queene of Carthage: Played by the Children
-of her Maiesties Chappell. Written by Christopher Marlowe, and Thomas
-Nash. Gent. _Widow Orwin for Thomas Woodcock._
-
-_S. R._ 1600, June 26. Transfer from Paul Lynley to John Flasket,
-‘Cupydes Journey to hell with the tragedie of Dido’ (Arber, iii. 165).
-[Perhaps another book.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Old English Drama_ (1825, ii), by J. S. Farmer (1914,
-_S. F. T._), and with _Works_ of Nashe.--_Dissertations_: J. Friedrich,
-_Didodramen des Dolce, Jodelle, und M._ (1888); B. Knutowski, _Das
-Dido-Drama von M. und Nash_ (1905, _Breslau diss._).
-
-Tanner, _Bibl. Britanniae_ (1748), says, ‘Petowius in praefatione ad
-secundam partem Herois et Leandri multa in Marlovii commendationem
-adfert; hoc etiam facit Tho. Nash in _Carmine Elegiaco tragediae
-Didonis praefixo in obitum Christoph. Marlovii_, ubi quatuor eius
-tragediarum mentionem facit, necnon et alterius _de duce Guisio_’. The
-existence of this elegy is confirmed by Warton, who saw it either in
-1734 or 1754 (_Hist. Eng. Poet._ iv. 311; cf. McKerrow, ii. 335). It
-was ‘inserted immediately after the title-page’, presumably not of all
-copies, as it is not in the three now known. Whether Nashe’s own share
-in the work was as collaborator, continuator, or merely editor, remains
-uncertain. Fleay, ii. 147, gives him only I. i. 122 to end, III. i, ii,
-iv; IV. i, ii, v; Knutowski regards him as responsible for only a few
-trifling passages. As, moreover, the play has affinities both to early
-and to late work by Marlowe, it cannot be dated. Beyond its title-page
-and that of the anonymous _Wars of Cyrus_ there is nothing to point
-to any performances by the Chapel between 1584 and 1600. It is true
-that Tucker Brooke, 389, says, ‘The one ascertained fact concerning
-the history of this company during the ten years previous to 1594
-seems to be that they acted before the Queen at Croydon in 1591, under
-the direction of N. Giles, and Mr. Fleay assumes, apparently with no
-further evidence, that _Dido_ was presented on this ‘occasion’. But
-this only shows what some literary historians mean by an ‘ascertained
-fact’. A company played _Summers Last Will and Testament_ (q.v.) at
-Croydon in 1592 and said that they had not played for a twelvemonth.
-But the Queen was not present, and they are not known to have been
-the Chapel, whose master was not then Nathaniel Giles. Nor did they
-necessarily play twelve months before at Croydon; and if they did,
-there is nothing to show that they played _Dido_. There is nothing to
-connect the play with the Admiral’s _Dido and Aeneas_ of 1598 (Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 189).
-
- _Lust’s Dominion. c. 1600_ (?)
-
-1657. Lusts Dominion; Or, The Lascivious Queen. A Tragedie. Written by
-Christopher Marlowe, Gent. _For F. K., sold by Robert Pollard._
-
-_Editions_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ i) and in Dodsley^4, xiv
-(1875).
-
-The attribution of the play, as it stands, to Marlowe is generally
-rejected. Fleay, i. 272, supported by Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 211),
-suggests an identification with _The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy_, which
-Day, Dekker, and Haughton were writing for the Admiral’s in Feb. 1600,
-although the recorded payment does not show that this was finished.
-They think that a play in which Marlowe had a hand may perhaps underlie
-it, and attempt, not wholly in agreement with each other, to distribute
-the existing scenes amongst the collaborators.
-
- _Lost Play_
-
- _The Maiden’s Holiday_
-
-Entered on the Stationers’ Register on 8 April 1654 (Eyre, i. 445)
-by Moseley as ‘A comedie called The Maidens Holiday by Christopher
-Marlow & John Day’, and included in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (_3
-Library_, ii. 231) as ‘The Mayden Holaday by Chri[~s]. Marlowe’.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Marlowe’s hand has been sought in _An Alarum for London_, _Contention
-of York and Lancaster_, _Edward III_, _Locrine_, _Selimus_, _Taming of
-A Shrew_, and _Troublesome Reign of King John_ (cf. ch. xxiv), and in
-Shakespeare’s _Titus Andronicus_, _Henry VI_, and _Richard III_.
-
-
-JOHN MARSTON (_c._ 1575–1634).
-
-Marston was son of John Marston, a lawyer of Shropshire origin, who had
-settled at Coventry, and his Italian wife Maria Guarsi. He matriculated
-at Brasenose College, Oxford, aged 16, on 4 Feb. 1592, and took his
-degree on 6 Feb. 1594. He joined the Middle Temple, and in 1599 his
-father left law-books to him, ‘whom I hoped would have profited by
-them in the study of the law but man proposeth and God disposeth’.
-He had already begun his literary career, as a satirist with _The
-Metamorphosis of Pygmalion’s Image and Certain Satires_ (1598) and
-_The Scourge of Villainy_ (1598). For these he took the pseudonym
-of W. Kinsayder. Small, 64, has refuted the attempts to find in them
-attacks on Jonson, and H. C. Hart (_9 N. Q._ xi. 282, 342) has made
-it plausible that by ‘Torquatus’ was meant, not Jonson, but Gabriel
-Harvey. This view is now accepted by Penniman (_Poetaster_, xxiii). On
-28 Sept. 1599 Henslowe paid £2, on behalf of the Admiral’s, for ‘M^r
-Maxton the new poete’. The interlineated correction ‘M^r Mastone’ is
-a forgery (Greg, _Henslowe_, i. xlii; ii. 206), but probably Marston
-was the poet. The title of the play was left blank, and there was no
-further payment. It seems clearer to me than it does to Dr. Greg that
-the £2 was meant to make up a complete sum of £6 10_s._ for _The King
-of Scots_, and that Marston was the ‘other Jentellman’ who collaborated
-with Chettle, Dekker, and Jonson on that lost play. The setting up
-of the Paul’s boys in 1599 saved Marston from Henslowe. For them he
-successively revised the anonymous _Histriomastix_ (q.v.), wrote the
-two parts of _Antonio and Mellida_ and _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_,
-helped Dekker with _Satiromastix_, and finally wrote _What You Will_.
-This probably accounts for all his dramatic work during Elizabeth’s
-reign. In the course of it he came into conflict with Jonson, who told
-Drummond in 1619 (according to the revision of the text of Laing,
-20, suggested by Penniman, _War_, 40, and Small, 3) that ‘He had
-many quarrells with Marston, beat him, and took his pistol from him,
-wrote his Poetaster on him; the beginning of them were, that Marston
-represented him in the stage’. Marston’s representation of Jonson as
-Chrysoganus in _Histriomastix_ was complimentary, that as Brabant
-senior in _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_ offensive; and it was doubtless
-the latter that stirred Jonson to retaliate on Marston, perhaps as
-Hedon in _Cynthia’s Revels_, certainly as Crispinus in _The Poetaster_.
-Marston’s final blow was with Lampatho Doria in _What You Will_. When
-the theatres reopened in 1604 Marston seems to have left the Paul’s
-boys and taken a share in the syndicate formed to exploit the Queen’s
-Revels, for whom the rest of his plays were written. He was now on
-friendly terms with Jonson, to whom he dedicated his _Malcontent_ and
-for whose _Sejanus_ he wrote congratulatory verses. Possibly further
-friction arose over the unfortunate collaboration of Jonson, Marston,
-and Chapman in _Eastward Ho!_, for the chief indiscretion in which
-Marston seems to have been responsible, and may have stimulated a
-sarcasm on Jonson in the Epistle to _Sophonisba_. In 1608 Marston’s
-career as a dramatist abruptly terminated. An abstract of the Privy
-Council Register has the brief note on 8 June, ‘John Marston committed
-to Newgate’ (F. P. Wilson from _Addl. MS._ 11402, f. 141, in _M. L.
-R._ ix. 99). I conjecture that he was the author of the Blackfriars
-play (cf. ch. xii, s.v. Chapel) which hit at James’s explorations
-after Scottish silver. He disappeared, selling his interest in the
-Blackfriars company, then or in 1605, to Robert Keysar, and leaving
-_The Insatiate Countess_ unfinished. He had taken orders by 10 Oct.
-1616 when he obtained the living of Christchurch, Hampshire. This he
-resigned on 13 Sept. 1631. In 1633 he was distant from London, but died
-on 25 June 1634 in Aldermanbury parish. He had married Mary, probably
-the daughter of William Wilkes, one of James’s chaplains, of whom
-Jonson said in 1619 (Laing, 16) that ‘Marston wrott his Father-in-lawes
-preachings, and his Father-in-law his Commedies’. If we trust the
-portrait of Crispinus in _The Poetaster_, he had red hair and little
-legs. A letter from Marston to Sir Gervase Clifton, endorsed ‘Poet
-Marston’, is calendared in _Hist. MSS. Various Coll._ vii. 389; it is
-undated, but must, from the names used, be of 1603–8.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1633. Tragedies and Comedies collected into one volume. Viz. 1. Antonio
-and Mellida. 2. Antonio’s Revenge. 3. The Tragedie of Sophonisba. 4.
-What You Will. 5. The Fawne. 6. The Dutch Courtezan. _A. M. for William
-Sheares._ [Epistle to Viscountess Falkland, signed ‘William Sheares’.]
-
-1633. The Workes of Mr. Iohn Marston, Being Tragedies and Comedies,
-Collected into one Volume. _For William Sheares._ [Another issue.]
-
-1856. J. O. Halliwell, _The Works of John Marston_. 3 vols. [Contains
-all the works, except _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_.]
-
-1879. A. B. Grosart, _The Poems of John Marston_. [Contains
-_Pygmalion’s Image_ and the satires.]
-
-1887. A. H. Bullen, _The Works of John Marston_. 3 vols. [Contains all
-the works, except _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_.]
-
-_Dissertations_: W. von Scholten, _Metrische Untersuchungen zu
-Marston’s Trauerspielen_ (1886, _Halle diss._); P. Aronstein, _John
-Marston als Dramatiker_ (_E. S._ xx. 377; xxi. 28); W. v. Wurzbach,
-_John Marston_ (1897, _Jahrbuch_, xxxiii. 85); C. Winckler, _John
-Marston’s litterarische Anfänge_ (1903, _Breslau diss._) and _Marston’s
-Erstlingswerke und ihre Beziehungen zu Shakespeare_ (1904, _E. S._
-xxxiii. 216).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _Antonio and Mellida. 1599_
-
-_S. R._ 1601, Oct. 24. ‘A booke called The ffyrst and second partes
-of the play called Anthonio and Melida provided that he gett laufull
-licence for yt.’ _Matthew Lownes and Thomas Fisher_ (Arber, iii. 193).
-
-1602. The History of Antonio and Mellida. The first part. As it hath
-beene sundry times acted, by the Children of Paules. Written by I. M.
-_For Mathew Lownes and Thomas Fisher._ [Epistle to Nobody, signed ‘J.
-M.’, Induction, Prologue, and Epilogue.]
-
-1602. Antonio’s Reuenge. The second part. As it hath beene sundry times
-acted, by the children of Paules. Written by I. M. _For Thomas Fisher._
-[Prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ ii) and W. W. Greg (1921,
-_M. S. R._).
-
-In V. i of Part i a painter brings in two pictures, one dated ‘Anno
-Domini, 1599’, the other ‘Aetatis suae 24’. I agree with Small, 92,
-that these are probably real dates and that the second indicates
-Marston’s own age. As he must have completed his twenty-fourth year
-by 3 Feb. 1600 at latest, Part i was probably produced in 1599. The
-prologue of Part ii speaks of winter as replacing summer, and probably
-therefore Part i is to be dated in the summer, and Part ii in the early
-winter of 1599. Clearly the painter scene cannot, as Fleay, ii. 75,
-suggests, be motived by a casual allusion to a painter in _Cynthia’s
-Revels_ (F_{1}) 2673 or the painter scene added on revision to Kyd’s
-_Spanish Tragedy_, since both are later. The ‘armed Epilogue’ of Part
-i seems to me clearly a criticism of the armed prologue of Jonson’s
-_Poetaster_ (1601); it may have been an addition of 1601. Part ii,
-prol. 13, 23, calls the theatre ‘round’ and ‘ring’.
-
- _What You Will. 1601_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Aug. 6 (Buck). ‘A commedie called What you will.’ _Thomas
-Thorp_ (Arber, iii. 358).
-
-1607. What You Will. By Iohn Marston. _G. Eld for Thomas Thorpe._
-[Induction and Prologue.]
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ ii).--_Dissertation_: F.
-Holthausen, _Die Quelle von Marston’s W. Y. W._ (1905, _Jahrbuch_, xli.
-186).
-
-Bullen, Fleay, ii. 76, Small, 101, and Aronstein agree in regarding
-the play as written in 1601 by way of answer to _Cynthia’s Revels_,
-and they are probably right. Small shows that, in spite of the fact
-that Quadratus calls Lampatho Doria a ‘Don Kynsader’ (II. i. 134),
-Lampatho must stand for Jonson, and Quadratus to some extent for
-Marston himself. Perhaps Simplicius Faber is the unidentified Asinius
-Bubo of _Satiromastix_. Both Fleay and Small think that the play has
-been revised before publication, partly because of confusion in the
-names of the characters, and partly because of the absence of the kind
-of Marstonian language which Jonson satirized. Small goes so far as to
-suggest that the seventeen untraceable words vomited by Crispinus in
-_The Poetaster_ came from _What You Will_, and that Marston rewrote
-the play and eliminated them. The rest of Fleay’s conjectures about
-the play seem to me irresponsible. If the play dates from 1601, it
-may reasonably be assigned to the Paul’s boys. The induction, with
-its allusions to the small size of the stage and the use of candles,
-excludes the possibility of an adult theatre.
-
- _The Dutch Courtesan. 1603–4_
-
-_S. R._ 1605, June 26. ‘A booke called the Dutche Curtizan, as yt was
-latelie presented at the Blackeffryers Provyded that he gett sufficient
-Aucthoritie before yt be prynted.’ _John Hodgettes_ (Arber, iii. 293).
-[A further note, ‘This is alowed to be printed by Aucthoritie from
-Master Hartwell’.]
-
-1605. The Dutch Courtezan. As it was played in the Blacke-Friars. by
-the Children of her Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iohn Marston, _T. P.
-for John Hodgets_. [Prologue.]
-
-_S. R._ 1613, April 19. Transfer to Hodgettes of Eleazer Edgar’s
-interest in the play (Arber, iii. 520).
-
-As a Queen’s Revels play, this must have been on the stage at least
-as late as 1603, and the clear proof of Crawford, ii. 1, that several
-passages are verbal imitations of Florio’s translation of Montaigne,
-published in that year, make it difficult to put it earlier, although
-Wallace, ii. 75, says that he has evidence, which he does not give,
-for production in 1602. On the other hand, C. R. Baskervill (_M. L.
-A._ xxiv. 718) argues that the plot influenced that of _The Fair Maid
-of Bristow_, which was performed at Court during the winter of 1603–4.
-The play is referred to with _Eastward Ho!_ (q.v.) as bringing trouble
-on Marston by A. Nixon, _The Black Year_ (1606). It was revived for
-the Court by the Lady Elizabeth’s on 25 Feb. 1613, under the name of
-_Cockle de Moye_ from one of the characters, and repeated on 12 Dec.
-1613 (cf. App. B).
-
- _The Malcontent. 1604_
-
-_S. R._ 1604, July 5 (Pasfield). ‘An Enterlude called the Malecontent,
-Tragicomoedia.’ _William Aspley and Thomas Thorpe_ (Arber, iii. 266,
-268). [Entry made on the wrong page and re-entered.]
-
-1604. The Malcontent. By Iohn Marston. _V. S. for William Aspley._
-[Two editions. Inscription ‘Beniamino Jonsonio, poetae elegantissimo,
-gravissimo, amico suo, candido et cordato, Iohannes Marston, Musarum
-alumnus, asperam hanc suam Thaliam D.D.’ and Epistle to Reader.]
-
-1604. The Malcontent. Augmented by Marston. With the Additions played
-by the Kings Maiesties servants. Written by Ihon Webster. _V. S. for
-William Aspley._ [A third edition, with the Induction, which is headed
-‘The Induction to the Malcontent, and the additions acted by the Kings
-Maiesties servants. Written by Iohn Webster’, and the insertions I. i.
-146–88, 195–212, 256–303; I. iii; II. ii. 34, 57–71; III. i. 33–156;
-IV. ii. 123–37; V. i; V. ii. 10–39, 164–94, 212–26; V. iii. 180–202.]
-
-_Editions_ by W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ ii) and W. A. Neilson (1911,
-_C. E. D._); and with _Works_ of Webster (q.v.).--_Dissertation_: E.
-E. Stoll, _John Webster_ (1905), 55, and _Shakspere, Marston, and the
-Malcontent Type_ (1906, _M. P._ iii. 281).
-
-The induction, in which parts are taken by Sly, Sinklo, Burbadge,
-Condell, and Lowin, explains the genesis of the enlarged edition.
-
- _Sly._ ... I would know how you came by this play?
-
- _Condell._ Faith, sir, the book was lost; and because ’twas
- pity so good a play should be lost, we found it and play it.
-
- _Sly._ I wonder you would play it, another company having
- interest in it.
-
- _Condell._ Why not Malevole in folio with us, as Jeronimo
- in decimosexto with them? They taught us a name for our play; we
- call it _One for Another_.
-
- _Sly._ What are your additions?
-
- _Burbadge._ Sooth, not greatly needful; only as your salad
- to your great feast, to entertain a little more time, and to
- abridge the not-received custom of music in our theatre.
-
-Stoll, 57, rightly argues that Small, 115, is not justified in ignoring
-the evidence of the title-page and assigning the insertions, as well
-as the induction, to Webster rather than Marston. On the other hand,
-I think he himself ignores the evidence of Burbadge’s speech in the
-induction, when he takes the undramatic quality of the insertions as
-proof that Marston did not write them first in 1604, but revived them
-from his original text, which the boy actors had shortened. He puts
-this original text in 1600, because of the allusion in one of the
-insertions (I. iii. 20) to a ‘horn growing in the woman’s forehead
-twelve years since’. This horn was described in a pamphlet of 1588. I
-do not share his view that ‘twelve’ must be a precise and not a round
-number. Sly says in the induction:
-
- ‘This play hath beaten all your gallants out of the feathers:
- Blackfriars hath almost spoiled Blackfriars for feathers.’
-
-It is clear therefore that the original actors were the Blackfriars
-boys, and there is nothing else to suggest a connexion between Marston
-and these boys during Elizabeth’s reign. Small, 115, points out a
-reference to the Scots in V. iii. 24 which should be Jacobean. I
-think that this is Marston’s first play for the Queen’s Revels after
-the formation of the syndicate early in 1604, and that the revision
-followed later in the same year. It is not necessary to assume that the
-play was literally ‘lost’ or that Marston was not privy to the adoption
-of it by the King’s. Importance is attached to the date by parallels to
-certain plays of Shakespeare, where Stoll thinks that Shakespeare was
-the borrower. I do not see how it can be so. The epilogue speaks of the
-author’s ‘reformed Muse’ and pays a compliment to ‘another’s happier
-Muse’ and forthcoming ‘Thalia’, perhaps Jonson’s _Volpone_.
-
- _The Fawn. 1604 < > 6_
-
-_S. R._ 1606, March 12. ‘A playe called the ffaune provided that
-he shall not put the same in prynte before he gett alowed lawfull
-aucthoritie.’ _William Cotton_ (Arber, iii. 316).
-
-1606. Parasitaster, Or The Fawne, As it hath bene diuers times
-presented at the blacke Friars, by the Children of the Queenes
-Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iohn Marston. _T. P. for W. C._ [Epistle
-to the Equal Reader, signed ‘Jo. Marston’, Prologue, and Epilogue.]
-
-1606.... and since at Paules.... And now corrected of many faults,
-which by reason of the Author’s absence were let slip in the first
-edition. _T. P. for W. C._ [A further Epistle to the Reader states that
-the writer has ‘perused this copy’ and is about to ‘present ... to you’
-the tragedy of _Sophonisba_.]
-
-Modern edition by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E. P._ ii).
-
-As a Queen’s Revels play, this must date from 1604 or 1605; presumably
-it was transferred to Paul’s by Edward Kirkham, when he took charge
-of them for the Christmas of 1605–6. Small, 116, refutes Aronstein’s
-suggested allusion to Jonson’s _Volpone_ of 1605 or 1606. Bolte,
-_Danziger Theater_, 177, prints from a seventeenth-century Dantzig MS.
-a German play, _Tiberius von Ferrara und Annabella von Mömpelgart_,
-which is in part derived from _The Fawn_ (Herz, 99). If, as the titles
-suggest, the performances of _Annabella, eines Hertzogen Tochter von
-Ferrara_ at Nördlingen in 1604, of _Annabella, eines Markgraffen
-Tochter von Montferrat_ at Rothenburg in 1604, and of _Herzog von
-Ferrara_ at Dresden in 1626 (Herz, 65, 66), indicate intermediate
-links, _The Fawn_ cannot be later than 1604. Yet I find it impossible
-not to attach some value to the argument of Stoll, _Webster_, 17, for
-a date later than the execution of Sir Everard Digby on 30 Jan. 1606
-(Stowe, _Annales_, 881), which appears to be alluded to in IV. i. 310,
-‘Nay, heed me, a woman that will thrust in crowds,--a lady, that, being
-with child, ventures the hope of her womb,--nay, gives two crowns
-for a room to behold a goodly man three parts alive, quartered, his
-privities hackled off, his belly lanched up’. It is true that there
-were also quarterings for treason on 29 Nov. 1603 (Stowe, _Annales_,
-ed. Howes, 831), but these were in Winchester; also that contemporary
-notices, such as that in Stowe and the narratives in J. Morris,
-_Catholics under James I_, 216, and in _Somers Tracts_ (1809), ii.
-111, which describes the victims as ‘proper men, in shape’, afford no
-confirmation of indecent crowds in 1606, but the cumulative effect
-of the quadruple allusions here, in Day’s _Isle of Gulls_ (q.v.),
-in Sharpham’s _Fleir_ (q.v.), and in Middleton’s _Michaelmas Term_
-(q.v.) is pretty strong. The passage quoted by Crawford, ii. 40, from
-Montaigne is hardly particular enough to explain that in the _Fawn_. I
-do not like explaining discrepancies by the hypothesis of a revision,
-but if Kirkham revived the _Fawn_ at Paul’s in 1606, he is not unlikely
-to have had it written up a bit. The epistle refers to ‘the factious
-malice and studied detractions’ of fellow-dramatists, perhaps an echo
-of Marston’s relations with Jonson and Chapman over _Eastward Ho!_
-
- _The Wonder of Women_, or _Sophonisba_. _1606_
-
-_S. R._ 1606, March 17 (Wilson). ‘A booke called the wonder of woemen,
-or the Tragedie of Sophonisba, &c.’ _Eleazar Edgar_ (Arber, iii. 316).
-
-1606. The Wonder of Women Or the Tragedie of Sophonisba, as it hath
-beene sundry times Acted at the Blacke-Friers. Written by Iohn Marston.
-_John Windet._ [Epistle to the General Reader by the author, but
-unsigned, Argumentum, Prologue, and Epilogue.]
-
-_S. R._ 1613, April 19. Transfer from Edgar to John Hodgettes (Arber,
-iii. 521).
-
-The mention of Blackfriars without the name of a company points to a
-performance after Anne’s patronage had been withdrawn from the Revels
-boys, late in 1605 or early in 1606, not, as Fleay, ii. 79, suggests,
-to one by the Chapel in 1602–3. Some features of staging (cf. ch. xxi)
-raise a suspicion that the play may have been taken over from Paul’s.
-The resemblance of the title to that of _Wonder of a Woman_ produced by
-the Admiral’s in 1595 is probably accidental. The epistle glances at
-Jonson’s translations in _Sejanus_ (1603).
-
- _The Insatiate Countess. c. 1610_
-
-1613. The Insatiate Countesse. A Tragedie: Acted at White-Fryers.
-Written by Iohn Marston. _T. S. for Thomas Archer._
-
-1616. _N. O. for Thomas Archer._
-
-1631.... Written by William Barksteed. _For Hugh Perrie._
-
-1631.... Written by Iohn Marston. _I. N. for Hugh Perrie._ [A reissue.]
-
-_Dissertation_: R. A. Small, _The Authorship and Date of the Insatiate
-Countess_ in _Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and Literature_, v
-(_Child Memorial Volume_), 277.
-
-It is generally supposed that Marston began the play and that Barksted
-(q.v.) finished it. Two lines (V. ii. 244–5) appear verbatim in
-Barksted’s _Mirrha_ (1607). Small traces several other clear parallels
-with both _Mirrha_ and _Hiren_, as well as stylistic qualities pointing
-to Barksted rather than to Marston, and concludes that the play is
-Barksted’s on a plot drafted by Marston. It may be conjectured that
-Marston left the fragment when he got into trouble for the second time
-in 1608, and that the revision was more probably for the Queen’s Revels
-at Whitefriars in 1609–11 than for the conjoint Queen’s Revels and
-Lady Elizabeth’s in 1613. Hardly any of the suggestions on the play in
-Fleay, ii. 80, bear analysis.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-On _The King of Scots_, _vide supra_. Rogers and Ley’s list of 1656
-(Greg, _Masques_, lxxii) ascribes to Marston a _Guise_, which other
-publishers’ lists transfer to Webster (q.v.). Collier, _Memoirs of
-Alleyn_, 154, assigns to Marston a _Columbus_, on the basis of a
-forgery.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Marston doubtless had a hand in revising the anonymous _Histriomastix_
-and in _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_, and attempts have been made
-to find him in _An Alarum for London_, _Charlemagne_, _London
-Prodigal_, _Puritan_ (cf. ch. xxiv), and as a collaborator in Dekker’s
-_Satiromastix_.
-
- MASKS
-
- _Ashby Entertainment. Aug. 1607_
-
-[_MSS._] (_a_) _Bridgewater House_, with title, ‘The honorable Lorde &
-Lady of Huntingdons Entertainment of their right Noble Mother Alice:
-Countesse Dowager of Darby the first night of her honors arrivall att
-the house of Ashby’. [Verses to Lady Derby signed ‘John Marston’;
-includes a mask of Cynthia and Ariadne.]
-
-(_b_) _B.M. Sloane_ 848, f. 9. [Speech of Enchantress only, with date
-Aug. 1607.]
-
-_Extracts_ in H. J. Todd, _Works of Milton_, v. 149 (1801), and
-Nichols, _James_, ii. 145 (1828).
-
-On arrival, in the park, at an ‘antique gate’ with complimentary
-inscriptions, were speeches by Merimna an enchantress, and Saturn; at
-the top of the stairs to the great chamber another speech by Merimna
-and a gift of a waistcoat.
-
-Later in the great chamber was a mask by four knights and four
-gentlemen, in carnation and white, and vizards like stars, representing
-sons of Mercury, with pages in blue, and Cynthia and Ariadne as
-presenters. A traverse ‘slided away’, and disclosed the presenters
-on clouds. Later a second traverse ‘sank down’, and the maskers
-appeared throned at the top of a wood. They danced ‘a new measure’,
-then ‘presented their shields’, and took out the ladies for measures,
-galliards, corantos and lavoltas. ‘The night being much spent’, came
-their ‘departing measure’.
-
-At departure were an eclogue by a shepherd and a nymph, and a gift of a
-cabinet by Niobe in the little park.
-
- _Mountebank’s Mask. 1618_ (?)
-
-The ascription to Marston of this Gray’s Inn mask rests on an
-unverifiable assertion by Collier (cf. Bullen, _Marston_, iii. 418;
-Brotanek, 356), and the known dates of Marston’s career render it
-extremely improbable.
-
-
-JOHN MASON (1581–2--?).
-
-The degree boasted on his title-page leads to the identification of
-Mason as a son of Richard Mason, priest, of Cavendish, Suffolk, and
-pupil of Bury St. Edmunds school, who matriculated from Caius College,
-Cambridge, as a sizar at the age of fourteen on 6 July 1596, and took
-the degree of B.A. in 1601 and M.A. in 1606 from St. Catharine’s Hall.
-He was a member of the King’s Revels syndicate in 1608, and nothing
-further is known of him, since the combination of names is too common
-to justify his identification with the schoolmaster of Camberwell,
-Surrey, whose school-play is described in _Princeps Rhetoricus_ (1648;
-cf. C. S. Northup in _E. S._ xlv. 154).
-
- _The Turk. 1607–8_
-
-_S. R._ 1609, March 10 (Segar). ‘A booke called The tragedy of the
-Turke with the death of Borgias by John Mason gent.’ _John Busby_
-(Arber, iii. 403).
-
-1610. The Turke. A Worthie Tragedie. As it hath bene diuers times acted
-by the Children of his Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iohn Mason Maister
-of Artes. _E. A. for John Busbie._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-1632. An excellent Tragedy of Mulleasses the Turke, and Borgias
-Governour of Florence. Full of Interchangeable variety; beyond
-expectation.... _T. P. for Francis Falkner._
-
-_Edition_ by J. Q. Adams (1913, _Materialien_,
-xxxvii).--_Dissertation_: G. C. Moore Smith, _John Mason and
-Edward Sharpham_ (1913, _M. L. R._ viii. 371).
-
-As a King’s Revels play this may be put in 1607–8. An earlier date has
-been thought to be indicated by _Eastward Ho!_ (1605), II. ii. 41,
-‘_Via_, the curtaine that shaddowed Borgia’, but if the reference is
-to a play, Borgia may well have figured in other plays. A play ‘Vom
-Turcken’ was taken by Spencer to Nuremberg in 1613 (Herz, 66).
-
-
-CHARLES MASSEY.
-
-For his career as an actor, cf. ch. xv.
-
-He apparently wrote _Malcolm King of Scots_ for the Admiral’s, to
-which he belonged, in April 1602, and began _The Siege of Dunkirk,
-with Alleyn the Pirate_ in March 1603. Neither play survives.
-
-
-PHILIP MASSINGER (1583–1640).
-
-Massinger, baptized at Salisbury on 24 Nov. 1583, was son of Arthur
-Massinger, a confidential servant of Henry, 2nd Earl of Pembroke. He
-entered at St. Alban Hall, Oxford, and left without a degree in 1606.
-Little is known of him for some years thereafter. He is conjectured to
-have become a Catholic and thus to have imperilled his relations with
-the Herbert family, at any rate until the time of Philip, the 4th earl,
-who was certainly his patron. He was buried at St. Saviour’s on 18
-March 1640 and left a widow. The greater part of his dramatic career,
-to which all his independent plays belong, falls outside the scope of
-this notice, but on 4 July 1615 he gave a joint bond with Daborne for
-£3 to Henslowe, and some undated correspondence probably of 1613 shows
-that he was collaborating in one or more plays with Daborne, Field, and
-Fletcher.
-
- _Collections_
-
-T. Coxeter (1759), J. M. Mason (1779), W. Gifford (1805), H. Coleridge
-(1840, 1848, 1851), F. Cunningham (1871, 3 vols.). [These include _The
-Old Law_, _The Fatal Dowry_, and _The Virgin Martyr_, but not any plays
-from the Beaumont and Fletcher Ff.]
-
- _Selections_
-
-1887–9. A. Symons, _The Best Plays of P. M._ 2 vols. (_Mermaid
-Series_). [Includes _The Fatal Dowry_ and _The Virgin Martyr_.]
-
-1912. L. A. Sherman, _P. M._ (_M. E. D._).
-
-_Dissertations_: S. R. Gardiner, _The Political Element in M._ (1876,
-_N. S. S. Trans._ 314); J. Phelan, _P. M._ (1879–80, _Anglia_, ii. 1,
-504; iii. 361); E. Koeppel, _Quellenstudien zu den Dramen G. Chapman’s,
-P. M.’s und J. Ford’s_ (1897, _Q. F._ lxxxii); W. von Wurzbach, _P. M._
-(1899–1900, _Jahrbuch_, xxxv. 214, xxxvi. 128); C. Beck, _P. M. The
-Fatal Dowry_ (1906); A. H. Cruickshank, _Philip Massinger_ (1920).
-
-It is doubtful how far Massinger’s dramatic activity began before 1616.
-For ascriptions to him, s.v. Beaumont and Fletcher (_Captain_, _Cupid’s
-Revenge_, _Coxcomb_, _Scornful Lady_, _Honest Man’s Fortune_, _Faithful
-Friends_, _Thierry and Theodoret_, _T. N. K._, _Love’s Cure_), Anthony
-Brewer (_The Lovesick King_), and _Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ (ch. xxiv).
-It has also been suggested that a _Philenzo and Hypollita_ and an
-_Antonio and Vallia_, ascribed to him in late records, but not extant,
-may represent revisions of early work by Dekker (q.v.).
-
-
-FRANCIS MERBURY (_c._ 1579).
-
-At the end of the epilogue to the following play is written ‘Amen,
-quoth fra: Merbury’. The formula may denote only a scribe, but a
-precisely similar one denotes the author in the case of Preston’s
-_Cambyses_ (q.v.).
-
- _A Marriage between Wit and Wisdom. c. 1579_
-
-[_MS._] _Brit. Mus. Addl. MS._ 26782, formerly _penes_ Sir Edward
-Dering.
-
-_Editions_ by J. O. Halliwell (1846, _Sh. Soc._), J. S. Farmer (1909,
-_T. F. T._).
-
-The MS. has a title-page, with the date 1579, an arrangement of the
-parts for six actors and the title ‘The ---- of a Marige betweene wit
-and wisdome very frutefull and mixed full of pleasant mirth as well
-for The beholders as the Readers or hearers neuer before imprinted’.
-There are nine Scenes in two Acts, with a Prologue and Epilogus. The
-characters are almost wholly allegorical. Idleness is ‘the vice’. The
-stage-directions mention a ‘stage’. Halliwell prints the mutilated
-word left blank in the title above as ‘Contract’, no doubt rightly.
-Conceivably the play was in fact printed in 1579, as ‘Mariage of wit
-and wisdome’ is in Rogers and Ley’s play-list of 1656 (Greg, _Masques_,
-lxxxvii).
-
-The play might be identical with the lost Paul’s moral of _The Marriage
-of Mind and Measure_ (cf. App. B), which also belongs to 1579. Fleay,
-ii. 287, 294, infers from a not very conclusive reference to a ‘King’
-in sc. iv that it dates from the time of Edward VI. He also identifies
-it with the _Hit Nail o’ th’ Head_ named in _Sir Thomas More_ (q.v.)
-because that phrase is quoted in the Epilogus, curiously disregarding
-the fact that the _Sir Thomas More_ list names the play under its
-existing title as distinct from _Hit Nail o’ th’ Head_. Most of the
-plays in the _Sir Thomas More_ list seem to be pre-Elizabethan; cf.
-_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 200.
-
-
-THOMAS MIDDLETON (_c._ 1570–1627).
-
-Thomas Middleton was a Londoner and of a gentle family. The date of
-his birth can only be roughly conjectured from the probability that
-he was one of two Thomas Middletons who entered Gray’s Inn in 1593
-and 1596, and of his earlier education nothing is known. His first
-work was _The Wisdom of Solomon Paraphrased_ (1597), and he may be
-the T. M. of _The Black Book_ (1604) and other pamphlets in prose and
-verse. He appears as a dramatist, possibly as early as 1599 in _The
-Old Law_ and certainly in Henslowe’s diary during 1602, writing an
-unnamed play for Worcester’s men, and for the Admiral’s _Caesar’s Fall
-or The Two Shapes_ with Dekker (q.v), Drayton, Munday, and Webster,
-and by himself, _Randal Earl of Chester_, and a prologue and epilogue
-to Greene’s _Friar Bacon_ (q.v.). This work is all lost, but by 1604
-he had also collaborated with Dekker for the Admiral’s in the extant
-_Honest Whore_. From 1602, if not from 1599, to the end of their career
-in 1606 or 1607, he was also writing diligently for the Paul’s boys. I
-think he is referred to with their other ‘apes and guls’, Marston and
-Dekker, in Marston’s _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_ (1600), IV. 40:
-
- How like you _Musus_ fashion in his carriage?
- O filthilie, he is as blunt as _Paules_.
-
-Brabant, the speaker, represents Jonson, who told Drummond in 1619
-that he was ‘not of the number of the Faithfull, i. e. _Poets_, and but
-a base fellow’ (Laing, 12). Occasional plays for several companies and
-the beginnings of employment in city pageantry occupied 1607–16, and
-to later periods belong a fruitful partnership with William Rowley for
-Prince Charles’s men, and some slight share in the heterogeneous mass
-of work that passes under the names of Beaumont and Fletcher. He also
-wrote a few independent plays, of which _A Game at Chess_ (1624) got
-him into political trouble. At some time before 1623 a few lines of his
-got interpolated into the text of _Macbeth_ (cf. _Warwick_ edition, p.
-164). In 1620 he obtained a post as Chronologer to the City. He married
-Maria Morbeck, had a son Edward, and dwelt at Newington Butts, where he
-was buried on 4 July 1627.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1840. A Dyce, _Works of T. M._ 5 vols.
-
-1885–6. A. H. Bullen, _Works of T. M._ 8 vols. [Omits _The Honest
-Whore_.]
-
-1887–90. H. Ellis, _The Best Plays of T. M._ 2 vols. (Mermaid Series).
-[Includes _Trick to Catch the Old One_, _Chaste Maid in Cheapside_,
-_Widow_, _Roaring Girl_, _Mayor of Queenborough_, and later plays.]
-
-_Dissertations_: J. Arnheim, _T. M._ (1887, _Archiv_, lxxviii. 1,
-129, 369); P. G. Wiggin, _An Inquiry into the Authorship of the
-Middleton-Rowley Plays_ (1897, _Radcliffe College Monographs_, ix);
-H. Jung, _Das Verhältniss T. M.’s zu Shakspere_ (1904, _Münchener
-Beiträge_, xxix).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _The Old Law. 1599_
-
-1656. The Excellent Comedy, called The Old Law; Or A new way to please
-you. By Phil. Massenger. Tho. Middleton. William Rowley. Acted before
-the King and Queene at Salisbury House, and at severall other places,
-with great Applause. Together with an exact and perfect Catalogue
-of all the Playes, with the Authors Names, and what are Comedies,
-Tragedies, Histories, Pastoralls, Masks, Interludes, more exactly
-Printed than ever before. _For Edward Archer._
-
-_Editions_ with Massinger’s _Works_ (q.v.).--_Dissertation_: E. E.
-Morris, _On the Date and Composition of T. O. L._ (_M. L. A._ xvii. 1).
-
-It is generally supposed that in some form the play dates from 1599,
-as in III. i. 34 a woman was ‘born in an. 1540, and now ’tis 99’. Of
-the three authors only Middleton can then have been writing. Morris,
-after elaborate study of the early work and the versification of all
-three, concludes that Rowley (_c._ 1615) and Massinger (_c._ 1625)
-successively revised an original by Middleton. The Paul’s plays began
-in 1599, but it cannot be assumed that this was one of them. Stork, 48,
-doubts the 1599 date and is inclined to assume collaboration between
-the three writers _c._ 1615.
-
- _Blurt Master Constable. 1601–2_
-
-_S. R._ 1602, June 7. ‘A Booke called Blurt Master Constable. _Edward
-Aldee_ (Arber, iii. 207).
-
-1602. Blurt Master Constable. Or The Spaniards Night-walke. As it hath
-bin sundry times priuately acted by the Children of Paules. _For Henry
-Rocket._
-
-_Edition_ [by W. R. Chetwood] in _A Select Collection of Old Plays_
-(1750).
-
-Bullen suggests that V. iii. 179, ‘There be many of your countrymen in
-Ireland, signior’, said to a Spaniard, reflects the raid of Spaniards
-in Sept. 1601. They were taken at Kinsale in June 1602. A parallel in
-III. i. 104 with _Macbeth_, II. ii. 3, cannot be taken with Fleay, ii.
-90, as proof of posteriority.
-
- _The Phoenix. 1603–4_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, May 9 (Buck). ‘A Booke called The Phenix.’ _Arthur
-Johnson_ (Arber, iii. 348).
-
-1607. The Phoenix, As It hath beene sundry times Acted by the Children
-of Paules. And presented before his Maiestie. _E. A. for A. I._
-
-1630. _T. H. for R. Meighen._
-
-The only available performance before James was on 20 Feb. 1604, and
-the imitation of _Volpone_ (1605) suggested by Fleay, ii. 92, is not
-clear enough to cause any difficulty. Knights are satirized in I. vi.
-150, II. iii. 4, and there is an allusion to the unsettled state of
-Ireland in I. v. 6.
-
- _A Trick to Catch the Old One. 1604 < > 6_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Oct. 7 (Buck). ‘Twoo plaies ... thother A trick to catche
-the old one.’ _George Eld_ (Arber, iii. 360).
-
-1608. A Trick to Catch the Old One. As it hath beene lately Acted, by
-the Children of Paules. _George Eld._
-
-1608.... As it hath beene often in Action, both at Paules, and the
-Black Fryers. Presented before his Maiestie on New yeares night last.
-Composed by T. M. _G. E. sold by Henry Rockett._ [Another issue.]
-
-1616.... By T. Middleton. _George Eld for Thomas Langley._
-
-_Editions_ in _O. E. D._ (1830, iii) and by C. W. Dilke (1814, _O. E.
-P._ v) and W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).
-
-The date of Q_{1} is doubtless 1608/9 and the Court performance that by
-the Children of Blackfriars on 1 Jan. 1609. They must have taken the
-play over from Paul’s when these went under in 1606 or 1607. The title
-is probably proverbial, and therefore the phrase ‘We are in the way to
-catch the old one’ in _Isle of Gulls_, II. v, hardly enables us to date
-the play with Fleay, ii. 92, before Day’s, which was in Feb. 1606.
-
- _A Mad World, my Masters. 1604 < > 6_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1608, Oct. 4. ‘A Booke called A Mad World (my Maysters).’
-_Walter Burre and Eleazar Edgar_ (Arber, iii. 391). [The licenser
-is Segar, ‘Deputy of Sir George Bucke’.]
-
-1608. A Mad World, My Masters. As it hath bin lately in Action by the
-Children of Paules. Composed by T. M. _H. B. for Walter Burre._
-
-_S. R._ 1613, April 19. Transfer to John Hodgettes of Edgar’s share
-(Arber, iii. 520).
-
-1640.... A Comedy. As it hath bin often Acted at the Private House in
-Salisbury Court, by her Majesties Servants.... _For J. S., sold by
-James Becket._ [Epistle to Reader, signed ‘J. S.’]
-
-_Edition_ by W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ ii).
-
-The epistle says ‘it is full twenty years since it was written’, which
-is absurd. A pamphlet of the same title by Breton in 1603, hits at the
-Jacobean knightings in I. i. 64, II. v. 41, and the Family of Love
-in I. ii. 73, and the disappearance of Paul’s in 1606 or 1607 are
-the only indications of date. In Acts IV and V the duplicate names
-Once-Ill-Brothel, Hargrave-Harebrain, Shortrod-Harebrain suggest
-revision.
-
- _Michaelmas Term. 1606_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1607, May 15 (Buck). ‘A Comedy called Mychaelmas terme.’
-_Arthur Johnson_ (Arber, iii. 349).
-
-1607. Michaelmas Terme. As it hath been sundry times acted by the
-Children of Paules. _For A. I._ [Induction.]
-
-1630.... Newly corrected. _T. H. for R. Meighen._
-
-Allusions in II. iii. 226, 376 to the presence of women at a quartering
-for treason may suggest, as in the case of Marston’s _Fawn_ (q.v.), a
-date after that of 30 Jan. 1606. There is no reference in II. i. 63 to
-the leap-year of 1604, as suggested by Fleay, ii. 91. Knightings are
-satirized in I. i. 191; III. i. 46.
-
- _Your Five Gallants. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1608, March 22 (Buck). ‘A Plaie called the ffyve Wittie
-Gallantes as it hath ben acted by the Children of the Chappell.’
-_Richard Bonyon_ (Arber, iii. 372).
-
-N.D. Your fiue Gallants. As it hath beene often in Action at the
-Blacke-friers. Written by T. Middleton. _For Richard Bonian._
-[Induction with ‘Presenter or Prologue’ in dumb-show.]
-
-This may have been in preparation for Paul’s when they ceased playing
-and taken over by Blackfriars. In any case a reference to closure for
-plague in IV. ii. 29 and to fighting with a windmill (like Don
-Quixote) in IV. viii. 7 fit in with a date in 1607.
-
- _The Family of Love. 1604 < > 7_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Oct. 12 (Buck). ‘A playe called the family of Loue as
-yt hath bene Lately acted by the Children of his Maiesties Reuelles.’
-_John Browne and John Helme_ (Arber, iii. 360).
-
-1608. The Famelie of Love. Acted by the Children of his Maiesties
-Reuells. _For John Helmes._ [Epistle to Reader, Prologue, Epilogue.]
-
-The prologue apologizes that ‘expectation’ hath not ‘filled the general
-round’. The King’s Revels can hardly have existed before 1607. Fleay,
-ii. 94, thinks that they inherited the play from Paul’s and assigns
-it to 1604 ‘when the Family of Love were such objects of public
-attention’. His chief reason is that the epistle regrets that the play
-was ‘not published when the general voice of the people had sealed
-it for good, and the newness of it made it much more desired than at
-this time’. It had ‘passed the censure of the stage with a general
-applause’. This epistle is clearly by the author, who says ‘it was
-in the press before I had notice of it, by which means some faults
-may escape in the printing’. I agree that there must have been some
-interval between production and publication. But there is no special
-virtue in the date 1604. References to the Family of Love are to be
-found in _Sir Giles Goosecap_ (_1601–3_), II. i. 263; _Dutch Courtesan_
-(_1603–4_), I. i. 156, I. ii. 18; _Mad World, My Masters_ (_1604–6_),
-I. ii. 73; _Isle of Gulls_ (_1606_), p. 26; _Every Woman in Her Humour_
-(?), p. 316. The sect was well known in England as early as 1574–81,
-when an act was passed for its suppression. It petitioned James _c._
-1604 and was answered in _A Supplication of the Family of Love_,
-printed at Cambridge in 1606. On its history, cf. Fuller, _Church
-History_ (1868), iii. 239; F. Nippold, _Heinrich Niclaes und das Haus
-der Liebe_ (1862, _Z. f. Hist. Theol._); R. Barclay, _Inner Life of the
-Religious Societies of the Commonwealth_ (1876), 25; A. C. Thomas, _The
-Family of Love_ (1893); R. M. Jones, _Studies in Mystical Religion_
-(1909), 428; E. B. Daw, _Love Feigned and Unfeigned_ (1917, _M. L. A._
-xxxii. 267).
-
- _The Roaring Girl. c. 1610._
-
- _With_ Dekker (q.v.).
-
- _A Chaste Maid in Cheapside. 1611._
-
-_S. R._ 1630, April 8 (Herbert). ‘A play called The Chast Mayd of
-Chepeside.’ _Constable_ (Arber, iv. 232).
-
-1630. A Chast Mayd in Cheape-side. A Pleasant conceited Comedy neuer
-before printed. As it hath beene often acted at the Swan on the
-Banke-side by the Lady Elizabeth her Seruants By Thomas Midelton Gent.
-_For Francis Constable._
-
-It is not known where the Lady Elizabeth’s played during 1611–13,
-and it may very well have been at the Swan. Nor is there anything
-improbable in the suggestion of Fleay, 186, that this is the _Proud
-Maid’s Tragedy_ acted by them at Court on 25 Feb. 1612 (App. B).
-
- _No Wit, no Help, like a Woman’s. 1613_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1653, Sept. 9. ‘No witt, no helpe like a Woman. Mr. Tho.
-Midleton.’ _H. Moseley._ (Eyre, i. 428).
-
- { Wit }
- 1657. No { Help } like a Womans. A Comedy. By Tho. Middleton,
- Gent. _For Humphrey Moseley._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-The text represents a revival by Shirley in 1638, but Fleay, ii. 96,
-refers the original to 1613 as in III. i. 286 a character, after
-referring to the almanac for 1638, says he has ‘proceeded in five and
-twenty such books of astronomy’. Bullen accepts the date, but I feel no
-confidence in the argument. Stork, 47, attempts to trace Rowley’s hand.
-
- _The Widow_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1652, Apr. 12 (Brent). ‘A play called The Widdow, written by
-John Fletcher & Tho: Middleton gent.’ _Moseley_ (Eyre, i. 394).
-
-1652. The Widdow A Comedie. As it was Acted at the private House in
-Black Fryers, with great Applause, by His late Majesties Servants.
-Written by Ben: Jonson John Fletcher. Tho: Middleton. Gent. Printed
-by the Originall Copy. _For Humphrey Moseley._ [Epistle to Reader by
-Alexander Gough. Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-Bullen places this ‘from internal evidence’ _c._ 1608–9, but thinks
-it revised at a later date, not improbably by Fletcher, although he
-cannot discover either Jonson’s hand or, ‘unless the songs be his’,
-Fletcher’s. Allusions to ‘a scornful woman’ (I. ii. 104) and to ‘yellow
-bands’ as ‘hateful’ (V. i. 52) are consistent with a date _c._ 1615–16.
-
- _The Mayor of Quinborough_ (?)
-
-[_MS._] A copy of the play, said to be ‘of no great antiquity’, is
-described in an appendix to _Wit and Wisdom_ (_Sh. Soc._), 85.
-
-_S. R._ 1646, Sept. 4 (Langley). ‘Maior of Quinborough.’ _Robinson and
-Moseley_ (Eyre, i. 244).
-
-1661, Feb. 13. ‘A Comedie called the Maior of Quinborough, By Tho:
-Middleton. _Henry Herringham_ (Eyre, ii. 288).
-
-1661. The Mayor of Quinborough: A Comedy. As it hath been often Acted
-with much Applause at Black Fryars, By His Majesties Servants. Written
-by Tho. Middleton. _For Henry Herringham._ [Epistle to Gentlemen.]
-
-There is a mention (V. i. 112) of Fletcher’s _Wild-Goose Chase_
-(1621), and the introduction of a ‘rebel Oliver’ suggests a much later
-date. But Bullen thinks this an old play revised, and Fleay, ii. 104,
-attempts to identify it with an anonymous play called both _Vortigern_
-and _Hengist_ (Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 181) which was produced by the
-Admiral’s on 4 Dec. 1596 and bought by the same company from Alleyn in
-1601. There is not, however, much to support a theory that Middleton
-was writing for the stage so early as 1596. Stork, 46, thinks that
-Middleton and Rowley revised the older play _c._ 1606, ‘at a time when
-plays of ancient Britain were in vogue’.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Middleton’s hand has been sought in _Birth of Merlin_, _Puritan_,
-and _Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ (cf. ch. xxiv) and in _Wit at Several
-Weapons_ of the Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher series.
-
- _Lost Mask_
-
- _Mask of Cupid. 4 Jan. 1614_
-
-Writing to Carleton on 5 Jan. 1614 of the festivities at the Earl
-of Somerset’s wedding (Birch, i. 288; cf. s.v. Campion, _Mask of
-Squires_), Chamberlain notes that the King had called on the City to
-entertain the bridal pair, which they had done, though reluctantly, on
-4 Jan. in Merchant Taylors’ hall, with a supper, a play and a mask,
-and a banquet. Howes in Stowe, _Annales_, 1005, says there were ‘2
-seuerall pleasant maskes & a play’. Bullen, _Middleton_, i. xxxix,
-gives from the City _Repertory_, xxxi. 2, f. 239^v, an order of 18
-Jan. 1614 for payment to Thomas Middleton in respect of the ‘late
-solemnities at Merchant Tailors’ Hall’ for ‘the last Mask of Cupid and
-other shows lately made’ by him.
-
- ENTERTAINMENTS
-
- _Running Stream Entertainment. 29 Sept. 1613_
-
-1613. The Manner of his Lordships [Sir Thomas Middleton’s]
-Entertainment on Michaelmas day last, being the day of his Honorable
-Election, together with the worthy Sir Iohn Swinarton, Knight, then
-Lord Maior, the Learned and Iuditious, Sir Henry Montague, Maister
-Recorder, and many of the Right Worshipfull the Aldermen of the Citty
-of London. At that most Famous and Admired Worke of the Running Streame
-from Amwell Head, into the Cesterne neere Islington, being the sole
-Inuention, Cost, and Industry of that Worthy Maister Hugh Middleton,
-of London Goldsmith, for the generall good of the Citty. By T. M.
-_Nicholas Okes._ [Appended to reissue of _The Triumphs of Truth_.]
-
- _The Triumphs of Truth. 29 Oct. 1613_
-
-_S. R._ 1613, Nov. 3. ‘A booke called the tryumphs of truth of all
-the showes pagiantes Chariots &c. on the Lord Maiours Day octobris 29,
-1613.’ _Nicholas Okes_ (Arber, iii. 536).
-
-1613. The Triumphs of Truth. A Solemnity vnparalleld for Cost, Art,
-and Magnificence, at the Confirmation and Establishment of that Worthy
-and true Nobly-minded Gentleman, Sir Thomas Middleton, Knight; in the
-Honorable Office of his Maiesties Lieuetenant, the Lord Maior of the
-thrice Famous Citty of London. Taking Beginning at his Lordships going,
-and proceeding after his Returne from receiuing the Oath of Maioralty
-at Westminster, on the Morrow next after Simon and Iudes day, October
-29. 1613. All the Showes, Pageants, Chariots; Morning, Noone, and
-Night-Triumphes. Directed, Written, and redeem’d into Forme, from the
-Ignorance of some former times, and their Common Writer, by Thomas
-Middleton. _Nicholas Okes._
-
-1613.... Shewing also his Lordships Entertainment on Michaelmas day
-last, ... [etc.]. _Nicholas Okes._ [Reissue, with _Running Stream
-Entertainment_ added.]
-
-_Edition_ in Nichols, _James_ (1828), ii. 679, with _Running Stream_.
-
- _Civitatis Amor. 4 Nov. 1616_
-
-1616. Ciuitatis Amor. The Cities Loue. An entertainement by water, at
-Chelsey, and Whitehall. At the ioyfull receiuing of that Illustrious
-Hope of Great Britaine, the High and Mighty Charles, To bee created
-Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornewall, Earle of Chester, &c. Together
-with the Ample Order and Solemnity of his Highnesse creation, as it
-was celebrated in his Maiesties Palace of Whitehall on Monday, the
-fourth of Nouember, 1616. As also the Ceremonies of that Ancient and
-Honourable Order of the Knights of the Bath; And all the Triumphs
-showne in honour of his Royall Creation. _Nicholas Okes for Thomas
-Archer._ [Middleton’s name follows the account of the ‘entertainment’.]
-
-
-ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY (_c._ 1556–_c._ 1610).
-
-A Scottish poet (cf. _D. N. B._) who has been suggested as the author
-of _Philotus_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-ROGER MORRELL (_c._ 1597).
-
-Possibly the author of the academic _Hispanus_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-RICHARD MULCASTER (_c._ 1530–1611).
-
-A contributor to the Kenilworth entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C). For
-his successive masterships of Merchant Taylors and St. Paul’s, see ch.
-xii.
-
-
-ANTHONY MUNDAY (_c._ 1553–1633).
-
-Anthony was son of Christopher Munday, a London Draper. He ‘first was
-a stage player’ (_A True Report of ... M. Campion_, 1582), but in
-Oct. 1576 was apprenticed for eight years to John Allde, stationer.
-Allde went out of business about 1582, and Munday never completed his
-apprenticeship, probably because his ready pen found better profit in
-the purveyance of copy for the trade. He began by a journey to Rome
-in 1578–9, and brought back material for a series of attacks upon
-the Jesuits, to one of which _A True Report of ... M. Campion_ is an
-answer. According to the anonymous author, Munday on his return to
-England ‘did play extempore, those gentlemen and others whiche were
-present, can best giue witnes of his dexterity, who being wery of his
-folly, hissed him from his stage. Then being thereby discouraged, he
-set forth a balet against playes, but yet (o constant youth) he now
-beginnes againe to ruffle upon the stage’. For the ballad there is some
-corroborative evidence in a S. R. entry of 10 Nov. 1580 (cf. App. C,
-No. xxvi), which, however, does not name Munday, and it is a possible
-conjecture that he also wrote the _Third Blast of Retrait from Plaies_
-issued in the same year (cf. App. C, No. xxvii). If so, he was already,
-before 1580, doing work as a playwright; but of this, with the doubtful
-exception of the anonymous _Two Italian Gentlemen_ (q.v.), there is no
-other evidence for another fifteen years. His experiences as an actor
-may have been with the company of the Earl of Oxford, whose ‘servant’
-he calls himself in his _View of Sundry Examples_ (1580). From 1581
-he was employed by Topcliffe and others against recusants, and as a
-result became, possibly by 1584 and certainly by 1588, a Messenger
-of the Chamber. He still held this post in 1593, and was employed
-as a pursuivant to execute the Archbishop of Canterbury’s warrants
-against Martin Marprelate in 1588. J. D. Wilson (_M. L. R._ iv. 489)
-suggests that he may also have taken a hand in the literary and
-dramatic controversy, as ‘Mar-Martin, John a Cant: his hobbie-horse’,
-who ‘was to his reproche, newly put out of the morris, take it how
-he will; with a flat discharge for euer shaking his shins about a
-maypole againe while he liued’ (_Protestation of Martin Marprelate_,
-_c._ Aug. 1589). Certainly Munday’s official duties did not interfere
-with his literary productiveness, as translator of romances, maker of
-ballads, lyrist, and miscellaneous writer generally. He is traceable,
-chiefly in Henslowe’s diary, as a busy dramatist for the Admiral’s men
-during various periods between 1594 and 1602, and there is no reason
-to suppose that his activities were limited to these years. Meres in
-1598 includes him amongst ‘the best for comedy’, with the additional
-compliment of ‘our best plotter’. But he was evidently a favourite mark
-for the satire of more literary writers, who depreciated his style and
-jested at his functions as a messenger. Small, 172, has disposed of
-attempts to identify him with the Deliro or the Puntarvolo of _E. M.
-O._, the Amorphus of _Cynthia’s Revels_, the In-and-In Medley of the
-_Tale of a Tub_, and the Timothy Tweedle of the anonymous _Jack Drum’s
-Entertainment_. But he may reasonably be taken for the Poet Nuntius
-of _E. M. I._ and the Antonio Balladino of _The Case is Altered_
-(q.v.); and long before Jonson took up the game, an earlier writer had
-introduced him as the Posthaste of the anonymous _Histriomastix_ (c.
-1589). Posthaste suggests the formation of Sir Oliver Owlet’s men, and
-acts as their poet (i. 124). He writes a _Prodigal Child_ at 1_s._ a
-sheet (ii. 94). He will teach the actors to play ‘true Politicians’
-(i. 128) and ‘should be employd in matters of state’ (ii. 130). He
-is always ready to drink (i. 162; ii. 103, 115, 319; vi. 222), and
-claims to be a gentleman, because ‘he hath a clean shirt on, with
-some learning’ (ii. 214). He has written ballads (v. 91; vi. 235).
-The players jeer at ‘your extempore’ (i. 127), and he offers to do a
-prologue extempore (ii. 121), and does extemporize on a theme (ii.
-293). He writes with
-
- no new luxury or blandishment
- But plenty of Old Englands mothers words (ii. 128).
-
-The players call him, when he is late for rehearsal, a ‘peaking
-pageanter’, and say ‘It is as dangerous to read his name at a play
-door, as a printed bill on a plague door’ (iv. 165). The whole portrait
-seems to be by the earlier author; Marston only adds a characteristic
-epithet in ‘goosequillian Posthast’ (iii. 187). But it agrees closely
-with the later portraits by Jonson, and with the facts of Munday’s
-career. I do not think that ‘pageanter’ means anything more than
-play-maker. But from 1605 onwards Munday was often employed by city
-companies to devise Lord Mayor’s pageants, and it has been supposed
-that he had been similarly engaged since 1592 on the strength of a
-claim in the 1618 edition of John Stowe’s _Survey of London_, which he
-edited, that he had been ‘six and twenty years in sundry employments
-for the City’s service’. But there were other civic employments, and it
-is doubtful (cf. ch. iv) how far there were pageants during the last
-decade of Elizabeth’s reign for Munday to devise. On the title-pages of
-his pageants he describes himself as a ‘Cittizen and Draper of London’.
-The Corporation’s welcome at the creation of Henry as Prince of Wales
-in 1610 (cf. ch. iv) also fell to him to devise. How long he continued
-to write plays is unknown. He had several children in St. Giles’s,
-Cripplegate, between 1584 and 1589, and was buried on 10 Aug. 1633 at
-St. Stephen’s, Coleman Street.
-
-_Dissertations_: J. D. Wilson, _A. M., Pamphleteer and Pursuivant_
-(1909, _M. L. R._ iv. 484); W. W. Greg, _Autograph Plays by A. M._
-(1913, _M. L. R._ viii. 89); M. St. C. Byrne, _The Date of A. M.’s
-Journey to Rome_ (1918, _3 Library_, ix. 106), _The Shepherd Tony--a
-Recapitulation_ (1920, _M. L. R._ xv. 364), _A. M. and his Books_
-(1921, _4 Library_, i. 225); E. M. Thompson, _The Autograph MSS. of A.
-M._ (1919, _Bibl. Soc. Trans._ xiv. 325).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _John a Kent and John a Cumber. 1594_
-
-[_MS._] Autograph MS. in possession of Lord Mostyn, with title ‘The
-Booke of John a Kent and John a Cumber’, and at end the signature
-‘Anthony Mundy’, and in another hand the date ‘---- Decembris 1596’. A
-mutilation of the paper has removed the day of the month and possibly
-some memorandum to which the date was appended. The wrapper is in part
-formed of a vellum leaf of which another part was used for _Sir Thomas
-More_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1851, _Sh. Soc._) and J. S. Farmer (1912,
-_T. F. T._).
-
-The date has been misread ‘1595’. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 172) agrees
-with Fleay, ii. 114, that the play, of which the scene is at West
-Chester, must be _The Wise Man of West Chester_, produced by the
-Admiral’s on 3 Dec. 1594 and played to 18 July 1597. Their inventory
-of 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 117) includes ‘Kentes woden leage’. This
-is not required by the extant text, but two or three leaves of the
-MS. appear to be missing. If the identification is correct, it is not
-easy to see how the MS. can be earlier than 1594, although Sir E.
-M. Thompson’s warning that the date of 1596 may be a later addition
-is justified. On 19 Sept. 1601 the Admiral’s bought the book from
-Alleyn. Greg further suggests that _Randal Earl of Chester_, written by
-Middleton for the same company in Oct. and Nov. 1602, may have been a
-‘refashioning’ of the earlier play, in which Randal is a character.
-
- _The Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598_
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Dec. 1. ‘The Downe falle of Robert Erle of Huntingdone
-after Called Robin Hood.’ _Leake_ (Arber, iii. 176).
-
-1601. The Downfall of Robert, Earle of Huntington, Afterward called
-Robin Hood of merrie Sherwodde: with his loue to chaste Matilda, the
-Lord Fitzwaters daughter, afterwardes his faire Maide Marian. Acted by
-the Right Honourable, the Earle of Notingham, Lord high Admirall of
-England, his seruants. _For William Leake._ [Induction.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1833, _Five Old Plays_), in Dodsley^4 viii
-(1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1913, _S. F. T._).--_Dissertation_: A.
-Ruckdeschel, _Die Quellen des Dramas ‘The Downfall and Death of Robert,
-Earle of Huntington, otherwise called Robin Hood’_ (1897).
-
-Henslowe paid Munday £5 on behalf of the Admiral’s for ‘the firste
-parte of Robyne Hoode’ on 15 Feb. 1598. From 20 Feb. to 8 March he paid
-Munday and Chettle sums amounting to £5 in all for a ‘seconde parte’,
-called in the fullest entry ‘seconde parte of the downefall of earlle
-Huntyngton surnamed Roben Hoode’. The books and apparel and properties
-are in the Admiral’s inventories of March 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 114,
-115, 120, 121). Both parts were licensed for performance on 28 March.
-On 18 Nov. he paid Chettle 10_s._ for ‘the mendynge of’ the first part,
-and on 25 Nov., apparently, another 10_s._ ‘for mendinge of Roben Hood
-for the corte’. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 190) suggests that the last
-payment was for the second part, and that the two Court performances by
-the Admiral’s at Christmas 1598 are of these plays. However this may
-be, Henslowe’s _1, 2 Robin Hood_ are doubtless the extant _Downfall_
-and _Death_. There is an allusion in _The Downfall_, IV. ii, to the
-‘merry jests’ of an earlier play, which may be _The Pastoral Comedy of
-Robin Hood and Little John_, entered in S. R. on 14 May 1594, but not
-now known. Fleay, ii. 114, thinks that Chettle, besides revising some
-of Munday’s scenes, added the Induction and the Skeltonic rhymes.
-
- _The Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598_
-
- _With_ Chettle.
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Dec. 1. ‘The Death of Robert Earle of Huntingdon with the
-lamentable trogidye of Chaste Mathilda.’ _Leake_ (Arber, iii. 176).
-
-1601. The Death of Robert, Earle of Huntington. Otherwise called Robin
-Hood of merrie Sherwodde: with the lamentable Tragedie of chaste
-Matilda, his faire maid Marian, poysoned at Dunmowe by King Iohn. Acted
-by the Right Honourable, the Earle of Notingham, Lord high Admirall of
-England, his seruants. _For William Leake._ [_Epilogue._]
-
-_Editions_ and _Dissertation_ with _The Downfall_ (q.v.).
-
-This is a sequel to _The Downfall_ (q.v.). Fleay, ii. 115, gives Munday
-the scenes dealing with Robin Hood’s death and Chettle those dealing
-with Maid Marian’s. The play contains discrepancies, but Henslowe’s
-entries afford no evidence that Munday revised Chettle’s work, as Fleay
-thinks. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 191) points out that Davenport borrowed
-much of his _King John and Matilda_ (1655) from _The Death_.
-
- _1 Sir John Oldcastle. 1599_
-
- _With_ Drayton (q.v.), Hathway, and Wilson.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-The following is a complete list of the plays in which Henslowe’s diary
-shows Munday to have written between 1597 and 1602. All were for the
-Admiral’s:
-
-(i) _Mother Redcap._
-
-With Drayton, Dec. 1597–Jan. 1598.
-
-(ii), (iii) _1, 2 Robin Hood._
-
-_Vide supra._
-
-(iv) _The Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-Lion._
-
-With Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, June 1598, probably as a sequel to
-_Robin Hood_ (cf. Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 190).
-
-(v) _Valentine and Orson._
-
-With Hathway (q.v.), July 1598.
-
-(vi) A ‘comodey for the corte’, for the completion of which Drayton was
-surety, Aug. 1598, but the entry is cancelled, and presumably the play
-was not finished, unless it is identical with (vii).
-
-(vii) _Chance Medley._
-
-With Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson, Aug. 1598.
-
-(viii), (ix) _1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle._
-
-With Drayton (q.v.), Hathway, and Wilson, Oct.–Dec. 1599.
-
-(x) _Owen Tudor._
-
-With Drayton, Hathway, and Wilson, Jan. 1600, but apparently not
-finished.
-
-(xi) _1 Fair Constance of Rome._
-
-With Dekker, Drayton, Hathway, and Wilson, June 1600.
-
-(xii) _1 Cardinal Wolsey._
-
-With Chettle, Drayton, and Smith, Aug.–Nov. 1601.
-
-(xiii) _Jephthah._
-
-With Dekker, May 1602.
-
-(xiv) _Caesar’s Fall, or The Two Shapes._
-
-With Dekker, Drayton, Middleton, and Webster, May 1602.
-
-(xv) _The Set at Tennis._
-
-Dec. 1602. The payment, though in full, was only £3; it was probably,
-therefore, a short play, and conceivably identical with the ‘[sec]ond
-part of fortun[es Tenn?]is’ of which a ‘plot’ exists (cf. ch. xxiv)
-and intended to piece out to the length of a normal performance
-the original _Fortune’s Tennis_ written by Dekker (q.v.) as a
-‘curtain-raiser’ for the Fortune on its opening in 1600. [This is
-highly conjectural.]
-
-Munday must clearly have had a hand in _Sir Thomas More_, which is
-in his writing, and has been suggested as the author of _Fedele and
-Fortunio_ and _The Weakest Goeth to the Wall_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
- ENTERTAINMENTS
-
- _The Triumphs of Reunited Britannia. 29 Oct. 1605_
-
-N.D. The Triumphes of re-vnited Britania. Performed at the cost and
-charges of the Right Worship: Company of the Merchant Taylors, in honor
-of Sir Leonard Holliday kni: to solemnize his entrance as Lorde Mayor
-of the Citty of London, on Tuesday the 29. of October. 1605. Deuised
-and Written by A. Mundy, Cittizen and Draper of London. _W. Jaggard._
-
-_Edition_ in Nichols, _James_ (1828), i. 564.
-
- _London’s Love to Prince Henry. 31 May 1610_
-
-See ch. xxiv.
-
- _Chryso-Thriambos. 29 Oct. 1611_
-
-1611. Chruso-thriambos. The Triumphes of Golde. At the Inauguration of
-Sir Iames Pemberton, Knight, in the Dignity of Lord Maior of London:
-On Tuesday, the 29. of October. 1611. Performed in the harty loue, and
-at the charges of the Right Worshipfull, Worthy, and Ancient Company
-of Gold-Smithes. Deuised and Written by A. M. Cittizen and Draper of
-London. _William Jaggard._
-
- _Himatia Poleos. 29 Oct. 1614_
-
-1614. Himatia-Poleos. The Triumphs of olde Draperie, or the rich
-Cloathing of England. Performed in affection, and at the charges of the
-right Worthie and first honoured Companie of Drapers: at the enstalment
-of Sr. Thomas Hayes Knight, in the high office of Lord Maior of London,
-on Satturday, being the 29. day of October. 1614. Deuised and written
-by A. M. Citizen and Draper of London. _Edward Allde._
-
- _Metropolis Coronata. 30 Oct. 1615_
-
-1615. Metropolis Coronata, The Triumphes of Ancient Drapery: or, Rich
-Cloathing of England, in a second Yeeres performance. In Honour of
-the aduancement of Sir Iohn Iolles, Knight, to the high Office of
-Lord Maior of London, and taking his Oath for the same Authoritie,
-on Monday, being the 30. day of October. 1615. Performed in heartie
-affection to him, and at the bountifull charges of his worthy Brethren
-the truely Honourable Society of Drapers, the first that receiued such
-Dignitie in this Citie. Deuised, and written, by A. M. Citizen, and
-Draper of London. _George Purslowe._
-
-_Edition_ in Nichols, _James_, iii. 107.
-
- _Chrysanaleia. 29 Oct. 1616_
-
-_S. R._ 1616, Oct. 29. ‘A booke called the golden Fishing of the showes
-of Sir John Leman Lord Maiour.’ _George Purslowe_ (Arber iii. 597).
-
-1616. Chrysanaleia: The Golden Fishing: Or, Honour of Fishmongers.
-Applauding the aduancement of Mr. Iohn Leman, Alderman, to the dignitie
-of Lord Maior of London. Taking his Oath in the same authority at
-Westminster, on Tuesday, being the 29. day of October. 1616. Performed
-in hearty loue to him, and at the charges of his worthy Brethren, the
-ancient, and right Worshipfull Company of Fishmongers. Deuised and
-written by A. M. Citizen and Draper of London. _George Purslowe._
-
-_Editions_ in Nichols, iii. 195, and by J. G. Nichols (1844, 1869) with
-reproductions of drawings for the pageant in the possession of the
-Fishmongers.
-
- _Doubtful Entertainment_
-
-The _Campbell_ mayoral pageant of 1609 (q.v.) has been ascribed to
-Munday.
-
-
-ROBERT NAILE (_c._ 1613).
-
-Probable describer of the Bristol entertainment of Queen Anne in 1613
-(cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-THOMAS NASHE (1507–>1601).
-
-Nashe was baptized at Lowestoft, Suffolk, in Nov. 1567, the son of
-William Nashe, minister, of a Herefordshire family. He matriculated
-from St. John’s, Cambridge, on 13 Oct. 1582, took his B.A. in 1586,
-and left the University probably in 1588. According to the _Trimming_
-(Harvey, iii. 67), he ‘had a hand in a Show called Terminus & non
-terminus, for which his partener in it was expelled the Colledge: but
-this foresaid Nashe played in it (as I suppose) the Varlet of Clubs;
-which he acted with such naturall affection, that all the spectators
-tooke him to be the verie same’. He went to London, and his first book,
-_The Anatomie of Absurditie_, was entered in S. R. on 19 Sept. 1588. In
-actual publication it was anticipated by an epistle ‘To the Gentlemen
-Students of Both Universities’, which he prefixed to the _Menaphon_
-(1589) of Robert Greene (cf. App. C, No. xlii). This contains some
-pungent criticism of actors, with incidental depreciation of certain
-illiterate dramatists, among whom is apparently included Kyd, coupled
-with praise of Peele, and of other ‘sweete gentlemen’, who have
-‘tricked vp a company of taffata fooles with their feathers’. Evidently
-Nashe had joined the London circle of University wits, and henceforth
-lived, partly by his pen, as dramatist and pamphleteer, and partly by
-services rendered to various patrons, amongst whom were Lord Strange,
-Sir George Carey, afterwards Lord Hunsdon, and Archbishop Whitgift.
-His connexion with this last was either the cause or the result of his
-employment, with other literary men, notably Lyly, in opposition to
-the anti-episcopalian tracts of Martin Marprelate and his fellows. His
-precise share in the controversy is uncertain. He has been credited
-with _An Almond for a Parrot_, with a series of writings under the name
-of Pasquil, and with other contributions, but in all cases the careful
-analysis of McKerrow, v. 49, finds the evidence quite inconclusive.
-
-McKerrow, too, has given the best account (v. 65) of Nashe’s quarrel
-with Gabriel and Richard Harvey. This arose out of his association
-as an anti-Martinist with Lyly, between whom and Gabriel there was
-an ancient feud. It was carried on, in a vein of scurrilous personal
-raillery on both sides, from 1590 until it was suppressed as a public
-scandal in 1599. One of the charges against Nashe was his friendship
-with, and in the Harveian view aping of, Robert Greene, with whom,
-according to Gabriel’s _Four Letters_ (_Works_, i. 170), Nashe took
-part in the fatal banquet of pickled herrings and Rhenish which
-brought him to his end. Nashe repudiated the charge of imitation, and
-spoke of Greene in _Have With You to Saffron Walden_ (iii. 132), as
-‘subscribing to mee in anything but plotting Plaies, wherein he was
-his crafts master’. Unless _Dido_ is early work, no play written by
-Nashe before Greene’s death on 3 Sept. 1592 is known to us. But he is
-pretty clearly the ‘young Iuuenall, that byting Satyrist, that lastly
-with mee together writ a Comedie’ of Greene’s posthumous _Groats-worth_
-(cf. App. C, No. xlviii), and the tone of his own Defence of Plays in
-_Pierce Penilesse_ of 1592 (cf. App. C, No. xlvi) as compared with
-that of the _Menaphon_ epistle suggests that he had made his peace
-with the ‘taffata fooles’. His one extant unaided play belongs to
-the autumn of 1592, and was apparently for a private performance at
-Croydon. Internal evidence enables us to date in Aug.–Oct. 1596, and
-to ascribe to Nashe, in spite of the fact that his name at the foot is
-in a nineteenth-century writing, a letter to William Cotton (McKerrow,
-v. 192, from _Cott. MS. Julius C._ iii, f. 280) which shows that he
-was still writing for the stage and gives valuable evidence upon the
-theatrical crisis of that year (App. D, No. cv). To 1597 belongs the
-misadventure of _The Isle of Dogs_, which sent Nashe in flight to Great
-Yarmouth, and probably ended his dramatic career. He is mentioned as
-dead in C. Fitzgeffrey, _Affaniae_ (1601).
-
- _Collections_
-
-1883–5. A. B. Grosart, _The Complete Works of T. N._ 6 vols. (_Huth
-Library_).
-
-1904–10. R. B. McKerrow, _The Works of T. N._ 5 vols.
-
- PLAYS
-
- _Summer’s Last Will and Testament. 1592_
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Oct. 28 (Harsnett). ‘A booke called Sommers last Will
-and testament presented by William Sommers.’ _Burby and Walter Burre_
-(Arber, iii. 175).
-
-1600. A Pleasant Comedie, called Summers last will and Testament.
-Written by Thomas Nash. _Simon Stafford for Walter Burre._ [Induction,
-with Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-_Edition_ in Dodsley^{3–4} (1825–74).--_Dissertations_: B. Nicholson,
-_The Date of S. L. W. and T._ (_Athenaeum_, 10 Jan. 1891); F. G. Fleay
-_Queen Elizabeth, Croydon and the Drama_ (1898).
-
-The play was intended for performance on the ‘tyle-stones’ and in the
-presence of a ‘Lord’, to whom there are several other references, in
-one of which he is ‘your Grace’ (ll. 17, 205, 208, 587, 795, 1897,
-1925). There are also local references to ‘betweene this and Stretham’
-(l. 202), to ‘Dubbers hill’ near Croydon (l. 621), to Croydon itself
-(ll. 1830, 1873), and to ‘forlorne’ Lambeth (l. 1879). The conclusion
-seems justified that ‘this lowe built house’ (l. 1884) was the palace
-of Archbishop Whitgift at Croydon.
-
-There was a plague ‘in this latter end of summer’ (l. 80); which had
-been ‘brought in’ by the dog-days (l. 656), and had led to ‘want of
-terme’ and consequent ‘Cities harm’ in London (l. 1881). Summer
-accuses Sol of spiting Thames with a ‘naked channell’ (l. 545) and Sol
-lays it on the moon (l. 562):
-
- in the yeare
- Shee was eclipst, when that the Thames was bare.
-
-Two passages refer to the Queen as on progress. Summer says (l. 125):
-
- Haruest and age haue whit’ned my greene head:
-
- * * * * *
-
- This month haue I layne languishing a bed,
- Looking eche hour to yeeld my life and throne;
- And dyde I had in deed vnto the earth,
- But that _Eliza_, Englands beauteous Queene,
- On whom all seasons prosperously attend,
- Forbad the execution of my fate,
- Vntill her ioyfull progresse was expir’d.
- For her doth Summer liue, and linger here.
-
-And again, at the end of the play (l. 1841):
-
- Vnto _Eliza_, that most sacred Dame,
- Whom none but Saints and Angels ought to name,
- All my faire dayes remaining I bequeath,
- To waite vpon her till she be returnd.
- Autumne, I charge thee, when that I am dead,
- Be prest and seruiceable at her beck,
- Present her with thy goodliest ripened fruites.
-
-The plague and absence of term from London might fit either 1592 or
-1593 (cf. App. E), but I agree with McKerrow, iv. 418, that the earlier
-year is indicated. In 1593 the plague did not begin in the dog-days,
-nor did Elizabeth go on progress. And it is on 6 Sept. 1592 that
-Stowe (1615), 764, records the emptying of Thames. I may add a small
-confirmatory point. Are not ‘the horses lately sworne to be stolne’ (l.
-250) those stolen by Germans in the train of Count Mompelgard between
-Reading and Windsor and referred to in _Merry Wives_, IV. v. 78. The
-Count came to Windsor on 19 Aug. 1592 (Rye, xcix). Now I part company
-with Mr. McKerrow, who thinks that, although the play was written in
-1592, it may have been revised for performance before Elizabeth in
-a later year, perhaps at her visit to Whitgift on 14 Aug. 1600. His
-reasons are three: (_a_) Sol’s reference to the Thames seems to date
-it in a year earlier than that in which he speaks; (_b_) the seasonal
-references suggest August, while Stowe’s date necessitates September at
-earliest, and the want of term points to October; (_c_) the references
-to Elizabeth imply her presence. I think there is something in (_a_),
-but not much, if the distinction between actual and dramatic time is
-kept in mind. As to (_b_), the tone of the references is surely to a
-summer prolonged beyond its natural expiration for Eliza’s benefit,
-well into autumn, and in such a year the fruits of autumn, which in
-this country are chiefly apples, will be on the trees until October.
-As to (_c_), I cannot find any evidence of the Queen’s presence at
-all. Surely she is on progress elsewhere, and due to ‘return’ in the
-future. I may add that Elizabeth was at Croydon in the spring of 1593,
-and that it would, therefore, have been odd to defer a revival for her
-benefit until another seven years had elapsed. The 1592 progress came
-to an end upon 9 Oct. and I should put the performance not long before.
-When Q_{1} of _Pierce Penilesse_ (S. R. 8 Aug. 1592) was issued, Nashe
-was kept by fear of infection ‘with my Lord in the Countrey’, and the
-misinterpretations of the pamphlet which he deprecates in the epistle
-to Q_{2} (McKerrow, i. 154) are hinted at in a very similar protest (l.
-65) in the play.
-
-The prologue is spoken by ‘the greate foole _Toy_’ (ll. 10, 1945),
-who would borrow a chain and fiddle from ‘my cousin Ned’ (l. 7), also
-called ‘Ned foole’ (l. 783). The epilogue is spoken (l. 1194) and
-the songs sung (ll. 117, 1871) by boys. Will Summer (l. 792) gives
-good advice to certain ‘deminitiue urchins’, who wait ‘on my Lords
-trencher’; but he might be speaking either to actors or to boys in the
-audience. The morris (l. 201) dances ‘for the credit of Wostershire’,
-where Whitgift had been bishop. The prompter was Dick Huntley (l. 14),
-and Vertumnus was acted by Harry Baker (l. 1567). There is a good deal
-of Latin in the text. On the whole, I think that the play was given
-by members of Whitgift’s household, which his biographer describes
-as ‘a little academy’. The prologue (l. 33) has ‘So fares it with vs
-nouices, that here betray our imperfections: we, afraid to looke on
-the imaginary serpent of Enuy, paynted in mens affections, haue ceased
-to tune any musike of mirth to your eares this twelue-month, thinking
-that, as it is the nature of the serpent to hisse, so childhood and
-ignorance would play the goslings, contemning and condemning what they
-vnderstood not’. This agrees curiously in date with the termination
-of the Paul’s plays. Whitgift might have entertained the Paul’s boys
-during the plague and strengthened them for a performance with members
-of his own household. But would they call themselves ‘nouices’?
-
- _Dido, Queen of Carthage > 1593_
-
- _With_ Marlowe (q.v.).
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
- _Terminus et non Terminus. 1586 < > 8_
-
-_Vide supra._ McKerrow, v. 10, thinks that the name of Nashe’s alleged
-part may be a jest, and points out that the identification by Fleay,
-ii. 124, of the play, of which nothing more is known, with the ‘London
-Comedie’ of the _Cards_ referred to in Harington’s _Apology_ (cf. App.
-C, No. xlv) is improbable.
-
- _The Isle of Dogs. 1597_
-
-Meres, _Palladis Tamia_ (S. R. 7 Sept. 1598), writes:
-
- ‘As _Actaeon_ was wooried of his owne hounds: so is _Tom Nash_
- of his _Isle of Dogs_. Dogges were the death of _Euripedes_,
- but bee not disconsolate gallant young _Iuuenall_, _Linus_,
- the sonne of _Apollo_ died the same death. Yet God forbid that
- so braue a witte should so basely perish, thine are but paper
- dogges, neither is thy banishment like _Ouids_, eternally to
- conuerse with the barbarous _Getes_. Therefore comfort thy
- selfe sweete _Tom_, with _Ciceros_ glorious return to Rome, &
- with the counsel _Aeneas_ giues to his seabeaten soldiors.’
-
-We learn something more from _Nashes Lenten Stuffe_ (S. R. 11 Jan.
-1599), where he tells us that he is sequestered from the wonted means
-of his maintenance and exposed to attacks on his fame, through ‘the
-straunge turning of the Ile of Dogs from a commedie to a tragedie
-two summers past, with the troublesome stir which hapned aboute it’,
-and goes on to explain the ‘infortunate imperfit Embrion of my idle
-houres, the Ile of Dogs before mentioned ... was no sooner borne but
-I was glad to run from it’; which is what brought him to Yarmouth. In
-a marginal note he adds ‘An imperfit Embrion I may well call it, for
-I hauing begun but the induction and first act of it, the other foure
-acts without my consent, or the least guesse of my drift or scope, by
-the players were supplied, which bred both their trouble and mine to’
-(McKerrow, iii. 153). Of this there is perhaps some confirmation in the
-list of writings on the cover of the _Northumberland MS._ which records
-the item, not now extant in the MS., ‘Ile of doges frmn^t by Thomas
-Nashe inferior plaiers’. This MS. contains work by Bacon (q.v.), and
-if the entry is not itself based on _Lenten Stuffe_, it may indicate
-that Bacon was professionally concerned in the proceedings to which
-the play gave rise. McKerrow, v. 31, points out that the evidence is
-against the suggestion in the _Trimming of Thomas Nashe_ (S. R. 11
-Oct. 1597) that Nashe suffered imprisonment for the play. The Privy
-Council letter of 15 Aug. 1597 (cf. App. D, No. cxi) was no doubt
-intended to direct his apprehension, but, as I pointed out in _M. L.
-R._ iv. 410, 511, the actor and maker of plays referred to therein
-as actually in prison must have been Ben Jonson, who was released by
-the Council on 3 Oct. 1597 (cf. App. D, No. cxii). The connexion of
-Jonson (q.v.) with the _Isle of Dogs_ is noted in _Satiromastix_. With
-him the Council released Gabriel Spencer and Robert Shaw, and the
-inference is that the peccant company was Pembroke’s (q.v.) at the
-Swan on Bankside. The belief that it was the Admiral’s at the Rose
-only rests on certain forged interpolations by Collier in Henslowe’s
-diary. These are set out by Greg (_Henslowe_, i. xl). The only genuine
-mention of the affair in the diary is the provision noted in the
-memorandum of Borne’s agreement of 10 Aug. 1597 that his service is to
-begin ‘imediatly after this restraynt is recaled by the lordes of the
-counsell which restraynt is by the meanes of playinge the Ieylle of
-Dooges’ (_Henslowe_, i. 203). The restraint was ordered by the Privy
-Council on 28 July 1597 (App. D, No. cx), presumably soon after the
-offence, the nature of which is only vaguely described as the handling
-of ‘lewd matters’. Perhaps it is possible, at any rate in conjecture,
-to be more specific. By dogs we may take it that Nashe meant men. The
-idea was not new to him. In _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_ he makes
-Orion draw an elaborate parallel between dogs and men, at the end of
-which Will Summer says that he had not thought ‘the ship of fooles
-would haue stayde to take in fresh water at the Ile of dogges’ (l.
-779). But there is nothing offensive to authority here. Nashe returns
-to the question of his indiscretion in more than one passage of _Lenten
-Stuffe_, and in particular has a diatribe (McKerrow, iii. 213) against
-lawyers who try to fish ‘a deepe politique state meaning’ out of what
-contains no such thing. ‘Talke I of a beare, O, it is such a man that
-emblazons him in his armes, or of a woolfe, a fox, or a camelion, any
-lording whom they do not affect it is meant by.’ Apparently Nashe was
-accused of satirizing some nobleman. But this was not the only point
-of attack. ‘Out steps me an infant squib of the Innes of Court ...
-and he, to approue hymselfe an extrauagant statesman, catcheth hold
-of a rush, and absolutely concludeth, it is meant of the Emperor of
-Ruscia, and that it will vtterly marre the traffike into that country
-if all the Pamphlets bee not called in and suppressed, wherein that
-libelling word is mentioned.’ I do not suppose that Nashe had literally
-called the Emperor of Russia a rush in _The Isle of Dogs_, but it is
-quite possible that he, or Ben Jonson, had called the King of Poland
-a pole. On 23 July 1597, just five days before the trouble, a Polish
-ambassador had made representations in an audience with Elizabeth,
-apparently about the question, vexed in the sixteenth as in the
-twentieth century, of contraband in neutral vessels, and she, scouring
-up her rusty old Latin for the purpose, had answered him in very
-round terms. The matter, to which there are several allusions in the
-Cecilian correspondence (Wright, _Eliz._ ii. 478, 481, 485), gave some
-trouble, and any mention of it on the public stage might well have been
-resented. A letter of Robert Beale in 1592 (McKerrow, v. 142) shows
-that the criticisms of Nashe’s _Pierce Penilesse_ had similarly been
-due to his attack upon the Danes, with which country the diplomatic
-issues were much the same as with Poland. In _Hatfield MSS._ vii. 343
-is a letter of 10 Aug. 1597 to Robert Cecil from Richard (misdescribed
-in the Calendar as Robert) Topcliffe, recommending an unnamed bearer
-as ‘the first man that discovered to me that seditious play called The
-Isle of Dogs’.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-Nashe has been suggested as a contributor to _A Knack to Know a Knave_
-(cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-THOMAS NELSON.
-
-The pageant-writer is probably identical with the stationer of the same
-name, who is traceable in London during 1580–92 (McKerrow, 198).
-
- _Allot Pageant. 29 Oct. 1590_
-
-1590. The Deuice of the Pageant: Set forth by the Worshipfull Companie
-of the Fishmongers, for the right honourable Iohn Allot: established
-Lord Maior of London, and Maior of the Staple for this present Yeere of
-our Lord 1590. By T. Nelson. _No imprint._
-
-Speeches by the riders on the Merman and the Unicorn, and by Fame,
-the Peace of England, Wisdom, Policy, God’s Truth, Plenty, Loyalty
-and Concord, Ambition, Commonwealth, Science and Labour, Richard the
-Second, Jack Straw, and Commonwealth again, representing Sir William
-Walworth, who was evidently the chief subject of the pageant.
-
-_Edition_ by W. C. Hazlitt (1886, _Antiquary_, xiii.
-54).--_Dissertation_: R. Withington, _The Lord Mayor’s Show for 1590_
-(1918, _M.L.N._ xxxiii. 8).
-
-
-ALEXANDER NEVILLE (1544–1614).
-
-Translator of Seneca (q.v.).
-
-
-THOMAS NEWTON (_c._ 1542–1607).
-
-Translator of Seneca (q.v.).
-
-
-RICHARD NICCOLS (1584–1616?).
-
-This writer of various poetical works and reviser in 1610 of _The
-Mirror for Magistrates_ may have been the writer intended by the S.
-R. entry to Edward Blount on 15 Feb. 1612 of ‘A tragedye called, The
-Twynnes tragedye, written by Niccolls’ (Arber, iii. 478). No copy is
-known, and it is arbitrary of Fleay, ii. 170, to ‘suspect’ a revival
-of it in William Rider’s _The Twins_ (1655), which had been played at
-Salisbury Court.
-
-
-HENRY NOEL (_ob._ 1597).
-
-A younger son of Andrew Noel of Dalby on the Wolds, Leicestershire,
-whose personal gifts and extravagance enabled him to make a
-considerable figure as a Gentleman Pensioner at Court. He may have been
-a fellow author with Robert Wilmot (q.v.) of _Gismond of Salerne_,
-although he has not been definitely traced as a member of the Inner
-Temple, by whom the play was produced.
-
-
-THOMAS NORTON (1532–84).
-
-Norton was born in London and educated at Cambridge and the Inner
-Temple. In 1571 he became Remembrancer of the City of London, and also
-sat in Parliament for London. Apparently he is distinct from the Thomas
-Norton who acted from 1560 as counsel to the Stationers’ Company. He
-took part in theological controversy as a Calvinist, and was opposed
-to the public stage (cf. App. D, No. xxxi). In 1583 he escaped with
-some difficulty from a charge of treason. His first wife, Margaret, was
-daughter, and his second, Alice, niece of Cranmer.
-
- _Ferrex and Porrex_, or _Gorboduc_. _28 Jan. 1562_
-
-_S. R._ 1565–6. ‘A Tragdie of Gorboduc where iij actes were Wretten by
-Thomas Norton and the laste by Thomas Sackvyle, &c.’ _William Greffeth_
-(Arber, i. 296).
-
-1565, Sept. 22. The Tragedie of Gorboduc, Where of three Actes were
-wrytten by Thomas Nortone, and the two laste by Thomas Sackuyle.
-Sett forthe as the same was shewed before the Quenes most excellent
-Maiestie, in her highnes Court of Whitehall, the .xviij. day of
-Ianuary, Anno Domini .1561. By the Gentlemen of Thynner Temple in
-London. _William Griffith._ [Argument; Dumb-Shows.]
-
-N.D. [_c._ 1571] The Tragidie of Ferrex and Porrex, set forth without
-addition or alteration but altogether as the same was shewed on stage
-before the Queenes Maiestie, about nine yeares past, _viz._, the xviij
-day of Ianuarie 1561, by the gentlemen of the Inner Temple. Seen and
-allowed, &c. _John Day._ [Epistle by ‘The P. to the Reader’.]
-
-1590. _Edward Allde for John Perrin._ [Part of _The Serpent of
-Division_.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–3} (1744–1825), and by Hawkins (1773, _O.
-E. D._ ii), W. Scott (1810, _A. B. D._ i), W. D. Cooper (1847, _Sh.
-Soc._), R. W. Sackville-West, _Works of Sackville_ (1859), L. T.
-Smith (1883), J. M. Manly (1897, _Spec._ ii. 211), J. S. Farmer
-(1908, _T. F. T._), J. W. Cunliffe and H. A. Watt (1912, _E. E. C.
-T._).--_Dissertations_: E. Köppel (_E. S._ xvi. 357); Koch, _F. und P._
-(1881, _Halle diss._); H. A. Watt, _G.; or F. and P._ (1910, _Wisconsin
-Univ. Bulletin_, 351).
-
-Day’s epistle says that the play was ‘furniture of part of the grand
-Christmasse in the Inner Temple first written about nine yeares agoe
-by the right honourable Thomas now Lorde Buckherst, and by T. Norton,
-and after shewed before her Maiestie, and neuer intended by the authors
-therof to be published’. But one W. G. printed it in their absence,
-‘getting a copie therof at some yongmans hand that lacked a litle money
-and much discretion’. Machyn, 275, records on 18 Jan. 1561 ‘a play in
-the quen hall at Westmynster by the gentyll-men of the Tempull, and
-after a grett maske, for ther was a grett skaffold in the hall, with
-grett tryhumpe as has bene sene; and the morow after the skaffold was
-taken done’. Fleay, ii. 174, doubts Norton’s participation--Heaven
-knows why.
-
-Malone (_Var._ iii. 32) cites the unreliable Chetwood for a performance
-of _Gorboduc_ at Dublin Castle in 1601.
-
-For the Inner Temple Christmas of 1561, at which Robert Dudley was
-constable-marshal and Christopher Hatton master of the game, cf.
-_Mediaeval Stage_, i. 415. It was presumably at the mask of 18 Jan.
-that Hatton danced his way into Elizabeth’s heart.
-
-
-THOMAS NUCE (_ob._ 1617).
-
-Translator of Seneca (q.v.).
-
-
-OWEN AP JOHN (_c._ 1600).
-
-A late sixteenth-century MS. (_Peniarth MS._ 65 = _Hengwrt MS._ 358)
-of _The Oration of Gwgan and Poetry_ is calendared as his in _Welsh
-MSS._ (_Hist. MSS. Comm._), i. 2. 454, and said to be ‘in the form of
-interludes’. He may be merely the scribe.
-
-
-PHILIP PARSONS (1594–1653).
-
-Fellow of St. John’s, Oxford, and later Principal of Hart Hall (_D. N.
-B._), and author of the academic _Atalanta_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-MERCURIUS (?) PATEN (_c._ 1575).
-
-Gascoigne names a ‘M. [Mr.] Paten’ as a contributor to the Kenilworth
-entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C.). He might be the Patten described in
-_D. N. B._ as rector of Stoke Newington (but not traceable in Hennessy)
-and author of an anonymous _Calendars of Scripture_ (1575). But I
-think he is more likely to have been Mercurius, son of William Patten,
-teller of the exchequer and lord of the manor of Stoke Newington,
-who matriculated at Trinity, Cambridge, in 1567 and was Blue Mantle
-pursuivant in 1603 (_Hist. of Stoke Newington_ in _Bibl. Top. Brit._
-ii; _Admissions to T. C. C._ ii. 70).
-
-
-GEORGE PEELE (_c._ 1557–96).
-
-As the son of James Peele, clerk of Christ’s Hospital and himself a
-maker of pageants (vol. i, p. 136; _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 166), George
-entered the grammar school in 1565, proceeded thence to Broadgates
-Hall, Oxford, in 1571, and became a student of Christ Church in 1574,
-taking his B.A. in 1577 and his M.A. in 1579. In Sept. 1579 the court
-of Christ’s Hospital required James Peele ‘to discharge His howse
-of his sonne George Peele and all other his howsold which have bene
-chargable to him’. This perhaps explains why George prolonged his
-residence at Oxford until 1581. In that year he came to London, and
-about the same time married. His wife’s business affairs brought him
-back to Oxford in 1583 and in a deposition of 29 March he describes
-himself as aged 25. During this visit he superintended the performance
-before Alasco at Christ Church on 11 and 12 June of the _Rivales_ and
-_Dido_ of William Gager, who bears testimony to Peele’s reputation as
-wit and poet in two sets of Latin verses _In Iphigeniam Georgii Peeli
-Anglicanis versibus redditam_ (Boas, 166,180). Presumably the rest of
-his life was spent in London, and its wit and accompanying riot find
-some record in _The Merry Conceited Jests of George Peele_ (S. R. 14
-Dec. 1605: text in Bullen and in Hazlitt, _Jest Books_, ii. 261, and
-Hindley, i), although this is much contaminated with traditional matter
-from earlier jest books. It provided material for the anonymous play of
-_The Puritan_ (1607), in which Peele appeared as George Pyeboard. His
-fame as a dramatist is thus acknowledged in Nashe’s epistle to Greene’s
-_Menaphon_ (1589):
-
- ‘For the last, though not the least of them all, I dare commend
- him to all that know him, as the chief supporter of pleasance
- now living, the Atlas of poetry, and _primus verborum artifex_;
- whose first increase, the Arraignment of Paris, might plead to
- your opinions his pregnant dexterity of wit and manifold variety
- of invention, wherein (_me iudice_) he goeth a step beyond all
- that write.’
-
-Some have thought that Peele is the
-
- Palin, worthy of great praise,
- Albe he envy at my rustic quill,
-
-of Spenser’s _Colin Clout’s Come Home Again_ (1591). It seems difficult
-to accept the suggestions of Sarrazin that he was the original both of
-Falstaff and of Yorick. An allusion in a letter to Edward Alleyn (cf.
-ch. xv) has unjustifiably been interpreted as implying that Peele was
-actor as well as playwright, and Collier accordingly included his name
-in a forged list of housekeepers at an imaginary Blackfriars theatre
-of 1589 (cf. vol. ii, p. 108). He was, however, clearly one of the
-three of his ‘quondam acquaintance’ to whom Greene (q.v.) addressed
-the attack upon players in his _Groats-worth of Wit_ (1592). In 1596
-Peele after ‘long sickness’ sent a begging letter by his daughter to
-Lord Burghley, with a copy of his _Tale of Troy_. He was buried as a
-‘householder’ at St. James’s, Clerkenwell, on 9 Nov. 1596 (_Harl. Soc.
-Registers_, xvii. 58), having died, according to Meres’s _Palladis
-Tamia_, ‘by the pox’. He can, therefore, hardly be the Peleus of _Birth
-of Hercules_ (1597 <).
-
- _Collections_
-
-1828–39. A. Dyce. 3 vols.
-
-1861, 1879. A. Dyce. 1 vol. [With Greene.]
-
-1888. A. H. Bullen. 2 vols.
-
-_Dissertations_: R. Lämmerhirt, _G. P. Untersuchungen über sein Leben
-und seine Werke_ (1882); L. Kellner, _Sir Clyomon and Sir Clamides_
-(1889, _E. S._ xiii. 187); E. Penner, _Metrische Untersuchungen zu
-P._ (1890, _Archiv_, lxxxv. 269); A. R. Bayley, _P. as a Dramatic
-Artist_ (_Oxford Point of View_, 15 Feb. 1903); G. C. Odell, _P. as
-a Dramatist_ (1903, _Bibliographer_, ii); E. Landsberg, _Der Stil in
-P.’s sicheren und zweifelhaften dramatischen Werken_ (1910, _Breslau
-diss._); G. Sarrazin, _Zur Biographie und Charakteristik von G. P._
-(1910, _Archiv_, cxxiv. 65); P. H. Cheffaud, _G. P._ (1913).
-
- PLAYS
-
- _The Arraignment of Paris, c. 1584_
-
-1584. The Araygnement of Paris A Pastorall. Presented before the
-Queenes Maiestie, by the Children of her Chappell. _Henry Marsh._
-[Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-_Editions_ by O. Smeaton (1905, _T. D._) and H. H. Child (1910, _M. S.
-R._).--_Dissertation_: F. E. Schelling, _The Source of P.’s A. of P._
-(1893, _M. L. N._ viii. 206).
-
-Fleay, ii. 152, assigns the play to 1581 on the assumption that the
-Chapel stopped playing in 1582. But they went on to 1584. Nashe’s
-allusion (_vide supra_) and the ascription of passages from the play to
-‘Geo. Peele’ in _England’s Helicon_ (1600) fix the authorship.
-
- _The Battle of Alcazar, c. 1589_
-
-[_MS._] _Addl. MS._ 10449, ‘The Plott of the Battell of Alcazar’.
-[Probably from Dulwich. The fragmentary text is given by Greg,
-_Henslowe Papers_, 138, and a facsimile by Halliwell, _The Theatre
-Plats of Three Old English Dramas_ (1860).]
-
-1594. The Battell of Alcazar, fought in Barbarie, betweene Sebastian
-king of Portugall, and Abdelmelec king of Marocco. With the death of
-Captaine Stukeley. As it was sundrie times plaid by the Lord high
-Admirall his seruants. _Edward Allde for Richard Bankworth_. [Prologue
-by ‘the Presenter’ and dumb-shows.]
-
-_Edition_ by W. W. Greg (1907, _M. S. R._).
-
-Interest in Sebastian was aroused in 1589 by the expedition of Norris
-and Drake to set Don Antonio on the throne of Portugal. This started on
-18 April, and Peele wrote _A Farewell_, in which is a reference to this
-amongst other plays (l. 20, ed. Bullen, ii. 238):
-
- Bid theatres and proud tragedians,
- Bid Mahomet’s Poo and mighty Tamburlaine,
- King Charlemagne, Tom Stukeley and the rest,
- Adieu.
-
-There are some possible but not very clear allusions to the Armada
-in the play. From 21 Feb. 1592 to 20 Jan. 1593 Strange’s men played
-fourteen times for Henslowe _Muly Mollocco_, by which this play, in
-which Abdelmelec is also called Muly Mollocco, is probably meant (Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 149). The ‘plot’ must belong to a later revival by the
-Admiral’s, datable, since both Alleyn and Shaw acted in it, either in
-Dec. 1597 or in 1600–2 (cf. ch. xiii).
-
-The authorship has been assigned to Peele, both on stylistic evidence
-and because ll. 467–72 appear over his name in R. A.’s _England’s
-Parnassus_ (1600), but R. A. has an error in at least one of his
-ascriptions to Peele, and he ascribes l. 49 of this play to Dekker
-(Crawford, _E. P._ xxxv. 398, 474; _M. S. C._ i. 101).
-
- _Edward I > 1593_
-
-_S. R._ 1593, Oct. 8. ‘An enterlude entituled the Chronicle of Kinge
-Edward the firste surnamed Longeshank with his Retourne out of the
-Holye Lande, with the lyfe of Leublen Rebell in Wales with the sinkinge
-of Quene Elinour.’ _Abel Jeffes_ (Arber, ii. 637).
-
-1593. The Famous Chronicle of king Edwarde the first, sirnamed Edwarde
-Longshankes, with his returne from the holy land. Also the life of
-Lleuellen, rebell in Wales. Lastly, the sinking of Queene Elinor, who
-sunck at Charingcrosse, and rose againe at Potters-hith now named
-Queenehith. _Abel Jeffes, sold by William Barley._ [At end, ‘Yours. By
-George Peele, Maister of Artes in Oxenford’.]
-
-1599. _W. White._
-
-_Edition_ by W. W. Greg (1911, _M. S. R._).--_Dissertations_: W.
-Thieme, _P.’s Ed. I und seine Quellen_ (1903, _Halle diss._); E.
-Kronenberg, _G. P.’s Ed. I_ (1903, _Jena diss._).
-
-Fleay, ii. 157, makes the date 1590–1, on the ground that lines are
-quoted from _Polyhymnia_ (1590). A theory that Shakespeare acted in the
-play is founded on ll. 759–62, where after Baliol’s coronation Elinor
-says:
-
- Now, brave John Baliol, Lord of Galloway
- And King of Scots, shine with thy golden head!
- Shake thy spears, in honour of his [i.e. Edward’s] name,
- Under whose royalty thou wearest the same.
-
-This is not very convincing.
-
-A play called _Longshank, Longshanks_, and _Prince Longshank_ was
-played fourteen times by the Admiral’s, from 29 Aug. 1595 to 14
-July 1596. It is marked ‘ne’, and unless there had been substantial
-revision, can hardly be Peele’s play. ‘Longe-shanckes sewte’ is in
-the Admiral’s inventory of 10 March 1598. On 8 Aug. 1602 Alleyn sold
-the book of the play to the Admiral’s with another for £4. (Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 176; _Henslowe Papers_, 113.)
-
- _David and Bethsabe > 1594_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, May 14. ‘A booke called the book of David and Bethsaba.’
-_Adam Islip_ (Arber, ii. 649). [Islip’s name is cancelled and Edward
-White’s substituted.]
-
-1599. The Love of King David and Fair Bethsabe. With the Tragedie of
-Absalon. As it hath ben divers times plaied on the stage. Written by
-George Peele. _Adam Islip._ [Prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by T. Hawkins (1773, _O. E. D._ ii), J. M. Manly
-(1897, _Specimens_, ii. 419), and W. W. Greg (1912, _M. S.
-R._).--_Dissertations_: B. Neitzel (1904, _Halle diss._); M.
-Dannenberg, _Die Verwendung des biblischen Stoffes von David und
-Bathseba im englischen Drama_ (1905, _Königsberg diss._).
-
-Fleay, ii. 153, dates the play _c._ 1588 on the ground of some not
-very plausible political allusions. The text as it stands looks like a
-boildown of a piece, perhaps of a neo-miracle type, written in three
-‘discourses’. It had choruses, of which two only are preserved. One
-is ll. 572–95 (at end of sc. iv of _M. S. R._ ed.). The other (ll.
-1646–58; _M. S. R._ sc. xv) headed ‘Chorus 5’, contains the statement:
-
- this storie lends vs other store,
- To make a third discourse of Dauids life,
-
-and is followed by a misplaced fragment of a speech by Absalon.
-
-In Oct. 1602 Henslowe (ii. 232) laid out money for Worcester’s on poles
-and workmanship ‘for to hange Absolome’; but we need not assume a
-revival of Peele’s play.
-
- _The Old Wive’s Tale. 1591 < > 4_
-
-_S. R._ 1595, Apr. 16. ‘A booke or interlude intituled a pleasant
-Conceipte called the owlde wifes tale.’ _Ralph Hancock_ (Arber, ii.
-296).
-
-1595. The Old Wiues Tale. A pleasant conceited Comedie, played by the
-Queenes Maiesties players. Written by G. P. _John Danter, sold by Ralph
-Hancock and John Hardie._
-
-_Editions_ by F. B. Gummere (1903, _R. E. C._), W. W. Greg
-(1908, _M. S. R._), W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._), F. R. Cady
-(1916).--_Dissertation_: H. Dutz, _Der Dank des Tödten in der
-englischen Literatur_ (1894).
-
-The Queen’s men had presumably produced the play by 1594, when they
-left London. Peele borrowed some lines and the name Sacrapant from
-Greene’s _Orlando Furioso_ (1591). The hexameters of Huanebango are a
-burlesque of Gabriel Harvey.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
- _Iphigenia. c. 1579_
-
-A translation of one of the two plays of Euripides, probably written at
-Oxford, is only known by some laudatory verses of William Gager, _In
-Iphigeniam Georgii Peeli Anglicanis versibus redditam_, printed by
-Bullen, i. xvii.
-
- _Hunting of Cupid > 1591_
-
-_S. R._ 1591, July 26 (Bp. of London). ‘A booke intituled the Huntinge
-of Cupid wrytten by George Peele, Master of Artes of Oxeford. Provyded
-alwayes that yf yt be hurtfull to any other Copye before lycenced, then
-this to be voyde.’ _Richard Jones_ (Arber, ii. 591).
-
-Probably the play--I suppose it was a play--was printed, as Drummond
-of Hawthornden includes jottings from ‘The Huntinge of Cupid by George
-Peele of Oxford. Pastoral’ amongst others from ‘Bookes red anno 1609 be
-me’, and thereby enables us to identify extracts assigned to Peele in
-_England’s Parnassus_ (1600) and _England’s Helicon_ (1600) as from the
-same source. The fragments are all carefully collected by W. W. Greg in
-_M. S. C._ i. 307.
-
- _The Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek > 1594_
-
-The _Merry Conceited Jests_ (Bullen, ii. 394) gives this as the title
-of a ‘famous play’ of Peele’s. Conceivably it, rather than Greene’s
-_Alphonsus_ (q.v.), may be the ‘Mahomet’s Poo’ of Peele’s _Farewell_ of
-1589 (_vide supra_, s.v. _Battle of Alcazar_). An Admiral’s inventory
-of 10 March 1598 includes ‘owld Mahemetes head’. The Admiral’s had
-played _Mahomet_ for Henslowe from 16 Aug. 1594 to 5 Feb. 1595, and a
-play called _The Love of a Grecian Lady_ or _The Grecian Comedy_ from
-5 Oct. 1594 to 10 Oct. 1595. In Aug. 1601 Henslowe bought _Mahemett_
-from Alleyn, and incurred other expenses on the play for the Admiral’s
-(Henslowe, ii. 167; _Henslowe Papers_, 116). Possibly all the three
-titles of 1594–5 stand for Peele’s play. Jacob Ayrer wrote a play on
-the siege of Constantinople and the loves of Mahomet and Irene. This
-may have had some relation on the one hand to Peele’s, and on the other
-to a play of the siege of Constantinople used by Spencer (cf. ch. xiv)
-in Germany during 1612–14 (Herz, 73). Pistol’s ‘Have we not Hiren
-here?’ (_2 Hen. IV_, II. iv. 173) is doubtless from the play.
-
- _The Knight of Rhodes_
-
-This also is described in the _Merry Jests_ (cf. ch. xxiv, s.v.
-_Soliman and Perseda_).
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Peele’s hand has been sought in nearly every masterless play of his
-epoch: _Alphonsus of Germany_, _Captain Thomas Stukeley_, _Clyomon
-and Clamydes_, _Contention of York and Lancaster_, _George a Greene_,
-_Henry VI_, _Histriomastix_, _Jack Straw_, _Troublesome Reign of King
-John_, _Knack to Know a Knave_, _Leire_, _Locrine_, _Mucedorus_,
-_Soliman and Perseda_, _Taming of A Shrew_, _True Tragedy of Richard
-III_, _Wily Beguiled_, _Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
- ENTERTAINMENTS
-
- _Dixie Pageant. 29 Oct. 1585_
-
-1585. The Device of the Pageant borne before Woolstone Dixi Lord Maior
-of the Citie of London. An. 1585. October 29. _Edward Allde._ [At end,
-‘Done by George Peele, Master of Arts in Oxford’.]
-
-_Editions_ in Nichols, _Eliz._ (1823), ii. 446, and F. W. Fairholt,
-_Lord Mayor’s Pageants_ (1843, _Percy Soc._ xxxviii).
-
- _Polyhymnia. 17 Nov. 1590_
-
-See s.v. Lee.
-
- _Descensus Astreae. 29 Oct. 1591_
-
-1591. Descensus Astreae. The Deuice of a Pageant, borne before M.
-William Web, Lord Maior of the Citie of London on the day he tooke his
-oath; beeing the 29. of October. 1591. Wherevnto is annexed A Speech
-deliuered by one clad like a Sea Nymph, who presented a Pinesse on the
-water brauely rigd and mand, to the Lord Maior, at the time he tooke
-Barge to go to Westminster. Done by G. Peele Maister of Arts in Oxford.
-_For William Wright._
-
-_Edition_ in F. W. Fairholt, _Lord Mayor’s Pageants_ (1843, _Percy
-Soc._ xxxviii).
-
- _Anglorum Feriae. 1595_
-
-[_MS._] _Brit. Mus. Addl. MS._ 21432 (autograph). ‘Anglorum Feriae,
-Englandes Hollydayes, celebrated the 17th of Novemb. last, 1595,
-beginninge happyly the 38 yeare of the raigne of our soveraigne ladie
-Queene Elizabeth. By George Peele M^r of Arte in Oxforde.’
-
-_S. R._ 1595, Nov. 18. ‘A newe Ballad of the honorable order of the
-Runnynge at Tilt at Whitehall the 17. of November in the 38 yere of
-her maiesties Reign.’ _John Danter_ (Arber, iii. 53). [This is not
-necessarily Peele’s poem.]
-
-_Edition_ by R. Fitch (n.d. _c._ 1830).
-
-This is a blank-verse description of tilting, like _Polyhymnia_; on the
-occasion, cf. s.v. Bacon.
-
- _Lost Entertainment. 1588_
-
-_S. R._ 1588, Oct. 28. ‘Entred for his copie vppon Condicon that it
-maye be lycenced, ye device of the Pageant borne before the Righte
-honorable Martyn Calthrop lorde maiour of the Cytie of London the 29th
-daie of October 1588 George Peele the Authour.’ _Richard Jones_ (Arber,
-ii. 504).
-
-In the _Merry Conceited Jests_ it is said that Peele had ‘all the
-oversight of the pageants’ (Bullen, ii. 381).
-
- _Doubtful Entertainment_
-
-For the ascription to Peele of a Theobalds entertainment in 1591, see
-s.v. Cecil.
-
-
-JOHN PENRUDDOCK (_c._ 1588).
-
-The Master ‘Penroodocke’, who was one of the directors for the
-_Misfortunes of Arthur_ of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588, was presumably
-John Penruddock, one of the readers of Gray’s Inn in 1590, and the John
-who was admitted to the inn in 1562 (J. Foster, _Admissions to Gray’s
-Inn_).
-
-
-WILLIAM PERCY (1575–1648).
-
-Percy was third son of Henry Percy, eighth Earl of Northumberland, and
-educated at Gloucester Hall, Oxford. He was a friend of Barnabe Barnes,
-and himself published _Sonnets to the Fairest Coelia_ (1594). His life
-is obscure, but in 1638 he was living in Oxford and ‘drinking nothing
-but ale’ (_Strafford Letters_, ii. 166), and here he died in 1648.
-
- PLAYS
-
-[_MS._] Autograph formerly in collection of the Duke of Devonshire,
-with t.p. ‘Comædyes and Pastoralls ... By W. P. Esq.... Exscriptum Anno
-Salutis 1647’. [Contains, in addition to the two plays printed in 1824,
-the following:
-
- _Arabia Sitiens, or A Dream of a Dry Year_ (1601).
- _The Aphrodysial, or Sea Feast_ (1602).
- _Cupid’s Sacrifice, or a Country’s Tragedy in Vacuniam_ (1602).
- _Necromantes, or The Two Supposed Heads_ (1602).]
-
-[_Edition_] 1824. The Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants or The
-Bearing down the Inne. A Comædye. The Faery Pastorall, or Forrest
-of Elves. By W. P. Esq. (_Roxburghe Club_). [Preface by [Joseph]
-H[aslewood].]--_Dissertations_: C. Grabau, _Zur englischen Bühne um
-1600_ (1902, _Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. 230); V. Albright, _P.’s Plays
-as Proof of the Elizabethan Stage_ (1913, _M. P._ xi. 237); G. F.
-Reynolds, _W. P. and his Plays_ (1914, _M. P._ xii. 241).
-
-Percy’s authorship appears to be fixed by a correspondence between an
-epigram in the MS. to Charles Fitzgeffrey with one _Ad Gulielmum
-Percium_ in _Fitzgeoffridi Affaniae_ (1601), sig. D 2. 6.
-
-_The Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants_ is dated 1601 and _The Faery
-Pastorall_ 1603. The other plays are unprinted and practically unknown,
-although Reynolds gives some account of _The Aphrodysial._ There are
-elaborate stage-directions, which contain several references to Paul’s,
-for which the plays, whether in fact acted or not, were evidently
-intended, as is shown by an author’s note appended to the manuscript
-(cf. ch. xii, s.v. Paul’s).
-
-I feel some doubt as to the original date of these plays. It seems
-to me just conceivable that they were originally produced by the
-Paul’s boys before 1590, and revised by Percy after 1599 in hopes of
-a revival. Some of the s.ds. are descriptive in the past tense (cf.
-ch. xxii), which suggests actual production. The action of _C. and C.
-Errant_ is during the time of the Armada, but the composition must be
-later than the death of Tarlton, as his ghost prologizes. Here the
-author notes, ‘Rather to be omitted if for Powles, and another Prologue
-for him to be brought in Place’. _Faery Pastoral_ uses (p. 97) the date
-‘1647’; it is in fairy time, but points to some revision when the MS.
-was written. There are alternative final scenes, with the note, ‘Be
-this the foresayd for Powles, For Actors see the Direction at later end
-of this Pastorall, which is separate by itself, Extra Olens, as they
-say’. Similarly in _Aphrodysial_ a direction for beards is noted ‘Thus
-for Actors; for Powles without’, and another s.d. is ‘Chambers (noise
-supposd for Powles) For Actors’. A reference to ‘a showre of Rose-water
-and confits, as was acted in Christ Church in Oxford, in Dido and
-Aeneas’ is a reminiscence of Gager’s play of 12 June 1583, and again
-makes a seventeenth-century date seem odd.
-
-
-PETER (?) PETT (_c._ 1600).
-
-Henslowe’s diary records a payment of £6 on 17 May 1600 for the
-Admiral’s ‘to pay Will: Haulton [Haughton] and Mr. Pett in full
-payment of a play called straunge newes out of Poland’. Fleay, i.
-273, says: ‘Pett is not heard of elsewhere. Should it not be Chett.,
-_i.e._ Chettle? The only Pett I know of as a writer is Peter Pett, who
-published _Time’s journey to seek his daughter Truth_, in verse, 1599.’
-To which Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 213, replies: ‘Henslowe often has Cett
-for Chettle, which is even nearer, but only where he is crowded for
-room and he never applies to him the title of Mr.’
-
-
-JOHN PHILLIP (> 1570–> 1626).
-
-John Phillip or Phillips was a member of Queens’ College, Cambridge,
-and author of various ballads, tracts, and elegies, published between
-1566 and 1591. I do not know whether he may be the ‘Phelypes’, who was
-apparently concerned with John Heywood and a play by Paul’s (q.v.)
-in 1559. A John Phillipps, this or another, is mentioned (1619) as a
-brother-in-law in the will of Samuel Daniel (_Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv.
-157).
-
-_Dissertation_: W. W. Greg, _J. P._--_Notes for a Bibliography_
-(1910–13, _3 Library_, i. 302, 395; iv. 432).
-
- _Patient Grissell. 1558–61_
-
-_S. R._ 1565–6. ‘An history of meke and pacyent gresell.’ _Thomas
-Colwell_ (Arber, i. 309).
-
-1568–9. ‘The history of payciente gresell &c.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber,
-i. 385).
-
-N.D. The Commodye of pacient and meeke Grissill, Whearin is declared,
-the good example, of her patience towardes her husband: and lykewise,
-the due obedience of Children, toward their Parentes. Newly. Compiled
-by Iohn Phillip. Eight persons maye easely play this Commody....
-_Thomas Colwell._ [Preface; Epilogue, followed by ‘Finis, qd. Iohn
-Phillipp’.]
-
-_Edition_ by R. B. McKerrow and W. W. Greg (1909, _M. S. R._).
-
-The characters include Politic Persuasion, the ‘Vice’. Elizabeth
-is mentioned as Queen in the epilogue, and a reference (51) to the
-‘wethercocke of Paules’ perhaps dates before its destruction in 1561.
-
-
-JOHN PICKERING (_c._ 1567–8).
-
-Brie records several contemporary John Pickerings, but there is nothing
-to connect any one of them with the play.
-
- _Horestes. 1567–8_
-
-1567. A Newe Enterlude of Vice Conteyninge, the Historye of Horestes,
-with the cruell reuengment of his Father’s death, vpon his one naturtll
-Mother. By John Pikeryng.... The names deuided for VI to playe....
-_William Griffith._ [On the back of the t.p. is a coat of arms which
-appears to be a slight variant of that assigned by Papworth and Morant,
-_Ordinary of British Armorials_, 536, to the family of Marshall.
-Oddly enough, there was a family of this name settled at Pickering
-in Yorkshire, but they, according to G. W. Marshall, _Miscellanea
-Marescalliana_, i. 1; ii. 2, 139, had quite a different coat.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1866, _Illustrations of Old English
-Literature_), A. Brandl (1898, _Q. W. D._), J. S. Farmer (1910, _T. F.
-T._).--_Dissertation_: F. Brie, _Horestes von J. P._ (1912, _E. S._
-xlvi. 66).
-
-The play has a Vice, and ends with prayer for Queen Elizabeth and the
-Lord Mayor of ‘this noble Cytie’. Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 449, thinks it
-too crude to be the Court _Orestes_ of 1567–8, but the coincidence of
-date strongly suggests that it was.
-
-
-JOHN POOLE (?).
-
-Possible author of _Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-HENRY PORTER (_c._ 1596–9).
-
-Porter first appears in Henslowe’s diary as recipient of a payment of
-£5 on 16 Dec. 1596 and a loan of £4 on 7 March 1597, both on account of
-the Admiral’s. It may be assumed that he was already writing for the
-company, who purchased five plays, wholly or partly by him, between May
-1598 and March 1599. Meres, in his _Palladis Tamia_ of 1598, counts
-him as one of ‘the best for Comedy amongst vs’. He appears to have
-been in needy circumstances, and borrowed several small sums from the
-company or from Henslowe personally (Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 304). On
-28 Feb. 1599, when he obtained £2 on account of _Two Merry Women of
-Abingdon_, ‘he gaue me his faythfulle promysse that I shold haue alle
-the boockes w^{ch} he writte ether him sellfe or w^{th} any other’. On
-16 April 1599, in consideration of 1_s._ he bound himself in £10 to
-pay Henslowe a debt of 25_s._ on the following day, but could not meet
-his obligation. Porter is not traceable as a dramatist after 1599. His
-extant play, on the title-page of which he is described as ‘Gent.’,
-suggests a familiarity with the neighbourhood of Oxford, and I see
-no _a priori_ reason why he should not be the Henry Porter, son of
-a London gentleman, who matriculated from Brasenose on 19 June 1589
-(Boase and Clark, ii. 2, 170), or the Henricus Porter, apparently a
-musician, of John Weever’s _Epigrammes_ (1599), v. 24, or the Henry
-Porter of Christ Church who became B.Mus. in July 1600 (Wood, _Fasti
-Oxon._ i. 284), or the Henry Porter who was a royal sackbut on 21 June
-1603 (Nagel, 36), or the Henry Porter whose son Walter became Gentleman
-of the Chapel Royal on 5 Jan. 1616 and has left musical works (_D.
-N. B._). Gayley’s argument to the contrary rests on the unfounded
-assumption that the musician could not have been writing Bankside plays
-during the progress of his studies for his musical degree.
-
- _The Two Angry Women of Abingdon > 1598_
-
-1599. The Pleasant Historie of the two angrie women of Abington.
-With the humorous mirthe of Dicke Coomes and Nicholas Prouerbes, two
-Seruingmen. As it was lately playde by the right Honorable the Earle
-of Nottingham, Lord High Admirall, his seruants. By Henry Porter Gent.
-_For Joseph Hunt and William Ferbrand._ [Prologue. Greg shows this to
-be Q_{1}.]
-
-1599. _For William Ferbrand._
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^4 (1874), and by G. M. Gayley (1903, _R. E. C._
-i), J. S. Farmer (1911, _T. F. T._), W. W. Greg (1912, _M. S. R._).
-
-The play shows no signs of being a sequel, and is presumably the First
-Part, to which Porter wrote a Second Part (_vide infra_) in the winter
-of 1598–9. It was an Admiral’s play, and therefore one would expect
-to find it in Henslowe’s very full, if not absolutely exhaustive,
-chronicle of the company’s repertory. Of the plays named as his by
-Henslowe, _Love Prevented_ seems the only likely title. But he was in
-the pay of the company before the diary began to record the authorship
-of plays, and Part i may therefore be among the anonymous plays of
-1596–7 or an earlier season. Gayley suggests _The Comedy of Humours_,
-produced 11 May 1597, but that is more plausibly identified with
-Chapman’s _Humorous Day’s Mirth_ (q.v.). Another possibility is _Woman
-Hard to Please_, produced 27 Jan. 1597.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-Henslowe’s diary records the following plays for the Admiral’s men, in
-which Porter had a hand in 1598 and 1599:
-
-(i) _Love Prevented._
-
-May 1598. _Vide Two Angry Women of Abingdon, supra._
-
-(ii) _Hot Anger Soon Cold._
-
-With Chettle and Jonson, Aug. 1598.
-
-(iii) _2 Two Angry Women of Abingdon._
-
-Dec. 1598–Feb. 1599.
-
-(iv) _Two Merry Women of Abingdon._
-
-Feb. 1599.
-
-(v) _The Spencers._
-
-With Chettle, March 1599.
-
-
-THOMAS POUND (1538?-1616?).
-
-Pound was of Beaumonds in Farlington, Hants, the son of William Pound
-and Anne Wriothesley, daughter of Thomas, first Earl of Southampton.
-William Pound had a brother Anthony, whose daughter Honora married
-Henry, fourth Earl of Sussex (_V. H. Hants_, iii. 149; _Harl. Soc._
-lxiv. 138; Berry, _Hants Genealogies_, 194; _Recusant Rolls_ in
-_Catholic Record Soc._ xviii. 278, 279, 330, 334). Thomas was in youth
-a Winchester boy, a Lincoln’s Inn lawyer, and a courtier of repute.
-About 1570 he left the world and became a fervent Catholic, and the
-record of his recusancy, of his relations with the Jesuit order, which
-he probably joined, of the help he gave to Edmund Campion, and of his
-long life of imprisonment and domiciliary restraint is written in H.
-Morus, _Historia Missionis Anglicanae Societatis Jesu_ (1660); D.
-Bartoli, _Dell’ Istoria della Compagnia di Gesu: L’Inghilterra_ (1667);
-N. Sanders and E. Rishton, _De Origine Schismatis Anglicani_ (1586);
-M. Tanner, _Societas Jesu Apostolorum Imitatrix_ (1694); R. Simpson in
-_2 Rambler_ (1857), viii. 29, 94; H. Foley, _Records of the English
-Province of the Society of Jesus_, iii (1878), 567; J. H. Pollen,
-_English Catholics in the Reign of Elizabeth_ (1920), 333 _sqq._ I
-am only concerned with his worldly life and his quitting of it. As a
-Winchester _alumnus_, he is said to have delivered a Latin speech of
-welcome to Elizabeth (Bartoli, 51), presumably at her visit of 1560
-(App. A), but he can hardly still have been a schoolboy; perhaps he
-was at New College. He had already been entered at Lincoln’s Inn on 16
-Feb. 1560 (_Adm. Reg._ i. 66), and it was on behalf of Lincoln’s Inn
-that he wrote and pronounced two mask orations which are preserved in
-_Bodl. Rawl. Poet. MS._ 108, ff. 24, 29, whence they are described in
-E. Brydges, _British Bibliographer_, ii. 612. Both seem to have been
-before Elizabeth (cf. vol. i, p. 162, and App. A). The first, at the
-wedding of his cousin Henry, Earl of Southampton, in Feb. 1566, is
-headed in the manuscript ‘The copye of an oration made and pronounced
-by Mr. Pownde of Lyncolnes Inne, with a brave maske out of the same
-howse, all one greatte horses att the mariage off the yonge erle
-of South hampton to the Lord Mountagues dawghter abowt Shrouetyde
-1565’. The second, at the wedding on 1 July 1566 of another cousin,
-Frances Radcliffe, is similarly headed ‘The copye of an oration made
-and pronounced by Mr. Pownd of Lincolnes Inne, with a maske att y^e
-marriage of y^e Earl of Sussex syster to Mr. Myldmaye off Lyncolnes
-Inne 1566’. From this, which is in rhyming quatrains, Brydges quotes
-119 lines; they are of no merit. In 1580 Pound wrote from his prison at
-Bishop’s Stortford to Sir Christopher Hatton (_S. P. D. Eliz._ cxlii.
-20) commending a petition to the Queen, ‘for her poeticall presents
-sake, which her Majesty disdayned not to take at poore Mercuries hands,
-if you remember it, at Killiegeworth Castle’. The reference must be to
-the Kenilworth visit of 1568, rather than 1573 or 1575, for soon after
-Thomas Pound’s days of courtly masking came to an abrupt end. The story
-is told in Morus, 46:
-
-‘Natales Christi dies, ut semper solemnes, ita anno sexagesimo quarto
-fuere celeberrimi; dabantur in Curia ludi apparatissimi Thoma Pondo
-instructore. Inter saltandum, nudam eius manum manu nuda prensat
-Regina, tum ei caput, abrepto Leicestrie Comitis pileo, ipsa tegit, ne
-ex vehementi motu accensus subito refrigeraretur. Imposita ei videbatur
-laurea: cum (secundo eandem saltationis formam flagitante Regina)
-celerrime de more uno in pede circumuolitans, pronus concidit; Plausu
-in risum mutato, surge, inquit Regina, Domine Taure; ea voce commotus,
-surrexit quidem; at flexo ad terram poplite, vulgatum illud latine
-prolocutus, _sic transit gloria mundi_, proripuit se, et non longo
-interuallo Aulam spesque fallaces deseruit, consumptarum facultatum et
-violatae Religionis praemium ludibrium consecutus.’
-
-There is a little difficulty as to the date. Morus puts it in 1564,
-but goes on to add that Pound was in his thirtieth year, and he was
-certainly born in 1538 or 1539. And Bartoli, 51, followed by Tanner,
-480, gives 1569, citing, probably from Jesuit archives, a letter
-written by Pound himself on 3 June 1609. No doubt 1569, which may mean
-either 1568–9 or 1569–70, is right.
-
-
-THOMAS PRESTON (> 1569–1589 <).
-
-A Thomas Preston entered King’s, Cambridge, from Eton in 1553, and
-became Fellow in 1556, taking his B.A. in 1557 and his M.A. in 1561. At
-Elizabeth’s visit in 1564 he disputed with Thomas Cartwright before her
-in the Philosophy Act, and also played in _Dido_, winning such favour
-that she called him her ‘scholar’ and gave him a pension of £20 a year
-from the privy purse (Cunningham, xx; Nichols, _Eliz._ i. 270; Fuller,
-_Cambridge_, 137; Wordsworth, _Ecclesiastical Memorials_, iv. 322). He
-held his fellowship at King’s until 1581. In 1583 a newswriter reported
-him to be ‘withdrawen into Scotland as a malcontent and there made much
-of by the King’ (Wright, _Eliz._ ii. 215). In 1584 he became Master
-of Trinity Hall, and in 1589 was Vice-Chancellor. In 1592, with other
-Heads of Houses, he signed a memorial to Burghley in favour of the stay
-of plays at Cambridge (_M. S. C._ i. 192). It seems to me incredible
-that he should, as is usually taken for granted, have been the author
-of _Cambyses_, about which there is nothing academic, and I think that
-there must have been a popular writer of the same name, responsible for
-the play, and also for certain ballads of the broadside type, of which
-_A Lamentation from Rome_ (Collier, _Old Ballads_, _Percy Soc._) was
-printed in 1570, and _A Ballad from the Countrie, sent to showe how we
-should Fast this Lent_ (_Archiv_, cxiv. 329, from _Bodl. Rawl. Poet.
-MS._ 185) is dated 1589. Both are subscribed, like _Cambyses_, ‘Finis
-Quod Thomas Preston’. A third was entered on S. R. in 1569–70 as ‘A
-geliflower of swete marygolde, wherein the frutes of tyranny you may
-beholde’.
-
-A Thomas Preston is traceable as a quarterly waiter at Court under
-Edward VI (_Trevelyan Papers_, i. 195, 200, 204; ii. 19, 26, 33), and
-a choirmaster of the same name was ejected from Windsor Chapel as a
-recusant about 1561 (cf. ch. xii).
-
- _Cambyses > 1570_
-
-_S. R._ 1569–70. ‘An enterlude a lamentable Tragedy full of pleasaunt
-myrth.’ _John Allde_ (Arber, i. 400).
-
-N.D. [1569–84]. A Lamentable Tragedie, mixed full of pleasant mirth,
-containing the life of Cambises King of Percia ... By Thomas Preston.
-_John Allde._ [Arrangement of parts for eight actors; Prologue;
-Epilogue, with prayer for Queen and Council. At end, ‘Amen, quod Thomas
-Preston’.]
-
-N.D. [1584–1628]. _Edward Allde._
-
-_Editions_ by T. Hawkins (1773, _O. E. D._ i), in Dodsley^4, iv (1874),
-and by J. M. Manly (1897, _Specimens_, ii), and J. S. Farmer (1910, _T.
-F. T._).
-
-Line 1148 mentions Bishop Bonner whose ‘delight was to shed blood’, and
-Fleay, 64, therefore dates the play 1569–70, as Bonner died 5 Sept.
-1569. But he may merely be put in the past as an ex-bishop. Three comic
-villains, Huf, Ruf, and Snuf, are among the characters, and chronology
-makes it possible that the play was the _Huff, Suff, and Ruff_ (cf.
-App. A) played at Court during Christmas 1560–1. Preston may, however,
-have borrowed these characters, as Ulpian Fulwell borrowed Ralph
-Roister, from an earlier play.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-Preston has been suggested as the author of _Sir Clyomon and Clamydes_
-(cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-DANIEL PRICE (1581–1631).
-
-A student of Exeter College, Oxford, who became chaplain to Prince
-Henry (_D. N. B._), and described his _Creation_ in 1610 (cf. ch. xxiv,
-C).
-
-
-RICHARD (?) PUTTENHAM (_c._ 1520–1601).
-
-The author of _The Arte of English Poesie_ (1589; cf. App. C, No. xli)
-claims to have written three plays, no one of which is extant. He
-analyses at length the plot of his ‘Comedie entituled _Ginecocratia_’
-(Arber, 146), in which were a King, Polemon, Polemon’s daughter, and
-Philino. He twice cites his ‘enterlude’, _Lustie London_ (Arber, 183,
-208), in which were a Serjeant, his Yeoman, a Carrier, and a Buffoon.
-And he twice cites his ‘enterlude’, _The Woer_ (Arber, 212, 233), in
-which were a Country Clown, a Young Maid of the City, and a Nurse.
-
-The author of _The Arte_ is referred to by Camden in 1614 (cf.
-Gregory Smith, ii. 444) as ‘Maister Puttenham’, and by E. Bolton,
-_Hypercritica_ (_c._ 1618), with the qualification ‘as the Fame is’, as
-‘one of her Gentlemen Pensioners, Puttenham’. H. Crofts, in his edition
-(1880) of Sir Thomas Elyot’s _The Governour_, has shown that this is
-more likely to have been Richard, the elder, than George, the younger,
-son of Robert Puttenham and nephew of Sir Thomas Elyot. Neither
-brother, however, can be shown to have been a Gentleman Pensioner, and
-Collier gives no authority for his statement that Richard was a Yeoman
-of the Guard. Richard was writing as far back as the reign of Henry
-VIII, and the dates of his plays are unknown.
-
-
-WILLIAM RANKINS (> 1587–1601 <).
-
-The moralist who published _A Mirrour of Monsters_ (1587), _The English
-Ape_ (1588), and _Seven Satires_ (1598) is, in spite of the attack
-on plays (cf. App. C, No. xxxviii) in the first of these, probably
-identical with the dramatist who received payment from Henslowe on
-behalf of the Admiral’s for the following plays during 1598–1601:
-
-(i) _Mulmutius Dunwallow._
-
-Oct. 1598, £3, ‘to by a boocke’, probably an old one.
-
-(ii) _Hannibal and Scipio._
-
-With Hathway, Jan. 1601.
-
-(iii) _Scogan and Skelton._
-
-With Hathway, Jan.–Mar. 1601.
-
-(iv) _The Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt._
-
-With Hathway, Mar.–Apr. 1601, but never finished, as shown by a letter
-to Henslowe from S. Rowley, bidding him let Hathway ‘haue his papars
-agayne’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 56).
-
-Rankins has also been suggested as the author of _Leire_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-THOMAS RICHARDS (_c._ 1577).
-
-A possible author of _Misogonus_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-HENRY ROBERTS (_c._ 1606).
-
-A miscellaneous writer (_D. N. B._) who described the visit of the
-King of Denmark to England (cf. ch. xxiv, C). The stationer of the same
-name, who printed the descriptions, may be either the author or his son
-(McKerrow, 229).
-
-
-JOHN ROBERTS (_c._ 1574).
-
-A contributor to the Bristol Entertainment of Elizabeth (cf. ch. xxiv,
-C).
-
-
-ROBINSON.
-
-Henslowe paid £3 on behalf of the Admiral’s men on 9 Sept. 1602 ‘vnto
-M^r. Robensone for a tragedie called Felmelanco’. Later in the month he
-paid two sums amounting to another £3 to Chettle, for ‘his tragedie’ of
-the same name. The natural interpretation is that Chettle and Robinson
-co-operated, but Fleay, i. 70, rather wantonly says, ‘Robinson was,
-I think, to Chettle what Mrs. Harris was to Mrs. Gamp’, and Greg,
-_Henslowe_, ii. 224, while not agreeing with Fleay, ‘It is, however,
-unlikely that he had any hand in the play. Probably Chettle had again
-pawned his MS.’
-
-Dates make it improbable that this Robinson was the poet Richard
-Robinson whose lost ‘tragedy’ _Hemidos and Thelay_ is not likely to
-have been a play (cf. App. M).
-
-
-SAMUEL ROWLEY (?-1624).
-
-For Rowley’s career as an Admiral’s and Prince’s man, cf. ch. xv.
-
- _Dr. Faustus_
-
-For the additions by Rowley and Bird in 1602, cf. s.v. Marlowe.
-
- _When You See Me, You Know Me. 1603 < > 5_
-
-_S. R._ 1605, Feb. 12, ‘Yf he gett good alowance for the enterlude of
-King Henry the 8th before he begyn to print it. And then procure the
-wardens handes to yt for the entrance of yt: He is to haue the same for
-his copy.’ _Nathanaell Butter_ (Arber, iii. 283). [No fee recorded.]
-
-1605. When you see me, You know me. Or the famous Chronicle Historie of
-King Henry the eight, with the birth and vertuous life of Edward Prince
-of Wales. As it was playd by the high and mightie Prince of Wales his
-seruants. By Samuell Rowly, seruant to the Prince. _For Nathaniel
-Butter._
-
-1613; 1621; 1632.
-
-_Editions_ by K. Elze (1874) and J. S. Farmer (1912, _S. F.
-T._).--_Dissertation_: W. Zeitlin, _Shakespeare’s King Henry the Eighth
-and R.’s When You See Me_ (1881, _Anglia_, iv. 73).
-
- _The Noble Soldier_
-
-Probably with Day and Dekker (q.v.).
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
- (a) _Plays for the Admiral’s, noted in Henslowe’s diary._
-
-_Judas._ With W. Bird, Dec. 1601, possibly a completion of the play of
-the same name left unfinished by Haughton (q.v.) in 1600.
-
-_Joshua._ Sept. 1602.
-
- (b) _Plays for the Palsgrave’s, licensed by Sir Henry Herbert_
- (Chalmers, _S. A._ 214–17; Herbert, 24, 26, 27).
-
-27 July 1623, _Richard III_.
-
-29 Oct. 1623, _Hardshifte for Husbands_.
-
-6 Apr. 1624, _A Match or No Match_.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-H. D. Sykes, _The Authorship of The Taming of A Shrew, etc._ (1920,
-_Sh. Association_), argues, on the basis of a comparison of phraseology
-with _When You See Me, You Know Me_ and some of the additions to _Dr.
-Faustus_, for Rowley’s authorship of (_a_) _The Famous Victories_,
-(_b_) the prose scenes of _A Shrew_, (_c_) the clowning passages in
-Greene’s _Orlando Furioso_, (_d_) the prose scenes of _Wily Beguiled_.
-He suggests that the same collaborator, borrowing first from Marlowe
-and then from Kyd, may have supplied the verse scenes both of _A Shrew_
-and of _Wily Beguiled_. There is no external evidence to connect Rowley
-with the Queen’s, and he only becomes clearly traceable with the
-Admiral’s in 1598, but Mr. Sykes has certainly made out a stylistic
-case which deserves consideration.
-
-
-WILLIAM ROWLEY (?-1625 <).
-
-Of Rowley’s origin and birth nothing is known. He first appears as
-collaborator in a play of Queen Anne’s men in 1607, and, although he
-may have also acted with this company, there is no evidence of the
-fact. His name is in the patent of 30 March 1610 for the Duke of York’s
-men with that of Thomas Hobbes, to whom his pamphlet _A Search for
-Money_ (1609, _Percy Soc. ii_.) is dedicated. He acted as their payee
-from 1610 to 1615, and they played his _Hymen’s Holiday or Cupid’s
-Vagaries_, now lost, in 1612. _A Knave in Print_ and _The Fool without
-Book_, entered as his on 9 Sept. 1653 (Eyre, i. 428), might be their
-anonymous two-part _Knaves_ of 1613. He contributed an epitaph on
-Thomas Greene of the Queen’s to Cooke’s _Greene’s Tu Quoque_ (1614).
-From 1615 to March 1616 the Prince’s men seem to have been merged in
-the Princess Elizabeth’s. They then resumed their identity at the Hope,
-and with them Rowley is traceable as an actor to 1619 and as a writer,
-in collaboration with Thomas Middleton (q.v.), Thomas Ford, and Thomas
-Heywood, until 1621. In 1621 he wrote an epitaph upon one of their
-members, Hugh Attwell, apparently as his ‘fellow’. It was still as a
-Prince’s man that he received mourning for James on 17 March 1625. But
-in 1621 and 1622 he was writing, with Middleton and alone, for the
-Lady Elizabeth’s at the Cockpit, and in 1623 both writing and acting
-in _The Maid of the Mill_ for the King’s men, and prefixing verses to
-Webster’s _Duchess of Malfi_, which belonged to the same company. He
-had definitely joined the King’s by 24 June 1625 when his name appears
-in their new patent, and for them his latest play-writing was done. In
-addition to what was published under his name, he is generally credited
-with some share in the miscellaneous collection of the Beaumont and
-Fletcher Ff. His name is not in an official list of King’s men in
-1629, but the date of his death is unknown. A William Rowley married
-Isabel Tooley at Cripplegate in 1637, but the date hardly justifies the
-assumption that it was the dramatist.
-
-_Dissertations_: P. G. Wiggin, _An Inquiry into the Authorship of the
-Middleton-Rowley Plays_ (1897, _Radcliffe College Monographs_, ix); C.
-W. Stork, _William Rowley_ (1910, _Pennsylvania Univ. Publ._ xiii, with
-texts of _All’s Lost for Lust_ and _A Shoemaker a Gentleman_).
-
- _A Shoemaker a Gentleman, c. 1608_
-
-_S. R._ 1637, Nov. 28 (Weekes). ‘A Comedie called A Shoomaker is a
-gentleman with the life and death of the Criple that stole the weather
-cocke of Pauls, by William Rowley.’ _John Okes_ (Arber, iv. 400).
-
-1638. A Merrie and Pleasant Comedy: Never before Printed, called A
-Shoomaker a Gentleman. As it hath beene sundry Times Acted at the Red
-Bull and other Theatres, with a general and good Applause. Written by
-W. R. Gentleman. _I. Okes, sold by Iohn Cooper._ [Epistle by Printer to
-Gentlemen of the Gentle Craft.]
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Stork (1910).
-
-The epistle says that the play was still often acted, and ‘as Plaies
-were then, some twenty yeares agone, it was in the fashion’. This
-dating and the mention of the Red Bull justify us in regarding it as an
-early play for Queen Anne’s men.
-
- _A New Wonder, A Woman Never Vexed_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1631, Nov. 24 (Herbert). ‘A booke called A new wonder or a
-woman neuer vext (a Comedy) by William Rowley.’ _Constable_ (Arber, iv.
-266).
-
-1632. A new Wonder, A Woman never vext. A pleasant conceited Comedy:
-sundry times Acted: never before printed. Written by William Rowley,
-one of his Maiesties Servants. _G. P. for Francis Constable._
-
-Fleay, ii, 102, and Greg (_H._ ii. 177) suggest revision by Rowley
-of the Admiral’s _Wonder of a Woman_ (1595), perhaps by Heywood
-(q.v.); Stork, 26, early work for Queen Anne’s men, under Heywood’s
-influence.
-
- _A Match at Midnight_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1633, Jan. 15 (Herbert). ‘A Play called A Match at midnight.’
-_William Sheares_ (Arber, iv. 291).
-
-1633. A Match at Midnight A Pleasant Comœdie: As it hath been Acted
-by the Children of the Revells. Written by W. R. _Aug. Mathewes for
-William Sheares._
-
-Fleay, 203 and ii. 95, treats the play, without discussion, as written
-by Middleton and Rowley for the Queen’s Revels _c._ 1607. Bullen,
-_Middleton_, i. lxxxix, and Stork, 17, concur as to the date, the
-former regarding it as Middleton’s revised _c._ 1622 by Rowley,
-the latter as practically all Rowley’s. These views are evidently
-influenced by the mention of the Children of the Revels on the
-title-page. Wiggin, 7, noting allusions to the battle of Prague in
-1620 and _Reynard the Fox_ (1621), thinks it alternatively possible
-that Rowley wrote it under Middletonian influence for one of the later
-Revels companies _c._ 1622. There was no doubt a company of Children of
-the Revels in 1622–3 (Murray, i. 198), but the name on a t.p. of 1633
-would naturally refer to the still later company of 1629–37 (Murray, i.
-279).
-
- _The Birth of Merlin_ (?)
-
-1662. The Birth of Merlin: Or, The Childe hath found his Father. As it
-hath been several times Acted with great Applause. Written by William
-Shakespear, and William Rowley. _Tho. Johnson for Francis Kirkman and
-Henry Marsh._
-
-_Editions_ by T. E. Jacob (1889), J. S. Farmer (1910, _T. F. T._), and
-with _Sh. Apocrypha_.--_Dissertations_: F. A. Howe, _The Authorship of
-the B. of M._ (1906, _M. P._ iv. 193); W. Wells, _The B. of M._ (1921,
-_M. L. R._ xvi. 129).
-
-Kirkman’s attribution to Shakespeare and Rowley was first made in his
-play-list of 1661 (Greg, _Masques_, liii). It is generally accepted
-for Rowley, but not for Shakespeare. But Fleay, _Shakespeare_, 289,
-on a hint of P. A. Daniel, gave Rowley a collaborator in Middleton,
-and later (ii. 105) treated the play as a revision by Rowley of the
-_Uther Pendragon_ produced by the Admiral’s on 29 April 1597. This
-view seems to rest in part upon the analogous character of _The
-Mayor of Quinborough_. Howe thinks that Rowley worked up a sketch by
-Middleton later than 1621, and attempts a division of the play on this
-hypothesis. But Stork, _Rowley_, 58, thinks that Rowley revised _Uther
-Pendragon_ or some other old play about 1608. F. W. Moorman (_C. H._ v.
-249) suggests Dekker, and Wells Beaumont and Fletcher.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-The ascription to Rowley on the t.p. of _The Thracian Wonder_ is not
-generally accepted. His hand has been sought in _The Captain_, _The
-Coxcomb_, and _Wit at Several Weapons_ (cf. s.v. Beaumont) and in
-_Troublesome Reign of King John_ (cf. ch. xxiv) and _Pericles_.
-
-
-MATTHEW ROYDON (> 1580–1622 <).
-
-The reference to his ‘comike inuentions’ in Nashe’s _Menaphon_ epistle
-of 1589 (App. C, No. xlii) suggests that he wrote plays.
-
-
-GEORGE RUGGLE (1575–1622).
-
-Ruggle entered St. John’s, Cambridge, from Lavenham grammar school,
-Suffolk, in 1589, migrated to Trinity, where he took his B.A. in 1593
-and his M.A. in 1597, and became Fellow of Clare Hall in 1598. He
-remained at Cambridge until 1620, shortly before his death.
-
- _Ignoramus. 8 March 1615_
-
-[_MSS._] _Bodl. Tanner MS._ 306, with actor-list; _Harl. MSS._ 6869
-(fragmentary); and others.
-
-_S. R._ 1615, April 18 (Nidd). ‘Ignoramus Comœdia provt Cantabrigie
-acta coram Jacobo serenissimo potentissimo magnae Britanniae rege.’
-_Walter Burre_ (Arber, iii. 566).
-
-1630. Ignoramus. Comœdia coram Regia Majestate Jacobi Regis Angliae,
-&c. _Impensis I. S._ [Colophon] _Excudebat T. P._ [Prologus Prior.
-Martii 8. Anno 1614; Prologus Posterior. Ad secundum Regis adventum
-habitus, Maii 6, 1615; Epilogus.]
-
-1630.... Secunda editio auctior & emendatior. _Typis T. H. Sumptibus G.
-E. & J. S._ [Macaronic lines, headed ‘Dulman in laudem Ignorami’.]
-
-1658.... Autore M^{ro} Ruggle, Aulae Clarensis A.M.
-
-1659, 1668, 1707, 1731, 1736, 1737.
-
-_Edition_ by J. S. Hawkins (1787).
-
-Chamberlain, describing to Carleton James’s visit to Cambridge in
-March 1615, wrote (Birch, i. 304): ‘The second night [8 March] was a
-comedy of Clare Hall, with the help of two or three good actors from
-other houses, wherein David Drummond, on a hobby-horse, and Brakin, the
-recorder of the town, under the name of Ignoramus, a common lawyer,
-bore great parts. The thing was full of mirth and variety, with many
-excellent actors; among whom the Lord Compton’s son, though least,
-yet was not worst, but more than half marred by extreme length.’
-On 31 March he told Carleton (Birch, i. 360) of the Oxford satires
-on the play, and of a possible second visit by the King, unless he
-could persuade the actors to visit London. And on 20 May he wrote to
-him (Birch, i. 363): ‘On Saturday last [13 May], the King went again
-to Cambridge, to see the play “Ignoramus”, which has so nettled the
-lawyers, that they are almost out of all patience.’ He adds that rhymes
-and ballads had been written by the lawyers, and answered. Specimens
-of the ‘flytings’ to which the play gave rise are in Hawkins, xxxvii,
-xlii, cvii, 259. Fuller, _Church History_ (1655), x. 70, reports a
-story that the irritation caused to the lawyers also led to John
-Selden’s demonstration of the secular origin of tithes. The authorship
-of _Ignoramus_ is indicated by the entry in a notice of the royal visit
-printed (Hawkins, xxx) from a manuscript in the library of Sir Edward
-Dering:
-
- ‘On Wednesday night, 2, _Ignoramus_, the lawyer, _Latine_, and
- part _English_, composed by M^r. _Ruggle_, _Clarensis_.’
-
-_Ignoramus_ was largely based on the _Trappolaria_ (1596) of
-Giambattista Porta, into which Ruggle introduced his satire of the
-Cambridge recorder, Francis Brackyn, who had already been the butt of
-_3 Parnassus_.
-
- _Doubtful and Lost Plays_
-
-There is no justification for ascribing to Ruggle _Loiola_ (1648),
-which is by John Hacket, but Hawkins, lxxii, cites from a note made in
-a copy of _Ignoramus_ by John Hayward of Clare Hall, _c._ 1741:
-
- ‘N.B. M^r. Geo. Ruggle wrote besides two other comedies, _Re
- vera_ or _Verily_, and _Club Law_, to expose the puritans, not
- yet printed. MS.’
-
-_Club Law_ (cf. ch. xxiv) has since been recovered.
-
-
-THOMAS SACKVILLE (1536–1608).
-
-Thomas Sackville became Lord Buckhurst in 1567 and Earl of Dorset in
-1604. He is famous in literature for his contributions to ed. 2 (1559)
-of _A Mirror for Magistrates_, and in statesmanship as Lord Treasurer
-under Elizabeth and James I.
-
- _Ferrex and Porrex_, or _Gorboduc_. _1562_
-
- _With_ Thomas Norton (q.v.).
-
-
-GEORGE SALTERNE (> 1603).
-
-Author of the academic _Tomumbeius_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-JOHN SAVILE (_c._ 1603).
-
-Describer of the coming of James I to England (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-
-
-ROBERT SEMPILL (_c._ 1530–95).
-
-A Scottish ballad writer (_D. N. B._) and a suggested author of
-_Philotus_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-SENECAN TRANSLATIONS (1559–81).
-
- _Troas_ (Jasper Heywood)
-
-_S. R._ 1558–9. ‘A treates of Senaca.’ _Richard Tottel_ (Arber, i. 96).
-
-1559. The Sixt Tragedie of the most graue and prudent author Lucius,
-Anneus, Seneca, entituled Troas, with diuers and sundrye addicions
-to the same. Newly set forth in Englishe by Iasper Heywood studient
-in Oxenforde. _Richard Tottel. Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum._
-[Epistle to Elizabeth by Heywood; Preface to the Readers; Preface to
-the Tragedy.]
-
-1559. _Richard Tottel._ [Another edition (B. M. G. 9440).]
-
-N.D. [_c._ 1560]. _Thomas Powell for George Bucke._
-
- _Thyestes_ (Jasper Heywood)
-
-1560, March 26. The seconde Tragedie of Seneca entituled Thyestes
-faithfully Englished by Iasper Heywood, fellow of Alsolne College in
-Oxforde. [_Thomas Powell_?] ‘_in the hous late Thomas Berthelettes_’.
-[Verse Epistle to Sir John Mason by Heywood; The Translator to the
-Book; Preface.]
-
- _Hercules Furens_ (Jasper Heywood)
-
-1561. Lucii Annei Senecae Tragedia prima quae inscribitur Hercules
-furens.... The first Tragedie of Lucius Anneus Seneca, intituled
-Hercules furens, newly pervsed and of all faultes whereof it did before
-abound diligently corrected, and for the profit of young schollers so
-faithfully translated into English metre, that ye may se verse for
-verse tourned as farre as the phrase of the english permitteth By
-Iasper Heywood studient in Oxford. _Henry Sutton._ [Epistle to William,
-Earl of Pembroke, by Heywood; Argument; Latin and English texts.]
-
- _Oedipus_ (Alexander Neville)
-
-_S. R._ 1562–3. ‘A boke intituled the lamentable history of the prynnce
-Oedypus &c.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i. 209).
-
-1563, April 28. The Lamentable Tragedie of Oedipus the Sonne of Laius
-Kyng of Thebes out of Seneca. By Alexander Neuyle. _Thomas Colwell._
-[Epistles to Nicholas Wotton by Neville, and to the Reader.]
-
- _Agamemnon_ (John Studley)
-
-_S. R._ 1565–6. ‘A boke intituled the eighte Tragide of Senyca.’
-_Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i. 304).
-
-1566. The Eyght Tragedie of Seneca. Entituled Agamemnon. Translated out
-of Latin into English, by Iohn Studley, Student in Trinitie Colledge
-in Cambridge. _Thomas Colwell._ [Commendatory Verses by Thomas Nuce,
-William R., H. C., Thomas Delapeend, W. Parkar, T. B.; Epistle to Sir
-William Cecil, signed ‘Iohn Studley’; Preface to the Reader.]
-
- _Medea_ (John Studley)
-
-_S. R._ 1565–6. ‘A boke intituled the tragedy of Seneca Media by John
-Studley of Trenety Colledge in Cambryge.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i.
-312).
-
-1566. The seuenth Tragedie of Seneca, Entituled Medea: Translated out
-of Latin into English, by Iohn Studley, Student in Trinitie Colledge
-in Cambridge. _Thomas Colwell._ [Epistle to Francis, Earl of Bedford,
-signed ‘Iohn Studley’; Preface to Reader; Commendatory Verses by W. P.;
-Argument.]
-
- _Octavia_ (Thomas Nuce)
-
- _Hercules Oetaeus_ (John Studley)
-
-_S. R._ 1566–7. ‘A boke intituled the ix^{th} and x^{th} tragide of
-Lucious Anneas oute of the laten into englesshe by T. W. fellowe of
-Pembrek Hall, in Chambryge.’ _Henry Denham_ (Arber, i. 327).
-
-1570–1. ‘iij^{de} part of Herculus Oote.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i.
-443).
-
-N.D. The ninth Tragedie of Lucius Anneus Seneca called Octavia.
-Translated out of Latine into English, by T. N. Student in Cambridge.
-_Henry Denham._ [Epistles to Robert Earl of Leicester, signed ‘T. N.’,
-and to the Reader.]
-
-This is B.M. C. 34, e. 48. C. Grabau in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xliii. 310,
-says that a copy in the Irish sale of 1906 was of an unknown edition,
-possibly of 1566.
-
- _Hippolytus_ (John Studley)
-
-_S. R._ 1566–7. ‘The iiij^{th} parte Seneca Workes.’ _Henry Denham_
-(Arber, i. 336).
-
-31 Aug. 1579. Transfer from Denham to Richard Jones and John Charlwood
-(Arber, ii. 359).
-
- _The Ten Tragedies. 1581_
-
-_S. R._ 1580–1. ‘Senecas Tragedies in Englishe.’ _Thomas Marsh_ (Arber,
-ii. 396).
-
-1581. Seneca his Tenne Tragedies, Translated into Englysh. _Thomas
-Marsh._ [Epistle to Sir Thomas Heneage by Thomas Newton. Adds
-_Thebais_, by Thomas Newton, and, if not already printed, as S.
-R. entries in 1566–7 and 1570–1 suggest, _Hercules Oetaeus_ and
-_Hippolytus_, by John Studley. The _Oedipus_ of Neville is a revised
-text.]
-
-_Reprint_ of 1581 collection (1887, _Spenser Soc._), and editions
-of Studley’s _Agamemnon_ and _Medea_, by E. M. Spearing (1913,
-_Materialien_, xxxviii), and of Heywood’s _Troas_, _Thyestes_,
-and _Hercules Furens_, by H. de Vocht (1913, _Materialien_,
-xli).--_Dissertations_: J. W. Cunliffe, _The Influence of S. on
-Elizabethan Tragedy_ (1893); E. Jockers, _Die englischen S.-Übersetzer
-des 16. Jahrhunderts_ (1909, _Strassburg diss._); E. M. Spearing, _The
-Elizabethan ‘Tenne Tragedies of S.’_ (1909, _M. L. R._ iv. 437), _The
-Elizabethan Translation of S.’s Tragedies_ (1912), _A. N.’s Oedipus_
-(1920, _M. L. R._ xv. 359); F. L. Lucas, _S. and Elizabethan Tragedy_
-(1922).
-
-Of the translators, Jasper Heywood (1535–98) became Fellow of All
-Souls, Oxford, in 1558. He was son of John Heywood the dramatist, and
-uncle of John Donne. In 1562 he became a Jesuit, and left England, to
-return as a missionary in 1581. He was imprisoned during 1583–5 and
-then expelled. John Studley (_c._ 1547–?) entered Trinity, Cambridge,
-in 1563 and became Fellow in 1567. Alexander Neville (1544–1614) took
-his B.A. in 1560 at Cambridge. He became secretary successively to
-Parker, Grindal, and Whitgift, archbishops of Canterbury, and produced
-other literary work, chiefly in Latin. Thomas Nuce (_ob._ 1617) was
-Fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, in 1562, and became Canon of Ely
-in 1585. Thomas Newton (_c._ 1542–1607) migrated in 1562 from Trinity,
-Oxford, to Queens’, Cambridge, but apparently returned to his original
-college later. About 1583 he became Rector of Little Ilford, Essex. He
-produced much unimportant verse and prose, in Latin and English, and
-was a friend of William Hunnis (q.v.).
-
-For a fragment of another translation of _Hercules Oetaeus_, cf. s.v.
-Elizabeth. Archer’s play-list of 1656 contains the curious entry ‘Baggs
-Seneca’, described as a tragedy. Of this Greg, _Masques_, li, can make
-nothing.
-
-
-WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (1564–1616).
-
-No adequate treatment of Shakespeare’s life and plays is possible
-within the limits of this chapter. I have therefore contented myself
-with giving the main bibliographical data, in illustration of the
-chapters on the companies (Strange’s, Pembroke’s, Chamberlain’s, and
-King’s) and the theatres (Rose, Newington Butts, Theatre, Curtain,
-Globe, Blackfriars) with which he was or may have been concerned. I
-follow the conjectural chronological order adopted in my article on
-Shakespeare in the 11th ed. of the _Encyclopaedia Britannica_.
-
- _Collections_
-
-[1619]. It is probable that the 1619 editions of _Merry Wives of
-Windsor_ (Q_{2}), _Pericles_ (Q_{4}), and the apocryphal _Yorkshire
-Tragedy_ were intended to form part of a collection of plays ascribed
-to Shakespeare, and that the ‘1600’ editions of _Midsummer Night’s
-Dream_ (Q_{2}) and _Merchant of Venice_ (Q_{2}) bearing the name of
-the printer Roberts, the ‘1600’ edition of the apocryphal _Sir John
-Oldcastle_ bearing the initials T. P., the ‘1608’ edition of _Henry V_
-(Q_{3}), the ‘1608’ edition of _King Lear_ (Q_{2}) lacking the name of
-the ‘Pide Bull’ shop, and the undated edition of _The Whole Contention
-of York and Lancaster_ were all also printed in 1619 for the same
-purpose. The printer seems to have been William Jaggard, with whom was
-associated Thomas Pavier, who held the copyright of several of the
-plays. Presumably an intention to prefix a general title-page is the
-explanation of the shortened imprints characteristic of these editions.
-The sheets of _The Whole Contention_ and _Pericles_ have in fact
-continuous signatures; but the plan seems to have been modified, and
-the other plays issued separately. The bibliographical evidence bearing
-on this theory is discussed by W. W. Greg, W. Jaggard, A. W. Pollard,
-and A. H. Huth in _2 Library_, ix. 113, 381; x. 208; and _3 Library_,
-i. 36, 46; ii. 101; and summed up by A. W. Pollard, _Shakespeare Folios
-and Quartos_, 81. Confirmatory evidence is adduced by W. J. Niedig,
-_The Shakespeare Quartos of 1619_ (_M. P._ viii. 145) and _False Dates
-on Shakespeare Quartos_ (1910, _Century_, 912).
-
-_S. R._ 1623, Nov. 8 (Worrall). ‘Master William Shakspeers Comedyes
-Histories, and Tragedyes soe manie of the said Copies as are not
-formerly entred to other men. viz^t Comedyes The Tempest The two
-gentlemen of Verona Measure for Measure The Comedy of Errors As you
-like it All’s well that ends well Twelfe Night The winters tale
-Histories The thirde parte of Henry ye Sixt Henry the eight Tragedies
-Coriolanus Timon of Athens Julius Caesar Mackbeth Anthonie and
-Cleopatra Cymbeline’ _Blounte and Isaak Jaggard_ (Arber, iv. 107).
-[This entry covers all the plays in F_{1} not already printed, except
-_Taming of the Shrew_, _King John_, and _2, 3 Henry VI_, which were
-doubtless regarded from the stationer’s point of view as identical
-with the _Taming of A Shrew_, _Troublesome Reign of King John_, and
-_Contention of York and Lancaster_, on which they were based. The
-‘thirde parte of Henry ye Sixt’ is of course the hitherto unprinted _1
-Henry VI_.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. M^{r}. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, &
-Tragedies Published according to the True Originall Copies. By _Isaac
-Iaggard and Ed. Blount_. [Colophon] _Printed_ [by W. Jaggard] _at the
-charges of W. Jaggard, Ed. Blount, I. Smethweeke, and W. Aspley_.
-[Verses to the Reader, signed B[en] I[onson]; Portrait signed ‘Martin
-Droeshout sculpsit London’; Epistles to the Earls of Pembroke and
-Montgomery and to the great Variety of Readers, both signed ‘Iohn
-Heminge, Henry Condell’; Commendatory Verses signed ‘Ben: Ionson’,
-‘Hugh Holland’, ‘L. Digges’, ‘I. M.’; ‘The Names of the Principall
-Actors in all these Playes’; ‘A Catalogue of the seuerall Comedies,
-Histories, and Tragedies contained in this Volume’.]
-
-_S. R._ 1627, June 19 [on or after]. Transfer from Dorothy widow
-of Isaac Jaggard to Thomas and Richard Cotes of ‘her parte in
-Schackspheere playes’ (Arber, iv. 182).
-
-_S. R._ 1630, Nov. 16. Transfer from Blount to Robert Allot by note
-dated 26 June 1630 of his ‘estate and right’ in the sixteen plays of
-the 1623 entry (Arber, iv. 243).
-
-[F_{2}] 1632. _Thomas Cotes, for John Smethwick, William Aspley,
-Richard Hawkins, Richard Meighen and Robert Allot._ [So colophon:
-there are t.ps. with separate imprints by Cotes for each of the five
-booksellers.]
-
-[F_{3}] 1663. _For Philip Chetwinde._ [For the second issue of 1664,
-with _Pericles_ and six apocryphal plays added, cf. p. 203.]
-
-[F_{4}] 1685. _For H. Herringman_ (and others).
-
-Of later editions the most valuable for literary history are those
-by E. Malone, revised by J. Boswell (1821, the _Third Variorum
-Shakespeare_, 21 vols.); W. A. Wright (1891–3, the _Cambridge
-Shakespeare_, 9 vols.); F. J. Furnivall and others (1885–91, the
-_Shakespeare Quarto Facsimiles_, 43 vols.); H. H. Furness (1871–1919,
-the _New Variorum Shakespeare_, 18 plays in 19 vols. issued); E.
-Dowden and others (1899–1922, the _Arden Shakespeare_); A. T. Q.
-Couch and J. D. Wilson (1921–2, the _New Shakespeare_, 5 vols.
-issued). Of dissertations I can only note, for biography, J. O.
-Halliwell-Phillipps, _Outlines of the Life of Shakespeare_ (1890, ed.
-9), and S. Lee, _A Life of William Shakespeare_ (1922, new ed.), and
-for bibliography, S. Lee, _Facsimile of F_{1} from the Chatsworth copy_
-(1902, with census of copies, added to in _2 Library_, vii. 113), W.
-W. Greg, _The Bibliographical History of the First Folio_ (1903, _2
-Library_, iv. 258), A. W. Pollard, _Shakespeare Folios and Quartos_
-(1909) and _Shakespeare’s Fight with the Pirates_ (1920), A. W. Pollard
-and H. C. Bartlett, _A Census of Shakespeare’s Plays in Quarto_ (1916),
-and H. C. Bartlett, _Mr. William Shakespeare_ (1922).
-
- _1 Henry VI. 1592_
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The first Part of Henry the Sixt.
-
- _2, 3 Henry VI. 1592_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ No original entry. [Probably these plays were regarded from a
-stationer’s point of view as identical with the anonymous _Contention
-of York and Lancaster_ (q.v.), on which they were based. Pavier had
-acquired rights over these from Millington in 1602.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Second Part of Henry the Sixt, with the death of the
-Good Duke Humfrey. The Third Part of Henry the Sixt, with the death of
-the Duke of Yorke.
-
-_S. R._ 1626, Aug. 4. Transfer from Mrs. Pavier to Edward Brewster and
-Robert Birde of ‘Master Paviers right in Shakesperes plaies or any of
-them’ (Arber, iv. 164).
-
-_S. R._ 1630, Nov. 8. Transfer from Bird to Richard Cotes of ‘Yorke and
-Lancaster’ (Arber, iv. 242).
-
- _Richard III. 1592–3_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1597, Oct. 20 (Barlowe). ‘The tragedie of Kinge Richard the
-Third with the death of the Duke of Clarence.’ _Andrew Wise_ (Arber,
-iii. 93).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1597. The Tragedy of King Richard the third. Containing, His
-treacherous Plots against his brother Clarence: the pittiefull murther
-of his iunocent nephewes: his tyrannical vsurpation: with the whole
-course of his detested life, and most deserued death. As it hath
-beene lately Acted by the Right honourable the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. _Valentine Sims for Andrew Wise._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1598.... By William Shakespeare. _Thomas Creede for Andrew
-Wise._
-
-[Q_{3}] 1602.... Newly augmented.... _Thomas Creede for Andrew Wise._
-[There is no augmentation.]
-
-_S. R._ 1603, June 25. Transfer from Andrew Wise to Mathew Lawe (Arber,
-iii. 239).
-
-[Q_{4}] 1605. _Thomas Creede, sold by Mathew Lawe._
-
-[Q_{5}] 1612.... As it hath beene lately Acted by the Kings Maiesties
-seruants.... _Thomas Creede, sold by Mathew Lawe._
-
-[Q_{6}] 1622. _Thomas Purfoot, sold by Mathew Law._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedy of Richard the Third: with the Landing of
-Earle Richmond, and the Battell at Bosworth Field. [_Running Title_,
-The Life and Death of Richard the Third. From Q_{1}-Q_{2}-Q_{3}-Q_{4}
-(+ Q_{3})-Q_{5}-Q_{6}, with corrections.]
-
-[Q_{7}] 1629. _John Norton, sold by Mathew Law._
-
-[Q_{8}] 1634. _John Norton._
-
- _Comedy of Errors. 1593_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Comedie of Errors.
-
- _Titus Andronicus. 1594_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, Feb. 6. ‘A Noble Roman historye of Tytus Andronicus.’
-_John Danter_ (Arber, ii. 644).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1594. The most Lamentable Romaine Tragedie of Titus Andronicus:
-As it was Plaide by the Right Honourable the Earle of Darbie, Earle of
-Pembrooke and Earle of Sussex their Seruants. _John Danter, sold by
-Edward White and Thomas Millington._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1600.... As it hath sundry times beene playde by the Right
-Honourable the Earle of Pembrooke, the Earle of Darbie, the Earle of
-Sussex, and the Lorde Chamberlaine theyr Seruants. _I[ames] R[oberts]
-for Edward White._
-
-_S. R._ 1602, April 19. Transfer ‘saluo iure cuiuscunque’ from Thomas
-Millington to Thomas Pavier (Arber, iii. 204).
-
-[Q_{3}] 1611. _For Edward White._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus. [From
-Q_{1}-Q_{2}-Q_{3}, with addition of III. ii.]
-
-_S. R._ 1626, Aug. 4. Transfer from Mrs. Pavier of interest to Edward
-Brewster and Robert Bird (Arber, iv. 164).
-
- _The Taming of The Shrew. 1594_
-
-_S. R._ No entry. [Probably the play was regarded from the point of
-view of copyright as identical with the anonymous _Taming of A Shrew_
-(q.v.), on which it was based.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Taming of the Shrew.
-
-[Q_{1}] 1631. A wittie and pleasant comedie called The Taming of
-the Shrew. As it was acted by his Maiesties Seruants at the Blacke
-Friers and the Globe. Written by Will. Shakespeare. _W. S. for Iohn
-Smethwicke._
-
- _Love’s Labour’s Lost. 1594_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ No original entry.
-
-[Q_{1}] 1598. A Pleasant Conceited Comedie Called, Loues labors lost.
-As it was presented before her Highnes this last Christmas. Newly
-corrected and augmented By W. Shakespere. _W[illiam] W[hite] for
-Cutbert Burby._
-
-_S. R._ 1607. Jan. 22. Transfer from Burby to Nicholas Ling (Arber,
-iii. 337).
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Nov. 19. Transfer from Ling to John Smethwick (Arber,
-iii. 365).
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. Loues Labour’s lost. [From Q_{1}.]
-
-[Q_{2}] 1631.... As it was Acted by his Maiesties Seruants at the
-Blacke-Friers and the Globe.... _W[illiam] S[tansby] for John
-Smethwicke._
-
- _Romeo and Juliet. 1594–5_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ No original entry.
-
-[Q_{1}] 1597. An Excellent conceited Tragedie of Romeo and Iuliet, As
-it hath been often (with great applause) plaid publiquely, by the right
-Honourable the L. of Hunsdon his Seruants. _John Danter._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1599.... Newly corrected, augmented, and amended: ... _Thomas
-Creede for Cuthbert Burby._ [Revised and enlarged text.]
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Jan. 22. Transfer by direction of a court from Burby to
-Nicholas Ling (Arber, iii. 337).
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Nov. 19. Transfer from Ling to John Smethwick (Arber,
-iii. 365).
-
-[Q_{3}] 1609.... by the King’s Maiesties Seruants at the Globe.... _For
-Iohn Smethwick._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Romeo and Iuliet. [From Q_{2}-Q_{3}.]
-
-[Q_{4}] N.D. _For Iohn Smethwicke._ [Two issues.]
-
-[Q_{5}] 1637. _R. Young for John Smethwicke._
-
- _A Midsummer Night’s Dream. 1595_
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Oct. 8 (Rodes). ‘A booke called A mydsommer nightes
-Dreame.’ _Thomas Fisher_ (Arber, iii. 174).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1600. A Midsommer nights dreame. As it hath beene sundry times
-publickely acted, by the Right honourable, the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. _For Thomas Fisher._
-
-[Q_{2}] [1619]. ‘_Printed by Iames Roberts, 1600._’ [On the evidence
-for printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard, 81.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. A Midsommer Nights Dreame. [From Q_{2}.]
-
-On the possible date and occasion of performance, cf. my paper in
-_Shakespeare Homage_ (1916).
-
- _The Two Gentlemen of Verona. 1595_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Two Gentlemen of Verona.
-
- _King John. 1595_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ No entry. [Probably the play was regarded, from a stationer’s
-point of view, as identical with the anonymous _Troublesome Reign of
-King John_ (q.v.), on which it was based.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The life and Death of King John.
-
- _Richard II. 1595–6_
-
-_S. R._ 1597, Aug. 29. ‘The Tragedye of Richard the Second.’ _Andrew
-Wise_ (Arber, iii. 89).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1597. The Tragedie of King Richard the second. As it hath beene
-publikely acted by the right Honourable the Lorde Chamberlaine his
-Seruants. _Valentine Simmes for Andrew Wise._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1598.... By William Shakespeare. _Valentine Simmes for Andrew
-Wise._
-
-[Q_{3}] 1598. _Valentine Simmes, for Andrew Wise._ [White coll.]
-
-_S. R._ 1603, June 25. Transfer from Andrew Wise to Mathew Lawe (Arber,
-iii. 239).
-
-[Q_{4}] 1608.... With new additions of the Parliament Sceane, and the
-deposing of King Richard. As it hath been lately acted by the Kinges
-Maiesties seruantes, at the Globe. _W[illiam] W[hite] for Mathew Law._
-[Two issues with distinct t.ps., of which one only has the altered
-title. Both include the added passage IV. i. 154–318.]
-
-[Q_{5}] 1615. _For Mathew Law._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The life and death of King Richard the Second. [From
-Q_{1}-Q_{2}-Q_{3}-Q_{4}-Q_{5}, with corrections.]
-
-[Q_{6}] 1634. _Iohn Norton._
-
- _The Merchant of Venice. 1596_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1598, July 22. ‘A booke of the Marchaunt of Venyce or otherwise
-called the Jewe of Venyce, Prouided that yt bee not prynted by the said
-James Robertes or anye other whatsoeuer without lycence first had from
-the Right honorable the lord Chamberlen.’ _James Robertes_ (Arber, iii.
-122).
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Oct. 28. Transfer from Roberts to Thomas Heyes (Arber,
-iii. 175).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1600. The most excellent Historie of the Merchant of Venice.
-With the extreame crueltie of Shylocke the Iewe towards the sayd
-Merchant, in cutting a iust pound of his flesh: and the obtayning of
-Portia by the choyse of three chests. As it hath been diuers times
-acted by the Lord Chamberlaine his Seruants. Written by William
-Shakespeare. _I[ames] R[oberts] for Thomas Heyes._
-
-[Q_{2}] [1619]. ‘_Printed by J. Roberts, 1600._’ [On the evidence for
-printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard, 81.]
-
-_S. R._ 1619, July 8. Transfer from Thomas to Laurence Heyes
-(Arber, iii. 651).
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Merchant of Venice. [From Q_{1}.]
-
-[Q_{3}] 1637. _M. P[arsons?] for Laurence Hayes._
-
-[Q_{3}] 1652. _For William Leake._ [Reissue.]
-
-_S. R._ 1657, Oct. 17. Transfer from Bridget Hayes and Jane Graisby to
-William Leake (Eyre, ii. 150).
-
- _1 Henry IV. 1596–7_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1598, Feb. 25 (Dix). ‘A booke intituled The historye of
-Henry the iiij^{th} with his battaile of Shrewsburye against Henry
-Hottspurre of the Northe with the conceipted mirthe of Sir John
-ffalstoff.’ _Andrew Wise_ (Arber, iii. 105).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1598. The History of Henrie the Fourth; With the battell
-at Shrewsburie, betweene the King and Lord Henry Percy, surnamed
-Henrie Hotspur of the North. With the humorous conceits of Sir Iohn
-Falstalffe. _P[eter] S[hort] for Andrew Wise._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1599.... Newly corrected by W. Shakespeare. _S[imon] S[tafford]
-for Andrew Wise._
-
-_S. R._ 1603, June 25. Transfer from Wise to Mathew Law (Arber, iii.
-239).
-
-[Q_{3}] 1604. _Valentine Simmes for Mathew Law._
-
-[Q_{4}] 1608. _For Mathew Law._
-
-[Q_{5}] 1613. _W[illiam] W[hite] for Mathew Law._
-
-[Q_{6}] 1622. _T[homas] P[urfoot], sold by Mathew Law._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The First Part of Henry the Fourth, with
-the Life and Death of Henry Sirnamed Hot-spurre. [From
-Q_{1}-Q_{2}-Q_{3}-Q_{4}-Q_{5}.]
-
-[Q_{7}] 1632. _John Norton, sold by William Sheares._
-
-[Q_{8}] 1639. _John Norton, sold by Hugh Perry._
-
- _2 Henry IV. 1597–8_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Aug. 23. ‘The second parte of the history of Kinge
-Henry the iiij^{th} with the humours of Sir John ffalstaff; wrytten by
-master Shakespere.’ _Andrew Wise and William Aspley_ (Arber, iii.
-170).
-
-[Q] 1600. The Second part of Henrie the fourth, continuing to his
-death, and coronation of Henrie the fift. With the humours of sir
-Iohn Falstaffe, and swaggering Pistoll. As it hath been sundrie times
-publikely acted by the right honourable, the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. _V[alentine] S[immes] for
-Andrew Wise and William Aspley._ [Two issues, the first of which omits
-III. i.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Second Part of Henry the Fourth, Containing his
-Death: and the Coronation of King Henry the Fift. [Distinct text from
-Q.]
-
- _Much Ado About Nothing. 1598_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ [1600], Aug. 4. ‘The commedie of muche A doo about nothing a
-booke ... to be staied’ (Arber, iii. 37).
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Aug. 23. ‘Muche a Doo about nothinge.’ _Andrew Wise and
-William Aspley_ (Arber, iii. 170).
-
-[Q] 1600. Much adoe about Nothing. As it hath been sundrie times
-publikely acted by the right honourable, the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. _V[alentine] S[immes] for
-Andrew Wise and William Aspley._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. Much adoe about Nothing. [From Q, with corrections.]
-
- _Henry V. 1599_
-
-_S. R._ No original entry. [Possibly the play was regarded from a
-stationer’s point of view as identical with the anonymous _Famous
-Victories of Henry V_ (q.v.) entered by Creede on 14 May 1594.]
-
-_S. R._ [1600], Aug. 4. ‘Henry the ffift, a booke ... to be staied’
-(Arber, iii. 37).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1600. The Chronicle History of Henry the fift, With his battell
-fought at Agin Court in France. Togither with Auntient Pistoll. As
-it hath bene sundry times playd by the Right honorable the Lord
-Chamberlaine his seruants. _Thomas Creede for Tho. Millington and Iohn
-Busby._
-
-_S. R._ 1600, Aug. 14. Transfer to Thomas Pavier, with other ‘thinges
-formerlye printed and sett over to’ him (Arber, iii. 169).
-
-[Q_{2}] 1602. _Thomas Creede for Thomas Pauier._
-
-[Q_{3}] [1619]. ‘_Printed for T. P. 1608._’ [On the evidence for
-printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard, _F. and Q._
-81.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Life of Henry the Fift. [Distinct text from Qq.]
-
-_S. R._ 1626, Aug. 4. Transfer from Mrs. Pavier to Edward Brewster and
-Robert Birde of interest in ‘The history of Henry the fift and the play
-of the same’ (Arber, iv. 164).
-
-_S. R._ 1630, Nov. 8. Transfer from Bird to Richard Cotes of ‘Henrye
-the Fift’ and ‘Agincourt’ (Arber, iv. 242).
-
- _Julius Caesar. 1599_
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Iulius Cæsar.
-
- _The Merry Wives of Windsor. 1599–1600_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1602, Jan. 18 (Seton). ‘A booke called An excellent and
-pleasant conceited commedie of Sir John ffaulstof and the merry wyves
-of Windesor.’ _John Busby._ Transfer the same day from Busby to Arthur
-Johnson (Arber, iii. 199).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1602. A most pleasaunt and excellent conceited Comedie, of
-Syr Iohn Falstaffe, and the merrie Wiues of Windsor. Entermixed with
-sundrie variable and pleasing humors, of Syr Hugh the Welch Knight,
-Iustice Shallow, and his wise Cousin M. Slender. With the swaggering
-vaine of Auncient Pistoll, and Corporall Nym. By William Shakespeare.
-As it hath bene diuers times Acted by the right Honorable my Lord
-Chamberlaines seruants. Both before her Maiestie, and elsewhere.
-_T[homas] C[reede] for Arthur Iohnson._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1619. _[William Jaggard] for Arthur Johnson._ [On its relation
-to other plays printed by Jaggard in 1619, cf. Pollard _F. and Q._ 81.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Merry Wiues of Windsor. [Distinct text from Qq.]
-
-_S. R._ 1630, Jan. 29. Transfer from Johnson to Meighen (Arber,
-iv. 227).
-
-[Q_{3}] 1630. _T. H[arper] for R. Meighen._
-
- _As You Like It. 1600_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. As you Like it.
-
- _Hamlet. 1601_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1602, July 26 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called the Revenge
-of Hamlett Prince Denmarke as yt was latelie Acted by the Lord
-Chamberleyne his servantes.’ _James Robertes_ (Arber, iii. 212).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1603, The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet Prince of Denmarke.
-By William Shakespeare. As it hath beene diuerse times acted by
-his Highnesse seruants in the Cittie of London: as also in the two
-Vniuersities of Cambridge and Oxford, and elsewhere. _[Valentine
-Simmes] for N[icholas] L[ing] and Iohn Trundell._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1604.... Newly imprinted and enlarged to almost as much againe
-as it was, according to the true and perfect Coppie.... _I[ames]
-R[oberts] for N[icholas] L[ing]._ [Some copies are dated 1605. Distinct
-text from Q_{1}.]
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Nov. 19. Transfer from Ling to John Smethwick (Arber,
-iii. 365).
-
-[Q_{3}] 1611. _For Iohn Smethwicke._
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke. [Distinct
-text from Qq.]
-
-[Q_{4}] N.D. [after 1611]. _W[illiam] S[tansby] for Iohn Smethwicke._
-
-[Q_{5}] 1637. _R. Young for John Smethwicke._
-
- _Twelfth Night. 1601–2_
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. Twelfe Night, Or what you will.
-
- _Troilus and Cressida. 1602_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1603, Feb. 7. ‘Master Robertes, Entred for his copie in
-full Court holden this day to print when he hath gotten sufficient
-aucthority for yt, The booke of Troilus and Cresseda as yt is acted by
-my lord Chamberlens Men’ (Arber, iii. 226).
-
-_S. R._ 1609, Jan. 28 (Segar, ‘deputye to Sir George Bucke’). ‘A booke
-called the history of Troylus and Cressida.’ _Richard Bonion and Henry
-Walleys_ (Arber, iii. 400).
-
-[Q] 1609. The Historie of Troylus and Cresseida. As it was acted by the
-Kings Maiesties seruants at the Globe. Written by William Shakespeare.
-_G. Eld for R. Bonian and H. Walley._ [In a second issue the title
-became ‘The Famous Historie of Troylus and Cresseid. Excellently
-expressing the beginning of their loues, with the conceited wooing of
-Pandarus Prince of Licia’; and an Epistle headed ‘A neuer writer, to an
-euer reader. Newes’ was inserted.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Troylus and Cressida. [A distinct text
-from Q.]
-
- _All’s Well That Ends Well. 1602_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. All’s Well, that Ends Well.
-
- _Measure for Measure. 1604_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. Measure, For Measure.
-
- _Othello 1604_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1621, Oct. 6 (Buck). ‘The Tragedie of Othello, the moore of
-Venice.’ _Thomas Walkley_ (Arber, iv. 59).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1622. The Tragœdy of Othello, The Moore of Venice. As it hath
-beene diuerse times acted at the Globe, and at the Black-Friers, by
-his Maiesties Seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. _N[icholas]
-O[kes] for Thomas Walkley._ [Epistle by the Stationer to the Reader,
-signed ‘Thomas Walkley’.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Othello, the Moore of Venice. [Distinct
-text from Q_{1}]
-
-_S. R._ 1628, March 1. Transfer from Walkley to Richard Hawkins (Arber,
-iv. 194).
-
-[Q_{2}] 1630. _A. M[athewes] for Richard Hawkins._
-
-[Q_{3}] 1655.... The fourth Edition. _For William Leak._
-
- _Macbeth. 1605–6_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Macbeth.
-
- _King Lear. 1605–6_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Nov. 26 (Buck). ‘A booke called Master William
-Shakespeare his historye of Kinge Lear, as yt was played before the
-kinges maiestie at Whitehall vppon Sainct Stephens night at Christmas
-Last by his maiesties servantes playinge vsually at the Globe on the
-Banksyde.’ _Nathanael Butter and John Busby_ (Arber, iii. 366).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1608. M. William Shakspeare: His True Chronicle Historie of
-the life and death of King Lear and his three Daughters. With the
-vnfortunate life of Edgar, sonne and heire to the Earle of Gloster, and
-his sullen and assumed humour of Tom of Bedlam: As it was played before
-the Kings Maiestie at Whitehall vpon S. Stephans night in Christmas
-Hollidayes. By his Maiesties seruants playing vsually at the Gloabe
-on the Banckeside. _[Nicholas Okes?] for Nathaniel Butter and are to
-be sold at ... the Pide Bull...._ [Sheets freely corrected during
-printing.]
-
-[Q_{2}] [1619]. ‘_Printed for Nathaniel Butter, 1608._’ [On the
-evidence for printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard,
-81.]
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of King Lear. [From Q_{1} with corrections.]
-
-[Q_{3}] 1655. _By Jane Bell._
-
- _Antony and Cleopatra. 1606_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1608, May 20 (Buck). ‘A booke Called Anthony and Cleopatra.’
-_Edward Blount_ (Arber, iii. 378).
-
-_S. R._ 1623, Nov. 8. ‘Anthonie and Cleopatra’, with other playes for
-F_{1} [_vide supra_]. _Edward Blount and Isaac Jaggard_ (Arber, iv.
-107).
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Anthonie, and Cleopatra.
-
- _Coriolanus. 1606_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedy of Coriolanus.
-
- _Timon of Athens. 1607_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Lyfe of Tymon of Athens.
-
- _Pericles. 1608_ (?)
-
-_S. R._ 1608, May 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called The booke of Pericles
-prynce of Tyre.’ _Edward Blount_ (Arber, iii. 378).
-
-[Q_{1}] 1609. The Late, And much admired Play, Called Pericles, Prince
-of Tyre. With the true Relation of the whole Historie, aduentures, and
-fortunes of the said Prince: As also, The no lesse strange, and worthy
-accidents, in the Birth and Life, of his Daughter Mariana. As it hath
-been diuers and sundry times acted by his Maiesties Seruants, at the
-Globe on the Banck-side. By William Shakespeare. _[William White] for
-Henry Gosson._
-
-[Q_{2}] 1609. _[William White] for Henry Gosson._ [‘Eneer’ for ‘Enter’
-on A_{2}].
-
-[Q_{3}] 1611. _By S[imon] S[tafford]._
-
-[Q_{4}] ‘_Printed for T[homas] P[avier] 1619._’ [The signatures are
-continuous with those of _The Whole Contention_ printed n.d. in 1619.
-Probably the printer was William Jaggard; cf. Pollard, 81.]
-
-[Q_{5}] 1630. _I. N[orton]for R. B[ird]._ [Two issues.]
-
-[Q_{6}] 1635. _By Thomas Cotes._
-
-[F_{3}] 1664. Pericles Prince of Tyre. [Distinct text from Qq.]
-
- _Cymbeline. 1609_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tragedie of Cymbeline.
-
- _The Winter’s Tale. 1610_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Winters Tale.
-
- _The Tempest. 1611_
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Tempest.
-
- _Henry VIII. 1613_ (?)
-
-[F_{1}] 1623. The Famous History of the Life of King Henry the Eight.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Besides the seven plays printed in F_{3} (_vide supra_) Shakespeare has
-been credited (cf. ch. xxiv) with the authorship of or contributions to
-_An Alarum for London_, _Arden of Feversham_, _Fair Em_, _Merry Devil
-of Edmonton_, _Troublesome Reign of King John_, _Mucedorus_, _Second
-Maiden’s Tragedy_, _Taming of A Shrew_, and perhaps more plausibly,
-_Contention of York and Lancaster_, _Edward III_, _Sir Thomas More_,
-and _T. N. K._ (cf. s.v. Beaumont).
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-Meres includes ‘Loue Labours Wonne’ in his list of 1598 (App. C, No.
-lii).
-
-On 9 Sept. 1653 Humphrey Mosely entered in the Stationers’ Register
-(Eyre, i. 428), in addition to _The Merry Devil of Edmonton_ with an
-ascription to Shakespeare (cf. ch. xxiv):
-
- ‘The History of Cardenio, by M^r Fletcher & Shakespeare.’
- ‘Henry y^e first, & Hen: the 2^d. by Shakespeare, & Davenport.’
-
-On 29 June 1660 he entered (Eyre, ii. 271):
-
- ‘The History of King Stephen. }
- Duke Humphrey, a Tragedy. } by Will: Shakspeare.’
- Iphis & Iantha or a marriage without }
- a man, a Comedy. }
-
-Warburton’s list of burnt plays (_3 Library_, ii. 230) contains:
-
- ‘Henry y^e 1^{st}. by Will. Shakespear & Rob. Davenport’,
- ‘Duke Humphery Will. Shakespear’,
-
-and in a supplementary list:
-
- ‘A Play by Will. Shakespear.’
-
-Of _Henry II_, _Stephen_, _Duke Humphrey_, and _Iphis and Iantha_
-nothing more is known.
-
-_Cardenio_ is presumably the play given as ‘Cardenno’ and ‘Cardenna’
-by the King’s men at Court in 1612–13 and again on 8 June 1613 (App.
-B). Its theme, from _Don Quixote_, Part I, chh. xxiii-xxxvii, is that
-of _Double Falsehood, or the Distressed Lovers_, published in 1728
-by Lewis Theobald as ‘written originally by W. Shakespeare, and now
-revised and adapted to the stage by M^r. Theobald’. In 1727 it had been
-produced at Drury Lane. Theobald claimed to have three manuscripts,
-no one of which is now known. One had formerly, he said, belonged to
-Betterton, and was in the handwriting of ‘M^r. _Downes_, the famous
-Old Prompter’ (cf. App. I). Another came from a ‘Noble Person’, with a
-tradition ‘that it was given by our Author, as a Present of Value, to a
-Natural Daughter of his, for whose Sake he wrote it, in the Time of his
-Retirement from the Stage’. Theobald is much under suspicion of having
-written _Double Falsehood_ himself (cf. T. R. Lounsbury, _The First
-Editors of Shakespeare_, 145).
-
-‘The Historye of Henry the First, written by Damport’ was licensed for
-the King’s men on 10 Apr. 1624 (_Var._ iii. 229, 319; Herbert, 27).
-
-
-EDWARD SHARPHAM (1576–1608).
-
-Edward was the third son of Richard Sharpham of Colehanger in East
-Allington, Devonshire, where he was baptized on 22 July 1576. He
-entered the Middle Temple on 9 Oct. 1594. He made his will on 22
-Apr. 1608, and was buried on the following day at St. Margaret’s,
-Westminster. It may be inferred that he died of plague. Unless he is
-the E. S. who wrote _The Discoveries of the Knights of the Post_
-(1597), he is only known by his two plays. There is no justification
-for identifying him with the Ed. Sharphell who prefixed a sonnet to
-the _Humours Heav’n on Earth_ (1605) of John Davies of Hereford,
-calling Davies his ‘beloued Master’, or, consequently, for assuming
-that he had been a pupil of Davies as writing-master at Magdalen,
-Oxford.
-
-_Dissertations_: G. C. Moore Smith, _E. S._ (1908, _10 N. Q._ x. 21),
-_John Mason and E. S._ (1913, _M. L. R._ viii. 371); M. W. Sampson,
-_The Plays of E. S._ (1910, _Studies in Language and Literature in
-Celebration of the 70th Birthday of J. M. Hart_, 440).
-
- _The Fleir. 1606_
-
-_S. R._ 1606, May 13. ‘A Comedie called The fleare. Provided that they
-are not to printe yt tell they bringe good aucthoritie and licence for
-the Doinge thereof.’ _John Trundell and John Busby_ (Arber, iii. 321).
-
-1606, Nov. 21. Transfer from Trundell to Busby and Arthur Johnson, with
-note ‘This booke is aucthorised by Sir George Bucke Master Hartwell and
-the wardens’ (Arber, iii. 333).
-
-1607. The Fleire. As it hath beene often played in the Blacke-Fryers by
-the Children of the Reuells. Written by Edward Sharpham of the Middle
-Temple, Gentleman. _F. B._ [Epistle to the Reader, by the printer.]
-
-1610; 1615; 1631.
-
-_Edition_ by H. Nibbe (1912, _Materialien_, xxxvi).
-
-The epistle says that the book has been ‘long lookt for’, that the
-author is ‘ith’ Country’ and that further ‘Comicall discourses’ from
-him are forthcoming. A date after the executions for treason on 30 Jan.
-1606 is suggested, as in the case of Marston’s _Fawn_, by ii. 364, ‘I
-have heard say, they will rise sooner, and goe with more deuotion to
-see an extraordinarie execution, then to heare a Sermon’, and with this
-indication allusions to the Union (ii. 258) and _Northward Ho!_ (ii.
-397) and resemblances to the _Fawn_ are consistent.
-
- _Cupid’s Whirligig. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, June 29 (Tylney). ‘A Comedie called Cupids
-Whirley-gigge.’ _John Busby and Arthur Johnson_ (Arber, iii. 354).
-
-1607. Cupid’s Whirligig, As it hath bene sundry times Acted by the
-Children of the Kings Majesties Reuels. _E. Allde, sold by A. Johnson._
-[Epistle to Robert Hayman, signed ‘E. S.’]
-
-1611; 1616; 1630.
-
-Baker, _Biographia Dramatica_, ii. 146, cites Coxeter as authority for
-a false ascription of the play to Shakespeare. But nobody could well
-have supposed Shakespeare to be indicated by the initials E. S., for
-which there is really no other candidate than Sharpham. The play must
-be the further ‘Comicall discourses’ promised by the same publishers in
-the epistle to _The Fleir_, and it may be added that Hayman (cf. _D. N.
-B._), like Sharpham, was a Devonshire man. The date may be taken to be
-1607, as the King’s Revels are not traceable earlier.
-
-
-SAMUEL SHEPPARD (> 1606–1652 <).
-
-The known work of this miscellaneous writer belongs to 1646–52, and
-although it includes a political tract in dramatic form, it is only his
-vague claim of a share, possibly as amanuensis, in Jonson’s _Sejanus_
-(q.v.), which suggests that he might be the unknown S. S. whose
-initials are on the title-page of _The Honest Lawyer_ (1616).
-
-
-SIR PHILIP SIDNEY (1554–86).
-
-Both his entertainments were printed for the first time with the third
-(1598) edition of the _Arcadia_.
-
- _The Lady of May. 1579_ (?)
-
-1598. The Countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia. Written by Sir Philip Sidney
-Knight. Now the third time published, with sundry new additions of
-the same Author. _For William Ponsonby._ [The description of the
-entertainment follows _Astrophel and Stella_ among the ‘new additions’,
-beginning at the head of sig. 3 B3^v, without title or date.]
-
-Reprints in 1599, 1605, 1613, 1621, 1622, 1623, 1627, 1629, 1633, 1638,
-1655, 1662, 1674 editions of the _Arcadia_.
-
-_Editions_ in Nichols, _Elizabeth^{1, 2}_, ii. 94 (1788–1823), and
-Collections of Sidney’s _Works_.
-
-The entertainment was in the Garden. As the Queen entered the grove,
-An Honest Man’s Wife of the Country delivered a speech and a written
-supplication in verse, for decision of the case of her daughter. Then
-came the daughter, chosen May Lady, and haled this way by six Shepherds
-on behalf of her lover Espilus and six Foresters on behalf of her
-lover Therion. The case was put to the Queen by Laius an old Shepherd,
-Rombus a Schoolmaster, and finally the May Lady herself. Espilus,
-accompanied by the Shepherds with recorders, and Therion, accompanied
-by the Foresters with cornets, sang in rivalry. A ‘contention’ followed
-between Dorcas, an old Shepherd, and Rixus, a young Forester, ‘whether
-of their fellows had sung better, and whether the estate of shepherds
-or foresters were the more worshipful’. Rombus tried to intervene. The
-May Lady appealed to the Queen, who decided for Espilus. Shepherds and
-Foresters made a consort together, Espilus sang a song, and the May
-Lady took her leave.
-
-Nichols assigns the entertainment to Elizabeth’s Wanstead visit of
-1578. But it might also belong to that of 1579, and possibly to that
-of 1582. In 1579, but not in 1578, the visit covered May Day. The
-references in the text are, however, to the month of May, rather than
-to May Day.
-
- _Pastoral Dialogue, c. 1580_
-
-1598. A Dialogue between two Shepherds, Vttered in a Pastorall Show at
-Wilton. [Appended to _Arcadia_; cf. _supra_.]
-
-_Edition_ in A. B. Grosart, _Poems of Sidney_ (1877), ii. 50.
-
-This dialogue between Dick and Will appears to belong to the series of
-poems motived by Sidney’s love for Penelope Devereux. It must therefore
-date between August 1577, when Sidney first visited his sister, Lady
-Pembroke, at Wilton, and his own marriage on 20 Sept. 1583. There is no
-indication that the Queen was present; not improbably the ‘Show’ took
-place while Sidney was out of favour at Court, and was living at Wilton
-from March to August 1580.
-
-
-JOHN SINGER (?-1603 <).
-
-On Singer’s career as an actor, see ch. xv.
-
-On 13 Jan. 1603, about which date he apparently retired from the
-Admiral’s, Henslowe paid him £5 ‘for his playe called Syngers
-vallentarey’ (Greg, _Henslowe_, i. 173; ii. 226). I think the term
-‘vallentarey’ must be used by Henslowe, rightly or wrongly, in the
-sense of ‘valedictory’. _Quips on Questions_ (1600), a book of
-‘themes’, is not his, but Armin’s (q.v.).
-
-
-WILLIAM SLY (?-1608).
-
-On Sly’s career as an actor, see ch. xv.
-
-He has been guessed at as the author of _Thomas Lord Cromwell_ (cf. ch.
-xxiv).
-
-
-W. SMITH.
-
-There are traceable (_a_) Wentworth Smith, who wrote plays for
-Henslowe’s companies, the Admiral’s, and Worcester’s during 1601–3
-(_vide infra_) and witnessed the will of W. Haughton in 1605; (_b_)
-a W. Smith, who wrote _Hector of Germany_ and _The Freeman’s Honour_
-(_vide infra_); (_c_) a ‘Smith’, whose _Fair Foul One_ Herbert
-licensed on 28 Nov. 1623 (Chalmers, _S. A._ 216; Herbert, 26); (_d_)
-if Warburton can be trusted, a ‘Will. Smithe’, whose _S^t George for
-England_ his cook burnt (_3 Library_, ii. 231). It is possible that
-(_a_) and (_b_) may be identical. A long space of time separates (_b_)
-and (_c_), and if (_d_) is to be identified with any other, it may
-most plausibly be with (_c_). There is nothing to connect any one of
-them with the William Smith who published sonnets under the title of
-_Chloris_ (1596), or with any other member of this infernal family, and
-the ‘W. S.’ of the anonymous _Locrine_ (1595), _Thomas Lord Cromwell_
-(1602), _The Puritan_ (1607) is more probably, in each case, aimed at
-Shakespeare.
-
- _The Hector of Germany, c. 1615_
-
-_S. R._ 1615, April 24 (Buck). ‘A play called The Hector of Germany,
-or the Palsgraue is a harmeles thinge.’ _Josias Harrison_ (Arber, iii.
-566). [The four last words of the title are scored through.]
-
-1615. The Hector of Germaine, or the Palsgrave, Prime Elector. A
-New Play, an Honourable Hystorie. As it hath beene publikely Acted
-at the Red Bull, and at the Curtaine, by a Companie of Young Men of
-this Citie. Made by W. Smith, with new Additions. _Thomas Creede for
-Josias Harrison._ [Epistle to Sir John Swinnerton, signed ‘W. Smith’;
-Prologue; after text, ‘Finis. W. Smyth.’ Some copies have a variant
-t.p.]
-
-_Edition_ by L. W. Payne (1906, _Pennsylvania Univ. Publ._).
-
-The epistle says ‘I have begun in a former Play, called the Freemans
-Honour, acted by the Now-Seruants of the Kings Maiestie, to
-dignifie the worthy Companie of the Marchantaylors’. If the phrase
-‘Now-Seruants’ implies production before 1603, the identification of W.
-Smith and Wentworth Smith becomes very probable. The prologue explains
-that the Palsgrave is not Frederick, since ‘Authorities sterne brow’
-would not permit ‘To bring him while he lives upon the stage’, and
-apologizes for the performance by ‘men of trade’.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-Henslowe assigns to Wentworth Smith a share in the following plays:
-
- _Plays for the Admiral’s, 1601–2_
-
-(i) _The Conquest of the West Indies._
-
-With Day and Haughton, Apr.–Sept. 1601.
-
-(ii) _1 Cardinal Wolsey._
-
-With Chettle, Drayton, and Munday, Aug.–Nov. 1601.
-
-(iii), (iv) _1, 2 The Six Clothiers._
-
-With Hathway and Haughton, Oct.–Nov. 1601. Apparently Part 2 was not
-finished.
-
-(v) _Too Good to be True._
-
-With Chettle and Hathway, Nov. 1601–Jan. 1602.
-
-(vi) _Love Parts Friendship._
-
-With Chettle, May 1602, conjectured to be the anonymous _Trial of
-Chivalry_ (q.v.).
-
-(vii) _Merry as May be._
-
-With Day and Hathway, Nov. 1602.
-
- _Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3_
-
-(viii) _Albere Galles._
-
-With Heywood, Sept. 1602, possibly identical with the anonymous
-_Nobody and Somebody_ (q.v.).
-
-(ix) _Marshal Osric._
-
-With Heywood, Sept. 1602, conceivably identical with _The Royal King
-and the Loyal Subject_, printed (1637) as by Heywood (q.v.).
-
-(x) _The Three_ (or _Two_) _Brothers_.
-
-Oct. 1602.
-
-(xi) _1 Lady Jane._
-
-With Chettle, Dekker, Heywood, and Webster, Oct. 1602. It is not
-certain that Smith, or any one but Dekker, had a hand in Part 2,
-which was apparently not finished. Part 1 is doubtless represented by
-the extant _Sir Thomas Wyatt_ of Dekker (q.v.) and Webster, in which
-nothing is at all obviously traceable to Smith.
-
-(xii), (xiii) _1, 2 The Black Dog of Newgate._
-
-With Day, Hathway, and another, Nov. 1602–Feb. 1603.
-
-(xiv) _The Unfortunate General._
-
-With Day and Hathway, Jan. 1602.
-
-(xv) _The Italian Tragedy._
-
-March 1603.
-
-
-EDMUND SPENSER (1552–99).
-
-The only record of Spenser’s dramatic experiments, unless they are
-buried amongst the anonymous plays of the Revels Accounts, is to be
-found in his correspondence of April 1580 with Gabriel Harvey, who
-wrote, ‘I imagine your Magnificenza will hold us in suspense ... for
-your nine English Commedies’, and again, ‘I am void of all judgment if
-your Nine Comedies, whereunto in imitation of Herodotus, you give the
-names of the Nine Muses (and in one mans fancy not unworthily) come
-not nearer Ariosto’s Comedies, either for the fineness of plausible
-elocution, or the rareness of Poetical Invention, than that Elvish
-Queen doth to his Orlando Furioso’ (_Two other Very Commendable
-Letters_, in Harvey’s _Works_, i. 67, 95). I can hardly suppose that
-the manuscript play of ‘Farry Queen’ in Warburton’s list (_3 Library_,
-ii. 232) had any connexion with Spenser’s comedies.
-
-
-ROD. STAFFORD.
-
-Probably the ‘Rod. Staff.’ who collaborated with Robert Wilmot (q.v.)
-in the Inner Temple play of _Gismond of Salerne_.
-
-
-WILLIAM STANLEY, EARL OF DERBY (1561–1642).
-
-Derby seems to have had players from 1594 to 1618, who presumably acted
-the comedies which he was said to be ‘penning’ in June 1599 (cf. ch.
-xiii), but none of these can be identified, although the company’s
-anonymous _Trial of Chivalry_ (1605) needs an author. A fantastic
-theory that his plays were for the Chamberlain’s, and that he wrote
-them under the name of William Shakespeare, was promulgated by J.
-Greenstreet in _The Genealogist_, n.s. vii. 205; viii. 8, 137, and has
-been elaborately developed by A. Lefranc in _Sous le Masque de ‘William
-Shakespeare’_ (1919) and later papers in _Le Flambeau_ and elsewhere.
-_A Midsummer Night’s Dream_ was not impossibly written for his wedding
-on 26 Jan. 1595 (cf. App. A and _Shakespeare Homage_, 154).
-
-
-JOHN STEPHENS (> 1611–1617 <).
-
-A Gloucester man, who entered Lincoln’s Inn in 1611, but is only known
-by his slight literary performances, of which the most important are
-his _Essayes_ of 1615 (cf. App. C, No. lx).
-
- _Cynthia’s Revenge > 1613_
-
-1613. Cinthias Revenge: or Maenanders Extasie. Written by John
-Stephens, Gent. _For Roger Barnes._ [There are two variant t.ps. of
-which one omits the author’s name. Epistle to Io. Dickinson, signed ‘I.
-S.’; Epistle to the Reader; Argument; Commendatory Verses, signed ‘F.
-C.’, ‘B. I.’, ‘G. Rogers’, ‘Tho. Danet’.]
-
-_Dissertation_: P. Simpson, _The Authorship and Original Issue of C.
-R._ (1907, _M. L. R._ ii. 348).
-
-The epistle to the reader says that the author’s name is ‘purposly
-concealed ... from the impression’, which accounts for the change of
-title-page. Stephens claims the authorship in the second edition of
-his _Essayes_ (1615). Kirkman (Greg, _Masques_, lxii) was misled into
-assigning it to ‘John Swallow’, by a too literal interpretation of F.
-C.’s lines:
-
- One Swallow makes no Summer, most men say,
- But who disproues that Prouerbe, made this Play.
-
-
-JOHN STUDLEY (_c._ 1545–_c._ 1590).
-
-Translator of Seneca (q.v.).
-
-
-ROBERT TAILOR (_c._ 1613).
-
-Tailor also published settings to _Sacred Hymns_ (1615) and wrote
-commendatory verses to John Taylor’s _The Nipping or Snipping of
-Abuses_ (1614).
-
- _Hog Hath Lost His Pearl. 1613_
-
-_S. R._ 1614, May 23, 1614 (Taverner and Buck). ‘A play booke called
-Hogge hath lost his pearle.’ _Richard Redmer_ (Arber, iii. 547).
-
-1614. The Hogge hath lost his Pearle. A Comedy. Divers times Publikely
-acted, by certaine London Prentices. By Robert Tailor. _For Richard
-Redmer._ [Prologue and Epilogue.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ iii).
-
-Sir H. Wotton wrote to Sir Edmund Bacon (Wotton, ii. 13): ‘On Sunday
-last at night, and no longer, some sixteen apprentices (of what sort
-you shall guess by the rest of the story) having secretly learnt a
-new play without book, intituled _The Hog hath lost his Pearl_, took
-up the White-Fryers for their theatre: and having invited thither (as
-it should seem) rather their mistresses than their masters; who were
-all to enter _per bullettini_ for a note of distinction from ordinary
-comedians, towards the end of the play the sheriffs (who by chance had
-heard of it) came in (as they say) and carried some six or seven of
-them to perform the last act at Bridewel; the rest are fled. Now it
-is strange to hear how sharp-witted the City is, for they will needs
-have Sir John Swinerton, the Lord Mayor, be meant by the Hog, and the
-late Lord Treasurer [Lord Salisbury] by the Pearl.’ Swinnerton was Lord
-Mayor in 1612–13. The letter is only dated ‘Tuesday’, but refers to
-the departure of the King, which was 22 Feb. 1613, as on the previous
-day. This would give the first Sunday in Lent (21 Feb.) for the date
-of production. The phrase (I. i) ‘Shrove-Tuesday is at hand’ suggests
-14 Feb., but the date originally intended was very likely altered.
-The Prologue refers to the difficulties of the producers. The play
-had been ‘toss’d from one house to another’. It does not grunt at
-‘state-affairs’ or ‘city vices’. There had been attempts to ‘prevent’
-it, but it ‘hath a Knight’s license’, doubtless Sir George Buck’s. In
-I. i is some chaff, apparently directed at Garlic and the Fortune, and
-an interview between a player and one Haddit, who writes a jig called
-_Who Buys my Four Ropes of Hard Onions_ for four angels, and a promise
-of a box for a new play. Fleay, ii. 256, identifies Haddit with Dekker,
-but his reasons do not bear analysis, and Haddit is no professional
-playwright, but a gallant who has run through his fortune. A passage
-in Act III (Dodsley, p. 465) bears out the suggestion of satire on the
-house of Cecil.
-
-
-RICHARD TARLTON (?-1588).
-
-On his career as an actor, cf. ch. xv.
-
- _The Seven Deadly Sins. 1585_
-
-[_MS._] _Dulwich MS._ xix, ‘The platt of The secound parte of the Seuen
-Deadlie sinns.’ [This was found pasted inside the boards forming the
-cover to a manuscript play of the seventeenth century, _The Tell Tale_
-(_Dulwich MS._ xx).]
-
-The text is given by Malone, _Supplement_ (1780), i. 60; Steevens,
-_Variorum_ (1803), iii. 404; Boswell, _Variorum_ (1821), iii. 348;
-Collier, iii. 197; Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 129; and a photographic
-facsimile by W. Young, _History of Dulwich_ (1889), ii. 5.
-
-The ‘platt’ names a number of actors and may thereby be assigned
-to a revival by the Admiral’s or Strange’s men about 1590 (cf. ch.
-xiii). The play consisted of three episodes illustrating Envy, Sloth,
-and Lechery, together with an Induction. This renders plausible the
-conjecture of Fleay, 83, supported by Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 153, that
-it is the _Four Plays in One_ revived by Strange’s for Henslowe on
-6 March 1592. And if so, the original two parts may be traceable in
-the _Five Plays in One_ and the _Three Plays in One_ of the Queen’s
-men in 1585. Tarlton was of course a Queen’s man, and evidence of his
-authorship is furnished by Gabriel Harvey, who in his _Four Letters_
-(1592, _Works_, i. 194) attacks Nashe’s _Pierce Penilesse_ (1592) as
-‘not Dunsically botched-vp, but right-formally conueied, according
-to the stile, and tenour of Tarletons president, his famous play of
-the seauen Deadly sinnes; which most deadly, but most liuely playe, I
-might haue seene in London; and was verie gently inuited thereunto at
-Oxford by Tarleton himselfe’. Nashe defends himself against the charge
-of plagiarism in his _Strange News_ (1592, _Works_, i. 304, 318), and
-confirms the indication of authorship.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-Tarlton has been suggested as the author of the anonymous _Famous
-Victories of Henry V_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-JOHN TAYLOR (1580–1653).
-
-Known as the Water Poet. His description of the festivities at the
-wedding of Princess Elizabeth in 1613 (cf. ch. xxiv, C) is only one of
-innumerable pamphlets in verse and prose, several of which throw light
-on stage history. Many of these were collected in his folio _Workes_
-of 1630, reprinted with others of his writings by the Spenser Society
-during 1868–78. There is also a collection by C. Hindley (1872).
-
-
-CHARLES TILNEY (_ob._ 1586).
-
-Said, on manuscript authority alleged by Collier, to be the author of
-_Locrine_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-THOMAS TOMKIS (> 1597–1614 <).
-
-Tomkis entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1597, took his B.A. in
-1600 and his M.A. in 1604, and became Fellow of Trinity in the same
-year. He has been confused by Fleay, ii. 260, and others with various
-members of a musical family of Tomkins.
-
- _Lingua. 1602 < > 7_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, Feb. 23 (Wilson). ‘A Commedie called Lingua.’ _Simon
-Waterson_ (Arber, iii. 340).
-
-1607. Lingua: Or The Combat of the Tongue, And the fiue Senses. For
-Superiority. _G. Eld for Simon Waterson._ [Prologue.]
-
-1617; 1622; n.d.; 1632; 1657.
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1874) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, _S. F. T._).--_Dissertation_: F. S.
-Boas, _Macbeth and L._ (1909, _M. L. R._ iv. 517).
-
-Winstanley (1687) assigned the play to Antony Brewer, but Sir J.
-Harington, in a memorandum printed by F. J. Furnivall from _Addl.
-MS._ 27632 in _7 N. Q._ ix. 382, notes ‘The combat of Lingua made by
-Thom. Tomkis of Trinity colledge in Cambridge’, and this is rendered
-plausible by the resemblance of the play to _Albumazar_. It is clearly
-of an academic type. As to the date there is less certainty. G. C.
-Moore Smith (_M. L. R._ iii. 146) supports 1602 by a theory that a
-compliment (IV. vii) to Queen Psyche is really meant for Elizabeth,
-and contains allusions to notable events of her reign. I do not find
-his interpretations very convincing, although I should not like to say
-that they are impossible. Fleay, ii. 261, starting from a tradition
-handed down by the publisher of 1657 that Oliver Cromwell acted in the
-play, conjectures that the play formed part of Sir Oliver Cromwell’s
-entertainment of James at Hinchinbrook on 27–9 April 1603, and that his
-four-year-old nephew took the four-line part of Small Beer (_IV._ v).
-Either date would fit in with the remark in _III._ v, ‘About the year
-1602 many used this skew kind of language’. Boas, however, prefers a
-date near that of publication, on account of similarities to passages
-in _Macbeth_. The play was translated as _Speculum Aestheticum_ for
-Maurice of Hesse-Cassel in 1613 by Johannes Rhenanus, who probably
-accompanied Prince Otto to England in 1611; cf. P. Losch, _Johannes
-Rhenanus_ (1895).
-
- _Albumazar. 1615_
-
-_S. R._ 1615, April 28 (Nidd). ‘Albumazar a comedie acted before his
-Maiestie at Cambridg 10^o Martii 1614.’ _Nicholas Okes_ (Arber, iii.
-566).
-
-1615. Albumazar. A Comedy presented before the Kings Maiestie at
-Cambridge, the ninth of March, 1614. By the Gentlemen of Trinitie
-Colledge. _Nicholas Okes for Walter Burre._ [Prologue.]
-
-1615. _Nicholas Okes for Walter Burre._ [Another edition with the same
-t.p.]
-
-1634.... Newly revised and corrected by a speciall Hand. _Nicholas
-Okes._
-
-1634. _Nicholas Okes._
-
-1668.... As it is now Acted at His Highness the Duke of York’s Theatre.
-_For Thomas Dring._ [Prologue by Dryden.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ ii).
-
-The play is assigned to ‘M^r Tomkis, Trinit.’ in an account of the
-royal visit given by S. Pegge from Sir Edward Dering’s MS. in _Gent.
-Mag._ xxvi. 224, and a bursar’s account-book for 1615 has the entry,
-‘Given M^r. Tomkis for his paines in penning and ordering the Englishe
-Commedie at our Masters appoyntment, xx^{ll}’ (_3 N. Q._ xii. 155).
-Chamberlain wrote to Carleton (Birch, i. 304) that ‘there was no great
-matter in it more than one good clown’s part’. It is an adaptation
-of Giambattista Porta’s _L’Astrologo_ (1606). No importance is to be
-attached to the suggestion of H. I. in _3 N. Q._ ix. 178, 259, 302,
-that Shakespeare was the author and wrote manuscript notes in a copy
-possessed by H. I. Dryden regards the play as the model of Jonson’s
-_Alchemist_ (1610):
-
- Subtle was got by our Albumazar,
- That Alchymist by our Astrologer.
-
-Unless Dryden was mistaken, the performance in 1615 was only a revival,
-but the payment for ‘penning’ makes this improbable.
-
- _Doubtful Later Play_
-
-G. C. Moore Smith (_M. L. R._ iii. 149) supports the attribution by
-Winstanley to Tomkis of _Pathomachia or the Battle of Affections_
-(1630), also called in a running title and in _Bodl. MS. Eng. Misc._ e.
-5 _Love’s Load-stone_, a University play of _c._ 1616, in which there
-are two references to ‘Madame Lingua’.
-
-
-CYRIL TOURNEUR (?-1626).
-
-Tourneur, or Turnor, first appears as the author of a satire, _The
-Transformed Metamorphosis_ (1600), but his history and relationships
-to the Cecils and to Sir Francis Vere suggest that he was connected
-with a Richard Turnor who served in the Low Countries as water-bailiff
-and afterwards Lieutenant of Brill during 1585–96. His career as a
-dramatist was over by 1613, and from December of that year to his death
-on 28 Feb. 1626 he seems himself to have been employed on foreign
-service, mainly in the Low Countries but finally at Cadiz, where he was
-secretary to the council of war under Sir Edward Cecil in 1625. He died
-in Ireland and left a widow Mary.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1878. J. C. Collins, _The Plays and Poems of C. T._ 2 vols.
-
-1888. J. A. Symonds, _Webster and Tourneur_ (_Mermaid
-Series_).
-
-_Dissertations_: G. Goodwin in _Academy_ (9 May 1891); T. Seccombe in
-_D. N. B._ (1899).
-
- _The Atheist’s Tragedy. 1607 < > 11_
-
-_S. R._ 1611, Sept. 14 (Buck). ‘A booke called, The tragedy of the
-Atheist.’ _John Stepneth_ (Arber, iii. 467).
-
-1611. The Atheist’s Tragedie: Or The honest Man’s Reuenge, As in diuers
-places it hath often beene Acted. Written by Cyril Tourneur. _For John
-Stepneth and Richard Redmer._
-
-1612. _For John Stepneth and Richard Redmer._ [Another issue.]
-
-Fleay, ii. 263, attempts to date the play before the close of the siege
-of Ostend in 1604, but, as E. E. Stoll, _John Webster_, 210, points
-out, this merely dates the historic action and proves nothing as to
-composition. Stoll himself finds some plausible reminiscences of _King
-Lear_ (1606) and suggests a date near that of publication.
-
- LOST PLAYS
-
- _The Nobleman. c. 1612_
-
-_S. R._ 1612, Feb. 15 (Buck). ‘A play booke beinge a Trage-comedye
-called, The Noble man written by Cyril Tourneur.’ _Edward Blount_
-(Arber, iii. 478).
-
-1653, Sept. 9. ‘The Nobleman, or Great Man, by Cyrill Tourneur.’
-_Humphrey Moseley_ (Eyre, i. 428).
-
-The play was acted by the King’s at Court on 23 Feb. 1612 and again
-during the winter of 1612–13. Warburton’s list of plays burnt by his
-cook (_3 Library_, ii. 232) contains distinct entries of ‘The Great Man
-T.’ and ‘The Nobleman T. C. Cyrill Turñuer’. Hazlitt, _Manual_, 167,
-says (1892): ‘Dr. Furnivall told me many years ago that the MS. was in
-the hands of a gentleman at Oxford, who was editing Tourneur’s Works;
-but I have heard nothing further of it. Music to a piece called The
-Nobleman is in _Addl. MS. B.M._ 10444.’
-
-For _The Arraignment of London_ (1613) v.s. Daborne.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Tourneur’s hand has been sought in the _Honest Man’s Fortune_ of the
-Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher series, and in _Charlemagne_, _Revenger’s
-Tragedy_, and _Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
-
-NICHOLAS TROTTE (_c._ 1588).
-
-A Gray’s Inn lawyer, who wrote an ‘Introduction’ for the _Misfortunes
-of Arthur_ of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588.
-
-
-RICHARD VENNAR (_c._ 1555–1615?).
-
-Vennar (Vennard), who has often been confused with William Fennor, a
-popular rhymer, was of Balliol and Lincoln’s Inn, and lived a shifty
-life, which ended about 1615 in a debtor’s prison. Its outstanding
-feature was the affair of _England’s Joy_, but in 1606 he is said (_D.
-N. B._) to have been in trouble for an attempt to defraud Sir John
-Spencer of £500 towards the preparation of an imaginary mask under the
-patronage of Sir John Watts, the Lord Mayor.
-
-_England’s Joy. 1602_
-
-[_Broadsheet_] The Plot of the Play, called England’s Joy. To be Played
-at the Swan this 6 of Nouember, 1602. [No. 98 in collection of Society
-of Antiquaries.]
-
-_Reprints_ by W. Park in _Harleian Miscellany_ (1813), x. 198; S. Lee
-(1887, _vide infra_); W. Martin (1913, _vide infra_); W. J. Lawrence
-(1913, _vide infra_).--_Dissertations_: S. Lee, _The Topical Side of
-the Elizabethan Drama_ (_N. S. S. Trans._ 1887–92, 1); T. S. Graves,
-_A Note on the Swan Theatre_ (1912, _M. P._ ix. 431), _Tricks of
-Elizabethan Showmen_ (_South Atlantic Quarterly_, April 1915); W.
-Martin, _An Elizabethan Theatre Programme_ (1913, _Selborne Magazine_,
-xxiv. 16); W. J. Lawrence (ii. 57), _The Origin of the Theatre
-Programme_.
-
-The document appears to be a ‘bill’. It is 12¾ by 7¾ inches, and
-contains a synopsis under nine heads, beginning with the civil wars
-from Edward III to Mary ‘induct by shew and in Action’, and continuing
-with episodes from the reign of Elizabeth, who is England’s Joy. In
-sc. viii ‘a great triumph is made with fighting of twelue Gentlemen
-at Barriers’, and in sc. ix Elizabeth ‘is taken vp into Heauen, when
-presently appeares, a Throne of blessed Soules, and beneath vnder the
-Stage set forth with strange fireworkes, diuers blacke and damned
-Soules, wonderfully discribed in their seuerall torments’. Apart from
-the bill, Vennar must have given it out that the performers were to be
-amateurs. Chamberlain, 163, writes to Carleton on 19 Nov. 1602:
-
- ‘And, now we are in mirth, I must not forget to tell you of
- a cousening prancke of one Venner, of Lincolns Inne, that
- gave out bills of a famous play on Satterday was sevenight
- on the Banckeside, to be acted only by certain gentlemen
- and gentlewomen of account. The price at cumming in was two
- shillings or eighteen pence at least; and when he had gotten
- most part of the mony into his hands, he wold have shewed them
- a faire paire of heeles, but he was not so nimble to get up on
- horse-backe, but that he was faine to forsake that course, and
- betake himselfe to the water, where he was pursued and taken,
- and brought before the Lord Chiefe Justice, who wold make
- nothing of it but a jest and a merriment, and bounde him over
- in five pound to appeare at the sessions. In the meane time
- the common people, when they saw themselves deluded, revenged
- themselves upon the hangings, curtains, chairs, stooles, walles,
- and whatsoever came in theire way, very outragiously, and made
- great spoile; there was great store of good companie, and many
- noblemen.’
-
-Similarly John Manningham in his _Diary_, 82, 93, notes in Nov. 1602,
-how
-
- ‘Vennar, a gent. of Lincolnes, who had lately playd a notable
- cunni-catching tricke, and gulled many under couller of a play
- to be of gent. and reuerens, comming to the court since in a
- blacke suit, bootes and golden spurres without a rapier, one
- told him he was not well suited; the golden spurres and his
- brazen face uns[uited].’
-
-On 27 Nov. he adds, ‘When one said that Vennar the graund connicatcher
-had golden spurres and a brazen face, “It seemes”, said R. R. “he hath
-some mettall in him.”’ Vennar’s own account of ‘my publique default of
-the Swan, where not a collier but cals his deere 12 pense to witnesse
-the disaster of the day’ was given many years later in ‘_An Apology_:
-Written by Richard Vennar, of Lincolnes Inne, abusively called Englands
-Joy. 1614’, printed by Collier in _Illustrations_ (1866), iii. It vies
-in impudence with the original offence. He had been in prison and was
-in debt, and ‘saw daily offering to the God of pleasure, resident at
-the Globe on the Banke-side’. This suggested his show, ‘for which they
-should give double payment, to the intent onely, men of ability might
-make the purchase without repentance’. He continues:
-
- ‘My devise was all sorts of musique, beginning with chambers,
- the harpe of war, and ending with hounds, the cry of peace, of
- which I was doubly provided for Fox and Hare. The report of
- gentlemen and gentlewomens actions, being indeed the flagge
- to our theater, was not meerely falcification, for I had
- divers Chorus to bee spoken by men of good birth, schollers by
- profession, protesting that the businesse was meerely abused
- by the comming of some beagles upon mee that were none of the
- intended kennell: I meane baylifes, who, siezing mee before the
- first entrance, spoke an Epilogue instead of a Prologue. This
- changed the play into the hunting of the fox, which, that the
- world may know for a verity, I heere promise the next tearme,
- with the true history of my life, to bee publiquely presented,
- to insert, in place of musicke for the actes, all those
- intendments prepared for that daies enterteinment.’
-
-Later on he says, ‘I presented you with a dumbe show’, and jests on
-getting ‘so much mony for six verses’, which, I suppose, means that the
-performance was intended to be a spoken one, but was broken off during
-the prologue. Apparently the new entertainment contemplated by Vennar
-in 1614 was in fact given, not by him but by William Fennor, to whom
-John Taylor writes in his _A Cast Over Water_ (1615):
-
- Thou brag’st what fame thou got’st upon the stage.
- Indeed, thou set’st the people in a rage
- In playing England’s Joy, that every man
- Did judge it worse than that was done at Swan.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Upon S. George’s day last, sir, you gave
- To eight Knights of the Garter (like a knave),
- Eight manuscripts (or Books) all fairelie writ,
- Informing them, they were your mother wit:
- And you compil’d them; then were you regarded,
- And for another’s wit was well rewarded.
- All this is true, and this I dare maintaine,
- The matter came from out a learned braine:
- And poor old _Vennor_ that plaine dealing man,
- Who acted England’s Joy first at the Swan,
- Paid eight crowns for the writing of these things.
- Besides the covers, and the silken strings.
-
-Robin Goodfellow, in Jonson’s _Love Restored_ (_1612_), calls the
-absence of a mask ‘a fine trick, a piece of England’s Joy’, and three
-characters in the _Masque of Augurs_ (_1622_) are said to be ‘three
-of those gentlewomen that should have acted in that famous matter of
-England’s Joy in six hundred and three’--apparently a slip of Jonson’s
-as to the exact date. Other allusions to the ‘gullery’ are in Saville,
-_Entertainment of King James at Theobalds_ (1603); R. Brathwaite, _The
-Poet’s Palfrey_ (_Strappado for the Devil_, ed. J. W. Ebsworth, 160);
-J. Suckling, _The Goblins_ (ed. Hazlitt, ii. 52); W. Davenant, _Siege
-of Rhodes_, Pt. ii, prol. It may be added that Vennar’s cozenage was
-perhaps suggested by traditional stories of similar tricks. One is
-ascribed to one Qualitees in _Merry Tales, Wittie Questions and Quick
-Answeres_, cxxxiii (1567, Hazlitt, _Jest Books_, i. 145). In this
-bills were set up ‘vpon postes aboute London’ for ‘an antycke plaie’
-at Northumberland Place and ‘all they that shoulde playe therin were
-gentilmen’. Another is the subject of one of the _Jests_ of George
-Peele (Bullen, ii. 389). W. Fennor, _The Compters Commonwealth_
-(1617), 64, tells of an adventure of ‘one M^r. Venard (that went by
-the name of Englands Joy)’ in jail, where he afterwards died.
-
-
-EDWARD DE VERE, EARL OF OXFORD (1550–1604).
-
-Meres (1598) includes the earl in his list of ‘the best for Comedy
-amongst vs’ but although Oxford had theatrical servants at intervals
-from 1580 to 1602 (cf. ch. xiii), little is known of their plays, and
-none can be assigned to him, although the anonymous _The Weakest Goeth
-to the Wall_ (1600) calls for an author. J. T. Looney, _Shakespeare
-Identified_ (1920), gives him Shakespeare’s plays, many of which were
-written after his death.
-
-
-FRANCIS VERNEY (1584–1615).
-
-Francis, the eldest son of Sir Edmund Verney of Penley, Herts., and
-Claydon, Bucks., entered Trinity College, Oxford, in 1600, and was
-knighted on 14 March 1604. As a result of family disputes, he left
-England about 1608, and became a pirate in the Mediterranean, dying at
-Messina on 6 Sept. 1615 (_Verney Memoirs^2_, i. 47). G. C. Moore Smith
-(_M. L. R._ iii. 151) gives him the following play.
-
- _Antipoe. 1603 < > 8_
-
-[_MS._] _Bodl. MS._ 31041, ‘The tragedye of Antipoe with other poetical
-verses written by mee Nic^o. Leatt Jun. in Allicant In June 1622’, with
-Epistles to James and the Reader by ‘Francis Verney’. Presumably Verney
-was the author, and Nicolas only a scribe.
-
-
-ANTONY WADESON (_c._ 1601).
-
-Henslowe made payments to him on behalf of the Admiral’s in June and
-July 1601 for a play called _The Honourable Life of the Humorous Earl
-of Gloucester, with his Conquest of Portugal_, but these only amounted
-to 30_s._, so that possibly the play was not finished.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-The anonymous _Look About You_ (cf. ch. xxiv) has been ascribed to
-Wadeson.
-
-
-LEWIS WAGER (_c._ 1560).
-
-Wager became Rector of St. James Garlickhithe on 28 March 1560. Some
-resemblance of his style to that of W. Wager has led to an assumption
-that they were related. He was a corrector of books.
-
- _The Life and Repentance of Mary Magdalene > 1566_
-
-_S. R._ 1566–7. ‘An interlude of the Repentaunce of Mary Magdalen.’
-_John Charlwood_ (Arber, i. 335).
-
-1566. A new Enterlude, neuer before this tyme imprinted, entreating
-of the Life and Repentaunce of Marie Magdalene: not only godlie,
-learned and fruitefull, but also well furnished with pleasaunt myrth
-and pastime, very delectable for those which shall heare or reade
-the same. Made by the learned clarke Lewis Wager. _John Charlwood._
-[Prologue.]
-
-1567. _John Charlwood._ [Probably a reissue. Two manuscript copies in
-the Dyce collection seem to be made from this edition.]
-
-_Editions_ by F. I. Carpenter (1902, 1904, _Chicago Decennial
-Publications_, ii. 1) and J. S. Farmer (1908, _T. F. T._).
-
-A play of Protestant tone, with biblical and allegorical characters,
-including ‘Infidelitie the Vice’, intended for four [five] actors.
-There is a Prologue, intended for actors who have ‘vsed this feate at
-the vniuersitie’ and will take ‘half-pence or pence’ from the audience.
-Carpenter dates the play _c._ 1550; but his chief argument that the
-prologue recommends obedience ‘to the kyng’ is not very convincing.
-
-See also W. Wager, s.v. _The Cruel Debtor._
-
-
-W. WAGER (_c._ 1559).
-
-Nothing is known of him beyond his plays and the similarity of his name
-to that of Lewis Wager (q.v.). Joseph Hunter, _Chorus Vatum_, v. 90,
-attempts to identify him with William Gager (q.v.), but this is not
-plausible. On the illegitimate extension of W. into William and other
-bibliographical confusions about the two Wagers, _vide_ W. W. Greg,
-_Notes on Dramatic Bibliographers_ (_M. S. C._ i. 324).
-
- _The Longer Thou Livest, the More Fool Thou Art. c. 1559_
-
-_S. R._ 1568–9. ‘A ballett the lenger thou leveste the more ffoole
-thow.’ _Richard Jones_ (Arber, i. 386).
-
-N.D. A very mery and Pythie Commedie, called The longer thou liuest,
-the more foole thou art. A Myrrour very necessarie for youth, and
-specially for such as are like to come to dignitie and promotion: As it
-maye well appeare in the Matter folowynge. Newly compiled by W. Wager.
-_William Howe for Richard Jones._ [Prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by Brandl (1900, _Jahrbuch_ xxxvi. 1) and J. S.
-Farmer (1910, _S. F. T._).
-
-A Protestant moral of 1,977 lines, with allegorical characters,
-arranged for four actors. Moros enters ‘synging the foote of many
-Songes, as fooles were wont’. Elizabeth is prayed for as queen, but the
-Catholic domination is still recent.
-
- _Enough is as Good as a Feast. c. 1560_
-
-N.D. A Comedy or Enterlude intituled, Inough is as good as a feast,
-very fruteful, godly and ful of pleasant mirth. Compiled by W. Wager.
-_By John Allde._ [The t.p. has also ‘Seuen may easely play this
-Enterlude’, with an arrangement of parts. The play was unknown until
-it appeared in Lord Mostyn’s sale of 1919. The seventeenth-century
-publishers’ lists record the title, but without ascription to Wager
-(Greg, _Masques_, lxvi).]
-
-_Edition_ by S. de Ricci (1920, _Huntingdon Reprints_, ii).
-
-F. S. Boas (_T. L. S._ 20 Feb. 1919) describes the play as ‘a
-morality with a controversial Protestant flavour’; at the end Satan
-carries off the Vice, Covetouse, on his back. Elizabeth is prayed for.
-
- _The Cruel Debtor. c. 1565_
-
-_S. R._ 1565–6. ‘A ballet intituled an interlude the Cruell Detter by
-Wager.’ _Thomas Colwell_ (Arber, i. 307).
-
-N.D. Fragments. C. iii in Bagford Collection (_Harl. MS._ 5919); D and
-D 4(?) formerly in collection of W. B. Scott, now in B.M. (C. 40, e.
-48).
-
-_Editions_ by F. J. Furnivall (1878, _N. S. S. Trans._ 1877–9, 2*) and
-W. W. Greg (1911, _M. S. C._ i. 314).
-
-The speakers are Rigour, Flattery, Simulation, Ophiletis, Basileus, and
-Proniticus.
-
-R. Imelmann in _Herrig’s Archiv_, cxi. 209, would assign these
-fragments to Lewis Wager, rather than W. Wager, but the stylistic
-evidence is hardly conclusive either way, and there is no other.
-
- _Lost Play_
-
-Warburton’s list of manuscripts burnt by his cook (_3 Library_, ii.
-232) includes ’Tis Good Sleeping in A Whole Skin W. Wager’.
-
-
-GEORGE WAPULL (_c._ 1576).
-
-A George Wapull was clerk of the Stationers’ Company from 29 Sept. 1571
-to 30 May 1575. In 1584–5 the company assisted him with 10_s._ ‘towards
-his voyage unto Norembegue’ in America (Arber, i. xliv, 509).
-
- _The Tide Tarrieth No Man > 1576_
-
-_S. R._ 1576, Oct. 22. ‘An Enterlude intituled The tide tariethe noe
-man.’ _Hugh Jackson_ (Arber, ii. 303).
-
-1576. The Tyde taryeth no Man. A Moste Pleasant and merry Commody,
-right pythie and full of delight. Compiled by George Wapull. _Hugh
-Jackson._ [Prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1864, _Illustrations of Early English
-Literature_, ii), E. Ruhl (1907, _Jahrbuch_, xliii. 1), J. S. Farmer
-(1910, _T. F. T._).
-
-A non-controversial moral, with allegorical and typical characters,
-including ‘Courage, the vice’, arranged for four actors.
-
-
-WILLIAM WARNER (_c._ 1558–1609).
-
-Warner was educated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, and became an attorney.
-His chief work, _Albion’s England_ (1586), was dedicated to Henry Lord
-Hunsdon, and his _Syrinx_ (1585) to Sir George Carey, afterwards Lord
-Hunsdon.
-
- _Menaechmi > c. 1592_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, June 10. ‘A booke entituled Menachmi beinge A pleasant
-and fine Conceyted Comedye taken out of the moste excellent wittie
-Poett Plautus chosen purposely from out the reste as leaste harmefull
-and yet moste delightfull.’ _Thomas Creede_ (Arber, ii. 653).
-
-1595. Menaecmi, A pleasant and fine Conceited Comædie, taken out of the
-most excellent wittie Poet Plautus: Chosen purposely from out the rest,
-as least harmefull, and yet most delightfull. Written in English, by W.
-W. _Thomas Creede, sold by William Barley._ [Epistle by the Printer to
-the Readers; Argument.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. Nichols (1779, _Six Old Plays_, i), W. C. Hazlitt
-(1875, _Sh. L._ ii. 1), and W. H. D. Rouse (1912, _Sh. Classics_).
-
-This translation is generally supposed to have influenced the
-_Comedy of Errors_. If so, Shakespeare must have had access to it in
-manuscript, and it must have been available before _c._ 1592. The
-epistle speaks of Warner as ‘having diverse of this Poetes Comedies
-Englished, for the use and delight of his private friends, who in
-Plautus owne words are not able to understand them’. No others are
-known.
-
-
-THOMAS WATSON (_c._ 1557–92).
-
-An Oxford man, who took no degree, and a lawyer, who did not practise,
-Watson became an elegant writer of English and Latin verse. He won the
-patronage of Walsingham at Paris in 1581, and became a member of the
-literary circle of Lyly and Peele. His most important volume of verse
-is the _Hekatompathia_ (1582) dedicated to the Earl of Oxford. At
-the time of his death in Sept. 1592 he was in the service of William
-Cornwallis, who afterwards wrote to Heneage that he ‘could devise
-twenty fictions and knaveryes in a play which was his daily practyse
-and his living’ (_Athenaeum_, 23 Aug. 1890). This suggests that the
-poet, and not the episcopal author of _Absalon_ (_Mediaeval Stage_,
-ii. 458), is the Watson included by Meres in 1598 amongst our ‘best
-for Tragedie’. But his plays, other than translations, must, if they
-exist, be sought amongst the anonymous work of 1581–92, where it would
-be an interesting task to reconstruct his individuality. In _Ulysses
-upon Ajax_ (1596) Harington’s anonymous critic says of his etymologies
-of Ajax, ‘Faith, they are trivial, the froth of witty Tom Watson’s
-jests, I heard them in Paris fourteen years ago: besides what balductum
-[trashy] play is not full of them’. In the meantime Oliphant (_M. P._
-viii. 437) has suggested that he may be the author of _Thorny Abbey,
-or, The London Maid_, printed by one R. D. with Haughton’s _Grim, the
-Collier of Croydon_ in _Gratiae Theatrales_ (1662) and there assigned
-to T. W. Oliphant regards _Thorny Abbey_ as clearly a late revision of
-an Elizabethan play.
-
- TRANSLATION
-
- _Antigone > 1581_
-
-_S. R._ 1581, July 31 (Bp. of London). ‘Aphoclis Antigone, Thoma
-Watsono interprete.’ _John Wolfe_ (Arber, ii. 398).
-
-1581. Sophoclis Antigone. Interprete Thoma Watsono I. V. studioso.
-Huic adduntur pompae quaedam, ex singulis Tragoediae actis deriuatae;
-& post eas, totidem themata sententiis refertissima; eodem Thoma
-Watsono Authore. _John Wolf._ [Latin translation. Verses to Philip
-Earl of Arundel, signed ‘Thomas Watsonus’. Commendatory Verses by
-Stephanus Broelmannus, Ἰωαννης Κωκος, Philip Harrison, Francis Yomans,
-Christopher Atkinson, C. Downhale, G. Camden.]
-
-
-JOHN WEBSTER (?-> 1634).
-
-There is little clue to the personal history of John Webster beyond the
-description of him on the title-page of his mayoral pageant _Monuments
-of Honour_ (1624) as ‘Merchant Taylor’, and his claim in the epistle to
-have been born free of the company. The records of the Merchant Taylors
-show that freemen of this name were admitted in 1571, 1576, and 1617,
-and that one of them was assessed towards the coronation expenses in
-1604. A John Webster, Merchant Taylor, also received an acknowledgement
-of a 15_s._ debt from John and Edward Alleyn on 25 July 1591 (Collier,
-_Alleyn Papers_, 14). A John Webster married Isabel Sutton at St.
-Leonard’s Shoreditch on 25 July 1590, and had a daughter Alice baptized
-there on 9 May 1606. It has been taken for granted that none of the
-sixteenth-century records can relate to the dramatist, although they
-may to his father. This presumably rests on the assumption that he must
-have been a young man when he began to write for Henslowe in 1602.
-It should, however, be pointed out that a John Webster, as well as a
-George Webster, appears amongst the Anglo-German actors of Browne’s
-group in 1596 (cf. ch. xiv) and that the financial record in the
-_Alleyn Papers_ probably belongs to a series of transactions concerning
-the winding up of a theatrical company in which Browne and the Alleyns
-had been interested (cf. ch. xiii, s.v. Admiral’s). It is conceivable
-therefore that Webster was an older man than has been suspected and had
-had a career as a player before he became a playwright.
-
-Gildon, _Lives of the Poets_ (1698), reports that Webster was parish
-clerk of St Andrew’s, Holborn. This cannot be confirmed from parish
-books, but may be true.
-
-As a dramatist, Webster generally appears in collaboration, chiefly
-with Dekker, and at rather infrequent intervals from 1602 up to 1624
-or later. In 1602 he wrote commendatory verses for a translation by
-Munday, and in 1612 for Heywood’s _Apology for Actors_. In 1613 he
-published his elegy _A Monumental Column_ on the death of Prince Henry,
-and recorded his friendship with Chapman. His marked tendency to borrow
-phrases from other writers helps to date his work. He can hardly be
-identified with the illiterate clothworker of the same name, who
-acknowledged his will with a mark on 5 Aug. 1625. But he is referred to
-in the past in Heywood’s _Hierarchie of the Angels_ (1635), Bk. iv, p.
-206, ‘Fletcher and Webster ... neither was but Iacke’, and was probably
-therefore dead.
-
- _Collections_
-
-1830. A. Dyce. 4 vols. 1857, 1 vol. [Includes _Malcontent_, _Appius and
-Virginia_, and _Thracian Wonder_.]
-
-1857. W. C. Hazlitt. 4 vols. (_Library of Old Authors_). [Includes
-_Appius and Virginia_, _Thracian Wonder_, and _The Weakest Goeth to the
-Wall_.]
-
-1888. J. A. Symonds, _W. and Tourneur_ (_Mermaid Series_). [_The White
-Devil_ and _Duchess of Malfi_.]
-
-1912. A. H. Thorndike, _Webster and Tourneur_. (_N. E. D._) [_White
-Devil_, _Duchess of Malfi_, _Appius and Virginia_.]
-
-_Dissertations_: E. Gosse, _J. W._ (1883, _Seventeenth-Century
-Studies_); A. C. Swinburne, _J. W._ (1886, _Studies in Prose and
-Poetry_, 1894); C. Vopel, _J. W._ (1888, _Bremen diss._); M. Meiners,
-_Metrische Untersuchungen über den Dramatiker J. W._ (1893, _Halle
-diss._); W. Archer, _Webster, Lamb, and Swinburne_ (1893, _New Review_,
-viii. 96); W. von Wurzbach, _J. W._ (1898, _Jahrbuch_, xxxi. 9);
-J. Morris, _J. W._ (_Fortnightly Review_, June 1902); E. E. Stoll,
-_J. W._ (1905); L. J. Sturge, _W. and the Law; a Parallel_ (1906,
-_Jahrbuch_, xlii, 148); C. Crawford, _J. W. and Sir Philip Sidney_
-(1906, _Collectanea_, i. 20), _Montaigne, W., and Marston: Donne and
-W._ (1907, _Collectanea_, ii. 1); F. E. Pierce, _The Collaboration of
-W. and Dekker_ (1909, _Yale Studies_, xxxvii); H. D. Sykes, _W. and
-Sir Thomas Overbury_ (1613, _11 N. Q._ viii. 221, 244, 263, 282, 304);
-A. F. Bourgeois, _W. and the N. E. D._ (1914, _11 N. Q._ ix. 302, 324,
-343); R. Brooke, _J. W. and the Elizabethan Drama_ (1916).
-
- _Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602_
-
-_With_ Chettle, Dekker (q.v.), Heywood, and Smith, for Worcester’s.
-
- _The Malcontent. 1604_
-
-Additions to the play of Marston (q.v.) for the King’s.
-
- _Westward Ho! 1604_
-
-_With_ Dekker (q.v.) for Paul’s.
-
- _Northward Ho! 1605_
-
-_With_ Dekker (q.v.) for Paul’s.
-
- _Appius and Virginia. c. 1608._
-
-_S. R._ 1654, May 13. ‘A play called Appeus and Virginia Tragedy
-written by John Webster.’ _Richard Marriott_ (Eyre, i. 448).
-
-1654. Appius and Virginia. A Tragedy. By Iohn Webster. [_No
-imprint._]
-
-1659. _For Humphrey Moseley._ [A reissue.]
-
-1679.
-
-_Edition_ by C. W. Dilke (1814–15, _O. E. P._ v).--_Dissertations_: J.
-Lauschke, _John Webster’s Tragödie A. und V. Eine Quellenstudie_ (1899,
-_Leipzig diss._); H. D. Sykes, _An Attempt to determine the Date of
-Webster’s A. and V._ (1913, _11 N. Q._ vii. 401, 422, 466; viii. 63);
-R. Brooke, _The Authorship of the Later A. and V._ (1913, _M. L. R._
-viii. 433), more fully in _John Webster_ (1916); A. M. Clark, _A. and
-V._ (1921, _M. L. R._ xvi. 1).
-
-The play is in Beeston’s list of Cockpit plays in 1639 (_Var._ iii.
-159), Webster’s authorship has generally been accepted, but Stoll,
-197, who put the play 1623–39, because of resemblances to _Julius
-Caesar_ and _Coriolanus_ which he thought implied a knowledge of F_{1},
-traced a dependence upon the comic manner of Heywood. Similarly, Sykes
-is puzzled by words which he thinks borrowed from Heywood and first
-used by Heywood in works written after Webster’s death. He comes to
-the conclusion that Heywood may have revised a late work by Webster.
-There is much to be said for the view taken by Brooke and Clark, after
-a thorough-going analysis of the problem, that the play is Heywood’s
-own, possibly with a few touches from Webster’s hand, and may have been
-written, at any date not long after the production of _Coriolanus_
-on the stage (_c._ 1608), for Queen Anne’s men, from whom it would
-naturally pass into the Cockpit repertory.
-
- _The White Devil. 1609 < > 12_
-
-1612. The White Divel; Or, The Tragedy of Paulo Giordano Ursini, Duke
-of Brachiano, With The Life and Death of Vittoria Corombona the famous
-Venetian Curtizan. Acted by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by
-Iohn Webster. _N. O. for Thomas Archer._ (Epistle to the Reader; after
-text, a note.)
-
-1631.... Acted, by the Queenes Maiesties seruants, at the Phœnix, in
-Drury Lane. _I. N. for Hugh Perry._
-
-1665; 1672.
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–3} (1744–1825) and by W. Scott (1810, _A.
-B. D._ iii) and M. W. Sampson (1904, _B. L._).--_Dissertations_: B.
-Nicholson, _Thomas Adams’ Sermon on The W. D._ (1881, _6 N. Q._ iii.
-166); W. W. Greg, _W.’s W. D._ (1900, _M. L. Q._ iii. 112); M. Landau,
-_Vittoria Accorambona in der Dichtung im Verhältniss zu ihrer wahren
-Geschichte_ (1902, _Euphorion_, ix. 310); E. M. Cesaresco, _Vittoria
-Accoramboni_ (1902, _Lombard Studies_, 131); P. Simpson, _An Allusion
-in W._ (1907, _M. L. R._ ii. 162); L. MacCracken, _A Page of Forgotten
-History_ (1911); H. D. Sykes, _The Date of W.’s Play, the W. D._ (1913,
-_11 N. Q._ vii. 342).
-
-The epistle apologizes for the ill success of the play, on the ground
-that ‘it was acted in so dull a time of winter, presented in so open
-and blacke a theater, that it wanted ... a full and understanding
-auditory’, and complains that the spectators at ‘that play-house’
-care more for new plays than for good plays. Fleay, ii. 271, dates
-the production in the winter of 1607–8, taking the French ambassador
-described in III. i. 73 as a performer ‘at last tilting’ to be M.
-Goterant who tilted on 24 March 1607, since ‘no other Frenchman’s name
-occurs in the tilt-lists. It is nothing to Fleay that Goterant was not
-an ambassador, or that the lists of Jacobean tilters are fragmentary,
-or that the scene of the play is not England but Italy. Simpson found
-an inferior limit in a borrowing from Jonson’s _Mask of Queens_ on 2
-Feb. 1609. I do not find much conviction in the other indications of
-a date in 1610 cited by Sampson, xl, or in the parallel with Jonson’s
-epistle to _Catiline_ (1611), with which Stoll, 21, supports a date in
-1612. The Irish notes which Stoll regards as taken from B. Rich, _A
-New Description of Ireland_ (1610), in fact go back to Stanyhurst’s
-account of 1577, and though there is a pretty clear borrowing from
-Tourneur’s _Atheist’s Tragedy_, that may have been produced some time
-before its publication in 1611. Nor was Dekker necessarily referring
-to Webster, when he wrote to the Queen’s men in his epistle before _If
-this be not a Good Play_ (1612): ‘I wish a _Faire_ and _Fortunate Day_
-to your _Next New-Play_ for the _Makers-sake_ and your _Owne_, because
-such _Brave Triumphes_ of _Poesie_ and _Elaborate Industry_, which my
-_Worthy Friends Muse_ hath there set forth, deserue a _Theater_ full of
-very _Muses_ themselves to be _Spectators_. To that _Faire Day_ I wish
-a _Full_, _Free_ and _Knowing Auditor_.’
-
-Webster’s own epistle contains his appreciation ‘of other mens worthy
-labours; especially of that full and haightned stile of Maister
-_Chapman_, the labor’d and understanding workes of Maister _Johnson_,
-the no lesse worthy composures of the both worthily excellent Maister
-_Beamont_, & Maister _Fletcher_, and lastly (without wrong last to be
-named) the right happy and copious industry of M. _Shakespeare_, M.
-_Decker_, & M. _Heywood_’. In the final note he commends the actors,
-and in particular ‘the well approved industry of my friend Maister
-Perkins’.
-
- _The Duchess of Malfi. 1613–14_
-
-1623. The Tragedy of the Dutchesse of Malfy. As it was Presented
-priuately, at the Black-Friers; and publiquely at the Globe, By the
-Kings Maiesties Seruants. The perfect and exact Coppy, with diuerse
-things Printed, that the length of the Play would not beare in
-the Presentment. Written by John Webster. _Nicholas Okes for Iohn
-Waterson._ [Epistle to George Lord Berkeley, signed ‘John Webster’;
-Commendatory Verses, signed ‘Thomas Middletonus Poëta et Chron:
-Londinensis’, ‘Wil: Rowley’, ‘John Ford’; ‘The Actors Names. Bosola,
-_J. Lowin_. Ferdinand, _1 R. Burbidge_, _2 J. Taylor_. Cardinall, _1 H.
-Cundaile_, _2 R. Robinson_. Antonio, _1 W. Ostler_, _2 R. Benfeild_.
-Delio, _J. Underwood_. Forobosco, _N. Towley_. Pescara, _J. Rice_.
-Silvio, _T. Pollard_. Mad-men, _N. Towley_, _J. Underwood_, _etc._
-Cardinals M^{is}, _J. Tomson_. The Doctor, etc., _R. Pallant_. Duchess,
-_R. Sharpe_.’]
-
-1640; 1678; N.D.
-
-_Editions_ by C. E. Vaughan (1896, _T. D._), M. W. Sampson (1904,
-_B. L._), and W. A. Neilson (1911, _C. E. D._).--_Dissertations_:
-K. Kiesow, _Die verschiedenen Bearbeitungen der Novelle von der
-Herzogin von Amalfi des Bandello in den Literaturen des xvi. und xvii.
-Jahrhunderts_ (1895, _Anglia_, xvii. 199); J. T. Murray, _The D. of M.
-List of the King’s Company_ (1910, _E. D. C._ ii. 146); W. J. Lawrence,
-_The Date of the D. of M._ (_Athenaeum_ for 21 Nov. 1919); W. Archer,
-_The D. of M._ (_Nineteenth Century_ for Jan. 1920).
-
-The actor-list records two distinct casts, one before Ostler’s
-death on 16 Dec. 1614, the other after Burbadge’s death on 13 March
-1619, and before that of Tooley in June 1623. Stoll, 29, quotes the
-_Anglopotrida_ of Orazio Busino (cf. the abstract in _V. P._ xv. 134),
-which appears to show that the play was on the stage at some date not
-very long before Busino wrote on 7 Feb. 1618:
-
- Prendono giuoco gli Inglesi della nostra religione come di
- cosa detestabile, et superstitiosa, ne mai rappresentano
- qualsivoglia attione pubblica, sia pura Tragisatiricomica,
- che non inserischino dentro uitij, et scelleragini di qualche
- religioso catolico, facendone risate, et molti scherni, con lor
- gusto, et ramarico de’ buoni, fu appunto veduto dai nostri, in
- una Commedia introdur’un frate franciscano, astuto, et ripieno
- di varie impietà, cosi d’avaritia come di libidine: et il tutto
- poi ruiscì in una Tragedia, facendoli mozzar la vista in scena.
- Un altra volta rappresentarono la grandezza d’un cardinale,
- con li habiti formali, et proprij molti belli, et ricchi, con
- la sua Corte, facendo in scena erger un Altare, dove finse di
- far oratione, ordinando una processione: et poi lo ridussero in
- pubblico con una Meretrice in seno. Dimostrò di dar il Velleno
- ad una sua sorella, per interesse d’honore: et d’ andar in
- oltre alla guerra, con depponer prima l’habito cardinalitio
- sopra l’altare col mezzo de’ suoi Cappellani, con gravità, et
- finalmente si fece cingere la spada, metter la serpa, con tanto
- garbo, che niente più: et tutto ciò fanno in sprezzo, delle
- grandezze ecclesiastice vilipese, et odiate a morte in questo
- Regno.
- Di Londra a’ 7 febaio 1618.
-
-The date of first production may reasonably be put in 1613–14. Crawford
-has pointed out the resemblances between the play and _A Monumental
-Column_ (1613) and definite borrowings from Donne’s _Anatomy of the
-World_ (1612), Chapman’s _Petrarch’s Seven Penitentiall Psalms_ (1612),
-and Chapman’s Middle Temple mask of 15 Feb. 1613. Lawrence thinks
-that Campion’s mask of 14 Feb. 1613 is also drawn upon. But it is
-not impossible that the extant text has undergone revision, in view
-of borrowings from the 6th edition (1615) of Sir Thomas Overbury’s
-_Characters_, to which Sykes calls attention, and of the apparent
-allusion pointed out by Vaughan in I. i. 5 to the purging of the French
-Court by Louis XIII after the assassination of Marshall d’Ancre on
-14 April 1617. It need not be inferred that this is the ‘enterlude
-concerninge the late Marquesse d’Ancre’, which the Privy Council
-ordered the Master of Revels to stay on 22 June 1617 (_M. S. C._ i.
-376).
-
- _Later Plays_
-
-_The Devil’s Law Case_ (1623).
-
-_A Cure for a Cuckold_ (1661), with W. Rowley.
-
-On the authorship and dates of these, cf. Brooke, 250, 255, and H. D.
-Sykes in _11 N. Q._ vii. 106; ix. 382, 404, 443, 463.
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-The following are recorded in Henslowe’s diary:
-
- For the Admiral’s:
-
- _Caesar’s Fall or The Two Shapes._
-
- With Dekker, Drayton, Middleton, and Munday, May 1602.
-
- For Worcester’s:
-
- _Christmas Comes but Once a Year._
-
- With Chettle, Dekker, and Heywood, Nov. 1602.
-
-In the epistle to _The Devil’s Law Case_, Webster says to Sir T. Finch,
-‘Some of my other works, as The White Devil, The Duchess of Malfi,
-Guise and others, you have formerly seen’, and a _Guise_ is ascribed
-to him as a comedy in Archer’s play-list of 1656 and included without
-ascription as a tragedy in Kirkman’s of 1661 and 1671 (Greg, _Masques_,
-lxxii). Rogers and Ley’s list of 1656 had given it to Marston (q.v.).
-Collier forged an entry in Henslowe’s diary meant to suggest that this
-was the _Massacre at Paris_ (cf. s.v. Marlowe).
-
-In Sept. 1624 Herbert licensed ‘a new Tragedy called _A Late Murther of
-the Sonn upon the Mother_: Written by Forde, and Webster’ (Herbert, 29).
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-The ascription to Webster on the t.p. of _The Thracian Wonder_ is not
-generally accepted. His hand has been suggested in _Revenger’s Tragedy_
-and _The Weakest Goeth to the Wall_.
-
-
-GEORGE WHETSTONE (1544?-87?).
-
-Whetstone was a Londoner by origin. After a riotous youth, he turned to
-literature interspersed with adventure, possibly acting at Canterbury
-_c._ 1571 (cf. ch. xv), serving in the Low Countries in 1572–4, the
-Newfoundland voyage in 1578–9, and the Low Countries again in 1585–6.
-His chief literary associates were Thomas Churchyard and George
-Gascoigne.
-
-After writing his one play, _Promos and Cassandra_, he translated
-its source, the 5th Novel of the 8th Decade of Giraldi Cinthio’s
-_Hecatomithi_ (1565) in his _Heptameron of Civil Discourses_ (1582).
-Both Italian and English are in Hazlitt, _Shakespeare’s Library_ (1875,
-iii). Like some other dramatists, Whetstone turned upon the stage, and
-attacked it in his _Touchstone for the Time_ (1584; cf. App. C, No.
-xxxvi).
-
- _Promos and Cassandra. 1578_
-
-_S. R._ 1578, July 31. ‘The famous historie of Promos and Casandra
-Devided into twoe Comicall Discourses Compiled by George Whetstone
-gent.’ _Richard Jones_ (Arber, ii. 334).
-
-1578. The Right Excellent and famous Historye, of Promos and Cassandra;
-Deuided into two Commicall Discourses.... The worke of George
-Whetstones Gent. _Richard Jones._ [Epistles to his ‘kinsman’ William
-Fleetwood, dated 29 July 1578, and signed ‘George Whetstone’, and from
-the Printer to the Reader, signed ‘R.I.’; Argument; Text signed ‘G.
-Whetstone’; Colophon with imprint and date ‘August 20, 1578’.]
-
-_Editions_ in _Six Old Plays_, i. 1 (1779), and by W. C. Hazlitt,
-_Shakespeare’s Library_, vi. 201 (1875), and J. S. Farmer (1910, _T.
-F. T._). There are two parts, arranged in acts and scenes. Whetstone’s
-epistle is of some critical interest (cf. App. C, No. xix). In the
-_Heptameron_ he says the play was ‘yet never presented upon stage’.
-The character of the s.ds. suggests, however, that it was written for
-presentation.
-
-
-NATHANIEL WIBURNE (_c._ 1597).
-
-Possible author of the academic _Machiavellus_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-GEORGE WILKINS (_fl._ 1604–8).
-
-Lee (_D. N. B._) after personally consulting the register of St.
-Leonard’s Shoreditch, confirms the extract in Collier, iii. 348, of
-the burial on 19 Aug. 1603 of ‘George Wilkins, the poet’. It must
-therefore be assumed that the date of 9 Aug. 1613 given for the entry
-by T. E. Tomlins in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, i. 34, from Ellis’s _History
-of Shoreditch_ (1798) is an error, and that the ‘poet’ was distinct
-from the dramatist. Nothing is known of Wilkins except that he wrote
-pamphlets from _c._ 1604 to 1608, and towards the end of that period
-was also engaged in play-writing both for the King’s and the Queen’s
-men. A George Wilkins of St. Sepulchre’s, described as a victualler and
-aged 36, was a fellow witness with Shakespeare in _Belott v. Mountjoy_
-on 19 June 1612 (C. W. Wallace, _N. U. S._ x. 289).
-
- _The Miseries of Enforced Marriage. 1607_
-
-_S. R._ 1607, July 31 (Buck). ‘A tragedie called the Miserye of
-inforced Marriage.’ _George Vyncent_ (Arber, iii. 357).
-
-1607. The Miseries of Inforst Manage. As it is now playd by his
-Maiesties Seruants. By George Wilkins. _For George Vincent._
-
-1611; 1629; 1637.
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{2–4} (1780–1874) and by W. Scott (1810, _A. B.
-D._ ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, _S. F. T._).
-
-The play, which was based on the life of Walter Calverley, as given in
-pamphlets of 1605, appears to have been still on the stage when it was
-printed. An allusion in III. ii to fighting with a windmill implies
-some knowledge of Don Quixote, but of this there are other traces by
-1607. The Clown is called Robin in II. ii, and Fleay, ii. 276, suggests
-that Armin took the part. He comes in singing:
-
- From London am I come,
- Though not with pipe and drum,
-
-in reference to Kempe’s morris.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Wilkins probably wrote Acts I, II of _Pericles_, and it has been
-suggested that he also wrote certain scenes of _Timon of Athens_; but
-the relation of his work to Shakespeare’s cannot be gone into here.
-
-The anonymous _Yorkshire Tragedy_ has also been ascribed to him.
-
-
-ROBERT WILMOT (> 1566–91 <).
-
-A student of the Inner Temple, and afterwards Rector of North Ockendon,
-Essex, from 28 Nov. 1582 and of Horndon-on-the-Hill, Essex, from 2 Dec.
-1585. William Webbe, _A Discourse of English Poetry_ (ed. Arber, 35),
-commends his writing.
-
- _Tancred and Gismund. 1566_ (?)
-
-Written with Rod. Staff[ord], Hen[ry] No[el], G. Al. and Chr[istopher]
-Hat[ton].
-
-[_MSS._] (_a_) _Lansdowne MS._ 786, f. 1, ‘Gismond of Salern in Loue’.
-
-(_b_) _Brit. Mus. Hargrave MS._ 205, f. 9, ‘The Tragedie of Gismond of
-Salerne’.
-
-[Both MSS. have three sonnets ‘of the Quenes maydes’, and Prologue and
-Epilogue.]
-
-(_c_) A fragment, now unknown, formerly belonging to Milton’s
-father-in-law, Richard Powell.
-
-1591. The Tragedie of Tancred and Gismund. Compiled by the Gentlemen
-of the Inner Temple, and by them presented before her Maiestie. Newly
-reuiued and polished according to the decorum of these daies. By R. W.
-_Thomas Scarlet, sold by R. Robinson._ [Epistles to Lady Mary Peter
-and Lady Anne Gray, signed ‘Robert Wilmot’; to R. W. signed ‘Guil.
-Webbe’ and dated ‘Pyrgo in Essex August the eighth 1591’; to the Inner
-and Middle Temple and other Readers, signed ‘R. Wilmot’; two Sonnets
-(2 and 3 of MSS.); Arguments; Prologue; Epilogue signed ‘R. W.’;
-Introductiones (dumb-shows). Some copies are dated 1592.]
-
-_Editions_ in Dodsley^{1–4} (1744–1874) and by J. S. Farmer (1912,
-_S. F. T._) from 1591, and by A. Brandl (1898, _Q. W. D._) and J. W.
-Cunliffe (1912, _E. E. C. T._) and J. S. Farmer (_S. F. T._) from
-MS.--_Dissertations_: J. W. Cunliffe, _Gismond of Salerne_ (1906, _M.
-L. A._ xxi. 435); A. Klein, _The Decorum of These Days_ (1918, _M. L.
-A._ xxxiii. 244).
-
-The MSS. represent the play as originally produced, probably, from an
-allusion in one of the sonnets, at Greenwich. The print represents a
-later revision by Wilmot, involving much re-writing and the insertion
-of new scenes and the dumb-shows. Webbe’s epistle is an encouragement
-to Wilmot to publish his ‘waste papers’, and refers to _Tancred_ as
-‘framed’ by the Inner Temple, and to Wilmot as ‘disrobing him of
-his antique curiosity and adorning him with the approved guise of
-our stateliest English terms’. Wilmot’s own Epistle to the Readers
-apologizes for the indecorum of publishing a play, excuses it by the
-example of Beza’s _Abraham_ and Buchanan’s _Jephthes_, and refers to
-‘the love that hath been these twenty-four years betwixt’ himself and
-Gismund. This seems to date the original production in 1567. But I
-find no evidence that Elizabeth was at Greenwich in 1567. Shrovetide
-1566 seems the nearest date at which a play is likely to have been
-given there. Wilmot was clearly not the sole author of the original
-play; to Act I he affixes ‘_Exegit Rod. Staff._’; to Act II, ‘_Per Hen.
-No._’; to Act III, ‘_G. Al._’; to Act IV, ‘_Composuit Chr. Hat._’; to
-the Epilogue, ‘_R. W._’ Probably Act V, which has no indication of
-authorship, was also his own.
-
-W. H. Cooke, _Students Admitted to the Inner Temple, 1547–1660_ (1878),
-gives the admission of Christopher Hatton in 1559–60, but Wilmot is not
-traceable in the list; nor are Hen. No., G. Al., or Rod. Staff. But
-the first may be Elizabeth’s Gentleman Pensioner, Henry Noel (q.v.),
-and Cunliffe, lxxxvi, notes that a ‘Master Stafford’ was fined £5 for
-refusing to act as Marshal at the Inner Temple in 1556–7.
-
- _Doubtful Play_
-
-Hazlitt assigns to Wilmot _The Three Ladies of London_, but the R. W.
-of the title-page is almost certainly Robert Wilson (q.v.).
-
-
-ROBERT WILSON (> 1572–1600).
-
-For Wilson’s career as an actor and a discussion as to whether there
-was more than one dramatist of the name, cf. ch. xv.
-
- _The Three Ladies of London. c. 1581_
-
-1584. A right excellent and famous Comœdy called the three Ladies of
-London. Wherein is notably declared and set foorth, how by the meanes
-of Lucar, Love and Conscience is so corrupted, that the one is married
-to Dissimulation, the other fraught with all abhomination. A perfect
-patterne for all Estates to looke into, and a worke right worthie to
-be marked. Written by R. W. as it hath been publiquely played. _Roger
-Warde._ [Prologue. At end of play ‘Paule Bucke’ (an actor; cf. ch. xv).]
-
-1592. _John Danter._
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier, _Five Old Plays_ (1851, _Roxb. Club_), in
-Dodsley^4 (1874), vi, and by J. S. Farmer (1911, _T. F. T._).
-
-The stylistic resemblance of this to the next two plays justifies
-the attribution to Wilson, although Hazlitt suggests Wilmot. Gosson
-describes the play in 1582 (_P. C._ 185) together with a play in answer
-called _London Against the Three Ladies_, but does not indicate whether
-either play was then in print. In B ii Peter’s pence are dated as ‘not
-muche more than 26 yeares, it was in Queen Maries time’. As the Act
-reviving Peter’s pence was passed in the winter of 1554–5, the play was
-probably written in 1581.
-
- _The Three Lords and Three Ladies of London. c. 1589_
-
-_S. R._ 1590, July 31 (Wood). ‘A comodie of the plesant and statelie
-morrall of the Three lordes of London.’ _Richard Jones_ (Arber, ii.
-556).
-
-1590. The Pleasant and Stately Morall, of the three Lordes and three
-Ladies of London. With the great Joy and Pompe, Solempnized at their
-Mariages: Commically interlaced with much honest Mirth, for pleasure
-and recreation, among many Morall obseruations and other important
-matters of due regard. By R. W. _R. Jones._ [Woodcut, on which cf.
-_Bibl. Note_ to ch. xviii; ‘Preface’, i.e. prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1851, _Five Old Plays_), in Dodsley^4, vi.
-371 (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1912, _T. F. T._).--_Dissertation_: H.
-Fernow, _The 3 L. and 3 L. By R. W._ (1885, _Hamburg programme_).
-
-Fleay, ii. 280, fixes the date by the allusions (C, C^v) to the recent
-death of Tarlton (q.v.) in Sept. 1588.
-
- _The Cobbler’s Prophecy > 1594_
-
-_S. R._ 1594, June 8. ‘A booke intituled the Coblers prophesie.’
-_Cuthbert Burby_ (Arber, ii. 653).
-
-1594. The Coblers Prophesie. Written by Robert Wilson, Gent. _John
-Danter for Cuthbert Burby._
-
-_Editions_ by W. Dibelius (1897, _Jahrbuch_, xxxiii. 3), J. S. Farmer
-(1911, _T. F. T._), and A. C. Wood (1914, _M. S. R._).
-
-The general character of this play, with its reference (i. 36) to an
-audience who ‘sit and see’ and its comfits cast, suggests the Court
-rather than the popular stage.
-
- _Doubtful Plays_
-
-Wilson’s hand has been sought in _Clyomon and Clamydes_, _Fair Em_,
-_Knack to Know a Knave_, _Pedlar’s Prophecy_ (cf. ch. xxiv).
-
- _Lost Plays_
-
-_Short and Sweet_ (_c._ 1579). _Vide Catiline’s Conspiracy_ (_infra_).
-
-The following is a complete list of plays for the Admiral’s men in
-which a share is assigned to Wilson by Henslowe:
-
-(i, ii) _1, 2, Earl Godwin and his Three Sons._
-
-With Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton, March-June 1598.
-
-(iii) _Pierce of Exton._
-
-With Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton, April, 1598; but apparently
-unfinished.
-
-(iv) _1 Black Bateman of the North._
-
-With Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton, May 1598.
-
-(v) _2 Black Bateman of the North._
-
-With Chettle, June 1598.
-
-(vi) _Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-Lion._
-
-With Chettle, Drayton, and Munday, June 1598.
-
-(vii) _The Madman’s Morris._
-
-With Dekker and Drayton, July 1598.
-
-(viii) _Hannibal and Hermes._
-
-With Dekker and Drayton, July 1598.
-
-(ix) _Pierce of Winchester._
-
-With Dekker and Drayton, July–Aug. 1598.
-
-(x) _Chance Medley._
-
-With Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, and Munday, Aug. 1598.
-
-(xi) _Catiline’s Conspiracy._
-
-With Chettle, Aug. 1598; but apparently not finished; unless the fact
-that the authors only received one ‘earnest’ of £1 5_s._ was due to the
-play being no more than a revision of Wilson’s old _Short and Sweet_,
-which Lodge (cf. App. C, No. xxiii) contrasts about 1579 with Gosson’s
-play on Catiline.
-
-(xii, xiii) _1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle._
-
-With Drayton (q.v.), Hathaway, and Munday, Oct.–Dec. 1599.
-
-(xiv) _2 Henry Richmond._
-
-Nov. 1599, apparently with others, as shown by Robert Shaw’s order for
-payment (Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 49), on which a scenario of one act
-is endorsed.
-
-(xv) _Owen Tudor._
-
-With Drayton, Hathaway, and Munday, Jan. 1600; but apparently not
-finished.
-
-(xvi) _1 Fair Constance of Rome._
-
-June 1600. The Diary gives the payments as made to Dekker, Drayton,
-Hathaway, and Munday, but a letter of 14 June from Robert Shaw (Greg,
-_Henslowe Papers_, 55) indicates that Wilson had a fifth share.
-
-
-ANTHONY WINGFIELD (_c._ 1550–1615).
-
-Possible author of the academic _Pedantius_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-NATHANIEL WOODES (?).
-
-A minister of Norwich, only known as author of the following play.
-
- _The Conflict of Conscience. > 1581_
-
-1581. An excellent new Commedie Intituled: The Conflict of Conscience.
-Contayninge, A most lamentable example, of the dolefull desperation of
-a miserable worldlinge, termed, by the name of Philologus, who forsooke
-the trueth of God’s Gospel, for feare of the losse of lyfe, & worldly
-goods. Compiled, by Nathaniell Woodes, Minister, in Norwich. _Richard
-Bradocke._ [Prologue.]
-
-_Editions_ by J. P. Collier (1851, _Five Old Plays_), in Dodsley^4, vi.
-29 (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1911, _T. F. T._).
-
-The characters are allegorical, typical and personal and arranged for
-six actors ‘most convenient for such as be disposed either to shew this
-Comedie in private houses or otherwise’. Philologus is Francis Spiera,
-a pervert to Rome about the middle of the sixteenth century. The play
-is strongly Protestant, and is probably much earlier than 1581. It is
-divided into a prologue and acts and scenes. Act VI is practically an
-epilogue.
-
-
-HENRY WOTTON (1568–1639).
-
-Izaak Walton (_Reliquiae Wottonianae_, 1651) tells us that, while a
-student at Queen’s College, Oxford, in 1586, Wotton ‘was by the chief
-of that College, persuasively enjoined to write a play for their
-private use;--it was the Tragedy of Tancredo--which was so interwoven
-with sentences, and for the method and exact personating those
-humours, passions, and dispositions, which he proposed to represent,
-so performed, that the gravest of that society declared, he had, in a
-slight employment, given an early and a solid testimony of his future
-abilities’.
-
-
-CHRISTOPHER WREN (1591–1658).
-
-Author of the academic _Physiponomachia_ (cf. App. K).
-
-
-ROBERT YARINGTON (_c._ 1601?).
-
-Nothing is known of Yarington, but this is hardly sufficient reason for
-denying him the ascription of the title-page.
-
- _Two Lamentable Tragedies. 1594 < > 1601_
-
-1601. Two Lamentable Tragedies. The one, of the murder of Maister
-Beech a Chaundler in Thames-streete, and his boye, done by Thomas
-Merry. The other of a young childe murthered in a Wood by two Ruffins,
-with the consent of his Vnckle. By Rob. Yarington. _For Mathew Lawe._
-[Running title, ‘Two Tragedies in One.’ Induction.]
-
-_Editions_ by A. H. Bullen (1885, _O. E. P._ iv) and J. S. Farmer
-(1913, _S. F. T._).--_Dissertation_: R. A. Law, _Y.’s T. L. T._ (1910,
-_M. L. R._ v. 167).
-
-This deals in alternate scenes with (_a_) the murder of Beech by
-Merry on 23 Aug. 1594, and (_b_) a version, with an Italian setting,
-of the Babes in the Wood, on which a ballad, with a Norfolk setting,
-was licensed in 1595. Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 208, following a hint of
-Fleay, ii. 285, connects the play with Henslowe’s entries of payments,
-on behalf of the Admiral’s, (i) of £5 in Nov. and Dec. 1599 to Day
-and Haughton for _Thomas Merry_ or _Beech’s Tragedy_, (ii) of 10_s._
-in Nov. 1599 and 10_s._ in Sept. 1601 to Chettle for _The Orphan’s
-Tragedy_, and (iii) of £2 to Day in Jan. 1600 for an Italian tragedy.
-He supposes that (ii) and (iii) were the same play, that it was
-finished, and that in 1601 Chettle combined it with (i), possibly
-dropping out Day’s contributions to both pieces. Yarington he dismisses
-as a scribe. In the alternate scenes of the extant version he discerns
-distinct hands, presumably those of Haughton and Chettle respectively.
-Law does not think that there are necessarily two hands at all, finds
-imitation of _Leire_ (1594) in scenes belonging to both plots, and
-reinstates Yarington. Oliphant (_M. P._ viii. 435) boldly conjectures
-that ‘Rob. Yarington’ might be a misreading of ‘W^m Haughton’. Bullen
-thought that this play, _Arden of Feversham_, and _A Warning for Fair
-Women_ might all be by the same hand.
-
-
-CHRISTOPHER YELVERTON (_c._ 1535–1612).
-
-Yelverton entered Gray’s Inn in 1552. He is mentioned as a poet in
-Jasper Heywood’s verses before Thomas Newton’s translation (1560) of
-Seneca’s _Thyestes_, and wrote an epilogue to the Gray’s Inn _Jocasta_
-of Gascoigne (q.v.) and Kinwelmershe in 1566. He also helped to devise
-the dumb-shows for the Gray’s Inn _Misfortunes of Arthur_ of Thomas
-Hughes (q.v.) on 28 Feb. 1588. He became a Justice of the Queen’s Bench
-on 2 Feb. 1602 and was knighted on 23 July 1603.
-
-
- PRINTED IN ENGLAND
- AT THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[2] _Quarterly Review_ (April 1908), 446.
-
-[3] A copy at Berlin of the Strassburg _Terence_ of 1496 has the
-manuscript note to the engraving of the _Theatrum_, ‘ein offen stat
-der weltlichkeit da man zu sicht, ubi fiunt chorei, ludi et de alijs
-leutitatibus, sicut nos facimus oster spill’ (Herrmann, 300). Leo
-Battista Alberti’s _De Re Edificatoria_ was written about 1451 and
-printed in 1485. Vitruvius, _De Architectura_, v. 3–9, deals with
-the theatre. The essential passage on the scene is v. 6, 8–9 ‘Ipsae
-autem scenae suas habent rationes explicitas ita, uti mediae valvae
-ornatus habeant aulae regiae, dextra ac sinistra hospitalia, secundum
-autem spatia ad ornatus comparata, quae loca Graeci περιάκτους dicunt
-ab eo, quod machinae sunt in his locis versatiles trigonoe habentes
-singulares species ornationis, quae, cum aut fabularum mutationes sunt
-futurae seu deorum adventus, cum tonitribus repentinis [ea] versentur
-mutentque speciem ornationis in frontes. secundum ea loca versurae sunt
-procurrentes, quae efficiunt una a foro, altera a peregre aditus in
-scaenam. genera autem sunt scaenarum tria: unum quod dicitur tragicum,
-alterum comicum, tertium satyricum. horum autem ornatus sunt inter
-se dissimili disparique ratione, quod tragicae deformantur columnis
-et fastigiis et signis reliquisque regalibus rebus; comicae autem
-aedificiorum privatorum et maenianorum habent speciem prospectusque
-fenestris dispositos imitatione, communium aedificiorum rationibus;
-satyricae vero ornantur arboribus, speluncis, montibus reliquisque
-agrestibus rebus in topeodis speciem deformati’; cf. G. Lanson, in
-_Revue de la Renaissance_ (1904), 72.
-
-[4] ‘Tu enim primus Tragoediae ... in medio foro pulpitum ad quinque
-pedum altitudinem erectum pulcherrime exornasti: eamdemque, postquam in
-Hadriani mole ... est acta, rursus intra tuos penates, tamquam in media
-Circi cavea, toto consessu umbraculis tecto, admisso populo et pluribus
-tui ordinis spectatoribus honorifice excepisti. Tu etiam primus
-picturatae scenae faciem, quum Pomponiani comoediam agerent, nostro
-saeculo ostendisti’; cf. Marcantonius Sabellicus, _Vita Pomponii_
-(_Op._ 1502, f. 55), ‘Pari studio veterum spectandi consuetudinem
-desuetae civitati restituit, primorum Antistitum atriis suo theatro
-usus, in quibus Plauti, Terentii, recentiorum etiam quaedam agerentur
-fabulae, quas ipse honestos adolescentes et docuit, et agentibus
-praefuit’; cf. also D’Ancona, ii. 65; Creizenach, ii. 1.
-
-[5] D’Ancona, ii. 74.
-
-[6] D’Ancona, ii. 84; Herrmann, 353; Flechsig, 51. The scenic wall is
-described in the contemporary narrative of P. Palliolo, _Le Feste pel
-Conferimento del Patriziato Romano a Giuliano e Lorenzo de’ Medici_
-(ed. O. Guerrini, 1885), 45, 63, ‘Guardando avanti, se appresenta la
-fronte della scena, in v compassi distinta per mezzo di colonne quadre,
-con basi e capitelli coperti de oro. In ciascuno compasso è uno uscio
-di grandezza conveniente a private case.... La parte inferiore di
-questa fronte di quattro frigi è ornata.... A gli usci delle scene
-furono poste portiere di panno de oro. El proscenio fu coperto tutto
-di tapeti con uno ornatissimo altare in mezzo.’ The side-doors were in
-‘le teste del proscenio’ (Palliolo, 98). I have not seen M. A. Altieri,
-_Giuliano de’ Medici, eletto cittadino Romano_ (ed. L. Pasqualucci,
-1881), or N. Napolitano, _Triumphi de gli mirandi Spettaculi_ (1519).
-Altieri names an untraceable Piero Possello as the architect; Guerrini
-suggests Pietro Rossello.
-
-[7] D’Ancona, ii. 128, from _Diario Ferrarese_, ‘in lo suo cortile ...
-fu fato suso uno tribunale di legname, con case v merlade, con una
-finestra e uscio per ciascuna: poi venne una fusta di verso le caneve e
-cusine, e traversò il cortile con dieci persone dentro con remi e vela,
-del naturale’; Bapt. Guarinus, _Carm._ iv:
-
- Et remis puppim et velo sine fluctibus actam
- Vidimus in portus nare, Epidamne, tuos,
- Vidimus effictam celsis cum moenibus urbem,
- Structaque per latas tecta superba vias.
- Ardua creverunt gradibus spectacula multis,
- Velaruntque omnes stragula picta foros.
-
-[8] D’Ancona, ii. 129.
-
-[9] Ibid. 130.
-
-[10] Ibid. 132, 135. The two Marsigli, with Il Bianchino and Nicoletto
-Segna, appear to have painted scenes and ships for the earlier
-Ferrarese productions.
-
-[11] Ibid. 134.
-
-[12] Ibid. 381, from G. Campori, _Lettere artistiche inedite_, 5, ‘Era
-la sua forma quadrangula, protensa alquanto in longitudine: li doi lati
-l’uno al altro de rimpecto, havevano per ciaschuno octo architravi con
-colonne ben conrespondenti et proportionate alla larghezza et alteza
-de dicti archi: le base et capitelli pomposissimamente con finissimi
-colori penti, et de fogliami ornati, representavano alla mente un
-edificio eterne ed antiquo, pieno de delectatione: li archi con relevo
-di fiori rendevano prospectiva mirabile: la largheza di ciascheuno era
-braza quactro vel cerca: la alteza proporzionata ad quella. Dentro nel
-prospecto eran panni d’oro et alcune verdure, si come le recitationi
-recerchavano: una delle bande era ornata delli sei quadri del Cesareo
-triumpho per man del singulare Mantengha: li doi altri lati discontro
-erano con simili archi, ma de numero inferiore, che chiascheuno ne
-haveva sei. Doj bande era scena data ad actorj et recitatorj: le doe
-altre erano ad scalini, deputati per le donne et daltro, per todeschi,
-trombecti et musici. Al jongere del’ angulo de un de’ grandi et minorj
-lati, se vedevano quactro altissime colonne colle basi orbiculate, le
-quali sustentavano quactro venti principali: fra loro era una grocta,
-benchè facta ad arte, tamen naturalissima: sopra quella era un ciel
-grande fulgentissimo de varij lumi, in modo de lucidissime stelle, con
-una artificiata rota de segni, al moto de’ quali girava mo il sole,
-mo la luna nelle case proprie: dentro era la rota de Fortuna con sei
-tempi: _regno_, _regnavj_, _regnabo_: in mezo resideva la dea aurea
-con un sceptro con un delphin. Dintorno alla scena al frontespitio da
-basso era li triumphi del Petrarcha, ancor loro penti per man del p^o.
-Mantengha: sopra eran candelierj vistosissimi deaurati tucti: nel mezo
-era un scudo colle arme per tucto della C^a. M^g.; sopra la aquila
-aurea bicapitata col regno et diadema imperiale: ciascheuno teneva tre
-doppieri; ad ogni lato era le insegne. Alli doi maiorj, quelle della
-S^{ta}. de N. S. et quelle della Cesarea Maestà: alli minorj lati
-quelle del C^o. Sig. Re, et quelle della Ill^{ma}. Sig^a. da Venetia;
-tra li archi pendevano poi quelle de V. Ex., quelle del Sig. duca
-Alberto Alemano: imprese de Sig. Marchese et Sig^a. Marchesana: sopre
-erano più alte statue argentate, aurate et de più colorj metallici,
-parte tronche, parte integre, che assai ornavano quel loco: poi ultimo
-era il cielo de panno torchino, stellato con quelli segni che quella
-sera correvano nel nostro hemisperio.’ Flechsig, 26, thinks that the
-architect was Ercole Albergati (Il Zafarano).
-
-[13] D’Ancona, i. 485; _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 79, 83, 135.
-
-[14] Ferrari, 50; D’Ancona, ii. 1, give examples of these at Ferrara
-and elsewhere. The _Favola d’Orfeo_, originally produced about 1471,
-seems to have been recast as _Orphei tragedia_ for Ferrara in 1486.
-It had five acts, _Pastorale_, _Ninfale_, _Eroico_, _Negromantico_,
-_Baccanale_; in the fourth, the way to hell and hell itself were
-shown--‘duplici actu haec scena utitur’.
-
-[15] J. W. Cunliffe, _Early English Classical Tragedies_, xl; F. A.
-Foster, in _E. S._ xliv. 8.
-
-[16] Herrmann, 280, 284; cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 208.
-
-[17] Translation by Hans Nithart, printed by C. Dinckmut (Ulm, 1486);
-cf. Herrmann, 292, who reproduces specimen cuts from this and the other
-sources described.
-
-[18] Edition printed by Johannes Trechsel (Lyons, 1493); cf. Herrmann,
-300. The editor claims for the woodcuts that ‘effecimus, ut etiam
-illitteratus ex imaginibus, quas cuilibet scenae praeposuimus, legere
-atque accipere comica argumenta valeat’. Badius also edited a Paris
-_Terence_ of 1502, with _Praenotamenta_ based on Vitruvius and other
-classical writers, in which he suggests the use in antiquity of ‘tapeta
-... qualia nunc fiunt in Flandria’.
-
-[19] Edition printed by Johannes Grüninger (Strassburg, 1496); cf.
-Herrmann, 318.
-
-[20] Editions printed by Lazarus Soardus (Venice, 1497 and 1499); cf.
-Herrmann, 346. The _Theatrum_ and other cuts are also reproduced in
-_The Mask_ for July 1909.
-
-[21] Flechsig, 84, citing as possibly a stage design an example of
-idealized architecture inscribed ‘Bramanti Architecti Opus’ and
-reproduced by E. Müntz, _Hist. de l’Art pendant la Renaissance_, ii.
-299. Bramante was at Rome about 1505, and was helped on St. Peter’s
-by Baldassarre Peruzzi. But there is nothing obviously scenic in the
-drawing.
-
-[22] D’Ancona, ii. 394, ‘Ma quello che è stato il meglio in tutte
-queste feste e representationi, è stato tute le sene, dove si sono
-representate, quale ha facto uno M^o. Peregrino depintore, che sta
-con il Sig^{re}.; ch’ è una contracta et prospettiva di una terra cum
-case, chiesie, campanili et zardini, che la persona non si può satiare
-a guardarla per le diverse cose che ge sono, tute de inzegno et bene
-intese, quale non credo se guasti, ma che la salvaràno per usarla de le
-altre fiate’.
-
-[23] Ibid., ‘il caso accadete a Ferrara’.
-
-[24] Ibid. 102, ‘La scena poi era finta una città bellissima con le
-strade, palazzi, chiese, torri, strade vere, e ogni cosa di rilevo,
-ma ajutata ancora da bonissima pintura e prospettiva bene intesa’;
-the description has further details. Genga is not named, but Serlio
-(cf. App. G) speaks of his theatrical work for Duke Francesco Maria of
-Urbino (succ. 1508). Vasari, vi. 316, says that he had also done stage
-designs for Francesco’s predecessor Guidobaldo.
-
-[25] Vasari, iv. 600. Some of Peruzzi’s designs for _Calandra_ are in
-the Uffizi; Ferrari (tav. vi) reproduces one.
-
-[26] D’Ancona, ii. 89, ‘Sonandosi li pifari si lasciò cascare la tela;
-dove era pinto Fra Mariano con alcuni Diavoli che giocavano con esso
-da ogni lato della tela; et poi a mezzo della tela vi era un breve che
-dicea: _Questi sono li capricci di Fra Mariano_; et sonandosi tuttavia,
-et il Papa mirando con il suo occhiale la scena, che era molto bella,
-di mano di Raffaele, et rappresentava si bene per mia fè forami di
-prospective, et molto furono laudate, et mirando ancora il cielo, che
-molto si rappresentava bello, et poi li candelieri, che erano formati
-in lettere, che ogni lettera substenìa cinque torcie, et diceano: _Leo
-Pon. Maximus_’.
-
-[27] Ariosto, _Orlando Furioso_, xxxii. 80:
-
- Quale al cader de le cortine suole
- Parer, fra mille lampade, la scena,
- D’archi, et di più d’una superba mole
- D’oro, e di statue e di pitture piena.
-
-This passage was added in the edition of 1532, but a more brief
-allusion in that of 1516 (xliii. 10, ‘Vo’ levarti dalla scena i panni’)
-points to the use of a curtain, rising rather than falling, before
-1519; cf. p. 31; vol. i, p. 181; Creizenach, ii. 299; Lawrence (i.
-111), _The Story of a Peculiar Stage Curtain_.
-
-[28] Ferrari (tav. xii) reproduces from _Uffizi_, 5282, an idealization
-by Serlio of the _piazzetta_ of S. Marco at Venice as a _scenario_.
-
-[29] Cf. App. G. Book ii first appeared in French (1545).
-
-[30] De Sommi, _Dial._ iv (_c._ 1565, D’Ancona, ii. 419), ‘Ben che paia
-di certa vaghezza il vedersi in scena una camera aperta, ben parata,
-dentro a la quale, dirò così per esempio, uno amante si consulti con
-una ruffiana, et che paia aver del verisimile, è però tanto fuor del
-naturale esser la stanza senza il muro dinanzi, il che necessariamente
-far bisogna, che a me ne pare non molto convenirsi: oltre che non so
-se il recitare in quel loco, si potrà dire che sia in scena. Ben si
-potrà per fuggir questi due inconvenienti, aprire come una loggia od un
-verone dove rimanesse alcuno a ragionare’.
-
-[31] Creizenach, ii. 271.
-
-[32] Ferrari, 105, with engravings; A. Magrini, _Il teatro Olympico_
-(1847). This is noticed by the English travellers, Fynes Morison,
-_Itinerary_, i. 2. 4 (ed. 1907, i. 376), ‘a Theater for Playes, which
-was little, but very faire and pleasant’, and T. Coryat, _Crudities_,
-ii. 7, ‘The scene also is a very faire and beautifull place to behold’.
-He says the house would hold 3,000. In _Histriomastix_, ii. 322, the
-‘base trash’ of Sir Oliver Owlet’s players is compared unfavourably
-with the splendour of Italian theatres. A permanent theatre had been
-set up in the _Sala grande_ of the Corte Vecchia at Ferrara in 1529,
-with scenery by Dosso Dossi representing Ferrara, for a revival of the
-_Cassaria_ and the production of Ariosto’s _Lena_; it was burnt down,
-just before Ariosto’s death, in 1532 (Flechsig, 23; Gardner, _King of
-Court Poets_, 203, 239, 258).
-
-[33] Probably some temporary additions to the permanent decoration of
-the _scena_ was possible, as Ferrari (tav. xv) gives a design for a
-_scenario_ by Scamozzi.
-
-[34] Ferrari, 100.
-
-[35] Engravings, by Jean de Gourmont and another, of this type of stage
-are reproduced by Bapst, 145, 153, and by Rigal in Petit de Julleville,
-iii. 264, 296; cf. M. B. Evans, _An Early Type of Stage_ (_M. P._ ix.
-421).
-
-[36] Cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 217.
-
-[37] Baschet, 6; D’Ancona, ii. 456; H. Prunières, _L’Opéra Italien en
-France_ (1913), xx; A. Solerti, _La rappresentazione della Calandra
-a Lione nel 1548_ (1901, _Raccolta di Studii Critici ded. ad A. d’
-Ancona_), from _La Magnifica et Triumphale Entrata del Christianissimo
-Re di Francia Henrico Secundo_ (1549).
-
-[38] Cf. ch. xiv (Italians).
-
-[39] D’Ancona, ii. 457.
-
-[40] Brantôme, _Recueil des Dames_, i. 2 (_[OE]uvres_, ed. 1890, x.
-47), ‘Elle eut opinion qu’elle avoit porté malheur aux affaires du
-royaume, ainsi qu’il succéda; elle n’en fit plus jouer’. Ingegneri says
-of tragedies, ‘Alcuni oltra dicio le stimano di triste augurio’.
-
-[41] E. Rigal in _Rev. d’Hist. Litt._ xii. 1, 203; cf. the opposite
-view of J. Haraszti in xi. 680 and xvi. 285.
-
-[42] Sainte-Marthe, _Elogia_ (1606), 175.
-
-[43] G. Lanson in _Rev. d’Hist. Litt._ x. 432. In _Northward Hoe_,
-iv. 1, Bellamont is writing a tragedy of Astyanax, which he will have
-produced ‘in the French court by French gallants’, with ‘the stage hung
-all with black velvet’.
-
-[44] Lanson, _loc. cit._ 422. A description of a tragi-comedy called
-_Genièvre_, based on Ariosto, at Fontainebleau in 1564 neglects the
-staging, but gives a picture of the audience as
-
- une jeune presse
- De tous costez sur les tapis tendus,
- Honnestement aux girons espandus
- De leur maîtresse.
-
-B. Rossi’s _Fiammella_ was given at Paris in 1584 with a setting of
-‘boschi’.
-
-[45] Lanson, _loc. cit._ 424.
-
-[46] The plan is in J. A. Du Cerceau, _Les Plus Excellens Bastimens de
-France_ (1576–9), and is reproduced in W. H. Ward, _French Châteaux
-and Gardens in the Sixteenth Century_, 14; cf. R. Blomfield, _Hist. of
-French Architecture_, i. 81, who, however, thinks that Du Cerceau’s
-‘bastiment en manière de théâtre’ was not the long room, but the open
-courtyard, in the form of a square with concave angles and semicircular
-projections on each side, which occupies the middle of the block.
-
-[47] Prunières, _Ballet de Cour_, 72, 134.
-
-[48] Bapst, 147, reproduces an example. This is apparently the type
-of French stage described by J. C. Scaliger, _Poetice_ (1561), i.
-21, ‘Nunc in Gallia ita agunt fabulas, ut omnia in conspectu sint;
-universus apparatus dispositis sublimibus sedibus. Personae ipsae
-nunquam discedunt: qui silent pro absentibus habentur’.
-
-[49] Rigal, 36, 46, 53.
-
-[50] The full text is printed by E. Dacier from _B. N. f. fr._ 24330 in
-_Mémoires de la Soc. de l’Hist. de Paris_ (1901), xxviii. 105, and is
-analysed by Rigal, 247. The designs have recently (1920) been published
-in H. C. Lancaster’s edition; reproductions, from the originals or
-from models made for the Exposition of 1878, will be found of Durval’s
-_Agarite_ in Rigal, f.p., Lawrence, i. 241, Thorndike, 154; of Hardy’s
-_Cornélie_ in Rigal, _Alexandre Hardy_ (1890), f.p., Bapst, 185; of
-_Pandoste_ in Jusserand, _Shakespeare in France_, 71, 75; of Mairet’s
-_Sylvanire_ in E. Faguet, _Hist. de la Litt. Fr._ ii. 31; and of
-_Pyrame et Thisbé_, Corneille’s _L’Illusion Comique_, and Du Ryer’s
-_Lisandre et Caliste_ in Petit de Julleville, _Hist._ iv. 220, 270, 354.
-
-[51] ‘Il faut un antre ... d’où sort un hermite’ (Dacier, 116), ‘une
-fenestre qui soit vis à vis d’une autre fenestre grillée pour la
-prison, où Lisandre puisse parler à Caliste’ (116), ‘un beau palais
-eslevé de trois ou quatre marches’ (117), ‘un palais ou sénat fort
-riche’ (117), ‘une case où il y ayt pour enseigne L’Ormeau’ (117), ‘une
-mer’ (117), ‘une tente’ (121), ‘un hermitage où l’on monte et descend’
-(123), ‘une fenestre où se donne une lettre’ (124), ‘une tour, une
-corde nouée pour descendre de la tour, un pont-levis qui se lâche quand
-il est nécessaire’ (125), ‘une sortie d’un roy en forme de palais’
-(127).
-
-[52] ‘Il faut aussy une belle chambre, une table, deux tabourets, une
-écritoire’ (117), ‘une belle chambre, où il y ayt un beau lict, des
-sièges pour s’asseoir; la dicte chambre s’ouvre et se ferme plusieurs
-fois’ (121), ‘forme de salle garnie de sièges où l’on peint une dame’
-(126).
-
-[53] Dacier, 119.
-
-[54] Ibid. 119.
-
-[55] ‘Forme de fontaine en grotte coulante ou de peinture’ (Dacier,
-127); ‘Au milieu du théâtre, dit la persepective, doit avoir une
-grande boutique d’orfèvre, fort superbe d’orfèvrerie et autre joyaux’
-(136); ‘Il faut deux superbes maisons ornées de peinture; au milieu
-du théâtre, une persepective où il y ait deux passages entre les deux
-maisons’ (137).
-
-[56] ‘Il faut que le théâtre soit tout en pastoralle, antres, verdures,
-et fleurs’ (116), ‘Il faut ... le petit Chastellet de la rue Saint
-Jacques, et faire paroistre une rue où sont les bouchers’ (116), ‘en
-pastoralle à la discrétion du feinteur’ (124), ‘Il faut le théâtre en
-rues et maisons’ (129, for Rotrou’s _Les Ménechmes_), ‘La décoration du
-théâtre doit estre en boutique’ (136), ‘le feinteur doit faire paraitre
-sur le théâtre la place Royalle ou l’imiter à peu près’ (133).
-
-[57] ‘Il faut que cela soit caché durant le premier acte, et l’on ne
-faict paroistre cela qu’au second acte, et se referme au mesme acte’
-(116), ‘un eschaffaut qui soit caché’ (117), ‘le vaisseau paraist
-au quatriesme acte’ (120). For the use of curtains to effect these
-discoveries, cf. Rigal, 243, 253, who, however, traces to a guess of
-Lemazurier, _Galerie Historique_, i. 4, the often repeated statement
-that to represent a change of scene ‘on levait ou on tirait une
-tapisserie, et cela se faisait jusqu’à dix ou douze fois dans la même
-pièce’.
-
-[58] It is so, e.g., in the design for _Agarite_.
-
-[59] ‘Non sic tolerari potest, ut longe lateque dissita loca in unum
-subito proscenium cogantur; qua in re per se absurdissima et nullo
-veterum exemplo comprobata nimium sibi hodie quidam indulserunt’; cf.
-Creizenach, ii. 102. Spingarn, _Literary Criticism in the Renaissance_,
-89, 206, 290, discusses the origin of the unities, and cites
-Castelvetro, Poetica (1570), 534, ‘La mutatione tragica non può tirar
-con esso seco se non una giornata e un luogo’, and Jean de la Taille,
-_Art de Tragédie_ (1572), ‘Il faut toujours représenter l’histoire ou
-le jeu en un même jour, en un même temps, et en un même lieu’.
-
-[60] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 257; Lawrence (i. 123), _Early French
-Players in England_. It is only a guess of Mr. Lawrence’s that these
-visitors played _Maistre Pierre Patelin_, a farce which requires a
-background with more than one _domus_. Karl Young, in _M. P._ ii. 97,
-traces some influence of French farces on the work of John Heywood.
-There had been ‘Fransche-men that playt’ at Dundee in 1490, and
-‘mynstrells of Fraunce’, not necessarily actors, played before Henry
-VII at Abingdon in 1507.
-
-[61] Halle, i. 176.
-
-[62] Halle, ii. 86.
-
-[63] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 196; cf. ch. xii (Paul’s). Spinelli’s
-letter is preserved in Marino Sanuto, _Diarii_, xlvi. 595, ‘La sala
-dove disnamo et si rapresentò la comedia haveva nella fronte una grande
-zoglia di bosso, che di mezzo conteneva in lettere d’oro: _Terentii
-Formio_. Da l’un di canti poi vi era in lettere antique in carta:
-_cedant arma togae_. Da l’altro: _Foedus pacis non movebitur_. Sotto
-poi la zoglia si vide: _honori et laudi pacifici_.... Per li altri
-canti de la sala vi erano sparsi de li altri moti pertinenti alla pace’.
-
-[64] _V. P._ iv. 115 translates ‘zoglia di bosso’ as ‘a garland of
-box’, but Florio gives ‘soglia’ as ‘the threshold or hanse of a doore;
-also the transome or lintle over a dore’.
-
-[65] Murray, ii. 168; cf. ch. xii (Westminster).
-
-[66] Halle, ii. 109.
-
-[67] Cf. ch. viii.
-
-[68] The memorandum on the reform of the Revels office in 1573, which
-I attribute to Edward Buggin, tells us (_Tudor Revels_, 37; cf. ch.
-iii) that ‘The connynge of the office resteth in skill of devise,
-in vnderstandinge of historyes, in iudgement of comedies tragedyes
-and showes, in sight of perspective and architecture, some smacke of
-geometrye and other thynges’. If Sir George Buck, however, in 1612,
-thought that a knowledge of perspective was required by the Art of
-Revels, he veiled it under the expression ‘other arts’ (cf. ch. iii).
-
-[69] _Mundus et Infans_, _Hickscorner_, _Youth_, _Johan Evangelist_,
-_Magnificence_, _Four Elements_, _Calisto and Melibaea_, _Nature_,
-_Love_, _Weather_, _Johan Johan_, _Pardoner and Friar_, _Four PP._,
-_Gentleness and Nobility_, _Witty and Witless_, _Kinge Johan_, _Godly
-Queen Hester_, _Wit and Science_, _Thersites_, with the fragmentary
-_Albion Knight_. To these must now be added Henry Medwall’s _Fulgens
-and Lucres_ (N.D., but 1500 <), formerly only known by a fragment
-(cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 458), but recently found in the Mostyn
-collection, described by F. S. Boas and A. W. Reed in _T. L. S._ (20
-Feb. and 3 April 1919), and reprinted by S. de Ricci (1920).
-
-[70] _Wealth and Health_, _Nice Wanton_, _Lusty Juventus_, _Impatient
-Poverty_, _Respublica_, _Jacob and Esau_, and perhaps _Enough is as
-Good as a Feast_, with the fragmentary _Love Feigned and Unfeigned_.
-
-[71] _Trial of Treasure_, _Like Will to Like_, _The Longer Thou Livest,
-The More Fool Thou Art_, _Marriage of Wit and Science_, _Marriage
-between Wit and Wisdom_, _New Custom_, _The Tide Tarrieth no Man_, _All
-for Money_, _Disobedient Child_, _Conflict of Conscience_, _Pedlar’s
-Prophecy_, _Misogonus_, _Glass of Government_, _Three Ladies of
-London_, _King Darius_, _Mary Magdalene_, _Apius and Virginia_, with
-the fragmentary _Cruel Debtor_.
-
-[72] For details of date and authorship cf. chh. xxiii, xxiv,
-and _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 439, 443. Albright, 29, attempts a
-classification on the basis of staging, but not, I think, very
-successfully.
-
-[73] Cf. e.g. _Hickscorner_, 544; _Youth_, 84, 201, 590, 633; _Johan
-Johan_, 667; _Godly Queen Hester_, 201, 635, 886; _Wit and Science_,
-969; _Wit and Wisdom_, 3, p. 60; _Nice Wanton_, 416; _Impatient
-Poverty_, 164, 726, 746, 861, 988; _Respublica_, V. i. 38; _Longer
-Thou Livest_, 628, 1234; _Conflict of Conscience_, III. i. 2; _et ad
-infinitum_. Characters in action are said to be in place. For the
-_platea_ cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 80, 135, but _Kinge Johan_, 1377,
-has a direction for an alarm ‘_extra locum_’.
-
-[74] Cf. e.g. _Wit and Science_, 193, ‘Wyt speketh at the doore’;
-_Longer Thou Livest_, 523, ‘Betweene whiles let Moros put in his head’,
-583, ‘Crie without the doore’, &c., &c.
-
-[75] Cf. ch. vii.
-
-[76] Cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 216, and for the making of ‘room’ or ‘a
-hall’ for a mask, ch. v.
-
-[77] Cf. M. L. Spencer, _Corpus Christi Pageants in England_, 184;
-Creizenach, ii. 101.
-
-[78] Wallace, ii. 48, ‘The Blackfriars stage was elastic in depth as
-well as width, and could according to the demands of the given play
-be varied by curtains or traverses of any required number placed at
-any required distance between the balcony and the front of the stage’;
-Prölss, 89; Albright, 58; cf. p. 78.
-
-[79] _Volpone_, v. 2801 (cf. p. 111); _White Devil_, V. iv. 70:
-
- ‘_Flamineo._ I will see them,
- They are behind the travers. Ile discover
- Their superstitious howling.
-
-_Cornelia, the Moore and 3 other Ladies discovered, winding Marcello’s
-coarse_’;
-
-_Duchess of Malfi_, IV. i. 54:
-
-‘_Here is discover’d, behind a travers, the artificiall figures of
-Antonio and his children, appearing as if they were dead._’
-
-[80] _Duke of Guise_, v. 3 (quoted by Albright, 58), ‘The scene draws,
-behind it a Traverse’, and later, ‘The Traverse is drawn. The King
-rises from his Chair, comes forward’.
-
-[81] The Revels Accounts for 1511 (Brewer, ii. 1497) include 10_d._ for
-a rope used for a ‘travas’ in the hall at Greenwich and stolen during a
-disguising. Puttenham (1589), i. 17, in an attempt to reconstruct the
-methods of classical tragedy, says that the ‘floore or place where the
-players vttered ... had in it sundrie little diuisions by curteins as
-trauerses to serue for seueral roomes where they might repaire vnto and
-change their garments and come in againe, as their speaches and parts
-were to be renewed’.
-
-[82] There was a traverse in the nursery of Edward V in 1474; cf. _H.
-O._ *28, ‘Item, we will that our sayd sonne in his chamber and for all
-nighte lyverye to be sette, the traverse drawne anone upon eight of the
-clocke’.
-
-[83] Rimbault, 150, 167. There is an elaborate description of ‘a fayer
-traverse of black taffata’ set up in the chapel at Whitehall for the
-funeral of James in 1625 and afterwards borrowed for the ceremony in
-Westminster Abbey.
-
-[84] The chapel of Ahasuerus come in and sing (860). On the possibility
-that plays may have been acted in the chapel under Elizabeth, cf. ch.
-xii.
-
-[85] _G. G. Needle_, I. iv. 34; II. iv. 20, ‘here, euen by this poste,
-Ich sat’; _Jack Juggler_, 908, ‘Joll his hed to a post’.
-
-[86] The manuscript of _Misogonus_ was written at Kettering. The
-prologue of _Mary Magdalene_ is for travelling actors, who had given
-it at a university. _Thersites_ contains local references (cf. Boas,
-20) suggesting Oxford. Both this and _The Disobedient Child_ are
-adaptations of dialogues of Ravisius Textor, but the adapters seem to
-be responsible for the staging.
-
-[87] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[88] II. ii. ‘Fowre women bravelie apparelled, sitting singing in
-Lamiaes windowe, with wrought Smockes, and Cawles, in their hands, as
-if they were a working’. _Supposes_, IV. iv, is a dialogue between
-Dalio the cook, at Erostrato’s window, and visitors outside. At the
-beginning, ‘Dalio commeth to the wyndowe, and there maketh them
-answere’; at the end, ‘Dalio draweth his hed in at the wyndowe, the
-Scenese commeth out’. The dialogue of sc. v proceeds at the door, and
-finally ‘Dalio pulleth the Scenese in at the dores’. In _Two Ital.
-Gent._ 435, ‘Victoria comes to the windowe, and throwes out a letter’.
-It must not be assumed on the analogy of later plays, and is in fact
-unlikely, that the windows of these early ‘houses’, or those of the
-‘case’ at Ferrara in 1486, were upper floor windows.
-
-[89] There is a reference to a falling curtain, not necessarily a stage
-one, in _Alchemist_, IV. ii. 6, ‘O, for a suite, To fall now, like a
-cortine: flap’. Such curtains were certainly used in masks; cf. ch. vi.
-
-[90] Donne, _Poems_ (ed. Grierson), i. 441; J. Hannah, _Courtly Poets_,
-29. Graves, 20, quotes with this epigram Drummond, _Cypress Grove_,
-‘Every one cometh there to act his part of this tragi-comedy, called
-life, which done, the courtaine is drawn, and he removing is said to
-dy’. But of course many stage deaths are followed by the drawing of
-curtains which are not front curtains.
-
-[91] Inns of Court and University plays naturally run on analogous
-lines. For the ‘houses’ at Cambridge in 1564 and at Oxford in
-1566, cf. ch. vii. The three Cambridge Latin comedies, _Hymenaeus_
-(1579), _Victoria_ (_c._ 1580–3), _Pedantius_ (_c._ 1581), follow
-the Italian tradition. For _Victoria_, which has the same plot as
-_Two Ital. Gent._, Fraunce directs, ‘Quatuor extruendae sunt domus,
-nimirum Fidelis, 1^a, Fortunij, 2^a, Cornelij, 3^a Octauiani, 4^a.
-Quin et sacellum quoddam erigendum est, in quo constituendum est
-Cardinalis cuiusdam Sepulchrum, ita efformatum, vt claudi aperirique
-possit. In Sacello autem Lampas ardens ponenda est’. The earliest
-extant tragedies, Grimald’s _Christus Redivivus_ (_c._ 1540) and
-_Archipropheta_ (_c._ 1547), antedate the pseudo-Senecan influence.
-Practical convenience, rather than dramatic theory, imposed upon the
-former a unity of action before the tomb. Grimald says, ‘Loca item,
-haud usque eò discriminari censebat; quin unum in proscenium, facilè &
-citra negocium conduci queant’. The latter was mainly before Herod’s
-palace, but seems to have showed also John’s prison at Macherus.
-There is an opening scene, as in _Promos and Cassandra_, of approach
-to the palace (Boas, 28, 35). Christopherson’s _Jephthah_, Watson’s
-(?) _Absalon_, and Gager’s _Meleager_ (1582) observe classical unity.
-The latter has two houses, in one of which an altar may have been
-‘discovered’. Boas, 170, quotes two s.ds., ‘Transeunt venatores e
-Regia ad fanum Dianae’ and ‘Accendit ligna in ara, in remotiore scenae
-parte extructa’. Gager’s later plays (Boas, 179) seem to be under the
-influence of theatrical staging. On Legge’s _Richardus Tertius vide_
-p. 43, _infra_.
-
-[92] I do not suggest that the actual ‘templum’ in Serlio’s design,
-which is painted on the back-cloth, was practicable. The _ruffiana’s_
-house was. About the shop or tavern, half-way up the rake of the stage,
-I am not sure. There is an echo of the _ruffiana_, quite late, in
-_London Prodigal_ (1605), V. i. 44, ‘Enter Ruffyn’.
-
-[93] The early editions have few s.ds. Mr. Bond supplies many, which
-are based on a profound misunderstanding of Lyly’s methods of staging,
-to some of the features of which Reynolds in _M. P._ i. 581, ii. 69,
-and Lawrence, i. 237, have called attention.
-
-[94] Possibly I. i might be an approach scene outside the city, as
-prisoners are sent (76) ‘into the citie’, but this may only mean to the
-interior of the city from the market-place.
-
-[95] Action is continuous between II. i, at the cave, and II. ii, in
-which Sapho will ‘crosse the Ferrie’. Phao told Sibylla (II. i. 14)
-that he was out of his way and benighted, but this was a mere excuse
-for addressing her.
-
-[96] The palace itself was not necessarily staged. If it was, it was
-used with the lunary bank, after visiting which Cynthia goes ‘in’ (IV.
-iii. 171). She comes ‘out’ and goes ‘in’ again (V. iii. 17, 285), but
-these terms may only refer to a stage-door. Nor do I think that the
-‘solitarie cell’ spoken of by Endymion (II. i. 41) was staged.
-
-[97] Yet Eumenides, who was sent to Thessaly in III. i, has only
-reached the fountain twenty years later (III. iii. 17), although he is
-believed at Court to be dead (IV. iii. 54). The time of the play cannot
-be reduced to consistency; cf. Bond, iii. 14.
-
-[98] In IV. ii. 96 Protea, in a scene before the rock, says to
-Petulius, ‘Follow me at this doore, and out at the other’. During the
-transit she is metamorphosed, but the device is rather clumsy. The
-doors do not prove that a _domus_ of Erisichthon was visible; they may
-be merely stage-doors.
-
-[99] Possibly _The Cobler’s Prophecy_ is also a Chapel or Paul’s play;
-it was given before an audience who ‘sit and see’, and to whom the
-presenters ‘cast comfets’ (39). The _domus_ required for a background
-are (_a_) Ralph’s, (_b_) Mars’s court, (_c_) Venus’s court, (_d_) the
-Duke’s court, (_e_) the cabin of Contempt. From (_a_) to (_b_) is ‘not
-farre hence’ (138) and ‘a flight shoot vp the hill’ (578); between
-are a wood and a spot near Charon’s ferry. From (_b_) to (_c_) leads
-‘Adowne the hill’ (776). At the end (_e_) is burnt, and foreshortening
-of space is suggested by the s.d. (1564), ‘Enter the Duke ... then
-compasse the stage, from one part let a smoke arise: at which place
-they all stay’. At the beginning (3) ‘on the stage Mercurie from one
-end Ceres from another meete’. _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_,
-which cannot be definitely assigned either to the Chapel or to Paul’s,
-continues the manner of the old interlude; it has a stage (1570), but
-the abstract action requires no setting beyond the tiled hall (205,
-359, 932, 974) in which the performance was given. _The Wars of Cyrus_
-is a Chapel play, but must be classed, from the point of view of
-staging, with the plays given in public theatres (cf. p. 48).
-
-[100] Act III has the s.d., ‘_The storme. Enter Æneas and Dido in the
-Caue at seuerall times_’ (996).... ‘_Exeunt to the Caue_’ (1059). They
-are supposed to remain in the cave during the interval between Acts III
-and IV, after which, ‘_Anna._ Behold where both of them come forth the
-Caue’ (1075).
-
-[101] ‘_Here the Curtaines draw, there is discouered Iupiter dandling
-Ganimed vpon his knee_’ (1).... ‘_Exeunt Iupiter cum Ganimed_’ (120).
-But as Jupiter first says, ‘Come Ganimed, we must about this gear’, it
-may be that they walk off. If so, perhaps they are merely ‘discouered’
-in the wood, and the curtains are front curtains.
-
-[102] So too (897),
-
- This day they both a hunting forth will ride
- Into these woods, adioyning to these walles.
-
-[103] At the end of the banquet scene (598), ‘_Exeunt omnes_’ towards
-the interior of the palace, when ‘_Enter Venus at another doore, and
-takes Ascanius by the sleeue_’. She carries him to the grove, and here
-he presumably remains until the next Act (III), when ‘_Enter Iuno to
-Ascanius asleepe_’ (811). He is then removed again, perhaps to make
-room for the hunting party. I suppose the ‘_another doore_’ of 598 to
-mean a stage-door.
-
-[104] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[105] Direct evidence pointing to performance at Court is only
-available for two of the five, _Cambyses_ and _Orestes_.
-
-[106] _Cambyses_, 75, 303, 380, 968, 1041, 1055; _Patient Grissell_,
-212, 338, 966, 1048, 1185, 1291, 1972, 1984, 2069; _Orestes_, 221,
-1108; _Clyomon and Clamydes_, 1421, 1717, 1776, 1901, 1907, 1931,
-1951, 2008, 2058, 2078; _Common Conditions_, 2, 110, 544, 838, 1397,
-1570; &c. Of course, the technical meaning of ‘place’ shades into the
-ordinary one.
-
-[107] A similar instruction clears the stage at the end (1197) of a
-corpse, as in many later plays; cf. p. 80.
-
-[108] The s.d. ‘one of their wives come out’ (813) does not necessarily
-imply a clown’s _domus_. _Cambyses_ fluctuates between the actor’s
-notion that personages come ‘out’ from the tiring-house, and the
-earlier notion of play-makers and audience that they go ‘out’ from the
-stage. Thus ‘Enter Venus leading out her son’ (843), but ‘goe out Venus
-and Cupid’ at the end of the same episode (880).
-
-[109] ‘Come, let us run his arse against the poste’ (186); cf. pp. 27,
-75.
-
-[110] For later examples cf. p. 99.
-
-[111] Lawrence (i. 41), _Title and Locality Boards on the
-Pre-Restoration Stage_.
-
-[112] Lawrence, i. 55. No English example of an inscribed miracle-play
-_domus_ has come to light.
-
-[113] Gregory Smith, _Elizabethan Critical Essays_, i. 185, 197
-(cf. App. C, No. xxxiv). Sidney’s main argument is foreshadowed in
-Whetstone’s Epistle to _Promos and Cassandra_ (1578; cf. App. C, No.
-xix), ‘The Englishman in this quallitie, is most vaine, indiscreete,
-and out of order; he fyrst groundes his worke on impossibilities: then
-in three howers ronnes he throwe the worlde: marryes, gets children,
-makes children men, men to conquer kingdomes, murder monsters, and
-bringeth Gods from Heaven, and fetcheth Divels from Hel’.
-
-[114] Cf. p. 20.
-
-[115] Gibson had used written titles to name his pageant buildings; cf.
-Brewer, ii. 1501; Halle, i. 40, 54. The Westminster accounts _c._ 1566
-(cf. ch. xii) include an item for ‘drawing the tytle of the comedee’.
-The Revels officers paid ‘for the garnyshinge of xiiij titles’ in
-1579–80, and for the ‘painting of ix. titles with copartmentes’ in
-1580–1 (Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 328, 338). The latter number agrees with
-that of the plays and tilt challenges for the year; the former is
-above that of the nine plays recorded, and Lawrence thinks that the
-balance was for locality-titles. But titles were also sometimes used
-in the course of action. Thus _Tide Tarrieth for No Man_ has the
-s.d. (1439), ‘Christianity must enter with a sword, with a title of
-pollicy, but on the other syde of the tytle, must be written gods word,
-also a shield, wheron must be written riches, but on the other syde
-of the shield must be Fayth’. Later on (1501) Faithful ‘turneth the
-titles’. Prologues, such as those of _Damon and Pythias_, _Respublica_,
-and _Conflict of Conscience_, which announce the names of the plays,
-tell rather against the use of title-boards for those plays. For the
-possible use of both title- and scene-boards at a later date, cf. pp.
-126, 154.
-
-[116] Cf. pp. 60, 63.
-
-[117] In the Latin academic drama the transition between classical
-and romantic staging is represented by Legge’s _Richardus Tertius_
-(1580). This is Senecan in general character, but unity of place is not
-strictly observed. A s.d. to the first _Actio_ (iii. 64) is explicit
-for the use of a curtain to discover a recessed interior, ’ A curtaine
-being drawne, let the queene appeare in y^e sanctuary, her 5 daughters
-and maydes about her, sittinge on packs, fardells, chests, cofers. The
-queene sitting on y^e ground with fardells about her’.
-
-[118] Cf. p. 21.
-
-[119] Cf. ch. vii.
-
-[120] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 365.
-
-[121] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[122] There are four presenters, but, in order to avoid crowding the
-stage, they are reduced to two by the sending of the others to bed
-within the hut (128).
-
-[123] Albright, 66; Reynolds, i. 11.
-
-[124] Queen’s, _Three Lords and Three Ladies of London_, _1, 2
-Troublesome Reign of King John_, _Selimus_, _Looking-Glass for London
-and England_, _Famous Victories of Henry V_, _James IV_, _King Leir_,
-_True Tragedy of Richard III_; Sussex’s, _George a Greene_, _Titus
-Andronicus_; Pembroke’s, _Edward II_, _Taming of a Shrew_, _2, 3
-Henry VI_, _Richard III_; Strange’s or Admiral’s, _1, 2 Tamburlaine_,
-_Spanish Tragedy_, _Orlando Furioso_, _Fair Em_, _Battle of Alcazar_,
-_Knack to Know a Knave_, _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_, _1 Henry
-VI_, _Comedy of Errors_, _Jew of Malta_, _Wounds of Civil War_, _Dr.
-Faustus_, _Four Prentices of London_; Admiral’s, _Knack to Know an
-Honest Man_, _Blind Beggar of Alexandria_, _Humorous Day’s Mirth_, _Two
-Angry Women of Abingdon_, _Look About You_, _Shoemaker’s Holiday_,
-_Old Fortunatus_, _Patient Grissell_, _1 Sir John Oldcastle_, _Captain
-Thomas Stukeley_, _1, 2 Robert Earl of Huntingdon_, _Englishmen for my
-Money_; Chamberlain’s, _Edward III_, _1 Richard II_, _Sir Thomas More_,
-_Taming of the Shrew_, _Two Gentlemen of Verona_, _Love’s Labour’s
-Lost_, _Romeo and Juliet_, _Midsummer Night’s Dream_, _Richard II_,
-_King John_, _Merchant of Venice_, _1, 2 Henry IV_, _Every Man in his
-Humour_, _Warning for Fair Women_, _A Larum for London_, _Thomas Lord
-Cromwell_ (the last two possibly Globe plays); Derby’s, _1, 2 Edward
-IV_, _Trial of Chivalry_; Oxford’s, _Weakest Goeth to the Wall_;
-Chapel, _Wars of Cyrus_; Unknown, _Arden of Feversham_, _Soliman
-and Perseda_, _Edward I_, _Jack Straw_, _Locrine_, _Mucedorus_,
-_Alphonsus_, _1, 2 Contention of York and Lancaster_.
-
-[125] _Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 446.
-
-[126] I here use ‘scene’ in the sense of a continuous section of action
-in an unchanged locality, and do not follow either the usage of the
-playwrights, which tends to be based upon the neo-classical principle
-that the entrance or exit of a speaker of importance constitutes a
-fresh scene, or the divisions of the editors, who often assume a change
-of locality where none has taken place; cf. ch. xxii. I do not regard
-a scene as broken by a momentary clearance of the stage, or by the
-opening of a recess in the background while speakers remain on the
-stage, or by the transference of action from one point to another of
-the background if this transference merely represents a journey over a
-foreshortened distance between neighbouring houses.
-
-[127] Albright, 114; Thorndike, 102.
-
-[128] _Downfall of R. Hood_, V. i.
-
-[129] _Alphonsus_, 163; _K. to K. Honest Man_, 71. The friar’s cell of
-_T. G._ V. i may be in an urban setting, as Silvia bids Eglamour go
-‘out at the postern by the abbey wall’; that of _R. J._ II. iii, vi;
-III. iii; IV. i; V. 2 seems to be in rural environs. How far there is
-interior action is not clear. None is suggested by II. or V. In III.
-iii (Q_{2}) the Friar bids Romeo ‘come forth’ (1), and Romeo falls
-‘upon the ground’ (69). Then ‘Enter Nurse and knocke’ (71). After
-discussing the knock, which is twice repeated, the Friar bids Romeo
-‘Run to my study’ and calls ‘I come’. Then ‘Enter Nurse’ (79) with ‘Let
-me come in’. Romeo has not gone, but is still ‘There on the ground’
-(83). Q_{1} is in the main consistent with this, but the first s.d. is
-merely ‘Nurse knockes’, and after talking to Romeo, ‘Nurse offers to
-goe in and turnes againe’ (163). In IV. i (Q_{1}, and Q_{2}) the Friar
-observes Juliet coming ‘towards my Cell’ (17), and later Juliet says
-‘Shut the door’ (44); cf. p. 83.
-
-[130] _Downfall of R. Hood_, III. ii, ‘Curtaines open, Robin Hoode
-sleepes on a greene banke and Marian strewing flowers on him’ ...
-‘yonder is the bower’; _Death of R. Hood_, I. v; cf. I. iv, ‘Let us to
-thy bower’.
-
-[131] _B. B. of Alexandria_, scc. i, iv; _Battle of Alcazar_, ii. 325,
-where the presenter describes Nemesis as awaking the Furies, ‘In caue
-as dark as hell, and beds of steele’, and the corresponding s.d. in the
-plot (_H. P._ 139) is ‘Enter aboue Nemesis ... to them lying behinde
-the Curtaines 3 Furies’.
-
-[132] _K. Leir_, scc. xxvii-xxxii.
-
-[133] _K. Leir_, sc. xxiv, ‘Enter the Gallian King and Queene, and
-Mumford, with a basket, disguised like Countrey folke’. Leir meets
-them, complaining of ‘this vnfruitfull soyle’, and (2178) ‘She bringeth
-him to the table’; _B. B. of Alexandria_, sc. iii.
-
-[134] _B. B. of Alexandria_, sc. iii.
-
-[135] _Locrine_, III. i (d.s.), ‘A Crocadile sitting on a riuers banke,
-and a little snake stinging it. Then let both of them fall into the
-water’; IV. v. 1756 (a desert scene), ‘Fling himselfe into the riuer’;
-V. vi. 2248 (a battle-field scene), ‘She drowneth her selfe’; _Weakest
-Goeth to the Wall_, I. i (d.s.), ‘The Dutches of Burgundie ... leaps
-into a Riuer, leauing the child vpon the banke’; _Trial of Chivalry_,
-C_{4}^v, ‘yon fayre Riuer side, which parts our Camps’; E_{2}, ‘This
-is our meeting place; here runs the streame That parts our camps’; cf.
-p. 90. _A. of Feversham_, IV. ii and iii are, like part of _Sapho and
-Phao_ (cf. p. 33), near a ferry, and ‘Shakebag falles into a ditch’,
-but the river is not necessarily shown.
-
-[136] Two late testimonies may be held to support the theory. In _T. N.
-K._ (King’s, _c. 1613_), III. i. 31, ‘Enter Palamon as out of a Bush’,
-but cf. III. vi. 1, ‘Enter Palamon from the Bush’. The Prologue to
-_Woman Killed with Kindness_ (Worcester’s, _1603_) says:
-
- I come but like a harbinger, being sent
- To tell you what these preparations mean:
- Look for no glorious state; our Muse is bent
- Upon a barren subject, a bare scene.
- We could afford this twig a timber tree.
- Whose strength might boldly on your favours build;
- Our russet, tissue; drone, a honey bee;
- Our barren plot, a large and spacious field.
-
-These rhetorical antitheses are an apology for meanness of theme,
-rather than, like the prologues to _Henry V_, for scenic imperfections,
-and I hesitate to believe that, when the actor said ‘twig’, he pointed
-to a branch which served as sole symbol on the stage for a woodland.
-
-[137] _Looking-Glass_, V. iii. 2059, 2075, ‘Lo, a pleasant shade, a
-spreading vine ... _A Serpent deuoureth the vine_’; _O. Furioso_, 572,
-‘Sacrepant hangs vp the Roundelayes on the trees’ (cf. _A. Y. L._
-III. ii. 1, ‘Hang there, my verse, in witness of my love’); _B. B. of
-Alexandria_, sc. vi, ‘Here’s a branch, forsooth, of your little son
-turned to a mandrake tree’; _Old Fortunatus_, 1–357, where Fortunatus
-dreams under a tree, 1861–2128, where there are apple-and nut-trees
-in a wilderness; &c., &c. Simon Forman in 1611 saw Macbeth and Banquo
-‘ridinge thorowe a wod’ (_N. S. S. Trans._ 1875–6, 417), although from
-the extant text we could have inferred no trees in I. iii.
-
-[138] _M. N. D._ II-IV. i; _Mucedorus_, I.; II. iii; III. iii-v; IV.
-ii, iii; V. i; _T. A. Women of Abingdon_, scc. vii, ix-xii.
-
-[139] _Edw. I_, 2391, ‘I must hang vp my weapon vppon this tree’;
-_Alphonsus_, II. i. 417, ‘this wood; where in ambushment lie’. For a
-river cf. p. 51, n. 8 (_Locrine_).
-
-[140] _Hen. V_, IV, prol. 49.
-
-[141] _1 Tamb._ 705, ‘Sound trumpets to the battell, and he runs in’;
-1286, ‘They sound the battell within, and stay’; _2 Tamb._ 2922, ‘Sound
-to the battell, and Sigismond comes out wounded’; _1 Contention_, sc.
-xii. 1, ‘Alarmes within, and the Chambers be discharged, like as it
-were a fight at sea’.
-
-[142] _Alphonsus_, II. i, ii; _1 Hen. IV_, V. i-iv. The whole of _Edw.
-III_, III, IV, V, is spread over Creçy and other vaguely located
-battle-fields in France.
-
-[143] _1 Contention_, sc. xxii. 1, ‘Alarmes to the battaile, and then
-enter the Duke of _Somerset_ and _Richard_ fighting, and _Richard_ kils
-him vnder the signe of the Castle in saint _Albones_’. The s.d. of _2
-Hen. VI_, V. ii. 66, is only ‘Enter Richard, and Somerset to fight’,
-but the dialogue shows that the ‘alehouse paltry sign’ was represented.
-
-[144] _1 Contention_, sc. xxii, 62 (with the alehouse), ‘Alarmes
-againe, and then enter three or foure, bearing the Duke of _Buckingham_
-wounded to his Tent’; _2 Tamb._ IV. i. 3674, ‘Amyras and Celebinus
-issues from the tent where Caliphas sits a sleepe’ ... 3764 (after
-Caliphas has spoken from within the tent), ‘He goes in and brings
-him out’; _Locrine_, 1423, ‘mee thinkes I heare some shriking noise.
-That draweth near to our pauillion’; _James IV_, 2272, ‘Lords, troop
-about my tent’; _Edw. I_, 1595, ‘King Edward ... goes into the Queenes
-Chamber, the Queenes Tent opens, shee is discouered in her bed’ ...
-1674, ‘They close the Tent’ ... 1750, ‘The Queenes Tent opens’ ...
-1867, ‘The Nurse closeth the Tent’ ... 1898, ‘Enter ... to giue the
-Queene Musicke at her Tent’, and in a later scene, 2141, ‘They all
-passe ... to the Kings pavilion, the King sits in his Tent with his
-pages about him’ ... 2152, ‘they all march to the Chamber. Bishop
-speakes to her [the Queen] in her bed’; _1 Troilus and Cressida_,
-plot (_Henslowe Papers_, 142), ‘Enter ... to them Achillis in his
-Tent’; _Trial of Chivalry_, C_{4}^v, ‘this is the Pauilion of the
-Princesse .... Here is the key that opens to the Tent’ ... D, ‘Discouer
-her sitting in a chayre asleepe’ and a dialogue in the tent follows.
-The presence of a tent, not mentioned in dialogue or s.ds., can often
-be inferred in camp scenes, in which personages sit, or in those which
-end with a ‘Come, let us in’; e.g. _Locrine_, 564, 1147.
-
-[145] _Richard III_, V. iii, iv, v (a continuous scene); _1 Hen. IV_,
-V. i, ii, iii, iv (probably similar); cf. p. 51, n. 8 (_Trial of
-Chivalry_).
-
-[146] _Edw. I_, 900, 1082, 2303 (after a battle), ‘Then make the
-proclamation vpon the walles’ (s.d.); _James IV_, 2003 (after parley),
-‘They descend downe, open the gates, and humble them’; _Soliman and
-Perseda_, III. iv; V. iv. 16, ‘The Drum sounds a parle. _Perseda_ comes
-vpon the walls in mans apparell. _Basilisco_ and _Piston_, vpon the
-walles.... Then _Perseda_ comes down to _Soliman_, and _Basilisco_ and
-_Piston_’; _2 Contention_, sc. xviii, ‘Enter the Lord Maire of _Yorke_
-vpon the wals’ ... (after parley) ‘Exit Maire’ ... ‘The Maire opens the
-dore, and brings the keies in his hand’; _K. John_, II. i. 201, ‘Enter
-a Citizen vpon the walles’ ... ‘Heere after excursions, Enter the
-Herald of France with Trumpets to the gates’ ... ‘Enter the two kings
-with their powers at seuerall doores’ ... (after parley) ‘Now, citizens
-of Angiers, ope your gates’; cf. _1 Troublesome Raigne_, scc. ii-x; _2
-Contention_, sc. xxi; _George a Greene_, sc. v; _Orlando Furioso_, I.
-ii; _2 Tamburlaine_, III. iii; _Selimus_, scc. xii, xxvii-xxxi; _Wounds
-of Civil War_, V. ii-iv; _Edw. III_, I. ii; _Death of R. Hood_, V. ii;
-_Stukeley_, II; _Frederick and Basilea_ and _1 Troilus and Cressida_
-plots (_Henslowe Papers_, 137, 142), &c. Wall scenes are not always
-siege scenes. Thus in _2 Troub. Raigne_, sc. i, ‘Enter yong Arthur on
-the walls.... He leapes’ (cf. _K. J._ IV. iii); in _1 Contention_, sc.
-xvi, ‘Enter the Lord Skayles vpon the Tower walles walking. Enter three
-or four Citizens below’ (cf. _2 Hen. VI_, IV. v). Analogous is _2 Hen.
-VI_, IV. ix (Kenilworth), ‘Enter King, Queene, and Somerset on the
-Tarras.... Enter Multitudes with Halters about their neckes’.
-
-[147] In _Alarum for London_, 203, a gun is fired at Antwerp from the
-walls of the castle; cf. _1 Hen. VI_ below.
-
-[148] _2 Tamburlaine_, V. i, ‘Enter the Gouernour of Babylon vpon
-the walles’ ... (after parley) ‘Alarme, and they scale the walles’,
-after which the governor is hung in chains from the walls and shot at;
-_Selimus_, 1200, ‘Alarum, Scale the walles’, 2391, ‘Allarum, beats
-them off the walles; cf. _1 Hen. VI_ below. _Hen. V_, III. i-iii (a
-continuous scene) opens with ‘Alarum: Scaling Ladders at Harflew’.
-Henry says ‘Once more vnto the breach’, but later a parley is sounded
-from the town, and ‘Enter the King and all his Traine before the
-Gates’, where submission is made, and they ‘enter the Towne’. Sometimes
-an assault appears to be on the gates rather than the walls; e.g. _1
-Edw. IV_, I. iv-vi; _1 Hen. VI_, I. iii.
-
-[149] Cf. p. 106, n. 6. The fullest use of walls is made in _1 Hen.
-VI_, a sixteenth-century play, although the extant text was first
-printed in 1623. An analysis is necessary. The walls are those of
-Orleans in I, II, of Rouen in III, of Bordeaux in IV, of Angiers in V.
-In I. iv, ‘Enter the Master Gunner of Orleance, and his Boy’. They tell
-how
-
- the English, in the suburbs close entrencht,
- Wont through a secret grate of iron barres,
- In yonder tower, to ouer-peere the citie.
-
-The Gunner bids the Boy watch, and tell him if he sees
-any English. Then ‘Enter Salisbury and Talbot on the turrets, with
-others’, and later ‘Enter the Boy with a Linstock’. The English talk of
-attacking ‘heere, at the bulwarke of the bridge’, and ‘Here they shot,
-and Salisbury falls downe’. After an _Exeunt_ which clears the stage,
-there is fighting in the open, during which a French relieving party
-‘enter the Towne with souldiers’, and later ‘Enter on the Walls, Puzel,
-Dolphin, Reigneir, Alanson, and Souldiers’. In II. i, which follows,
-a French watch is set, lest English come ‘neere to the walles’. Then
-‘Enter Talbot, Bedford, and Burgundy, with scaling Ladders’; Bedford
-will go ‘to yond corner’, Burgundy ‘to this’, and Talbot mount ‘heere’.
-They assault, and ‘The French leape ore the walles in their shirts.
-Enter seuerall wayes, Bastard, Alanson, Reignier, halfe ready, and
-halfe unready’. They discourse and are pursued by the English, who
-then ‘retreat’, and in turn discourse ‘here ... in the market-place’,
-rejoicing at how the French did ‘Leape o’re the Walls for refuge in
-the field’. Then, after a clearance, comes a scene at the Countess
-of Auvergne’s castle. In III. ii the Pucell enters before the gates
-of Rouen, obtains access by a trick, and then ‘Enter Pucell on the
-top, thrusting out a torch burning’. Other French watch without for
-the signal from ‘yonder tower’ or ‘turret’, and then follow into the
-town and expel the English, after which, ‘Enter Talbot and Burgonie
-without: within, Pucell, Charles, Bastard, and Reigneir on the walls’.
-After parley, ‘Exeunt from the walls’, and fighting in front leaves the
-English victorious, and again able to enter the town. In IV. ii ‘Enter
-Talbot ... before Burdeaux’, summons the French general ‘vnto the
-Wall’, and ‘Enter Generall aloft’. In V. iii the English are victorious
-before Angiers, sound for a parley before the castle, and ‘Enter
-Reignier on the walles’. After parley, Reignier says ‘I descend’, and
-then ‘Enter Reignier’ to welcome the English.
-
-[150] In _Looking-Glass_, II. i, ‘Enters Remilia’ and after discourse
-bids her ladies ‘Shut close these curtaines straight and shadow me’;
-whereupon ‘They draw the Curtaines and Musicke plaies’. Then enter the
-Magi, and ‘The Magi with their rods beate the ground, and from vnder
-the same riseth a braue Arbour’. Rasni enters and will ‘drawe neare
-Remilias royall tent’. Then ‘He drawes the Curtaines, and findes her
-stroken with thunder, blacke.’ She is borne out. Presumably the same
-arbour is used in IV. iii, where Alvida’s ladies ‘enter the bowers’.
-Both scenes are apparently near the palace at Nineveh and not in a
-camp. The earlier action of _L. L. L._ is in a park, near a manor
-house, which is not necessarily represented. But at IV. iii. 373 the
-King wishes to devise entertainment ‘in their tents’ for the ‘girls
-of France’, and Biron says, ‘First, from the park let us conduct them
-thither’. Presumably therefore V. ii passes near the tents.
-
-[151] _Looking-Glass_, II. i; IV. iii (_supra_); _Edw. III_, II. i.
-61, at Roxborough Castle, ‘Then in the sommer arber sit by me’; _2
-Hen. IV_, V. iii (_infra_). In _Sp. Trag._ II. ii. 42, Horatio and
-Belimperia agree to meet in ‘thy father’s pleasant bower’. In II. iv
-they enter with ‘let us to the bower’ and set an attendant to ‘watch
-without the gate’. While they sit ‘within these leauy bowers’ they
-are betrayed, and (s.d.) ‘They hang him in the Arbor’. In II. v (not
-really a new scene) Hieronimo emerges from his house, where a woman’s
-cry ‘within this garden’ has plucked him from his ‘naked bed’, finds
-Horatio hanging ‘in my bower’, and (s.d.) ‘He cuts him downe’. In III.
-xii (an addition of the 1602 text) Hieronimo ranges ‘this hidious
-orchard’, where Horatio was murdered before ‘this the very tree’.
-Finally, in IV. ii Isabella enters ‘this garden plot’, and (s.d.) ‘She
-cuts downe the Arbour’.
-
-[152] _Sp. Trag._ III. xii^a (_supra_); _Shoemaker’s Holiday_, sc. ii,
-‘this flowry banke’, sc. iv, ‘these meddowes’; _1 Hen. VI_, II. iv,
-‘From off this brier pluck a white rose with me’, &c. In _R. J._ II.
-i (Q_{1}, but Q_{2} has apparently the same setting) Romeo enters,
-followed by friends, who say, ‘He came this way, and leapt this orchard
-wall’, and refer to ‘those trees’. They go, and in II. ii (presumably
-the same scene) Romeo speaks under Juliet’s window ‘ouer my head’.
-She says ‘The Orchard walles are high and hard to climb’, and he, ‘By
-loues light winges did I oreperch these wals’, and later swears by the
-blessed moon, ‘That tips with siluer all these fruit trees tops’.
-
-[153] _R. J._ II. ii (_supra_); _Sp. Trag._ II. v (_supra_); _Look
-About You_, sc. v (a bowling green under Gloucester’s chamber in the
-Fleet); _1 Oldcastle_, I. iii, II. i (a grove before Cobham’s gate and
-an inn); &c. In _1 Contention_, sc. ii. 64, Elinor sends for a conjurer
-to do a spell ‘on the backside of my orchard heere’. In sc. iv she
-enters with the conjurer, says ‘I will stand upon this Tower here’,
-and (s.d.) ‘She goes vp to the Tower’. Then the conjurer will ‘frame a
-cirkle here vpon the earth’. A spirit ascends; spies enter; and ‘Exet
-Elnor aboue’. York calls ‘Who’s within there?’ The setting of _2 Hen.
-VI_, I. ii, is much the same, except that the references to the tower
-are replaced by the s.d. ‘Enter Elianor aloft’. In _2 Hen. VI_, II.
-ii, the scene is ‘this close walke’ at the Duke of York’s. Similarly,
-scc. i, iv of _Humourous Day’s Mirth_ are before Labervele’s house in
-a ‘green’, which is his wife’s ‘close walk’, which is kept locked, and
-into which a visitor intrudes. But in sc. vii, also before Labervele’s,
-the ‘close walk’ is referred to as distinct from the place of the scene.
-
-[154] _2 Troublesome Raigne_, sc. viii, ‘Enter two Friars laying a
-Cloth’. One says, ‘I meruaile why they dine heere in the Orchard’. We
-need not marvel; it was to avoid interior action. In _2 Hen. IV_, V.
-iii, the scene is Shallow’s orchard, ‘where, in an arbour, we will eat
-a last year’s pippin of mine own graffing, with a dish of caraways, and
-so forth’.
-
-[155] _Famous Victories_, sc. ii, 5, ‘we will watch here at
-Billingsgate ward’; _Jack Straw_, iii (Smithfield); _W. for Fair
-Women_, II. 115, ‘here at a friends of mine in Lumberd Street’; IV.
-1511, ‘Enter two Carpenters vnder Newgate’; _Shoemaker’s Holiday_, sc.
-xi (Tower Street, _vide infra_); _Cromwell_, V. ii, iii (Westminster
-and Lambeth, _vide infra_); _Arden of F._ II. ii (Paul’s Churchyard,
-_vide infra_); _2 Hen. VI_, IV. vi, ‘Enter Iacke Cade and the rest, and
-strikes his staffe on London stone’; &c.
-
-[156] _Span. Tragedy_, III. vi. 104, ‘He turnes him off’ (s.d.); _Sir
-T. More_, sc. xvii. More is brought in by the Lieutenant of the Tower
-and delivered to the sheriff. He says (1911), ‘Oh, is this the place?
-I promise ye it is a goodly scaffolde’, and ‘your stayre is somewhat
-weake’. Lords enter ‘As he is going vp the stayres’ (s.d.), and he
-jests with ‘this straunge woodden horsse’ and ‘Truely heers a moste
-sweet Gallerie’ (where the marginal s.d. is ‘walking’). Apparently the
-block is not visible; he is told it is ‘to the Easte side’ and ‘exit’
-in that direction.
-
-[157] _Rich. II_, I. iii, ‘The trumpets sound and the King enters with
-his nobles; when they are set, enter the Duke of Norfolke in armes
-defendent’. No one is ‘to touch the listes’ (43), and when the duel is
-stopped the combatants’ returne backe to their chaires againe’ (120).
-
-[158] _S. and P._ I. iii. There is an open place in Rhodes which a mule
-and ass can enter. Knights and ladies are welcomed and go ‘forwards to
-the tilt’ with an ‘Exeunt’ (126). Action continues in the same place.
-Piston bids Basilisco ‘stay with me and looke vpon the tilters’, and
-‘Will you vp the ladder, sir, and see the tilting?’ The s.d. follows
-(180), ‘Then they go vp the ladders and they sound within to the first
-course’. Piston and Basilisco then describe the courses as these
-proceed, evidently out of sight of the audience. The tiltyard may be
-supposed to run like that at Westminster, parallel to the public road
-and divided from it by a wall, up which ladders can be placed for the
-commoner spectators. In V. ii Erastus is arrested in public and tried
-on the spot before the Marshal. He is bound to ‘that post’ (83) and
-strangled. The witnesses are to be killed. Soliman says (118),
-
- Lord Marshall, hale them to the towers top.
- And throw them headlong downe into the valley;
-
-and we get the s.ds. ‘Then the Marshall beares them to the tower top’
-(122), and ‘Then they are both tumbled downe’ (130). Presumably they
-disappear behind.
-
-[159] _James IV_, I. ii. 1, ‘Enter _Slipper_, _Nano_, and _Andrew_,
-with their billes, readie written, in their hands’. They dispute as to
-whose bill shall stand highest, and then post the bills.
-
-[160] _Lord Cromwell_, III. i. 41 (in Italy):
-
- Content thee, man; here set vp these two billes,
- And let us keep our standing on the bridge,
-
-followed by s.ds., ‘One standes at one end, and one at tother’, and
-‘Enter Friskiball, the Marchant, and reades the billes’. In V. ii. 1
-(Westminster) Cromwell says, ‘Is the Barge readie?’ and (12) ‘Set on
-before there, and away to Lambeth’. After an ‘Exeunt’, V. iii begins
-‘Halberts, stand close vnto the water-side’, and (16) ‘Enter Cromwell’.
-
-[161] Cf. ch. xix, p. 44. _Wounds of Civil War_ has several such
-scenes. In I. i. 1, ‘Enter on the Capitoll Sulpitius Tribune ...
-whom placed, and their Lictors before them with their Rods and Axes,
-Sulpitius beginneth’ ... (146) ‘Here enter Scilla with Captaines and
-Souldiers’. Scilla’s party are not in the Capitol; they ‘braue the
-Capitoll’ (149), are ‘before the Capitoll’ (218), but Scilla talks to
-the senators, and Marius trusts to see Scilla’s head ‘on highest top of
-all this Capitoll’. Presently Scilla bids (249) ‘all that loue Scilla
-come downe to him’, and (258) ‘Here let them goe downe’. In II. i the
-action is in the open, but (417) ‘yond Capitoll’ is named; III. i seems
-to be in ‘this Capitoll’ (841). In IV. i Marius and his troops enter
-before the seated Senate. Octavius, the consul, ‘sits commanding in
-his throne’ (1390). From Marius’ company, ‘Cynna presseth vp’ (s.d.)
-to ‘yonder emptie seate’ (1408), and presently Marius is called up and
-(1484) ‘He takes his seate’. In V. v. 2231 ‘Scilla seated in his roabes
-of state is saluted by the Citizens’. Similarly in _T. A._ I. i, ‘Enter
-the Tribunes and Senatours aloft: and then enter Saturninus and his
-followers at one doore, and Bassianus and his followers’. Saturninus
-bids the tribunes ‘open the gates and let me in’ (63) and ‘They goe vp
-into the Senate house’. Titus enters and buries his sons in his family
-tomb, and (299) ‘Enter aloft the Emperour’ and speaks to Titus. There
-is a Venetian senate house in _K. to K. an Honest Man_, scc. iii, xvii,
-but I do not find a similar interplay with the outside citizens here.
-
-[162] _W. for Fair Women_, II. 93 (Lombard Street), ‘While Master
-Sanders and he are in busy talk one to the other, Browne steps to a
-corner.... Enter a Gentleman with a man with a torch before. Browne
-draws to strike’; _Arden of F._ II. ii. 41, ‘Stand close, and take you
-fittest standing, And at his comming foorth speed him’.
-
-[163] _T. G._ IV. ii (cf. IV. iii. 16, ‘Now must we to her window’, and
-III. i. 35, 114, where Valentine has a rope-ladder to scale Silvia’s
-window ‘in an upper tower’ and ‘aloft, far from the ground’); IV. iv.
-91, ‘That’s her chamber’; _R. J._ (orchard scenes), II. ii; III. v,
-‘Enter Romeo and Juliet at the window’ (Q_{1} where Q_{2} has ‘aloft’;
-on the difficulty presented by Juliet’s chamber, cf. p. 94); _M. V._
-II. vi. 1, ‘This is the penthouse vnder which Lorenzo Desired us to
-make a stand’ ... ‘Jessica aboue’ (s.d.) ... ‘Descend, for you must be
-my torch-bearer’ ... ‘Enter Jessica’ (having come down within from the
-casement forbidden her by Shylock and advised by Lancelot in II. v);
-_Englishmen for my Money_, sc. ix (where Vandalle, come to woo Pisaro’s
-daughter in the dark, is drawn up in a basket and left dangling in
-mid-air, while later (1999) Pisaro is heard ‘at the window’ and ‘Enter
-Pisaro aboue’); _Two A. Women_, 1495, ‘Enter Mall in the window’;
-_Sp. Trag._ II. ii, where spies ‘in secret’ and ‘aboue’ overhear the
-loves of Horatio and Belimperia below. Lovers are not concerned in
-_Sp. Trag._ III. ii, ‘Enter Hieronimo ... A Letter falleth’; III. ix,
-‘Belimperia, at a window’; _The Shrew_, V. i. 17, ‘Pedant lookes out of
-the window’.
-
-[164] In _T. A._ I. i a coffin is brought in, apparently in the
-market-place, while the Senators are visible in the Capitol (cf. p.
-58, n. 2), and (90) ‘They open the Tombe’ and (150) ‘Sound trumpets,
-and lay the coffin in the Tombe’. _R. J._ V. iii is in a churchyard
-with ‘yond yew trees’ (3). A torch ‘burneth in the Capels monument’
-(127), also called a ‘vault’ (86, &c.) and ‘the tomb’ (262). Romeo will
-‘descend into this bed of death’ (28), and Q_{1} adds the s.d. ‘Romeo
-opens the tombe’ (45). He kills Paris, whose blood ‘stains The stony
-entrance of this sepulchre’ (141). Juliet awakes and speaks, and must
-of course be visible. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (_Henslowe
-Papers_, 116) include ‘j tombe’, ‘j tome of Guido, j tome of Dido’.
-
-[165] _George a Greene_, sc. xi, ‘Enter a Shoemaker sitting vpon the
-Stage at worke’, where a shop is not essential; but may be implied
-by ‘Stay till I lay in my tooles’ (1005); _Locrine_, II. ii, ‘Enter
-Strumbo, Dorothy, Trompart cobling shooes and singing’ (569) ... ‘Come
-sirrha shut vp’ (660); _R. and J._ V. i. 55, ‘This should be the house.
-Being holiday, the beggar’s shop is shut. What, ho! apothecary!’ where
-the elaborate description of the shop which precedes leaves some doubt
-how far it was represented; _Shoemaker’s Holiday_, scc. iii, ‘Open my
-shop windows’; v, ‘Ile goe in’; viii, ‘Shut vp the shop’; xi, ‘Enter
-Hodge at his shop-board, Rafe, Friske, Hans, and a boy at worke’ (all
-before or in Eyre’s shop); x, ‘Enter Iane in a Semsters shop working,
-and Hammon muffled at another doore, he stands aloofe’ (another shop);
-_1 Edw. IV_, IV. iii, ‘Enter two prentizes, preparing the Goldsmiths
-shop with plate.... Enter mistris Shoare, with her worke in her
-hand.... The boy departs, and she sits sowing in her shop. Enter the
-King disguised’.
-
-[166] _Arden of F._ II. ii. 52,
-
-‘_Here enters_ a prentise.
-
- Tis very late; I were best shute vp my stall,
- For heere will be ould filching, when the presse
- Comes foorth of Paules.
-
-_Then lettes he downe his window, and it breaks_ Black Wils _head_’.
-
-[167] _Shoemaker’s Holiday_, sc. xi, ‘the signe of the Last in
-Tower-street, mas yonders the house’; _1 Edw. IV_, IV. iii, ‘Heres
-Lombard Streete, and heres the Pelican’. The Admiral’s inventories of
-1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 117) include ‘j syne for Mother Redcap’.
-
-[168] Cf. ch. xix, p. 11. The introduction of a meal goes rather beyond
-the neo-classic analogy, but presents no great difficulty. If a banquet
-can be brought into a garden or orchard, it can be brought into a porch
-or courtyard. It is not always possible to determine whether a meal
-is in a threshold scene or a hall scene (cf. p. 64), but in _1 Edw.
-IV_, III. ii, ‘Enter Nell and Dudgeon, with a table couered’ is pretty
-clearly at the door of the Tanner’s cottage.
-
-[169] In the theatre usage personages go ‘in’, even where they merely
-go ‘off’ without entering a house (cf. e.g. p. 53, n. 2). The interlude
-usage is less regular, and sometimes personages go ‘out’, as they would
-appear to the audience to do.
-
-[170] _Soliman and Perseda_, II. i. 227, ‘Sound vp the Drum to Lucinaes
-doore’ (s.d.). Doors are conspicuous in _K. to K. Honest Man_; thus sc.
-ii. 82, ‘Enter Lelio with his sword drawen, hee knockes at his doore’;
-sc. v. 395, ’tis time to knocke vp Lelios householde traine. _He
-knockes_’ ... ‘What mean this troup of armed men about my dore?’; sc.
-v. 519 (Bristeo’s), ‘Come breake vp the doore’; sc. vii. 662, ‘_Enter
-Annetta and Lucida with their worke in their handes...._ Here let vs
-sit awhile’ ... (738) ‘Get you in ... _Here put them in at doore_’; sc.
-vii. 894 (Lelio’s), ‘Underneath this wall, watch all this night: If
-any man shall attempt to breake your sisters doore, Be stout, assaile
-him’; sc. vii. 828 (a Senator’s), ‘What make you lingering here about
-my doores?’; sc. ix. 1034 (Lelio’s), ‘Heaue me the doores from of the
-hinges straight’; sc. xv. 1385 (Lelio’s), ‘my door doth ope’ (cf. p.
-62, on the courtyard scene in the same play).
-
-[171] Thus _Humorous Day’s Mirth_, sc. v (Moren’s), 111, ‘We’ll draw
-thee out of the house by the heels’ ... 143, ‘Thrust this ass out of
-the doors’ ... 188, ‘Get you out of my house!’, but 190, ‘Well, come
-in, sweet bird’; _Shoemaker’s Holiday_, sc. xii (Lord Mayor’s), ‘Get
-you in’, but ‘The Earl of Lincoln at the gate is newly lighted’.
-
-[172] _James IV_, II. i, ‘_Enter the Countesse of Arrain, with Ida,
-her daughter, in theyr porch, sitting at worke_’ ... (753) ‘Come, will
-it please you enter, gentle sir? _Offer to Exeunt_’; cf. _Arden of F._
-(_vide infra_) and the penthouse in _M. V._ II. vi. 1 (p. 58).
-
-[173] Perhaps the best example is in _Arden of Feversham_. Arden’s
-house at Aldersgate is described by Michael to the murderers in II. ii.
-189:
-
- The dores Ile leaue unlockt against you come,
- No sooner shall ye enter through the latch,
- Ouer the thresholde to the inner court,
- But on your left hand shall you see the staires
- That leads directly to my M. Chamber.
-
-Here, then, is III. i. Arden and Francklin talk and go to bed. Michael,
-in remorse, alarms them with an outcry, and when they appear, explains
-that he ‘fell asleepe, Vpon the thresholde leaning to the staires’ and
-had a bad dream. Arden then finds that ‘the dores were all unlockt’.
-Later (III. iv. 8) Michael lies about this to the murderers:
-
- Francklin and my master
- Were very late conferring in the porch,
- And Francklin left his napkin where he sat
- With certain gold knit in it, as he said.
- Being in bed, he did bethinke himselfe,
- And comming down he found the dores vnshut:
- He lockt the gates, and brought away the keyes.
-
-When the murderers come in III. ii, Will bids Shakebag ‘show me to this
-house’, and Shakebag says ‘This is the doore; but soft, me thinks tis
-shut’. They are therefore at the outer door of the courtyard; cf. p.
-69, n. 2. Similarly _1 Rich. II_, III. ii, which begins with ‘Enter
-Woodstock, Lancaster, and Yorke, at Plashey’, and ‘heere at Plasshy
-house I’le bid you wellcome’, is clearly in a courtyard. A servant
-says (114), ‘Ther’s a horseman at the gate.... He will not off an’s
-horse-backe till the inner gate be open’. Gloucester bids ‘open the
-inner gate ... lett hime in’, and (s.d.) ‘Enter a spruce Courtier a
-horse-backe’. It is also before the house, for the Courtier says,
-‘Is he within’, and ‘I’le in and speake with the duke’. Rather more
-difficult is _Englishmen for my Money_, sc. iv, ‘Enter Pisaro’ with
-others, and says, ‘Proud am I that my roofe containes such friends’
-(748), also ‘I would not haue you fall out in my house’ (895). He
-sends his daughters ‘in’ (827, 851), so must be in the porch, and a
-‘knock within’ (s.d.) and ‘Stirre and see who knocks!’ (796) suggest
-a courtyard gate. But later in the play (cf. p. 58, n. 4) the street
-seems to be directly before the same house.
-
-[174] In _K. to K. Honest Man_, scc. x-xii (continuous scene at
-Servio’s), Phillida is called ‘forth’ (1058) and bidden keep certain
-prisoners ‘in the vpper loft’. Presently she enters ‘with the keyes’
-and after the s.d. ‘Here open the doore’ calls them out and gives them
-a signet to pass ‘the Porter of the gates’, which Servio (1143) calls
-‘my castell gates’. In _1 Hen. VI_, II. iii, the Countess of Auvergne,
-to entrap Talbot, bids her porter ‘bring the keyes to me’; presumably
-Talbot’s men are supposed to break in the gates at the s.d. ‘a Peale of
-Ordnance’. _Rich. III_, III. vii, is at Baynard’s Castle. Buckingham
-bids Gloucester (55) ‘get you vp to the leads’ to receive the Mayor,
-who enters with citizens, and (95) ‘Enter Richard with two bishops a
-lofte’. Similarly in _Rich. II_, III. iii. 62, ‘Richard appeareth on
-the walls’ of Flint Castle, and then comes down (178) to the ‘base
-court’. _B. Beggar of Alexandria_, sc. ii, is before the house of
-Elimine’s father and ‘Enter Elimine above on the walls’. She is in a
-‘tower’ and comes down, but there is nothing to suggest a courtyard.
-
-[175] _1 Sir John Oldcastle_, IV. iv, v (a continuous scene), is partly
-‘neare vnto the entrance of the Tower’, beyond the porter’s lodge,
-partly in Oldcastle’s chamber there, with a ‘window that goes out into
-the leads’; cf. p. 67.
-
-[176] _Famous Victories_, sc. vi, 60, ‘What a rapping keep you at the
-Kings Court gate!’; _Jack Straw_, II. ii (a City gate).
-
-[177] _A Shrew_, ind. 1, ‘Enter a Tapster, beating out of his doores
-Slie Droonken’; _1 Oldcastle_, V. iii-vii (inn and barn); _True Tragedy
-of Rich. III_, sc. viii, ‘Earle Riuers speakes out of his chamber’ in
-an inn-yard, where he has been locked up; _James IV_, III. ii (stable);
-_Looking Glass_, V. ii. 2037, ‘Enter the temple Omnes’. _Selimus_, sc.
-xxi. 2019, has
-
- Thy bodie in this auntient monument,
- Where our great predecessours sleep in rest:
- Suppose the Temple of _Mahomet_,
- Thy wofull son _Selimus_ thus doth place.
-
-Is the third line really a s.d., in which case it does not suggest
-realistic staging, or a misunderstood line of the speech, really meant
-to run, ‘Supposed the Temple of great Mahomet’?
-
-[178] _Patient Grissell_, 755–1652, reads like a threshold scene, and
-‘Get you in!’ is repeated (848, 1065, 1481), but Grissell’s russet
-gown and pitcher are hung up and several times referred to (817, 828,
-1018, 1582). _Old Fortunatus_, 733–855, at the palace of Babylon, must
-be a threshold scene as the Soldan points to ‘yon towre’ (769), but
-this is not inconsistent with the revealing of a casket, with the s.d.
-(799) ‘Draw a Curtaine’. We need not therefore assume that _M. V._ II.
-vii, ix, in which Portia bids ‘Draw aside the Curtaines’ and ‘Draw the
-Curtain’, or III. ii are hall scenes, and all the Belmont scenes may
-be, like V. i, in a garden backed by a portico; or rather the hall
-referred to in V. i. 89, ‘That light we see is burning in my hall’, may
-take the form of a portico.
-
-[179] Cf. p. 58, n. 2.
-
-[180] Thus in _Rich. II_, V. iii, iv (a continuous scene), Aumerle has
-leave to ‘turne the key’ (36). Then ‘_The Duke of Yorke knokes at the
-doore and crieth_, My leige ... Thou hast a traitor in thy presence
-there’. Cf. _1 Troublesome Raigne_, sc. xiii. 81:
-
- He stayes my Lord but at the Presence door:
- Pleaseth your Highnes, I will call him in.
-
-[181] _Famous Victories_, scc. iv, v (a continuous scene), ‘Jayler,
-bring the prisoner to the barre’ (iv. 1).... ‘Thou shalt be my Lord
-chiefe Justice, and thou shalt sit in the chaire’ (v. 10); _Sir
-T. More_, sc. ii. 104, ‘An Arras is drawne, and behinde it (as in
-sessions) sit the L. Maior.... Lifter the prisoner at the barre’;
-_Warning for Fair Women_, II. 1180, ‘Enter some to prepare the
-judgement seat to the Lord Mayor....(1193) Browne is brought in and the
-Clerk says, ‘To the barre, George Browne’; _M. V._ IV. i; _1 Sir John
-Oldcastle_, V. x; &c.
-
-[182] _Bacon and Bungay_, scc. vii, ix (Regent House), where visitors
-‘sit to heare and see this strange dispute’ (1207), and later, ‘Enter
-Miles, with a cloth and trenchers and salt’ (1295); _Shoemaker’s
-Holiday_, sc. xv (Leadenhall); _Englishmen for my Money_, sc. iii
-(Exchange).
-
-[183] _1 Troublesome Raigne_, sc. xi, in a convent, entails the opening
-of a coffer large enough to hold a nun and a press large enough to
-hold a priest; _2 Troublesome Raigne_, sc. iii, before St. Edmund’s
-shrine, has a numerous company who swear on an altar. _Alphonsus_, IV.
-i, begins ‘Let there be a brazen Head set in the middle of the place
-behind the Stage, out of the which cast flames of fire’. It is in the
-‘sacred seate’ of Mahomet, who speaks from the head, and bids the
-priests ‘call in’ visitors ‘which now are drawing to my Temple ward’.
-
-[184] _T. of a Shrew_, scc. ix, xi, xiii; _Sir T. More_, scc. ix,
-‘Enter S^r _Thomas Moore_, M^r _Roper_, and Seruing men setting
-stooles’; xiii, ‘Enter ... Moore ... as in his house at Chelsey’ ...
-(1413) ‘Sit good Madame [_in margin_, ‘lowe stooles’] ... (1521)
-‘Entreate their Lordships come into the hall’. _E. M. I._ III. i, ii
-(a continuous scene), is at Thorello’s house, and in III. iii. 1592
-it is described with ‘I saw no body to be kist, vnlesse they would
-haue kist the post, in the middle of the warehouse; for there I left
-them all ... How? were they not gone in then?’ But I. iv. 570, also at
-Thorello’s, has ‘Within sir, in the warehouse’. Probably the warehouse
-was represented as an open portico.
-
-[185] Cf. p. 63, nn. 3, 4.
-
-[186] _Sir T. More_, scc. ix, xiii (stools, _vide supra_); x, where
-the Council ‘sit’ to ‘this little borde’ (1176); _R. J._ I. v (stools,
-_vide supra_); _James IV_, I. i. 141, ‘Enstall and crowne her’; _Sp.
-Tragedy_, I. iii. 8, ‘Wherefore sit I in a regall throne’; _1 Rich.
-II_, II. ii. 81, ‘Please you, assend your throne’; _1 Tamburlaine_, IV.
-ii. 1474, ‘He [Tamburlaine] gets vp vpon him [Bajazet] to his chaire’;
-_Dr. Faustus_, 1010 (addition of 1616 text), ‘His Maiesty is comming to
-the Hall; Go backe, and see the State in readinesse’; _Look About You_,
-sc. xix, ‘Enter young Henry Crowned ... Henry the elder places his
-Sonne, the two Queenes on eyther hand, himselfe at his feete, Leyster
-and Lancaster below him’; this must have involved an elaborate ‘state’.
-
-[187] _Bacon and Bungay_, sc. ix. (_vide supra_); _T. of a Shrew_, sc.
-ix. 32, ‘They couer the bord and fetch in the meate’; _1 Edw. IV_,
-IV. ii, ‘They bring forth a table and serue in the banquet’; _Patient
-Grissell_, 1899, ‘A Table is set’; _Humorous Day’s Mirth_, scc. viii,
-x-xii (Verone’s ordinary), on which cf. p. 70.
-
-[188] _1 Rich. II_, IV. ii; _Death of R. Hood_, II. ii; _R. J._ I.
-v, where a servant says, ‘Away with the joint-stools, remove the
-court-cupboard’, and Capulet ‘turn the tables up’; cf. ch. vi.
-
-[189] _M. N. D._ v (cf. III. i. 58); _Sir T. More_, sc. ix; _Sp.
-Tragedy_, IV. iii, iv (a continuous scene), on which cf. p. 93, n. 1.
-
-[190] _2 Tamburlaine_, III. iii. 2969, ‘The Arras is drawen, and
-Zenocrate lies in her bed of state, Tamburlaine sitting by her: three
-Phisitians about her bed, tempering potions. Theridamas, Techelles,
-Vsumcasane, and the three sonnes’.... (3110, at end of sc.) ‘The
-Arras is drawen’; _Selimus_, sc. x. 861, ‘I needs must sleepe.
-_Bassaes_ withdraw your selues from me awhile’.... ‘They stand
-aside while the curtins are drawne’ (s.d.) ... (952) ‘A Messenger
-enters, _Baiazet_ awaketh’; _Battle of Alcazar_, d.s. 24, ‘Enter
-Muly Mahamet and his sonne, and his two young brethren, the Moore
-sheweth them the bed, and then takes his leaue of them, and they betake
-them to their rest’ ... (36) ‘Enter the Moore and two murdrers
-bringing in his unkle Abdelmunen, then they draw the curtains and
-smoother the yong princes in the bed. Which done in sight of the vnkle
-they strangle him in his Chaire, and then goe forth’; _Edw. I_, sc.
-xxv. 2668, ‘Elinor in child-bed with her daughter Ione, and other
-Ladies’; _True Tragedy of Rich. III_, sc. i, ‘Now Nobles, draw
-the Curtaines and depart ... (s.d.) The King dies in his bed’; sc.
-xiii, where murderers are called ‘vp’, and murder of princes in bed
-is visible; _Famous Victories_, sc. viii. 1, ‘Enter the King with
-his Lords’ ... (10), ‘Draw the Curtaines and depart my chamber a
-while’ ... ‘He sleepeth ... Enter the Prince’ (s.d.) ... ‘I wil
-goe, nay but why doo I not go to the Chamber of my sick father?’ ...
-(23) ‘Exit’ [having presumably taken the crown] ... (25) ‘_King._
-Now my Lords ... Remoue my chaire a little backe, and set me right’
-... (47) ‘_Prince_ [who has re-entered]. I came into your Chamber
-... And after that, seeing the Crowne, I tooke it’ ... (87) ‘Draw
-the Curtaines, depart my Chamber, ... Exeunt omnes, The King dieth’.
-In the analogous _2 Hen. IV_, IV. iv, v (a continuous scene divided,
-with unanimity in ill-doing, by modern editors in the middle of a
-speech), the King says (IV. iv. 131), ‘Beare me hence Into some other
-chamber’, Warwick (IV. v. 4), ‘Call for the Musick in the other
-Roome’, and the King ‘Set me the Crowne vpon my Pillow here’. The
-Prince enters and the Lords go to ‘the other roome’; he takes the
-crown and ‘Exit’. Later (56) the Lords say, ‘This doore is open,
-he is gone this way’, and ‘He came not through the chamber where we
-staide’. The Prince returns and the Lords are bidden ‘Depart the
-chamber’. Later (233) the King asks the name of ‘the lodging where
-I first did swound’, and bids ‘beare me to that Chamber’. Then the
-scene, and in F_{1} the act, ends. In _1 Contention_, sc. x. 1, ‘Then
-the Curtaines being drawne, Duke _Humphrey_ is discouered in his bed,
-and two men lying on his brest and smothering him in his bed. And then
-enter the Duke of _Suffolke_ to them’. He bids ‘draw the Curtaines
-againe and get you gone’. The King enters and bids him call Gloucester.
-He goes out, and returns to say that Gloucester is dead. Warwick says,
-‘Enter his priuie chamber my Lord and view the bodie’, and (50),
-‘_Warwicke_ drawes the curtaines and showes Duke _Humphrey_ in his
-bed’. The analogous _2 Hen. VI_, III. ii, omits the murder _coram
-populo_ and begins ‘Enter two or three running ouer the Stage, from
-the Murther of Duke Humfrey’. It then follows the earlier model until
-(132) the King bids Warwick ‘Enter his Chamber’ and we get the brief
-s.d. (146) ‘Bed put forth’, and Warwick speaks again. The next scene
-is another death scene, which begins in _1 Contention_, sc. xi, ‘Enter
-King and _Salsbury_, and then the Curtaines be drawne, and the Cardinal
-is discouered in his bed, rauing and staring as if he were madde’,
-and in _2 Hen. VI_, III. iii, ‘Enter the King ... to the Cardinal in
-bed’, ending (32) ‘Close vp his eyes, and draw the Curtaine close’. In
-_1 Rich. II_, V. i, Lapoole enters ‘with a light’ and murderers, whom
-he bids ‘stay in the next with-draweing chamber ther’. Then (48), ‘He
-drawes the curtayne’, says of Gloucester ‘He sleepes vppon his bed’,
-and Exit. Gloucester, awaked by ghosts, says (110), ‘The doores are all
-made fast ... and nothing heere appeeres, But the vast circute of this
-emptie roome’. Lapoole, returning, says, ‘Hee’s ryssen from his bed’.
-Gloucester bids him ‘shutt to the doores’ and ‘sits to wright’. The
-murderers enter and kill him. Lapoole bids ‘lay hime in his bed’ and
-‘shutt the doore, as if he ther had dyd’, and they (247) ‘Exeunt with
-the bodye’. In _Death of R. Hood_, ii, ind., the presenter says ‘Draw
-but that vaile, And there King John sits sleeping in his chaire’, and
-the s.d. follows, ‘Drawe the curten: the King sits sleeping ... Enter
-Queene ... She ascends, and seeing no motion, she fetcheth her children
-one by one; but seeing yet no motion, she descendeth, wringing her
-hands, and departeth’. In _R. J._ IV. iii, iv, v (continuous action),
-Juliet drinks her potion and Q_{1}, has the s.d. (IV. iii. 58) ‘She
-fals vpon her bed within the Curtaines’. Action follows before the
-house, until the Nurse, bidden to call Juliet, finds her dead. Then
-successively ‘Enter’ Lady Capulet, Capulet, the Friar, and Paris, to
-all of whom Juliet is visible. After lament, the Friar, in Q_{2} (IV.
-v. 91), bids them all ‘go you in’, but in Q_{1}, ‘They all but the
-Nurse goe foorth, casting Rosemary on her and shutting the Curtens’.
-The Nurse, then, in both texts, addresses the musicians, who came with
-Paris. On the difficulty of this scene, in relation to II. ii and III.
-v, cf. p. 94.
-
-[191] _Wounds of Civil War_, III. ii, 913, ‘Enter old _Marius_ with
-his keeper, and two souldiers’. There is (965) ‘this homely bed’, on
-which (972) ‘He lies downe’ (s.d.), and when freed (1066) ‘from walls
-to woods I wend’. In _Edw. II_, 2448–2568 (at Kenilworth), keepers
-say that the King is ‘in a vault vp to the knees in water’, of which
-(2455) ‘I opened but the doore’. Then (2474) ‘Heere is the keyes, this
-is the lake’ and (2486), ‘Heeres a light to go into the dungeon’. Then
-(2490) Edward speaks and, presumably having been brought out, is bid
-(2520) ‘lie on this bed’. He is murdered with a table and featherbed
-brought from ‘the next roome’ (2478), and the body borne out. In _1
-Tr. Raigne_, sc. xii, Hubert enters, bids his men (8) ‘stay within
-that entry’ and when called set Arthur ‘in this chayre’. He then bids
-Arthur (13) ‘take the benefice of the faire evening’, and ‘Enter
-Arthur’ who is later (131) bid ‘Goe in with me’. _K. J._ IV. i has
-precisely analogous indications, except that the attendants stand
-(2) ‘within the arras’, until Hubert stamps ‘Vpon the bosome of the
-ground’. In _Rich. III_, I. iv, Clarence talks with his keeper, and
-sleeps. Murderers enter, to whom the keeper says (97), ‘Here are the
-keies, there sits the Duke a sleepe’. They stab him, threaten to ‘chop
-him in the malmsey but in the next roome’ (161, 277), and bear the body
-out. In _Rich. II_, V. v (at Pontefract) Richard muses on ‘this prison
-where I liue’. He is visited by a groom of his stable (70), ‘where no
-man neuer comes, but that sad dog, That brings me foode’. Then (95)
-‘Enter one to Richard with meate’ and (105) ‘The murderers rush in’,
-and (119) the bodies are cleared away. _Sir T. More_, sc. xvi, ‘Enter
-_Sir Thomas Moore_, the Lieutenant, and a seruant attending as in his
-chamber in the Tower’; _Lord Cromwell_, V. v, ‘Enter Cromwell in the
-Tower.... Enter the Lieutenant of the Tower and officers.... Enter all
-the Nobles’; _Dead Man’s Fortune_, plot (_Henslowe Papers_, 134), ‘Here
-the laydes speakes in prysoun’; _Death of R. Hood_, IV. i:
-
- _Brand._ Come, come, here is the door.
- _Lady Bruce._ O God, how dark it is.
- _Brand._ Go in, go in; it’s higher up the stairs....
- _He seems to lock a door._
-
-In _Old Fortunatus_, 2572, Montrose says of Ampedo, ‘Drag him to
-yonder towre, there shackle him’. Later (2608) Andelocia is brought to
-join him in ‘this prison’ and the attendants bid ‘lift in his legs’.
-The brothers converse in ‘fetters’. In _1 Oldcastle_, IV. iv, v (a
-continuous scene), ‘Enter the Bishop of Rochester with his men, in
-liuerie coates’. They have brought him ‘heere into the Tower’ (1965)
-and may ‘go backe vnto the Porters Lodge’ or attend him ‘here without’.
-But they slip away. The Bishop calls the Lieutenant and demands to
-see Oldcastle. A message is sent to Oldcastle by Harpoole. Then
-(1995), ‘Enter sir Iohn Oldcastle’, and while the Bishop dismisses the
-Lieutenant, Harpoole communicates a plot ‘aside’ to Oldcastle. Then the
-Bishop addresses Oldcastle, and as they talk Oldcastle and Harpoole lay
-hands upon him. They take his upper garments, which Oldcastle puts on.
-Harpoole says (2016) ‘the window that goes out into the leads is sure
-enough’ and he will ‘conuay him after, and bind him surely in the inner
-room’. Then (2023) ‘Enter seruing men againe’. Oldcastle, disguised as
-the Bishop, comes towards them, saying, ‘The inner roomes be very hot
-and close’. Harpoole tells him that he will ‘downe vpon them’. He then
-pretends to attack him. The serving-men join in, and (2049) ‘Sir John
-escapes’. The Lieutenant enters and asks who is brawling ‘so neare vnto
-the entrance of the Tower’. Then (2057) ‘Rochester calls within’, and
-as they go in and bring him out bound, Harpoole gets away; cf. p. 62,
-n. 2. _Look About You_, sc. v, is a similar scene in the Fleet, partly
-in Gloucester’s chamber (811), the door of which can be shut, partly
-(865) on a bowling green. Analogous to some of the prison scenes is
-_Alarum for London_, sc. xii, in which a Burgher’s Wife shows Van End a
-vault where her wealth is hid, and (1310) ‘She pushes him downe’, and
-he is stoned there.
-
-[192] _Bacon and Bungay_, I. ii. 172, ‘Enter frier _Bacon_’, with
-others, says ‘Why flocke you thus to Bacon’s secret cell?’, and
-conjures; II. ii is in a street, but Bacon says (603) ‘weele to my
-studie straight’, and II. iii begins (616), ‘_Bacon_ and _Edward_
-goes into the study’, where Edward *sits and looks in ‘this glasse
-prospectiue’ (620), but his vision is represented on some part of the
-stage; in IV. i. 1530, ‘Enter Frier _Bacon_ drawing the courtaines,
-with a white sticke, a booke in his hand, and a lampe lighted by him,
-and the brazen head and _Miles_, with weapons by him’. Miles is bid
-watch the head, and ‘Draw closse the courtaines’ and ‘Here he [Bacon]
-falleth asleepe’ (1568). Miles ‘will set me downe by a post’ (1577).
-Presently (1604), ‘Heere the Head speakes and a lightning flasheth
-forth, and a hand appeares that breaketh down the Head with a hammer’.
-Miles calls to Bacon (1607) ‘Out of your bed’; IV. iii. 1744 begins
-‘Enter frier _Bacon_ with frier _Bungay_ to his cell’. A woodcut in
-Q_{2} of 1630, after the revival by the Palsgrave’s men, seems to
-illustrate II. iii; the back wall has a window to the left and the head
-on a bracket in the centre; before it is the glass on a table, with
-Edward gazing in it; Bacon sits to the right. Miles stands to the left;
-no side-walls are visible. In _Locrine_, I. iii. 309, ‘Enter Strumbo
-aboue in a gowne, with inke and paper in his hand’; _Dr. Faustus_, ind.
-28, ‘And this the man that in his study sits’, followed by s.d. ‘Enter
-Faustus in his Study’, 433, ‘Enter Faustus in his Study ... (514)
-Enter [Mephastophilis] with diuels, giuing crownes and rich apparell
-to Faustus, and daunce, and then depart’, with probably other scenes.
-In _T. A._ V. ii. 1, ‘Enter Tamora, and her two sonnes disguised’ ...
-(9) ‘They knocke and Titus opens his studie doore’. Tamora twice (33,
-43) bids him ‘come downe’, and (80) says, ‘See heere he comes’. The
-killing of Tamora’s sons follows, after which Titus bids (205) ‘bring
-them in’. In _Sir T. More_, sc. viii. 735, ‘A table beeing couered
-with a greene Carpet, a state Cushion on it, and the Pursse and Mace
-lying thereon Enter Sir Thomas Moore’.... (765) ‘Enter Surrey, Erasmus
-and attendants’. Erasmus says (779), ‘Is yond Sir Thomas?’ and Surrey
-(784), ‘That Studie is the generall watche of England’. The original
-text is imperfect, but in the revision Erasmus is bid ‘sitt’, and later
-More bids him ‘in’ (ed. Greg, pp. 84, 86). _Lord Cromwell_ has three
-studies; in II. i, ii (continuous action at Antwerp), ‘Cromwell in his
-study with bagges of money before him casting of account’, while Bagot
-enters in front, soliloquizes, and then (II. ii. 23) with ‘See where he
-is’ addresses Cromwell; in III. ii (Bologna), the action begins as a
-hall scene, for (15) ‘They haue begirt you round about the house’ and
-(47) ‘Cromwell shuts the dore’ (s.d.), but there is an inner room, for
-(115) ‘Hodge [disguised as the Earl of Bedford] sits in the study, and
-Cromwell calls in the States’, and (126) ‘Goe draw the curtaines, let
-vs see the Earle’; in IV. v (London), ‘Enter Gardiner in his studie,
-and his man’. _E. M. I._ I. iii, is before Cob’s house, and Tib is bid
-show Matheo ‘vp to Signior Bobadilla’ (Q_{1} 392). In I. iv ‘Bobadilla
-discouers himselfe on a bench; to him, Tib’. She announces ‘a gentleman
-below’; Matheo is bid ‘come vp’, enters from ‘within’, and admires the
-‘lodging’. In _1 Oldcastle_, V. i. 2086, ‘Enter Cambridge, Scroope,
-and Gray, as in a chamber, and set downe at a table, consulting about
-their treason: King Harry and Suffolke listning at the doore’ ...
-(2114) ‘They rise from the table, and the King steps in to them, with
-his Lordes’. _Stukeley_, i. 121, begins with Old Stukeley leaving his
-host’s door to visit his son. He says (149), ‘I’ll to the Temple to
-see my son’, and presumably crosses the stage during his speech of
-171–86, which ends ‘But soft this is his chamber as I take it’. Then
-‘He knocks’, and after parley with a page, says, ‘Give me the key of
-his study’ and ‘methinks the door stands open’, enters, criticizes the
-contents of the study, emerges, and (237) *‘Old Stukeley goes again
-to the study’. Then (244) ‘Enter _Stukeley_ at the further end of the
-stage’ and joins his father. Finally the boy is bid (335) ‘lock the
-door’. In _Downfall of R. Hood_, ind., ‘Enter Sir John Eltham and
-knocke at Skeltons doore’. He says, ‘Howe, maister Skelton, what at
-studie hard?’ and (s.d.) ‘Opens the doore’. In _2 Edw. IV_, IV. ii,
-‘Enter D. Shaw, pensiuely reading on his booke’. He is visited by a
-Ghost, who gives him a task, and adds, ‘That done, return; and in thy
-study end Thy loathed life’.
-
-[193] _Old Fortunatus_, 1315–1860, is before or in the hall of a court;
-at 1701, ‘A curtaine being drawne, where Andelocia lies sleeping in
-Agripines lap’. In _Downfall of R. Hood_, ind., is a s.d. of a court
-scene, presumably in a hall, and ‘presently Ely ascends the chaire ...
-Enter Robert Earl of Huntingdon, leading Marian: ... they infolde each
-other, and sit downe within the curteines ... drawing the curteins,
-all (but the Prior) enter, and are kindely receiued by Robin Hood. The
-curteins are again shut’.
-
-[194] _Jew of Malta_, i. 36, ‘Enter Barabas in his Counting-house, with
-heapes of gold before him’. Later his house is taken for a nunnery;
-he has hid treasure (536) ‘underneath the plancke That runs along the
-vpper chamber floore’, and Abigail becomes a nun, and (658) throws
-the treasure from ‘aboue’. He gets another house, and Pilia-Borza
-describes (iii. 1167) how ‘I chanc’d to cast mine eye vp to the Iewes
-counting-house’, saw money-bags, and climbed up and stole by night.
-_Arden of Feversham_, I., III. v, IV. i, V. i are at Arden’s house at
-Feversham. From I. I should assume a porch before the house, where
-Arden and his wife breakfast and (369) ‘Then she throwes down the broth
-on the grounde’; cf. 55, ‘Call her foorth’, and 637, ‘Lets in’. It can
-hardly be a hall scene, as part of the continuous action is ‘neare’
-the house (318) and at 245 we get ‘This is the painters [Clarke’s]
-house’, who is called out. There is no difficulty in III. v or IV. i;
-cf. III. v. 164, ‘let vs in’. But V. i, taken by itself, reads like a
-hall scene with a counting-house behind. Black Will and Shakebag are
-hidden in a ‘counting-house’, which has a ‘door’ and a ‘key’ (113, 145,
-153). A chair and stool are to be ready for Mosbie and Arden (130).
-Alice bids Michael (169) ‘Fetch in the tables, And when thou hast done,
-stand before the counting-house doore’, and (179) ‘When my husband
-is come in, lock the streete doore’. When Arden comes with Mosbie,
-they are (229) ‘in my house’. They play at tables and the murderers
-creep out and kill Arden, and (261), ‘Then they lay the body in the
-Counting-house’. Susan says (267), ‘The blood cleaueth to the ground’,
-and Mosbie bids (275) ‘strew rushes on it’. Presently, when guests
-have come and gone, (342) ‘Then they open the counting-house doore
-and looke vppon Arden’, and (363) ‘Then they beare the body into the
-fields’. Francklin enters, having found the body, with rushes in its
-shoe, ‘Which argueth he was murthred in this roome’, and looking about
-‘this chamber’, they find blood ‘in the place where he was wont to sit’
-(411–15).
-
-[195] In _1 Hen. IV_, II. iv, Henry calls Poins (1) ‘out of that fat
-roome’ and bids him (32) ‘Stand in some by-roome’ while the Prince
-talks to the Drawer. The Vintner (91) bids the Drawer look to guests
-‘within’, and says Falstaff is ‘at the doore’. He enters and later
-goes out to dismiss a court messenger who is (317) ‘at doore’ and
-returns. He has a chair and cushion (416). When the Sheriff comes,
-Henry bids Falstaff (549) ‘hide thee behind the Arras, the rest walke
-vp aboue’. Later (578) Falstaff is found ‘a sleepe behind the Arras’.
-This looks like a hall scene, and with it III. iii, where Mrs. Quickly
-is miscalled (72) ‘in mine owne house’ and Falstaff says (112) ‘I fell
-a sleepe here, behind the Arras’, is consistent. But in _2 Hen. IV_,
-II. iv, Falstaff and Doll come out of their supper room. The Drawer
-announces (75) ‘Antient Pistol’s belowe’, and is bid (109) ‘call him
-vp’ and (202) ‘thrust him downe staires’. Later (381) ‘Peyto knockes
-at doore’; so does Bardolph (397), to announce that ‘a dozen captaines
-stay at doore’. This is clearly an upper parlour. In _Look About You_,
-scc. ix, x (continuous action), Gloucester, disguised as Faukenbridge,
-and a Pursuivant have stepped into the Salutation tavern (1470),
-and are in ‘the Bel, our roome next the Barre’ (1639), with a stool
-(1504) and fire (1520). But at 1525 the action shifts. Skink enters,
-apparently in a room called the Crown, and asks whether Faukenbridge
-was ‘below’ (1533). Presumably he descends, for (1578) he sends the
-sheriff’s party ‘vp them stayres’ to the Crown. This part of the
-action is before the inn, rather than in the Bell. _Humorous Day’s
-Mirth_, scc. viii, x-xii, in Verone’s ordinary, with tables and a court
-cupboard, seems to be a hall scene; at viii. 254 ‘convey them into the
-inward parlour by the inward room’ does not entail any action within
-the supposed inward room.
-
-[196] _W. for Fair Women_, II. 601. The scene does not itself prove
-interior action, but cf. the later reference (800), ‘Was he so suted
-when you dranke with him, Here in the buttery’.
-
-[197] In _Jew of Malta_, V. 2316, Barabas has ‘made a dainty Gallery,
-The floore whereof, this Cable being cut, Doth fall asunder; so that
-it doth sinke Into a deepe pit past recouery’, and at 2345 is s.d. ‘A
-charge, the cable cut, A Caldron discouered’.
-
-[198] Cf. pp. 51, 53, 55–6, 58–9, 62.
-
-[199] A. E. Richards, _Studies in English Faust Literature: i. The
-English Wagner Book of 1594_ (1907). The book was entered in S. R. on
-16 Nov. 1593 (Arber, ii. 640). A later edition of 1680 is reprinted as
-_The Second Report of Dr. John Faustus_ by W. J. Thoms, _Early Prose
-Romances_ (1828), iii. Richards gives the date of the first edition of
-the German book by Fridericus Schotus of Toledo as 1593. An edition
-of 1714 is reprinted by J. Scheible, _Das Kloster_, iii. 1. This has
-nothing corresponding to the stage-play of the English version.
-
-[200] _1 Contention_, sc. i. 1 (court scene), sc. xx. 1 (garden scene);
-_Locrine_, III. vi. 1278 (battle scene); &c., &c.
-
-[201] _Henslowe Papers_, 130, ‘To them Pride, Gluttony Wrath and
-Couetousness at one dore, at an other dore Enuie, Sloth and Lechery’
-(l. 6) ... ‘Enter Ferrex ... with ... soldiers one way ... to them At
-a nother dore, Porrex ... and soldiers’ (26) ... ‘Enter Queene, with 2
-Counsailors ... to them Ferrex and Porrex seuerall waies ... Gorboduk
-entreing in The midst between’ (30) ... ‘Enter Ferrex and Porrex
-seuerally’ (36). I suppose that, strictly, ‘seuerally’ might also mean
-successively by the same door, and perhaps does mean this in _Isle of
-Gulls_, ind. 1 (Blackfriars), ‘Enter seuerally 3 Gentlemen as to see a
-play’.
-
-[202] e. g. _Alphonsus_, II. i. 1 (battle scene); _Selimus_, 2430
-(battle scene); _Locrine_, V. v. 2022, 2061 (battle scene); _Old
-Fortunatus_, 2675 (threshold scene); &c., &c. Archer, 469, calculates
-that of 43 examples (sixteenth and seventeenth century) taken at
-random, 11 use ‘one ... the other’, 21 ‘one ... an other’, and 11
-‘several’.
-
-[203] _Selimus_, 658, ‘at diuerse doores’; _Fair Em_, sc. ix, ‘at two
-sundry doors’; _James IV_, II. ii. 1, ‘one way ... another way’; _Look
-About You_, 464, ‘two waies’; _Weakest Goeth to the Wall_, 3, ‘one way
-... another way’; _Jew of Malta_, 230, ‘Enter Gouernor ... met by’.
-Further variants are the seventeenth-century _Lear_ (Q_{1}), II. i. 1,
-‘meeting’, and _Custom of Country_, IV. iv, ‘at both doors’.
-
-[204] _1 Rich. II_, I. i, ‘at seuerall doores’.
-
-[205] _Fair Em_, sc. iv, ‘Enter Manvile ... Enter Valingford at
-another door ... Enter Mountney at another door’; _Patient Grissell_,
-1105, ‘Enter Vrcenze and Onophrio at seuerall doores, and Farneze
-in the mid’st’; _Trial of Chivalry_, sign. I_{3}^{v}, ‘Enter at one
-dore ... at the other dore ... Enter in the middest’. Examples from
-seventeenth-century public theatres are _Four Prentices of London_,
-prol., ‘Enter three in blacke clokes, at three doores’; _Travels of
-3 English Brothers_, p. 90, ‘Enter three seuerall waies the three
-Brothers’; _Nobody and Somebody_, 1322, ‘Enter at one doore ... at
-another doore ... at another doore’; _Silver Age_, V. ii, ‘Exeunt three
-wayes’. It may be accident that these are all plays of Queen Anne’s
-men, at the Curtain or Red Bull. For the middle entrance in private
-theatres, cf. p. 132.
-
-[206] _Downfall of R. Hood_, I. i (ind.), after Eltham has knocked
-at Skelton’s study door (cf. p. 69), ‘At euery doore all the players
-runne out’; _Englishmen for my Money_, 393, ‘Enter Pisaro, Delion
-the Frenchman, Vandalle the Dutchman, Aluaro the Italian, and other
-Marchants, at seuerall doores’; cf. the seventeenth-century _1 Honest
-Whore_, sc. xiii (Fortune), ‘Enter ... the Duke, Castruchio, Pioratto,
-and Sinezi from severall doores muffled’.
-
-[207] _Locrine_, IV. ii. 1460 (not an entry), ‘Locrine at one side of
-the stage’; _Sir T. More_, sc. i. 1, ‘Enter at one end John Lincolne
-... at the other end enters Fraunces’; _Stukeley_, 245, ‘Enter Stukeley
-at the further end of the stage’, 2382, ‘Two trumpets sound at either
-end’; _Look About You_, sc. ii. 76, ‘Enter ... on the one side ... on
-the other part’. Very elaborate are the s.ds. of _John a Kent_, III. i.
-The scene is before a Castle. A speaker says, ‘See, he [John a Cumber]
-sets the Castell gate wide ope’. Then follows dialogue, interspersed
-with the s.ds. ‘Musique whyle he opens the door’.... ‘From one end of
-the Stage enter an antique ... Into the Castell ... Exit’.... ‘From
-the other end of the Stage enter another Antique ... Exit into the
-Castell’.... ‘From under the Stage the third antique ... Exit into the
-Castell’.... ‘The fourth out of a tree, if possible it may be ... Exit
-into the Castell’. Then John a Cumber ‘Exit into the Castell, and makes
-fast the dore’. John a Kent enters, and ‘He tryes the dore’. John a
-Cumber and others enter ‘on the walles’ and later ‘They discend’. For
-an earlier example of ‘end’, cf. _Cobler’s Prophecy_ (p. 35, n. 1), and
-for a later _The Dumb Knight_ (Whitefriars), i, iv. In _2 Return from
-Parnassus_ (Univ. play), IV. i begins ‘Sir _Radericke_ and _Prodigo_,
-at one corner of the Stage, Recorder and _Amoretto_ at the other’.
-
-[208] Cf. p. 98.
-
-[209] _Soliman and Perseda_, I. iv. 47, ‘Enter _Basilisco_ riding of a
-mule’ ... (71) ‘_Piston_ getteth vp on his Asse, and rideth with him to
-the doore’; cf. _1 Rich. II_ (quoted p. 61, n. 3), and for the private
-stage, _Liberality and Prodigality_, _passim_, and _Summer’s Last Will
-and Testament_, 968. W. J. Lawrence, _Horses upon the Elizabethan
-Stage_ (_T. L. S._ 5 June 1919), deprecates a literal acceptance of
-Forman’s notice of Macbeth and Banquo ‘riding through a wood’, attempts
-to explain away the third example here given, and neglects the rest. I
-think some kind of ‘hobby’ more likely than a trained animal. In the
-_Mask of Flowers_, Silenus is ‘mounted upon an artificiall asse, which
-sometimes being taken with strains of musicke, did bow down his eares
-and listen with great attention’; cf. T. S. Graves, _The Ass as Actor_
-(1916, _South Atlantic Quarterly_, XV. 175).
-
-[210] _Knack to Know an Honest Man_, sc. ix. 1034 (cf. p. 60, n. 3).
-
-[211] _Leir_, 2625 (open country scene near a beacon), ‘Mumford
-followes him to the dore’; cf. p. 60, _supra_.
-
-[212] Cf. ch. xviii, p. 544.
-
-[213] _2 Angry Women_, sc. x. 2250, ‘A plague on this poast, I would
-the Carpenter had bin hangd that set it vp for me. Where are yee now?’;
-_Englishmen for my Money_, scc. vii-ix (continuous scene), 1406, ‘Take
-heede, sir! hers a post’ ... (1654) ‘Watt be dis Post?... This Post;
-why tis the May-pole on Iuie-bridge going to Westminster.... Soft,
-heere’s an other: Oh now I know in deede where I am; wee are now at the
-fardest end of Shoredich, for this is the May-pole’.... (1701) ‘Ic weit
-neit waer dat ic be, ic goe and hit my nose op dit post, and ic goe and
-hit my nose op danden post’.
-
-[214] _3 Lords and 3 Ladies_, sign. I_{3}^v.
-
-[215] Cf. p. 57, n. 4, and for Kempe, ch. xviii, p. 545.
-
-[216] Cf. p. 57, n. 5; p. 58, n. 1.
-
-[217] Cf. p. 64, n. 3; p. 67, n. 1.
-
-[218] Graves, 88.
-
-[219] Cf. ch. xix, p. 42; _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 86, 142. Heywood,
-_Apology_ (_1608_), thinks that the theatre of Julius Caesar at Rome
-had ‘the covering of the stage, which we call the heavens (where upon
-any occasion their gods descended)’.
-
-[220] _Battle of Alcazar_, 1263 (s.d.), ‘Lightning and thunder ...
-Heere the blazing Starre ... Fire workes’; _Looking Glass_, 1556
-(s.d.), ‘A hand from out a cloud, threatneth a burning sword’; _2
-Contention_, sc. v. 9 (s.d.), ‘Three sunnes appeare in the aire’ (cf.
-_3 Hen. VI_, II. i. 25); _Stukeley_, 2272 (s.d.), ‘With a sudden
-thunderclap the sky is on fire and the blazing star appears’.
-
-[221] _1 Troublesome Raign_, sc. xiii. 131 (s.d.), ‘There the fiue
-Moones appeare’. The Bastard casts up his eyes ‘to heauen’ (130) at the
-sight, and the moons are in ‘the skie’ (163), but the episode follows
-immediately after the coronation which is certainly in ‘the presence’
-(81). Perhaps this is why in _K. J._, IV. ii. 181, the appearance of
-the moons is only narrated.
-
-[222] The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 117)
-include ‘the clothe of the Sone and Moone’.
-
-[223] _Alphonsus_, prol. (1), ‘After you haue sounded thrise, let
-_Venus_ be let downe from the top of the stage’; epil. (1916), ‘Enter
-_Venus_ with the Muses’ ... (1937), ‘Exit _Venus_; or if you can
-conueniently, let a chaire come down from the top of the Stage and draw
-her vp’. In _Old Fortunatus_, 840, Fortunatus, at the Soldan’s court,
-gets a magic hat, wishes he were in Cyprus, and ‘Exit’. The bystanders
-speak of him as going ‘through the ayre’ and ‘through the clouds’.
-Angels descend from heaven to a tower in the _Wagner Book_ play (cf. p.
-72).
-
-[224] One of the 1616 additions to the text of _Dr. Faustus_ (sc. xiv)
-has the s.d. ‘Musicke while the Throne descends’ before the vision of
-heaven, and ‘Hell is discouered’ before that of hell. On the other
-hand, in _Death of R. Hood_, ii, ind. (cf. p. 66), the king is in a
-chair behind a curtain, and the fact that the queen ‘ascends’ and
-‘descends’ may suggest that this chair is the ‘state’. However this
-may be, I do not see how any space behind the curtain can have been
-high enough to allow any dignity to the elaborate states required by
-some court scenes; cf. p. 64, n. 5. The throne imagined in the _Wagner
-Book_ (cf. p. 72) had 22 steps. Out-of-door scenes, in which the
-‘state’ appears to be used, are _Alphonsus_, II. i. 461 (battle scene),
-‘Alphonsus sit in the Chaire’ (s.d.); II. i (a crowning on the field);
-_Locrine_, IV. ii. 1490 (camp scene), ‘Let him go into his chaire’
-(s.d.); _Old Fortunatus_, sc. i. 72 (dream scene in wood), ‘Fortune
-takes her Chaire, the Kings lying at her feete, shee treading on them
-as shee goes vp’ ... (148), ‘She comes downe’.
-
-[225] Henslowe, i. 4, ‘Itm pd for carpenters worke & mackinge the
-throne in the heuenes the 4 of Iune 1595 ... vij^{li} ij^s’.
-
-[226] _E. M. I._ (F_{1}), prol. 14,
-
- One such to-day, as other plays should be;
- Where neither chorus wafts you o’er the seas,
- Nor creaking throne comes down the boys to please.
-
-[227] Cf. p. 89.
-
-[228] Cf. vol. ii, p. 546.
-
-[229] Mettenleiter, _Musikgeschichte von Regensburg_, 256; Herz, 46,
-‘ein Theater darinnen er mit allerley musikalischen Instrumenten auf
-mehr denn zehnerley Weise gespielt, und über der Theaterbühne noch
-eine Bühne 30 Schuh hoch auf 6 grosse Säulen, über welche ein Dach
-gemacht worden, darunter ein viereckiger Spund, wodurch die sie schöne
-Actiones verrichtet haben’; cf. ch. xiv and C. H. Kaulfuss-Diesch, _Die
-Inszenierung des deutschen Dramas an der Wende des sechzehnten und
-siebzehnten Jahrhunderts_ (1905).
-
-[230] Prölss, 73; Brodmeier, 5, 43, 57; cf. Reynolds, i. 7, and in _M.
-P._ ix. 59; Albright, 151; Lawrence, i. 40.
-
-[231] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Vennor. The only extant Swan play is
-Middleton’s _Chaste Maid in Cheapside_ of 1611. Chamber scenes are
-III. i, ii, iii; IV. i; V. ii. Some of these would probably have been
-treated in a sixteenth-century play as threshold scenes. But III. ii,
-a child-bed scene, would have called for curtains. In _Chaste Maid_,
-however, the opening s.d. is ‘A bed thrust out upon the stage; Allwit’s
-wife in it’. We cannot therefore assume curtains; cf. p. 113. The room
-is above (ll. 102, 124) and is set with stools and rushes. In V. iv,
-two funeral processions meet in the street, and ‘while all the company
-seem to weep and mourn, there is a sad song in the music-room’.
-
-[232] Florio, _Dictionary_, ‘_Scena_ ... forepart of a theatre where
-players make them readie, being trimmed with hangings’ (cf. vol. ii, p.
-539); Jonson, _Cynthia’s Revels_, ind. 151, ‘I am none of your fresh
-Pictures, that use to beautifie the decay’d dead Arras, in a publique
-Theater’; Heywood, _Apology_, 18 (Melpomene _loq._), ‘Then did I tread
-on arras; cloth of tissue Hung round the fore-front of my stage’;
-Flecknoe (cf. App. I), ‘Theaters ... of former times ... were but plain
-and simple, with no other scenes, nor decorations of the stage, but
-onely old tapestry, and the stage strew’d with rushes’.
-
-[233] _1 Hen. VI_, I. i. 1, ‘Hung be the heavens with black, yield day
-to night!’; _Lucr._ 766 (of night), ‘Black stage for tragedies and
-murders fell’; _Warning for Fair Women_, ind. 74, ‘The stage is hung
-with blacke, and I perceive The auditors prepar’d for tragedie’; II.
-6, ‘But now we come unto the dismal act, And in these sable curtains
-shut we up The comic entrance to our direful play’; Daniel, _Civil
-Wars_ (_Works_, ii. 231), ‘Let her be made the sable stage, whereon
-Shall first be acted bloody tragedies’; _2 Antonio and Mellida_
-(Paul’s, 1599), prol. 20, ‘Hurry amain from our black-visaged shows’;
-_Northward Hoe_, IV. i (of court play), ‘the stage hung all with black
-velvet’; Dekker (iii. 296), _Lanthorne and Candlelight_ (1608), ‘But
-now, when the stage of the world was hung with blacke, they jetted
-vppe and downe like proud tragedians’; _Insatiate Countess_, IV. v. 4
-‘The stage of heaven is hung with solemn black, A time best fitting
-to act tragedies’; Anon., _Elegy on Burbage_ (Collier, _Actors_,
-53), ‘Since thou art gone, dear Dick, a tragic night Will wrap our
-black-hung stage’; cf. Malone in _Variorum_, iii. 103; Graves, _Night
-Scenes in the Elizabethan Theatres_ (_E. S._ xlvii. 63); Lawrence,
-_Night Performances in the Elizabethan Theatres_ (_E. S._ xlviii.
-213). In several of the passages quoted above, the black-hung stage is
-a metaphor for night, but I agree with Lawrence that black hangings
-cannot well have been used in the theatre to indicate night scenes
-as well as tragedy. I do not know why he suggests that a ‘prevalent
-idea that the stage was hung with blue for comedies’, for which, if it
-exists, there is certainly no evidence, is ‘due to a curious surmise
-of Malone’s’. Malone (_Var._ iii. 108) only suggests that ‘pieces of
-drapery tinged with blue’ may have been ‘suspended across the stage to
-represent the heavens’--quite a different thing. But, of course, there
-is no evidence for that either. According to Reich, _Der Mimus_, I.
-ii. 705, the colour of the _siparium_ in the Indian theatre is varied
-according to the character of the play.
-
-[234] Cf. p. 30; vol. i, p. 231. On the removal of bodies W. Archer
-(_Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 454) says, ‘In over a hundred plays which
-we have minutely examined (including all Shakespeare’s tragedies)
-there is only a small minority of cases in which explicit provision
-is not made, either by stage-direction or by a line in the text, for
-the removal of bodies. The few exceptions to this rule are clearly
-mere inadvertences, or else are due to the fact that there is a crowd
-of people on the stage in whose exit a body can be dragged or carried
-off almost unobserved’. In _Old Fortunatus_, 1206, after his sons have
-lamented over their dead father, ‘They both fall asleepe: Fortune and
-a companie of Satyres enter with Musicke, and playing about Fortunatus
-body, take him away’. Of course, a body left dead in the alcove need
-not be removed; the closing curtains cover it.
-
-[235] Cf. p. 26.
-
-[236] Cf. p. 51, n. 3 (_Downfall of R. Hood_, ‘curtaines’ of bower
-‘open’); p. 51, n. 4 (_Battle of Alcazar_, cave behind ‘curtaines’);
-p. 53, n. 5 (_Edw. I_, tent ‘opens’ and is closed, and Queen is
-‘discouered’); p. 55, n. 1 (_Looking-Glass_, ‘curtaines’ of tent
-drawn to shut and open); p. 63, n. 1 (_Old Fortunatus_, _M. V._,
-‘curtaines’ drawn to reveal caskets); p. 63, n. 4 (_Sir T. More_,
-‘arras’ drawn); p. 65, n. 3 (_2 Tamburlaine_, ‘arras’ drawn;
-_Selimus_, ‘curtins’ drawn; _Battle of Alcazar_, ‘curtains’ drawn;
-_Famous Victories_, ‘curtains’ drawn; _1 Contention_, ‘curtains’
-drawn and bodies ‘discouered’; _1 Rich. II_, ‘curtayne’ drawn; _Death
-of R. Hood_, ‘vaile’ or ‘curten’ drawn; _R. J._, ‘curtens’ shut);
-p. 67, n. 1 (_Friar Bacon_, ‘courtaines’ drawn by actor with stick;
-_Lord Cromwell_, ‘curtaines’ drawn); p. 68, n. 1 (_Old Fortunatus_,
-‘curtaine’ drawn; _Downfall of R. Hood_, ‘curteines’ drawn and ‘shut’).
-
-[237] _M. W._ III. iii. 97; cf. p. 66, n. 1 (_K. J._), p. 68, n. 3 (_1
-Hen. IV_).
-
-[238] So probably in _Dr. Faustus_, 28, where the prol. ends ‘And this
-the man that in his study sits’, and the s.d. follows, ‘Enter Faustus
-in his study’.
-
-[239] The ‘groom’ of the seventeenth-century _Devil’s Charter_ (cf. p.
-110) might be a servitor.
-
-[240] Cf. p. 53, n. 5 (_Edw. I_; _Trial of Chivalry_); p. 65, n. 3 (_1
-Contention_); p. 67, n. 1 (_E. M. I._). In _James IV_, V. vi. 2346, ‘He
-discouereth her’ only describes the removal of a disguise.
-
-[241] Prölss, 85; Albright, 140; Reynolds, i. 26; cf. p. 65, n. 3
-(_Battle of Alcazar_); p. 67, n. 1 (_Dr. Faustus_).
-
-[242] W. Archer in _Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 470; Reynolds, i. 9;
-Graves, 88; cf. Brereton in _Sh. Homage_, 204.
-
-[243] Cf. p. 65, n. 3 (_2 Tamburlaine_).
-
-[244] Cf. p. 64, n. 2 (_Alphonsus_).
-
-[245] Cf. p. 85.
-
-[246] Cf. vol. ii, p. 539.
-
-[247] W. Archer in _Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 470; Graves, 13.
-
-[248] Cf. p. 73. T. Holyoke, _Latin Dict._ (1677), has ‘_Scena_--the
-middle door of the stage’.
-
-[249] Lawrence, ii. 50. A window could also be shown in front, if
-needed, but I know of no clear example; cf. Wegener, 82, 95.
-
-[250] Cf. p. 51, n. 2 (_R. J._).
-
-[251] Cf. p. 67, n. 1 (_Stukeley_).
-
-[252] _Stratford Town Shakespeare_, x. 360; cf. Wegener, 56, 73;
-Neuendorff, 124; Reynolds, i. 25.
-
-[253] Cf. p. 65, n. 3.
-
-[254] Cf. vol. ii, p. 520.
-
-[255] Of the examples cited on p. 80, n. 3, bed-curtains could only
-suffice for _Selimus_, _Battle of Alcazar_, _1 Rich. II_, and possibly
-_R. J._ and _Bacon and Bungay_; in the others either there is no bed,
-or there is a clear indication of a discovered chamber. The curtains in
-_Sp. Trag._ need separate consideration; cf. p. 93, n. 1.
-
-[256] The s.ds. of _2 Hen. VI_, in so far as they vary from _1
-Contention_, may date from the seventeenth century; cf. ch. xxi, p. 113.
-
-[257] _Henslowe Papers_, 130.
-
-[258] Prölss, 96; Reynolds, i. 24, 31; Albright, 111.
-
-[259] Cf. p. 63, n. 4.
-
-[260] _Dr. Faustus_, 1007 sqq., is apparently a hall scene, but in 1030
-(an addition of 1616 text), ‘Enter Benuolio aboue at a window’, whence
-he views the scene with a state. On the play scene, with a gallery for
-the court, in _Sp. Trag._ IV. ii, cf. p. 93.
-
-[261] _Famous Victories_, sc. viii; _2 Hen. IV_, IV. iv, v; _1
-Contention_, scc. x, xi; _2 Hen. VI_, III. ii, iii (cf. p. 65, n. 3);
-_Edw. II_, 2448–2565; _1 Tr. Raigne_, xii; _K. J._ IV. i (cf. p. 66, n.
-1); _Lord Cromwell_, III. ii (cf. p. 67, n. 1); _Downfall of R. Hood_,
-ind. (cf. p. 68, n. 1); _Arden of Feversham_, V. i (cf. p. 68, n. 2);
-_1 Hen. IV_, II. iv; _Humorous Day’s Mirth_, viii (cf. p. 68, n. 3).
-
-[262] Cf. p. 64, n. 6. W. Archer (_Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 457)
-suggests that convention allowed properties, but not dead or drunken
-men, to be moved in the sight of the audience by servitors. But as a
-rule the moving could be treated as part of the action, and need not
-take place between scenes.
-
-[263] _Rich. II_, I. iii; _2 Edw. IV_, II. iv, ‘This while the hangman
-prepares, Shore at this speech mounts vp the ladder ... Shoare comes
-downe’. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 116)
-include ‘j payer of stayers for Fayeton’.
-
-[264] The dissertations of Reynolds (cf. _Bibl. Note_ to ch. xviii) are
-largely devoted to the exposition of this theory.
-
-[265] Cf. p. 52, n. 2. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (_Henslowe
-Papers_, 116) include ‘j baye tree’, ‘j tree of gowlden apelles’,
-‘Tantelouse tre’, as well as ‘ij mose banckes’.
-
-[266] Cf. p. 51, n. 3.
-
-[267] _Looking Glass_, II. i. 495, ‘The Magi with their rods beate the
-ground, and from vnder the same riseth a braue Arbour’; _Bacon and
-Bungay_, sc. ix. 1171, ‘Heere Bungay coniures and the tree appeares
-with the dragon shooting fire’; _W. for Fair Women_, ii. 411, ‘Suddenly
-riseth vp a great tree betweene them’. On the other hand, in _Old
-Fortunatus_, 609 (ind.), the presenters bring trees on and ‘set the
-trees into the earth’. The t.p. of the 1615 _Spanish Tragedy_ shows the
-arbour of the play as a small trellissed pergola with an arched top,
-not too large, I should say, to come up and down through a commodious
-trap.
-
-[268] _1 Contention_, sc. ii (cf. p. 56, n. 3); _John a Kent_, III. i
-(cf. p. 74, n. 3); &c.
-
-[269] _Looking Glass_, IV. ii, s.d. ‘Jonas the Prophet cast out of the
-Whales belly vpon the Stage’.
-
-[270] _Dr. Faustus_, 1450, s.d. (addition of 1616 text), ‘Hell is
-discouered’; cf. p. 72 for the description of the imaginary stage
-in the _Wagner Book_. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (_Henslowe
-Papers_, 116) include ‘j Hell mought’.
-
-[271] _Arden of Feversham_, IV. ii, iii.
-
-[272] Cf. p. 51.
-
-[273] Cf. p. 43.
-
-[274] Cf. p. 76.
-
-[275] Of the late woodcuts, _Roxana_ shows ‘above’ two compartments,
-clearly with spectators; _Messalina_ one, closed by curtains; _The
-Wits_ a central one closed by curtains, and three on each side, with
-female spectators. In view of their dates and doubtful provenances
-(cf. _Bibl. Note_ to ch. xviii), these are no evidence for the
-sixteenth-century public theatre, but they show that at some plays,
-public or private, the audience continued to sit ‘over the stage’ well
-in to the seventeenth century.
-
-[276] Cf. vol. ii, p. 542.
-
-[277] Cf. p. 45.
-
-[278] _Henslowe Papers_, 139.
-
-[279] _James IV_, 106, 605, 618, 1115.
-
-[280] _Looking Glass_, 152, 1756.
-
-[281] _T. of a Shrew_, scc. ii, xvi. In _T. of the Shrew_, sc. ii of
-the Induction is ‘aloft’ (1), and the presenters ‘sit’ to watch the
-play (147), but they only comment once (I. i. 254) with the s.d. ‘The
-Presenters aboue speakes’, and Sly is not carried down at the end.
-
-[282] Cf. p. 57, n. 4. The main induction ends (38) with, ‘Why stay we
-then? Lets giue the Actors leaue, And, as occasion serues, make our
-returne’.
-
-[283] Revenge says (I. i. 90), ‘Here sit we downe to see the misterie,
-And serue for Chorus in this Tragedie’, and the Ghost (III. xv. 38),
-‘I will sit to see the rest’. In IV. i Hieronimo discusses with his
-friends a tragedy which he has promised to give before the Court, and
-alludes (184) to ‘a wondrous shew besides. That I will haue there
-behinde a curtaine’. The actual performance occupies part of IV. iii,
-iv (a continuous scene). In IV. iii. 1, ‘Enter Hieronimo; he knocks up
-the curtaine’. We must not be misled by the modern French practice of
-knocking for the rise of the front curtain. The tragedy has not yet
-begun, and this is no front curtain, but the curtain already referred
-to in IV. i, which Hieronimo is now hammering up to conceal the dead
-body of Horatio, as part of the setting which he is arranging at one
-end of the main stage. The Duke of Castile now enters, and it is clear
-that the Court audience are to sit ‘above’, for Hieronimo begs the
-Duke (12) that ‘when the traine are past into the gallerie, You would
-vouchsafe to throw me downe the key’. He then bids (16) a Servant
-‘Bring a chaire and a cushion for the King’ and ‘hang up the Title: Our
-scene is Rhodes’. We are still concerned with Court customs, and no
-light is thrown on the possible use of title-boards on the public stage
-(cf. p. 126). The royal train take their places, and the performance
-is given. Hieronimo epilogizes and suddenly (IV. iv. 88) ‘Shewes his
-dead sonne’. Now it is clear why he wanted the key of the gallery, for
-(152) ‘He runs to hange himselfe’, and (157) ‘They breake in, and hold
-Hieronimo’.
-
-[284] Cf. p. 87, n. 3.
-
-[285] _Locrine_, I. iii; _Sp. Trag._ II. ii, III. ii, ix; _T. A._
-V. ii; _T. G._ IV. ii, iv; _R. J._ II. ii, III. v; _M. V._ II. vi;
-_Englishmen for my Money_, sc. ix; _Two Angry Women_, 1495; cf. p. 56,
-n. 3, p. 58, n. 4, p. 67, n. 1.
-
-[286] Cf. p. 66, n. 1, p. 67, n. 1, p. 68, n. 2, p. 68, n. 3.
-
-[287] In _R. J._ II. ii Romeo is in the orchard, and (2) ‘But soft,
-what light through yonder window breaks?’ The lovers discourse, he
-below, she ‘o’er my head’ (27). Presently (F_{1}; Q_{1}, is summary
-here) Juliet says ‘I hear some noise within’ (136), followed by s.d.
-‘Cals within’ and a little later ‘Within: Madam’, twice. Juliet then
-‘Exit’ (155), and (159) ‘Enter Juliet again’. Modern editors have
-reshuffled the s.ds. In III. v, Q_{2} (reproduced in F_{1}), in
-addition to textual differences from Q_{1}, may represent a revised
-handling of the scene. Q_{1} begins ‘Enter Romeo and Juliet at the
-window’. They discuss the dawn. Then ‘He goeth downe’, speaks from
-below, and ‘Exit’. Then ‘Enter Nurse hastely’ and says ‘Your Mother’s
-comming to your Chamber’. Then ‘She goeth downe from the Window’. I
-take this to refer to Juliet, and to close the action above, at a
-point represented by III. v. 64 of the modern text. Then follow ‘Enter
-Juliets Mother, Nurse’ and a dialogue below. Q_{2} begins ‘Enter
-Romeo and Juliet aloft’. Presently (36) ‘Enter Madame [? an error]
-and Nurse’, and the warning is given while Romeo is still above.
-Juliet says (41) ‘Then, window, let day in, and let life out’, and
-Romeo, ‘I’ll descend’. After his ‘Exit’ comes ‘Enter Mother’ (64), and
-pretty clearly discourses with Juliet, not below, but in her chamber.
-Otherwise there would be no meaning in Juliet’s ‘Is she not downe so
-late or vp so early? What vnaccustomd cause procures her hither?’
-Probably, although there is no s.d., they descend (125) to meet
-Capulet, for at the end of the scene Juliet bids the Nurse (231) ‘Go
-in’, and herself ‘Exit’ to visit Friar Laurence.
-
-[288] Cf. p. 65, n. 3.
-
-[289] Cf. p. 58, n. 2.
-
-[290] Cf. p. 119.
-
-[291] _Arden of Feversham_, III. i (p. 61, n. 3), and _Death of R.
-Hood_, IV. i (p. 66, n. 1), require stairs of which the foot or
-‘threshold’ is visible. For the execution scene in _Sir T. More_,
-sc. xvii (p. 57, n. 2), the whole stairs should be visible, but
-perhaps here, as elsewhere, the scaffold, although More likens it to
-a ‘gallerie’, was to be at least in part a supplementary structure.
-The Admiral’s inventory of 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 116; cf. ch. ii,
-p. 168) included ‘j payer of stayers for Fayeton’. In _Soliman and
-Perseda_, I. iii (p. 57, n. 4), where the back wall represents the
-outer wall of a tiltyard, ladders are put up against it.
-
-[292] Albright, 66; Lawrence, ii. 45. I am not prepared to accept the
-theory that in _R. J._ III. v Romeo descends his ladder from behind;
-cf. p. 94, n. 2. The other examples cited are late, but I should add
-the ‘window that goes out into the leads’ of _1 Oldcastle_, 2016 (p.
-66, n. 1).
-
-[293] _Jew of Malta_, V. 2316; cf. p. 68, n. 5.
-
-[294] _E. M. I._ I. v, ‘Bobadilla discouers himselfe: on a bench’.
-
-[295] Cf. p. 54, nn. 2–5.
-
-[296] See the conjectural reconstruction in Albright, 120.
-
-[297] _Jonsonus Virbius_ (1638).
-
-[298] Cf. p. 72.
-
-[299] _1 Hen. VI_, II. i (p. 54, n. 5). This arrangement would also fit
-I. ii, in which a shot is fired from the walls at ‘the turrets’, which
-could then be represented by the back wall. On a possible similar wall
-in the Court play of _Dido_, cf. p. 36.
-
-[300] W. Archer (_Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 466) suggests the possible
-use of a machine corresponding to the Greek ἐκκύκλημα (on which cf. A.
-E. Haigh, _Attic Theatre_^3, 201), although he is thinking of it as a
-device for ‘thrusting’ out a set interior from the alcove, which does
-not seem to me necessary.
-
-[301] _Henslowe Papers_, 118. The ‘j payer of stayers for Fayeton’
-may have been a similar structure; cf. p. 95, n. 4. Otway, _Venice
-Preserved_ (_1682_), V, has ‘Scene opening discovers a scaffold and a
-wheel prepared for the executing of Pierre’.
-
-[302] _Henslowe Papers_, 116.
-
-[303] Cf. p. 56, nn. 2, 3. The courtyard in _Arden of Feversham_, III.
-i, ii, might have been similarly staged.
-
-[304] _1 Hen. VI_, I. ii (a tower with a ‘grate’ in it), III. ii
-(p. 55); _1 Contention_, sc. iii (p. 56); _Soliman and Perseda_, V.
-ii. 118 (p. 57); _Blind Beggar of Alexandria_, sc. ii (p. 62); _Old
-Fortunatus_, 769 (p. 63).
-
-[305] Cf. p. 54.
-
-[306] _Arden of Feversham_, sc. i, begins before Arden’s house whence
-Alice is called forth (55); but, without any break in the dialogue, we
-get (245) ‘This is the painter’s house’, although we are still (318)
-‘neare’ Arden’s, where the speakers presently (362) breakfast.
-
-[307] _T. of A Shrew_, sc. xvi (cf. p. 92), see. iii, iv, v (a
-continuous scene). _T. of The Shrew_, I. i, ii, is similarly before the
-houses both of Baptista and Hortensio.
-
-[308] _Blind Beggar_, scc. v, vii. The use of the houses seems natural,
-but not perhaps essential.
-
-[309] _1 Oldcastle_, II. i. 522, 632.
-
-[310] Cf. p. 67, n. 1.
-
-[311] _K. to K. Honest Man_, sc. v. 396, 408, 519, 559; sc. vii. 662,
-738, 828, 894; sc. xv. 1385, 1425, 1428; cf. Graves, 65.
-
-[312] Cf. pp. 25, 33.
-
-[313] _George a Greene_, sc. xi. 1009, ‘Wil you go to the townes
-end.... Now we are at the townes end’.
-
-[314] _A. of Feversham_, III. vi. 55, ‘See Ye ouertake vs ere we come
-to Raynum down’.... (91) ‘Come, we are almost now at Raynum downe’.
-
-[315] _Dr. Faustus_, 1110, ‘let vs Make haste to Wertenberge ... til I
-am past this faire and pleasant greene, ile walke on foote’, followed
-immediately by ‘Enter a Horse-courser’ to Faustus, evidently in his
-‘chaire’ (1149) at Wittenberg.
-
-[316] _R. J._ I. iv. 113, where, in Q_{1}, Romeo’s ‘on lustie
-Gentlemen’ to the maskers is followed by ‘Enter old Capulet with the
-Ladies’, while in Q_{2}, Benvolio responds ‘Strike drum’, and then
-‘They march about the Stage, and Seruingmen come forth with Napkins’,
-prepare the hall, and ‘Exeunt’, when ‘Enter all the guests and
-gentlewomen to the Maskers’.
-
-[317] In _T. of The Shrew_, V. i. 17, ‘Pedant lookes out of the
-window’, while the presenters are presumably occupying the gallery, but
-even if this is a sixteenth-century s.d., the window need not be an
-upper one.
-
-[318] The s.d. to _Sp. Trag._ III. xi. 8, where ‘He goeth in at one
-doore and comes out at another’, is rather obscure, but the doors are
-probably those of a house which has just been under discussion, and if
-so, more than one door was sometimes supposed to belong to the same
-house.
-
-[319] Cf. pp. 3, 4, 11.
-
-[320] See my diagrams on pp. 84–5.
-
-[321] W. Archer in _Universal Review_ (1888), 281; J. Le G. Brereton,
-_De Witt at the Swan_ (_Sh. Homage_, 204); cf. p. 7.
-
-[322] Serlio’s ‘comic’ and ‘tragic’ scenes (cf. App. G) show steps to
-the auditorium from the front of the stage.
-
-[323] Creizenach, iii. 446; iv. 424 (Eng. tr. 370), with engravings
-from printed descriptions of 1539 and 1562.
-
-[324] The contest of 1561 is described in a long letter to Sir Thomas
-Gresham (Burgon, i. 377) by his agent at Antwerp, Richard Clough.
-It might be possible to trace a line of affiliation from another of
-Gresham’s servants, Thomas Dutton, who was his post from Antwerp
-_temp._ Edw. VI, and his agent at Hamburg _c._ 1571 (Burgon, i. 109;
-ii. 421). The actor Duttons, John and Laurence, seem also to have
-served as posts from Antwerp and elsewhere (cf. ch. xv).
-
-[325] _Thomas Lord Cromwell_ and _A Larum for London_, dealt with in
-the last chapter, might also be Globe plays.
-
-[326] _Henry V_, _Much Ado about Nothing_, _Merry Wives of Windsor_,
-_Hamlet_, _King Lear_, _Troilus and Cressida_, _Pericles_, _Every Man
-Out of his Humour_, _Sejanus_, _Volpone_, _Yorkshire Tragedy_, _London
-Prodigal_, _Fair Maid of Bristow_, _Devil’s Charter_, _Merry Devil
-of Edmonton_, _Revenger’s Tragedy_, _Miseries of Enforced Marriage_,
-and perhaps _1 Jeronimo_; with the second version of _Malcontent_,
-originally a Queen’s Revels play, and _Satiromastix_, the s.ds. of
-which perhaps belong rather to Paul’s, where it was also played.
-
-[327] _Catiline_, _Alchemist_; _Second Maid’s Tragedy_.
-
-[328] _Julius Caesar_, _Twelfth Night_, _As You Like It_, _All’s
-Well that Ends Well_, _Measure for Measure_, _Othello_, _Macbeth_,
-_Coriolanus_, _Antony and Cleopatra_, _Timon of Athens_.
-
-[329] _Cymbeline_, _Winter’s Tale_, _Tempest_, _Henry VIII_, _Duchess
-of Malfi_, _Two Noble Kinsmen_, _Maid’s Tragedy_, _King and no King_,
-_Philaster_, and perhaps _Thierry and Theodoret_.
-
-[330] I have only occasionally drawn upon plays such as _Bonduca_,
-whose ascription in whole or part to 1599–1613 is doubtful; these will
-be found in the list in App. L.
-
-[331] _1 Honest Whore_, _When You See Me You Know Me_, _Whore of
-Babylon_, _Roaring Girl_, and possibly _Two Lamentable Tragedies_. The
-extant text of _Massacre at Paris_ may also represent a revival at the
-Fortune.
-
-[332] _Nobody and Somebody_, _Travels of Three English Brothers_,
-_Woman Killed With Kindness_, _Sir Thomas Wyat_, _Rape of Lucrece_,
-_Golden Age_, _If It Be Not Good the Devil is in It_, _White Devil_,
-_Greene’s Tu Quoque_, _Honest Lawyer_, and probably _1, 2 If You Know
-Not Me You Know Nobody_, _Fair Maid of the Exchange_, _Silver Age_,
-_Brazen Age_. _How to Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_ is probably a Rose
-or Boar’s Head play.
-
-[333] _Hen. V_, IV. iv-viii; _T. C._ V. iv-x; _J. C._ V. i-v; _Lear_,
-IV. iii, iv, vii; V. i-iii; _A. C._ III. vii-x, xii; IV. i, iii, v-xiv;
-V. i, &c.
-
-[334] _Hen. V_, IV. viii; _J. C._ IV. ii, iii; _T. C._ I. iii; II. i,
-iii; III. iii; IV. v; V. i, ii, apparently with tents in one or other
-scene of Agamemnon (I. iii. 213), Ulysses (I. iii. 305), Ajax (II. i),
-Achilles (II. iii. 84; III. iii. 38; V. i. 95), and Calchas (V. i. 92;
-V. ii); _Devil’s Charter_, IV. iv. 2385, ‘He discouereth his Tent where
-her two sonnes were at Cardes’; and in s.d. of Prol. 29 (not a battle
-scene) ‘Enter, at one doore betwixt two other Cardinals, Roderigo ...
-one of which hee guideth to a Tent, where a table is furnished ... and
-to another Tent the other’.
-
-[335] _Hen. V_, III. vi, vii; IV. i-iii.
-
-[336] _Hen. V_, III. i. 1, ‘Scaling Ladders at Harflew’; III. iii.
-1, ‘Enter the King and all his Traine before the Gates’.... (58)
-‘Flourish, and enter the Towne’; _Cor._ I. iv. 13, ‘Enter two Senators
-with others on the Walles of Corialus’.... (29) ‘The Romans are beat
-back to their Trenches’.... (42) ‘Martius followes them to their gates,
-and is shut in’.... (62) ‘Enter Martius bleeding, assaulted by the
-enemy’.... ‘They fight and all enter the City’, and so on to end of sc.
-x; _Tim._ V. iv. 1, ‘Enter Alcibiades with his Powers before Athens....
-The Senators appeare vpon the wals’; IV. i; _Devil’s Charter_, II. i;
-IV. iv; _Maid’s Tragedy_, V. iii.
-
-[337] _A. Y. L._ III. ii. 1; _Philaster_, IV. iv. 83, ‘Philaster creeps
-out of a bush’ (as shown in the woodcut on the t.p. of the Q.); _T. N.
-K._ III. i. 37, ‘Enter Palamon as out of a bush’; V. i. 169, ‘Here the
-Hynde vanishes under the Altar: and in the place ascends a Rose Tree,
-having one Rose upon it’.
-
-[338] _Ham._ III. ii. 146 (Q_{1}) ‘Enter in a Dumb Show, the King and
-the Queene, he sits downe in an Arbor’, (Q_{2}, F_{2}) ‘he lyes him
-downe vpon a bancke of flowers’; _M. Ado_, I. ii. 10; III. i. 7, 30;
-_J. C._ III. ii. 1, ‘Enter Brutus and goes into the Pulpit’; _Tim._ V.
-iii. 5; _E. M. O._ III. ii.
-
-[339] _Ham._ V. i; _Macb._ IV. i; _Devil’s Charter_, prol.; _Catiline_,
-I. i, &c.; I do not know whether hell-mouth remained in use; there is
-nothing to point to it in the hell scene of _The Devil is an Ass_, I. i.
-
-[340] _Pericles_, II. i. 121, ‘Enter the two Fisher-men, drawing vp a
-Net’.
-
-[341] _Devil’s Charter_, III. v. Caesar Borgia and Frescobaldi murder
-the Duke of Candie (_vide infra_). Caesar says ‘let vs heaue him ouer,
-That he may fall into the riuer Tiber, Come to the bridge with him’; he
-bids Frescobaldi ‘stretch out their armes [for] feare that he Fall not
-vpon the arches’, and ‘Caesar casteth Frescobaldi after’.
-
-[342] _Rape of Lucrece_ (ed. Pearson), p. 240. It is before ‘yon
-walles’ of Rome. Horatius has his foot ‘fixt vpon the bridge’ and
-bids his friends break it behind him, while he keeps Tarquin’s party
-off. Then ‘a noise of knocking downe the bridge, within’ and ‘Enter
-... Valerius aboue’, who encourages Horatius. After ‘Alarum, and the
-falling of the Bridge’, Horatius ‘exit’, and Porsenna says ‘Hee’s leapt
-off from the bridge’. Presently ‘the shout of all the multitude Now
-welcomes him a land’.
-
-[343] _Devil’s Charter_, III. v, Frescobaldi is to waylay the Duke of
-Candie. ‘He fenceth’ (s.d.) with ‘this conduct here’ (1482), and as the
-victim arrives, ‘Here will I stand close’ (1612) and ‘He stands behind
-the post’ (s.d.); cf. _Satiromastix_ (p. 141, n. 4).
-
-[344] _Tp._ IV. i. 72.
-
-[345] _Tp._ III. iii. 17, ‘Solemne and strange Musicke: and Prosper
-on the top (invisible:) Enter severall strange shapes, bringing in a
-Banket; and dance about it with gentle actions of salutations, and
-inuiting the King, &c. to eate, they depart’.... (52) ‘Thunder and
-lightning. Enter Ariell (like a Harpey) claps his wings upon the Table,
-and with a queint device the Banquet vanishes’.... (82) ‘He vanishes
-in Thunder: then (to soft Musicke) Enter the shapes againe, and daunce
-(with mockes and mowes) and carrying out the Table’; IV. i. 134, ‘Enter
-Certaine Nimphes.... Enter certaine Reapers (properly habited:) they
-ioyne with the Nimphes, in a gracefull dance, towards the end whereof,
-_Prospero_ starts sodainly and speakes, after which to a strange hollow
-and confused noyse, they heauily vanish’.... (256) ‘A noyse of Hunters
-heard. Enter divers Spirits in shape of Dogs and Hounds, hunting them
-about: Prospero and Ariel setting them on’. Was the ‘top’ merely the
-gallery, or the third tiring-house floor (cf. p. 98) above? Ariel, like
-Prospero, enters ‘invisible’ (III. ii. 48). Is this merely the touch
-of an editor (cf. ch. xxii) or does it reflect a stage convention? The
-Admiral’s tiring-house contained in 1598 (_Henslowe Papers_, 123) ‘a
-robe for to goo invisibell’.
-
-[346] _G. A._ V, ‘Iris descends ... Iupiter first ascends upon the
-Eagle, and after him Ganimed’.... ‘Enter at 4 severall corners the
-4 winds’; _S. A._ II, ‘Thunder and lightning. Iupiter discends in a
-cloude’.... ‘Iuno and Iris descend from the heavens’; III, ‘Enter Iuno
-and Iris above in a cloud’.... ‘Enter Pluto, his Chariot drawne in by
-Divels’.... ‘Mercury flies from above’.... ‘Earth riseth from under
-the stage’.... ‘Earth sinkes’.... ‘The river Arethusa riseth from the
-stage’; IV, ‘Iupiter taking up the Infant speakes as he ascends in
-his cloud’; V, ‘Hercules sinkes himselfe: Flashes of fire; the Diuels
-appeare at every corner of the stage with severall fireworkes’....
-‘Exeunt three wayes Ceres, Theseus, Philoctetes, and Hercules dragging
-Cerberus one way: Pluto, hels Iudges, the Fates and Furies downe to
-hell: Iupiter, the Gods and Planets ascend to heaven’; _B. A._ I,
-‘When the Fury sinkes, a Buls head appeares’; V, ‘Enter Hercules from
-a rocke above, tearing down trees’.... ‘Iupiter above strikes him with
-a thunderbolt, his body sinkes, and from the heavens discends a hand
-in a cloud, that from the place where Hercules was burnt, brings up a
-starre, and fixeth it in the firmament’.
-
-[347] _G. A._ II, ‘Enter Iupiter like a Nimph, or a Virago’; IV,
-‘Enter Iupiter like a Pedler’; _S. A._ II, ‘Enter ... Iupiter shapt
-like Amphitrio’; IV, ‘Enter Iuno in the shape of old Beroe’.... ‘Enter
-Iupiter like a woodman’; _B. A._ V, ‘Enter ... Hercules attired like a
-woman, with a distaffe and a spindle’.
-
-[348] _S. A._ III, ‘The Nurses bring yong Hercules in his Cradle, and
-leave him. Enter Iuno and Iris with two snakes, put them to the childe
-and depart: Hercules strangles them: to them Amphitrio, admiring the
-accident’; _B. A._ IV, ‘Enter Vulcan and Pyragmon with his net of
-wire.... Vulcan catcheth them fast in his net.... All the Gods appeare
-above and laugh, Iupiter, Iuno, Phoebus, Mercury, Neptune’.
-
-[349] _G. A._ II, ‘A confused fray, an alarme.... Lycaon makes head
-againe, and is beat off by Iupiter and the Epirians, Iupiter ceazeth
-the roome of Lycaon’; II, ‘Enter with musicke (before Diana) sixe
-Satires, after them all their Nimphs, garlands on their heads, and
-iavelings in their hands, their Bowes and Quivers: the Satyrs sing’....
-‘Hornes winded, a great noise of hunting. Enter Diana, all her Nimphes
-in the chase, Iupiter pulling Calisto back’; III, ‘Alarm. They combat
-with iavelings first, after with swords and targets’; _S. A._ III,
-‘Enter Ceres and Proserpine attired like the Moone, with a company of
-Swaines, and country Wenches: They sing’.... ‘A confused fray with
-stooles, cups and bowles, the Centaurs are beaten.... Enter with
-victory, Hercules’; _B. A._ IV, ‘Enter Aurora, attended with Seasons,
-Daies, and Howers’; V, ‘Hercules swings Lychas about his head, and kils
-him’.
-
-[350] _G. A._ I, ‘Enter Saturn with wedges of gold and silver, models
-of ships and buildings, bow and arrowes, &c.’; II, ‘Vesta and the
-Nurse, who with counterfeit passion present the King a bleeding heart
-upon a knives point, and a bowle of bloud’.... ‘A banquet brought in,
-with the limbes of a man in the service’; _B. A._ V, ‘Enter to the
-sacrifice two Priests to the Altar, sixe Princes with sixe of his
-labours, in the midst Hercules bearing his two brazen pillars, six
-other Princes, with the other six labours’.
-
-[351] _G. A._ V, ‘Pluto drawes hell: the Fates put upon him a
-burning Roabe, and present him with a Mace, and burning crowne’;
-_S. A._ II, ‘Jupiter appeares in his glory under a Raine-bow’; IV,
-‘Thunder, lightnings, Jupiter descends in his maiesty, his Thunderbolt
-burning’.... ‘As he toucheth the bed it fires, and all flyes up’; V,
-‘Fire-workes all over the house’.... ‘Enter Pluto with a club of fire,
-a burning crowne, Proserpine, the Judges, the Fates, and a guard of
-Divels, all with burning weapons’; _B. A._ II, ‘There fals a shower of
-raine’. Perhaps one should remember the sarcasm of _Warning for Fair
-Women_, ind. 51, ‘With that a little rosin flasheth forth, Like smoke
-out of a tobacco pipe, or a boys squib’.
-
-[352] _Revenger’s Tragedy_ (Dodsley^4), p. 99; it recurs in _2 If You
-Know Not Me_ (ed. Pearson), p. 292.
-
-[353] _T. N._ IV. ii; _M. for M._ IV. iii; _Fair Maid of Bristow_, sig.
-E 3; _Philaster_, V. ii.
-
-[354] _Tp._ V. i. 172, ‘Here Prospero discouers Ferdinand and Miranda,
-playing at Chesse’.
-
-[355] _Tim._ IV. iii.; V. i. 133.
-
-[356] _M. Wives_, I. iv. 40, ‘He steps into the Counting-house’
-(Q_{1}); _2 Maid’s Tragedy_, 1995, 2030, ‘Locks him self in’.
-
-[357] _M. D. of Edmonton_, prol. 34, ‘Draw the Curtaines’ (s.d.),
-which disclose Fabel on a couch, with a ‘necromanticke chaire’ by him;
-_Devil’s Charter_, I. iv. 325, ‘Alexander in his study’; IV. i. 1704,
-1847; v. 2421, 2437; V. iv. 2965; vi. 3016, ‘Alexander vnbraced betwixt
-two Cardinalls in his study looking vpon a booke, whilst a groome
-draweth the Curtaine.... They place him in a chayre vpon the stage, a
-groome setteth a Table before him’.... (3068), ‘Alexander draweth the
-Curtaine of his studie where hee discouereth the diuill sitting in his
-pontificals’; _Hen. VIII_, II. ii. 63, after action in anteroom, ‘Exit
-Lord Chamberlaine, and the King drawes the Curtaine and sits reading
-pensiuely’; _Catiline_, I. i. 15, ‘Discouers Catiline in his study’;
-_Duchess of Malfi_, V. ii. 221 (a ‘cabinet’); cf. _Massacre at Paris_
-(Fortune), 434, ‘He knocketh, and enter the King of Nauarre and Prince
-of Condy, with their scholmaisters’ (clearly a discovery, rather than
-an entry).
-
-[358] _2 Maid’s Tragedy_, 1725, ‘Enter the Tirant agen at a farder
-dore, which opened, bringes hym to the Toombe wher the Lady lies
-buried; the Toombe here discovered ritchly set forthe’; (1891)
-‘Gouianus kneeles at the Toomb wondrous passionatly’.... (1926), ‘On
-a sodayne in a kinde of Noyse like a Wynde, the dores clattering, the
-Toombstone flies open, and a great light appeares in the midst of the
-Toombe’.
-
-[359] _W. T._ V. iii; _D. of Malfi_, III. iv. 1, ‘Two Pilgrimes to the
-Shrine of our Lady of Loretto’.
-
-[360] _E. M. O._ IV. iii-v; cf. _Roaring Girl_ (Fortune) (ed. Pearson,
-p. 50), ‘The three shops open in a ranke: the first a Poticaries shop,
-the next a Fether shop; the third a Sempsters shop’; _Two Lamentable
-Tragedies_ (? Fortune), I. i, ‘Sit in his shop’ (Merry’s); I. iii,
-‘Then Merry must passe to Beeches shoppe, who must sit in his shop, and
-Winchester his boy stand by: Beech reading’; II. i, ‘The boy sitting
-at his maisters dore’.... ‘When the boy goeth into the shoppe Merrie
-striketh six blowes on his head and with the seaventh leaues the hammer
-sticking in his head’.... ‘Enter one in his shirt and a maide, and
-comming to Beeches shop findes the boy murthered’; IV. iv, ‘Rachell
-sits in the shop’ (Merry’s); _Bartholomew Fair_ (Hope), II-V, which
-need booths for the pig-woman, gingerbread woman, and hobby-horse man.
-
-[361] _Revenger’s Tragedy_ (Dodsley^4), i, p. 26, ‘Enter ... Antonio
-... discovering the body of her dead to certain Lords and Hippolito;
-pp. 58, 90 (scenes of assignation and murder in a room with ‘yon silver
-ceiling’, a ‘darken’d blushless angle’, ‘this unsunned lodge’, ‘that
-sad room’); _D. of Malfi_, IV. i. 55, ‘Here is discover’d, behind a
-travers, the artificiall figures of Antonio and his children, appearing
-as if they were dead’; ii. 262, ‘Shewes the children strangled’; cf.
-_White Devil_ (Queen’s), V. iv. 71, ‘They are behind the travers. Ile
-discover Their superstitious howling’, with s.d. ‘Cornelia, the Moore
-and 3 other Ladies discovered, winding Marcello’s coarse’; _Brazen Age_
-(Queen’s), III, ‘Two fiery Buls are discouered, the Fleece hanging
-over them, and the Dragon sleeping beneath them: Medea with strange
-fiery-workes, hangs above in the Aire in the strange habite of a
-Coniuresse’.
-
-[362] Cf. p. 25. I am not clear whether _Volpone_, V. 2801, ‘Volpone
-peepes from behinde a trauerse’ is below or above, but in either event
-the traverse in this case must have been a comparatively low screen and
-free from attachment at the top, as Volpone says (2761), ‘I’le get up,
-Behind the cortine, on a stoole, and harken; Sometime, peepe ouer’.
-
-[363] _M. Ado_, I. iii. 63; _M. Wives_, III. iii. 97, ‘Falstaffe stands
-behind the aras’ (Q_{1}); _Ham._ II. ii. 163; III. iv. 22; _D. of
-Malfi_, I. ii. 65; _Philaster_, II. ii. 61, ‘Exit behind the hangings’
-... (148), ‘Enter Galatea from behind the hangings’.
-
-[364] _Cy._ II. ii. 1, ‘Enter Imogen, in her Bed, and a Lady’ ... (11)
-‘Iachimo from the Trunke’, who says (47) ‘To th’ Truncke againe, and
-shut the spring of it’ and (51) ‘Exit’; cf. II. iii. 42, ‘Attend you
-here the doore of our stern daughter?’; cf. _Rape of Lucrece_ (Red
-Bull), p. 222 (ed. Pearson), ‘Lucrece discovered in her bed’.
-
-[365] _Ham._ III. iv; cf. p. 116. Most of the scenes are in some
-indefinite place in the castle, called in II. ii. 161 ‘here in the
-lobby’ (Q_{2}, F_{1}) or ‘here in the gallery’ (Q_{1}). Possibly the
-audience for the play scene (III. ii) were in the alcove, as there is
-nothing to suggest that they were above; or they may have been to right
-and left, and the players in the alcove; it is guesswork.
-
-[366] _Oth._ V. ii. 1, ‘Enter Othello with a light’ (Q_{1}), ‘Enter
-Othello and Desdemona in her bed’ (F_{1}). It is difficult to say
-whether _Maid’s Tragedy_, V. i. 2 (continuous scene), where Evadne’s
-entry and colloquy with a gentleman of the bedchamber is followed by
-s.d. ‘King abed’, implies a ‘discovery’ or not.
-
-[367] _D. Charter_, I. v. 547, ‘Enter _Lucretia_ alone in her night
-gowne untired, bringing in a chaire, which she planteth upon the Stage’
-... (579) ‘Enter Gismond di Viselli untrussed in his Night-cap, tying
-his points’ ... (625) ‘Gismond sitteth downe in a Chaire, Lucretia on
-a stoole [ready on the stage for a spectator?] beside him’ ... (673)
-‘She ... convaieth away the chaire’. Barbarossa comes into ‘this parler
-here’ (700), finds the murdered body, and they ‘locke up the dores
-there’ and ‘bring in the body’ (777), which is therefore evidently not
-behind a curtain.
-
-[368] _D. Charter_, IV. iii. 2005, ‘Enter Lucretia richly attired with
-a Phyal in her hand’ ... ‘Enter two Pages with a Table, two looking
-glasses, a box with Combes and instruments, a rich bowle’. She paints
-and is poisoned, and a Physician bids ‘beare in her body’ (2146).
-
-[369] _D. Charter_, IV. v. 2441, ‘Exit _Alexander_ into his study’ ...
-‘Enter _Astor_ and _Philippo_ in their wast-cotes with rackets’ ...
-‘Enter two Barbers with linen’ ... ‘After the barbers had trimmed and
-rubbed their bodies a little, _Astor_ caleth’ ... ‘They lay them selves
-upon a bed and the barbers depart’ ... ‘_Bernardo_ knocketh at the
-study’. They are murdered and Bernardo bidden to ‘beare them in’ (2589).
-
-[370] Cf. p. 66.
-
-[371] Albright, 142; Graves, 17; Reynolds (1911), 55; Thorndike, 81.
-
-[372] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[373] In _The Faithful Friends_ (possibly a Jacobean King’s play), iv.
-282, Rufinus says, ‘Lead to the chamber called Elysium’; then comes
-s.d. ‘Exit Young Tullius, Phyladelphia and Rufinus. Then a rich Bed
-is thrust out and they enter again’, and Tullius says ‘This is the
-lodging called Elysium’. Later examples are Sir W. Berkeley, _The Lost
-Lady_ (1638), V. i, ‘Enter the Moor on her bed, Hermione, Phillida, and
-Irene. The bed thrust out’; Suckling, _Aglaura_ (1646), V, ‘A bed put
-out. Thersames and Aglaura in it.... Draw in the Bed’; Davenport, _City
-Night Cap_ (1661, Cockpit), II. i, ‘A bed thrust out. Lodovico sleeping
-in his clothes; Dorothea in bed’.
-
-[374] _Silver Age_, IV, ‘Enter Semele drawne out in her bed’; _Hector
-of Germany_, I. i, ‘a bed thrust out, the Palsgrave lying sick on
-it, the King of Bohemia, the Duke of Savoy, the Marquis Brandenburg
-entering with him’; _Chaste Maid in Cheapside_, III. ii. 1, ‘A bed
-thrust out upon the stage; Allwit’s wife in it’. This appears from
-‘call him up’ (102) to be on the upper stage. _Golden Age_, I, ‘Enter
-Sibilla lying in child-bed, with her child lying by her, and her Nurse,
-&c.’ has the Cymbeline formula, but presumably the staging was as for
-Danae.
-
-[375] _Golden Age_, IV, ‘Enter foure old Beldams’, and say ‘The ‘larme
-bell rings’; it is Acrisius; they will ‘clap close to the gate and let
-him in’. He bids them watch ‘your percullist entrance’, says ‘Danae is
-descended’, speaks of ‘the walkes within this barricadoed mure’. She
-returns ‘unto her chamber’ and he ‘Exit’. The beldams will ‘take our
-lodgings before the Princesse chamber’ and ‘Exit’. Then ‘Enter Iupiter
-like a Pedler, the Clowne his man, with packs at their backes’. They
-are evidently outside the gate. ‘He rings the bell’ and persuades the
-beldams to let him ‘into the Porters lodge’. They will ‘shut the gate
-for feare the King come and if he ring clap the Pedlers into some of
-yon old rotten corners’. Then ‘Enter Danae’, whom Jupiter courts. She
-says ‘Yon is my doore’ and ‘Exit’. The beldams will ‘see the Pedlers
-pack’t out of the gate’, but in the end let them ‘take a nap upon
-some bench or other’, and bid them good-night. Jupiter ‘puts off his
-disguise’ and ‘Exit’. Then ‘Enter the foure old Beldams, drawing out
-Danae’s bed: she in it. They place foure tapers at the foure corners’.
-Jupiter returns ‘crown’d with his imperiall robes’, says ‘Yon is the
-doore’, calls Danae by name, ‘lyes upon her bed’ and ‘puts out the
-lights and makes unready’. Presently ‘The bed is drawne in, and enter
-the Clowne new wak’t’, followed by ‘Enter Iupiter and Danae in her
-night-gowne’. He puts on his cloak, and ‘Enter the foure Beldams in
-hast’, say ‘the gate is open’, and dismiss the pedlars.
-
-[376] _M. Ado_, III. iv. Presumably the action is at the window, as
-there is a ‘new tire within’ (13) and Hero withdraws when guests arrive
-(95). It is of course the same window which is required by Don John’s
-plot, although it is not again in action (cf. II. ii. 43; iii. 89; III.
-ii. 116, iii. 156; IV. i. 85, 311).
-
-[377] _Volpone_, II. v-vii. In the piazza, under the same window, is
-II. i-iii, where ‘Celia at the windo’ throws downe her handkerchiefe’
-(1149).
-
-[378] _M. W._ II. ii; III. v, in both of which persons ‘below’ are
-bidden ‘come up’; possibly V. i; cf. IV. v, 13, 22, 131, where persons
-below speak of the chamber as above.
-
-[379] _E. M. O._ V. iv-vi, at the Mitre; _M. Devil of Edmonton_, I.
-i; _Miseries of Enforced Marriage_, III. i; and for other theatres,
-_Massacre at Paris_ (Fortune), 257 ‘Enter the Admirall in his bed’, 301
-‘Enter into the Admirals house, and he in his bed’, with 310 ‘Throw him
-downe’; _Two Lamentable Tragedies_ (Fortune), parts of I. iii, ‘Then
-being in the upper Rome Merry strickes him in the head fifteene times’,
-II. i, iii; _1 If You Know Not Me_ (? Queen’s), p. 240 (ed. Pearson),
-‘Enter Elizabeth, Gage, and Clarencia aboue’. Elizabeth bids Gage
-‘Looke to the pathway that doth come from the court’, perhaps from a
-window at the back (cf. p. 96), and he describes a coming horseman.
-
-[380] _Yorkshire Tragedy_, scc. iii, v, vii, while the intermediate
-episodes, scc. iv, vi, are below. It is all really one scene.
-
-[381] _Sejanus_ (F_{1}), i. 355–469 (cf. 287), an episode breaking the
-flow of the main action, a hall scene, of the act; it must be apart
-from the hall, not perhaps necessarily above.
-
-[382] _E. M. O._ V. ii, preceded and followed by scene near the court
-gate at the foot of stairs leading to the great chamber; V. i has ‘Is
-this the way? good truth here be fine hangings’ and ‘courtiers drop
-out’, presumably through the arras and up the stairs. Then a presenter
-says, ‘Here they come’, and the courtiers enter, presumably above.
-
-[383] _A. and C._ IV. xv. 1, ‘Enter Cleopatra, and her Maides aloft’,
-with (8) ‘Look out o’ the other side your monument’ ... (37) ‘They
-heave Anthony aloft to Cleopatra’; V. ii; cf. 360, ‘bear her women from
-the monument’.
-
-[384] _Pericles_, III. i (prol. 58, ‘In your imagination hold This
-stage the ship’); V. i (prol. 21, ‘In your supposing once more put your
-sight Of heavy Pericles; think this his bark’). The other scenes (_1
-Contention_, sc. xii; _A. and C._ II. vii; _Tp._ I. i) have nothing
-directly indicating action ‘above’.
-
-[385] _Ham._ I. i, iv, v; cf. I. ii. 213, ‘upon the platform where we
-watch’d’. There would be hardly room ‘above’ for the Ghost to waft
-Hamlet to ‘a more removed ground’ (I. iv. 61), and the effect of I. v.
-148, where ‘Ghost cries under the Stage’, would be less. On the other
-hand, in _White Devil_ (Queen’s), IV. iv. 39 the s.d. ‘A Cardinal on
-the Tarras’ is explained by Flamineo’s words, ‘Behold! my lord of
-Arragon appeares, On the church battlements’.
-
-[386] _J. C._ III. i; _Cor._ II. ii, ‘Enter two Officers, to lay
-Cushions, as it were, in the Capitol’; _Sejanus_ (F_{1}), iii. 1–6;
-v. 19–22; _Catiline_, IV. ii, V. iv, vi; also _Rape of Lucrece_ (Red
-Bull), pp. 168–73 (ed. Pearson). There is a complete absence of s.ds.
-for ‘above’; cf. p. 58. But in _J. C._ III. i and _Catiline_, V. vi,
-at least, action in the senate house is continuous with action in the
-street or forum without, and both places must have been shown, and
-somehow differentiated.
-
-[387] _Bonduca_, V. i, ‘Enter Caratach upon a rock, and Hengo by him,
-sleeping’; V. iii, ‘Enter Caratach and Hengo on the Rock’. Hengo is let
-down by a belt to fetch up food. It is ‘a steep rock i th’ woods’ (V.
-ii); cf. the rock scene in _Brazen Age_, V (cf. p. 109).
-
-[388] Cf. p. 153. _Duchess of Malfi_, III. ii, with (173) ‘call up our
-officers’ is a possible exception.
-
-[389] _E. M. O._ II. i (where personages standing ‘under this Tarras’
-watch action under a window); _Devil’s Charter_, III. ii, ‘Alexander
-out of a Casement’; _M. Devil of Edmonton_, V. ii. 59, ‘D’yee see yon
-bay window?’ _Miseries of Enforced Marriage_ (Dodsley^4), iv, p. 540
-(‘Here’s the sign of the Wolf, and the bay-window’); _T. N. K._ II. i,
-ii; _Catiline_, III. v; _Philaster_, II. iv; _Second Maiden’s Tragedy_,
-V. i. 2004, ‘Leonella above in a gallery with her love Bellarius’ ...
-(2021) ‘Descendet Leonela’; _Duchess of Malfi_, V. v; _Hen. VIII_, V.
-ii. 19, ‘Enter the King, and Buts, at a Windowe above’, with ‘Let ’em
-alone, and draw the curtaine close’ (34); _Pericles_, II. ii (where
-Simonides and Thaisa ‘withdraw into the gallerie’, to watch a tilting
-supposed behind, as in the sixteenth-century _Soliman and Perseda_; cf.
-p. 96). So, too, in _T. N. K._ V. iii, the fight between Palamon and
-Arcite takes place within; Emilia will not see it, and it is reported
-to her on the main stage.
-
-[390] _D. an Ass_, II. vi. 37, ‘This Scene is acted at two windo’s
-as out of two contiguous buildings’ ... (77) ‘Playes with her paps,
-kisseth her hands, &c.’ ... vii. 1 ‘Her husband appeares at her back’
-... (8) ‘Hee speaks out of his wives window’ ... (23) ‘The Divell
-speakes below’ ... (28) ‘Fitz-dottrel enters with his wife as come
-downe’.
-
-[391] _M. Devil of Edmonton_, V. i, ii; _Catiline_, V. vi (where
-apparently three houses are visited after leaving the senate house);
-cf. the cases of shops on p. 110, n. 10.
-
-[392] _Ham._ V. i. 60.
-
-[393] _Bonduca_, V. iii.
-
-[394] _Three English Brothers_, ad fin. A court scene in _Sir T. Wyatt_
-ends (ed. Hazlitt, p. 10) with s.d. ‘pass round the stage’, which takes
-the personages to the Tower. Similarly in _1 If You Know Not Me_ (ed.
-Pearson, p. 246) a scene at Hatfield ends ‘And now to London, lords,
-lead on the way’, with s.d. ‘Sennet about the Stage in order. The Maior
-of London meets them’, and in _2 If You Know Not Me_ (p. 342) troops
-start from Tilbury, and ‘As they march about the stage, Sir Francis
-Drake and Sir Martin Furbisher meet them’.
-
-[395] W. Archer in _Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 471; Albright, 77;
-Lawrence, i. 19; cf. my analogous conjecture of ‘wings’ on p. 100.
-
-[396] _David and Bethsabe_, 25, ‘He [Prologus] drawes a curtaine, and
-discouers Bethsabe with her maid bathing ouer a spring: she sings, and
-David sits aboue vewing her’.
-
-[397] Lawrence, i. 159 (_Proscenium Doors: an Elizabethan Heritage_).
-
-[398] Cf. vol. ii, p. 534.
-
-[399] At the Globe the windows appear to have been bay windows; cf. p.
-116, n. 7. Lawrence, ii. 25 (_Windows on the Pre-Restoration Stage_),
-cites T. M. _Black Book_ (1604), ‘And marching forward to the third
-garden-house, there we knocked up the ghost of mistress Silverpin,
-who suddenly risse out of two white sheets, and acted out of her
-tiring-house window’. It appears from Tate Wilkinson’s _Memoirs_
-(Lawrence, i. 177) that the proscenium balconies were common ground to
-actors and audience in the eighteenth century.
-
-[400] _Family of Love_, I. iii. 101.
-
-[401] The theory is best represented by C. Brodmeier, _Die
-Shakespeare-Bühne nach den alten Bühnenanweisungen_ (1904); V.
-Albright, _The Shakespearian Stage_ (1909).
-
-[402] Thorndike, 106.
-
-[403] Cf. pp. 41, 126, 154.
-
-[404] Palace of Tiberius (Acts I, II, III), Senate house (III, V),
-Gardens of Eudemus (II), Houses of Agrippina (II, IV), Sejanus (V),
-Regulus (V).
-
-[405] Houses of Volpone (I, II, III, V), Corvino (II), Would Be (V),
-Law court (IV, V).
-
-[406] Houses of Catiline (I, IV), Fulvia (II), Cicero (III, IV, V),
-Lecca (III), Brutus (IV), Spinther (V. vi), Cornificius (V. vi), Caesar
-(V. vi), Senate house (IV, V), Milvian Bridge (IV).
-
-[407] _Alchemist_, _III._ v. 58, ‘He speakes through the keyhole,
-the other knocking’. _Hen. VIII_, V. ii, iii (continuous scene) also
-requires a council-chamber door upon the stage, at which Cranmer is
-stopped after he has entered through the stage-door.
-
-[408] Daborne gave Tourneur ‘an act of y^e Arreignment of London to
-write’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 72).
-
-[409] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[410] _M. N. D._ III. ii. 463 (F_{1}), ‘They sleep all the Act’; i.
-e. all the act-interval (cf. p. 131). So in _Catiline_ the storm with
-which Act III ends is still on at the beginning of Act IV, and in
-_Alchemist_ Mammon and Lovewit are seen approaching at the ends of Acts
-I and IV respectively, but in both cases the actual arrival is at the
-beginning of the next act.
-
-[411] F. A. Foster, _Dumb Show in Elizabethan Drama before 1620_ (_E.
-S._ xliv. 8).
-
-[412] Jonson has a ‘Chorus--of musicians’ between the acts of
-_Sejanus_, and the presenter of _Two Lamentable Tragedies_ bids
-the audience ‘Delight your eares with pleasing harmonie’ after the
-harrowing end of Act II. Some other examples given in Lawrence, i. 75
-(_Music and Song in the Elizabethan Drama_), seem to me no more than
-incidental music such as may occur at any point of a play. Malone
-(_Var._ iii. 111) describes a copy of the Q_{2} of _R. J._ in which
-the act endings and directions for inter-act music had been marked in
-manuscript; but this might be of late date.
-
-[413] _Malcontent_, ind. 89.
-
-[414] _Henslowe Papers_, 127.
-
-[415] _Catiline_, I. i.
-
-[416] _Second Maidens Tragedy_, 1719, ‘Exit’ the Tyrant, four lines
-from the end of a court scene, and 1724 ‘Enter the Tirant agen at a
-farder dore, which opened, bringes hym to the Toombe’ (cf. p. 110,
-n. 8). So in _Woman Killed with Kindness_ (Queen’s), IV. ii, iii
-(continuous scene), Mrs. Frankford and her lover retire from a hall
-scene to sup in her chamber, and the servants are bidden to lock
-the house doors. In IV. iv Frankford enters with a friend, and says
-(8) ‘This is the key that opes my outward gate; This the hall-door;
-this the withdrawing chamber; But this ... It leads to my polluted
-bedchamber’. Then (17) ‘now to my gate’, where they light a lanthorn,
-and (23) ‘this is the last door’, and in IV. v Frankford emerges as
-from the bedchamber. Probably sc. iv is supposed to begin before the
-house. They go behind at (17), emerge through another door, and the
-scene is then in the hall, whence Frankford passes at (23) through the
-central aperture behind again.
-
-[417] _Wily Beguiled_, prol. The Prologus asks a player the name of the
-play, and is told ‘Sir you may look vpon the Title’. He complains that
-it is ‘_Spectrum_ once again’. Then a Juggler enters, will show him a
-trick, and says ‘With a cast of cleane conveyance, come aloft _Jack_
-for thy masters advantage (hees gone I warrant ye)’ and there is the
-s.d. ‘_Spectrum_ is conveied away: and _Wily beguiled_, stands in the
-place of it’.
-
-[418] Most of the examples in Lawrence, i. 43 (_Title and Locality
-Boards on the Pre-Restoration Stage_) belong to Court or to private
-theatres; on the latter cf. p. 154, _infra_. But the prologue to _1 Sir
-John Oldcastle_ begins ‘The doubtful Title (Gentlemen) prefixt Upon
-the Argument we have in hand May breede suspence’. The lost Frankfort
-engraving of English comedians (cf. vol. ii, p. 520) is said to have
-shown boards.
-
-[419] Cunningham, _Jonson_, iii. 509; Dekker, _G. H. B._ (ed.
-McKerrow), 40, ‘And first observe your doors of entrance, and your
-exit; not much unlike the players at the theatres; keeping your
-decorums, even in fantasticality. As for example: if you prove to be a
-northern gentleman, I would wish you to pass through the north door,
-more often especially than any of the other; and so, according to your
-countries, take note of your entrances’.
-
-[420] _1 Contention_, sc. xxii, ‘Richard kils him under the signe
-of the Castle in St. Albones’; _Comedy of Errors_ (the Phoenix, the
-Porpentine), _Shoemaker’s Holiday_ (the Last), _Edw. IV_ (the Pelican),
-_E. M. O._ (the Mitre), _Miseries of Enforced Marriage_ (the Mitre, the
-Wolf); _Bartholomew Fair_ (the Pig’s Head); &c.
-
-[421] _Wounds of Civil War_, III. iv, ‘Enter Marius solus from the
-Numidian mountaines, feeding on rootes’; _3 Hen. VI_, IV. ii, ‘Enter
-Warwick and Oxford in England’, &c.; cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[422] _Warning for Fair Women_, ind. 86, ‘My scene is London, native
-and your own’; _Alchemist_, prol. 5, ‘Our scene is London’; cf. the
-Gower speeches in _Pericles_.
-
-[423] _Dr. Faustus_, 13, 799, 918, 1111.
-
-[424] I cite Greg’s Q_{2}, but Q_{1} agrees. Jonson’s own
-scene-division is of course determined by the introduction of new
-speakers (cf. p. 200) and does not precisely follow the textual
-indications.
-
-[425] _Henslowe Papers_, 116.
-
-[426] _2 If You Know Not Me_ (ed. Pearson), p. 295.
-
-[427] Cf. App. I, and Neuendorff, 149, who quotes J. Corey, _Generous
-Enemies_ (1672), prol.:
-
- Coarse hangings then, instead of scenes, were worn.
- And Kidderminster did the stage adorn.
-
-Graves, 78, suggests pictorial ‘painted cloths’ for
-backgrounds.
-
-[428] ‘Scenes’ were used in the public performances of Nabbes’s
-_Microcosmus_ (1637), Suckling’s _Aglaura_ (_1637_), and Habington’s
-_Queen of Arragon_ (_1640_); cf. Lawrence, ii. 121 (_The Origin of
-the English Picture-Stage_); W. G. Keith, _The Designs for the First
-Movable Scenery on the English Stage_ (_Burlington Magazine_, xxv. 29,
-85).
-
-[429] For Paul’s, _C. and C. Errant_ (after each act), ‘Here they
-knockt up the Consort’; _Faery Pastorall_; _Trick to Catch the Old One_
-(after I and II), ‘music’; _What You Will_, II. ii. 235 ‘So ends our
-chat;--sound music for the act’; for Blackfriars, _Gentleman Usher_,
-III. i. 1, ‘after the song’; _Sophonisba_ (after I), ‘the cornets and
-organs playing loud full music for the act’, (II) ‘Organ mixt with
-recorders, for this act’, (III) ‘Organs, viols and voices play for this
-act’, (IV) ‘A base lute and a treble violl play for the act’, with
-which should be read the note at the end of Q_{1}, ‘let me intreat my
-reader not to taxe me for the fashion of the entrances and musique of
-this tragedy, for know it is printed only as it was presented by youths
-and after the fashion of the private stage’; _K. B. P._ (after I),
-‘Boy danceth. Musicke. Finis Actus primi’, (II) ‘Musicke. Finis Actus
-secundi’, (III) ‘Finis Actus tertii. Musicke. Actus quartus, scoena
-prima. Boy daunceth’, (IV) Ralph’s May Day speech; cf. _infra_ and vol.
-ii, p. 557. I do not find any similar recognition of the scene as a
-structural element in the play to be introduced by music; in _1 Antonio
-and Mellida_, III. ii. 120, the s.d. ‘and so the Scene begins’ only
-introduces a new scene in the sense of a regrouping of speakers (cf. p.
-200).
-
-[430] For Paul’s, _Histriomastix_, III. i. 1, ‘Enter Pride,
-Vaine-Glory, Hypocrisie, and Contempt: Pride casts a mist, wherein
-Mavortius and his company [who ended II] vanish off the Stage, and
-Pride and her attendants remaine’, (after III) ‘They all awake, and
-begin the following Acte’, (after V) ‘Allarmes in severall places, that
-brake him off thus: after a retreat sounded, the Musicke playes and
-Poverty enters’; 2 ANTONIO AND MELLIDA, III. i. 1, ‘A dumb show. The
-cornets sounding for the Act’, (after IV) ‘The cornets sound for the
-act. The dumb show’; _What You Will_, III. i. 1, ‘Enter Francisco ...
-They clothe Francisco whilst Bidet creeps in and observes them. Much of
-this done whilst the Act is playing’; _Phoenix_ (after II), ‘Towards
-the close of the musick the justices three men prepare for a robberie’;
-for Blackfriars, _Malcontent_, II. i. 1, ‘Enter Mendoza with a sconce,
-to observe Ferneze’s entrance, who, whilst the act is playing, enters
-unbraced, two Pages before him with lights; is met by Maquerelle and
-conveyed in; the Pages are sent away’; _Fawn_, V. i. 1, ‘Whilst the Act
-is a-playing, Hercules and Tiberio enters; Tiberio climbs the tree,
-and is received above by Dulcimel, Philocalia, and a Priest; Hercules
-stays beneath’. The phrase ‘whilst the act is playing’ is a natural
-development from ‘for the act’, i. e. ‘in preparation for the act’,
-used also for the elaborate music which at private houses replaced the
-three preliminary trumpet ‘soundings’ of the public houses; cf. _What
-You Will_, ind. 1 (s.d.), ‘Before the music sounds for the Act’, and
-_1 Antonio and Mellida_, ind. 1, ‘The music will sound straight for
-entrance’. But it leads to a vagueness of thought in which the interval
-itself is regarded as the ‘act’; cf. the _M. N. D._ s.d. of F_{1},
-quoted p. 124, n. 3, with Middleton, _The Changeling_ (1653), III. i.
-1, ‘In the act-time De Flores hides a naked rapier behind a door’,
-and Cotgrave, _Dict._ (1611), ‘Acte ... also, an Act, or Pause in a
-Comedie, or Tragedie’.
-
-[431] For Paul’s, _Histriomastix_, i. 163, ‘Enter Fourcher, Voucher,
-Velure, Lyon-Rash ... two and two at severall doores’; v. 103, ‘Enter
-... on one side ... on the other’; v. 192, ‘Enter ... at one end of
-the stage: at the other end enter ...’; vi. 41, ‘Enter Mavortius
-and Philarchus at severall doores’; vi. 241, ‘Enter ... at the one
-doore. At the other ...’; _1 Antonio and Mellida_, iv. 220 (marsh
-scene), ‘Enter ... at one door; ... at another door’; _2 Antonio and
-Mellida_, v. 1, ‘Enter at one door ... at the other door’; _Maid’s
-Metamorphosis_, II. ii. 1 (wood scene), ‘Enter at one door ... at the
-other doore, ... in the midst’; III. ii. 1 (wood scene), ‘Enter ... at
-three severall doores’; _Faery Pastoral_, III. vi, ‘Mercury entering
-by the midde doore wafted them back by the doore they came in’; IV.
-viii, ‘They enterd at severall doores, Learchus at the midde doore’;
-_Puritan_, I. iv. 1 (prison scene), ‘Enter ... at one dore, and ...
-at the other’, &c.; for Blackfriars, _Sir G. Goosecap_, IV. ii. 140,
-‘Enter Jack and Will on the other side’; _Malcontent_, V. ii. 1, ‘Enter
-from opposite sides’; _E. Ho!_, I. i. 1, ‘Enter ... at severall dores
-... At the middle dore, enter ...’; _Sophonisba_, prol., ‘Enter at one
-door ... at the other door’; _May Day_, II. i. 1, ‘Enter ... several
-ways’; _Your Five Gallants_, I. ii. 27, ‘Enter ... at the farther
-door’, &c.
-
-[432] For Paul’s, _2 Antonio and Mellida_, IV. ii. 87, ‘They strike the
-stage with their daggers, and the grave openeth’; V. i. 1, ‘Balurdo
-from under the Stage’; _Aphrodysial_ (quoted Reynolds, i. 26), ‘A Trap
-door in the middle of the stage’; _Bussy d’Ambois_, II. ii. 177, ‘The
-Vault opens’ ... ‘ascendit Frier and D’Ambois’ ... ‘Descendit Fryar’
-(cf. III. i; IV. ii; V. i, iii, iv); for Blackfriars, _Poetaster_
-(F_{1}) prol. 1, ‘Envie. Arising in the midst of the stage’; _Case is
-Altered_, III. ii, ‘Digs a hole in the ground’; _Sophonisba_, III. i.
-201, ‘She descends after Sophonisba’ ... (207) ‘Descends through the
-vault’; V. i. 41, ‘Out of the altar the ghost of Asdrubal ariseth’.
-
-[433] _Widow’s Tears_ (Blackfriars), III. ii. 82, ‘Hymen descends,
-and six Sylvans enter beneath, with torches’; this is in a mask, and
-Cupid may have descended from a pageant. When a ‘state’ or throne is
-used (e.g. _Satiromastix_, 2309, ‘Soft musicke, Chaire is set under a
-Canopie’), there is no indication that it descends. In _Satiromastix_,
-2147, we get ‘O thou standst well, thou lean’st against a poast’, but
-this is obviously inadequate evidence for a heavens supported by posts
-at Paul’s.
-
-[434] _C. and C. Errant_, V. ix, ‘He tooke the Bolle from behind the
-Arras’; _Faery Pastoral_, V. iv (wood scene), ‘He tooke from behind
-the Arras a Peck of goodly Acornes pilld’; _What You Will_, ind. 97,
-‘Let’s place ourselves within the curtains, for good faith the stage
-is so very little, we shall wrong the general eye else very much’;
-_Northward Ho!_, IV. i, ‘Lie you in ambush, behind the hangings, and
-perhaps you shall hear the piece of a comedy’. In _C. and C. Errant_,
-V. viii. 1, the two actors left on the stage at the end of V. vii were
-joined by a troop from the inn, and yet others coming ‘easily after
-them and stealingly, so as the whole Scene was insensibly and suddenly
-brought about in Catastrophe of the Comoedy. And the whole face of the
-Scene suddenly altered’. I think that Percy is only trying to describe
-the change from a nearly empty to a crowded stage, not a piece of
-scene-shifting.
-
-[435] _Cynthia’s Revels_ (Q), ind. 149, ‘Slid the Boy takes me for a
-peice of Prospective (I holde my life) or some silke Curtine, come to
-hang the Stage here: Sir Cracke I am none of your fresh Pictures, that
-use to beautifie the decay’d dead Arras, in a publique Theater’; _K.
-B. P._ II. 580, ‘_Wife._ What story is that painted upon the cloth?
-the confutation of Saint Paul? _Citizen._ No lambe, that Ralph and
-Lucrece’. In _Law Tricks_, III. i, Emilia bids Lurdo ‘Behind the Arras;
-scape behind the Arras’. Polymetes enters, praises the ‘verie faire
-hangings’ representing Venus and Adonis, makes a pass at Vulcan, and
-notices how the arras trembles and groans. Then comes the s.d. (which
-has got in error into Bullen’s text, p. 42) ‘Discouer Lurdo behind the
-Arras’, and Emilia carries it off by pretending that it is only Lurdo’s
-picture.
-
-[436] I think it is possible that _Sophonisba_, with its ‘canopy’ (cf.
-p. 149) was also originally written for Paul’s.
-
-[437] _1, 2 Antonio and Mellida_, _Maid’s Metamorphosis_, _Wisdom of
-Dr. Dodipoll_, _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_, _Satiromastix_, _Blurt
-Master Constable_, _Bussy D’Ambois_, _Westward Ho!_, _Northward Ho!_,
-_Fawn_, _Michaelmas Term_, _Phoenix_, _Mad World, My Masters_, _Trick
-to Catch the Old One_, _Puritan_, _Woman Hater_.
-
-[438] _Jack Drum’s Ent._ v. 112.
-
-[439] _Histriomastix_, i. 6, ‘now sit wee high (tryumphant in our
-sway)’; ii. 1, ‘Enter Plenty upon a Throne’; iii. 11, ‘If you will sit
-in throne of State with Pride’; v. 1, ‘Rule, fier-eied Warre!... Envy
-... Hath now resigned her spightfull throne to us’; vi. 7, ‘I [Poverty]
-scorne a scoffing foole about my Throne’; vi. 271 (s.d.), ‘Astraea’
-[in margin, ‘Q. Eliza’] ‘mounts unto the throne’; vi. 296 (original
-ending), ‘In the end of the play. Plenty Pride Envy Warre and Poverty
-To enter and resigne their severall Scepters to Peace, sitting in
-Maiestie’.
-
-[440] _Histriomastix_, i. 163, ‘Enter ... Chrisoganus in his study’ ...
-(181) ‘So all goe to Chrisoganus study, where they find him reading’;
-ii. 70, ‘Enter Contrimen, to them, Clarke of the Market: hee wrings a
-bell, and drawes a curtaine; whereunder is a market set about a Crosse’
-... (80) ‘Enter Gulch, Belch, Clowt and Gut. One of them steppes on the
-Crosse, and cryes, A Play’ ... (105) ‘Enter Vintner with a quart of
-Wine’; v. 192, ‘Enter Lyon-rash to Fourchier sitting in his study at
-one end of the stage: At the other end enter Vourcher to Velure in his
-shop’.
-
-[441] _Dr. Dodipoll_, I. i. 1, ‘A Curtaine drawne, Earl Lassingbergh
-is discovered (like a Painter) painting Lucilia, who sits working on a
-piece of cushion worke’. In III. ii a character is spoken of after his
-‘Exit’ as ‘going down the staires’, which suggests action ‘above’. But
-other indications place the scene before Cassimere’s house.
-
-[442] _C. and C. Errant_, I. i, ‘They entered from Maldon’; I. iv,
-‘They entered from Harwich all’.
-
-[443] _C. and C. Errant_, I. ii, ‘They met from Maldon and from
-Harwich’, for a scene in Colchester; III. i, ‘They crossd: Denham to
-Harwich, Lacy to Maldon’.
-
-[444] Reynolds (_M. P._ xii. 248) gives the note as ‘In the middle and
-alofte Oceanus Pallace The Scene being. Next Proteus-Hall’. This seems
-barely grammatical and I am not sure that it is complete. A limitation
-of Paul’s is suggested by the s.d. (ibid. 258) ‘Chambers (noise supposd
-for Powles) For actors’, but apparently ‘a showre of Rose-water and
-confits’ was feasible.
-
-[445] _Faery Pastoral_, p. 162, ‘A Scrolle fell into her lap from
-above’.
-
-[446] _Jack Drum_, II. 27, ‘The Casement opens, and Katherine
-appeares’; 270, ‘Winifride lookes from aboue’; 286, ‘Camelia, from her
-window’.
-
-[447] I give s.ds. with slight corrections from Bullen, who
-substantially follows 1633. But he has re-divided his scenes; 1633 has
-acts only for _1 Antonio and Mellida_ (in spite of s.d. ‘and so the
-scene begins’ with a new speaker at III. ii. 120); acts and scenes, by
-speakers, for _2 Antonio and Mellida_; and acts and scenes or acts and
-first scenes only, not by speakers and very imperfectly, for the rest.
-
-[448] _1 Ant. and Mell._ I. 100, ‘Enter above ... Enter below’ ...
-(117) ‘they two stand ... whilst the scene passeth above’ ... (140)
-‘Exeunt all on the lower stage’ ... (148) ‘_Rossaline._ Prithee, go
-down!’ ... (160) ‘Enter Mellida, Rossaline, and Flavia’; III. ii. 190
-‘Enter Antonio and Mellida’ ... (193) ‘_Mellida._ A number mount my
-stairs; I’ll straight return. _Exit_’ ... (222) ‘_Feliche._ Slink to my
-chamber; look you, that is it’.
-
-[449] _IV._ 220, ‘Enter Piero (&c.) ... Balurdo and his Page, at
-another door’.
-
-[450] _2 Ant. and Mell._ I. ii. 194, ‘_Antonio._ See, look, the curtain
-stirs’ ... (s.d.) ‘The curtains drawn, and the body of Feliche, stabb’d
-thick with wounds, appears hung up’ and ‘_Antonio._ What villain bloods
-the window of my love?’
-
-[451] III. ii. 1, ‘Enter ... Maria, her hair loose’ ... (59) ‘_Maria._
-Pages, leave the room’ ... (65) ‘Maria draweth the curtain: and the
-ghost of Andrugio is displayed, sitting on the bed’ ... (95) ‘Exit
-Maria to her bed, Andrugio drawing the curtains’.
-
-[452] V. ii. 50, ‘While the measure is dancing, Andrugio’s ghost is
-placed betwixt the music-houses’ ... (115) ‘The curtaine being drawn,
-exit Andrugio’.
-
-[453] V. ii. 112, ‘They run all at Piero with their rapiers’. This is
-while the ghost is present above, but (152) ‘The curtains are drawn,
-Piero departeth’.
-
-[454] III. i. 33, ‘And, lo, the ghost of old Andrugio Forsakes his
-coffin’ ... (125) ‘Ghosts ... from above and beneath’ ... (192) ‘From
-under the stage a groan’; IV. ii. 87, ‘They strike the stage with their
-daggers, and the grave openeth’. The church must have been shown open,
-and part of the crowded action of these scenes kept outside; at IV. ii.
-114, ‘yon bright stars’ are visible.
-
-[455] _Fawn_, IV. 638, ‘_Dulcimel._ Father, do you see that tree,
-that leans just on my chamber window?’ ... (V. 1) ‘whilst the Act is
-a-playing, Hercules and Tiberio enters; Tiberio climbs the tree, and is
-received above by Dulcimel, Philocalia, and a Priest: Hercules stays
-beneath’. After a mask and other action in the presence, (461) ‘Tiberio
-and Dulcimel above, are discovered hand in hand’.
-
-[456] _W. You Will_, IV. 373, after a dance, ‘_Celia._ Will you to
-dinner?’ ... (V. 1) ‘The curtains are drawn by a Page, and Celia (&c.)
-displayed, sitting at dinner’.
-
-[457] II. 1, ‘One knocks: Laverdure draws the curtains, sitting on his
-bed, apparelling himself; his trunk of apparel standing by him’ ...
-(127) ‘Bidet, I’ll down’; II. ii. 1, ‘Enter a schoolmaster, draws the
-curtains behind, with Battus, Nous, Slip, Nathaniel, and Holophernes
-Pippo, schoolboys, sitting, with books in their hands’.
-
-[458] I. 110, ‘He sings and is answered; from above a willow garland is
-flung down, and the song ceaseth’.
-
-[459] _Satiromastix_, I. ii. 1, ‘Horrace sitting in a study behinde a
-curtaine, a candle by him burning, bookes lying confusedly’.
-
-[460] V. ii. 23, where the ‘canopie’, if a Paul’s term, may be the
-equivalent of the public theatre alcove (cf. pp. 82, 120). The ‘bower’
-in IV. iii holds eight persons, and a recess may have been used.
-
-[461] Shorthose says (V. i. 60) ‘Thou lean’st against a poast’, but
-obviously posts supporting a heavens at Paul’s cannot be inferred.
-
-[462] _Westward Ho!_ uses the houses of Justiniano (I. i), Wafer (III.
-iii), Ambush (III. iv), the Earl (II. ii; IV. ii), and a Bawd (IV. i),
-the shops of Tenterhook (I. ii; III. i) and Honeysuckle (II. i), and
-inns at the Steelyard (II. iii), Shoreditch (II. iii), and Brentford
-(V). Continuous setting would not construct so many houses for single
-scenes. There is action above at the Bawd’s, and interior action below
-in several cases; in IV. ii, ‘the Earle drawes a curten and sets forth
-a banquet’. The s.ds. of this scene seem inadequate; at a later point
-Moll is apparently ‘discovered’, shamming death. _Northward Ho!_ uses
-the houses of Mayberry (I. iii; II. ii) and Doll (II. i; III. i), a
-garden house at Moorfields (III. ii), Bellamont’s study (IV. i), Bedlam
-(IV. iii, iv), a ‘tavern entry’ in London (I. ii), and an inn at Ware
-(I. i; V. i). Action above is at the last only, interior action below
-in several.
-
-[463] _B. d’Ambois_, II. ii. 177, ‘_Tamyra_. See, see the gulfe is
-opening’ ... (183) ‘Ascendit Frier and D’Ambois’ ... (296) ‘Descendit
-Fryar’; IV. ii. 63, ‘Ascendit [Behemoth]’ ... (162) ‘Descendit cum
-suis’; V. i. 155, ‘Ascendit Frier’ ... (191) ‘_Montsurry._ In, Ile
-after, To see what guilty light gives this cave eyes’; V. iv. 1,
-‘Intrat umbra Comolet to the Countesse, wrapt in a canapie’ ... (23)
-‘D’Amboys at the gulfe’.
-
-[464] The Q of 1641, probably representing a revival by the King’s men,
-alters the scenes in Montsurry’s house, eliminating the characteristic
-Paul’s ‘canapie’ of V. iv. 1 and placing spectators above in the same
-scene. It is also responsible for the proleptic s.d. (cf. ch. xxii) at
-I. i. 153 for I. ii. 1, ‘Table, Chesbord and Tapers behind the Arras’.
-
-[465] _Blurt Master Constable_ has (_a_) Camillo’s (I. i; II. i) with a
-hall; (_b_) Hippolyto’s (III. i) where (136) ‘Violetta appears above’,
-and (175) ‘Enter Truepenny above with a letter’; (_c_) a chapel (III.
-ii) with a ‘pit-hole’ dungeon, probably also visible in II. i and III.
-i; (_d_) Blurt’s (I. ii) which is ‘twelve score off’; (_e_) Imperia’s,
-where is most of the action (II. ii; III. iii; IV. i, ii, iii; V. ii,
-iii). Two chambers below are used; into one Lazarillo is shown in III.
-iii. 201, and here in IV. ii he is let through a trap into a sewer,
-while (38) ‘Enter Frisco above laughing’ and (45) ‘Enter Imperia
-above’. At IV. iii. 68 Lazarillo crawls from the sewer into the street.
-In IV. i and IV. iii tricks are played upon Curvetto with a cord and a
-rope-ladder hanging from a window above.
-
-[466] _Phoenix_ has (_a_) the palace (I. i; V. i) with hall; (_b_)
-Falso’s (I. vi; II. iii; III. i); (_c_) the Captain’s (I. ii; II. ii);
-(_d_) a tavern (I. iv; IV. iii) with interior action; (_e_) a law court
-(IV. i); (_f_) a jeweller’s (III. ii; IV. i, ii, iii) with interior
-action. It will be observed that (_f_) is needed both with (_d_) and
-(_e_). There is no action above.
-
-[467] _M. Term_ has (_a_) Paul’s (I. i, ii); (_b_) Quomodo’s shop, the
-Three Knaves (II. iii; III. iv; IV. i, iii, iv; V. i); (_c_) a tavern
-(II. i); (_d_) a law court (V. iii); (_e_) a courtesan’s (III. i;
-IV. ii). All have interior action and (_b_) eavesdropping above in a
-balcony (II. iii. 108, 378, 423; III. iv). Much action is merely in the
-streets.
-
-[468] _A Mad World_ has (_a_) Harebrain’s (I. ii; III. i; IV. iv);
-(_b_) Penitent Brothel’s (IV. i), with interior action; (_c_) a
-courtesan’s (I. i; II. iii, vi; III. ii; IV. v), with a bed and five
-persons at once, perhaps above, in III. ii; (_d_) Sir Bounteous
-Progress’s in the country (II. i; II. ii, iv, v, vii; III. iii; IV. ii,
-iii; V. i, ii). The action here is rather puzzling, but apparently a
-hall, a lodging next it, where are ‘Curtains drawn’ (II. vii. 103), the
-stairs, and a ‘closet’ or ‘matted chamber’ (IV. ii. 27; IV. iii. 3) are
-all used. If the scenes were shifted, the interposition of a scene of
-only 7 lines (II. iii) at London amongst a series of country scenes is
-strange.
-
-[469] _A Trick to Catch_ has (_a_) Lucre’s (I. iii, iv; II. i, ii;
-IV. ii, iii; V. i); (_b_) Hoard’s (III. ii; IV. iv; V. ii); (_c_) a
-courtesan’s (III. i); (_d_) an inn (III. iii); (_e_) Dampit’s (III. iv;
-IV. v); and away from London, (_f_) Witgood Hall, with (_g_) an inn (I.
-i, ii); (_h_) Cole Harbour (IV. i). Nearly all the action is exterior,
-but a window above is used at (_b_) in IV. iv, and at (_e_) there is
-interior action both below in III. iv and perhaps above (cf. III. iv.
-72), with a bed and eight persons at once in IV. v.
-
-[470] _Puritan_ has (_a_) the Widow’s (I. i; II. i, ii; III. i, ii;
-IV. i, ii, iii; V. i, ii), with a garden and rosemary bush; (_b_) a
-gentleman’s house (III. iv); (_c_) an apothecary’s (III. iii); (_d_) a
-prison (I. iv; III. v). There is interior action below in all; action
-above only in (_a_) at V. ii. 1, ‘Enter Sir John Penidub, and Moll
-aboue lacing of her clothes’ in a balcony.
-
-[471] _Woman Hater_ has (_a_) the Duke’s palace (I. i, iii; IV. i; V.
-ii); (_b_) the Count’s (I. iii); (_c_) Gondarino’s (II. i; III. i, ii);
-(_d_) Lazarillo’s lodging (I. i, ii); (_e_) a courtesan’s (II. i; IV.
-ii, iii; V. ii); (_f_) a mercer’s shop (III. iv); (_g_) Lucio’s study
-(V. i). There is interior action below in (_a_), (_e_), (_f_), and
-(_g_), where ‘Enter Lazarello, and two Intelligencers, Lucio being at
-his study.... Secretary draws the Curtain’. A window above is used at
-(_e_), and there is also action above at (_c_), apparently in a loggia
-within sight and ear-shot of the street.
-
-[472] The term is used in _The Faery Pastoral_, _Satiromastix_, and
-_Bussy d’Ambois_ (_vide supra_); but also in _Sophonisba_ (_vide
-infra_), which is a Blackfriars play.
-
-[473] I take it that it was in this stand that Andrugio’s ghost was
-placed ‘betwixt the music-houses’ in _2 Antonio and Mellida_.
-
-[474] The four plays which seem most repugnant to continuous staging,
-_Westward Ho!_, _Northward Ho!_, _A Mad World, my Masters_, and _A
-Trick to Catch the Old One_, are all datable in 1604–6.
-
-[475] Elizabethan Plays: _Love’s Metamorphosis_, _Liberality and
-Prodigality_, _Cynthia’s Revels_, _Poetaster_, _Sir Giles Goosecap_,
-_Gentleman Usher_, and probably _All Fools_; Jacobean Plays: _M.
-d’Olive_, _May Day_, _Widow’s Tears_, _Conspiracy of Byron_, _Tragedy
-of Byron_, _Case is Altered_, _Malcontent_, _Dutch Courtesan_,
-_Sophonisba_, _Eastward Ho!_, _Your Five Gallants_, _Philotas_, _Isle
-of Gulls_, _Law Tricks_, _Fleir_, _Faithful Shepherdess_, _Knight of
-the Burning Pestle_. In addition _Fawn_ and _Trick to Catch an Old
-One_, already dealt with under Paul’s, were in the first case produced
-at, and in the second transferred to, Blackfriars.
-
-[476] Cf. p. 34.
-
-[477] _Lib. and Prod._ 903, ‘Here Prod. scaleth. Fortune claps a halter
-about his neck, he breaketh the halter and falles’; 1245, ‘The Judge
-placed, and the Clerkes under him’.
-
-[478] The fountain requires a trap. There is no action above. I cite
-the scenes of Q_{1}, which are varied by Jonson in F_{1}.
-
-[479] In the prol. 27, Envy says, ‘The scene is, ha! Rome? Rome? and
-Rome?’ (cf. p. 154). The only action above is by Julia in IV. ix. 1,
-before the palace, where (F_{1}) ‘Shee appeareth above, as at her
-chamber window’, and speaks thence.
-
-[480] _Sir G. G._ has, besides the London and Barnet road (III. i),
-the houses of (_a_) Eugenia (I. i-iii; II; IV. i) and (_b_) Momford
-(I. iv; II; III. ii; IV. iii; V). Both have action within, none above.
-In IV. ii. 140 persons on the street are met by pages coming from
-Momford’s ‘on the other side’, but (_b_) is near enough to (_a_) to
-enable Clarence in II to overhear from it (as directed in I. iv. 202)
-a talk between Momford and Eugenia, probably in her porch, where (ii.
-17) ‘Enter Wynnefred, Anabell, with their sowing workes and sing’,
-and Momford passes over to Clarence at ii. 216. Two contiguous rooms
-in (_b_) are used for V. i, ii (a single scene). One is Clarence’s;
-from the other he is overheard. They are probably both visible to the
-audience, and are divided by a curtain. At V. ii. 128 ‘He draws the
-curtains and sits within them’. Parrott adds other s.ds. for curtains
-at 191, 222, 275, which are not in Q_{1}.
-
-[481] _Gent. Usher_ has (_a_) Strozza’s (I. i; IV. i, iii; V. ii),
-where only a porch or courtyard is needed, and (_b_) Lasso’s (I. ii;
-II; III; IV. ii, iv; V. i, iii, iv), with a hall, overlooked by a
-balcony used in V. i. 1 and V. iii. 1, and called ‘this tower’ (V. iii.
-5).
-
-[482] The visible houses of _All Fools_ are (_a_) Gostanzo’s, (_b_)
-Cornelio’s, and (_c_) the Half Moon tavern, where drawers set tables
-(V. ii. 1), but not necessarily inside. Both (_a_) and (_b_) are
-required in II. i and IV. i, and (_a_), (_b_), and (_c_) in III. i.
-
-[483] _M. d’Olive_ has (_a_) a hall at Court (II. ii); (_b_)
-Hieronyme’s chamber, also at Court (V. ii); (_c_) d’Olive’s chamber
-(III. ii; IV. ii); (_d_) Vaumont’s (I; II. i; IV. i; V. i); (_e_) St.
-Anne’s (III. i); of which (_b_) and (_d_) are used together in V. i, ii
-(a continuous scene), and probably (_c_) and (_e_) in III. i. There is
-action within at (_a_), (_c_), and (_d_), and above at (_d_), which has
-curtained windows lit by tapers (I. 48), at one of which a page above
-‘looks out with a light’, followed by ladies who are bidden ‘come down’
-(V. i. 26, 66).
-
-[484] _May Day_ has (_a_) Quintiliano’s, (_b_) Honorio’s, (_c_)
-Lorenzo’s, and (_d_) the Emperor’s Head, with an arbour (III. iii.
-203). The only interior action is in Honorio’s hall (V). Windows above
-are used at Lorenzo’s, with a rope-ladder, over a terrace (III. iii),
-and at Quintiliano’s (III. ii). The action, which is rather difficult
-to track, consists largely of dodging about the pales of gardens and
-backsides (II. i. 180; III. iii. 120, 185; IV. ii. 83, 168). Clearly
-(_a_), (_c_), and (_d_) are all used in the latter part of II. i, where
-a new scene may begin at 45; and similarly (_b_), (_c_), and (_d_) in
-III. iii, and (_b_) and (_c_) in IV. ii.
-
-[485] _Widow’s Tears_ has (_a_) Lysander’s (I. i; II. i; III. i); (_b_)
-Eudora’s (I. ii; II. ii, iv; III. ii; IV. i); (_c_) Arsace’s (II. iii);
-all of which are required in I. iii; and (_d_), a tomb (IV. ii, iii;
-V). There is interior action in a hall of (_b_), watched from a ‘stand’
-(I. i. 157; I. iii. 1) without, and the tomb opens and shuts; no action
-above.
-
-[486] In the _Conspiracy_ the Paris scenes are all at Court, vaguely
-located, and mainly of hall type, except III. iii, which is at an
-astrologer’s; the only Brussels scene is I. ii, at Court. The _Tragedy_
-is on the same lines, but for V. ii, in the Palace of Justice, with a
-‘bar’, V. iii, iv, in and before the Bastille, with a scaffold, and
-I. ii and III. i at Dijon, in Byron’s lodging. In II. i. 3 there is
-‘Music, and a song above’, for a mask.
-
-[487] _C. Altered_, I. i. 1, ‘Iuniper a Cobler is discouered, sitting
-at worke in his shoppe and singing’; IV. v. 1, ‘Enter Iuniper in his
-shop singing’.
-
-[488] _C. A._ I. v. 212; II. i; III. ii, iii, v, ‘Enter Iaques with his
-gold and a scuttle full of horse-dung’. ‘_Jaques._ None is within. None
-ouerlookes my wall’; IV. vii. 62, ‘Onion gets vp into a tree’; V. i.
-42. In I. v action passes directly from the door of Farneze to that of
-Jaques.
-
-[489] _Malc._ I. i. 11, ‘The discord ... is heard from ... Malevole’s
-chamber’ ... (19) ‘Come down, thou rugged cur’ ... (43) ‘Enter Malevole
-below’.
-
-[490] _Malc._ V. ii. 163. This transition is both in Q_{1} and Q_{2},
-although Q_{2} inserts a passage (164–94) here, as well as another
-(10–39) earlier in the scene, which entails a contrary transition from
-the palace to the citadel.
-
-[491] _Dutch C._ has (_a_) Mulligrub’s (I. i; II. iii; III. iii) with
-action in a ‘parlour’ (III. iii. 53); (_b_) Franceschina’s (I. ii; II.
-ii; IV. iii, v; V. i), with action above, probably in a _loggia_ before
-Franceschina’s chamber, where she has placed an ambush at V. i. 12,
-‘She conceals them behind the curtain’; (_c_) Subboy’s (II. i; III.
-i; IV. i, ii, iv; V. ii), with a ring thrown from a window above (II.
-i. 56); (_d_) Burnish’s shop (III. ii; V. iii), with an inner and an
-outer door, for (III. ii. 1) ‘Enter Master Burnish [&c.] ... Cocledemoy
-stands at the other door ... and overhears them’.
-
-[492] _Soph._ I. ii. 32, ‘The Ladies lay the Princess in a fair bed,
-and close the curtains, whilst Massinissa enters’ ... (35) ‘The Boys
-draw the curtains, discovering Sophonisba, to whom Massinissa speaks’
-... (235) ‘The Ladies draw the curtains about Sophonisba; the rest
-accompany Massinissa forth’.
-
-[493] _Soph._ III. i. 117, ‘The attendants furnish the altar’....
-(162) ‘They lay Vangue in Syphax’ bed and draw the curtains’ ... (167)
-_Soph._ ‘Dear Zanthia, close the vault when I am sunk’ ... (170) ‘She
-descends’ ... (207) ‘[Syphax] descends through the vault’.
-
-[494] _Soph._ IV. i, ‘Enter Sophonisba and Zanthia, as out of a cave’s
-mouth’ ... (44) ‘Through the vaut’s mouth, in his night-gown, torch in
-his hand, Syphax enters just behind Sophonisba’.... (126) ‘Erichtho
-enters’ ... (192) ‘Infernal music, softly’ ... (202) ‘A treble viol and
-a base lute play softly within the canopy’ ... (212) ‘A short song to
-soft music above’ ... (215) ‘Enter Erichtho in the shape of Sophonisba,
-her face veiled, and hasteth in the bed of Syphax’ ... (216) ‘Syphax
-hasteneth within the canopy, as to Sophonisba’s bed’ ... (V. i. 1)
-‘Syphax draws the curtains, and discovers Erichtho lying with him’ ...
-(24) ‘Erichtho slips into the ground’ ... (29) ‘Syphax kneels at the
-altar’ ... (40) ‘Out of the altar the ghost of Asdrubal ariseth’. There
-is no obvious break in IV. Erichtho promises to bring Sophonisba with
-music, and says ‘I go’ (181), although there is no _Exit_. We must
-suppose Syphax to return to his chamber through the vault either here
-or after his soliloquy at 192, when the music begins.
-
-[495] _E. Ho!_, I. i. 1, ‘Enter Maister Touchstone and Quick-silver
-at severall dores.... At the middle dore, enter Golding, discovering
-a gold-smiths shoppe, and walking short turns before it’; II. i. 1,
-‘Touchstone, Quick-silver[cf above and below, but Touchstone diff];
-Goulding and Mildred sitting on eyther side of the stall’.
-
-[496] At the end of II. ii, which is before Security’s, with Winifred
-‘above’ (241), Quick-silver remains on the stage, for II. iii, before
-Petronel’s. The tavern is first used in III. iii, after which III. iv,
-of one 7–line speech only, returns to Security’s and ends the act.
-Billingsgate should be at some little distance from the other houses.
-
-[497] _E. Ho!_, IV. i. 1, ‘Enter Slitgut, with a paire of oxe hornes,
-discovering Cuckolds-Haven above’.
-
-[498] Clearly IV. i. 346–64 (ed. Schelling) has been misplaced in the
-Q_{q}; it is a final speech by Slitgut, with his _Exit_, but without
-his name prefixed, and should come after 296. The new scene begins with
-297.
-
-[499] _E. Ho!_, IV. i. 92, ‘Enter the Drawer in the Taverne before
-[i.e. in III. iii], with Wynnyfrid’; he will shelter her at ‘a house
-of my friends heere in S. Kath’rines’ ... (297) ‘Enter Drawer, with
-Wynifrid new attird’, who says ‘you have brought me nere enough your
-taverne’ and ‘my husband stale thither last night’. Security enters
-(310) with ‘I wil once more to this unhappy taverne’.
-
-[500] _Y. F. Gallants_ has (_a_) Frippery’s shop (I. i); (_b_)
-Katherine’s (I. ii; V. ii); (_c_) Mitre inn (II. iii); (_d_) Primero’s
-brothel (II. i; III. iv; V. i); (_e_) Tailby’s lodging (IV. i, ii);
-(_f_) Fitzgrave’s lodging (IV. iii); (_g_) Mrs. Newcut’s dining-room
-(IV. vii); (_h_) Paul’s (IV. vi). There is action within in all these,
-and in V. i, which is before (_d_), spies are concealed ‘overhead’
-(124).
-
-[501] In _Isle of Gulls_ the park or forest holds a lodge for the duke
-(I. i), a ‘queach of bushes’ (II. ii), Diana’s oak (II. ii; IV. iv),
-Adonis’ bower (II. ii; V. i), a bowling green with arbours (II. iii-v),
-and the house of Manasses (IV. iii).
-
-[502] _Law Tricks_ has (_a_) the palace (I. i; II; IV. i, ii; V. ii),
-within which (p. 64, ed. Bullen) ‘Discover Polymetes in his study’, and
-(p. 78) ‘Polymetes in his study’; (_b_) an arrased chamber in Lurdo’s
-(III. i), entered by a vault (cf. p. 148, _supra_); (_c_) Countess
-Lurdo’s (III. ii); (_d_) the cloister vaults (V. i, ii) where (p. 90)
-‘Countesse in the Tombe’. Action passes direct from (_a_) to (_d_) at
-p. 89.
-
-[503] _Fleir_ has (_a_) the courtesans’ (I. 26–188; II; III. 1–193; IV.
-1–193); (_b_) Alunio’s (IV. 194–287); (_c_) Ferrio’s (V. 1–54); (_d_) a
-prison (V. 55–87); (_e_) a law court (V. 178–end); (_f_) possibly Susan
-and Nan’s (I. 189–500). Conceivably (_c_), (_d_), (_e_) are in some way
-combined: there is action within at (_b_), ‘Enter Signior Alunio the
-Apothecarie in his shop with wares about him’ (194), (_d_) ‘Enter Lord
-Piso ... in prison’ (55), and (_e_); none above.
-
-[504] The action of _F. Shepherdess_ needs a wood, with rustic cotes
-and an altar to Pan (I. ii, iii; V. i, iii), a well (III. i), and a
-bower for Clorin (I. i; II. ii; IV. ii, v; V. ii, v), where is hung a
-curtain (V. ii. 109).
-
-[505] _K. B. P._ I. 230, ‘Enter Rafe like a Grocer in ’s shop, with
-two Prentices Reading Palmerin of England’; at 341 the action shifts
-to Merrithought’s, but the episode at Venturewell’s is said to have
-been ‘euen in this place’ (422), and clearly the two houses were staged
-together. Possibly the conduit head on which Ralph sings his May Day
-song (IV. 439) was also part of the permanent setting.
-
-[506] _K. B. P._ II. 71–438; III. 1–524; IV. 76–151.
-
-[507] The certain plays are _Epicoene_, _Woman a Weathercock_,
-_Insatiate Countess_, and _Revenge of Bussy_. I have noted two unusual
-s.ds.: _W. a W._ III. ii, ‘Enter Scudmore ... Scudmore passeth one
-doore, and entereth the other, where Bellafront sits in a Chaire, under
-a Taffata Canopie’; _Insatiate C._ III. i, ‘Claridiana and Rogero,
-being in a readiness, are received in at one anothers houses by their
-maids. Then enter Mendoza, with a Page, to the Lady Lentulus window’.
-There is some elaborate action with contiguous rooms in _Epicoene_, IV,
-V.
-
-[508] Cf. pp. 98, 117.
-
-[509] I have noted bedchamber scenes as ‘perhaps above’ at Paul’s
-in _A Mad World, my Masters_ and _A Trick to Catch the Old One_,
-but the evidence is very slight and may be due to careless writing.
-In _A Mad World_, III. ii. 181, Harebrain is said to ‘walke below’;
-later ‘Harebrain opens the door and listens’. In _A Trick_, III. iv.
-72, Dampit is told that his bed waits ‘above’, and IV. v is in his
-bedchamber.
-
-[510] Cf. p. 116.
-
-[511] Cf. _Dr. Dodipoll_, _1 Antonio and Mellida_, _The Fawn_, and
-_Bussy d’Ambois_ for Paul’s, and _Sir Giles Goosecap_ and _Fleir_ for
-Blackfriars. The early Court plays had similar scenes; cf. p. 43.
-
-[512] _C. Revels_, ind. 54, ‘First the Title of his Play is _Cynthias
-Revels_, as any man (that hath hope to be sau’d by his Booke) can
-witnesse; the Scene _Gargaphia_’; _K. B. P._ ind. 10, ‘Now you call
-your play, The London Marchant. Downe with your Title, boy, downe with
-your Title’. For _Wily Beguiled_, cf. p. 126.
-
-[513] Duff, xi.
-
-[514] Ch. ix; cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 221.
-
-[515] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 2. ‘Cum priuilegio’ is in the colophons of
-Rastell’s 1533 prints of _Johan Johan_, _The Pardoner and the Friar_,
-and _The Wether_, and ‘Cum priuilegio regali’ in those of his undated
-_Gentleness and Nobility_ and _Beauty and Good Properties of Women_.
-
-[516] _Procl._ 114, 122, 155, 176. The texts of 1529 and 1530 are in
-Wilkins, _Concilia_, iii. 737, 740; that of 1538 in Burnet, _Hist. of
-Reformation_, vi. 220; cf. Pollard, _Sh. F._ 6, and in _3 Library_, x.
-57. I find ‘Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum’ in the colophon of
-_Acolastus_ (1540) and in both t.p. and colophon of _Troas_ (1559);
-also ‘Seen and allowed &c.’ in the t.p. of Q_{2} of _Gorboduc_ (_c._
-1570), ‘Perused and Alowed’ at the end of _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_
-(1575), and ‘Seen and allowed, according to the order appointed in the
-Queenes maiesties Injunctions’ in the t.p. of _The Glass of Government_
-(1575). Otherwise these precautions became dead letters, so far as
-plays were concerned.
-
-[517] _Procl._ 295 (part only in Wilkins, iv. 1; cf. Pollard, _Sh. F._
-7). The ‘daye of the printe’ is in the t.ps. of _Thyestes_ (1560),
-_Oedipus_ (1563), _Gordobuc_ (1565), _Four Ps_ (1569), and the colophon
-of _Promos and Cassandra_ (1578); the year and month in the t.p.
-of _King Darius_ (1565). Earlier printers had given the day in the
-colophons of _Mundus et Infans_ (1522), _Johan Johan_ (1533), and _The
-Pardoner and the Friar_ (1533).
-
-[518] Dasent, ii. 312; _Procl._ 395 (text in Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 9; cf.
-Pollard, _Sh. F._ 8).
-
-[519] _Procl._ 427 (cf. Pollard, _Sh. F._ 9); _Procl._ 461 (text in
-Wilkins, _Concilia_, iv. 128; Arber, i. 52); _Procl._ 488 (text in
-Arber, i. 92).
-
-[520] Arber, i. xxviii, xxxii.
-
-[521] Duff, xi.
-
-[522] _1 Eliz._ c. 1 (_Statutes_, iv. 1. 350).
-
-[523] App. D, No. ix.
-
-[524] App. D, No. xii.
-
-[525] App. D, No. xiii.
-
-[526] _Procl._ 638, 656, 659, 687, 688, 702, 740, 752, 775; Arber, i.
-430, 452, 453, 461, 464, 474, 502; cf. McKerrow, xiii. A draft Bill by
-William Lambarde prepared in 1577–80 for the establishment of a mixed
-body of ecclesiastics and lawyers as Governors of the English Print
-(Arber, ii. 751) never became law.
-
-[527] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 15; _F. and Q._ 4. Mr. Pollard stresses the
-difficulty of obtaining the hands of six Privy Councillors. Perhaps
-this is somewhat exaggerated. Six was the ordinary quorum of that body,
-which sat several times a week, while many of its members resided in
-court, were available for signing documents daily, and did in fact
-sign, in sixes, many, such as warrants to the Treasurer of the Chamber,
-of no greater moment than licences (cf. ch. ii). The signatures were of
-course ministerial, and would be given to a licence on the report of an
-expert reader. In any case the _Injunction_ provides alternatives.
-
-[528] Arber, iii. 690; Pollard, _Sh. F._ 23, ‘From 19^o Elizabethe
-[1576–7] till the Starre-chamber Decree 28^o Elizabeth [1586], many
-were licensed by the Master and Wardens, some few by the Master alone,
-and some by the Archbishop and more by the Bishop of London. The like
-was in the former parte of the Quene Elizabeth’s time. They were made a
-corporacon but by P. and M. Master Kingston, y^e now master, sayth that
-before the Decree the master and wardens licensed all, and that when
-they had any Divinity booke of muche importance they would take the
-advise of some 2 or 3 ministers of this towne’.
-
-[529] The references in the following notes, unless otherwise
-specified, are to the vols. and pages of Arber’s _Transcript_.
-
-[530] i. 106; ii. 879.
-
-[531] i. 17, ‘No member or members of this Company shall hereafter
-knowingly imprint or cause to be imprinted any book, pamphlet,
-portraicture, picture or paper whereunto the law requires a license,
-without such license as by the law is directed for the imprinting of
-the same (1678)’; 22, ‘By ancient usage of this company, when any book
-or copy is duly entred in the register-book of this company, to any
-member or members of this company, such person to whom such entry is
-made, is, and always hath been reputed and taken to be proprietor of
-such book or copy, and ought to have the sole printing thereof (1681)’;
-26, ‘It hath been the ancient usage of the members of this company,
-for the printer or printers, publisher or publishers of all books,
-pamphlets, ballads, and papers, (except what are granted by letters
-pattents under the great seal of England) to enter into the publick
-register-book of this company, remaining with the clerk of this company
-for the time being, in his or their own name or names, all books,
-pamphlets, ballads, and papers whatsoever, by him or them to be printed
-or published, before the same book, pamphlet, ballad, or paper is begun
-to be printed, to the end that the printer or publisher thereof may be
-known, to justifie whatsoever shall be therein contained, and have no
-excuse for the printing or publishing thereof (1682)’.
-
-[532] Typical examples are i. 75 (1557–8), ‘To master John Wally these
-bokes called Welth and helthe, the treatise of the ffrere and the boy,
-stans puer ad mensam, another of youghte charyte and humylyte, an a.
-b. c. for cheldren in englesshe with syllabes, also a boke called an
-hundreth mery tayles ij^s’; 77 (1557–8), ‘To Henry Sutton to prynte
-an enterlude vpon the history of Jacobe and Esawe out of the xxvij
-chapeter of the fyrste boke of Moyses called Genyses and for his
-lycense he geveth to the howse iiij^d’; 128 (1559–60), ‘Recevyd of John
-Kynge for his lycense for pryntinge of these copyes Lucas urialis, nyce
-wanton, impaciens poverte, the proude wyves pater noster, the squyre
-of low degre and syr deggre graunted ye x of June anno 1560 ij^s’. The
-last becomes the normal form, but without the precise date.
-
-[533] i. 155, 177, 204, 205, 208, 209, 231, 263, 268, 269, 272, 299,
-302, 308, 312, 334, 336, 343, 378, 382, 385, 398, 399, 415. It is
-possible that the wardens, intent on finance, did not always transcribe
-into their accounts notes of authorizations. Only half a dozen of the
-above are ascribed to the archbishop, yet a mention of ‘one Talbot,
-servant of the archbishop of Canterbury, a corrector to the printers’
-in an examination relative to the Ridolfi plot (Haynes-Murdin, ii. 30)
-shows that he had enough work in 1571 to justify the appointment of a
-regular deputy.
-
-[534] ii. 35, 301. Collins remained clerk to 1613, when he was
-succeeded by Thomas Mountfort, who became a stationer (McKerrow, 196),
-and is of course to be distinguished from the prebendary of Paul’s and
-High Commissioner of a similar name, who acted as ‘corrector’ (cf. p.
-168).
-
-[535] i. 451 _sqq._
-
-[536] ii. 302, 359, 371, 377, 378, 414, &c.
-
-[537] ii. 440, 444.
-
-[538] ii. 334, ‘vnder the hande of Master Recorder’; 341, ‘vnder
-thandes of Doctour Redman and the wardens’; 342, ‘master Recorder and
-the wardens’; 346, ‘the lord maiour and the wardens’; 357, ‘sub manibus
-comitum Leicester et Hunsdon’; 372, ‘master Crowley’; 375, ‘master
-Vaughan’; 386, ‘master Secretary Wilson’; 403, ‘master Thomas Norton
-[Remembrancer]’; 404, ‘the Lord Chancellor’; 409, ‘master Cotton’;
-417, ‘by aucthoritie from the Counsell’; 434, 435, ‘pervsed by master
-Crowley’; 447, ‘master Recorder’. For Talbot, cf. _supra_.
-
-[539] ii. 304; cf. ii. 447 (1586), ‘Entred by commaundement from master
-Barker in wrytinge vnder his hand. Aucthorised vnder the Archbishop of
-Canterbury his hand’. ‘Licenced’, as well as ‘authorised’ or ‘alowed’,
-now sometimes (ii. 307, 447) describes the action of a prelate or
-corrector.
-
-[540] ii. 366.
-
-[541] ii. 428.
-
-[542] ii. 424, ‘alwaies provided that before he print he shall get the
-bishop of London his alowance to yt’; 424, ‘upon condicon he obtaine
-the ordinaries hand thereto’; 429, ‘provyded alwaies and he is enioyned
-to gett this booke laufully alowed before he print yt’; 431, ‘yt is
-granted vnto him that if he gett the card of phantasie lawfullie alowed
-vnto him, that then he shall enioye yt as his owne copie’; 431, ‘so
-it be or shalbe by laufull aucthoritie lycenced vnto him’; 444, ‘to
-be aucthorised accordinge to her maiesties Iniunctions’. The wardens’
-hands are not cited to any of these conditional entries.
-
-[543] ii. 307, 308, 336, 353, 430, 438, 439.
-
-[544] App. D, No. lxxvii; cf. Strype, _Life of Whitgift_, i. 268;
-Pierce, _Introduction to Mar Prelate Tracts_, 74. Confirmations
-and special condemnations of offending books are in _Procl._ 802,
-812, 1092, 1362, 1383 (texts of two last in G. W. Prothero, _Select
-Statutes_, 169, 395).
-
-[545] ii. 459, ‘Master Hartwell certifying it to be tollerated’; 460,
-‘authorised or alowed as good vnder thand of Doctour Redman &c.’; 461,
-‘certified by Master Hartwell to be alowed leavinge out the ij staues
-yat are crossed’; 464, ‘master Crowleys hand is to yt, as laufull to
-be printed’; 475, ‘aucthorised by tharchbishop of Canterbury as is
-reported by Master Cosin’; 479, ‘which as master Hartwell certifyithe
-by his hande to the written copie, my Lordes grace of Canterbury is
-content shall passe without anie thinge added to yt before it be
-pervsed’; 487, ‘sett downe as worthie to be printed vnder thand of
-Master Gravet’; 489, ‘Master Crowleys hand is to yt testyfying it to be
-alowable to ye print’; 491, ‘vnder the Bishop of London, Master Abraham
-Fraunce, and the wardens hands’; 493, ‘Master Hartwells hand beinge at
-the wrytten copie testifyinge his pervsinge of the same’; 493, ‘alowed
-vnder D^r Stallers hand as profitable to be printed’, &c.
-
-[546] Lambe notes (iii. 690) in 1636 that on 30 June 1588, ‘the
-archbishop gave power to Doctor Cosin, Doctor Stallard, Doctor Wood,
-master Hartwell, master Gravett, master Crowley, master Cotton, and
-master Hutchinson, or any one of them, to license books to be printed:
-Or any 2 of those following master Judson, master Trippe, master Cole
-and master Dickens’. It will be observed that most of the first group
-of these had already acted as ‘correctors’, together with William
-Redman and Richard Vaughan, chaplains respectively to Archbishop
-Grindal and Bishop Aylmer. William Hutchinson and George Dickens were
-also chaplains to Aylmer. Hutchinson was in the High Commission of
-1601. Richard Cosin was Dean of the Arches and a High Commissioner.
-Abraham Hartwell was secretary and Cole chaplain (Arber, ii. 494) to
-Archbishop Whitgift. Hutchinson, William Gravett, William Cotton,
-and George Dickins were or became prebendaries of St. Paul’s. Thomas
-Stallard was rector of All Hallows’ and St. Mary’s at Hill; Henry Tripp
-of St. Faith’s and St. Stephen’s, Walbrook. Most of this information
-is from Hennessy. Crowley was presumably Robert Crowley, vicar of St.
-Giles, Cripplegate, and himself a stationer, although his activity as
-a Puritan preacher and pamphleteer makes his appointment an odd one
-for Whitgift. Moreover, he died on 18 June 1588. There may have been
-two Robert Crowleys, or the archbishop’s list may have been drawn up
-earlier than Lambe dates it.
-
-[547] Amongst the correctors who appear later in the Register are
-Richard Bancroft, John Buckeridge, and Michael Murgatroyd, secretaries
-or chaplains to Whitgift, Samuel Harsnett, William Barlow, Thomas
-Mountford, John Flower, and Zacharias Pasfield, prebendaries of St.
-Paul’s, William Dix, Peter Lyly, chaplain of the Savoy and brother of
-the dramatist, Lewis Wager, rector of St. James’s, Garlickhithe, and
-dramatist, John Wilson, and Gervas Nidd. Mountford and Dix were in the
-High Commission of 1601. I have not troubled to trace the full careers
-of these men in Hennessy and elsewhere. Thomas Morley (Arber, iii. 93)
-and William Clowes (ii. 80) seem to have been applied to as specialists
-on musical and medical books respectively.
-
-[548] ii. 463, 464, 508, 509, ‘Alowed by the Bishop of London vnder
-his hand and entred by warrant of Master [warden] Denhams hand to the
-copie’.
-
-[549] A typical entry is now
-
- ‘xiii^{to} die Augusti [1590].
-Richard Jones. Entred vnto him for his Copye The twooe commicall
-discourses of Tomberlein the Cithian shepparde vnder the handes of
-Master Abraham Hartewell and the Wardens. vj^d.’
-
-[550] iii. 677. A number of satirical books were condemned by name
-to be burnt, and direction given to the master and wardens, ‘That no
-Satyres or Epigrams be printed hereafter; That noe Englishe historyes
-be printed excepte they bee allowed by some of her maiesties privie
-Counsell; That noe playes be printed excepte they bee allowed by suche
-as haue aucthoritie; That all Nasshes bookes and Doctor Harvyes bookes
-be taken wheresoeuer they maye be found and that none of theire bookes
-be euer printed hereafter; That thoughe any booke of the nature of
-theise heretofore expressed shalbe broughte vnto yow vnder the hands of
-the Lord Archebisshop of Canterburye or the Lord Bishop of London yet
-the said booke shall not be printed vntill the master or wardens haue
-acquainted the said Lord Archbishop or the Lord Bishop with the same to
-knowe whether it be theire hand or no’.
-
-[551] _Hunting of Cupid_ (R. Jones, 26 July 1591), ‘provyded alwayes
-that yf yt be hurtfull to any other copye before lycenced, then this
-to be voyde’; _Merchant of Venice_ (J. Robertes, 22 July 1598),
-‘prouided, that yt bee not prynted by the said James Robertes or anye
-other whatsoeuer without lycence first had from the Right honorable
-the lord chamberlen’; _Blind Beggar of Alexandria_ (W. Jones, 15 Aug.
-1598), ‘vppon condition that yt belonge to noe other man’; _Spanish
-Tragedy_ (transfer from A. Jeffes to W. White, 13 Aug. 1599), ‘saluo
-iure cuiuscunque’; _Cloth Breeches and Velvet Hose_ (J. Robertes,
-27 May 1600), ‘prouided that he is not to putt it in prynte without
-further and better aucthority’; _A Larum for London_ (J. Robertes,
-29 May 1600), ‘prouided that yt be not printed without further
-aucthoritie’; _Antonio and Mellida_ (M. Lownes and T. Fisher, 24 Oct.
-1601), ‘prouided that he gett laufull licence for yt’; _Satiromastix_
-(J. Barnes, 11 Nov. 1601), ‘vppon condicon that yt be lycensed to be
-printed’; _Troilus and Cressida_ (J. Robertes, 7 Feb. 1603), ‘to print
-when he hath gotten sufficient aucthoritie for yt’; _When You See Me,
-You Know Me_ (N. Butter, 12 Feb. 1605), ‘yf he gett good alowance for
-the enterlude of King Henry the 8^{th} before he begyn to print it. And
-then procure the wardens handes to yt for the entrance of yt: He is to
-haue the same for his copy’; _Westward Hoe_ (H. Rocket, 2 March 1605),
-‘prouided yat he get further authoritie before yt be printed’ (entry
-crossed out, and marked ‘vacat’); _Dutch Courtesan_ (J. Hodgets, 26
-June 1605), ‘provyded that he gett sufficient aucthoritie before yt be
-prynted’ (with later note, ‘This is alowed to be printed by aucthoritie
-from Master Hartwell’); _Sir Giles Goosecap_ (E. Blount, 10 Jan.
-1606), ‘prouided that yt be printed accordinge to the copie wherevnto
-Master Wilsons hand ys at’; _Fawn_ (W. Cotton, 12 March 1606),
-‘provided that he shall not put the same in prynte before he gett
-alowed lawfull aucthoritie’; _Fleire_ (J. Trundle and J. Busby, 13 May
-1606), ‘provided that they are not to printe yt tell they bringe good
-aucthoritie and licence for the doinge thereof’ (with note to transfer
-of Trundle’s share to Busby and A. Johnson on 21 Nov. 1606, ‘This booke
-is aucthorised by Sir George Bucke Master Hartwell and the wardens’).
-
-[552] Buck’s hand first appears to _Claudius Tiberius Nero_ (10 Mar.
-1607), and thereafter to all London (but not University) plays up to
-his madness in 1622, except _Cupid’s Whirligig_ (29 June 1607), which
-has Tilney’s, _Yorkshire Tragedy_ (2 May 1608), which has Wilson’s,
-some of those between 4 Oct. 1608 and 10 March 1609, which have
-Segar’s, who is described as Buck’s deputy, and _Honest Lawyer_ (14
-Aug. 1615), which has Taverner’s.
-
-[553] i. 45, 69, 93, 100, &c.; ii. 821, 843. In 1558–9, only, the
-heading is ‘Fynes for defautes for Pryntynge withoute lycense’.
-
-[554] See the case of Jeffes and White in 1593 given in ch. xxiii, s.v.
-Kyd, _Spanish Tragedy_.
-
-[555] i. 93, 100; ii. 853 (21 Jan. 1583), ‘This daye, Ric. Jones is
-awarded to paie x^s for a fine for printinge a thinge of the fall of
-the gallories at Paris Garden without licence and against commandement
-of the Wardens. And the said Jones and Bartlet to be committed to
-prison viz Bartlet for printing it and Jones for sufferinge it to be
-printed in his house’.
-
-[556] ii. 824, 826, 832, 837, 849, 851.
-
-[557] ii. 850.
-
-[558] The testimony only relates strictly to the period 1576–86, which
-is nearly coincident with the slack ecclesiastical rule of Archbishop
-Grindal (1576–83). Parker (1559–75) may have been stricter, as Whitgift
-(1583–1604) certainly was.
-
-[559] i. 95, ‘Master Waye had lycense to take the lawe of James Gonnell
-for a sarten dett due vnto hym’; 101, ‘Owyn Rogers for ... kepynge of a
-forren with out lycense ys fyned’.
-
-[560] ii. 62.
-
-[561] i. 322.
-
-[562] v. lxxvi, ‘we do will and commande yowe that from hence forthe
-yowe suffer neither booke ballett nor any other matter to be published
-... until the same be first seene and allowed either by us of her
-M^{tes} pryvie Counsell or by thee [_sic_] Commissioners for cawses
-ecclesyastical there at London’.
-
-[563] The fee seems at first to have been 4_d._ for ‘entraunce’ (i.
-94), with a further sum for books above a certain size at the rate of
-‘euery iij leves a pannye’ (i. 97); plays ran from 4_d._ to 12_d._ But
-from about 1582 plays and most other books are charged a uniform fee of
-6_d._, and only ballads and other trifles escape with 4_d._ Payments
-were sometimes in arrear; often there is no note of fee to a title;
-and in some of these cases the words ‘neuer printed’ have been added.
-On the other hand, the receipt of fees is sometimes recorded, and the
-title remains unentered; at the end of the entries for 1585–6 (ii. 448)
-is a memorandum that one of the wardens ‘brought in about iiij^s moore
-which he had receved for copies yat were not brought to be entred into
-the book this yere’. A similar item is in the wardens’ accounts for
-1592–3 (i. 559). Fees were charged for entries of transferred as well
-as of new copies.
-
-[564] Various formulae are used, such as ‘assigned vnto him’ (ii. 310,
-351), ‘turned ouer to him’ (ii. 369), ‘putt ouer vnto him’ (ii. 431),
-‘sold and sett ouer vnto him’ (ii. 350), ‘which he affyrmeth yat he
-bought of’ (ii. 351), ‘by assent of’ (ii. 415), ‘by thappointment of’
-(ii. 667), ‘by the consent of’ (ii. 608), ‘which he bought of’ (ii.
-325), &c. A transfer of ‘plaiebookes’ from Sampson Awdeley to John
-Charlewood on 15 Jan. 1582 (ii. 405) included, besides two plays,
-_Youth_ and _Impatient Poverty_, which had been formerly registered,
-four others, _Weather_, _Four Ps_, _Love_, and _Hickscorner_, which
-had been printed before the Register came into existence. I suppose
-that Charlwood secured copyright in these, but was there any copyright
-before the entry of 1582?
-
-[565] ii. 377. ‘Tollerated vnto him but not vnder the wardens handes’,
-472, ‘beinge broughte to enter by John Woulf without the wardens handes
-to the copy’. Even in the seventeenth century ballads are sometimes
-entered without any citation of hands, and in 1643 it was the clerk
-and not the wardens whom Parliament authorized to license ‘small
-pamphletts, portratures, pictures, and the like’ (v. liv).
-
-[566] ii. 365, ‘Translated by a French copie whereat was the bishop of
-Londons hand and master Harrisons’; 440, ‘by commaundement from master
-warden Newbery vnder his own handwrytinge on the backside of ye wrytten
-copie’; 443, ‘vnder his hand to the printed copie’; 449, ‘by warrant
-of master warden Bisshops hand to the former copie printed anno 1584’;
-449, ‘by warrant of master warden Bishops hand to the wrytten copie’;
-457, ‘by warrant of the wardens handes to thold copie’; 521, ‘with
-master Hartwelles hand to the Italyan Booke’; 534, ‘alowed vnder master
-Hartwelles hand, entred by warrant of the subscription of the wardens’,
-&c.
-
-[567] ii. 434, ‘entred vpon a special knowen token sent from master
-warden Newbery’; 437, ‘allowed by tharchbishop of Canterbury, by
-testymonie of the Lord Chenie’; 460, ‘by the wardens appointment at the
-hall’; 504, ‘by warrant of a letter from Sir Ffrauncis Walsingham to
-the master and wardens of the Cumpanye’; 523, ‘alowed by a letter or
-note vnder master Hartwelles hand’; 524, ‘reported by master Fortescue
-to be alowed by the archbishop of Canterbury’; 633, ‘The note vnder
-master Justice Ffenners hand is layd vp in the wardens cupbord’;
-iii. 160, ‘John Hardie reporteth that the wardens are consentinge to
-thentrance thereof’, &c.
-
-[568] An inventory of 1560 (i. 143) records ‘The nombre of all suche
-Copyes as was lefte in the Cubberde in our Counsell Chambre at the
-Compte ... as apereth in the whyte boke for that yere ... xliiij. Item
-in ballettes ... vij^e iiij^x and xvj’. From 1576 to 1579 ‘and a copie’
-is often added to the notes of fees. The wardens accounts from 1574
-to 1596 (i. 470, 581) regularly recite that they had ‘deliuered into
-the hall certen copies which haue been printed this yeare, as by a
-particular booke thereof made appearithe’.
-
-[569] ii. 452, ‘Receaved of him for printinge 123 ballades which are
-filed vp in the hall with his name to euerie ballad’. The order of
-1592 about _Dr. Faustus_ (cf. ch. xxiii) suggests preliminary entry of
-claims in a Hall book distinct from the Clerk’s book.
-
-[570] ii. 414, ‘Graunted by the Assistants’; 449, ‘entred in full
-court’; 462, ‘entred in plena curia’; 465, ‘intratur in curia’; 477,
-‘by the whole consent of thassistantes’; 535, ‘aucthorysed to him at
-the hall soe that yt doe not belonge to any other of the Cumpanye’;
-535, ‘This is allowed by the consent of the whole table’; 663, ‘in open
-court’; 344, ‘memorandum that this lycence is revoked and cancelled’;
-457, ‘This copie is forbydden by the Archbishop of Canterbury’, with
-marginal note ‘Expunctum in plena curia’; 514, ‘so yat he first gett yt
-to be laufully and orderly alowed as tollerable to be printed and doo
-shewe thaucthoritie thereof at a Court to be holden’; 576, ‘Cancelled
-out of the book, for the vndecentnes of it in diuerse verses’; iii. 82,
-‘Entred ... in full court ... vppon condicon that yt be no other mans
-copie, and that ... he procure it to be aucthorised and then doo shew
-it at the hall to the master and wardens so aucthorised’.
-
-[571] The register indicates that even at the time of entry the fee
-sometimes remained unpaid. But probably it had to be paid before the
-stationer could actually publish with full security of copyright.
-
-[572] Cf. p. 173.
-
-[573] I note twenty-two cases (1586–1616) in which the earliest print
-known falls in a calendar year later than the next after that of
-entry: _Spanish Tragedy_, 1592–4 (N.D. probably earlier); _Soliman
-and Perseda_, 1592–9 (N.D. probably earlier); _James IV_, 1594–8;
-_Famous Victories_, 1594–8; _David and Bethsabe_, 1594–9; _King Leire_,
-1594–1605 (re-entry 1605); _Four Prentices_, 1594–1615 (one or more
-earlier editions probable); _Jew of Malta_, 1594–1633 (re-entry 1632);
-_Woman in the Moon_, 1595–7; _George a Greene_, 1595–9; _Merchant of
-Venice_, 1598–1600 (conditional entry); _Alarum for London_, 1600–2
-(conditional entry); _Patient Grissell_, 1600–3 (stayed by Admiral’s);
-_Stukeley_, 1600–5; _Dr. Faustus_, 1601–4; _Englishmen for my Money_,
-1601–16; _Troilus and Cressida_, 1603–9 (re-entry 1609); _Westward
-Ho!_, 1605–7 (conditional entry cancelled); _Antony and Cleopatra_,
-1608–23, (re-entry 1623); _2 Honest Whore_, 1608–30 (re-entry 1630);
-_Epicoene_, 1610–20 (earlier edition probable); _Ignoramus_, 1615–30
-(re-entry 1630). The glutting of the book-market in 1594 accounts for
-some of the delays.
-
-[574] ii. 829 (1599), 833 (1601), 835 (1602), 837 (1603).
-
-[575] I find no entries of _Enough is as Good as a Feast_ (N.D.),
-_Thyestes_ (1560), _Hercules Furens_ (1561), _Trial of Treasure_
-(1567), _God’s Promises_ (1577), perhaps reprints; of _Orestes_ (1567);
-or of _Abraham’s Sacrifice_ (1577) or _Conflict of Conscience_ (1581),
-perhaps entered in 1571–5. The method of exhaustions suggests that
-Copland’s _Robin Hood_ (N.D.) is the ‘newe playe called ---- ’ which he
-entered on 30 Oct. 1560, and that Colwell’s _Disobedient Child_ (N.D.)
-is the unnamed ‘interlude for boyes to handle and to passe tyme at
-christenmas’, which he entered in 1569–70.
-
-[576] His plays were _Sir Thomas Wyat_ (1607), _Every Woman in her
-Humour_ (1609), _Two Maids of Moreclack_ (1609), _Roaring Girl_ (1611),
-_White Devil_ (1612), and _Insatiate Countess_ (1613).
-
-[577] In _Nice Wanton_ a prayer for a king has been altered by
-sacrificing a rhyme into one for a queen. The prayer of _Impatient
-Poverty_ seems also to have been for Mary and clumsily adapted for
-Elizabeth. Wager’s _Enough is as Good as a Feast_ may be Elizabethan
-or pre-Elizabethan. _Jacob and Esau_ (1568), entered in 1557–8, is
-pre-Elizabethan.
-
-[578] Reprints of 1559–85 include Heywood’s _Weather_ and _Four
-Ps_, printed in England before the establishment of the Stationers’
-Register, and Bale’s _Three Laws_ and _God’s Promises_, printed,
-probably abroad, in 1538. John Walley, who seems to have printed
-1545–86, failed to date his books. I cannot therefore say whether his
-reprints of the pre-Register _Love_ and _Hickscorner_, or the prints
-of _Youth_ and _Wealth and Health_ (if it is his), which he entered in
-1557–8, are Elizabethan or not.
-
-[579] Cf. App. L.
-
-[580] Cf. App. B. I classify as follows: (a) COMPANIES OF MEN: (i)
-Morals (3), _Delight_, _Beauty and Housewifery_, _Love and Fortune_;
-(ii) Classical (7), _Tully_, _A Greek Maid_, _Four Sons of Fabius_,
-_Sarpedon_, _Telomo_, _Phillida and Corin_, _Rape of the Second Helen_;
-(iii) Romantic (17), _Lady Barbara_, _Cloridon and Radiamanta_, _Predor
-and Lucia_, _Mamillia_, _Herpetulus the Blue Knight and Perobia_,
-_Philemon and Philecia_, _Painter’s Daughter_, _Solitary Knight_,
-_Irish Knight_, _Cynocephali_, _Three Sisters of Mantua_, _Knight in
-the Burning Rock_, _Duke of Milan and Marquess of Mantua_, _Portio
-and Demorantes_, _Soldan and Duke_, _Ferrar_, _Felix and Philiomena_;
-(iv) Farce (1), _The Collier_; (v) Realistic (2), _Cruelty of a
-Stepmother_, _Murderous Michael_; (vi) Antic Play (1); (vii) Episodes
-(2), _Five Plays in One_, _Three Plays in One_; (b) COMPANIES OF
-BOYS: (i) Morals (6), _Truth, Faithfulness and Mercy_, ‘_Vanity_’,
-_Error_, _Marriage of Mind and Measure_, _Loyalty and Beauty_, _Game
-of Cards_; (ii) Classical (12), _Iphigenia_, _Ajax and Ulysses_,
-_Narcissus_, _Alcmaeon_, _Quintus Fabius_, _Siege of Thebes_, _Perseus
-and Andromeda_, ‘_Xerxes_’, _Mutius Scaevola_, _Scipio Africanus_,
-_Pompey_, _Agamemnon and Ulysses_; (iii) Romantic (4), _Paris and
-Vienna_, _Titus and Gisippus_, _Alucius_, _Ariodante and Genevora_;
-(c) UNKNOWN COMPANIES: (i) Morals (5), _As Plain as Can Be_, _Painful
-Pilgrimage_, _Wit and Will_, _Prodigality_, ‘_Fortune_’; (ii) Classical
-(2), _Orestes_, _Theagenes and Chariclea_; (iii) Romantic (1), _King of
-Scots_; (iv) Farces (2), _Jack and Jill_, _Six Fools_. The moral and
-romantic elements meet also in the list of pieces played by companies
-of men at Bristol from 1575 to 1579: _The Red Knight_, _Myngo_, _What
-Mischief Worketh in the Mind of Man_, _The Queen of Ethiopia_, _The
-Court of Comfort_, _Quid pro Quo_ (Murray, ii. 213).
-
-[581] _Love and Fortune_ was printed in the next period.
-
-[582] _Mary Magdalen_; _Conflict of Conscience_. ‘Compiled’ goes back
-to Bale, Heywood, and Skelton. Earlier still, _Everyman_ is not so much
-a play as ‘a treatyse ... in maner of a morall playe’.
-
-[583] The prologue of _Mary Magdalen_ has ‘we haue vsed this feate at
-the uniuersitie’.
-
-[584] Wynkyn de Worde calls _Mundus et Infans_ a ‘propre newe
-interlude’, and the advertising title-page is well established from the
-time of Rastell’s press.
-
-[585] _Conflict of Conscience_; cf. _Damon and Pythias_, the prologue
-of which, though it had been a Court play, ‘is somewhat altered for
-the proper use of them that hereafter shall haue occasion to plaie it,
-either in Priuate, or open Audience’. The castings, for four, five,
-or six players, occur in _King Darius_, _Like Will to Like_, _Longer
-Thou Livest_, _Mary Magdalen_, _New Custom_, _Tide Tarrieth for No
-Man_, _Trial of Treasure_, _Conflict of Conscience_. I find a later
-example from the public stage in _Fair Maid of the Exchange_, which
-has ‘Eleauen may easily acte this comedie’, and a division of parts
-accordingly. There are pre-Elizabethan precedents, while _Jack Juggler_
-is ‘for Chyldren to playe’, the songs in _Ralph Roister Doister_ are
-for ‘those which shall vse this Comedie or Enterlude’, and _The Four
-Elements_ has directions for reducing the time of playing at need from
-an hour and a half to three-quarters of an hour, and the note ‘Also yf
-ye lyst ye may brynge in a dysgysynge’. Similarly _Robin Hood_ is ‘for
-to be played in Maye games’. That books were in fact bought to act from
-is shown by entries in the accounts of Holy Trinity, Bungay, for 1558
-of 4_d._ for ‘the interlude and game booke’ and 2_s._ for ‘writing the
-partes’ (_M. S._ ii. 343). A book costing only 4_d._ must clearly have
-been a print.
-
-[586] There are prayers in _All for Money_, _Apius and Virginia_,
-_Common Conditions_, _Damon and Pythias_, _Disobedient Child_ (headed
-‘The Players ... kneele downe’), _King Darius_, _Like Will to Like_,
-_Longer Thou Livest_, _New Custom_, _Trial of Treasure_ (epilogue
-headed ‘Praie for all estates’). _Mary Magdalen_ and _Tide Tarrieth
-for No Man_ substitute a mere expression of piety. I do not agree with
-Fleay, 57, that such prayers are evidence of Court performance. The
-reverence and epilogue to the Queen in the belated moral of _Liberality
-and Prodigality_ (1602), 1314, is different in tone. _The Pedlar’s
-Prophecy_, also belated as regards date of print, adds to the usual
-prayer for Queen and council ‘And that honorable T. N. &c. of N.
-chiefly: Whom as our good Lord and maister, found we haue’. No doubt
-any strolling company purchasing the play would fill up the blanks to
-meet their own case. Probably both the Queen and estates and the ‘lord’
-of a company were prayed for, whether present or absent, so long as the
-custom lasted; cf. ch. x, p. 311; ch. xviii, p. 550.
-
-[587] Cf. e. g. _Mary Magdalen_ (which refers on the title-page to
-those who ‘heare or read the same’), 56, 1479, 1743; _Like Will to
-Like_, sig. C, ‘He ... speaketh the rest as stammering as may be’, C
-ij, ‘Haunce sitteth in the chaire, and snorteth as though he were fast
-a sleep’, E ij^v, ‘Nichol Newfangle lieth on the ground groning’, &c.,
-&c.
-
-[588] _Three Ladies of London_ (1584), _Three Lords and Three Ladies of
-London_ (1590), _Pedlar’s Prophecy_ (1595), _Contention of Liberality
-and Prodigality_ (1602). _Lingua_ (1607) is a piece of academic
-archaism. I cannot believe that the manuscript fragment of _Love
-Feigned and Unfeigned_ belongs to the seventeenth century. Of course
-there are moral elements in other plays, such as _Histriomastix_,
-especially in dumb-shows and inductions.
-
-[589] There is little evidence as to the price at which prints were
-sold; what there is points to 6_d._ for a quarto. A ‘testerne’ is
-given in the epistle as the price of _Troilus and Cressida_, and in
-Middleton, _Mayor of Quinborough_, v. i, come thieves who ‘only take
-the name of country comedians to abuse simple people with a printed
-play or two, which they bought at Canterbury for sixpence’. The
-statement that the First Folio cost £1 only rests on Steevens’s report
-of a manuscript note in a copy not now known; cf. McKerrow in _Sh.
-England_, ii. 229.
-
-[590] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Shakespeare.
-
-[591] Cf. App. L. In the above allocation _Leir_ and _Satiromastix_, to
-each of which two companies have equal claims, are counted twice.
-
-[592] Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 148, gives a full list; cf. ch. xiii, s.vv.
-Queen’s, Sussex’s, Strange’s, Admiral’s, Pembroke’s, Worcester’s.
-
-[593] Cf. App. M. Can Moseley have been trying in some way to secure
-plays of which he possessed manuscripts from being _acted_ without his
-consent? On 30 Aug. 1660 (_Variorum_, iii. 249; Herbert, 90) he wrote
-to Sir Henry Herbert, denying that he had ever agreed with the managers
-of the Cockpit and Whitefriars that they ‘should act any playes that
-doe belong to mee, without my knowledge and consent had and procured’.
-
-[594] Printed from _Addl. MS._ 27632, f. 43, by F. J. Furnivall in _7
-N. Q._ (1890), ix. 382. Harington died in 1612. An earlier leaf (30)
-has the date ‘29^{th} of Jan. 1609’. The latest datable play in the
-collection is _The Turk_ (1610, S. R. 10 Mar. 1609). There are four out
-of six plays printed in 1609, as well as _The Faithful Shepherdess_
-(N.D.), of which on this evidence we can reasonably put the date of
-publication in 1609 or 1610.
-
-[595] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Heywood.
-
-[596] _M. S. C._ i. 364; _Variorum_, iii. 159. The King’s men played
-_The Malcontent_, probably after its first issue in 1604, as a retort
-for the appropriation of _Jeronimo_ by its owners, the Queen’s Revels.
-The earliest extant print of _1 Jeronimo_ is 1605, but the play, which
-is not in S. R., may have been printed earlier. The Chapel boys seem
-to have revived one at least of Lyly’s old Paul’s plays in 1601. The
-Chamberlain’s adopted _Titus Andronicus_, which had been Sussex’s, and
-Shakespeare revised for them _Taming of A Shrew_ and _The Contention_,
-which had been Pembroke’s, and based plays which were new from the
-literary, and in the case of the last also from the publisher’s,
-standpoint on the _Troublesome Reign of John_ and the _Famous Victories
-of Henry V_, which had been the Queen’s, and upon _King Leir_. But of
-course Sussex’s, Pembroke’s, and the Queen’s had broken.
-
-[597] Henslowe, i. 119.
-
-[598] A single printer, Thomas Creede, entered or printed ten plays
-between 1594 and 1599, all of which he probably acquired in 1594,
-although he could not get them all in circulation at once. These
-include four (_T. T. of Rich. III_, _Selimus_, _Famous Victories_,
-_Clyomon and Clamydes_) from the Queen’s; it is therefore probable that
-some of those on whose t.ps. no company is named (_Looking Glass_,
-_Locrine_, _Pedlar’s Prophecy_, _James IV_, _Alphonsus_) were from the
-same source. The tenth, _Menaechmi_, was not an acting play.
-
-[599] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 44; cf. ch. ix.
-
-[600] The Folio editors of Shakespeare condemn the Quartos, or some
-of them, as ‘stolne, and surreptitious copies’; ‘piratical’, although
-freely used by Mr. Pollard and others, is not a very happy term, since
-no piracy of copyright is involved. The authorized Q_{2} of _Roxana_
-(1632) claims to be ‘a plagiarii unguibus vindicata’.
-
-[601] Introduction, xxxvi of his edition.
-
-[602] R. B. McKerrow in _Bibl. Soc. Trans._ xii. 294; J. D. Wilson,
-_The Copy for Hamlet 1603 and the Hamlet Transcript 1593_ (1918).
-
-[603] C. Dewischeit, _Shakespeare und die Stenographie_
-(_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxxiv. 170); cf. Lee, 113, quoting Sir G. Buck’s
-_Third Universitie of England_ (1612; cf. ch. iii), ‘They which know it
-[brachygraphy] can readily take a Sermon, Oration, Play, or any long
-speech, as they are spoke, dictated, acted, and uttered in the instant’.
-
-[604] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 48; _F. and Q._ 64. More recently A. W.
-Pollard and J. D. Wilson have developed a theory (_T. L. S._ Jan.–Aug.
-1919) that the ‘bad quartos’ rest upon pre-Shakespearian texts partly
-revised by Shakespeare, of which shortened transcripts had been made
-for a travelling company in 1593, and which had been roughly adapted
-by an actor-reporter so as to bring them into line with the later
-Shakespearian texts current at the time of publication. Full discussion
-of this theory belongs to a study of Shakespeare. The detailed
-application of it in J. D. Wilson, _The Copy for Hamlet 1603 and the
-Hamlet Transcript 1593_ (1918), does not convince me that Shakespeare
-had touched the play in 1593, although I think that the reporter was in
-a position to make some slight use of a pre-Shakespearian _Hamlet_. And
-although travelling companies were doubtless smaller than the largest
-London companies (cf. chh. xi and xiii, s.v. Pembroke’s), there is no
-external evidence that special ‘books’ were prepared for travelling.
-For another criticism of the theory, cf. W. J. Lawrence in _T. L.
-S._ for 21 Aug. 1919. Causes other than travelling might explain the
-shortening of play texts: prolixity, even in an experienced dramatist
-(cf. t.p. of _Duchess of Malfi_), the approach of winter afternoons, an
-increased popular demand for jigs.
-
-[605] Cf. G. Wither, _Schollers Purgatory_ (_c._ 1625), 28, ‘Yea, by
-the lawes and Orders of their Corporation, they can and do setle upon
-the particuler members thereof a perpetuall interest in such Bookes
-as are Registred by them at their Hall, in their several Names: and
-are secured in taking the ful benefit of those books, better then any
-Author can be by vertue of the Kings Grant, notwithstanding their first
-Coppies were purloyned from the true owner, or imprinted without his
-leave’.
-
-[606] Pollard, _F. and Q._ 10. Mr. Pollard seems to suggest (_F. and
-Q._ 3) that copyright in a printed book did not hold as against the
-author. He cites the case of Nashe’s _Pierce Pennilesse_, but there
-seems no special reason to assume that in this case, or in those of
-_Gorboduc_ and _Hamlet_, the authorized second editions were not made
-possible by an arrangement, very likely involving blackmail, with the
-pirate.
-
-[607] Letter in Grosart, _Poems of Sidney_ (1877), i. xxiii. Pollard,
-_F. and Q._ 8, says that on other occasions Sidney’s friends approached
-the Lord Treasurer and the Star Chamber.
-
-[608] Pollard, _F. and Q._ 7, 11. I am not sure that the appearance
-of Bacon’s name can be regarded as a recognition of the principle of
-author’s copyright. He may have been already in the High Commission; he
-was certainly in that of 1601.
-
-[609] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 49, 51, speaks of Burby as ‘regaining the
-copyright’ by his publications, and as, moreover, saving his sixpences
-‘as a license was only required for new books’. But surely there was
-no copyright, as neither Danter nor Burby paid for an entry. I take
-it that when, on 22 Jan. 1607, _R. J._ and _L. L. L._ were entered to
-Nicholas Ling, ‘by direccõn of a Court and with consent of Master Burby
-in wrytinge’, the entry of the transfer secured the copyright for the
-first time.
-
-[610] Arber, iii. 37. The ink shows that there are two distinct entries.
-
-[611] Fleay, _L. and W._ 40; Furness, _Much Ado_, ix.
-
-[612] Pollard, _F. and Q._ 66; _Sh. F._ 44.
-
-[613] Roberts did not print the 1603 _Hamlet_, although he did that
-of 1604; but it must have been covered by his entry of 1602, and this
-makes it a little difficult to regard him (or Blount in 1609) as the
-‘agent’ of the Chamberlain’s.
-
-[614] Pollard, _F. and Q._ 66; _Sh. F._ 45.
-
-[615] There are analogies in _Taming of the Shrew_, _2, 3 Henry VI_,
-and _King John_, which were not entered in S. R. with the other
-unprinted plays in 1623, and were probably regarded as covered by
-copyright in the plays on which they were based, although, as a matter
-of fact, the _Troublesome Reign_ was itself not entered.
-
-[616] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 53.
-
-[617] They had risks to run. The Star Chamber fined and imprisoned
-William Buckner, late chaplain to the archbishop, for licensing
-Prynne’s _Histriomastix_ in 1633 (Rushworth, _Historical Collections_,
-ii. 234).
-
-[618] _M. S. C._ i. 364; _Variorum_, iii. 159.
-
-[619] Moseley’s _Epistle_ to F_{1} (1647) of Beaumont and Fletcher
-says, ‘When these _Comedies_ and _Tragedies_ were presented on the
-Stage, the _Actours_ omitted some _Scenes_ and Passages (with the
-_Authour’s_ consent) as occasion led them; and when private friends
-desir’d a Copy, they then (and justly too) transcribed what they Acted’.
-
-[620] See _Epistles_ to Armin, _Two Maids of Moreclack_; Chapman,
-_Widow’s Tears_; Heywood, _Rape of Lucrece_, _Golden Age_; Marston,
-_Malcontent_; Middleton, _Family of Love_.
-
-[621] Jonson, _E. M. O._ (1600), ‘As it was first composed by the
-Author B. I. Containing more than hath been publikely spoken or acted’;
-Barnes, _Devil’s Charter_ (1607), ‘As it was plaide.... But more
-exactly reuewed, corrected, and augmented since by the Author, for the
-more pleasure and profit of the Reader’; Webster, _Duchess of Malfi_
-(1623), ‘with diuerse things Printed, that the length of the Play would
-not beare in the Presentment’.
-
-[622] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 57; _F. and Q._ 117.
-
-[623] The editors of the Shakespeare F_{1} claim that they are
-replacing ‘stolne, and surreptitious copies’ by plays ‘absolute in
-their numbers, as he conceiued them’, and that ‘wee haue scarse
-receiued from him a blot in his papers’; and those of the Beaumont
-and Fletcher F_{1} say they ‘had the Originalls from such as received
-them from the Authors themselves’ and lament ‘into how many hands the
-Originalls were dispersed’. The same name ‘original’ was used for the
-authoritative copy of a civic miracle-play; cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii.
-143.
-
-[624] The manuscripts of _Sir John Barnevelt_ (_Addl. MS._ 18653),
-_Believe As You List_ (_Egerton MS._ 2828), _The Honest Man’s Fortune_
-(_Dyce MS._ 9), _The Faithful Friends_ (_Dyce MS._ 10), and _The
-Sisters_ (_Sion College MS._) appear to be play-house copies, with
-licensing corrections, and in some cases the licences endorsed, and
-some of them may be in the authors’ autographs; cf. Pollard, _Sh.
-F._ 59; Mönkemeyer, 72. Several of the copies in _Egerton MS._ 1994,
-described by F. S. Boas in _3 Library_ (July 1917), including that of
-_1 Richard II_, are of a similar type.
-
-[625] Sir Henry Herbert noted in his office-book in 1633 (_Variorum_,
-iii. 208), ‘The Master ought to have copies of their new playes
-left with him, that he may be able to shew what he hath allowed or
-disallowed’, but it was clearly not the current practice. In 1640
-(_Variorum_, iii. 241) he suppressed an unlicensed play, and noted,
-‘The play I cald for, and, forbiddinge the playinge of it, keepe the
-booke’, which suggests that only one copy existed.
-
-[626] Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 155, prints it; cf. _1 Antonio and
-Mellida_, ind. 1, ‘Enter ... with parts in their hands’; _Wily
-Beguiled_, prol. 1, ‘Where are these paltrie Plaiers? stil poaring in
-their papers and neuer perfect?’ By derivation, the words assigned
-to an actor became his ‘part’; cf. Dekker, _News from Hell_ (1606,
-_Works_, ii. 144), ‘with pittifull action, like a Plaier, when hees out
-of his part’.
-
-[627] In 1623 Herbert re-allowed _The Winter’s Tale_, ‘thogh the
-allowed booke was missinge’, and in 1625 _The Honest Man’s Fortune_,
-‘the originall being lost’ (_Variorum_, iii. 229).
-
-[628] Cf. App. N.
-
-[629] The handing over of ‘papers’ is referred to in several letters to
-Henslowe; cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 56, 69, 75, 76, 81, 82.
-
-[630] He sends Henslowe an instalment ‘fayr written’, and on another
-occasion says, ‘I send you the foule sheet and y^e fayr I was wrighting
-as your man can testify’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 72, 78).
-
-[631] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 62.
-
-[632] _Birth of Hercules_, 3, ‘Notae marginales inseruiant dirigendae
-histrion[ic]ae’; Nashe, _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_, 1813, ‘You
-might haue writ in the margent of your play-booke, Let there be a fewe
-rushes laide in the place where _Back-winter_ shall tumble, for feare
-of raying his cloathes: or set downe, Enter _Back-winter_, with his boy
-bringing a brush after him, to take off the dust if need require. But
-you will ne’re haue any wardrobe wit while you live. I pray you holde
-the booke well, that we be not _non plus_ in the latter end of the
-play.’
-
-[633] ‘Exit’ and ‘Exeunt’ soon became the traditional directions for
-leaving the stage, but I find ‘Exite omnes’ in Peele, _Edw. I_, 1263.
-
-[634] Mönkemeyer, 73.
-
-[635] _T. N. K._ I. iii. 69, ‘2 Hearses ready with Palamon: and Arcite:
-the 3 Queenes. Theseus: and his Lordes ready’, i.e. ready for I. iv,
-which begins 42 lines later; and again I. iv. 29, ‘3 Hearses ready’,
-for I. v, beginning 24 lines later. So too _Bussy D’Ambois_ (1641, not
-1607 ed.), I. i. 153, ‘Table, Chesbord and Tapers behind the Arras’,
-ready for I. ii.
-
-[636] _A Shrew_, ind. i, ‘San.’ for speaker; _The Shrew_ (F_{1}), ind.
-i. 88, ‘Sincklo’ for speaker; _3 Hen. VI_ (F_{1}), I. ii. 48, ‘Enter
-Gabriel’; III. i. 1, ‘Enter Sinklo, and Humfrey’; _R. J._ (Q_{2}), IV.
-v. 102, ‘Enter Will Kemp’; _M. N. D._ (F_{1}), V. i. 128, ‘Tawyer with
-a Trumpet before them’; _1 Hen. IV_ (Q_{1}), I. ii. 182 (text, not
-s.d.), ‘Falstaffe, Haruey, Rossill, and Gadshil, shall rob those men
-that we haue already waylaid’ (cf. II. ii); _2 Hen. IV_ (Q_{1}), V. iv.
-1, ‘Enter Sincklo and three or foure officers’; _M. Ado_ (F_{1}), II.
-iii. 38, ‘Enter Prince, Leonato, Claudio and Iacke Wilson’; _M. Ado_ (Q
-and F), IV. ii, ‘Cowley’ and ‘Kemp’ for speakers; _T.N.K._ v. 3, ‘T.
-Tucke: Curtis’, IV. ii. 75, ‘Enter Messenger, Curtis’; _1 Antonio and
-Mellida_, IV. i. 30, ‘Enter Andrugio, Lucio, Cole, and Norwood’; for
-other examples, cf. pp. 227, 271, 285, 295, 330, and vol. iv, p. 43.
-The indications of speakers by the letters E. and G. in _All’s Well_,
-II. i; III. i, ii, vi, may have a similar origin. The names of actors
-are entered in the ‘plots’ after those of the characters represented
-(cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 127).
-
-[637] _Alphonsus_, prol. 1, ‘after you haue sounded thrise’; 1938,
-‘Exit Venus. Or, if you can conueniently, let a chaire come down from
-the top of the stage’; _James IV_, 1463, ‘Enter certaine Huntsmen,
-if you please, singing’; 1931, ‘Enter, from the widdowes house, a
-seruice, musical songs of marriages, or a maske, or what prettie
-triumph you list’; _Three Lords and Three Ladies of London_, sig. C,
-‘Here Simp[licitie] sings first, and Wit after, dialoguewise, both to
-musicke if ye will’; _Locrine_, I. i. 1, ‘Let there come foorth a Lion
-running after a Beare or any other beast’; _Death of R. Hood_, III. ii,
-‘Enter or aboue [Hubert, Chester]’; _2 Hen. VI_, IV. ii. 33, ‘Enter
-Cade [etc.] with infinite numbers’; IV. ix. 9, ‘Enter Multitudes with
-Halters about their Neckes’; _T. A._ I. i. 70, ‘as many as can be’;
-_Edw. I_, 50, ‘Enter ... and others as many as may be’; _Sir T. More_,
-sc. ix. 954, ‘Enter ... so many Aldermen as may’; _What You Will_, v.
-193, ‘Enter as many Pages with torches as you can’.
-
-[638] Mönkemeyer, 63, 91.
-
-[639] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 79.
-
-[640] e.g. _R. J._ (Q_{1}), III. i. 94, ‘Tibalt vnder Romeos arme
-thrusts Mercutio in and flyes’; III. ii. 32, ‘Enter Nurse wringing her
-hands, with the ladder of cordes in her lap’; IV. v. 95, ‘They all but
-the Nurse goe foorth, casting Rosemary on her and shutting the Curtens’.
-
-[641] Cf. ch. xxi, pp. 133, 136.
-
-[642] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 71; Van Dam and Stoffel, _William Shakespeare,
-Prosody and Text_, 274; _Chapters on English Printing, Prosody, and
-Pronunciation_.
-
-[643] R. B. McKerrow, introd. xiv, to Barnes, _Devil’s Charter_.
-
-[644] Pollard, _Sh. F._ 74; cf. his introd. to _A New Shakespeare
-Quarto_ (1916).
-
-[645] Epistles to Heywood, _Rape of Lucrece_; Marston, _Malcontent_,
-_Fawn_; Middleton, _Family of Love_. In _Father Hubburd’s Tales_
-Middleton says, ‘I never wished this book a better fortune than to
-fall into the hands of a truespelling printer’. Heywood, in an Epistle
-to _Apology for Actors_ (1612), praises the honest workmanship of
-his printer, Nicholas Okes, as against that of W. Jaggard, who would
-not let him issue _errata_ of ‘the infinite faults escaped in my
-booke of _Britaines Troy_, by the negligence of the Printer, as the
-misquotations, mistaking of sillables, misplacing halfe lines, coining
-of strange and neuer heard of words’.
-
-[646] ‘Proofs’ and ‘revises’ had come into use before 1619, for
-Jaggard, criticized by Ralph Brooke for his ill printing of Brooke’s
-_Catalogue of Nobility_ (1619), issued a new edition as _A Discoverie
-of Errors in the First Edition of the Catalogue of Nobility_ (1622),
-regretting that his workmen had not given Brooke leave to print his own
-faulty English, and saying, ‘In the time of this his vnhappy sicknesse,
-though hee came not in person to ouer-looke the Presse, yet the Proofe,
-and Reuiewes duly attended him, and he perused them (as is well to be
-iustifyed) in the maner he did before’; cf. p. 261.
-
-[647] Cf. pp. 106, 107, 117, 127.
-
-[648] e.g. _Cynthia’s Revels_ (F_{1}), ‘The Scene Gargaphie’;
-_Philaster_ (F_{2}), ‘The scene being in Cicilie’; _Coxcomb_ (F_{2}),
-‘The Scene; England, France’ (but in fact there are no scenes in
-France!).
-
-[649] _The Marriage of Wit and Wisdom_ has no acts, but nine scenes.
-The latish _Jacob and Esau_, _Respublica_, _Misogonus_, _Conflict of
-Conscience_ have acts and scenes.
-
-[650] _Ralph Roister Doister_, _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_, _Gorboduc_,
-_Gismund of Salerne_, _Misfortunes of Arthur_, _Jocasta_, _Supposes_,
-_Bugbears_, _Two Italian Gentlemen_, _Glass of Government_, _Promos
-and Cassandra_, _Arraignment of Paris_; so, too, as a rule, University
-plays. _Dido_ and _Love and Fortune_, like the later private theatre
-plays, show acts only.
-
-[651] _Devil’s Charter_, _Duchess of Malfi_, _Philotas_, _Sir Giles
-Goosecap_, _The Turk_, _Liberality and Prodigality_, Percy’s plays,
-_The Woman Hater_, _Monsieur Thomas_, _2 Antonio and Mellida_.
-
-[652] Acts and scenes are marked in _Tamburlaine_ and _Locrine_; acts,
-or one or more of them only, sometimes with the first scene, in _Jack
-Straw_, _Battle of Alcazar_, _Wounds of Civil War_, _King Leire_,
-_Alphonsus_, _James IV_, _Soliman and Perseda_, _Spanish Tragedy_,
-_John a Kent and John a Cumber_; a few scenes without acts in _Death
-of Robin Hood_. These exceptions may indicate neo-classic sympathies
-in the earlier group of scholar playwrights; some later plays, e.g. of
-Beaumont and Fletcher, have partial divisions. The acts in _Spanish
-Tragedy_ and _Jack Straw_ are four only; _Histriomastix_, a private
-theatre play, has six. Where there are no formal divisions, they are
-sometimes replaced by passages of induction or dumb-shows.
-
-[653] Cf. ch. xxi.
-
-[654] Pollard, _F. and Q._ 124; _Sh. F._ 79.
-
-[655] Creizenach, 248.
-
-[656] _Melville’s Diary_ (Bannatyne Club), 22.
-
-[657] R. Hudson, _Memorials of a Warwickshire Parish_, 141.
-
-[658] Lodge, _Defence of Plays_, 7.
-
-[659] Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_, 133.
-
-[660] _Plays Confuted_, 167
-
-[661] _School of Abuse_, 40.
-
-[662] Lodge, _Defence of Plays_, 28.
-
-[663] _Plays Confuted_, 165.
-
-[664] _Repentance_ (Grosart, xii. 177).
-
-[665] Grosart, xii. 134.
-
-[666] Ibid. viii. 128.
-
-[667] Ibid. vii. 7.
-
-[668] App. M; cf. E. Köppel (_Archiv_, cii. 357); W. Bang (_E. S._
-xxviii. 229).
-
-[669] Grosart, vi. 86, 119.
-
-[670] Grosart, vi. 31.
-
-[671] Sig. A 3^v. _Farewell to Folly_ was entered on S. R. on 11
-June 1587 (Arber, ii. 471), but the first extant edition of 1591 was
-probably the first published, and the use of the term ‘Martinize’ in
-the preface dates it as at least post-1589 (cf. Simpson, ii. 349).
-
-[672] Grosart, xi. 75.
-
-[673] _Strange News_ (Nashe, i. 271); cf. _Pierce Penniless; his
-Supplication to the Devil_ (Nashe, i. 198) and _Have With You to
-Saffron Walden_ (Nashe, iii. 130). The passage about ‘make-plays’ is in
-an Epistle only found in some copies of _The Lamb of God_ (Nashe, v.
-180).
-
-[674] This allusion is not in the extant 1592 editions of the pamphlet
-(Grosart, xi. 206, 258).
-
-[675] Ed. Grosart, i. 167.
-
-[676] Ed. McKerrow, i. 247.
-
-[677] Ed. Gosart, ii. 222, 322.
-
-[678] Ed. McKerrow, iii. 131.
-
-[679] Arber, ii. 620.
-
-[680] App. C, No. xlviii.
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been
- corrected silently.
-
-2. Original spelling has been retained where appropriate.
-
-3. Some hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have been
-retained as in the original.
-
-4.Superscripts are represented using the caret character, e.g. D^r.
- or X^{xx}. Subscripts are shown as X{x}.
-
-5. Italics are shown as _xxx_.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 3 of 4), by E. K. Chambers</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-</div>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 3 of 4)</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: E. K. Chambers</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 21, 2022 [eBook #67462]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Tim Lindell, Karin Spence and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE (VOL 3 OF 4) ***</div>
-
-<p id="half-title" class="p6">THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">VOL. III</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p6">Oxford University Press</p>
-
-<p class="center sm">
-<i>London</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Edinburgh</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Glasgow</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Copenhagen</i><br />
-<i>New York</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Toronto</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Melbourne</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Cape Town</i><br />
-<i>Bombay</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Calcutta</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Madras</i>&emsp;&ensp;<i>Shanghai</i><br />
-Humphrey Milford Publisher to the <span class="smcap">University</span></p>
-
- <div class="figcenter" id="i_frontispiece">
- <img
- class="p2"
- src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 center">FROM THE VENICE TERENCE OF 1499</p>
- </div>
-
-<h1 class="p6">THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE<br />
-
-BY E. K. CHAMBERS. VOL. III</h1>
-
-<p class="p6 p-left">OXFORD: AT THE CLARENDON PRESS<br />
-
-M.CMXXIII</p>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center sm p6">Printed in England</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CONTENTS
-<span class="lg">VOLUME III</span></h2></div>
-
-<table summary="contents" class="smaller">
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th></th>
- <th class="pag">PAGE</th>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">XIX.</td>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">Staging at Court</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">XX.</td>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">Staging in the Theatres: Sixteenth Century</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">XXI.</td>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">Staging in the Theatres: Seventeenth Century</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="header" colspan="3">BOOK V. PLAYS AND PLAYWRIGHTS</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">XXII.</td>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">The Printing of Plays</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_157">157</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">XXIII.</td>
- <td class="cht"><span class="smcap">Playwrights</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_201">201</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="illos">
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Coliseus sive Theatrum. From edition of Terence
-published by Lazarus Soardus (Venice, 1497 and 1499)</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#i_frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Diagrams of Stages</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#i_084">pp. 84, 85</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="lg">NOTE ON SYMBOLS</h2></div>
-
-<p>I have found it convenient, especially in Appendix A, to use the symbol
-&lt; following a date, to indicate an uncertain date not earlier than that
-named, and the symbol &gt; followed by a date, to indicate an uncertain
-date not later than that named. Thus 1903 &lt;&gt; 23 would indicate the
-composition date of any part of this book. I have sometimes placed the
-date of a play in italics, where it was desirable to indicate the date
-of production rather than publication.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XIX<br />
-<span class="subhed">STAGING AT COURT</span></h3></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Of the dissertations named in the
-<i>note</i> to ch. xviii, T. S. Graves, <i>The Court and the
-London Theatres</i> (1913), is perhaps the most valuable for
-the subject of the present chapter, which was mainly written
-before it reached me. A general account of the Italian drama of
-the Renaissance is in W. Creizenach, <i>Geschichte des neueren
-Dramas</i>, vol. ii (1901). Full details for Ferrara and Mantua
-are given by A. D’Ancona, <i>Origini del Teatro Italiano</i>
-(1891), of which App. II is a special study of <i>Il Teatro
-Mantovano nel secolo xvi</i>. F. Neri, <i>La Tragedia italiana
-del Cinquecento</i> (1904), E. Gardner, <i>Dukes and Poets
-at Ferrara</i> (1904), and <i>The King of Court Poets</i>
-(1906), W. Smith, <i>The Commedia dell’ Arte</i> (1912), are
-also useful. Special works on staging are E. Flechsig, <i>Die
-Dekorationen der modernen Bühne in Italien</i> (1894), and G.
-Ferrari, <i>La Scenografia</i> (1902). The Terence engravings
-are described by M. Herrmann, <i>Forschungen zur deutschen
-Theatergeschichte des Mittelalters und der Renaissance</i>
-(1914). Of contemporary Italian treatises, the unprinted
-<i>Spectacula</i> of Pellegrino Prisciano is in <i>Cod.
-Est. lat.</i> d. x. 1, 6 (cf. G. Bertoni, <i>La Biblioteca
-Estense</i>, 13), and of L. de Sommi’s <i>Dialoghi in materia
-di rappresentazione scenica</i> (c. 1565) a part only is in
-L. Rasi, <i>I Comici italiani</i> (1897), i. 107. The first
-complete edition of S. Serlio, <i>Architettura</i> (1551),
-contains Bk. ii, on <i>Perspettiva</i>; the English translation
-was published by R. Peake (1611); extracts are in App. G; a
-biography is L. Charvet, <i>Sébastien Serlio</i> (1869). Later
-are L. Sirigatti, <i>La pratica di prospettiva</i> (1596),
-A. Ingegneri, <i>Della poesia rappresentativa e del modo di
-rappresentare le favole sceniche</i> (1598), and N. Sabbatini,
-<i>Pratica di fabricar scene e macchine ne’ Teatri</i> (1638).</p>
-
-<p>For France, E. Rigal, <i>Le Théâtre de la Renaissance</i>
-and <i>Le Théâtre au xvii<sup>e</sup> siècle avant Corneille</i>, both
-in L. Petit de Julleville, <i>Hist. de la Langue et de la
-Litt. Françaises</i> (1897), iii. 261, iv. 186, and the same
-writer’s <i>Le Théâtre Français avant la Période Classique</i>
-(1901), may be supplemented by a series of studies in <i>Revue
-d’Histoire Littéraire de la France</i>&mdash;P. Toldo, <i>La Comédie
-Française de la Renaissance</i> (1897–1900, iv. 336; v. 220,
-554; vi. 571; vii. 263), G. Lanson, <i>Études sur les Origines
-de la Tragédie Classique en France</i> (1903, x. 177, 413) and
-<i>L’Idée de la Tragédie en France avant Jodelle</i> (1904,
-xi. 541), E. Rigal, <i>La Mise en Scène dans les Tragédies
-du xvi<sup>e</sup> siècle</i> (1905, xii. 1, 203), J. Haraszti, <i>La
-Comédie Française de la Renaissance et la Scène</i> (1909, xvi.
-285); also G. Lanson, <i>Note sur un Passage de Vitruve</i>, in
-<i>Revue de la Renaissance</i> (1904), 72. Less important is E.
-Lintilhac, <i>Hist. Générale du Théâtre en France</i> (1904–9,
-in progress). G. Bapst, <i>Essai sur l’Histoire du Théâtre</i>
-(1893), and D. C. Stuart, <i>Stage Decoration and the Unity of
-Place in France in the Seventeenth Century</i> (1913, <i>M.
-P.</i> x. 393), deal with staging, for which the chief material
-is E. Dacier, <i>La Mise en Scène à Paris au xvii<sup>e</sup> siècle:
-Mémoire de L. Mahelot et M. Laurent</i> in <i>Mémoires de la
-Soc. de l’Hist. de Paris et de l’Ile-de-France</i>, xxviii
-(1901), 105. An edition by H. C. Lancaster (1920) adds Mahelot’s
-designs.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>We come now to the problems, reserved from treatment in the foregoing
-chapter, of scenic background. What sort of setting did the types
-of theatre described afford for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span> plots, often complicated, and
-the range of incident, so extraordinarily wide, which we find in
-Elizabethan drama? No subject in literary history has been more often
-or more minutely discussed, during the quarter of a century since the
-Swan drawing was discovered, and much valuable spadework has been done,
-not merely in the collecting and marshalling of external evidence,
-but also in the interpretation of this in the light of an analysis of
-the action of plays and of the stage-directions by which these are
-accompanied.[1] Some points have emerged clearly enough; and if on
-others there is still room for controversy, this may be partly due to
-the fact that external and internal evidence, when put together, have
-proved inadequate, and partly also to certain defects of method into
-which some of the researchers have fallen. To start from the assumption
-of a ‘typical Shakespearian stage’ is not perhaps the best way of
-approaching an investigation which covers the practices of thirty or
-forty playing companies, in a score of theatres, over a period of not
-much less than a century. It is true that, in view of the constant
-shifting of companies and their plays from one theatre to another, some
-‘standardization of effects’, in Mr. Archer’s phrase, may at any one
-date be taken for granted.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> But analogous effects can be produced
-by very different arrangements, and even apart from the obvious
-probability that the structural divergences between public and private
-theatres led to corresponding divergences in the systems of setting
-adopted, it is hardly safe to neglect the possibility of a considerable
-evolution in the capacities of stage-management between 1558 and 1642,
-or even between 1576 and 1616. At any rate a historical treatment
-will be well advised to follow the historical method. The scope of
-the inquiry, moreover, must be wide enough to cover performances at
-Court, as well as those on the regular stage, since the plays used for
-both purposes were undoubtedly the same. Nor can Elizabethan Court
-performances, in their turn, be properly considered, except in the
-perspective afforded by a short preliminary survey of the earlier
-developments of the art of scenic representation at other Renaissance
-Courts.</p>
-
-<p>The story begins with the study of Vitruvius in the latter part of
-the fifteenth century by the architect Alberti and others, which led
-scholars to realize that the tragedies of the pseudo-Seneca and the
-comedies of Terence and the recently discovered Plautus had been not
-merely recited, but acted much in the fashion already familiar in
-contemporary <i>ludi</i> of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span> the miracle-play type.<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> The next step
-was, naturally, to act them, in the original or in translations.
-Alberti planned a <i>theatrum</i> in the Vatican for Nicholas V, but
-the three immediate successors of Nicholas were not humanists, and it
-is not until the papacy of Innocent VIII that we hear of classical
-performances at Rome by the pupils of Pomponius Laetus. One of these
-was Tommaso Inghirami, who became a cardinal, without escaping the
-nickname of Phaedra from the part he had played in <i>Hippolytus</i>.
-This, as well as at least one comedy, had already been given before
-the publication (<i>c.</i> 1484–92) of an edition of Vitruvius by
-Sulpicius Verulanus, with an epistle addressed by the editor to
-Cardinal Raffaelle Riario, as a notable patron of the revived art.
-Sulpicius is allusive rather than descriptive, but we hear of a fair
-adorned stage, 5 ft. high, for the tragedy in the forum, of a second
-performance in the Castle of St. Angelo, and a third in Riario’s house,
-where the audience sat under <i>umbracula</i>, and of the ‘picturatae
-scenae facies’, which the cardinal provided for a comedy by the
-Pomponiani.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span> Performances continued after the death of Pomponius in
-1597, but we get no more scenic details, and when the <i>Menaechmi</i>
-was given at the wedding of Alfonso d’Este and Lucrezia Borgia in
-1502 it is noted that ‘non gli era scena alcuna, perchè la camera
-non era capace’.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> It is not until 1513 that we get anything like a
-description of a Roman neo-classical stage, at the conferment of Roman
-citizenship on Giuliano and Lorenzo de’ Medici, the Florentine kinsmen
-of Leo X.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> This had a decorated back wall divided by pilasters into
-five spaces, in each of which was a door covered by a curtain of golden
-stuff. There were also two side-doors, for entrance and exit, marked
-‘via ad forum’.</p>
-
-<p>An even more important centre of humanistic drama than Rome was
-Ferrara, where the poets and artists, who gathered round Duke Ercole
-I of Este, established a tradition which spread to the allied courts
-of the Gonzagas at Mantua and the Delle Rovere at Urbino. The first
-neo-classical revival on record at Ferrara was of the <i>Menaechmi</i>
-in 1486, from which we learn that Epidamnus was represented by five
-marvellous ‘case’ each with its door and window, and that a practicable
-boat moved across the <i>cortile</i> where the performance was given.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1487 it was the turn of the <i>Amphitrio</i> ‘in dicto cortile
-a tempo di notte, con uno paradiso cum stelle et altre rode’.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-Both the <i>Amphitrio</i> and the <i>Menaechmi</i> were revived in
-1491; the former had its ‘paradiso’, while for the latter ‘nella sala
-era al prospecto de quattro castelli, dove avevano a uscire quilli
-dovevano fare la representatione’.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> Many other productions followed,
-of some of which no details are preserved. For the <i>Eunuchus</i>,
-<i>Trinummus</i>, and <i>Penulus</i> in 1499 there was a stage, 4
-ft. high, with decorated columns, hangings of red, white, and green
-cloth, and ‘cinque casamenti merlati’ painted by Fino and Bernardino
-Marsigli.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> In 1502, when Lucrezia Borgia came, the stage for
-the <i>Epidicus</i>, <i>Bacchides</i>, <i>Miles Gloriosus</i>,
-<i>Casina</i>, and <i>Asinaria</i> was of the height of a man, and
-resembled a city wall, ‘sopra gli sono le case de le comedie, che
-sono sei, non avantagiate del consueto’.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> The most elaborate
-description on record is, however, one of a theatre set up at Mantua
-during the carnival of 1501, for some play of which the name has not
-reached us. Unfortunately it is not very clearly worded, but the stage
-appears to have been rather wider than its depth, arcaded round, and
-hung at the back with gold and greenery. Its base had the priceless
-decoration of Mantegna’s <i>Triumphs</i>, and above was a heaven with
-a representation of the zodiac. Only one ‘casa’ is noted, a ‘grocta’
-within four columns at a corner of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span></p>
-
-<p>The scanty data available seem to point to the existence of two rather
-different types of staging, making their appearance at Ferrara and
-at Rome respectively. The scene of the Ferrarese comedies, with its
-‘case’ as the principal feature, is hardly distinguishable from that
-of the mediaeval <i>sacre rappresentazioni</i>, with its ‘luoghi
-deputati’ for the leading personages, which in their turn correspond
-to the ‘loci’, ‘domus’, or ‘sedes’ of the western miracle-plays.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a>
-The methods of the <i>rappresentazioni</i> had long been adopted for
-pieces in the mediaeval manner, but upon secular themes, such as
-Poliziano’s <i>Favola d’Orfeo</i>, which continued, side by side with
-the classical comedies, to form part of the entertainment of Duke
-Ercole’s Court.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> The persistence of the mediaeval tradition is very
-clearly seen in the interspersing of the acts of the comedies, just as
-the <i>rappresentazioni</i> had been interspersed, with ‘moresche’ and
-other ‘intermedii’ of spectacle and dance, to which the ‘dumb-shows’
-of the English drama owe their ultimate origin.[15] At Rome, on the
-other hand, it looks as if, at any rate by 1513, the ‘case’ had been
-conventionalized, perhaps under the influence of some archaeological
-theory as to classical methods, into nothing more than curtained
-compartments forming part of the architectural embellishments of the
-<i>scena</i> wall. It is a tempting conjecture that some reflex, both
-of the Ferrarese and of the Roman experiments, may be traced in the
-woodcut illustrations of a number of printed editions of Terence, which
-are all derived from archetypes published in the last decade of the
-fifteenth century. The synchronism between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span> the revival of classical
-acting and the emergence of scenic features in such illustrations is
-certainly marked. The Terentian miniatures of the earlier part of the
-century show no Vitruvian knowledge. If they figure a performance,
-it is a recitation by the wraith Calliopius and his gesticulating
-mimes.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> Nor is there any obvious scenic influence in the printed Ulm
-<i>Eunuchus</i> of 1486, with its distinct background for each separate
-woodcut.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> The new spirit comes in with the Lyons <i>Terence</i>
-of 1493, wherein may be seen the hand of the humanist Jodocus Badius
-Ascensius, who had certainly visited Ferrara, and may well also
-have been in touch with the Pomponiani.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> The Lyons woodcuts, of
-which there are several to each play, undoubtedly represent stage
-performances, real or imaginary. The stage itself is an unrailed
-quadrangular platform, of which the supports are sometimes visible.
-The back wall is decorated with statuettes and swags of Renaissance
-ornament, and in front of it is a range of three, four, or five small
-compartments, separated by columns and veiled by fringed curtains.
-They have rather the effect of a row of bathing boxes. Over each
-is inscribed the name of a character, whose ‘house’ it is supposed
-to be. Thus for the <i>Andria</i> the inscriptions are ‘Carini’,
-‘Chreme[tis]’, ‘Chrisidis’, ‘Do[mus] Symonis’. On the scaffold, before
-the houses, action is proceeding between characters each labelled
-with his name. Sometimes a curtain is drawn back and a character is
-emerging, or the interior of a house is revealed, with some one sitting
-or in bed, and a window behind. It is noteworthy that, while the
-decoration of the back wall and the arrangement of the houses remain
-uniform through all the woodcuts belonging to any one play, they vary
-from play to play. Sometimes the line of houses follows that of the
-wall; sometimes it advances and retires, and may leave a part of the
-wall uncovered, suggesting an entrance from without. In addition to the
-special woodcuts for each play, there is a large introductory design
-of a ‘Theatrum’. It is a round building, with an exterior staircase,
-to which spectators are proceeding,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span> and are accosted on their way by
-women issuing from the ‘Fornices’, over which the theatre is built.
-Through the removal of part of the walls, the interior is also made
-visible. It has two galleries and standing-room below. A box next the
-stage in the upper gallery is marked ‘Aediles’. The stage is cut off
-by curtains, which are divided by two narrow columns. In front of the
-curtains sits a flute-player. Above is inscribed ‘Proscenium’. Some of
-the Lyons cuts are adopted, with others from the Ulm <i>Eunuchus</i>,
-in the Strasburg <i>Terence</i> of 1496.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> This, however, has a
-different ‘Theatrum’, which shows the exterior only, and also a new
-comprehensive design for each play, in which no scaffold or back wall
-appears, and the houses are drawn on either side of an open place, with
-the characters standing before them. They are more realistic than the
-Lyons ‘bathing boxes’ and have doors and windows and roofs, but they
-are drawn, like the Ulm houses, on a smaller scale than the characters.
-If they have a scenic origin, it may be rather in the ‘case’ of
-Ferrara than in the conventional ‘domus’ of Rome. Finally, the Venice
-<i>Terence</i> of 1497, while again reproducing with modifications the
-smaller Lyons cuts, replaces the ‘Theatrum’ by a new ‘Coliseus sive
-Theatrum’, in which the point of view is taken from the proscenium.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a>
-No raised stage is visible, but an actor or prologue is speaking from
-a semicircular orchestra on the floor-level. To right and left of him
-are two houses, of the ‘bathing-box’ type, but roofed, from which
-characters emerge. He faces an auditorium with two rows of seats and a
-gallery above.</p>
-
-<p>We are moving in shadowy regions of conjecture, and if all the material
-were forthcoming, the interrelations of Rome and Ferrara and the
-Terentian editors might prove to have been somewhat different from
-those here sketched. After all, we have not found anything which
-quite explains the ‘picturatae scenae facies’ for which Cardinal
-Raffaelle Riario won such praise, and perhaps Ferrara is not really
-entitled to credit for the innovation, which is generally supposed
-to have accompanied the production of the first of Ariosto’s great
-Italian comedies on classical lines, the <i>Cassaria</i> of 1508.
-This is the utilization for stage scenery of the beloved Italian
-art of architectural perspective. It has been suggested, on no very
-secure grounds, that the first to experiment in this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span> direction may
-have been the architect Bramante Lazzari.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> But the scene of the
-<i>Cassaria</i> is the earliest which is described by contemporary
-observers as a <i>prospettiva</i>, and it evidently left a vivid
-impression upon the imagination of the spectators.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> The artist was
-Pellegrino da Udine, and the city represented was Mytilene, where the
-action of the <i>Cassaria</i> was laid. The same, or another, example
-of perspective may have served as a background in the following year
-for Ariosto’s second comedy, <i>I Suppositi</i>, of which the scene was
-Ferrara itself.<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> But other artists, in other cities, followed in
-the footsteps of Pellegrino. The designer for the first performance of
-Bernardo da Bibbiena’s <i>Calandra</i> at Urbino in 1513 was probably
-Girolamo Genga;<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> and for the second, at Rome in 1514, Baldassarre
-Peruzzi, to whom Vasari perhaps gives exaggerated credit for scenes
-which ‘apersono la via a coloro che ne hanno poi fatte a’ tempi
-nostri’.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> Five years later, <i>I Suppositi</i> was also revived at
-Rome, in the Sala d’ Innocenzio of the Vatican, and on this occasion no
-less an artist was employed than Raphael himself.<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> As well as the
-scene, there was an elaborately painted front curtain, which fell at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-the beginning of the performance. For this device, something analogous
-to which had almost certainly already been used at Ferrara, there was a
-precedent in the classical <i>aulaeum</i>. Its object was apparently to
-give the audience a sudden vision of the scene, and it was not raised
-again during the action of the play, and had therefore no strictly
-scenic function.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
-
-<p>The sixteenth-century <i>prospettiva</i>, of which there were many
-later examples, is the type of scenery so fully described and
-illustrated by the architect Sebastiano Serlio in the Second Book of
-his <i>Architettura</i> (1551). Serlio had himself been the designer
-of a theatre at Vicenza, and had also been familiar at Rome with
-Baldassarre Peruzzi, whose notes had passed into his possession. He
-was therefore well in the movement.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> At the time of the publication
-of the <i>Architettura</i> he was resident in France, where he was
-employed, like other Italians, by Francis I upon the palace of
-Fontainebleau. Extracts from Serlio’s treatise will be found in an
-appendix and I need therefore only briefly summarize here the system
-of staging which it sets out.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> This is a combination of the more
-or less solid ‘case’ with flat cloths painted in perspective. The
-proscenium is long and comparatively shallow, with an entrance at each
-end, and flat. But from the line of the <i>scena</i> wall the level
-of the stage slopes slightly upwards and backwards, and on this slope
-stand to right and left the ‘case’ of boards or laths covered with
-canvas, while in the centre is a large aperture, disclosing a space
-across which the flat cloths are drawn, a large one at the back and
-smaller ones on frames projecting by increasing degrees from behind
-the ‘case’. Out of these elements is constructed, by the art of
-perspective, a consistent scene with architectural perspectives facing
-the audience, and broken in the centre by a symmetrical vista. For the
-sake of variety, the action can use practicable doors and windows in
-the façades, and to some extent also within the central aperture, on
-the lower part of the slope. It was possible to arrange for interior
-action by discovering<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span> a space within the ‘case’ behind the façades,
-but this does not seem to have been regarded as a very effective
-device.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> Nor is there anything to suggest that Serlio contemplated
-any substantial amount of action within his central recess, for which,
-indeed, the slope required by his principles of perspective made
-it hardly suitable. As a matter of fact the action of the Italian
-<i>commedia sostenuta</i>, following here the tradition of its Latin
-models, is essentially exterior action before contiguous houses,
-and some amusing conventions, as Creizenach notes, follow from this
-fact; such as that it is reasonable to come out-of-doors in order to
-communicate secrets, that the street is a good place in which to bury
-treasure, and that you do not know who lives in the next house until
-you are told.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> In discussing the decoration of the stage, Serlio is
-careful to distinguish between the kinds of scenery appropriate for
-tragedy, comedy, and the satyric play or pastoral, respectively, herein
-clearly indicating his debt and that of his school to the doctrine of
-Vitruvius.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be supposed that Serlio said the last word on Italian
-Renaissance staging. He has mainly temporary theatres in his mind,
-and when theatres became permanent it was possible to replace laths
-and painted cloths by a more solid architectural <i>scena</i> in
-relief. Of this type was the famous <i>Teatro Olympico</i> of Vicenza
-begun by Andrea Palladio about 1565 and finished by Vincenzo Scamozzi
-about 1584.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> It closely followed the indications of Vitruvius,
-with its <i>porta regia</i> in the middle of the <i>scena</i>, its
-<i>portae minores</i> to right and left, and its proscenium doors in
-<i>versurae</i> under balconies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span> for spectators. And it did not leave
-room for much variety in decoration, as between play and play.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> It
-appears, indeed, to have been used only for tragedy. A more important
-tendency was really just in the opposite direction, towards change
-rather than uniformity of scenic effect. Even the perspectives, however
-beautiful, of the comedies did not prove quite as amusing, as the
-opening heavens and hells and other ingeniously varied backgrounds of
-the mediaeval plays had been, and by the end of the sixteenth century
-devices were being tried for movable scenes, which ultimately led
-to the complete elimination of the comparatively solid and not very
-manageable ‘case’.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is difficult to say how far the Italian perspective scene made its
-way westwards. Mediaeval drama&mdash;on the one hand the miracle-play, on
-the other the morality and the farce&mdash;still retained an unbounded
-vitality in sixteenth-century France. The miracle-play had its own
-elaborate and traditional system of staging. The morality and the
-farce required very little staging at all, and could be content at
-need with nothing more than a bare platform, backed by a semicircle
-or hollow square of suspended curtains, through the interstices of
-which the actors might come and go.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a> But from the beginning of
-the century there is observable in educated circles an infiltration
-of the humanist interest in the classical drama; and this, in course
-of time, was reinforced through two distinct channels. One of these
-was the educational influence, coming indirectly through Germany and
-the Netherlands, of the ‘Christian Terence’, which led about 1540 to
-the academic Latin tragedies of Buchanan and Muretus at Bordeaux.<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-The other was the direct contact with humanist civilization, which
-followed upon the Italian adventures of Charles VIII and Louis XII,
-and dominated the reigns of François I and his house, notably after
-the marriage of Catherine de’ Medici to the future Henri II in 1533.
-In 1541 came Sebastiano Serlio with his comprehensive knowledge of
-stage-craft; and the translation of his <i>Architettura</i>, shortly
-after its publication in 1545, by Jean Martin, a friend of Ronsard,
-may be taken as evidence of its vogue. In 1548 the French Court may be
-said to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span> been in immediate touch with the <i>nidus</i> of Italian
-scenic art at Ferrara, for when Henri and Catherine visited Lyons it
-was Cardinal Hippolyte d’Este who provided entertainment for them
-with a magnificent performance of Bibbiena’s famous <i>Calandra</i>.
-This was ‘nella gran sala di San Gianni’ and was certainly staged in
-the full Italian manner, with perspective by Andrea Nannoccio and
-a range of terra-cotta statues by one Zanobi.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> Henceforward it
-is possible to trace the existence of a Court drama in France. The
-Italian influence persisted. It is not, indeed, until 1571 that we
-find regular companies of Italian actors settling in Paris, and these,
-when they came, probably played, mainly if not entirely, <i>commedie
-dell’ arte</i>.<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> But Court performances in 1555 and 1556 of the
-<i>Lucidi</i> of Firenzuola and the <i>Flora</i> of Luigi Alamanni show
-that the <i>commedia sostenuta</i> was already established in favour
-at a much earlier date.<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a> More important, however, is the outcrop of
-vernacular tragedy and comedy, on classical and Italian models, which
-was one of the literary activities of the Pléiade. The pioneer in
-both <i>genres</i> was Étienne Jodelle, whose tragedy of <i>Cléopâtre
-Captive</i> was produced before Henri II by the author and his friends
-at the Hôtel de Reims early in 1553, and subsequently repeated at the
-Collège de Boncour, where it was accompanied by his comedy of <i>La
-Rencontre</i>, probably identical with the extant <i>Eugène</i>, which
-is believed to date from 1552. Jodelle had several successors: in
-tragedy, Mellin de Saint-Gelais, Jacques and Jean de la Taille, Jacques
-Grévin, Robert Garnier, Antoine de Montchrestien; and in comedy, Rémy
-Belleau, Jean de Baïf, Jean de la Taille, Jacques Grévin, and Pierre
-Larivey. So far as tragedy was concerned, the Court representations
-soon came to an end. Catherine de’ Medici, always superstitious,
-believed that the <i>Sophonisbe</i> of Mellin de Saint-Gelais in 1556
-had brought ill luck, and would have no more.<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> The academies may
-have continued to find hospitality for a few, but the best critical
-opinion appears to be that most of the tragedies of Garnier and his
-fellows were for the printing-press only, and that their scenic
-indications,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span> divorced from the actualities of representation, can
-hardly be regarded as evidence on any system of staging.<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> Probably
-this is also true of many of the literary comedies, although Court
-performances of comedies, apart from those of the professional players,
-continue to be traceable throughout the century. Unfortunately
-archaeological research has not succeeded in exhuming from the archives
-of the French royal households anything that throws much light on the
-details of staging, and very possibly little material of this kind
-exists. <i>Cléopâtre</i> is said to have been produced ‘in Henrici
-II aula ... magnifico veteris scenae apparatu’.<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> The prologue of
-<i>Eugène</i>, again, apologizes for the meagreness of an academic
-setting:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Quand au théâtre, encore qu’il ne soit</div>
- <div>En demi-rond, comme on le compassoit,</div>
- <div>Et qu’on ne l’ait ordonné de la sorte</div>
- <div>Que l’on faisoit, il faut qu’on le supporte:</div>
- <div>Veu que l’exquis de ce vieil ornement</div>
- <div>Ores se voue aux Princes seulement.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Hangings round the stage probably sufficed for the colleges, and
-possibly even on some occasions for royal <i>châteaux</i>.<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> But
-Jodelle evidently envisaged something more splendid as possible at
-Court, and a notice, on the occasion of some comedies given before
-Charles IX at Bayonne in 1565, of ‘la bravade et magnificence de la
-dite scène ou théâtre, et des feux ou verres de couleur, desquelles
-elle etait allumée et enrichie’ at once recalls a device dear to
-Serlio, and suggests a probability that the whole method of staging,
-which Serlio expounds, may at least have been tried.<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> Of an actual
-theatre ‘en demi-rond’ at any French palace we have no clear proof.
-Philibert de l’Orme built a <i>salle de spectacle</i> for Catherine in
-the Tuileries, on a site afterwards occupied by the grand staircase,
-but its shape and dimensions are not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span> on record.<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> There was another
-in the pleasure-house, which he planned for Henri II in the grounds
-of Saint-Germain, and which was completed by Guillaume Marchand under
-Henri IV. This seems, from the extant plan, to have been designed as
-a parallelogram.<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> The hall of the Hôtel de Bourbon, hard by the
-Louvre, in which plays were sometimes given, is shown by the engravings
-of the <i>Balet Comique</i>, which was danced there in 1581, to have
-been, in the main, of similar shape. But it had an apse ‘en demi-rond’
-at one end.<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> It may be that the Terence illustrations come again to
-our help, and that the new engravings which appear, side by side with
-others of the older tradition, in the <i>Terence</i> published by Jean
-de Roigny in 1552 give some notion of the kind of stage which Jodelle
-and his friends used.<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a> The view is from the auditorium. The stage is
-a platform, about 3½ ft. high, with three shallow steps at the back,
-on which actors are sitting, while a prologue declaims. There are no
-hangings or scenes. Pillars divide the back of the stage from a gallery
-which runs behind and in which stand spectators. Obviously this is not
-on Italian lines, but it might preserve the memory of some type of
-academic stage.</p>
-
-<p>If we know little of the scenic methods of the French Court, we know
-a good deal of those employed in the only public theatre of which,
-during the sixteenth century and the first quarter of the seventeenth,
-Paris could boast. This was the Hôtel de Bourgogne, a rectangular
-hall built by the Confrérie de la Passion in 1548, used by that body
-for the representation of miracle-plays and farces up to 1598, let
-between 1598 and 1608 to a succession of visiting companies, native
-and foreign, and definitively occupied from the latter year by the
-Comédiens du Roi, to whom Alexandre Hardy was dramatist in chief.<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a>
-The <i>Mémoire pour la décoration des pièces qui se représentent par
-les comediens du roy, entretenus de sa Magesté</i> is one of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span> most
-valuable documents of theatrical history which the hazard of time has
-preserved in any land. It, or rather the earlier of the two sections
-into which it is divided, is the work of Laurent Mahelot, probably a
-machinist at the Hôtel de Bourgogne, and contains notes, in some cases
-apparently emanating from the authors, of the scenery required for
-seventy-one plays belonging to the repertory of the theatre, to which
-are appended, in forty-seven cases, drawings showing the way in which
-the requirements were to be met.<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a> It is true that the <i>Mémoire</i>
-is of no earlier date than about 1633, but the close resemblance of
-the system which it illustrates to that used in the miracle-plays of
-the Confrèrie de la Passion justifies the inference that there had
-been no marked breach of continuity since 1598. In essence it is the
-mediaeval system of juxtaposed ‘maisons’, corresponding to the ‘case’
-of the Italian and the ‘houses’ of the English tradition, a series
-of independent structures, visually related to each other upon the
-stage, but dramatically distinct and serving, each in its turn, as the
-background to action upon the whole of the free space&mdash;<i>platea</i>
-in mediaeval terminology, <i>proscenium</i> in that of the
-Renaissance&mdash;which stretched before and between them. The stage of the
-Hôtel de Bourgogne had room for five such ‘maisons’, one in the middle
-of the back wall, two in the angles between the back and side-walls,
-and two standing forward against the side-walls; but in practice two or
-three of these compartments were often devoted to a ‘maison’ of large
-size. A ‘maison’ might be a unit of architecture, such as a palace, a
-senate house, a castle, a prison, a temple, a tavern; or of landscape,
-such as a garden, a wood, a rock, a cave, a sea.<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> And very often it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-represented an interior, such as a chamber with a bed in it.<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> A good
-illustration of the arrangement may be found in the <i>scenario</i> for
-the familiar story of Pyramus and Thisbe, as dramatized about 1617 by
-Théophile de Viaud.<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Il faut, au milieu du théâtre, un mur de marbre et pierre
-fermé; des ballustres; il faut aussi de chasque costé deux ou
-trois marches pour monster. A un des costez du théâtre, un
-murier, un tombeau entouré de piramides. Des fleurs, une éponge,
-du sang, un poignard, un voile, un antre d’où sort un lion,
-du costé de la fontaine, et un autre antre à l’autre bout du
-théâtre où il rentre.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Pandoste</i> of Alexandre Hardy required different settings for
-the two parts, which were given on different days.<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> On the first day,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Au milieu du théâtre, il faut un beau palais; à un des costez,
-une grande prison où l’on paroist tout entier. A l’autre costé,
-un temple; au dessous, une pointe de vaisseau, une mer basse,
-des rozeaux et marches de degrez.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The needs of the second day were more simply met by ‘deux palais et une
-maison de paysan et un bois’.</p>
-
-<p>Many examples make it clear that the methods of the Hôtel de Bourgogne
-did not entirely exclude the use of perspective, which was applied on
-the back wall, ‘au milieu du théâtre’; and as the Italian stage, on its
-side, was slow to abandon altogether the use of ‘case’ in relief, it is
-possible that under favourable circumstances Mahelot and his colleagues
-may have succeeded in producing the illusion of a consistently built
-up background much upon the lines contemplated by Serlio.<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> There
-were some plays whose plot called for nothing more than a single
-continuous scene in a street, perhaps a known and nameable street,
-or a forest.<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span> Nor was the illusion necessarily broken by such
-incidents as the withdrawal of a curtain from before an interior at
-the point when it came into action, or the introduction of the movable
-ship which the Middle Ages had already known.<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> It was broken,
-however, when the ‘belle chambre’ was so large and practicable as to
-be out of scale with the other ‘maisons’.<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> And it was broken when,
-as in <i>Pandoste</i> and many other plays, the apparently contiguous
-‘maisons’ had to be supposed, for dramatic purposes, to be situated in
-widely separated localities. It is, indeed, as we shall find to our
-cost, not the continuous scene, but the need for change of scene, which
-constitutes the problem of staging. It is a problem which the Italians
-had no occasion to face; they had inherited, almost unconsciously, the
-classical tradition of continuous action in an unchanged locality,
-or in a locality no more changed than is entailed by the successive
-bringing into use of various apertures in a single façade. But the
-Middle Ages had had no such tradition, and the problem at once declared
-itself, as soon as the matter of the Middle Ages and the manner of the
-Renaissance began to come together in the ‘Christian Terence’. The
-protest of Cornelius Crocus in the preface to his <i>Joseph</i> (1535)
-against ‘multiple’ staging, as alike intrinsically absurd and alien
-to the practice of the ancients, anticipates by many years that law
-of the unity of place, the formulation of which is generally assigned
-to Lodovico Castelvetro, and which was handed down by the Italians
-to the Pléiade and to the ‘classical’ criticism of the seventeenth
-century.<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> We are not here concerned with the unity of place as a
-law of dramatic structure, but we are very much concerned with the
-fact that the romantic drama of western Europe did not observe unity
-of place in actual<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span> practice, and that consequently the stage-managers
-of Shakespeare in England, as well as those of Hardy in France, had to
-face the problem of a system of staging, which should be able rapidly
-and intelligibly to represent shifting localities. The French solution,
-as we have seen, was the so-called ‘multiple’ system, inherited from
-the Middle Ages, of juxtaposed and logically incongruous backgrounds.</p>
-
-<p>Geography would be misleading if it suggested that, in the westward
-drift of the Renaissance, England was primarily dependent upon the
-mediation of France. During the early Tudor reigns direct relations
-with Italy were firmly established, and the classical scholars of
-Oxford and Cambridge drew their inspiration at first hand from the
-authentic well-heads of Rome and Florence. In matters dramatic, in
-particular, the insular had little or nothing to learn from the
-continental kingdom. There were French players, indeed, at the Court
-of Henry VII in 1494 and 1495, who obviously at that date can only
-have had farces and morals to contribute.<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> And thereafter the
-lines of stimulus may just as well have run the other way. If the
-academic tragedy and comedy of the Pléiade had its reaction upon the
-closet dramas of Lady Pembroke, Kyd, Daniel, Lord Brooke, yet London
-possessed its public theatres long before the Parisian makeshift of
-the Hôtel de Bourgogne, and English, no less than Italian, companies
-haunted the Court of Henri IV, while it is not until Caroline days
-that the French visit of 1495 can be shown to have had its successor.
-The earliest record of a classical performance in England was at
-Greenwich on 7 March 1519, when ‘there was a goodly commedy of Plautus
-plaied’, followed by a mask, in the great chamber, which the King had
-caused ‘to be staged and great lightes to be set on pillers that were
-gilt, with basons gilt, and the rofe was covered with blewe satyn
-set full of presses of fyne gold and flowers’.<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> The staging here
-spoken of, in association with lights, was probably for spectators
-rather than for actors, for in May 1527, when a dialogue, barriers,
-and mask were to be given in a banqueting-house at Greenwich, we are
-told that ‘thys chambre was raised with stages v. degrees on every
-syde, and rayled and counterailed, borne by pillars of azure, full<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-of starres and flower delice of gold; every pillar had at the toppe
-a basin silver, wherein stode great braunches of white waxe’.<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> In
-this same year 1527, Wolsey had a performance of the <i>Menaechmi</i>
-at his palace of York Place, and it was followed in 1528 by one of
-the <i>Phormio</i>, of which a notice is preserved in a letter of
-Gasparo Spinelli, the secretary to the Italian embassy in London.<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>
-Unfortunately, Spinelli’s description proves rather elusive. I am not
-quite clear whether he is describing the exterior or the interior of a
-building, and whether his <i>zoglia</i> is, as one would like to think,
-the framework of a proscenium arch, or merely that of a doorway.<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-One point, however, is certain. Somewhere or other, the decorations
-displayed in golden letters the title of the play which was about to
-be given. Perhaps this explains why, more than a quarter of a century
-later, when the Westminster boys played the <i>Miles Gloriosus</i>
-before Elizabeth in January 1565, one of the items of expenditure was
-for ‘paper, inke and colores for the wryting of greate letters’.<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a></p>
-
-<p>Investigation of Court records reveals nothing more precise than
-this as to the staging of plays, whether classical or mediaeval in
-type, under Henry VIII. It is noticeable, however, that a play often
-formed but one episode in a composite entertainment, other parts of
-which required the elaborate pageantry which was Henry’s contribution
-to the development of the mask; and it may be conjectured that in
-these cases the structure of the pageant served also as a sufficient
-background for the play. Thus in 1527 a Latin tragedy celebrating the
-deliverance of the Pope and of France by Wolsey was given in the ‘great
-chamber of disguysings’, at the end of which stood a fountain with a
-mulberry and a hawthorn tree, about which sat eight fair ladies in
-strange attire upon ‘benches of rosemary fretted in braydes layd on
-gold, all the sydes sette wyth roses in braunches as they wer growyng
-about this fountayne’.<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> The device<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span> was picturesque enough, but can
-only have had an allegorical relation to the action of the play. The
-copious Revels Accounts of Edward and of Mary are silent about play
-settings. It is only with those of Elizabeth that the indications of
-‘houses’ and curtains already detailed in an earlier chapter make their
-appearance.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> The ‘houses’ of lath and canvas have their analogy
-alike in the ‘case’ of Ferrara, which even Serlio had not abandoned,
-and in the ‘maisons’ which the Hôtel de Bourgogne inherited from the
-Confrérie de la Passion. We are left without guide as to whether the
-use of them at the English Court was a direct tradition from English
-miracle-plays, or owed its immediate origin to an Italian practice,
-which was itself in any case only an outgrowth of mediaeval methods
-familiar in Italy as well as in England. Nor can we tell, so far as the
-Revels Accounts go, whether the ‘houses’ were juxtaposed on the stage
-after the ‘multiple’ fashion of the Hôtel de Bourgogne, or were fused
-with the help of perspective into a continuous façade or vista, as
-Serlio bade. Certainly the Revels officers were not wholly ignorant of
-the use of perspective, but this is also true of the machinists of the
-Hôtel de Bourgogne.<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> Serlio does not appear to have used curtains,
-as the Revels officers did, for the discovery of interior scenes, but
-if, on the other hand, any of the great curtains of the Revels were
-front curtains, these were employed at Ferrara and Rome, and we have no
-knowledge that they were employed at Paris. At this point the archives
-leave us fairly in an <i>impasse</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It will be well to start upon a new tack and to attempt to ascertain,
-by an analysis of such early plays as survive, what kind of setting
-these can be supposed, on internal evidence, to have needed. And
-the first and most salient fact which emerges is that a very large
-number of them needed practically no setting at all. This is broadly
-true, with exceptions which shall be detailed, of the great group
-of interludes which extends over about fifty years of the sixteenth
-century, from the end of Henry VII’s reign or the beginning of Henry
-VIII’s, to a point in Elizabeth’s almost coincident with the opening of
-the theatres. Of these, if mere fragments<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span> are neglected, there are not
-less than forty-five. Twenty are Henrican;<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> perhaps seven Edwardian
-or Marian;<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> eighteen Elizabethan.<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> Characteristically, they are
-morals, presenting abstract personages varied in an increasing degree
-with farcical types; but several are semi-morals, with a sprinkling
-of concrete personages, which point backwards to the miracle-plays,
-or forward to the romantic or historical drama. One or two are almost
-purely miracle-play or farce; and towards the end one or two show some
-traces of classical influence.<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> Subject, then, to the exceptions,
-the interludes&mdash;and this, as already indicated, is a fundamental point
-for staging&mdash;call for no changes of locality, with which, indeed, the
-purely abstract themes of moralities could easily dispense. The action
-proceeds continuously in a locality, which is either wholly undefined,
-or at the most vaguely defined as in London (<i>Hickscorner</i>),
-or in England (<i>King Johan</i>). This is referred to, both in
-stage-directions and in dialogue, as ‘the place’, and with such
-persistency as inevitably to suggest a term of art, of which the
-obvious derivation is from the <i>platea</i> of the miracle-plays.<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a>
-It may be either an exterior or an interior place, but often it is
-not clearly envisaged as either. In <i>Pardoner and Friar</i> and
-possibly in <i>Johan the Evangelist</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span> it is a church; in <i>Johan
-Johan</i> it is Johan’s house. Whether interior or exterior, a door
-is often referred to as the means of entrance and exit for the
-characters.<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> In <i>Johan Johan</i> a door is supposed to lead to
-the priest’s chamber, and there is a long colloquy at the ‘chamber
-dore’. In exterior plays some kind of a house may be suggested in close
-proximity to the ‘place’. In <i>Youth</i> and in <i>Four Elements</i>
-the characters come and go to a tavern. The ‘place’ of <i>Apius and
-Virginia</i> is before the gate of Apius. There is no obvious necessity
-why these houses should have been represented by anything but a door.
-The properties used in the action are few and simple; a throne or
-other seat, a table or banquet (<i>Johan Johan</i>, <i>Godly Queen
-Hester</i>, <i>King Darius</i>), a hearth (<i>Nature</i>, <i>Johan
-Johan</i>), a pulpit (<i>Johan the Evangelist</i>), a pail (<i>Johan
-Johan</i>), a dice-board (<i>Nice Wanton</i>). My inference is that
-the setting of the interludes was nothing but the hall in which
-performances were given, with for properties the plenishing of that
-hall or such movables as could be readily carried in. Direct hints
-are not lacking to confirm this view. A stage-direction in <i>Four
-Elements</i> tells us that at a certain point ‘the daunsers without the
-hall syng’. In <i>Impatient Poverty</i> (242) Abundance comes in with
-the greeting, ‘Joye and solace be in this hall!’ <i>All for Money</i>
-(1019) uses ‘this hall’, where we should expect ‘this place’. And I
-think that, apart from interludes woven into the pageantry of Henry
-VIII’s disguising chambers, the hall contemplated was at first just the
-ordinary everyday hall, after dinner or supper, with the sovereigns or
-lords still on the dais, the tables and benches below pushed aside,
-and a free space left for the performers on the floor, with the
-screen and its convenient doors as a background and the hearth ready
-to hand if it was wanted to figure in the action. If I am right, the
-staged dais, with the sovereign on a high state in the middle of the
-hall, was a later development, or a method reserved for very formal
-entertainments.<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> The actors of the more homely interlude would have
-had to rub shoulders all the time with the inferior members of their
-audience. And so they did. In <i>Youth</i> (39) the principal character
-enters, for all the world like the St. George of a village mummers’
-play, with an</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>A backe, felowes, and gyve me roume</div>
- <div>Or I shall make you to auoyde sone.<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span></p>
-
-<p>In <i>Like Will to Like</i> the Vice brings in a knave of clubs, which
-he ‘offreth vnto one of the men or boyes standing by’. In <i>King
-Darius</i> (109) Iniquity, when he wants a seat, calls out</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Syrs, who is there that hath a stoole?</div>
- <div>I will buy it for thys Gentleman;</div>
- <div>If you will take money, come as fast as you can.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>A similar and earlier example than any of these now presents itself in
-<i>Fulgens and Lucres</i>, where there is an inductive dialogue between
-spectators, one of whom says to another</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">I thought verely by your apparel,</div>
- <div>That ye had bene a player.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Of a raised stage the only indication is in <i>All for Money</i>, a
-late example of the type, where one stage-direction notes (203), ‘There
-must be a chayre for him to sit in, and vnder it or neere the same
-there must be some hollowe place for one to come vp in’, while another
-(279) requires ‘some fine conueyance’ to enable characters to vomit
-each other up.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to nine interludes which, for various reasons, demand
-special remark. In <i>Jacob and Esau</i> (&gt; 1558) there is coming and
-going between the place and the tent of Isaac, before which stands
-a bench, the tent of Jacob, and probably also the tent of Esau. In
-<i>Wit and Wisdom</i> (&gt; 1579) action takes place at the entrances of
-the house of Wantonness, of the den of Irksomeness, of a prison, and
-of Mother Bee’s house, and the prison, as commonly in plays of later
-types, must have been so arranged as to allow a prisoner to take part
-in the dialogue from within. Some realism, also, in the treatment of
-the den may be signified by an allusion to ‘these craggie clifts’. In
-<i>Misogonus</i> (<i>c.</i> 1560–77), the place of which is before
-the house of Philogonus, there is one scene in Melissa’s ‘bowre’ (ii.
-4, 12), which must somehow have been represented. In <i>Thersites</i>
-(1537), of which one of the characters is a snail that ‘draweth her
-hornes in’, Mulciber, according to the stage-directions, ‘must have a
-shop made in the place’, which he leaves and returns to, and in which
-he is perhaps seen making a sallet. Similarly, the Mater of Thersites,
-when she drops out of the dialogue, ‘goeth in the place which is
-prepared for her’, and hither later ‘Thersites must ren awaye, and
-hyde hym behynde hys mothers backe’. These four examples only differ
-from the normal interlude type by some multiplication of the houses
-suggested in the background, and probably by some closer approximation
-than a mere door to the visual realization of these. There is no change
-of locality, and only an adumbration of interior<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span> action within the
-houses. Four other examples do entail some change of locality. Much
-stress must not be laid on the sudden conversions in the fourth act
-of <i>The Conflict of Conscience</i> (&gt; 1581) and the last scene of
-<i>Three Ladies of London</i> of the open ‘place’ into Court, for these
-are very belated specimens of the moral. And the opening dialogue
-of the <i>Three Ladies</i>, on the way to London, may glide readily
-enough into the main action before two houses in London itself. But in
-<i>The Disobedient Child</i> (<i>c.</i> 1560) some episodes are before
-the house of the father, and others before that of the son in another
-locality forty miles away. In <i>Mary Magdalene</i> (&lt; 1566), again,
-the action begins in Magdalo, but there is a break (842) when Mary
-and the Vice start on their travels, and it is resumed at Jerusalem,
-where it proceeds first in some public place, and afterwards by a
-sudden transition (1557) at a repast within the house of Simon. In both
-cases it may be conjectured that the two localities were indicated on
-opposite sides of the hall or stage, and that the personages travelled
-from one to the other over the intervening space, which was regarded
-as representing a considerable distance. You may call this ‘multiple
-staging’, if you will. The same imaginative foreshortening of space
-had been employed both in the miracle-plays and in the ‘Christian
-Terence’.<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> Simon’s house at Jerusalem was, no doubt, some kind of
-open <i>loggia</i> with a table in it, directly approachable from the
-open place where the earlier part of the Jerusalem action was located.</p>
-
-<p><i>Godly Queen Hester</i> (? 1525–9) has a different interest, in
-that, of all the forty-four interludes, it affords the only possible
-evidence for the use of a curtain. In most respects it is quite a
-normal interlude. The action is continuous, in a ‘place’, which
-represents a council-chamber, with a chair for Ahasuerus. But there
-is no mention of a door, and while the means of exit and entrance for
-the ordinary personages are unspecified, the stage-directions note, on
-two occasions (139, 635) when the King goes out, that he ‘entreth the
-trauerse’. Now ‘traverses’ have played a considerable part in attempts
-to reconstruct the Elizabethan theatre, and some imaginative writers
-have depicted them as criss-crossing about the stage in all sorts of
-possible and impossible directions.<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span> The term is not a very happy
-one to employ in the discussion of late sixteenth-century or early
-seventeenth-century conditions. After <i>Godly Queen Hester</i> it does
-not appear again in any play for nearly a hundred years, and then,
-so far as I know, is only used by Jonson in <i>Volpone</i>, where it
-appears to indicate a low movable screen, probably of a non-structural
-kind, and by John Webster, both in <i>The White Devil</i> and in
-<i>The Duchess of Malfi</i>, where it is an exact equivalent to the
-‘curtains’ or ‘arras’, often referred to as screening off a recess at
-the back of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> Half a century later still, it is used in
-the Restoration play of <i>The Duke of Guise</i> to indicate, not this
-normal back curtain, but a screen placed across the recess itself, or
-the inner stage which had developed out of it, behind ‘the scene’.<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a>
-Webster’s use seems to be an individual one. Properly a ‘traverse’
-means, I think, not a curtain suspended from the roof, but a screen
-shutting off from view a compartment within a larger room, but leaving
-it open above. Such a screen might, of course, very well be formed by a
-curtain running on a rod or cord.<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> And a ‘traverse’ also certainly
-came to mean the compartment itself which was so shut off.<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> The
-construction is familiar in the old-fashioned pews of our churches,
-and as it happens, it is from the records of the royal chapel that its
-Elizabethan use can best be illustrated. Thus when Elizabeth took her
-Easter communion at St. James’s in 1593, she came down, doubtless from
-her ‘closet’ above, after the Gospel had been read, ‘into her Majestes
-Travess’, whence she emerged to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span> make her offering, and then ‘retorned
-to her princely travess sumptuously sett forthe’, until it was time
-to emerge again and receive the communion. So too, when the Spanish
-treaty was sworn in 1604, ‘in the chappell weare two traverses sett
-up of equall state in all thinges as neare as might be’. One was the
-King’s traverse ‘where he usually sitteth’, the other for the Spanish
-ambassador, and from them they proceeded to ‘the halfe pace’ for the
-actual swearing of the oath.<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> The traverse figures in several other
-chapel ceremonies of the time, and it is by this analogy, rather
-than as a technical term of stage-craft, that we must interpret the
-references to it in <i>Godly Queen Hester</i>. It is not inconceivable
-that the play, which was very likely performed by the Chapel, was
-actually performed in the chapel.<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a> Nor is it inconceivable, also,
-that the sense of the term ‘traverse’ may have been wide enough to
-cover the screen at the bottom of a Tudor hall.</p>
-
-<p>I come now to the group of four mid-century farces, <i>Gammer Gurton’s
-Needle</i>, <i>Jack Juggler</i>, <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i>, and
-<i>Tom Tyler</i>, which literary historians have distinguished from
-the interludes as early ‘regular comedies’. No doubt they show traces
-of Renaissance influence upon their dramatic handling. But, so far as
-scenic setting is concerned, they do not diverge markedly from the
-interlude type. Nor is this surprising, since Renaissance comedy, like
-the classical comedy upon which it was based, was essentially an affair
-of continuous action, in an open place, before a background of houses.
-<i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i> requires two houses, those of Gammer
-Gurton and of Dame Chat; <i>Jack Juggler</i> one, that of Boungrace;
-<i>Ralph Roister Doister</i> one, that of Christian Custance. Oddly
-enough, both <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i> and <i>Jack Juggler</i>
-contain indications of the presence of a post, so placed that it could
-be used in the action.<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> <i>Tom Tyler</i>, which may have reached us
-in a sophisticated text, has a slightly more complicated staging. There
-are some quite early features. The locality is ‘this place’ (835), and
-the audience are asked (18), as in the much earlier <i>Youth</i>, to
-‘make them room’. On the other hand, as in <i>Mary Magdalene</i> and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-in <i>The Conflict of Conscience</i>, there is at one point (512) a
-transition from exterior to interior action. Hitherto it has been in
-front of Tom’s house; now it is within, and his wife is in bed. An
-open <i>loggia</i> here hardly meets the case. The bed demands some
-discovery, perhaps by the withdrawal of a curtain.</p>
-
-<p>I am of course aware that the forty-four interludes and the four farces
-hitherto dealt with cannot be regarded as forming a homogeneous body
-of Court drama. Not one of them, in fact, can be absolutely proved to
-have been given at Court. Several of them bear signs of having been
-given elsewhere, including at least three of the small number which
-present exceptional features.<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> Others lie under suspicion of having
-been written primarily for the printing-press, in the hope that any
-one who cared to act them would buy copies, and may therefore never
-have been given at all; and it is obvious that in such circumstances a
-writer might very likely limit himself to demands upon stage-management
-far short of what the Court would be prepared to meet.<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> This is
-all true enough, but at the same time I see no reason to doubt that
-the surviving plays broadly represent the kind of piece that was
-produced, at Court as well as elsewhere, until well into Elizabeth’s
-reign. Amongst their authors are men, Skelton, Medwall, Rastell,
-Redford, Bale, Heywood, Udall, Gascoigne, who were about the Court,
-and some of whom we know to have written plays, if not these plays,
-for the Court; and the survival of the moral as a Court entertainment
-is borne witness to by the Revels Accounts of 1578–9, in which the
-‘morrall of the <i>Marriage of Mind and Measure</i>’ still holds its
-own beside the classical and romantic histories which had already
-become fashionable. As we proceed, however, we come more clearly
-within the Court sphere. The lawyers stand very close, in their
-interests and their amusements, to the Court, and with the next group
-of plays, a characteristically Renaissance one, of four Italianate
-comedies and four Senecan tragedies, the lawyers had a good deal to
-do. Gascoigne’s Gray’s Inn <i>Supposes</i> is based directly upon one
-of Ariosto’s epoch-making comedies, <i>I Suppositi</i>, and adopts its
-staging. Jeffere’s <i>Bugbears</i> and the anonymous <i>Two Italian
-Gentlemen</i> are similarly indebted to their models<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span> in Grazzini’s
-<i>La Spiritata</i> and Pasqualigo’s <i>Il Fedele</i>. Each preserves
-complete unity of place, and the continuous action in the street before
-the houses, two or three in number, of the principal personages, is
-only varied by occasional colloquies at a door or window, and in the
-case of the <i>Two Italian Gentlemen</i> by an episode of concealment
-in a tomb which stands in a ‘temple’ or shrine beneath a burning
-lamp. Whetstone’s <i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, the neo-classical
-inspiration of which is advertised in the prefatory epistle, follows
-the same formula with a certain freedom of handling. In the first part,
-opportunity for a certain amount of interior action is afforded by
-two of the three houses; one is a prison, the other a barber’s shop,
-presumably an open stall with a door and a flap-down shutter. The third
-is the courtesan’s house, on which Serlio insists. This reappears in
-the second part and has a window large enough for four women to sit
-in.<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> The other houses in this part are a temple with a tomb in it,
-and a pageant stage used at a royal entry. The conveniences of exterior
-action lead to a convention which often recurs in later plays, by which
-royal justice is dispensed in the street. And the strict unity of place
-is broken by a scene (iv. 2) which takes place, not like the rest of
-the action in the town of Julio, but in a wood through which the actors
-are approaching it. Here also we have, I think, the beginnings of a
-convention by which action on the extreme edge of a stage, or possibly
-on the floor of the hall or on steps leading to the stage, was treated
-as a little remote from the place represented by the setting in the
-background. The four tragedies were all produced at the Court itself by
-actors from the Inns of Court. It is a little curious that the earliest
-of the four, <i>Gorboduc</i> (1562), is also the most regardless of
-the unity of place. While Acts <span class="allsmcap">I</span> and <span class="allsmcap">III</span>-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>
-are at the Court of Gorboduc, Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span> is divided between the
-independent Courts of Ferrex and Porrex. We can hardly suppose that
-there was any substantial change of decoration, and probably the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>
-generalized palace background served for all three. Here also the
-convention, classical enough, rules, by which the affairs of state are
-conducted in the open. By 1562 the raised stage had clearly established
-itself. There are no regular stage-directions in <i>Gorboduc</i>, but
-the stage is often mentioned in the descriptions of the dumb-shows
-between the acts, and in the fourth of these ‘there came from vnder
-the stage, as though out of hell, three furies’. Similarly in
-<i>Jocasta</i> (1566) the stage opens in the dumb-shows to disclose,
-at one time a grave, at another the gulf of Curtius. The action of
-the play itself is before the palace of Jocasta, but there are also
-entrances and exits, which are carefully specified in stage-directions
-as being through ‘the gates called Electrae’ and ‘the gates called
-Homoloydes’. Perhaps we are to infer that the gates which, if the
-stage-manager had Vitruvius in mind, would have stood on the right and
-left of the proscenium, were labelled ‘in great letters’ with their
-names; and if so, a similar device may have served in <i>Gorboduc</i>
-to indicate at which of the three Courts action was for the time
-being proceeding. <i>Gismond of Salerne</i> has not only a hell, for
-Megaera, but also a heaven, for the descent and ascent of Cupid. Like
-<i>Jocasta</i>, it preserves unity of place, but it has two houses in
-the background, the palace of Tancred and an independent ‘chamber’ for
-Gismond, which is open enough and deep enough to allow part of the
-action, with Gismond lying poisoned and Tancred mourning over her, to
-take place within it. <i>The Misfortunes of Arthur</i> is, of course,
-twenty years later than the other members of the group. But it is true
-to type. The action is in front of three <i>domus</i>, the ‘houses’ of
-Arthur and of Mordred, which ought not perhaps historically to have
-been in the same city, and a cloister. A few years later still, in
-1591, Wilmot, one of the authors of <i>Gismond of Salerne</i>, rewrote
-it as <i>Tancred and Gismund</i>. He did not materially interfere with
-the old staging, but he added an epilogue, of which the final couplet
-runs:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thus end our sorrowes with the setting sun:</div>
- <div>Now draw the curtens for our Scaene is done.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>If these lines had occurred in the original version of the play, they
-would naturally have been taken as referring to curtains used to cover
-and discover Gismond’s death-chamber. But in this point Wilmot has
-modified the original action, and has made Gismund take her poison and
-die, not in her chamber, but on the open stage. Are we then faced,
-as part of the paraphernalia of a Court stage, at any rate by 1591,
-with a front curtain&mdash;a curtain drawn aside, and not sinking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span> like the
-curtains of Ferrara and Rome, but like those curtains used to mark the
-beginning and end of a play, rather than to facilitate any changing
-of scenes?<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> It is difficult to say. Wilmot, not re-writing for the
-stage, may have rewritten loosely. Or the epilogue may after all have
-belonged to the first version of the play, and have dropped out of the
-manuscript in which that version is preserved. The Revels Accounts
-testify that ‘great curtains’ were used in Court plays, but certainly
-do not prove that they were used as front curtains. The nearest
-approach to a corroboration of Wilmot is to be found in an epigram
-which exists in various forms, and is ascribed in some manuscripts to
-Sir Walter Raleigh.<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What is our life? a play of passion.</div>
- <div>Our mirth? the musick of diuision.</div>
- <div>Our mothers wombs the tyring houses bee</div>
- <div>Where we are drest for liues short comedy.</div>
- <div>The earth the stage, heauen the spectator is,</div>
- <div>Who still doth note who ere do act amisse.</div>
- <div>Our graues, that hyde vs from the all-seeing sun,</div>
- <div>Are but drawne curtaynes when the play is done.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>If these four comedies and four tragedies were taken alone, it
-would, I think, be natural to conclude that, with the Italianized
-types of drama, the English Court had also adopted the Italian type
-of setting.<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> Certainly the tragedies would fit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span> well enough into
-Serlio’s stately façade of palaces, and the comedies into his more
-homely group of bourgeois houses, with its open shop, its ‘temple’, and
-its discreet abode of a <i>ruffiana</i>.<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
-
-<p>As courtly, beyond doubt, we must treat the main outlook of the
-choir companies during their long hegemony of the Elizabethan drama,
-which ended with the putting down of Paul’s in 1590. Unfortunately
-it is not until the last decade of this period, with the ‘court
-comedies’ of Lyly, that we have any substantial body of their work,
-differentiated from the interludes and the Italianate comedies, to go
-upon. The <i>Damon and Pythias</i> of Richard Edwardes has a simple
-setting before the gates of a court. Lyly’s own methods require rather
-careful analysis.<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> The locality of <i>Campaspe</i> is throughout
-at Athens, in ‘the market-place’ (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 56).<a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> On this
-there are three <i>domus</i>: Alexander’s palace, probably represented
-by a portico in which he receives visitors, and from which inmates
-‘draw in’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 32) to get off the stage; a tub ‘turned
-towardes the sun’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 12) for Diogenes over which he can
-‘pry’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 21); a shop for Apelles, which has a window
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 18), outside which a page is posted, and open enough
-for Apelles to carry on dialogue with Campaspe (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii.;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv), while he paints her within. These three <i>domus</i>
-are quite certainly all visible together, as continuous action can
-pass from one to another. At one point (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 110) the
-philosophers walk direct from the palace to the tub; at another
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 44, 57) Alexander, going to the shop, passes the
-tub on the way; at a third (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 82) Apelles, standing
-at the tub, is bidden ‘looke about you, your shop is on fire!’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span> As
-Alexander (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 71) tells Diogenes that he ‘wil haue thy
-cabin remoued nerer to my court’, I infer that the palace and the tub
-were at opposite ends of the stage, and the shop in the middle, where
-the interior action could best be seen. In <i>Sapho and Phao</i> the
-unity of place is not so marked. All the action is more or less at
-Syracuse, but, with the exception of one scene (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii), the
-whole of the first two acts are near Phao’s ferry outside the city.
-I do not think that the actual ferry is visible, for passengers go
-‘away’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 72; ii. 69) to cross, and no use is made of a
-ferryman’s house, but somewhere quite near Sibylla sits ‘in the mouth
-of her caue’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 13), and talks with Phao.<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a> The rest of
-the action is in the city itself, either before the palace of Sapho,
-or within her chamber, or at the forge of Vulcan, where he is perhaps
-seen ‘making of the arrowes’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 33) during a song.
-Certainly Sapho’s chamber is practicable. The stage-directions do not
-always indicate its opening and shutting. At one point (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-iii. 1) we simply get ‘Sapho in her bed’ in a list of interlocutors;
-at another (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 20) ‘Exit Sapho’, which can only mean
-that the door closes upon her. It was a door, not a curtain, for she
-tells a handmaid (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 101) to ‘shut’ it. Curtains are
-‘drawne’ (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 36; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 95), but these are
-bed-curtains, and the drawing of them does not put Sapho’s chamber in
-or out of action. As in <i>Campaspe</i>, there is interplay between
-house and house. A long continuous stretch of action, not even broken
-by the act-intervals, begins with <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii and extends to
-the end of <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, and in the course of this Venus sends
-Cupid to Sapho, and herself waits at Vulcan’s forge (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i.
-50). Presently (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 45) she gets tired of waiting, and
-without leaving the stage, advances to the chamber and says, ‘How
-now, in Saphoes lap?’ There is not the same interplay between the
-city houses and Sibylla’s cave, to which the last scene of the play
-returns. I think we must suppose that two neighbouring spots within
-the same general locality were shown in different parts of the stage,
-and this certainly entails a bolder use of dramatic foreshortening of
-distance than the mere crossing the market-place in <i>Campaspe</i>.
-This foreshortening recurs in <i>Endymion</i>. Most of the action
-is in an open place which must be supposed to be near the palace of
-Cynthia, or at the lunary bank (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 9), of Endymion’s
-slumber, which is also near the palace.<a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> It stands in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span> a grove
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 160), and is called a ‘caban’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii.
-111). Somewhere also in the open space is, in Act <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, the
-aspen-tree, into which Dipsas has turned Bagoa and from which she is
-delivered (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 283). But <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i are at the door of ‘the Castle in the Deserte’ (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 41;
-ii. 1) and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv is also in the desert (cf. <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii. 35), before a fountain. This fountain was, however, ‘hard by’
-the lunary bank (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 67), and probably the desert was
-no farther off than the end of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> In <i>Midas</i> the
-convention of foreshortening becomes inadequate, and we are faced with
-a definite change of locality. The greater part of the play is at the
-Court of Midas, presumably in Lydia rather than in Phrygia, although
-an Elizabethan audience is not likely to have been punctilious about
-Anatolian geography. Some scenes require as background a palace, to
-which it is possible to go ‘in’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 117; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii.
-83; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 104). A temple of Bacchus may also have been
-represented, but is not essential. Other scenes are in a neighbouring
-spot, where the speaking reeds grow. There is a hunting scene
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i) on ‘the hill Tmolus’ (cf. <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 44). So
-far Lyly’s canons of foreshortening are not exceeded. But the last
-scene (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii) is out of the picture altogether. The opening
-words are ‘This is Delphos’, and we are overseas, before the temple
-of Apollo. In <i>Galathea</i> and in <i>Love’s Metamorphosis</i>, on
-the other hand, unity is fully achieved. The whole of <i>Galathea</i>
-may well proceed in a single spot, on the edge of a wood, before a
-tree sacred to Neptune, and in Lincolnshire (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 12).
-The sea is hard by, but need not be seen. The action of <i>Love’s
-Metamorphosis</i> is rather more diffuse, but an all-over pastoral
-setting, such as we see in Serlio’s <i>scena satirica</i>, with
-scattered <i>domus</i> in different glades, would serve it. Or, as
-the management of the Hôtel de Bourgogne would have put it, the stage
-is <i>tout en pastoralle</i>. There are a tree of Ceres and a temple
-of Cupid. These are used successively in the same scene (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-i). Somewhat apart, on the sea-shore, but close to the wood, dwells
-Erisichthon. There is a rock for the Siren, and Erisichthon’s house may
-also have been shown.<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> Finally, <i>Mother Bombie</i> is an extreme<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-example of the traditional Italian comic manner. The action comes and
-goes, rapidly for Lyly, in an open place, surrounded by no less than
-seven houses, the doors of which are freely used.</p>
-
-<p>Two other Chapel plays furnish sufficient evidence that the type of
-staging just described was not Lyly’s and Lyly’s alone.<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> Peele’s
-<i>Arraignment of Paris</i> is <i>tout en pastoralle</i>. A poplar-tree
-dominates the stage throughout, and the only house is a bower of
-Diana, large enough to hold the council of gods (381, 915). A trap
-is required for the rising and sinking of a golden tree (489) and
-the ascent of Pluto (902). Marlowe’s <i>Dido</i> has proved rather a
-puzzle to editors who have not fully appreciated the principles on
-which the Chapel plays were produced. I think that one side of the
-stage was arranged <i>en pastoralle</i>, and represented the wood
-between the sea-shore and Carthage, where the shipwrecked Trojans
-land and where later Aeneas and Dido hunt. Here was the cave where
-they take shelter from the storm.<a id="FNanchor_100" href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a> Here too must have been the
-curtained-off <i>domus</i> of Jupiter.<a id="FNanchor_101" href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> This is only used in a kind
-of prelude. Of course it ought to have been in heaven, but the Gods are
-omnipresent, and it is quite clear that when the curtain is drawn on
-Jupiter, Venus, who has been discoursing with him, is left in the wood,
-where she then meets<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span> Aeneas (134, 139, 173). The other side of the
-stage represents Carthage. Possibly a wall with a gate in it was built
-across the stage, dividing off the two regions. In the opening line of
-Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, Aeneas says,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Where am I now? these should be Carthage walles,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and we must think of him as advancing through the wood to the
-gate.<a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> He is amazed at a carved or printed representation of Troy,
-which Virgil placed in a temple of Juno, but which Marlowe probably
-thought of as at the gate. He meets other Trojans who have already
-reached the city, and they call his attention to Dido’s servitors,
-who ‘passe through the hall’ bearing a banquet. Evidently he is now
-within the city and has approached a <i>domus</i> representing the
-palace. The so-called ‘hall’ is probably an open <i>loggia</i>. Here
-Dido entertains him, and in a later scene (773) points out to him the
-pictures of her suitors. There is perhaps an altar in front of the
-palace, where Iarbas does his sacrifice (1095), and somewhere close
-by a pyre is made for Dido (1692). Either within or without the walls
-may be the grove in which Ascanius is hidden while Cupid takes his
-place.<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> If, as is more probable, it is without, action passes
-through the gate when Venus beguiles him away. It certainly does at the
-beginning (912, 960) and end (1085) of the hunt, and again when Aeneas
-first attempts flight and Anna brings him back from the sea-shore
-(1151, 1207).</p>
-
-<p>The plays of the Lylyan school, if one may so call it, seem to me to
-illustrate very precisely, on the side of staging, that blend of the
-classical and the romantic tempers which is characteristic of the later
-Renaissance. The mediaeval instinct for a story, which the Elizabethans
-fully shared, is with difficulty accommodated to the form of an action
-coherent in place and time, which the Italians had established on the
-basis of Latin comedy. The Shakespearian romantic drama is on the
-point of being born. Lyly and his fellow University wits deal with
-the problem to the best of their ability. They widen the conception
-of locality, to a city and its environs instead of a street; and even
-then the narrative<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span> sometimes proves unmanageable, and the distance
-from one end of the stage to the other must represent a foreshortening
-of leagues, or even of the crossing of an ocean. In the hands of less
-skilful workmen the tendency was naturally accentuated, and plays had
-been written, long before Lyly was sent down from Magdalen, in which
-the episodes of breathless adventure altogether overstepped the most
-elastic confines of locality. A glance at the titles of the plays
-presented at Court during the second decade of Elizabeth’s reign will
-show the extent to which themes drawn from narrative literature were
-already beginning to oust those of the old interlude type.<a id="FNanchor_104" href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> The
-new development is apparent in the contributions both of men and of
-boys; with this distinction, that the boys find their sources mainly
-in the storehouse of classical history and legend, while the men turn
-either to contemporary events at home and abroad, or more often to the
-belated and somewhat jaded versions, still dear to the Elizabethan
-laity, of mediaeval romance. The break-down of the Italian staging must
-therefore be regarded from the beginning, as in part at least a result
-of the reaction of popular taste upon that of the Court. The noblemen’s
-players came to London when the winter set in, and brought with them
-the pieces which had delighted <i>bourgeois</i> and village audiences
-up and down the land throughout the summer; and on the whole it proved
-easier for the Revels officers to adapt the stage to the plays than the
-plays to the stage. Nor need it be doubted that, even in so cultivated
-a Court as that of Elizabeth, the popular taste was not without its
-echoes.</p>
-
-<p>Of all this wealth of forgotten play-making, only five examples
-survive; but they are sufficient to indicate the scenic trend.<a id="FNanchor_105" href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a>
-Their affiliation with the earlier interludes is direct. The ‘vice’ and
-other moral abstractions still mingle with the concrete personages, and
-the proscenium is still the ‘place’.<a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> The simplest setting is that
-of <i>Cambyses</i>. All is at or within sight of the Persian Court. If
-any <i>domus</i> was represented, it was the palace, to which there are
-departures (567, 929). Cambyses consults his council (1–125) and there
-is a banquet (965–1042) with a ‘boorde’, at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span> end of which order is
-given to ‘take all these things away’.<a id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a> In other episodes the Court
-is ‘yonder’ (732, 938); it is only necessary to suppose that they were
-played well away from the <i>domus</i>. One is in a ‘feeld so green’
-(843–937), and a stage-direction tells us ‘Heere trace up and downe
-playing’. In another (754–842) clowns are on their way to market.<a id="FNanchor_108" href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a>
-The only other noteworthy point is that, not for the first nor for
-the last time, a post upon the stage is utilized in the action.<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a>
-<i>Patient Grissell</i>, on the other hand, requires two localities.
-The more important is Salucia (Saluzzo), where are Gautier’s mansion,
-Janickell’s cottage, and the house of Mother Apleyarde, a midwife
-(1306). The other is Bullin Lagras (Bologna), where there are two short
-episodes (1235–92, 1877–1900) at the house of the Countess of Pango.
-There can be little doubt that all the <i>domus</i> were staged at
-once. There is direct transfer of action from Gautier’s to the cottage
-and back again (612–34; cf. 1719, 2042, 2090). Yet there is some little
-distance between, for when a messenger is sent, the foreshortening of
-space is indicated by the stage-direction (1835), ‘Go once or twise
-about the Staige’.<a id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> Similarly, unless an ‘Exiunt’ has dropped out,
-there is direct transfer (1900) from Bullin Lagras to Salucia. In
-<i>Orestes</i> the problem of discrete localities is quite differently
-handled. The play falls into five quasi-acts of unequal length, which
-are situated successively at Mycenae, Crete, Mycenae, Athens, Mycenae.
-For all, as in <i>Gorboduc</i>, the same sketchy palace background
-might serve, with one interesting and prophetic exception. The middle
-episodes (538–925), at Mycenae, afford the first example of those siege
-scenes which the Shakespearian stage came to love. A messenger brings
-warning to Aegisthus and Clytemnestra of the purpose of Orestes ‘to
-inuade this Mycoene Citie stronge’. Aegisthus goes into the ‘realme’,
-to take up men, and Clytemnestra will defend the city. There is a
-quarrel between a soldier and a woman and the Vice sings a martial
-song. Then ‘Horestes entrith with his bande and marcheth about the
-stage’. He instructs a Herald, who advances with his trumpeter.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span> ‘Let
-y<sup>e</sup> trumpet go towarde the Citie and blowe.’ Clytemnestra answers. ‘Let
-y<sup>e</sup> trumpet leaue soundyng and let Harrauld speake and Clytemnestra
-speake ouer y<sup>e</sup> wal.’ Summons and defiance follow, and Orestes calls
-on his men for an assault. ‘Go and make your liuely battel and let it
-be longe, eare you can win y<sup>e</sup> Citie, and when you haue won it, let
-Horestes bringe out his mother by the armes, and let y<sup>e</sup> droum sease
-playing and the trumpet also, when she is taken.’ But now Aegisthus
-is at hand. ‘Let Egistus enter and set hys men in a raye, and let the
-drom play tyll Horestes speaketh.’ There is more fighting, which ends
-with the capture and hanging of Aegisthus. ‘Fling him of y<sup>e</sup> lader, and
-then let on bringe in his mother Clytemnestra; but let her loke wher
-Egistus hangeth’. Finally Orestes announces that ‘Enter now we wyll the
-citie gate’. In the two other plays the changes of locality come thick
-and fast. The action of <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i> begins in Denmark,
-and passes successively to Swabia, to the Forest of Marvels on the
-borders of Macedonia, to the Isle of Strange Marshes twenty days’ sail
-from Macedonia, to the Forest again, to the Isle again, to Norway, to
-the Forest, to the Isle, to the Forest, to a road near Denmark, to the
-Isle, to Denmark. Only two <i>domus</i> are needed, a palace (733) in
-the Isle, and Bryan Sans Foy’s Castle in the Forest. This is a prison,
-with a practicable door and a window, from which Clamydes speaks
-(872). At one point Providence descends and ascends (1550–64). In one
-of the Forest scenes a hearse is brought in and it is still there in
-the next (1450, 1534), although a short Isle scene has intervened.
-This looks as though the two ends of the stage may have been assigned
-throughout to the two principal localities, the Forest and the Isle.
-Some care is taken to let the speakers give the audience a clue
-when a new locality is made use of for the first time. Afterwards
-the recurrence of characters whom they had already seen would help
-them. The Norway episode (1121) is the only one which need have much
-puzzled them. But <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i> may have made use of
-a peculiar device, which becomes apparent in the stage-directions
-of <i>Common Conditions</i>. The play opens in Arabia, where first
-a spot near the Court and then a wood are indicated; but the latter
-part alternates between Phrygia, near the sea-shore, and the Isle of
-Marofus. No <i>domus</i> is necessary, and it must remain uncertain
-whether the wood was represented by visualized trees. It is introduced
-(295) with the stage-direction, ‘Here enter Sedmond with Clarisia and
-Condicions out of the wood’. Similarly Phrygia is introduced (478)
-with ‘Here entreth Galiarbus out of Phrygia’,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span> and a few lines later
-(510) we get ‘Here enter Lamphedon out of Phrygia’. Now it is to be
-noted that the episodes which follow these directions are not away
-from, but in the wood and Phrygia respectively; and the inference
-has been drawn that there were labelled doors, entrance through one
-of which warned the spectators that action was about to take place
-in the locality whose title the label bore.<a id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> This theory obtains
-some plausibility from the use of the gates Homoloydes and Electrae
-in <i>Jocasta</i>; and perhaps also from the inscribed house of the
-<i>ruffiana</i> in Serlio’s <i>scena comica</i>, from the early Terence
-engravings, and from certain examples of lettered <i>mansions</i> in
-French miracle-plays.<a id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a> But of course these analogies do not go
-the whole way in support of a practice of using differently lettered
-entrances to help out an imagined conversion of the same ‘place’ into
-different localities. More direct confirmation may perhaps be derived
-from Sidney’s criticism of the contemporary drama in his <i>Defence of
-Poesie</i> (<i>c.</i> 1583). There are two passages to be cited.<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a>
-The first forms part of an argument that poets are not liars. Their
-feigning is a convention, and is accepted as such by their hearers.
-‘What Childe is there’, says Sidney, ‘that, comming to a Play, and
-seeing <i>Thebes</i> written in great letters vpon an olde doore, doth
-beleeue that it is <i>Thebes</i>?’ Later on he deals more formally
-with the stage, as a classicist, writing after the unity of place had
-hardened into a doctrine. Even <i>Gorboduc</i> is no perfect tragedy.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘For it is faulty both in place and time, the two necessary
-companions of all corporall actions. For where the stage
-should alwaies represent but one place, and the vttermost time
-presupposed in it should be, both by <i>Aristotles</i> precept
-and common reason, but one day, there is both many dayes,
-and many places, inartificially imagined. But if it be so in
-<i>Gorboduck</i>, how much more in al the rest? where you shal
-haue <i>Asia</i> of the one side, and <i>Affrick</i> of the
-other, and so many other vnder-kingdoms, that the Player, when
-he commeth in, must ever begin with telling where he is, or els
-the tale wil not be conceiued. Now ye shal haue three ladies
-walke to gather flowers, and then we must beleeue the stage to
-be a Garden. By and by, we heare <span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>newes of shipwracke in the
-same place, and then wee are to blame if we accept it not for a
-Rock. Vpon the backe of that, comes out a hidious Monster, with
-fire and smoke, and then the miserable beholders are bounde to
-take it for a Caue. While in the meantime two Armies flye in,
-represented with foure swords and bucklers, and then what harde
-heart will not receiue it for a pitched fielde?’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is evident that the plays which Sidney has mostly in mind, the
-‘al the rest’ of his antithesis with <i>Gorboduc</i>, are precisely
-those romantic histories which the noblemen’s players in particular
-were bringing to Court in his day, and of which <i>Clyomon and
-Clamydes</i> and <i>Common Conditions</i> may reasonably be taken as
-the characteristic débris. He hints at what we might have guessed that,
-where changes of scene were numerous, the actual visualization of the
-different scenes left much to the imagination. He lays his finger upon
-the foreshortening, which permits the two ends of the stage to stand
-for localities separated by a considerable distance, and upon the
-obligation which the players were under to let the opening phrases of
-their dialogue make it clear where they were supposed to be situated.
-And it certainly seems from the shorter passage, as if he was also
-familiar with an alternative or supplementary device of indicating
-locality by great letters on a door. The whole business remains rather
-obscure. What happened if the distinct localities were more numerous
-than the doors? Were the labels shifted, or were the players then
-driven, as Sidney seems to suggest, to rely entirely upon the method
-of spoken hints? The labelling of special doors with great letters
-must be distinguished from the analogous use of great letters, as
-at the <i>Phormio</i> of 1528, to publish the title of a play.<a id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a>
-That this practice also survived in Court drama may be inferred from
-Kyd’s <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>, in which Hieronimo gives a Court play,
-and bids his assistant (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 17) ‘hang up the Title: Our
-scene is Rhodes’. Even if the ‘scene’ formed part of the title in
-such cases, it would only name a generalized locality or localities
-for the play, and would not serve as a clue to the localization of
-individual episodes.<a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span> A retrospect over this discussion of Tudor
-staging, which is mainly Court staging, up to a point well subsequent
-to the establishment of the first regular theatres, seems to offer the
-following results. The earliest interludes, other than revivals of
-Plautus and Terence or elements in spectacular disguisings, limited
-themselves to the setting of the hall in which they were performed,
-with its doors, hearth, and furniture. In such conditions either
-exterior or interior action could be indifferently represented. This
-arrangement, however, soon ceased to satisfy, in the Court at any rate,
-the sixteenth-century love of decoration; and one or more houses were
-introduced into the background, probably on a Renaissance rather than
-a mediaeval suggestion, through which, as well as the undifferentiated
-doors, the personages could come and go. The addition of an elevated
-stage enabled traps to be used (<i>All for Money</i>, <i>Gorboduc</i>,
-<i>Jocasta</i>, <i>Gismond of Salerne</i>, <i>Arraignment of
-Paris</i>); but here, as in the corresponding device of a descent
-from above (<i>Gismond of Salerne</i>, <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>),
-it is the mediaeval grading for heaven and hell which lies behind the
-Renaissance usage. With houses in the background, the normal action
-becomes uniformly exterior. If a visit is paid to a house, conversation
-takes place at its door rather than within. The exceptions are rare and
-tentative, amounting to little more than the provision of a shallow
-recess within a house, from which personages, usually one or two
-only, can speak. This may be a window (<i>Two Italian Gentlemen</i>,
-<i>Promos and Cassandra</i>), a prison (<i>Wit and Wisdom</i>,
-<i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>), a bower
-(<i>Misogonus</i>, <i>Endymion</i>, <i>Dido</i>, <i>Arraignment of
-Paris</i>), a tub (<i>Campaspe</i>), a shrine or tomb (<i>Two Italian
-Gentlemen</i>, <i>Promos and Cassandra</i>), a shop (<i>Thersites</i>,
-<i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, <i>Campaspe</i>, <i>Sapho and Phao</i>),
-a bedchamber (<i>Gismund of Salerne</i>, <i>Tom Tyler</i>, <i>Sapho
-and Phao</i>). Somewhat more difficulty is afforded by episodes
-in which there is a banquet (<i>Mary Magdalene</i>, <i>Dido</i>,
-<i>Cambyses</i>), or a law court (<i>Conflict of Conscience</i>), or
-a king confers with his councillors (<i>Midas</i>, <i>Cambyses</i>).
-These, according to modern notions, require the setting of a hall; but
-my impression is that the Italianized imagination of the Elizabethans
-was content<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span> to accept them as taking place more or less out-of-doors,
-on the steps or in the cortile of a palace, with perhaps some arcaded
-<i>loggia</i>, such as Serlio suggests, in the background, which would
-be employed when the action was supposed to be withdrawn from the
-public market-place or street. And this convention I believe to have
-lasted well into the Shakespearian period.<a id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></p>
-
-<p>The simplicity of this scheme of staging is broken into, when a
-mediaeval survival or the popular instinct for storytelling faces
-the producer with a plot incapable of continuous presentation in
-a single locality. A mere foreshortening of the distance between
-houses conceived as surrounding one and the same open <i>platea</i>,
-or as dispersed in the same wood, is hardly felt as a breach of
-unity. But the principle is endangered, when action within a city is
-diversified by one or more ‘approach’ episodes, in which the edge
-of the stage or the steps leading up to it must stand for a road or
-a wood in the environs (<i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, <i>Sapho and
-Phao</i>, <i>Dido</i>). It is on the point of abandonment, when the
-foreshortening is carried so far that one end of the stage represents
-one locality and the other end another at a distance (<i>Disobedient
-Child</i>, <i>Mary Magdalene</i>, <i>Endymion</i>, <i>Midas</i>,
-<i>Patient Grissell</i>). And it has been abandoned altogether, when
-the same background or a part of it is taken to represent different
-localities in different episodes, and ingenuity has to be taxed to
-find means of informing the audience where any particular bit of
-action is proceeding (<i>Gorboduc</i>, <i>Orestes</i>, <i>Clyomon and
-Clamydes</i>, <i>Common Conditions</i>).<a id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a></p>
-
-<p>After considering the classicist group of comedies and tragedies, I
-suggested that these, taken by themselves, would point to a method of
-staging at the Elizabethan Court not unlike that recommended by Serlio.
-The more comprehensive survey now completed points to some revision
-of that judgement. Two localities at opposite ends of the stage could
-not, obviously, be worked into a continuous architectural façade. They
-call for something more on the lines of the multiple setting of the
-Hôtel de Bourgogne, although the width of the Elizabethan palace halls
-may perhaps have accommodated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span> a longer stage than that of the Hôtel,
-and permitted of a less crude juxtaposition of the houses belonging to
-distinct localities than Mahelot offers us. Any use of perspective, for
-which there is some Elizabethan evidence, was presumably within the
-limits of one locality.<a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a></p>
-
-<p>The indications of the Revels Accounts, scanty as they are, are
-not inconsistent with those yielded by the plays.<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a> If the
-<i>Orestes</i> of 1567–8, as may reasonably be supposed, was
-Pikeryng’s, his ‘howse’ must have been the common structure used
-successively for Mycenae, Crete, and Athens. The ‘Scotland and a gret
-Castell on thothere side’ give us the familiar arrangement for two
-localities. I think that the ‘city’ of the later accounts may stand
-for a group of houses on one street or market-place, and a ‘mountain’
-or ‘wood’ for a setting <i>tout en pastoralle</i>. There were tents
-for <i>A Game of the Cards</i> in 1582–3, as in <i>Jacob and Esau</i>,
-a prison for <i>The Four Sons of Fabius</i> in 1579–80, as in several
-extant plays. I cannot parallel from any early survival the senate
-house for the <i>Quintus Fabius</i> of 1573–4, but this became a
-common type of scene at a later date. These are recessed houses, and
-curtains, quite distinct from the front curtain, if any, were provided
-by the Revels officers to open and close them, as the needs of the
-action required. Smaller structures, to which the accounts refer,
-are also needed by the plays; a well by <i>Endymion</i>, a gibbet
-by <i>Orestes</i>, a tree by <i>The Arraignment of Paris</i>, and
-inferentially by all pastoral, and many other plays. The brief record
-of 1567–8 does not specify the battlement or gated wall, solid enough
-for Clytemnestra to speak ‘ouer y<sup>e</sup> wal’, which was a feature in the
-siege episode of <i>Orestes</i>. Presumably it was part of the ‘howse’,
-which is mentioned, and indeed it would by itself furnish sufficient
-background for the scenes alike at Mycenae, Crete, and Athens. If it
-stood alone, it probably extended along the back of the stage, where
-it would interfere least with the arrays of Orestes and of Aegisthus.
-But in the accounts of 1579–85, the plays, of which there are many,
-with battlements also, as a rule, have cities, and here we must suppose
-some situation for the battlement which will not interfere with the
-city. If it stood for the gate and wall of some other city, it may
-have been reared at an opposite end of the stage. In <i>Dido</i>,
-where the gate of Troy seems to have been shown, although there is
-no action ‘ouer’ it, I can visualize it best as extending across the
-middle of the stage from back to front. With an unchanging setting it
-need not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span> always have occupied the same place. The large number of
-plays between 1579 and 1585 which required battlements, no less than
-fourteen out of twenty-eight in all, is rather striking. No doubt the
-assault motive was beloved in the popular type of drama, of which
-<i>Orestes</i> was an early representative. A castle in a wood, where a
-knight is imprisoned, is assaulted in <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>, and
-the Shakespearian stage never wearied of the device. I have sometimes
-thought that with the Revels officers ‘battlement’ was a technical
-term for any platform provided for action at a higher level than the
-floor of the stage. Certainly a battlement was provided in 1585 for
-an entertainment which was not a play at all, but a performance of
-feats of activities.<a id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a> But as a matter of fact raised action, so
-common in the Shakespearian period, is extremely rare in these early
-plays. With the exceptions of Clytemnestra peering over her wall, and
-the descents from heaven in <i>Gismond of Salerne</i> and <i>Clyomon
-and Clamydes</i>, which may of course have been through the roof
-rather than from a platform, the seventy or so plays just discussed
-contain nothing of the kind. There are, however, two plays still to
-be mentioned, in which use is made of a platform, and one of these
-gives some colour to my suggestion. In 1582 Derby’s men played <i>Love
-and Fortune</i> at Court, and a city and a battlement, together with
-some other structure of canvas, the name of which is left blank, were
-provided. This may reasonably be identified with the <i>Rare Triumphs
-of Love and Fortune</i>, which claims on its title-page of 1589 to have
-been played before the Queen. It is a piece of the romantic type. The
-action is divided between a court and a cave in a wood, which account
-for the city and the unnamed structure of the Revels record. They were
-evidently shown together, at opposite ends of the stage, for action
-passes directly from one to the other. There is no assault scene. But
-there is an induction, in which the gods are in assembly, and Tisiphone
-arises from hell. At the end of it Jupiter says to Venus and Fortune:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Take up your places here, to work your will,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and Vulcan comments:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>They are set sunning like a crow in a gutter.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>They remain as spectators of the play until they ‘shew themselves’ and
-intervene in the <i>dénouement</i>. Evidently they are in a raised
-place or balcony. And this balcony must be the battlement. An exact
-analogy is furnished by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span> the one of Lyly’s plays to which I have not as
-yet referred. This is <i>The Woman in the Moon</i>, Lyly’s only verse
-play, and possibly of later date than his group of productions with the
-Paul’s boys. The first act has the character of an induction. Nature
-and the seven Planets are on the stage and ‘They draw the curtins from
-before Natures shop’. During the other four there is a human action in
-a pastoral setting with a cave, beneath which is a trap, a grove on the
-bank of Enipeus, and a spot near the sea-shore. And throughout one or
-other of the Planets is watching the play from a ‘seate’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-176; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1) above, between which and the stage they
-‘ascend’ and ‘descend’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 138, 230; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 174, 236;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 35; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 3).</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XX<br />
-<span class="subhed">STAGING IN THE THEATRES: SIXTEENTH CENTURY</span></h3></div>
-
-<p class="center sm">[For <i>Bibliographical Note</i>, <i>vide</i> ch. xviii.]</p>
-
-
-<p>In dealing with the groups of plays brought under review in the
-last chapter, the main problem considered has been that of their
-adaptability to the conditions of a Court stage. In the present chapter
-the point of view must be shifted to that of the common theatres.
-Obviously no hard and fast line is to be drawn. There had been regular
-public performances in London since the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign
-or earlier, and there is no reason to suppose that the adult companies
-at least did not draw upon the same repertory both for popular and for
-private representation. But there is not much profit in attempting
-to investigate the methods of staging in the inns, of which we know
-nothing more than that quasi-permanent structures of carpenter’s work
-came in time to supplement the doors, windows, and galleries which
-surrounded the yards; and so far as the published plays go, it is
-fairly apparent that, up to the date of the suppression of Paul’s, the
-Court, or at any rate the private, interest was the dominating one. A
-turning-point may be discerned in 1576, at the establishment, on the
-one hand of the Theatre and the Curtain, and on the other of Farrant’s
-house in the Blackfriars. It is not likely that the Blackfriars
-did more than reproduce the conditions of a courtly hall. But the
-investment of capital in the Theatre and the Curtain was an incident
-in the history of the companies, the economic importance of which has
-already been emphasized in an earlier discussion.<a id="FNanchor_121" href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> It was followed
-by the formation of strong theatrical organizations in the Queen’s men,
-the Admiral’s, Strange’s, the Chamberlain’s. For a time the economic
-changes are masked by the continued vogue of the boy companies; but
-when these dropped out at the beginning of the ’nineties, it is clear
-that the English stage had become a public stage, and that the eyes of
-its controllers were fixed primarily upon the pence gathered by the
-box-holders, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span> only secondarily upon the rewards of the Treasurer of
-the Chamber.</p>
-
-<p>The first play published ‘as it was publikely acted’ is the
-<i>Troublesome Raigne of John</i> of 1591, and henceforward I think
-it is true to say that the staging suggested by the public texts and
-their directions in the main represents the arrangements of the public
-theatres. There is no sudden breach of continuity with the earlier
-period, but that continuity is far greater with the small group of
-popular plays typified by <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i> and <i>Common
-Conditions</i>, than with anything which Lyly and his friends produced
-at Paul’s or the Blackfriars. Again it is necessary to beware of any
-exaggeration of antithesis. There is one Chapel play, <i>The Wars of
-Cyrus</i>, the date of which is obscure, and the setting of which
-certainly falls on the theatre rather than the Court side of any
-border-line. On the other hand, the Queen’s men and their successors
-continued to serve the Court, and one of the published Queen’s plays,
-<i>The Old Wive’s Tale</i>, was evidently staged in a way exactly
-analogous to that adopted by Lyly, or by Peele himself in <i>The
-Arraignment of Paris</i>. It is <i>tout en pastoralle</i>, and about
-the stage are dispersed a hut with a door, at the threshold of which
-presenters sit to watch the main action (71, 128, 1163), a little hill
-or mound with a practicable turf (512, 734, 1034), a cross (173, 521),
-a ‘well of life’ (743, 773), an inn before which a table is set (904,
-916), and a ‘cell’ or ‘studie’ for the conjurer, before which ‘he
-draweth a curten’ (411, 773, 1060).<a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> Of one other play by Peele it
-is difficult to take any account in estimating evidence as to staging.
-This is <i>David and Bethsabe</i>, of which the extant text apparently
-represents an attempt to bring within the compass of a single
-performance a piece or fragments of a piece originally written in three
-‘discourses’. I mention it here, because somewhat undue use has been
-made of its opening direction in speculations as to the configuration
-of the back wall of the public stage.<a id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> It uses the favourite
-assault motive, and has many changes of locality. The title-page
-suggests that in its present form it was meant for public performance.
-But almost anything may lie behind that present form, possibly a
-Chapel play, possibly a University play, or even a neo-miracle in the
-tradition of Bale; and the staging of any particular scene<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span> may contain
-original elements, imperfectly adapted to later conditions.</p>
-
-<p>Counting in <i>The Wars of Cyrus</i> then, and counting out <i>The
-Old Wive’s Tale</i> and <i>David and Bethsabe</i>, there are about
-seventy-four plays which may reasonably be taken to have been presented
-upon common stages, between the establishment of the Queen’s men
-in 1583 and the building of the Globe for the Chamberlain’s men in
-1599 and of the Fortune for the Admiral’s men in 1600. With a few
-exceptions they were also published during the same period, and the
-scenic arrangements implied by their texts and stage-directions may
-therefore be looked upon as those of the sixteenth-century theatres.
-These form the next group for our consideration. Of the seventy-four
-plays, the original production of nine may with certainty or fair
-probability be assigned to the Queen’s men, of two to Sussex’s, five
-to Pembroke’s, fourteen to Strange’s or the Admiral’s or the two in
-combination, thirteen to the Admiral’s after the combination broke up,
-seventeen to the Chamberlain’s, three to Derby’s, one to Oxford’s,
-and one to the Chapel; nine must remained unassigned.<a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> It is far
-less easy to make a guess at the individual theatre whose staging
-each play represents. The migrations of the companies before 1594 in
-the main elude us. Thereafter the Admiral’s were settled at the Rose
-until 1600. The Chamberlain’s may have passed from the Theatre to
-the Curtain about 1597. The habitations of the other later companies
-are very conjectural. Moreover, plays were carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span> from theatre
-to theatre, and even transferred from company to company. <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>, successively presented by Pembroke’s, Strange’s,
-Sussex’s, and the Chamberlain’s, is an extreme case in point. The
-ideal method would have been to study the staging of each theatre
-separately, before coming to any conclusion as to the similarity or
-diversity of their arrangements. This is impracticable, and I propose
-therefore to proceed on the assumption that the stages of the Theatre,
-the Curtain, and the Rose were in their main features similar. For
-this there is an <i>a priori</i> argument in the convenience of what
-Mr. Archer calls a ‘standardisation of effects’, especially at a time
-when the bonds between companies and theatres were so loose.<a id="FNanchor_125" href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a>
-Moreover, the Theatre and the Curtain were built at much the same date,
-and although there was room for development in the art of theatrical
-architecture before the addition of the Rose, I am unable, after a
-careful examination of the relevant plays, to lay my finger upon any
-definite new feature which Henslowe can be supposed to have introduced.
-It is exceedingly provoking that the sixteenth-century repertory of the
-Swan has yielded nothing which can serve as a <i>point de liaison</i>
-between De Witt’s drawing and the mass of extant texts.</p>
-
-<p>It will be well to begin with some analysis of the various types of
-scene which the sixteenth-century managers were called upon to produce;
-and these may with advantage be arranged according to the degree of
-use which they make of a structural background.<a id="FNanchor_126" href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> There are, of
-course, a certain number of scenes which make no use of a background
-at all, and may in a sense be called unlocated scenes&mdash;mere bits of
-conversation which might be carried on between the speakers wherever
-they happened to meet, and which give no indication of where that
-meeting is supposed to be. Perhaps these scenes are not so numerous as
-is sometimes suggested.<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> At any rate it must be borne in mind that
-they were located<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span> to the audience, who saw them against a background,
-although, if they were kept well to the front or side of the stage,
-their relation to that background would be minimized.</p>
-
-<p>A great many scenes are in what may be called open country&mdash;in a
-road, a meadow, a grove, a forest, a desert, a mountain, a sea-shore.
-The personages are travelling, or hunting, or in outlawry, or merely
-taking the air. The background does not generally include a house in
-the stricter sense; but there may be a cottage,<a id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> a hermit’s or
-friar’s cell,<a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> a rustic bower,<a id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> a cave,<a id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> a beacon.<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a>
-Even where there is no evidence, in dialogue or stage-directions,
-for a dwelling, a table or board may be suddenly forthcoming for a
-banquet.<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> There may be a fountain or well,<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> and a few scenes
-seem to imply the presence of a river.<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> But often there is no
-suggestion of any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span> surroundings but rocks or trees, and the references
-to the landscape, which are frequently put in the mouths of speakers,
-have been interpreted as intended to stimulate the imagination of
-spectators before whose eyes no representation, or a very imperfect
-representation, of wilderness or woodland had been placed.<a id="FNanchor_136" href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> But
-it is not likely that this literary artifice was alone relied upon,
-and in some cases practicable trees or rocks are certainly required
-by the action and must have been represented.<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> There are plays
-which are set continuously in the open country throughout, or during a
-succession of scenes, and are thus analogous to Court plays <i>tout en
-pastoralle</i>. But there are others in which the open-country scenes
-are only interspersed among scenes of a different type.<a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></p>
-
-<p>Nothing was more beloved by a popular audience, especially in an
-historical play or one of the <i>Tamburlaine</i> order, than an episode
-of war. A war scene was often only a variety of the open-country scene.
-Armies come and go on the road, and a battle naturally takes place in
-more or less open ground. It may be in a wood, or a tree or river may
-be introduced.<a id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a> Obviously large forces could not be shown on the
-stage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i7h">We shall much disgrace,</div>
- <div>With four or five most vile and ragged foils,</div>
- <div>Right ill disposed in brawl ridiculous,</div>
- <div>The name of Agincourt.<a id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The actual fighting tended to be sketchy and symbolical. There were
-alarums and excursions, much beating of drums and blowing of trumpets.
-But the stage was often only on the outskirts of the main battle.<a id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a>
-It served for a duel of protagonists, or for a flight and pursuit of
-stragglers; and when all was over a triumphant train marched across
-it. There may be a succession of ‘excursions’ of this kind, in which
-the stage may be supposed, if you like, to stand for different parts
-of a battle-field.<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a> Battle scenes have little need for background;
-the inn at St. Albans in <i>Henry VI</i> is an exception due to the
-fulfilment of an oracular prophecy.<a id="FNanchor_143" href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a> A more natural indication of
-<i>milieu</i> is a tent, and battle scenes merge into camp scenes,
-in which the tents are sometimes elaborate pavilions, with doors and
-even locks to the doors. Seats and tables may be available, and the
-action is clearly sometimes within an opened tent.<a id="FNanchor_144" href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> Two opposing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-camps can be concurrently represented, and action may alternate
-between them.<a id="FNanchor_145" href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> Another kind of background is furnished, as in
-<i>Orestes</i>, by the walls of a besieged city. On these walls the
-defenders can appear and parley with the besieging host. They can
-descend and open the gates.<a id="FNanchor_146" href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a> They can shoot, and be shot at from
-below.<a id="FNanchor_147" href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a> The walls can be taken by assault and the defenders can
-leap from them.<a id="FNanchor_148" href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> Such scenes had an unfailing appeal, and are
-sometimes repeated, before different cities, in the same play.<a id="FNanchor_149" href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span></p>
-
-<p>Several scenes, analogous in some ways to those in the open country,
-are set in a garden, an orchard, a park. These also sometimes utilize
-tents.<a id="FNanchor_150" href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a> Alternative shelter may be afforded by an arbour or bower,
-which facilitates eavesdropping.<a id="FNanchor_151" href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span> The presence of trees, banks, or
-herbs is often required or suggested.<a id="FNanchor_152" href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a> As a rule, the neighbourhood
-of a dwelling is implied, and from this personages may issue, or may
-hold discourse with those outside. Juliet’s balcony, overlooking
-Capulet’s orchard, is a typical instance.<a id="FNanchor_153" href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> A banquet may be brought
-out and served in the open.<a id="FNanchor_154" href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></p>
-
-<p>The next great group of scenes consists of those which pass in some
-public spot in a city&mdash;in a street, a market-place, or a churchyard.
-Especially if the play is located in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span> or near London, this may be
-a definite and familiar spot&mdash;Cheapside, Lombard Street, Paul’s
-Churchyard, Westminster.<a id="FNanchor_155" href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> Often the action is self-sufficient and
-the background merely suggestive or decorative. A procession passes;
-a watch is set; friends meet and converse; a stranger asks his way.
-But sometimes a structure comes into use. There is a scaffold for an
-execution.<a id="FNanchor_156" href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> Lists are set, and there must be at least a raised
-place for the judge, and probably a barrier.<a id="FNanchor_157" href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> One street scene
-in <i>Soliman and Perseda</i> is outside a tiltyard; another close
-to an accessible tower.<a id="FNanchor_158" href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> Bills may be set up.<a id="FNanchor_159" href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> In <i>Lord
-Cromwell</i> this is apparently done on a bridge, and twice in this
-play it is difficult to resist the conclusion, already<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span> pointed to in
-certain open-country scenes, that some kind of representation of a
-river-side was feasible.<a id="FNanchor_160" href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> In Rome there are scenes in which the
-dialogue is partly amongst senators in the capitol and partly amongst
-citizens within ear-shot outside.<a id="FNanchor_161" href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> A street may provide a corner,
-again, whence passers-by can be overheard or waylaid.<a id="FNanchor_162" href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> And in it,
-just as well as in a garden, a lover may hold an assignation, or bring
-a serenade before the window of his mistress.<a id="FNanchor_163" href="#Footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> A churchyard,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span> or in
-a Roman play a market-place, may hold a tomb.<a id="FNanchor_164" href="#Footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> Finally one or more
-shops may be visible, and action may take place within them as well as
-before them.<a id="FNanchor_165" href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> Such a shop would, of course, be nothing more than a
-shallow stall, with an open front for the display of wares, which may
-be closed by a shutter or flap from above.<a id="FNanchor_166" href="#Footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> It may also, like the
-inn in <i>Henry VI</i>, have a sign.<a id="FNanchor_167" href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-<p>Where there is a window, there can of course be a door, and street
-scenes very readily become threshold scenes. I do not think that it
-has been fully realized how large a proportion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span> of the action of
-Elizabethan plays passes at the doors of houses; and as a result
-the problem of staging, difficult enough anyhow, has been rendered
-unnecessarily difficult. Here we have probably to thank the editors
-of plays, who have freely interspersed their texts with notes of
-locality, which are not in the original stage-directions, and, with
-eighteenth-century models before them, have tended to assume that
-action at a house is action in some room within that house. The
-playwrights, on the other hand, followed the neo-classic Italian
-tradition, and for them action at a house was most naturally action
-before the door of that house. If a man visited his friend he was
-almost certain to meet him on the doorstep; and here domestic
-discussions, even on matters of delicacy, commonly took place. Here
-too, of course, meals might be served.<a id="FNanchor_168" href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> A clue to this convention
-is afforded by the numerous passages in which a servant or other
-personage is brought on to the stage by a ‘Who’s within?’ or a call
-to ‘Come forth!’ or in which an episode is wound up by some such
-invitation as ‘Let us in!’ No doubt such phrases remain appropriate
-when it is merely a question of transference between an outer room
-and an inner; and no doubt also the point of view of the personages
-is sometimes deflected by that of the actors, to whom ‘in’ means ‘in
-the tiring-room’ and ‘out’ means ‘on the stage’.<a id="FNanchor_169" href="#Footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> But, broadly
-speaking, the frequency of their use points to a corresponding
-frequency of threshold scenes; and, where there is a doubt, they
-should, I think, be interpreted in the light of that economy of
-interior action which was very evident in the mid-sixteenth-century
-plays, and in my opinion continued to prevail after the opening
-of the theatres. The use of a house door was so frequent that the
-stage-directions do not, as a rule, trouble to specify it.<a id="FNanchor_170" href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> Two
-complications are, however, to be observed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span> Sometimes, in a scene
-which employs the ‘Let us in!’ formula, or on other ground looks like
-a threshold scene, we are suddenly pulled up either by a suggestion
-of the host that we are ‘in’ his house or under his roof, or by an
-indication that persons outside are to be brought ‘in’.<a id="FNanchor_171" href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> The first
-answer is, I think, that the threshold is not always a mere doorstep
-opening from the street; it may be something of the nature of a porch
-or even a lobby, and that you may fairly be said to be under a man’s
-roof when you are in his porch.<a id="FNanchor_172" href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> The second is that in some
-threshold scenes the stage was certainly regarded as representing a
-courtyard, shut off from the street or road by an outer gate, through
-which strangers could quite properly be supposed to come ‘in’.<a id="FNanchor_173" href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a>
-Such courtyard scenes are not out of place, even<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span> before an ordinary
-private house; still less, of course, when the house is a castle, and
-in a castle courtyard scene we get very near the scenes with ‘walls’
-already described.<a id="FNanchor_174" href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> Some prison scenes, in the Tower or elsewhere,
-are apparently of this type, although others seem to require interior
-action in a close chamber or even a dungeon.<a id="FNanchor_175" href="#Footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> Threshold scenes may
-also be before the outer gate of a palace or castle, where another
-analogy to assault scenes presents itself;<a id="FNanchor_176" href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> or before a church or
-temple, a friar’s cell, an inn, a stable, or the like.<a id="FNanchor_177" href="#Footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> Nor are
-shop scenes, since a shop may be a mere adjunct to a house, really
-different in kind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span></p>
-
-<p>The threshold theory must not be pushed to a disregard of the clear
-evidence for a certain amount of interior action. We have already come
-across examples of shallow recesses, such as a tent, a cave, a bower, a
-tomb, a shop, a window, within which, or from within which, personages
-can speak. There are also scenes which must be supposed to take
-place within a room. In dealing with these, I propose to distinguish
-between spacious hall scenes and limited chamber scenes. Hall scenes
-are especially appropriate to palaces. Full value should no doubt be
-given to the extension in a palace of a porch to a portico, and to the
-convention, which kings as well as private men follow in Elizabethan
-plays, especially those located in Italian or Oriental surroundings, of
-transacting much important business more or less out-of-doors.<a id="FNanchor_178" href="#Footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> The
-characteristic Roman ‘senate house’, already described, is a case in
-point.<a id="FNanchor_179" href="#Footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> But some scenes must be in a closed presence-chamber.<a id="FNanchor_180" href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a>
-Others are in a formal council room or parliament house. The conception
-of a hall, often with a numerous company, cannot therefore be
-altogether excluded. Nor are halls confined to palaces. They must be
-assumed for law courts.<a id="FNanchor_181" href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> There are scenes in such buildings as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-London Exchange, Leadenhall, the Regent House at Oxford.<a id="FNanchor_182" href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> There
-are scenes in churches or heathen temples and in monasteries.<a id="FNanchor_183" href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a>
-There are certainly also hall scenes in castles or private houses,
-and it is sometimes a matter of taste whether you assume a hall scene
-or a threshold scene.<a id="FNanchor_184" href="#Footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> Certain features of hall scenes may be
-enumerated. Personages can go into, or come forth from, an inner room.
-They can be brought in from without.<a id="FNanchor_185" href="#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> Seats are available, and
-a chair or ‘state’ for a sovereign.<a id="FNanchor_186" href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a> A law court has its ‘bar’.
-Banquets can be served.<a id="FNanchor_187" href="#Footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> Masks<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span> may come dancing in.<a id="FNanchor_188" href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> Even a
-play ‘within a play’ can be presented; that of Bottom and his fellows
-in ‘the great chamber’ of Theseus’ palace is an example.<a id="FNanchor_189" href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a></p>
-
-<p>My final group is formed by the chamber scenes, in which the action
-is clearly regarded as within the limits of an ordinary room. They
-are far from numerous, in proportion to the total number of scenes in
-the seventy-three plays, and in view of their importance in relation
-to staging all for which there is clear evidence must be put upon
-record. Most of them fall under two or three sub-types, which tend to
-repeat themselves. The commonest are perhaps bedchamber scenes.<a id="FNanchor_190" href="#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a>
-These, like prison scenes, which are also frequent,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span> give opportunity
-for tragic episodes of death and sickness.<a id="FNanchor_191" href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span> There are scenes
-in living-rooms, often called ‘studies’.<a id="FNanchor_192" href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span> A lady’s bower,<a id="FNanchor_193" href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a>
-a counting-house,<a id="FNanchor_194" href="#Footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> an inn parlour,<a id="FNanchor_195" href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> a buttery,<a id="FNanchor_196" href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> a
-gallery,<a id="FNanchor_197" href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> may also be represented.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span></p>
-
-<p>This then is the practical problem, which the manager of an Elizabethan
-theatre had to solve&mdash;the provision of settings,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span> not necessarily
-so elaborate or decorative as those of the Court, but at least
-intelligible, for open country scenes, battle and siege scenes, garden
-scenes, street and threshold scenes, hall scenes, chamber scenes. Like
-the Master of the Revels, he made far less use of interior action
-than the modern or even the Restoration producer of plays; but he
-could not altogether avoid it, either on the larger scale of a hall
-scene, in which a considerable number of persons had occasionally to
-be staged for a parliament or a council or the like, or on the smaller
-scale when only a few persons had to be shown in a chamber, or in
-the still shallower enclosure which might stand as part of a mainly
-out-of-doors setting for a cell, a bower, a cave, a tent, a senate
-house, a window, a tomb, a shop, a porch, a shrine, a niche.<a id="FNanchor_198" href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> Even
-more than the Master of the Revels, he had to face the complication
-due to the taste of an English audience for romantic or historical
-drama, and the changes of locality which a narrative theme inevitably
-involved. Not for him, except here and there in a comedy, that blessed
-unity of place upon which the whole dramatic art of the Italian
-neo-classic school had been built up. Our corresponding antiquarian
-problem is to reconstruct, so far as the evidence permits, the
-structural resources which were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span> at the Elizabethan manager’s disposal
-for the accomplishment of his task. As material we have the numerous
-indications in dialogue and stage-directions with which the footnotes
-to this chapter are groaning; we have such contemporary allusions as
-those of Dekker’s <i>Gull’s Hornbook</i>; we have the débris of Philip
-Henslowe’s business memoranda; we have the tradition inherited from the
-earlier Elizabethan period, for all the types of scene usual in the
-theatres had already made their appearance before the theatres came
-into existence; to a much less degree, owing to the interposition of
-the roofed and rectangular Caroline theatre, we have also the tradition
-bequeathed to the Restoration; and as almost sole graphic presentment
-we have that drawing of the Swan theatre by Johannes de Witt, which
-has already claimed a good deal of our consideration, and to which we
-shall have to return from time to time, as a <i>point de repère</i>, in
-the course of the forthcoming discussion. It is peculiarly unfortunate
-that of all the seventy-three plays, now under review, not one can be
-shown to have been performed at the Swan, and that the only relics of
-the productions at that house, the plot of <i>England’s Joy</i> of
-1602 and Middleton’s <i>Chaste Maid in Cheapside</i> of 1611, stand
-at such a distance of time from DeWitt’s drawing as not to exclude
-the hypothesis of an intermediate reconstruction of its stage. One
-other source of information, which throws a sidelight or two upon the
-questions at issue, I will here deal with at more length, because it
-has been a good deal overlooked. The so-called ‘English Wagner Book’
-of 1594, which contains the adventures of Wagner after the death of
-his master Faustus, although based upon a German original, is largely
-an independent work by an author who shows more than one sign of
-familiarity with the English theatre.<a id="FNanchor_199" href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> The most important of these
-is in chapter viii, which is headed ‘The Tragedy of Doctor Faustus
-seene in the Ayre, and acted in the presence of a thousand people of
-Wittenberg. An. 1540’. It describes, not an actual performance, but an
-aerial vision produced by Wagner’s magic arts for the bewilderment of
-an imperial pursuivant. The architecture has therefore, no doubt, its
-elements of fantasy. Nevertheless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span> it is our nearest approach to a pen
-picture of an Elizabethan stage, whereby to eke out that of De Witt’s
-pencil.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘They might distinctly perceiue a goodlye Stage to be reard
-(shining to sight like the bright burnish golde) uppon many a
-faire Pillar of clearest Cristall, whose feete rested uppon the
-Arch of the broad Raynebow, therein was the high Throne wherein
-the King should sit, and that prowdly placed with two and twenty
-degrees to the top, and round about curious wrought chaires for
-diverse other Potentates, there might you see the ground-worke
-at the one end of the Stage whereout the personated divels
-should enter in their fiery ornaments, made like the broad wide
-mouth of an huge Dragon ... the teeth of this Hels-mouth far
-out stretching.... At the other end in opposition was seene the
-place where in the bloudlesse skirmishes are so often perfourmed
-on the Stage, the Wals ... of ... Iron attempered with the most
-firme steele ... environed with high and stately Turrets of the
-like metall and beautye, and hereat many in-gates and out-gates:
-out of each side lay the bended Ordinaunces, showing at their
-wide hollowes the crueltye of death: out of sundry loopes many
-large Banners and Streamers were pendant, brieflye nothing was
-there wanting that might make it a faire Castle. There might you
-see to be short the Gibbet, the Posts, the Ladders, the tiring-house,
-there everything which in the like houses either use or
-necessity makes common. Now above all was there the gay Clowdes
-<i>Vsque quaque</i> adorned with the heavenly firmament, and
-often spotted with golden teares which men callen Stars. There
-was lively portrayed the whole Imperiall Army of the faire
-heavenly inhabitaunts.... This excellent faire Theator erected,
-immediatly after the third sound of the Trumpets, there entreth
-in the Prologue attired in a blacke vesture, and making his
-three obeysances, began to shew the argument of that Scenicall
-Tragedy, but because it was so far off they could not understand
-the wordes, and having thrice bowed himselfe to the high Throne,
-presently vanished.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The action of the play is then described. Devils issue from hell mouth
-and besiege the castle. Faustus appears on the battlements and defies
-them. Angels descend from heaven to the tower and are dismissed by
-Faustus. The devils assault the castle, capture Faustus and raze the
-tower. The great devil and all the imperial rulers of hell occupy the
-throne and chairs and dispute with Faustus. Finally,</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Faustus ... leapt down headlong of the stage, the whole company
-immediatly vanishing, but the stage with a most monstrous
-thundering crack followed Faustus hastely, the people verily
-thinking that they would have fallen uppon them ran all away.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The three salient features of the Swan stage, as depicted by De Witt,
-are, firstly the two pairs of folding doors in the back wall; secondly,
-the ‘heavens’ supported on posts, which give the effect of a division
-of the space into a covered rear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span> and an uncovered front; and thirdly,
-the gallery or row of boxes, which occupies the upper part of the back
-wall. Each of these lends itself to a good deal of comment. The two
-doors find abundant confirmation from numerous stage-directions, which
-lead up to the favourite dramatic device of bringing in personages from
-different points to meet in the centre of the stage. The formula which
-agrees most closely with the drawing is that which directs entrance
-‘at one door’ and ‘at the other door’, and is of very common use.<a id="FNanchor_200" href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a>
-But there are a great many variants, which are used, as for example in
-the plot of <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i>, with such indifference as to
-suggest that no variation of structure is necessarily involved.<a id="FNanchor_201" href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a>
-Thus an equally common antithesis is that between ‘one door’ and, not
-‘the other door’, but ‘an other door’.<a id="FNanchor_202" href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> Other analogous expressions
-are ‘one way’ and ‘at an other door’, ‘one way’ and ‘another way’,
-‘at two sundry doors’, ‘at diverse doors’, ‘two ways’, ‘met by’;<a id="FNanchor_203" href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a>
-or again, ‘at several doors’, ‘several ways’, ‘severally’.<a id="FNanchor_204" href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> There
-is a divergence, however, from De Witt’s indications, when we come
-upon terminology which suggests that more than two doors may have
-been available for entrances, a possibility with which the references
-to ‘one door’ and ‘an other’ are themselves not inconsistent. Thus
-in one of the <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i> variants, after other
-personages have entered ‘seuerall waies’, we find ‘Gorboduk entreing
-in the midst between’. There are other examples of triple entrance in
-<i>Fair Em</i>, in <i>Patient Grissell</i>, and in <i>The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span> Trial of
-Chivalry</i>, although it is not until the seventeenth century that
-three doors are in so many words enumerated.<a id="FNanchor_205" href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> We get entrance ‘at
-every door’, however, in <i>The Downfall of Robin Hood</i>, and this,
-with other more disputable phrases, might perhaps be pressed into an
-argument that even three points of entrance did not exhaust the limits
-of practicability.<a id="FNanchor_206" href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> It should be added that, while doors are most
-commonly indicated as the avenue of entrance, this is not always the
-case. Sometimes personages are said to enter from one or other ‘end’,
-or ‘side’, or ‘part’ of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_207" href="#Footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> I take it that the three terms
-have the same meaning, and that the ‘end’ of a stage wider than its
-depth is what we should call its ‘side’. A few minor points about doors
-may be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span> noted, and the discussion of a difficulty may be deferred.<a id="FNanchor_208" href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a>
-Some entrances were of considerable size; an animal could be ridden on
-and off.<a id="FNanchor_209" href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> There were practicable and fairly solid doors; in <i>A
-Knack to Know an Honest Man</i>, a door is taken off its hinges.<a id="FNanchor_210" href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a>
-And as the doors give admittance indifferently to hall scenes and
-to out-of-door scenes, it is obvious that the term, as used in the
-stage-directions, often indicates a part of the theatrical structure
-rather than a feature properly belonging to a garden or woodland
-background.<a id="FNanchor_211" href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></p>
-
-<p>Some observations upon the heavens have already been made in an earlier
-chapter.<a id="FNanchor_212" href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> I feel little doubt that, while the supporting posts
-had primarily a structural object, and probably formed some obstacle
-to the free vision of the spectators, they were occasionally worked
-by the ingenuity of the dramatists and actors into the ‘business’ of
-the plays. The hints for such business are not very numerous, but
-they are sufficient to confirm the view that the Swan was not the
-only sixteenth-century theatre in which the posts existed. Thus in a
-street scene of <i>Englishmen for my Money</i> and in an open country
-scene of <i>Two Angry Women of Abingdon</i> we get episodes in which
-personages groping in the darkness stumble up against posts, and the
-second of these is particularly illuminating, because the victim
-utters a malediction upon the carpenter who set the post up, which a
-carpenter may have done upon the stage, but certainly did not do in
-a coney burrow.<a id="FNanchor_213" href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> In <i>Englishmen for my Money</i> the posts are
-taken for maypoles, and there are two of them. There<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span> are two of them
-also in <i>Three Lords and Three Ladies of London</i>, a post and ‘the
-contrarie post’, and to one of them a character is bound, just as
-Kempe tells us that pickpockets taken in a theatre were bound.<a id="FNanchor_214" href="#Footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a>
-The binding to a post occurs also in <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>.<a id="FNanchor_215" href="#Footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a>
-In <i>James IV</i> and in <i>Lord Cromwell</i> bills are set up on the
-stage, and for this purpose the posts would conveniently serve.<a id="FNanchor_216" href="#Footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a>
-All these are out-of-door scenes, but there was a post in the middle
-of a warehouse in <i>Every Man In his Humour</i>, and Miles sits down
-by a post during one of the scenes in the conjurer’s cell in <i>Bacon
-and Bungay</i>.<a id="FNanchor_217" href="#Footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> I am not oblivious of the fact that there were
-doubtless other structural posts on the stage besides those of the
-heavens, but I do not see how they can have been so conspicuous or so
-well adapted to serve in the action.<a id="FNanchor_218" href="#Footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> Posts may have supported the
-gallery, but I find it difficult to visualize the back of the stage
-without supposing these to have been veiled by the hangings. But two
-of them may have become visible when the hangings were drawn, or some
-porch-like projection from the back wall may have had its posts, and
-one of these may be in question, at any rate in the indoor scenes.</p>
-
-<p>The roof of the heavens was presumably used to facilitate certain
-spectacular effects, the tradition of which the public theatres
-inherited from the miracle-plays and the Court stage.<a id="FNanchor_219" href="#Footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> Startling
-atmospheric phenomena were not infrequently represented.<a id="FNanchor_220" href="#Footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> These
-came most naturally in out-of-door scenes, but I have noted one example
-in a scene which on general grounds one would classify as a hall
-scene.<a id="FNanchor_221" href="#Footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span> illusion may not have gone much beyond a painted cloth
-drawn under the roof of the heavens.<a id="FNanchor_222" href="#Footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> More elaborate machinery may
-have been entailed by aerial ascents and descents, which were also
-not uncommon. Many Elizabethan actors were half acrobats, and could
-no doubt fly upon a wire; but there is also clear evidence for the
-use of a chair let down from above.<a id="FNanchor_223" href="#Footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> And was the arrangement of
-cords and pulleys required for this purpose also that by which the
-chair of state, which figures in so many hall scenes and even a few
-out-of-door scenes, was put into position?<a id="FNanchor_224" href="#Footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> Henslowe had a throne
-made in the heavens of the Rose in 1595.<a id="FNanchor_225" href="#Footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> Jonson sneered at the
-jubilation of boyhood over the descent of the creaking chair.<a id="FNanchor_226" href="#Footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> The
-device would lighten the labours of the tire-man, for a state would be
-an awkward thing to carry on and off. It would avoid the presence of
-a large incongruous property on the stage during action to which it
-was inappropriate. And it would often serve as a convenient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span> signal
-for the beginning or ending of a hall scene. But to this aspect of the
-matter I must return.<a id="FNanchor_227" href="#Footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a> Whatever the machinery, it must have been
-worked in some way from the upper part of the tire-house; possibly from
-the somewhat obscure third floor, which De Witt’s drawing leaves to
-conjecture; possibly from the superstructure known as the hut, if that
-really stood further forward than De Witt’s drawing suggests. Perhaps
-the late reference to Jove leaning on his elbows in the garret, or
-employed to make squibs and crackers to grace the play, rather points
-to the former hypothesis.<a id="FNanchor_228" href="#Footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> In favour of the latter, for what it
-is worth, is the description, also late, of a theatre set up by the
-English actors under John Spencer at Regensburg in 1613. This had a
-lower stage for music, over that a main stage thirty feet high with a
-roof supported by six great pillars, and under the roof a quadrangular
-aperture, through which beautiful effects were contrived.<a id="FNanchor_229" href="#Footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a></p>
-
-<p>There has been a general abandonment of the hypothesis, which found
-favour when De Witt’s drawing was first discovered, of a division of
-the stage into an inner and an outer part by a ‘traverse’ curtain
-running between the two posts, perhaps supplemented by two other
-curtains running from the posts back to the tire-house.<a id="FNanchor_230" href="#Footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> Certainly
-I do not wish to revive it. Any such arrangement would be inconsistent
-with the use of the tire-house doors and gallery in out-of-door scenes;
-for, on the hypothesis, these were played with the traverse closed.
-And it would entail a serious interference with the vision of such
-scenes by spectators sitting far round in the galleries or ‘above the
-stage’. It does not, of course, follow that no use at all was made
-of curtains upon the stage. It is true that no hangings of any kind
-are shown by De Witt. Either there were none visible when he drew the
-Swan in 1596, or, if they were visible, he failed to draw them; it is
-impossible to say which. We know that even the Swan was not altogether
-undraped in 1602, for during the riot which followed the ‘cousening
-prancke’ of <i>England’s Joy</i> in that year the audience are said
-to have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span> ‘revenged themselves upon the hangings, curtains, chairs,
-stooles, walles, and whatsoever came in their way’.<a id="FNanchor_231" href="#Footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> It is not,
-indeed, stated that these hangings and curtains were upon the stage,
-and possibly, although not very probably, they may have been in the
-auditorium. Apart, however, from the Swan, there is abundant evidence
-for the use of some kind of stage hangings in the public theatres of
-the sixteenth century generally. To the references in dialogue and
-stage-directions quoted in the footnotes to this chapter may be added
-the testimony of Florio in 1598, of Ben Jonson in 1601, of Heywood in
-1608, and of Flecknoe after the Restoration.<a id="FNanchor_232" href="#Footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> We can go further,
-and point to several passages which attest a well-defined practice,
-clearly going back to the sixteenth century, of using black hangings
-for the special purpose of providing an appropriate setting for a
-tragedy.<a id="FNanchor_233" href="#Footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> Where then were these hangings? For a front<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span> curtain,
-on the public stage, as distinct from the Court stage, there is no
-evidence whatever, and the precautions taken to remove dead bodies
-in the course of action enable us quite safely to leave it out of
-account.<a id="FNanchor_234" href="#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> There may have been hangings of a decorative kind in
-various places, of course; round the base of the stage, for example,
-or dependent, as Malone thought, from the heavens. But the only place
-where we can be sure that there were hangings was what Heywood calls
-the ‘fore-front’ of the stage, by which it seems clear from Florio that
-he means the fore-front of the tiring-house, which was at the same time
-the back wall of the stage. It is, I believe, exclusively to hangings
-in this region that our stage-directions refer. Their terminology is
-not quite uniform. ‘Traverse’ I do not find in a sixteenth-century
-public play.<a id="FNanchor_235" href="#Footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> By far the most common term is ‘curtain’, but I do
-not think that there is any technical difference between ‘curtain’
-and the not infrequent ‘arras’ or the unique ‘veil’ of <i>The Death
-of Robin Hood</i>.<a id="FNanchor_236" href="#Footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> ‘Arras’ is the ordinary Elizabethan name for
-a hanging<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span> of tapestry used as a wall decoration, and often projected
-from a frame so as to leave a narrow space, valuable to eavesdroppers
-and other persons in need of seclusion, between itself and the wall.
-The stage arras serves precisely this purpose as a background to
-interior scenes. Here stand the murderers in <i>King John</i>; here
-Falstaff goes to sleep in <i>1 Henry IV</i>; and here too he proposes
-to ‘ensconce’ himself, in order to avoid being confronted with both his
-ladyloves together in <i>The Merry Wives</i>.<a id="FNanchor_237" href="#Footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a></p>
-
-<p>The stage-directions, however, make it quite clear that the curtains
-were not merely an immovable decoration of the back wall. They could
-be ‘opened’ and ‘shut’ or ‘closed’; and either operation could
-indifferently be expressed by the term ‘drawn’. This drawing was
-presumably effected by sliding the curtain laterally along a straight
-rod to which it was affixed by rings sewn on to its upper edge; there
-is no sign of any rise or fall of the curtain. The operator may be
-an actor upon the stage; in <i>Bacon and Bungay</i> Friar Bacon
-draws the curtains ‘with a white sticke’. He may be the speaker of
-a prologue.<a id="FNanchor_238" href="#Footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> Whether the ‘servitours’ of a theatre ever came
-upon the stage, undisguised, to draw the curtains, I am uncertain;
-but obviously it would be quite easy to work the transformation from
-behind, by a cord and pulley, without any visible intervention.<a id="FNanchor_239" href="#Footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a>
-The object of the drawing is to introduce interior action, either in
-a mere recess, or in a larger space, such as a chamber; and this, not
-only where curtains are dramatically appropriate, as within a house,
-or at the door of a tent, but also where they are less so, as before a
-cave or a forest bower. One may further accept the term ‘discovered’
-as indicating the unveiling of an interior by the play of a curtain,
-even when the curtain is not specifically mentioned;<a id="FNanchor_240" href="#Footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> and may
-recognize that the stage-directions sometimes use ‘Enter’ and ‘Exit’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-in a loose sense of persons, who do not actually move in or out, but
-are ‘discovered’, or covered, by a curtain.<a id="FNanchor_241" href="#Footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a></p>
-
-<p>Of what nature, then, was the space so disclosed? There was ordinarily,
-as already stated, a narrow space behind an arras; and if the gallery
-above the stage jutted forward, or had, as the Swan drawing perhaps
-indicates, a projecting weather-board, this might be widened into a
-six- or seven-foot corridor, still in front of the back wall.<a id="FNanchor_242" href="#Footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a>
-Such a corridor would, however, hardly give the effect of a chamber,
-although it might that of a portico. Nor would it be adequate in
-size to hold all the scenes which it is natural to class as chamber
-scenes; such, for example, as that in <i>Tamburlaine</i>, where no
-less than ten persons are discovered grouped around Zenocrate’s
-bed.<a id="FNanchor_243" href="#Footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> The stage-directions themselves do not help us much; that
-in <i>Alphonsus</i> alone names ‘the place behind the stage’, and as
-this is only required to contain the head of Mahomet, a corridor, in
-this particular scene, would have sufficed.<a id="FNanchor_244" href="#Footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> There is, however,
-no reason why the opening curtains should not have revealed a quite
-considerable aperture in the back wall, and an alcove or recess of
-quite considerable size lying behind this aperture. With a 43-foot
-stage, as at the Fortune, and doors placed rather nearer the ends of
-it than De Witt shows them, it would be possible to get a 15-foot
-aperture, and still leave room for the drawn curtains to hang between
-the aperture and the doors. Allow 3 feet for the strip of stage between
-arras and wall, and a back-run of 10 feet behind the wall, and you
-get an adequate chamber of 15 feet × 13 feet. My actual measurements
-are, of course, merely illustrative. There would be advantages, as
-regards vision, in not making the alcove too deep. The height, if
-the gallery over the stage ran in a line with the middle gallery for
-spectators, would be about 8 feet or 9 feet; rather low, I admit.<a id="FNanchor_245" href="#Footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a>
-A critic may point out that behind the back wall of the outer stage
-lay the tire-house, and that the 14-foot deep framework of a theatre
-no greater in dimensions than the Fortune does not leave room for an
-inner stage in addition to the tire-house. I think the answer is that
-the ‘place behind the stage’ was in fact nothing but an <i>enclave</i>
-within the tire-house, that its walls consisted of nothing but screens
-covered with some more arras, that these were only put up when they
-were needed for some particular scene, and that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span> when they were up,
-although they extended to nearly the full depth of the tire-house, they
-did not occupy its full width, but left room on either side for the
-actors to crowd into, and for the stairs leading to the upper floors.
-When no interior scene had to be set, there was nothing between the
-tire-house and the outer stage but the curtains; and this renders quite
-intelligible the references quoted in an earlier chapter to actors
-peeping through a curtain at the audience, and to the audience ‘banding
-tile and pear’ against the curtains, to allure the actors forth.<a id="FNanchor_246" href="#Footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a> I
-do not think it is necessary to assume that there was a third pair of
-folding doors permanently fixed in the aperture.<a id="FNanchor_247" href="#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> They would be big
-and clumsy, although no doubt they would help to keep out noise. In any
-case, there is not much evidence on the point. If Tarlton’s head was
-seen ‘the Tire-House doore and tapistrie betweene’, he may very well
-have gone to the end of the narrow passage behind the arras, and looked
-out where that was broken by one of the side-doors. No doubt, however,
-the aperture is the third place of entrance ‘in the midst’, which the
-stage-directions or action of some plays require, and which, as such,
-came to be regarded as a third door.<a id="FNanchor_248" href="#Footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a></p>
-
- <div class="figcenter" id="i_084">
- <img
- class="p2"
- src="images/i_084.jpg"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 center">A. SQUARE THEATRE (Proportions of Fortune)</p>
- </div>
-
-<p>I conceive, therefore, of the alcove as a space which the tire-man,
-behind the curtains and in close proximity to the screens and
-properties stored in the tire-house, can arrange as he likes, without
-any interruption to continuous action proceeding on the outer stage. He
-can put up a house-front with a door, and if needed, a porch. He can
-put up a shop, or for that matter, a couple of adjacent shops. He can
-put up the arched gates of a city or castle. These are comparatively
-shallow structures. But he can also take advantage of the whole depth
-of the space, and arrange a chamber, a cave, or a bower, furnishing it
-as he pleases, and adding doors at the back or side, or a back window,
-which would enable him to give more light, even if only borrowed light
-from the tire-house, to an interior scene.<a id="FNanchor_249" href="#Footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> One point, however,
-is rather puzzling. There are some scenes which imply entrance to a
-chamber, not from behind, but from the open stage in front, and by
-a visible door which can be knocked at or locked. Thus in <i>Romeo
-and Juliet</i>, of which all the staging is rather difficult on any
-hypothesis, the Friar observes Juliet coming towards his cell, and
-after they have discoursed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span> Juliet bids him shut the door. Here, no
-doubt, the Friar may have looked out and seen Juliet through a back
-window, and she may have entered by a back door. But in an earlier
-scene, where we get the stage-direction ‘Enter Nurse and knockes’, and
-the knocking is repeated until the Nurse is admitted to the cell, we
-are, I think, bound to suppose that the entry is in front, in the sight
-of the audience, and antecedent to the knocking.<a id="FNanchor_250" href="#Footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> Perhaps an even
-clearer case is in <i>Captain Thomas Stukeley</i>, where Stukeley’s
-chamber in the Temple is certainly approached from the open stage by
-a door at which Stukeley’s father knocks, and which is unlocked and
-locked again.<a id="FNanchor_251" href="#Footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a> Yet how can a door be inserted in that side of a
-chamber which is open to the stage and the audience. Possibly it was a
-very conventional door set across the narrow space between the arras
-and the back wall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span> of the main stage, at the corner of the aperture and
-at right angles to its plane. The accompanying diagrams will perhaps
-make my notion of the inner stage clearer.</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter" id="i_085">
- <img
- class="p2"
- src="images/i_085.jpg"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 center">B. OCTAGONAL THEATRE (e.g. Globe; size of Fortune)</p>
- </div>
-
-<p>It has been suggested, by me as well as by others, that the inner stage
-may have been raised by a step or two above the outer stage.<a id="FNanchor_252" href="#Footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> On
-reflection, I now think this unlikely. There would be none too much
-height to spare, at any rate if the height of the alcove was determined
-by that of the spectators’ galleries. The only stage-direction which
-suggests any such arrangement is in the <i>Death of Robin Hood</i>,
-where the King sits in a chair behind the curtains, and the Queen
-ascends to him and descends again.<a id="FNanchor_253" href="#Footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> But even if the tire-man put
-up an exalted seat in this case, there need have been no permanent
-elevation. The missing woodcut of the Anglo-German stage at Frankfort
-in 1597 is said to have shown a raised inner stage;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span> but until it is
-recovered, it is difficult to estimate its value as testimony upon the
-structure of the London theatres.<a id="FNanchor_254" href="#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a></p>
-
-<p>It must not, of course, be taken for granted that every curtain,
-referred to in text or stage-directions as ‘drawn’, was necessarily a
-back curtain disclosing an alcove. In some, although not all, of the
-bedchamber scenes the indications do not of themselves exclude the
-hypothesis of a bed standing on the open stage and the revealing of the
-occupant by the mere drawing of bed-curtains.<a id="FNanchor_255" href="#Footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> I do not think there
-is any certain example of such an arrangement in a sixteenth-century
-play.<a id="FNanchor_256" href="#Footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> But tents also could be closed by curtains, and the plot of
-<i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i> requires Henry VI to lie asleep in ‘A tent
-being plast one the stage’, while dumb-shows enter ‘at one dore’ and
-‘at an other dore’.<a id="FNanchor_257" href="#Footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> However it may have been with other theatres,
-we cannot, on the evidence before us, assert that the Swan had an
-alcove at all; and if it had not, it was probably driven to provide for
-chamber scenes by means of some curtained structure on the stage itself.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, it must not be supposed that every case, in which
-a back curtain was drawn, will have found record in the printed book
-of the play concerned; and when the existence of an alcove has once
-been established, it becomes legitimate to infer its use for various
-chamber and analogous scenes, to the presentation of which it would
-have been well adapted. But this inference, again, must not be twisted
-into a theory that the stage in front of the back wall served only for
-out-of-door scenes, and that all interior action was housed, wholly
-or in part, in the alcove. This is, I think, demonstrably untrue, as
-regards the large group of indoor scenes which I have called hall
-scenes. In the first place, the alcove would not have been spacious
-enough to be of any value for a great many of the hall scenes. You
-could not stage spectacular action, such as that of a coronation, a
-sitting of parliament, or a trial at the bar, in a box of 15 by 13 feet
-and only 9 feet high. A group of even so many as ten persons clustered
-round a bed is quite another thing. I admit the device of the so-called
-‘split’ scene, by which action<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span> beginning in the alcove is gradually
-extended so as to take the whole of the stage into its ambit.<a id="FNanchor_258" href="#Footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a>
-This might perhaps serve for a court of justice, with the judges in
-the alcove, the ‘bar’ drawn across the aperture, and the prisoners
-brought in before it. A scene in which the arras is drawn in <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i> points to such a setting.<a id="FNanchor_259" href="#Footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a> But a scene in which a
-royal ‘state’ is the dominating feature would be singularly ineffective
-if the state were wedged in under the low roof of the alcove; and if
-I am right in thinking that the ‘state’ normally creaked down into
-its position from the heavens, it would clearly land, not within the
-alcove, but upon the open stage in front of it. Indeed, if it could
-be placed into position behind a curtain, there would be no reason
-for bringing it from the heavens at all. Then, again, hall scenes
-are regularly served by two or more doors, which one certainly would
-not suppose from the stage-directions to be any other than the doors
-similarly used to approach out-of-door scenes; and they frequently
-end with injunctions to ‘come in’, which would be superfluous if the
-personages on the stage could be withdrawn from sight by the closing
-of the curtain. Occasionally, moreover, the gallery over the stage
-comes into play in a hall scene, in a way which would not be possible
-if the personages were disposed in the alcove, over which, of course,
-this gallery projected.<a id="FNanchor_260" href="#Footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a> Some of these considerations tell more
-directly against the exclusive use of the alcove for hall scenes, than
-against its use in combination with the outer stage; and this combined
-use, where suitable, I am quite prepared to allow. But ordinarily, I
-think, the hall scenes were wholly on the outer stage; and this must
-necessarily have been the case where two rooms were employed, of which
-one opens out behind the other.<a id="FNanchor_261" href="#Footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a></p>
-
-<p>It may be said that the main object of the curtain is to allow of
-the furniture and decorations of a ‘set’ scene, which is usually an
-interior scene, being put in place behind it, without any interruption
-to the continuous progress of an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span> act; and that hall scenes cannot
-be set properly, unless they also are behind the curtain line. I do
-not think that there is much in this argument. A hall scene does
-not require so much setting as a chamber scene. It is sufficiently
-furnished, at any rate over the greater part of its area, with the
-state and such lesser seats as can very readily be carried on during
-the opening speeches or during the procession by which the action is
-often introduced. A bar can be set up, or a banquet spread, or a sick
-man brought in on his chair, as part of the action itself.<a id="FNanchor_262" href="#Footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> Even
-an out-of-door scene, such as an execution or a duel in the lists,
-sometimes demands a similar adjustment;<a id="FNanchor_263" href="#Footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> it need no more give pause
-than the analogous devices entailed by the removal of dead bodies from
-where they have fallen.</p>
-
-<p>I must not be taken to give any countenance to the doctrine that
-properties, incongruous to the particular scene that was being played,
-were allowed to stand on the public Elizabethan stage, and that the
-audience, actually or through a convention, was not disturbed by
-them.<a id="FNanchor_264" href="#Footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a> This doctrine appears to me to rest upon misunderstandings
-of the evidence produced in its support, and in particular upon a
-failure to distinguish between the transitional methods of setting
-employed by Lyly and his clan, and those of the permanent theatres
-with which we are now concerned. The former certainly permitted of
-incongruities in the sense that, as the neo-classic stage strove to
-adapt itself to a romantic subject-matter, separate localities, with
-inconsistent properties, came to be set at one and the same time in
-different regions of the stage. But the system proved inadequate to
-the needs of romanticism, as popular audiences understood it; and,
-apart from some apparent rejuvenescence in the ‘private’ houses,
-with which I must deal later, it gave way, about the time of the
-building of the permanent theatres, to the alternative system, by
-which different localities were represented, not synchronously but
-successively, and each in its turn had full occupation of the whole
-field of the stage. This full occupation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span> was not, I venture to think,
-qualified by the presence in any scene of a property inappropriate
-to that scene, but retained there because it had been used for some
-previous, or was to be used for some coming, scene. I do not mean to
-say that some colourless or insignificant property, such as a bench,
-may not have served, without being moved, first in an indoors and then
-in an out-of-doors scene. But that the management of the Theatre or
-the Rose was so bankrupt in ingenuity that the audience had to watch
-a coronation through a fringe of trees or to pretend unconsciousness
-while the strayed lovers in a forest dodged each other round the
-corners of a derelict ‘state’, I, for one, see no adequate reason to
-believe. It is chiefly the state and the trees which have caused the
-trouble. But, after all, a state which has creaked down can creak up
-again, just as a banquet or a gallows which has been carried on can be
-carried off. Trees are perhaps a little more difficult. A procession
-of porters, each with a tree in his arms, would be a legitimate
-subject for the raillery of <i>The Admirable Bashville</i>. A special
-back curtain painted <i>en pastoralle</i> would hardly be adequate,
-even if there were any evidence for changes of curtain; trees were
-certainly sometimes practicable and therefore quasi-solid.<a id="FNanchor_265" href="#Footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> The
-alcove, filled with shrubs, would by itself give the illusion of a
-greenhouse rather than a forest; moreover, the alcove was available in
-forest scenes to serve as a rustic bower or cottage.<a id="FNanchor_266" href="#Footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> Probably the
-number of trees dispersed over the body of the stage was not great;
-they were a symbolical rather than a realistic setting. On the whole,
-I am inclined to think that, at need, trees ascended and descended
-through traps; and that this is not a mere conjecture is suggested by
-a few cases in which the ascent and descent, being part of a conjuring
-action, are recorded in the stage-directions.<a id="FNanchor_267" href="#Footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> One of these shows
-that the traps would carry not merely a tree but an arbour. The traps
-had, of course, other functions. Through them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span> apparitions arose and
-sank;<a id="FNanchor_268" href="#Footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> Jonah was spewed up from the whale’s belly;<a id="FNanchor_269" href="#Footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> and the
-old device of hell-mouth still kept alive a mediaeval tradition.<a id="FNanchor_270" href="#Footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a>
-Only primitive hydraulics would have been required to make a fountain
-flow or a fog arise;<a id="FNanchor_271" href="#Footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> although it may perhaps be supposed that
-the episodes, in which personages pass to and from boats or fling
-themselves into a river, were performed upon the extreme edge of the
-stage rather than over a trap.<a id="FNanchor_272" href="#Footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a> I do not find any clear case, in
-the public sixteenth-century theatres, of the convention apparently
-traceable in Lyly and Whetstone, by which the extreme edge of the
-stage is used for ‘approach’ scenes, as when a traveller arrives from
-afar, or when some episode has to be represented in the environs of a
-city which furnishes the principal setting.<a id="FNanchor_273" href="#Footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> And I think it would
-certainly be wrong to regard the main stage, apart from the alcove,
-as divided into an inner area covered by the heavens and an outer
-area, not so covered and appropriate to open-country scenes. Indeed,
-the notion that any substantial section of the stage appeared to the
-audience not to lie under the heavens is in my view an illusion due
-to the unskilful draughtsmanship of De Witt or his copyist. Skyey
-phenomena belong most naturally to open-country scenes, nor are these
-wholly debarred from the use of the state; and the machinery employed
-in both cases seems to imply the existence of a superincumbent
-heavens.<a id="FNanchor_274" href="#Footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a></p>
-
-<p>I come finally to the interesting question of the gallery above the
-stage. This, in the Swan drawing, may project very slightly over the
-scenic wall, and is divided by short vertical columns into six small
-compartments, in each of which one or two occupants are sitting. They
-might, of course, be personages in the play; but, if so, they seem
-curiously dissociated from the action. They might be musicians, but
-they appear to include women, and there is no clear sign of musical
-instruments. On the whole, they have the air of spectators.<a id="FNanchor_275" href="#Footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a>
-However this may be, let us recall<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span> what has already been established
-in an earlier chapter, that there is conclusive evidence for some use
-of the space above the stage for spectators, at least until the end
-of the sixteenth century, and for some use of it as a music-room, at
-least during the seventeenth century.<a id="FNanchor_276" href="#Footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a> With these uses we have to
-reconcile the equally clear indications that this region, or some part
-of it, was available when needed, throughout the whole of the period
-under our consideration, as a field for dramatic action. For the moment
-we are only concerned with the sixteenth century. A glance back over my
-footnotes will show many examples in which action is said to be ‘above’
-or ‘aloft’, or is accompanied by the ascent or descent of personages
-from or to the level of the main stage. This interplay of different
-levels is indeed the outstanding characteristic of the Elizabethan
-public theatre, as compared with the other systems of stage-presentment
-to which it stands in relation. There are mediaeval analogies, no
-doubt, and one would not wish to assert categorically that no use was
-ever made of a balcony or a house-roof in a Greek or Roman or Italian
-setting. But, broadly speaking, the classical and neo-classical
-stage-tradition, apart from theophanies, is one of action on a single
-level. Even in the Elizabethan Court drama, the platform comes in
-late and rarely, although the constant references to ‘battlements’
-in the Revels Accounts enable us to infer that, by the time when the
-public theatres came to be built, the case of <i>Orestes</i> was not
-an isolated one. Battlements, whatever the extension which the Revels
-officers came to give to the term, were primarily for the beloved
-siege scenes, and to the way in which siege scenes were treated in the
-theatres I must revert. But from two plays, <i>The Rare Triumphs of
-Love and Fortune</i> and <i>The Woman in the Moon</i>, both of which
-probably represent a late development of the Court drama, we may gather
-at least one other definite function of the platform, as a point of
-vantage from which presenters, in both cases of a divine type, may
-sit ‘sunning like a crow in a gutter’, and watch the evolution of
-their puppets on the stage below.<a id="FNanchor_277" href="#Footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> This disposition of presenters
-‘aloft’ finds more than one parallel in the public theatres. The divine
-element is retained in <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, where Henslowe’s
-plot gives us, as part of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span> direction for a dumb-show, ‘Enter aboue
-Nemesis’.<a id="FNanchor_278" href="#Footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> There are traces of it also in <i>James IV</i> and in
-<i>A Looking Glass for London and England</i>. In <i>James IV</i> the
-presenters are Bohan, a Scot, and Oberon, king of fairies. They come
-on the stage for an induction, at the end of which Bohan says, ‘Gang
-with me to the Gallery, and Ile show thee the same in action by guid
-fellowes of our country men’, and they ‘<i>Exeunt</i>’. Obviously they
-watch the action, for they enter again and comment upon it during act-intervals.
-One of their interpositions is closed with the words ‘Gow
-shrowd vs in our harbor’; another with ‘Lets to our sell, and sit
-&amp; see the rest’.<a id="FNanchor_279" href="#Footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a> In the <i>Looking Glass</i> we get after the
-first scene the direction, ‘Enters brought in by an angell Oseas the
-Prophet, and set downe ouer the Stage in a Throne’. Oseas is evidently
-a presenter; the actors ignore him, but he makes moral comments after
-various scenes, and at the end of Act <span class="allsmcap">IV</span> comes the further
-direction, ‘Oseas taken away’.<a id="FNanchor_280" href="#Footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a> Purely human presenters in <i>The
-Taming of a Shrew</i> are still on a raised level. Sly is removed from
-the main stage during the first scene of the induction. He is brought
-back at the beginning of the second scene, presumably above, whence he
-criticizes the play, for towards the end the lord bids his servants</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">lay him in the place where we did find him,</div>
- <div>Just underneath the alehouse side below;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and this is done by way of an epilogue.<a id="FNanchor_281" href="#Footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a></p>
-
-<p>I do not suggest that presenters were always above; it is not so when
-they merely furnish the equivalent of a prologue or epilogue, but only
-when it is desired to keep them visible during the action, and on
-the other hand they must not obstruct it. Sometimes, even when their
-continued presence might be desirable, it has to be dispensed with, or
-otherwise provided for. The presenters in <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>
-come and go; those in <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i> sit upon the stage
-itself. Why? I think the answer is the same in both cases. A platform
-was required for other purposes. In <i>Soliman and Perseda</i> one
-scene has the outer wall of a tiltyard reached by ladders from the
-stage; another has a tower, from which victims are tumbled down out
-of sight.<a id="FNanchor_282" href="#Footnote_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a> In the <i>Spanish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span> Tragedy</i>, apart from some minor
-action ‘above’, there is the elaborate presentation of Hieronimo’s
-‘play within the play’ to be provided for. This must be supposed to
-be part of a hall scene. It occupies, with its preparations, most of
-the fourth, which is the last, act; and for it the King and his train
-are clearly seated in an upper ‘gallerie’, while the performance
-takes place on the floor of the hall below, with the body of Horatio
-concealed behind a curtain, for revelation at the appropriate
-moment.<a id="FNanchor_283" href="#Footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a> We are thus brought face to face with an extension on
-the public stage of the use of ‘above’, beyond what is entailed by
-the needs of sieges or of exalted presenters. Nor, of course, are the
-instances already cited exhaustive. The gallery overlooking a hall in
-the <i>Spanish Tragedy</i> has its parallel in the window overlooking
-a hall in <i>Dr. Faustus</i>.<a id="FNanchor_284" href="#Footnote_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> More frequent is an external
-window, door, or balcony, overlooking an external scene in street or
-garden.<a id="FNanchor_285" href="#Footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> In these cases the action ‘above’ is generally slight.
-Some one appears in answer to a summons from without; an eavesdropper
-listens to a conversation below; a girl talks to her lover, and there
-may be an ascent or descent with the help of a rope-ladder or a basket.
-But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span> there are a few plays in which we are obliged to constitute the
-existence of a regular chamber scene, with several personages and
-perhaps furniture, set ‘above’. The second scene of the induction to
-the <i>Taming of the Shrew</i>, just cited, is already a case in point.
-The presenters here do not merely sit, as spectators in the lord’s room
-might, and listen. They move about a chamber and occupy considerable
-space. Scenes which similarly require the whole interior of an upper
-room to be visible, and not merely its balcony or window bay, are
-to be found in <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i>, in <i>Every Man In his
-Humour</i>, twice in <i>The Jew of Malta</i>, in <i>2 Henry IV</i>, and
-in <i>Look About You</i>.<a id="FNanchor_286" href="#Footnote_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a> I do not know whether I ought to add
-<i>Romeo and Juliet</i>. Certainly the love scenes, Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span>,
-scc. i and ii, and Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, sc. v, require Juliet’s chamber to
-be aloft, and in these there is no interior action entailing more than
-the sound of voices, followed by the appearance of the speakers over
-Juliet’s shoulder as she stands at the casement or on a balcony.<a id="FNanchor_287" href="#Footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a>
-It would be natural to assume that the chamber of Act <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>,
-sc. iii, in which Juliet drinks her potion, and sc. v, in which she
-is found lying on her bed, is the same, and therefore also aloft.
-Obviously its interior, with the bed and Juliet, must be visible to the
-spectators. The difficulty is that it also appears to be visible to
-the wedding guests and the musicians, as they enter the courtyard from
-without; and this could only be, if it were upon the main<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span> level of
-the stage. If the scene stood by itself, one would undoubtedly assign
-it to the curtained recess behind the stage; and on the whole it is
-probable that on this occasion architectural consistency was sacrificed
-to dramatic effect, and Juliet’s chamber was placed sometimes above and
-sometimes below.<a id="FNanchor_288" href="#Footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a> There is one other type of scene which requires
-elevated action, and that is the senate-house scene, as we find it in
-<i>The Wounds of Civil War</i> and in <i>Titus Andronicus</i>, where
-the Capitol clearly stands above the Forum, but is within ear-shot and
-of easy approach.<a id="FNanchor_289" href="#Footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a></p>
-
-<p>I think we are bound to assume that some or all of this action ‘above’
-took place in the gallery ‘over the stage’, where it could be readily
-approached from the tiring-house behind, and could be disposed with the
-minimum of obstruction to the vision of the auditorium. A transition
-from the use of this region for spectators to its use for action is
-afforded by the placing there of those idealized spectators, the
-presenters. So far as they are concerned, all that would be needed, in
-a house arranged like the Swan, would be to assign to them one or more,
-according to their number, of the rooms or compartments, into which the
-gallery was normally divided. One such compartment, too, would serve
-well for a window, and would be accepted without demur as forming part
-of the same ‘domus’ to which a door below, or, as in <i>The Merchant
-of Venice</i>, a penthouse set in the central aperture, gave access.
-To get a practicable chamber, it would be necessary to take down a
-partition and throw two of the compartments, probably the two central
-compartments, into one; but there would still be four rooms left for
-the lords. As a matter of fact, most upper chamber scenes, even of
-the sixteenth century, are of later date than the Swan drawing, and
-some architectural evolution, including the provision of a music-room,
-may already have taken place, and have been facilitated by the waning
-popularity of the lord’s rooms. It will be easier to survey the whole
-evolution of the upper stage in the next chapter.<a id="FNanchor_290" href="#Footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a> For the present,
-let us think of the upper chamber as running back on the first floor of
-the tiring-house above the alcove, and reached from within by stairs
-behind the scenic wall, of which, if desired, the foot could perhaps be
-made visible within the alcove.<a id="FNanchor_291" href="#Footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a> Borrowed light could be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span> given by
-a window at the back, from which also the occupants of the room could
-pretend to look out behind.<a id="FNanchor_292" href="#Footnote_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> Internal doors could of course also
-be made available. A scene in <i>The Jew of Malta</i> requires a trap
-in the floor of the upper chamber, over a cauldron discovered in the
-alcove below.<a id="FNanchor_293" href="#Footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a> The upper chamber could be fitted, like the alcove
-itself, with an independent curtain for discoveries.<a id="FNanchor_294" href="#Footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a></p>
-
-<p>Are we to conclude that all action ‘above’ was on or behind the back
-line of the stage? The point upon which I feel most uncertainty is
-the arrangement of the battlements in the stricter sense.<a id="FNanchor_295" href="#Footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> These
-appear to be generally regarded as running along the whole of the back
-line, with the gates of the town or castle represented in the central
-aperture below. Some writers suggest that they occupied, not the actual
-space of the rooms or boxes ‘over the stage’, but a narrow balcony
-running in front of these.<a id="FNanchor_296" href="#Footnote_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a> I cannot satisfy myself that the Swan
-drawing bears out the existence of any projecting ledge adequate for
-the purpose. On the other hand, if all the compartments of the gallery
-were made available and their partitions removed, all the spectators
-‘over the stage’ must have been displaced; and siege scenes are early,
-and numerous. I do not know that it is essential to assume that the
-battlements extended beyond the width of two compartments. There is
-some definite evidence for a position of the ‘walles’ on the scenic
-line, apart from the patent convenience of keeping the main stage clear
-for besieging armies, in Jasper Mayne’s laudation of Ben Jonson:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou laid’st no sieges to the music-room.<a id="FNanchor_297" href="#Footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">I am content to believe that this is where they normally
-stood. At the same time, it is possible that alternative arrangements
-were not unknown. In the <i>Wagner Book</i>, which must be supposed to
-describe a setting of a type not incredible on the public stage, we are
-told of a high throne,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span> presumably at the back, of hell mouth ‘at the
-one end of the stage’, and of an elaborate castle ‘at the other end in
-opposition’. This is ‘the place where in the bloudlesse skirmishes are
-so often perfourmed upon the stage’, and although I should not press
-this as meaning that the walls were always at an ‘end’ of the stage,
-the passage would be absurd, if they were invariably at the back.<a id="FNanchor_298" href="#Footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a>
-Further, there is at least one extant play in which it is very
-difficult to envisage certain scenes with the walls at the back. This
-is <i>1 Henry VI</i>, the Orleans scenes of which, with the leaping
-over the walls, and the rapid succession of action in the market-place
-within the town and in the field without, seem to me clearly to point
-to walls standing across the main stage from back to front.<a id="FNanchor_299" href="#Footnote_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a> But if
-so, how were such walls put into place? The imagination boggles at the
-notion of masons coming in to build a wall during the action, in the
-way in which attendants might set up a bar or a lists, or carpenters
-the gibbet for an execution. Bottom’s device for <i>Pyramus and
-Thisbe</i> would hardly be more grotesque. Yet the Orleans siege scenes
-in <i>1 Henry VI</i> are by no means coincident with acts, and could
-not therefore be set in advance and dismantled at leisure when done
-with. Can the walls have been drawn forwards and backwards, with the
-help of some machine, through the doors or the central aperture?<a id="FNanchor_300" href="#Footnote_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a>
-It is not inconceivable, and possibly we have here the explanation
-of the ‘j whell and frame in the Sege of London’, which figures in
-the Admiral’s inventories. Once the possibility of a scenic structure
-brought on to the main stage is mooted, one begins to look for other
-kinds of episode in which it would be useful. This, after all, may
-have been the way in which a gibbet was introduced, and the Admiral’s
-had also ‘j frame for the heading in Black Jone’, although nothing
-is said of a wheel.<a id="FNanchor_301" href="#Footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a> The senate houses could, I think, have been
-located in the gallery, but the beacon in <i>King Leir</i> would not
-look plausible there,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span> and the Admiral’s had a beacon, apparently as
-a detached property.<a id="FNanchor_302" href="#Footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> I am also inclined to think that a wall may
-occasionally have been drawn across the stage to make a close of part
-of it for a garden scene. In Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span> of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>
-Romeo pretty clearly comes in with his friends in some public place
-of the city, and then leaps a wall into an orchard, where he is lost
-to their sight, and finds himself under Juliet’s window. He must have
-a wall to leap. I mentioned <i>Pyramus and Thisbe</i> just above with
-intent, for what is <i>Pyramus and Thisbe</i> but a burlesque of the
-<i>Romeo and Juliet</i> motive, which would have been all the more
-amusing, if a somewhat conspicuous and unusual wall had been introduced
-into its model? Another case in point may be the ‘close walk’ before
-Labervele’s house in <i>A Humorous Day’s Mirth</i>.<a id="FNanchor_303" href="#Footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a> I have allowed
-myself to stray into the field of conjecture.</p>
-
-<p>One other possible feature of action ‘above’ must not be left out of
-account. The use of the gallery may have been supplemented on occasion
-by that of some window or balcony in the space above it, which De
-Witt’s drawing conceals from our view. Here may have been the ‘top’ on
-which La Pucelle appears in the Rouen episode of <i>1 Henry VI</i>,
-and the towers or turrets, which are sometimes utilized or referred to
-in this and other plays.<a id="FNanchor_304" href="#Footnote_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a> It would be difficult to describe the
-central boxes of the Swan gallery as a tower.</p>
-
-<p>Before any attempt is made to sum up the result of this long
-chapter, one other feature of sixteenth-century staging, which is
-often overlooked, requires discussion. In the majority of cases the
-background of an out-of-door scene need contain at most a single
-<i>domus</i>; and this, it is now clear, can be represented either by
-a light structure, such as a tent or arbour, placed temporarily upon
-the floor of the stage, or more usually by the <i>scena</i> or back
-wall, with its doors, its central aperture, and its upper gallery.
-There are, however, certain scenes in which one <i>domus</i> will
-not suffice, and two or possibly even three, must be represented.
-Thus, as in <i>Richard III</i>, there may be two hostile camps, with
-alternating action at tents in each of them.<a id="FNanchor_305" href="#Footnote_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> There may also be
-interplay, without change of scene, between different houses in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span> one
-town or village. In <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, Arden’s house and the
-painter’s are set together;<a id="FNanchor_306" href="#Footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> in <i>The Taming of A Shrew</i>,
-the lord’s house and the alehouse for the induction, and Polidor’s
-and Alphonso’s during the main play;<a id="FNanchor_307" href="#Footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a> in <i>The Blind Beggar of
-Alexandria</i>, the houses of Elimine and Samethis;<a id="FNanchor_308" href="#Footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> in <i>1 Sir
-John Oldcastle</i>, Cobham’s gate and an inn;<a id="FNanchor_309" href="#Footnote_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a> in <i>Stukeley</i>,
-Newton’s house and a chamber in the Temple;<a id="FNanchor_310" href="#Footnote_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> in <i>A Knack to Know
-an Honest Man</i>, Lelio’s and Bristeo’s for one scene, Lelio’s and a
-Senator’s for another, possibly Lelio’s and Servio’s, though of this I
-am less sure, for a third.<a id="FNanchor_311" href="#Footnote_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> These are the most indisputable cases;
-given the principle, we are at liberty to conjecture its application
-in other plays. Generally the houses may be supposed to be contiguous;
-it is not so in <i>Stukeley</i>, where Old Stukeley clearly walks some
-little distance to the Temple, and here therefore we get an example of
-that foreshortening of distance between two parts of a city, with which
-we became familiar in the arrangement of Court plays.<a id="FNanchor_312" href="#Footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a> It is not
-the only example. In <i>George a Greene</i> Jenkin and the Shoemaker
-walk from one end to the other of Wakefield.<a id="FNanchor_313" href="#Footnote_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a> In <i>Arden of
-Feversham</i>, although this is an open-country and not an urban scene,
-Arden and Francklin travel some little way to Raynham Down.<a id="FNanchor_314" href="#Footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a> In
-<i>Dr. Faustus</i>, so far as we can judge from the unsatisfactory text
-preserved, any limitation to a particular neighbourhood is abandoned,
-and Faustus passes without change of scene from the Emperor’s Court
-to his own home in Wittenberg.<a id="FNanchor_315" href="#Footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a> Somewhat analogous is the curious
-device in <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>, where the maskers, after preparing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-in the open, ‘march about the stage’, while the scene changes to the
-hall of Capulet, which they then enter.<a id="FNanchor_316" href="#Footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a></p>
-
-<p>I think, then, it must be taken that the background of a public stage
-could stand at need, not merely for a single <i>domus</i>, but for a
-‘city’. Presumably in such cases the central aperture and the gallery
-above it were reserved for any house in which interior action was to
-proceed, and for the others mere doors in the scenic wall were regarded
-as adequate. I do not find any sixteenth-century play which demands
-either interior action or action ‘above’ in more than one house.<a id="FNanchor_317" href="#Footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a>
-But a question arises as to how, for a scene in which the scenic
-doors had to represent house doors, provision was made for external
-entrances and exits, which certainly cannot be excluded from such
-scenes. Possibly the answer is, although I feel very doubtful about
-it, that there were never more than two houses, and that therefore one
-door always remained available to lead on and off the main stage.<a id="FNanchor_318" href="#Footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a>
-Possibly also entrances and exits by other avenues than the two scenic
-doors, which we infer from the Swan drawing, and the central aperture
-which we feel bound to add, are not inconceivable. We have already had
-some hint that three may not have been the maximum number of entrances.
-If the Elizabethan theatre limited itself to three, it would have
-been worse off than any of the early neo-classic theatres based upon
-Vitruvius, in which the <i>porta regia</i> and <i>portae minores</i> of
-the scenic wall were regularly supplemented by the <i>viae ad forum</i>
-in the <i>versurae</i> to right and left of the <i>proscenium</i>.<a id="FNanchor_319" href="#Footnote_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a>
-No doubt such wings could not be constructed at the Swan, where a space
-was left on the level of the ‘yard’ between the spectators’ galleries
-and the right and left edges of a narrow stage. But they would be
-feasible in theatres with wider stages, and the arrangement, if it
-existed, would make the problem of seats on the stage easier.<a id="FNanchor_320" href="#Footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a>
-It is no more than a conjecture. It has also been suggested that the
-heavy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span> columns drawn by De Witt may have prevented him from showing
-two entrances round the extreme ends of the scenic wall, such as are
-perhaps indicated in some of the Terentian woodcuts of 1493.<a id="FNanchor_321" href="#Footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> Or,
-finally, actors might have emerged from the tiring-house into the space
-on the level of the yard just referred to, and thence reached the
-stage, as from without, by means of a short flight of steps.<a id="FNanchor_322" href="#Footnote_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a></p>
-
-<p>Working then from the Swan stage, and only departing in any essential
-from De Witt’s drawing by what appears to be, at any rate for theatres
-other than the Swan, the inevitable addition of a back curtain, we
-find no insuperable difficulty in accounting for the setting of all
-the types of scenes recognizable in sixteenth-century plays. The great
-majority of them, both out-of-door scenes and hall scenes, were acted
-on the open stage, under the heavens, with no more properties and
-practicable <i>terrains</i> than could reasonably be carried on by the
-actors, lowered from the heavens, raised by traps, or thrust on by
-frames and wheels. For more permanent background they had the scenic
-doors, the gallery above, the scenic curtain, and whatever the tire-man
-might choose to insert in the aperture, backed by an alcove within the
-tire-house, which the drawing of the curtain discovered. For entrances
-they had at least the scenic doors and aperture. The comparatively few
-chamber scenes were set either in the alcove or in a chamber ‘above’,
-formed by throwing together two compartments of the gallery. A window
-in a still higher story could, if necessary, be brought into play. So,
-with all due respect to the obscurities of the evidence, I reconstruct
-the facts. It will, I hope, be apparent without any elaborate
-demonstration that this system of public staging, as practised by
-Burbadge at the Theatre, by Lanman at the Curtain, by Henslowe at the
-Rose, and perhaps with some modifications by Langley at the Swan, is
-very fairly in line with the earlier sixteenth-century tradition, as
-we have studied it in texts in which the Court methods are paramount.
-This is only natural, in view of the fact that the same plays continued
-to be presented to the public and to the sovereign. There is the same
-economy of recessed action, the same conspicuous tendency to dialogue
-on a threshold, the same unwillingness to break the flow of an act by
-any deliberate pause for resetting. The public theatre gets in some
-ways a greater variety of dramatic situation, partly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span> owing to its free
-use of the open stage, instead of merely a portico, for hall scenes,
-partly owing to its characteristic development of action ‘above’.
-This, in spite of the battlements of the Revels accounts, may perhaps
-be a contribution of the inn-yard. The main change is, of course, the
-substitution for the multiple staging of the Court, with its adjacent
-regions for different episodes, of a principle of successive staging,
-by which the whole space became in turn available for each distinct
-scene. This was an inevitable change, as soon as the Elizabethan love
-for history and romance broke down the Renaissance doctrine of the
-unity of place; and it will not be forgotten that the beginnings of
-it are already clearly discernible in the later Court drama, which
-of course overlaps with the popular drama, itself. Incidentally the
-actors got elbow-room; some of the Lylyan scenes must have been
-very cramped. But they had to put up with a common form setting,
-capable only of minor modifications, and no doubt their architectural
-decorations and unvarying curtain were less interesting from the point
-of view of <i>spectacle</i>, than the diversity of ‘houses’ which
-the ingenuity and the resources of the Court architects were in a
-position to produce. In any case, however, economy would probably have
-forbidden them to enter into rivalry with the Revels Office. Whether
-the Elizabethan type of public stage was the invention of Burbadge,
-the ‘first builder of theatres’, or had already come into use in the
-inn-yards, is perhaps an idle subject for wonder. The only definite
-guess at its origin is that of Professor Creizenach, who suggests that
-it may have been adapted from the out-of-door stages, set up from time
-to time for the dramatic contests held by the Rederijker or Chambers
-of Rhetoric in Flanders.<a id="FNanchor_323" href="#Footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> Certainly there are common features in
-the division of the field of action into two levels and the use of
-curtained apertures both below and above. But the latest examples of
-the Flemish festivals were at Ghent in 1539 and at Antwerp in 1561
-respectively; and it would be something of a chance if Burbadge or any
-other English builder had any detailed knowledge of them.<a id="FNanchor_324" href="#Footnote_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XXI<br />
-<span class="subhed">STAGING IN THE THEATRES: SEVENTEENTH CENTURY</span></h3></div>
-
-<p class="center sm">[For <i>Bibliographical Note</i>, <i>vide</i> ch. xviii.]</p>
-
-
-<p>The turn of the century is also a turning-point in the history of the
-public theatres. In 1599 the Chamberlain’s men built the Globe, and in
-1600, not to be outdone, the Admiral’s men built upon the same model
-the Fortune. These remained the head-quarters of the same companies,
-when at the beginning of the reign of James the one became the King’s
-and the other the Prince’s men. Worcester’s, afterwards the Queen’s,
-men were content for a time with the older houses, first the Rose,
-then the Curtain and the Boar’s Head, but by 1605 or 1606 they were
-occupying the Red Bull, probably a new building, but one of which we
-know very little. Meanwhile the earlier Tudor fashion of plays by boys
-had been revived, both at Paul’s, and at the Blackfriars, where a
-theatre had been contrived by James Burbadge about 1596 in a chamber of
-the ancient priory, for the purposes of a public stage.</p>
-
-<p>We cannot on <i>a priori</i> grounds assume that the structural
-arrangements of the sixteenth-century houses were merely carried into
-those of the seventeenth century without modification; the experience
-of twenty-five years’ working may well have disclosed features
-in the original plan of James Burbadge which were not altogether
-convenient or which lent themselves to further development. On the
-other hand, we have not got to take into account the possibility of
-any fundamental change or sharp breach of continuity. The introduction
-of a new type of stage, even if it escaped explicit record, would
-inevitably have left its mark both upon the dramatic construction of
-plays and upon the wording of their stage-directions. No such mark
-can be discerned. You cannot tell an early seventeenth-century play
-from a late sixteenth-century one on this kind of evidence alone;
-the handling and the conventions, the situations and the spectacular
-effects, remain broadly the same, and such differences as do gradually
-become apparent, concern rather the trend of dramatic interest than
-the external methods of <span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>stage-presentation. Moreover, it is evident
-that the sixteenth-century plays did not pass wholly into disuse. From
-time to time they were revived, and lent themselves, perhaps with some
-minor adaptation, to the new boards as well as to the old. In dealing
-with early seventeenth-century staging, then, I will assume the general
-continuance of the sixteenth-century plan, and will content myself with
-giving some further examples of its main features, and with considering
-any evidence which may seem to point to specific development in one
-or more particular directions. And on the whole it will be convenient
-to concentrate now mainly upon the theatres occupied by the King’s
-men. For this there are various reasons. One is that the possession of
-Shakespeare’s plays gives them a prerogative interest in modern eyes;
-another that the repertories of the other companies have hardly reached
-us in a form which renders any very safe induction feasible.</p>
-
-<p>Even in the case of the King’s men, the material is not very ample, and
-there are complications which make it necessary to proceed by cautious
-steps to somewhat tentative conclusions. The Globe was probably opened
-in the autumn of 1599. The first play which we can definitely locate
-there is <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>; but I have decided
-with some hesitation to treat <i>Henry V</i> and <i>Much Ado about
-Nothing</i>, for the purposes of these chapters, as Globe plays.<a id="FNanchor_325" href="#Footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a>
-So far as we know, the Globe was the only theatre used by the company
-up to the winter of 1609, when they also came into possession of the
-Blackfriars. From 1609 to 1613 they used both houses, but probably the
-Globe was still the more important of the two, for when it was burnt
-in 1613 they found it worth while to rebuild it fairer than before. At
-some time, possibly about the end of James’s reign, the Blackfriars
-began to come into greater prominence, and gradually displaced the
-Globe as the main head-quarters of the London drama. This, however, is
-a development which lies outside the scope of these volumes; nor can
-I with advantage inquire in detail whether there were any important
-structural features in which the new Globe is likely to have differed
-from the old Globe. At the most I can only offer a suggestion for the
-historian of the Caroline stage to take up in his turn. In the main,
-therefore, we have to consider the staging of the Globe from 1599 to
-1609, and of the Globe and the Blackfriars from 1609 to 1613. The plays
-available fall into four groups.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span> There are nineteen or twenty printed
-and probably produced during 1599–1609, of which, however, one or
-two were originally written for private theatres.<a id="FNanchor_326" href="#Footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> There are two
-produced and printed during 1609–12, and one preserved in manuscript
-from the same period.<a id="FNanchor_327" href="#Footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a> There are ten probably produced during
-1599–1603, but not printed before 1622 or 1623.<a id="FNanchor_328" href="#Footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> There are perhaps
-nine or ten produced during 1609–13, and printed at various dates from
-1619 to 1634.<a id="FNanchor_329" href="#Footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a> It will be seen that the first group is of much the
-greatest value evidentially, as well as fortunately the longest, but
-that it only throws light upon the Globe and not upon the Blackfriars;
-that the value of the second and fourth groups is discounted by our not
-knowing how far they reflect Globe and how far Blackfriars conditions;
-and that the original features of the third and fourth groups may
-have been modified in revivals, either at the Blackfriars or at the
-later Globe, before they got into print. I shall use them all, but,
-I hope, with discrimination.<a id="FNanchor_330" href="#Footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a> I shall also use, for illustration
-and confirmation, rather than as direct evidence, plays from other
-seventeenth-century theatres. The Prince’s men were at the Fortune
-during the whole of the period with which we are concerned, and then on
-to and after the fire of 1621, and the reconstruction, possibly on new
-lines, of 1623. We know that its staging arrangements resembled those
-of the Globe, for it was provided in the builder’s contract that this
-should be so, and also that the stage should be ‘placed and sett’ in
-accordance with ‘a plott thereof drawen’. Alleyn would have saved me
-a great deal of trouble if he had put away this little piece of paper
-along with so many others. Unfortunately, the Prince’s men kept their
-plays very close, and only five or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span> six of our period got into print
-before 1623.<a id="FNanchor_331" href="#Footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> From the Queen’s men we have rather more, perhaps
-sixteen in all; but we do not always know whether these were given at
-the Red Bull or the Curtain. Nor do we know whether any structural
-improvements introduced at the Globe and Fortune were adopted at the
-Red Bull, although this is <i>a priori</i> not unlikely.<a id="FNanchor_332" href="#Footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a> From the
-Swan we have only <i>The Chaste Maid of Cheapside</i>, and from the
-Hope only <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>.</p>
-
-<p>At the Globe, then, the types of scene presented are much the same as
-those with which we have become familiar in the sixteenth century; the
-old categories of open-country scenes, battle scenes, garden scenes,
-street scenes, threshold scenes, hall scenes, and chamber scenes
-will still serve. Their relative importance alters, no doubt, as the
-playwrights tend more and more to concern themselves with subjects of
-urban life. But there are plenty of battle scenes in certain plays,
-much on the traditional lines, with marchings and counter-marchings,
-alarums for fighting ‘within’, and occasional ‘excursions’ on the
-field of the stage itself.<a id="FNanchor_333" href="#Footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a> Practicable tents still afford a
-convenient camp background, and these, I think, continue to be pitched
-on the open boards.<a id="FNanchor_334" href="#Footnote_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a> The opposing camps of <i>Richard III</i> are
-precisely repeated in <i>Henry V</i>.<a id="FNanchor_335" href="#Footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> There are episodes before
-the ‘walls’ too, with defenders speaking from above, assaults by means
-of scaling ladders, and coming and going through the gates.<a id="FNanchor_336" href="#Footnote_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> I
-find no example in which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span> a wall inserted on the line of the scenic
-curtain would not meet the needs of the situation. Pastoral scenes are
-also common, for the urban preoccupation has its regular reaction in
-the direction of pastoral. There is plenty of evidence for practicable
-trees, such as that on which Orlando in <i>As You Like It</i> hangs
-his love verses, and the most likely machinery for putting trees into
-position still seems to me to be the trap.<a id="FNanchor_337" href="#Footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a> A trap, too, might
-bring up the bower for the play within the play of <i>Hamlet</i>,
-the pleached arbour of <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>, the pulpit in
-the forum of <i>Julius Caesar</i>, the tombstone in the woods of
-<i>Timon of Athens</i>, the wayside cross of <i>Every Man Out of
-his Humour</i>, and other <i>terrains</i> most easily thought of as
-free-standing structures.<a id="FNanchor_338" href="#Footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> It would open for Ophelia’s grave, and
-for the still beloved ascents of spirits from the lower regions.<a id="FNanchor_339" href="#Footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a>
-It remains difficult to see how a riverbank or the sea-shores was
-represented.<a id="FNanchor_340" href="#Footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> As a rule, the edge of the stage, with steps into the
-auditorium taken for water stairs, seems most plausible. But there is a
-complicated episode in <i>The Devil’s Charter</i>, with a conduit and a
-bridge over the Tiber, which I do not feel quite able to envisage.<a id="FNanchor_341" href="#Footnote_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a>
-There is another bridge over the Tiber for Horatius Cocles in the Red
-Bull play of the <i>Rape of Lucrece</i>. But this is easier; it is
-projected from the walls of Rome, and there must be a trapped cavity on
-the scenic line, into which Horatius leaps.<a id="FNanchor_342" href="#Footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Hope contract of 1613 provides for the heavens to be supported
-without the help of posts rising from the stage. For this there was
-a special reason at the Hope, since the stage had to be capable of
-removal to make room for bear-baitings. But the advantage of dispensing
-with the posts and the obstacle to the free vision of the spectators
-which they presented must have been so great, that the innovation
-may well have occurred to the builders of the Globe. Whether it did,
-I do not think that we can say. There are one or two references to
-posts in stage-directions, but they need not be the posts of the
-heavens.<a id="FNanchor_343" href="#Footnote_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a> Possibly, too, there was less use of the descending
-chair. One might even fancy that Jonson’s sarcasm in the prologue to
-<i>Every Man In his Humour</i> discredited it. The new type of play
-did not so often call for spectacular palace scenes, and perhaps
-some simpler and more portable kind of ‘state’ was allowed to serve
-the turn. There is no suggestion of a descent from the heavens in
-the theophanies of <i>As You Like It</i> and <i>Pericles</i>; Juno,
-however, descends in <i>The Tempest</i>.<a id="FNanchor_344" href="#Footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> This, although it has
-practically no change of setting, is in some ways, under the mask
-influence, the most spectacular performance attempted by the King’s
-men at Globe or Blackfriars during our period.<a id="FNanchor_345" href="#Footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> But it is far
-outdone by the Queen’s plays of the <i>Golden</i>, <i>Silver</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-and <i>Brazen Ages</i>, which, if they were really given just as
-Heywood printed them, must have strained the scenic resources of the
-Red Bull to an extreme. Here are ascents and descents and entries
-from every conceivable point of the stage;<a id="FNanchor_346" href="#Footnote_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> divinities in
-fantastic disguise;<a id="FNanchor_347" href="#Footnote_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> mythological dumb-shows;<a id="FNanchor_348" href="#Footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a> battles and
-hunting episodes and revels;<a id="FNanchor_349" href="#Footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a> ingenious properties, often with
-a melodramatic thrill;<a id="FNanchor_350" href="#Footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a> and from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span> beginning to end a succession
-of atmospheric phenomena, which suggest that the Jacobeans had made
-considerable progress in the art of stage pyrotechnics.<a id="FNanchor_351" href="#Footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a> The Globe,
-with its traditional ‘blazing star’, is left far behind.<a id="FNanchor_352" href="#Footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a></p>
-
-<p>The critical points of staging are the recesses below and above.
-Some kind of recess on the level of the main stage is often required
-by the King’s plays; for action in or before a prison,<a id="FNanchor_353" href="#Footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a> a
-cell,<a id="FNanchor_354" href="#Footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a> a cave,<a id="FNanchor_355" href="#Footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a> a closet,<a id="FNanchor_356" href="#Footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a> a study,<a id="FNanchor_357" href="#Footnote_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a> a tomb,<a id="FNanchor_358" href="#Footnote_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a> a
-chapel,<a id="FNanchor_359" href="#Footnote_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a> a shop;<a id="FNanchor_360" href="#Footnote_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a> for the revelation of dead bodies or other
-concealed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span> sights.<a id="FNanchor_361" href="#Footnote_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a> In many cases the alcove constructed in the
-tiring-house behind the scenic wall would give all that is required,
-and occasionally a mention of the ‘curtains’ or of ‘discovery’ in a
-stage-direction points plainly to this arrangement. The ‘traverse’ of
-Webster’s plays, both for the King’s and the Queen’s men, appears,
-as already pointed out, to be nothing more than a terminological
-variant.<a id="FNanchor_362" href="#Footnote_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a> Similarly, hall scenes have still their ‘arras’ or their
-‘hangings’, behind which a spy can post himself.<a id="FNanchor_363" href="#Footnote_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a> A new feature,
-however, now presents itself in the existence of certain scenes,
-including some bedchamber scenes, which entail the use of properties
-and would, I think, during the sixteenth century have been placed
-in the alcove, but now appear to have been brought forward and to
-occupy, like hall scenes, the main stage. The usage is by no means
-invariable. Even in so late a play as <i>Cymbeline</i>, Imogen’s
-chamber, with Iachimo’s trunk and the elaborate fire-places in it,
-must, in spite of the absence of any reference to curtains, have been
-disposed in the alcove; for the trunk scene is immediately followed
-by another before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span> the door of the same chamber, from which Imogen
-presently emerges.<a id="FNanchor_364" href="#Footnote_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a> But I do not think that the alcove was used
-for Gertrude’s closet in <i>Hamlet</i>, the whole of which play seems
-to me to be set very continuously on the outer stage.<a id="FNanchor_365" href="#Footnote_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a> Hamlet does
-not enter the closet direct from in front, but goes off and comes on
-again. A little distance is required for the vision of the Ghost, who
-goes out at a visible ‘portal’. When Hamlet has killed Polonius, he
-lugs the guts into the neighbour room, according to the ordinary device
-for clearing a dead body from the main stage, which is superfluous when
-the death has taken place in the alcove. There is an arras, behind
-which Polonius esconces himself, and on this, or perhaps on an inner
-arras disclosed by a slight parting of the ordinary one, hangs the
-picture of Hamlet’s father. Nor do I think, although it is difficult
-to be certain, that the alcove held Desdemona’s death-chamber in
-<i>Othello</i>.<a id="FNanchor_366" href="#Footnote_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a> True, there are curtains drawn here, but they may
-be only bed-curtains. A longish chamber, with an outer door, seems to
-be indicated. A good many persons, including Cassio ‘in a chaire’, have
-to be accommodated, and when Emilia enters, it is some time before her
-attention is drawn to Desdemona behind the curtains. If anything is in
-the alcove, it can only be just the bed itself. The best illustrations
-of my point, however, are to be found in <i>The Devil’s Charter</i>,
-a singular play, with full and naïve stage-directions, which perhaps
-betray the hand of an inexperienced writer. Much of the action takes
-place in the palace of Alexander Borgia at Rome. The alcove seems to be
-reserved for Alexander’s study. Other scenes of an intimately domestic
-character are staged in front, and the necessary furniture is very
-frankly carried on, in one case by a protagonist. This is a scene in a
-parlour by night, in which Lucrezia Borgia<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span> murders her husband.<a id="FNanchor_367" href="#Footnote_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a>
-Another scene represents Lucrezia’s toilet;<a id="FNanchor_368" href="#Footnote_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a> in a third young men
-come in from tennis and are groomed by a barber.<a id="FNanchor_369" href="#Footnote_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a> My impression is
-that in the seventeenth century, instead of discovering a bedchamber
-in the alcove, it became the custom to secure more space and light by
-projecting the bed through the central aperture on to the main stage,
-and removing it by the same avenue when the scene was over. As to this
-a stage-direction in <i>2 Henry VI</i> may be significant. There was a
-scene in <i>1 Contention</i> in which the murdered body of the Duke of
-Gloucester is discovered in his bedchamber. This recurs in <i>2 Henry
-VI</i>, but instead of a full direction for the drawing of curtains,
-the Folio has the simple note ‘Bed put forth’.<a id="FNanchor_370" href="#Footnote_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a> This is one of a
-group of formulas which have been the subject of some discussion.<a id="FNanchor_371" href="#Footnote_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a>
-I do not think that either ‘Bed put forth’ or still less ‘Bed thrust
-out’ can be dismissed as a mere equivalent of ‘Enter in a bed’, which
-may admittedly cover a parting of the curtains, or of such a warning
-to the tire-man as ‘Bed set out’ or ‘ready’ or ‘prepared’.<a id="FNanchor_372" href="#Footnote_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a> There
-is a difference between ‘setting out’ and ‘thrusting out’, for the
-one does and the other does not carry the notion of a push. And if
-‘Bed put forth’ is rather more colourless, ‘Bed drawn out’, which
-also occurs, is clear enough. Unfortunately the extant text of <i>2
-Henry VI</i> may be of any date up to 1623, and none of the other
-examples of the formulas in question are direct evidence for the
-Globe in 1599–1613.<a id="FNanchor_373" href="#Footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a> To be sure of the projected bed at so early<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-a date, we have to turn to the Red Bull, where we find it both in
-the <i>Golden</i> and the <i>Silver Age</i>, as well as the amateur
-<i>Hector of Germany</i>, or to the Swan, where we find it in <i>The
-Chaste Maid of Cheapside</i>.<a id="FNanchor_374" href="#Footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a> The <i>Golden Age</i> particularly
-repays study. The whole of the last two acts are devoted to the episode
-of Jupiter and Danae. The scene is set in</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">the Darreine Tower</div>
- <div>Guirt with a triple mure of shining brasse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Most of the action requires a courtyard, and the wall
-and gate of this, with a porter’s lodge and an alarm-bell, must have
-been given some kind of structural representation on the stage. An
-inner door is supposed to lead to Danae’s chamber above. It is in this
-chamber, presumably, that attendants enter ‘drawing out Danae’s bed’,
-and when ‘The bed is drawn in’, action is resumed in the courtyard
-below.<a id="FNanchor_375" href="#Footnote_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span></p>
-
-<p>There are chamber scenes in the King’s plays also, which are neither
-in the alcove nor on the main stage, but above. This is an extension
-of a practice already observable in pre-Globe days. Hero’s chamber
-in <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i> is above.<a id="FNanchor_376" href="#Footnote_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a> So is Celia’s in
-<i>Volpone</i>.<a id="FNanchor_377" href="#Footnote_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a> So is Falstaff’s at the Garter Inn in <i>The
-Merry Wives of Windsor</i>.<a id="FNanchor_378" href="#Footnote_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a> In all these examples, which are not
-exhaustive, a reasonable amount of space is required for action.<a id="FNanchor_379" href="#Footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a>
-This is still more the case in <i>The Yorkshire Tragedy</i>, where
-the violent scene of the triple murder at Calverley Hall is clearly
-located upstairs.<a id="FNanchor_380" href="#Footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a> Moreover, there are two plays which stage above
-what one would normally regard as hall rather than chamber scenes.
-One is <i>Sejanus</i>, where a break in the dialogue in the first act
-can best be explained by the interpretation of a scene in an upper
-‘gallery’.<a id="FNanchor_381" href="#Footnote_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a> The other is <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>, where
-the personages go ‘up’ to the great chamber at Court.<a id="FNanchor_382" href="#Footnote_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a> Elaborate
-use is also made of the upper level in <i>Antony and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span> Cleopatra</i>,
-where it represents the refuge of Cleopatra upon a monument, to which
-Antony is heaved up for his death scene, and on which Cleopatra is
-afterwards surprised by Caesar’s troops.<a id="FNanchor_383" href="#Footnote_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a> But I do not agree
-with the suggestion that it was used in shipboard scenes, for which,
-as we learn from the presenter’s speeches in <i>Pericles</i>, the
-stage-manager gave up the idea of providing a realistic setting, and
-fell back upon an appeal to the imagination of the audience.<a id="FNanchor_384" href="#Footnote_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a> Nor
-do I think that it was used for the ‘platform’ at Elsinore Castle
-in <i>Hamlet</i>;<a id="FNanchor_385" href="#Footnote_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a> or, as it was in the sixteenth century, for
-scenes in a Capitoline senate overlooking the forum at Rome.<a id="FNanchor_386" href="#Footnote_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a> In
-<i>Bonduca</i>, if that is of our period, it was adapted for a high
-rock, with fugitives upon it, in a wood.<a id="FNanchor_387" href="#Footnote_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a> I do not find extensive
-chamber scenes ‘above’ in any King’s play later than 1609, and that may
-be a fact of significance to which I shall return.<a id="FNanchor_388" href="#Footnote_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a> But shallow
-action, at windows or in a gallery overlooking a hall or open space,
-continues to be frequent.<a id="FNanchor_389" href="#Footnote_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span> In <i>The Devil is an Ass</i>, which is
-a Blackfriars play of 1616, a little beyond the limits of our period,
-there is an interesting scene played out of two contiguous upper
-windows, supposed to be in different houses.<a id="FNanchor_390" href="#Footnote_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a></p>
-
-<p>There is other evidence to show that in the seventeenth century as
-in the sixteenth, the stage was not limited to the presentation of a
-single house only at any given moment. A multiplicity of houses would
-fit the needs of several plays, but perhaps the most striking instance
-for the Globe is afforded by <i>The Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>, the
-last act of which requires two inns on opposite sides of the stage,
-the signs of which have been secretly exchanged, as a trick in the
-working out of the plot.<a id="FNanchor_391" href="#Footnote_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a> The King’s plays do not often require
-any marked foreshortening of distance in journeys over the stage.
-Hamlet, indeed, comes in ‘a farre off’, according to a stage-direction
-of the Folio, but this need mean no more than at the other end of the
-graveyard, although Hamlet is in fact returning from a voyage.<a id="FNanchor_392" href="#Footnote_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a>
-In <i>Bonduca</i> the Roman army at one end of the stage are said to
-be half a furlong from the rock occupied by Caractacus, which they
-cannot yet see; but they go off, and their leaders subsequently emerge
-upon the rock from behind.<a id="FNanchor_393" href="#Footnote_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a> The old device endured at the Red
-Bull, but even here the flagrant example usually cited is of a very
-special type.<a id="FNanchor_394" href="#Footnote_394" class="fnanchor">[394]</a> At the end of <i>The Travels of the Three English
-Brothers</i>, the action of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span> which ranges widely over the inhabited
-world, there is an appeal to imagination by Fame, the presenter, who
-says,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">Would your apprehensions helpe poore art,</div>
- <div>Into three parts deuiding this our stage,</div>
- <div>They all at once shall take their leaues of you.</div>
- <div>Thinke this England, this Spaine, this Persia.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Then follow the stage-directions, ‘Enter three seuerall
-waies the three Brothers’, and ‘Fame giues to each a prospective
-glasse, they seme to see one another’. Obviously such a visionary
-dumb-show cannot legitimately be twisted into an argument that the
-concurrent representation of incongruous localities was a matter of
-normal staging. Such interplay of opposed houses, as we get in <i>The
-Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>, would no doubt seem more effective if we
-could adopt the ingenious conjecture which regards the scenic wall
-as not running in a straight line all the way, but broken by two
-angles, so that, while the central apertures below and above directly
-front the spectators, the doors to right and left, each with a room
-or window above it, are set on a bias, and more or less face each
-other from end to end of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_395" href="#Footnote_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a> I cannot call this more
-than a conjecture, for there is no direct evidence in its favour,
-and the Swan drawing, for what that is worth, is flatly against it.
-Structurally it would, I suppose, fit the round or apsidal ended
-Globe better than the rectangular Fortune or Blackfriars. The theory
-seems to have been suggested by a desire to make it possible to watch
-action within the alcove from a gallery on the level above. I have
-not, however, come across any play which can be safely assigned to a
-public theatre, in which just this situation presents itself, although
-it is common enough for persons above to watch action in a threshold
-or hall scene. Two windows in the same plane would, of course, fully
-meet the needs of <i>The Devil is an Ass</i>. There is, indeed, the
-often-quoted scene from <i>David and Bethsabe</i>, in which the King
-watches the Hittite’s wife bathing at a fountain; but the provenance
-of <i>David and Bethsabe</i> is so uncertain and its text so evidently
-manipulated, that it would be very temerarious to rely upon it as
-affording any proof of public usage.<a id="FNanchor_396" href="#Footnote_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a> On the other hand, if it is
-the case, as seems almost certain, that the boxes over the doors were
-originally the lord’s rooms, it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span> would no doubt be desirable that the
-occupants of those rooms should be able to see anything that went on
-within the alcove. I do not quite know what weight to attach to Mr.
-Lawrence’s analogy between the oblique doors which this theory involves
-and the familiar post-Restoration proscenium doors, with stage-boxes
-above them, at right angles to the plane of the footlights.<a id="FNanchor_397" href="#Footnote_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a> The
-roofed Caroline theatres, with their side-walls to the stage, and the
-proscenium arch, probably borrowed from the masks, have intervened, and
-I cannot pretend to have traced the history of theatrical structure
-during the Caroline period.</p>
-
-<p>I have felt justified in dealing more briefly with the early
-seventeenth-century stages than with those of the sixteenth century,
-for, after all, the fundamental conditions, so far as I can judge,
-remained unaltered. I seem able to lay my finger upon two directions in
-which development took place, and both of these concern the troublesome
-problem of interior action. First of all there is the stage gallery. Of
-this I venture to reconstruct the story as follows. Its first function
-was to provide seating accommodation for dignified and privileged
-spectators, amongst whom could be placed, if occasion arose, presenters
-or divine agents supposed to be watching or directing the action of
-a play. Perhaps a differentiation took place. Parts of the gallery,
-above the doors at either end of the scene, were set aside as lord’s
-rooms. The central part, with the upper floor of the tiring-house
-behind it, was used for the musicians, but was also available for such
-scenes as could effectively be staged above, and a curtain was fitted,
-corresponding to that below, behind which the recess could be set as
-a small chamber. Either as a result of these changes or for other
-reasons, the lord’s rooms, about the end of the sixteenth century, lost
-their popularity, and it became the fashion for persons of distinction,
-or would-be distinction, to sit upon the stage itself instead.<a id="FNanchor_398" href="#Footnote_398" class="fnanchor">[398]</a>
-This left additional space free above, and the architects of the Globe
-and Fortune took the opportunity to enlarge the accommodation for
-their upper scenes. Probably they left windows over the side-doors, so
-that the upper parts of three distinct houses could, if necessary, be
-represented; and it may be that spectators were not wholly excluded
-from these.<a id="FNanchor_399" href="#Footnote_399" class="fnanchor">[399]</a> But they widened<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span> the music-room, so that it could now
-hold larger scenes, and in fact now became an upper stage and not a
-mere recess. Adequate lighting from behind could probably be obtained
-rather more easily here than on the crowded floor below. There is an
-interesting allusion which I have not yet quoted, and which seems
-to point to an upper stage of substantial dimensions in the public
-theatres of about the year 1607. It is in Middleton’s <i>Family of
-Love</i>, itself a King’s Revels play.<a id="FNanchor_400" href="#Footnote_400" class="fnanchor">[400]</a> Some of the characters have
-been to a performance, not ‘by the youths’, and there ‘saw Sampson bear
-the town-gates on his neck from the lower to the upper stage’. You
-cannot carry a pair of town-gates into a mere box, such as the Swan
-drawing shows.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, what of the alcove? I think that it proved too dark and
-too cramped for the convenient handling of chamber scenes, and that
-the tendency of the early seventeenth century was to confine its
-use to action which could be kept shallow, or for which obscurity
-was appropriate. It could still serve for a prison, or an ‘unsunned
-lodge’, or a chamber of horrors. For scenes requiring more light and
-movement it was replaced, sometimes by the more spacious upper stage,
-sometimes by the main stage, on to which beds and other properties
-were carried or ‘thrust out’, just as they had always been on a
-less extensive scale for hall scenes. The difficulties of shifting
-were, on the whole, compensated for by the greater effectiveness and
-visibility which action on the main scene afforded. I do not therefore
-think it possible to accept even such a modified version of the old
-‘alternationist’ theory as I find set out in Professor Thorndike’s
-recent <i>Shakespeare’s Theater</i>. The older alternationists,
-starting from the principle, sound enough in itself, of continuous
-action within an act, assumed that all interior or other propertied
-scenes were played behind the curtains, and were set there while
-unpropertied action was played outside; and they deduced a method of
-dramatic construction, which required the dramatists to alternate
-exterior and interior scenes so as to allow time for the settings to be
-carried out.<a id="FNanchor_401" href="#Footnote_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a> The theory breaks down, not merely because it entails
-a much more constant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span> use of the curtains than the stage-directions
-give us any warrant for, but also because it fails to provide for the
-not infrequent event of a succession of interior scenes; and in its
-original form it is abandoned by Professor Thorndike in common with
-other recent scholars, who see plainly enough that what I have called
-hall scenes must have been given on the outer stage. I do not think
-that they have always grasped that the tendency of the seventeenth
-century was towards a decreased and not an increased reliance upon the
-curtained space, possibly because they have not as a rule followed the
-historical method in their investigations; and Professor Thorndike,
-although he traces the earlier employment of the alcove much as I
-do, treats the opening and closing of the curtains as coming in
-time to be used, in <i>Antony and Cleopatra</i> for example and in
-<i>Cymbeline</i>, as little more than a handy convention for indicating
-the transference of the scene from one locality to another.<a id="FNanchor_402" href="#Footnote_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a> Such
-a usage would not of course mean that the new scene was played wholly
-or even partly within the alcove itself; the change might be merely one
-of background. But, although I admit that there would be a convenience
-in Professor Thorndike’s development, I do not see that there is in
-fact any evidence for it. The stage-directions never mention the use
-of curtains in such circumstances as he has in mind; and while I am
-far from supposing that they need always have been mentioned, and have
-myself assumed their use in one scene of <i>Cymbeline</i> where they
-are not mentioned, yet mentions of them are so common in connexion with
-the earlier and admitted functions of the alcove, that I should have
-expected Professor Thorndike’s view, if it were sound, to have proved
-capable of confirmation from at least one unconjectural case.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulty which has led Professor Thorndike to his conclusion
-is, however, a real one. In the absence of a <i>scenario</i> with
-notes of locality, for which certainly there is no evidence, how
-did the Elizabethan managers indicate to their audiences the shifts
-of action from one place to another? This is both a sixteenth- and a
-seventeenth-century problem. We have noted in a former chapter that
-unity of place was characteristic of the earlier Elizabethan interlude;
-that it failed to impose itself upon the romantic narrative plots
-of the popular drama; that it was departed from through the device
-of letting two ends of a continuously set stage stand for discrete
-localities; that this device proved only a transition to a system in
-which the whole stage stood successively for different localities;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-and that there are hints of a convention by which the locality of
-each scene was indicated with the help of a label, placed over the
-door through which the personages in that scene made their exits and
-their entrances.<a id="FNanchor_403" href="#Footnote_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a> The public stage of the sixteenth and early
-seventeenth centuries experienced no re-establishment of the principle
-of unity; broadly speaking, it presents an extreme type of romantic
-drama, with an unfettered freedom of ranging from one to another of any
-number of localities required by a narrative plot. But the practice,
-or the instinct, of individual playwrights differs. Ben Jonson is
-naturally the man who betrays the most conscious preoccupation with the
-question. He is not, however, a rigid or consistent unitarian. In his
-two earliest plays the scene shifts from the country to a neighbouring
-town, and the induction to <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i> is in
-part an apology for his own liberty, in part a criticism of the licence
-of others.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="narrow"><i>Mitis.</i><span style="margin-left: 12em">What’s his scene?</span></p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Cordatus.</i> Mary <i>Insula Fortunata</i>, sir.</p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Mitis.</i> O, the fortunate Iland? masse he has bound himself to a
-strict law there.</p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Cordatus.</i> Why so?</p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Mitis.</i> He cannot lightly alter the scene without crossing the seas.</p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Cordatus.</i> He needs not, hauing a whole Ilande to runne through,
-I thinke.</p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Mitis.</i> No? howe comes it then, that in some one play we see so
-many seas, countries, and kingdomes, past over with such admirable
-dexteritie?</p>
-
-<p class="narrow"><i>Cordatus.</i> O, that but shewes how well the Authors can travaile in
-their vocation, and out-run the apprehension of their Auditorie.</p></div>
-
-
-<p><i>Sejanus</i> is throughout in Rome, but five or six distinct houses
-are required, and it must be doubtful whether such a multiplicity of
-houses could be shown without a change of scene.<a id="FNanchor_404" href="#Footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a> The prologue to
-<i>Volpone</i> claims for the author that ‘The laws of time, place,
-persons he obserueth’, and this has no more than four houses, all in
-Venice.<a id="FNanchor_405" href="#Footnote_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a> In <i>Catiline</i> the scenes in Rome, with some ten
-houses, are broken by two in open country.<a id="FNanchor_406" href="#Footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a> In <i>Bartholomew
-Fair</i> a preliminary act at a London<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span> house is followed by four set
-continuously before the three booths of the fair. Absolute unity, as
-distinct from the unity of a single country, or even a single town, is
-perhaps only attained in <i>The Alchemist</i>. Here everything takes
-place, either in a single room in Lovewit’s house in the Blackfriars,
-or in front of a door leading from the street into the same room.
-Evidently advantage was taken of the fact that the scene did not have
-to be changed, to build a wall containing this door out on to the
-stage itself, for action such as speaking through the keyhole requires
-both sides of the door to be practicable.<a id="FNanchor_407" href="#Footnote_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a> There is also a window
-from which persons approaching can be seen. Inner doors, presumably in
-the scenic wall, lead to a laboratory and other parts of the house,
-but these are not discovered, and no use is made of the upper level.
-Jonson here is a clear innovator, so far as the English public theatre
-is concerned; no other play of our period reproduces this type of
-permanent interior setting.</p>
-
-<p>Shakespeare is no classicist; yet in some of his plays, comedies and
-romantic tragedies, it is, I think, possible to discern at least an
-instinctive feeling in the direction of scenic unity. <i>The Comedy of
-Errors</i>, with its action in the streets of Syracuse, near the mart,
-or before the Phoenix, the Porpentine, or the priory, follows upon
-the lines of its Latin model, although here, as in most of Jonson’s
-plays, it is possible that the various houses were shown successively
-rather than concurrently. <i>Twelfth Night</i>, <i>Much Ado about
-Nothing</i>, and <i>Measure for Measure</i> each require a single town,
-with two, three, and five houses respectively; <i>Titus Andronicus</i>,
-<i>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</i>, <i>The Merry Wives of Windsor</i>,
-<i>As You Like It</i>, <i>Troilus and Cressida</i>, <i>Timon of
-Athens</i>, each a single town, with open country environs. <i>Love’s
-Labour’s Lost</i> has the unity of a park, with perhaps a manor-house
-as background at one end and tents at the other; <i>The Tempest</i>
-complete pastoral unity after the opening scene on shipboard.
-<i>Hamlet</i> would all be Elsinore, but for one distant open-country
-scene; <i>Romeo and Juliet</i> all Venice, but for one scene in Mantua.
-In another group of plays the action is divided between two towns. It
-alternates from Padua to near Verona in <i>The Taming of the Shrew</i>,
-from Verona to Milan in <i>The Two Gentlemen of Verona</i>, from
-Venice to Belmont in <i>The Merchant of Venice</i>; in <i>Othello</i>
-an act in Venice is followed by four in Cyprus. On the other hand,
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span> a few comedies and in the histories and historical tragedies,
-where Shakespeare’s sources leave him less discretion, he shifts his
-scenes with a readiness outdone by no other playwright. The third act
-of <i>Richard II</i> requires no less than four localities, three of
-which have a castle, perhaps the same castle from the stage-manager’s
-point of view, in the background. The second act of <i>1 Henry IV</i>
-has as many. <i>King John</i> and <i>Henry V</i> pass lightly between
-England and France, <i>All’s Well that Ends Well</i> between France
-and Italy, <i>The Winter’s Tale</i> between Sicily and Bohemia,
-<i>Cymbeline</i> between Britain, Italy, and Wales. Quite a late play,
-<i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>, might almost be regarded as a challenge
-to classicists. Rome, Misenum, Athens, Actium, Syria, Egypt are the
-localities, with much further subdivision in the Egyptian scenes. The
-second act has four changes of locality, the third no less than eight,
-and it is noteworthy that these changes are often for quite short
-bits of dialogue, which no modern manager would regard as justifying
-a resetting of the stage. Shakespeare must surely have been in some
-danger, in this case, of outrunning the apprehension of his auditory,
-and I doubt if even Professor Thorndike’s play of curtains would have
-saved him.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be observed also that, in Shakespeare’s plays as in those of
-others, no excessive pains are taken to let the changes of locality
-coincide with the divisions between the acts. If the second and third
-acts of <i>All’s Well that Ends Well</i> are at Paris, the fourth at
-Florence, and the fifth at Marseilles, yet the shift from Roussillon to
-Paris is in the middle and not at the end of the first act. The shift
-from Sicily to Bohemia is in the middle of the third act of <i>The
-Winter’s Tale</i>; the Agincourt scenes begin in the middle of the
-third act of <i>Henry V</i>. Indeed, although the poets regarded the
-acts as units of literary structure, the act-divisions do not appear
-to have been greatly stressed, at any rate on the stages of the public
-houses, in the actual presentation of plays.<a id="FNanchor_408" href="#Footnote_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a> I do not think that
-they were wholly disregarded, although the fact that they are so often
-unnoted in the prints of plays based on stage copies might point to
-that conclusion.<a id="FNanchor_409" href="#Footnote_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a> The act-interval did not necessarily denote any
-substantial time-interval in the action of the play, and perhaps the
-actors did not invariably leave the stage. Thus the lovers in <i>A
-Midsummer Night’s Dream</i> sleep through the interval between the
-third and fourth acts.<a id="FNanchor_410" href="#Footnote_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a> But some sort of break in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span> continuity
-of the performance is a natural inference from the fact that the
-act-divisions are the favourite, although not the only, points for
-the intervention of presenters, dumb-shows, and choruses.<a id="FNanchor_411" href="#Footnote_411" class="fnanchor">[411]</a> The
-act-intervals cannot have been long, at any rate if the performance
-was to be completed in two hours. There may sometimes have been music,
-which would not have prevented the audience from stretching themselves
-and talking.<a id="FNanchor_412" href="#Footnote_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a> Short intervals, rather than none at all, are, I
-think, suggested by the well-known passage in the induction of <i>The
-Malcontent</i>, as altered for performance at the Globe, in which it
-is explained that passages have been added to the play as originally
-written for Revels boys, ‘to entertain a little more time, and to
-abridge the not-received custom of music in our theatre’.<a id="FNanchor_413" href="#Footnote_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a> Some
-information is perhaps to be gleaned from the ‘plots’ of plays prepared
-for the guidance of the book-keeper or tire-man, of which examples
-are preserved at Dulwich.<a id="FNanchor_414" href="#Footnote_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a> These have lines drawn across them at
-points which pretty clearly correspond to the beginnings of scenes,
-although it can hardly be assumed that each new scene meant a change of
-locality. The act-divisions can in some, but not all, cases be inferred
-from the occurrence of dumb-shows and choruses; in one, <i>The Dead
-Man’s Fortune</i>, they are definitely marked by lines of crosses, and
-against each such line there is the marginal note ‘musique’. Other
-musical directions, ‘sound’, ‘sennet’, ‘alarum’, ‘flourish’, come
-sometimes at the beginning, sometimes in the middle of scenes.</p>
-
-<p>We do not get any encouragement to think that a change of locality was
-regularly heralded by notes of music, even if this may incidentally
-have been the case when a procession or an army or a monarch was about
-to enter. Possibly the lines on the plots may signify an even slighter
-pause than that between the acts, such as the modern stage provides<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-with the added emphasis of a drop-curtain; but of this there is no
-proof, and an allusion in <i>Catiline</i> to action as rapid</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As is a veil put off, a visor changed,</div>
- <div>Or the scene shifted, in our theatres,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">is distinctly against it.<a id="FNanchor_415" href="#Footnote_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a> A mere clearance of the
-stage does not necessarily entail a change of scene, although there
-are one or two instances in which the exit of personages at one door,
-followed by their return at another, seems to constitute or accompany
-such a change.<a id="FNanchor_416" href="#Footnote_416" class="fnanchor">[416]</a> And even if the fact of a change could be signified
-in one or other of these ways, the audience would still be in the dark
-as to what the new locality was supposed to be. Can we then assume a
-continuance of the old practice of indicating localities by labels over
-the doors? This would entail the shifting of the labels themselves
-during the progress of the play, at any rate if there were more
-localities than entrances, or if, as might usually be expected, more
-entrances than one were required to any locality. But there would be no
-difficulty about this, and in fact we have an example of the shifting
-of a label by a mechanical device in the introduction to <i>Wily
-Beguiled</i>.<a id="FNanchor_417" href="#Footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a> This was not a public theatre play, and the label
-concerned was one giving the title of the play and not its locality,
-but similar machinery could obviously have been applied. There is not,
-however, much actual evidence for the use either of title-labels or
-of locality-labels on the public stage. The former are perhaps the
-more probable of the two, and the practice of posting play-bills at
-the theatre door and in places<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span> of public resort would not render
-them altogether superfluous.<a id="FNanchor_418" href="#Footnote_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a> In favour of locality-labels it is
-possible to quote Dekker’s advice to those entering Paul’s, and also
-the praise given to Jonson by Jasper Mayne in <i>Jonsonus Virbius</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thy stage was still a stage, two entrances</div>
- <div>Were not two parts o’ the world, disjoined by seas.<a id="FNanchor_419" href="#Footnote_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">These, however, are rather vague and inconclusive
-allusions on which to base a whole stage practice, and there is
-not much to be added to them from the texts and stage-directions
-of the plays themselves. Signs are of course used to distinguish
-particular taverns and shops, just as they would be in real life.<a id="FNanchor_420" href="#Footnote_420" class="fnanchor">[420]</a>
-Occasionally, moreover, a locality is named in a stage-direction in
-a way that recalls <i>Common Conditions</i>, but this may also be
-explained as no more than a descriptive touch such as is not uncommon
-in stage-directions written by authors.<a id="FNanchor_421" href="#Footnote_421" class="fnanchor">[421]</a> It is rather against
-the theory of labels that care is often taken, when a locality is
-changed, to let the personages themselves declare their whereabouts.
-A careful reader of such rapidly shifting plays as <i>Edward I</i>,
-<i>James IV</i>, <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, or <i>King Leir</i>
-will generally be able to orientate himself with the aid of the
-opening passages of dialogue in each new scene, and conceivably a very
-attentive spectator might do the same. Once the personages have got
-themselves grouped in the mind in relation to their localities, the
-recurrence of this or that group would help. It would require a rather
-careful examination of texts to enable one to judge how far this method
-of localization by dialogue<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span> continues throughout our period. I have
-been mainly struck by it in early plays. The presenters may also give
-assistance, either by declaring the general scene in a prologue, or
-by intervening to call attention to particular shifts.<a id="FNanchor_422" href="#Footnote_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a> Thus in
-<i>Dr. Faustus</i> the original scene in Wittenberg is indicated by
-the chorus, a shift to Rome by speeches of Wagner and Faustus, a shift
-to the imperial court by the chorus, and the return to Wittenberg
-by a speech of Faustus.<a id="FNanchor_423" href="#Footnote_423" class="fnanchor">[423]</a> Jonson makes a deliberate experiment
-with this method in <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>, which it is
-worth while following in detail. It is the Grex of presenters, Mitis
-and Cordatus, who serve as guides. The first act is in open country
-without background, and it is left to the rustic Sogliardo to describe
-it (543) as his lordship. A visit to Puntarvolo’s is arranged, and
-at the beginning of the second act Cordatus says, ‘The Scene is the
-countrey still, remember’ (946). Presently the stage is cleared, with
-the hint, ‘Here he comes, and with him Signior Deliro a merchant, at
-whose house hee is come to soiourne. Make your owne obseruation now;
-only transferre your thoughts to the Cittie with the Scene; where,
-suppose they speake’ (1499). The next scene then is at Deliro’s. Then,
-for the first scene of the third act, ‘We must desire you to presuppose
-the Stage, the middle Isle in Paules; and that, the West end of it’
-(1918). The second scene of this act is in the open country again, with
-a ‘crosse’ on which Sordido hangs himself; we are left to infer it from
-the reappearance of the rustic characters. It is closed with ‘Let your
-minde keepe companie with the Scene stil, which now remoues it selfe
-from the Countrie to the Court’ (2555). After a scene at Court, ‘You
-vnderstand where the scene is?’ (2709), and presumably the entry of
-personages already familiar brings us back for the first scene of Act
-<span class="allsmcap">IV</span> to Deliro’s. A visit to ‘the Notaries by the Exchange’ is
-planned, and for the second and third scenes the only note is of the
-entry of Puntarvolo and the Scrivener; probably a scrivener’s shop was
-discovered. Act <span class="allsmcap">V</span> is introduced by ‘Let your imagination be
-swifter than a paire of oares, and by this, suppose Puntarvolo, Briske,
-Fungoso, and the Dog, arriu’d at the court gate, and going vp to the
-great chamber’ (3532). The action of the next scene begins in the great
-chamber and then shifts to the court gate again. Evidently the two
-localities were in some way staged together, and a guide is not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span> called
-upon to enlighten us. There are yet two more scenes, according to the
-Grex. One opens with ‘Conceiue him but to be enter’d the Mitre’ (3841),
-and as action shifts from the Mitre to Deliro’s and back again without
-further note, these two houses were probably shown together. The final
-scene is introduced by ‘O, this is to be imagin’d the Counter belike’
-(4285). So elaborate a directory would surely render any use of labels
-superfluous for this particular play; but, so far as we know, the
-experiment was not repeated.<a id="FNanchor_424" href="#Footnote_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a></p>
-
-
-<p>When Cordatus points to ‘that’, and calls it the west end of Paul’s,
-are we to suppose that the imagination of the audience was helped out
-by the display of any pictorial background? It is not impossible. The
-central aperture, disclosed by the parting curtains, could easily
-hold, in place of a discovered alcove or a quasi-solid monument or
-rock, any kind of painted cloth which might give colour to the scene.
-A woodland cloth or a battlement cloth could serve for play after
-play, and for a special occasion something more distinctive could be
-attempted without undue expense. Such a back-cloth, perhaps for use in
-<i>Dr. Faustus</i>, may have been ‘the sittie of Rome’ which we find
-in Henslowe’s inventory of 1598.<a id="FNanchor_425" href="#Footnote_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a> And something of this kind seems
-to be required in <i>2 If You Know not Me, You Know Nobody</i>, where
-the scene is before Sir Thomas Gresham’s newly completed Burse, and the
-personages say ‘How do you like this building?’ and ‘We are gazing here
-on M. Greshams work’.<a id="FNanchor_426" href="#Footnote_426" class="fnanchor">[426]</a> Possibly Elizabethan imaginations were more
-vivid than a tradition of scene-painters allows ours to be, but that
-does not mean that an Elizabethan audience did not like to have its
-eyes tickled upon occasion. And if as a rule the stage-managers relied
-mainly upon garments and properties to minister to this instinct, there
-is no particular reason why they should not also have had recourse
-to so simple a device as a back-cloth. This conjecture is hardly
-excluded by the very general terms in which post-Restoration writers
-deny ‘scenes’ and all decorations other than ‘hangings’ to the earlier
-stage.<a id="FNanchor_427" href="#Footnote_427" class="fnanchor">[427]</a> By ‘scenes’ they no doubt mean the complete settings with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-shuttered ‘wings’ as well as back-cloths which Inigo Jones had devised
-for the masks and the stage had adopted. Even these were not absolutely
-unknown in pre-Restoration plays, and neither this fact nor the
-incidental use of special cloths over the central aperture would make
-it untrue that the normal background of an Elizabethan or Jacobean play
-was an arras.<a id="FNanchor_428" href="#Footnote_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a></p>
-
-<p>The discussions of the last chapter and a half have envisaged the
-plays presented, exclusively in open theatres until the King’s took
-over the Blackfriars, by professional companies of men. I must deal
-in conclusion, perhaps more briefly than the interest of the problem
-would itself justify, with those of the revived boy companies which for
-a time carried on such an active rivalry with the men, at Paul’s from
-1599 to 1606 and at the Blackfriars from 1600 to 1609. It is, I think,
-a principal defect of many investigations into Jacobean staging, that
-the identity of the devices employed in the so-called ‘public’ and
-‘private’ houses has been too hastily assumed, and a uniform hypothesis
-built up upon material taken indifferently from both sources, without
-regard to the logical possibility of the considerable divergences
-to which varying conditions of structure and of tradition may have
-given rise. This is a kind of syncretism to which an inadequate
-respect for the historic method naturally tends. It is no doubt true
-that the ‘standardization’ of type, which I have accepted as likely
-to result from the frequent migration of companies and plays from
-one public house to another, may in a less degree have affected the
-private houses also. James Burbadge originally built the Blackfriars
-for public performances, and we know that <i>Satiromastix</i> was
-produced both at the Globe and at Paul’s in 1601, and that in 1604 the
-Revels boys and the King’s men were able to effect mutual piracies
-of <i>Jeronimo</i> and <i>The Malcontent</i>. Nor is there anything
-in the general character of the two groups of ‘public’ and ‘private’
-plays, as they have come down to us, which is in any obvious way
-inconsistent with some measure of standardization. It is apparent,
-indeed, that the act-interval was of far more importance at both Paul’s
-and the Blackfriars than elsewhere. But this is largely a matter of
-degree. The inter-acts of music and song and dance were more universal
-and longer.<a id="FNanchor_429" href="#Footnote_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a> But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span> the relation of the acts to each other was not
-essentially different. The break in the representation may still
-correspond to practically no interval at all in the time-distribution
-of the play; and there are examples in which the action continues
-to be carried on by the personages in dumb-show, while the music is
-still sounding.<a id="FNanchor_430" href="#Footnote_430" class="fnanchor">[430]</a> In any case this particular distinction, while it
-might well modify the methods of the dramatist, need only affect the
-economy of the tire-house in so far as it would give more time for the
-preparation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span> an altered setting at the beginning of an act. When
-<i>The Malcontent</i> was taken over at the Globe, the text had to be
-lengthened that the music might be abridged, but there is no indication
-of any further alteration, due to a difficulty in adapting the original
-situations to the peculiarities of the Globe stage. The types of
-incident, again, which are familiar in public plays, reappear in the
-private ones; in different proportions, no doubt, since the literary
-interest of the dramatists and their audiences tends rather in the
-directions, on the one hand of definite pastoral, and on the other of
-courtly crime and urban humour, than in that of chronicle history. And
-there is a marked general analogy in the stage-directions. Here also
-those who leave the stage go ‘in’, and music and voices can be heard
-‘within’. There are the same formulae for the use of several doors, of
-which one is definitely a ‘middle’ door.<a id="FNanchor_431" href="#Footnote_431" class="fnanchor">[431]</a> Spirits and so forth can
-‘ascend’ from under the stage by the convenient traps.<a id="FNanchor_432" href="#Footnote_432" class="fnanchor">[432]</a> Possibly
-they can also ‘descend’ from the heavens.<a id="FNanchor_433" href="#Footnote_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a> The normal backing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span> of
-the stage, even in out-of-door scenes, is an arras or hanging, through
-which at Paul’s spectators can watch a play.<a id="FNanchor_434" href="#Footnote_434" class="fnanchor">[434]</a> At the Blackfriars,
-while the arras, even more clearly than in the public theatres, is of a
-decorative rather than a realistic kind, it can also be helped out by
-something in the nature of perspective.<a id="FNanchor_435" href="#Footnote_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a> There is action ‘above’,
-and interior action, some of which is recessed or ‘discovered’. It must
-be added, however, that these formulae, taken by themselves, do not go
-very far towards determining the real character of the staging. They
-make their first appearance, for the most part, with the interludes
-in which the Court influence is paramount, and are handed down as a
-tradition to the public and the private plays alike. They would hardly
-have been sufficient, without the Swan drawing and other collateral
-evidence, to disclose even such a general conception of the various
-uses and interplay, at the Globe and elsewhere, of main stage, alcove,
-and gallery, as we believe ourselves to have succeeded in adumbrating.
-And it is quite possible that at Paul’s and the Blackfriars they may
-not&mdash;at any rate it must not be taken for granted without inquiry that
-they do&mdash;mean just the same things. Thus, to take the doors alone, we
-infer with the help of the Swan drawing, that in the public<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span> theatres
-the three main entrances were in the scenic wall and on the same or
-nearly the same plane. But the Blackfriars was a rectangular room. We
-do not know that any free space was left between its walls and the
-sides of the stage. And it is quite conceivable that there may have
-been side-doors in the planes of these walls, and at right angles to
-the middle door. Whether this was so or not, and if so how far forward
-the side-doors stood, there is certainly nothing in the formulae
-of the stage-directions to tell us. Perhaps the most noticeable
-differentiation, which emerges from a comparative survey of private and
-public plays, is that in the main the writers of the former, unlike
-those of the latter, appear to be guided by the principle of unity of
-place; at any rate to the extent that their <i>domus</i> are generally
-located in the same town, although they may be brought for purposes
-of representation into closer contiguity than the actual topography
-of that town would suggest. There are exceptions, and the scenes in a
-town are occasionally broken by one or two, requiring at the most an
-open-country background, in the environs. The exact measure in which
-the principle is followed will become sufficiently evident in the
-sequel. My immediate point is that it was precisely the absence of
-unity of place which drove the public stage back upon its common form
-background of a curtained alcove below and a curtained gallery above,
-supplemented by the side-doors and later the windows above them, and
-convertible to the needs of various localities in the course of a
-single play.</p>
-
-<p>Let us now proceed to the analysis, first of the Paul’s plays and then
-of the Chapel and Revels plays at the Blackfriars; separately, for
-the same caution, which forbids a hasty syncretism of the conditions
-of public and private houses, also warns us that divergences may
-conceivably have existed between those of the two private houses
-themselves. But here too we are faced with the fact that individual
-plays were sometimes transferred from one to the other, <i>The Fawn</i>
-from Blackfriars to Paul’s, and <i>The Trick to Catch the Old One</i>
-in its turn from Paul’s to Blackfriars.<a id="FNanchor_436" href="#Footnote_436" class="fnanchor">[436]</a></p>
-
-<p>Seventeen plays, including the two just named and <i>Satiromastix</i>,
-which was shared with the Globe, are assigned to Paul’s by contemporary
-title-pages.<a id="FNanchor_437" href="#Footnote_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a> To these may be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span> added, with various degrees of
-plausibility, <i>Histriomastix</i>, <i>What You Will</i>, and <i>Wily
-Beguiled</i>. For Paul’s were also certainly planned, although we
-cannot be sure whether, or if so when, they were actually produced, the
-curious series of plays left in manuscript by William Percy, of which
-unfortunately only two have ever been published. As the company only
-endured for six or seven years after its revival, it seems probable
-that a very fair proportion of its repertory has reached us. <i>Jack
-Drum’s Entertainment</i> speaks of the ‘mustie fopperies of antiquitie’
-with which the company began its career, and one of these is no doubt
-to be found in <i>Histriomastix</i>, evidently an old play, possibly
-of academic origin, and recently brought up to date.<a id="FNanchor_438" href="#Footnote_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a> The staging
-of <i>Histriomastix</i> would have caused no difficulty to the Revels
-officers, if it had been put into their hands as a Paul’s play of the
-’eighties. The plot illustrates the cyclical progression of Peace,
-Plenty, Pride, Envy, War, Poverty, each of whom in turn occupies a
-throne, finally resigned to Peace, for whom in an alternative ending
-for Court performance is substituted Astraea, who is Elizabeth.<a id="FNanchor_439" href="#Footnote_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a>
-This arrangement recalls that of <i>The Woman in the Moon</i>, but the
-throne seems to have its position on the main stage rather than above.
-Apart from the abstractions, the whole of the action may be supposed
-to take place in a single provincial town, largely in an open street,
-sometimes in the hall of a lord called Mavortius, on occasion in or
-before smaller <i>domus</i> representing the studies of Chrisoganus,
-a scholar, and Fourcher, a lawyer, the shop of Velure, a merchant, a
-market-cross, which is discovered by a curtain, perhaps a tavern.<a id="FNanchor_440" href="#Footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a>
-Certainly in the ’eighties these would have been disposed together
-around the stage, like the <i>domus</i> of <i>Campaspe</i> about
-the market-place at Athens.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span> And I believe that this is in fact how
-<i>Histriomastix</i> was staged, more particularly as at one point (v.
-259) the action appears to pass directly from the street to the hall
-without a clearance. Similarly <i>The Maid’s Metamorphosis</i> is on
-strictly Lylyan lines. It is <i>tout en pastoralle</i>, in a wood,
-about whose paths the characters stray, while in various regions of it
-are located the cave of Somnus (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 148), the cottage of
-Eurymine (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 4), and a palace where ‘Phoebus appeares’
-(<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 25), possibly above. <i>Wily Beguiled</i> needs a
-stage of which part is a wood, and part a village hard by, with some
-suggestion of the doors of the houses of Gripe, Ploddall, Churms, and
-Mother Midnight. Somewhat less concentration is to be found in <i>The
-Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll</i>. Here too, a space of open country, a green
-hill with a cave, the harbourage and a bank, is neighboured by the
-Court of Alphonso and the houses of Cassimere and of Flores, of which
-the last named is adapted for interior action.<a id="FNanchor_441" href="#Footnote_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a> All this is in
-Saxony, but there is also a single short scene (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii) of
-thirty-two lines, not necessarily requiring a background, in Brunswick.
-The plays of William Percy are still, it must be admitted, rather
-obscure, and one has an uneasy feeling that the manuscript may not yet
-have yielded up all its indications as to date and provenance. But on
-the assumption that the conditions contemplated are those of Paul’s in
-1599–1606, we learn some curious details of structure, and are face
-to face with a technique which is still closely reminiscent of the
-’eighties. Percy, alone of the dramatists, prefixes to his books, for
-the guidance of the producer, a note of the equipment required to set
-them forth. Thus for <i>Cuckqueans and Cuckolds Errant</i> he writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">‘The Properties.</p>
-
-<p>‘Harwich, In Midde of the Stage Colchester with Image of
-Tarlton, Signe and Ghirlond under him also. The Raungers Lodge,
-Maldon, A Ladder of Roapes trussed up neare Harwich. Highest and
-Aloft the Title The Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants. A Long
-Fourme.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The house at Colchester is the Tarlton Inn, and here the
-ghost of Tarlton prologizes, ‘standing at entrance of the doore and
-right under the Beame’. That at Harwich is the house of Floredin, and
-the ladder leads to the window of his wife Arvania. Thus we have the
-concurrent representation of three localities, in three distinct towns
-of Essex. To each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span> is assigned one of three doors and, as in <i>Common
-Conditions</i> of old, entry by a particular door signifies that a
-scene is to take place at the locality to which it belongs.<a id="FNanchor_442" href="#Footnote_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a> One is
-at liberty to conjecture that the doors were nominated by labels, but
-Percy does not precisely say so, although he certainly provides for a
-title label. Journeys from one locality to another are foreshortened
-into a crossing of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_443" href="#Footnote_443" class="fnanchor">[443]</a> For <i>The Aphrodysial</i> there
-were at least two houses, the palace of Oceanus ‘in the middle and
-alofte’, and Proteus Hall, where interior action takes place.<a id="FNanchor_444" href="#Footnote_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a> For
-<i>The Faery Pastoral</i> there is an elaborate note:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">‘The Properties</p>
-
-<p>‘Highest, aloft, and on the Top of the Musick Tree the Title The
-Faery Pastorall, Beneath him pind on Post of the Tree The Scene
-Elvida Forrest. Lowest of all over the Canopie ΝΑΠΑΙΤΒΟΔΑΙΟΝ
-or Faery Chappell. A kiln of Brick. A Fowen Cott. A Hollowe
-Oake with vice of wood to shutt to. A Lowe well with Roape and
-Pullye. A Fourme of Turves. A greene Bank being Pillowe to the
-Hed but. Lastly A Hole to creepe in and out.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Having written so far, Percy is smitten with a doubt.
-The stage of Paul’s was a small one, and spectators sat on it. If he
-clutters it up like this with properties, will there be room to act at
-all? He has a happy thought and continues:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Now if so be that the Properties of any These, that be outward,
-will not serve the turne by reason of concourse of the People
-on the Stage, Then you may omitt the sayd Properties which be
-outward and supplye their Places with their Nuncupations onely
-in Text Letters. Thus for some.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Whether the master of Paul’s was prepared to avail
-himself of this ingenious device, I do not know. There is no other
-reference to it, and I do not think it would be safe to assume that it
-was in ordinary use upon either the public or the private stage. There
-is no change of locality in <i>The Faery Pastoral</i>, which is <i>tout
-en pastoralle</i>, but besides the title label, there was a general
-scenic label and a special one for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span> the fairy chapel. This, which had
-seats on ‘degrees’ (v. 5), occupied the ‘Canopie, Fane or Trophey’,
-which I take to have been a discovered interior under the ‘Beame’
-named in the other play, corresponding to the alcove of the public
-theatres. The other properties were smaller ‘practicables’ standing
-free on the stage, which is presumably what Percy means by ‘outward’.
-The arrangement must have closely resembled that of <i>The Old Wive’s
-Tale</i>. The ‘Fowen Cott’ is later described as ‘tapistred with cats
-and fowëns’&mdash;a gamekeeper’s larder. Some kind of action from above was
-possible; it may have been only from a tree.<a id="FNanchor_445" href="#Footnote_445" class="fnanchor">[445]</a></p>
-
-<p>The plays so far considered seem to point to the use at Paul’s of
-continuous settings, even when various localities had to be shown,
-rather than the successive settings, with the help of common form
-<i>domus</i>, which prevailed at the contemporary Globe and Fortune.
-Perhaps there is rather an archaistic note about them. Let us turn to
-the plays written for Paul’s by more up-to-date dramatists, by Marston,
-Dekker and Webster, Chapman, Middleton, and Beaumont. Marston’s hand,
-already discernible in the revision of <i>Histriomastix</i>, appears
-to be dominant in <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>, although neither
-play was reclaimed for him in the collected edition of 1633. Unity
-of locality is not observed in <i>Jack Drum</i>. By far the greater
-part of the action takes place on Highgate Green, before the house of
-Sir Edward Fortune, with practicable windows above.<a id="FNanchor_446" href="#Footnote_446" class="fnanchor">[446]</a> But there
-are two scenes (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 282–428; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 207–56) in London,
-before a tavern (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 345), which may be supposed to be also
-the house where Mistress Brabant lies ‘private’ in an ‘inner chamber’
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 83, 211). And there are three (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 170–246;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> 220–413; <span class="allsmcap">V</span>) in an open spot, on the way to
-Highgate (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 228) and near a house, whence a character
-emerges (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> 249, 310). It is described as ‘the crosse stile’
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 338), and is evidently quite near Fortune’s house, and
-still on the green (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 96, 228). This suggests to me a staging
-closely analogous to that of <i>Cuckqueans and Cuckolds</i>, with
-Highgate at one end of the stage, London at the other, and the cross
-stile between them. It is true that there is no very certain evidence
-of direct transference of action from one spot to another, but the use
-of two doors at the beginning of the first London scene is consistent,
-on my theory, with the fact that one entrant comes from Highgate,
-whither also he goes at the end of the scene, and the similar use at
-the beginning of the second cross-stile scene is consistent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span> with the
-fact that the two entrants are wildly seeking the same lady, and one
-may well have been in London and the other at Highgate. She herself
-enters from the neighbouring house; that is to say, a third, central,
-door. With Marston’s acknowledged plays, we reach an order of drama in
-which interior action of the ‘hall’ type is conspicuous.<a id="FNanchor_447" href="#Footnote_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a> There are
-four plays, each limited to a single Italian city, Venice or Urbino.
-The main action of <i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i> is in the hall of the
-doge’s palace, chiefly on ‘the lower stage’, although ladies discourse
-‘above’, and a chamber can be pointed to from the hall.<a id="FNanchor_448" href="#Footnote_448" class="fnanchor">[448]</a> One short
-scene (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 1–94), although near the Court, is possibly in
-the lodging of a courtier, but probably in the open street. And two
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>) are in open country, representing ‘the
-Venice marsh’, requiring no background, but approachable by more than
-one door.<a id="FNanchor_449" href="#Footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a> The setting of <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i> is a little
-more complicated. There is no open-country scene. The hall recurs and
-is still the chief place of action. It can be entered by more than one
-door (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 17, &amp;c.) and has a ‘vault’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 44) with a
-‘grate’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 127), whence a speaker is heard ‘under the
-stage’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 1). The scenes within it include several episodes
-discovered by curtains. One is at the window of Mellida’s chamber
-above.<a id="FNanchor_450" href="#Footnote_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a> Another, in Maria’s chamber, where the discovery is only
-of a bed, might be either above or below.<a id="FNanchor_451" href="#Footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a> A third involves the
-appearance of a ghost ‘betwixt the music-houses’, probably above.<a id="FNanchor_452" href="#Footnote_452" class="fnanchor">[452]</a>
-Concurrently, a fourth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span> facilitates a murder in a recess below.<a id="FNanchor_453" href="#Footnote_453" class="fnanchor">[453]</a>
-Nor is the hall any longer the only interior used. Three scenes
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 1–17; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> 1–212; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii) are in an
-aisle (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> 128) of St. Mark’s, with a trapped grave.<a id="FNanchor_454" href="#Footnote_454" class="fnanchor">[454]</a>
-As a character passes (ii. 17) directly from the church to the
-palace in the course of a speech, it is clear that the two ‘houses’,
-consistently with actual Venetian topography, were staged together and
-contiguously. <i>The Fawn</i> was originally produced at Blackfriars
-and transferred to Paul’s. I deal with it here, because of the close
-analogy which it presents to <i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i>. It begins
-with an open-country scene within sight of the ‘far-appearing spires’
-of Urbino. Thereafter all is within the hall of the Urbino palace. It
-is called a ‘presence’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 68), but one must conceive it
-as of the nature of an Italian colonnaded <i>cortile</i>, for there
-is a tree visible, up which a lover climbs to his lady’s chamber, and
-although both the tree and the chamber window might have occupied a
-bit of façade in the plane of the aperture showing the hall, they
-appear in fact to have been within the hall, since the lovers are
-later ‘discovered’ to the company there.<a id="FNanchor_455" href="#Footnote_455" class="fnanchor">[455]</a> <i>What You Will</i>,
-intermediate in date between <i>Antonio and Mellida</i> and <i>The
-Fawn</i>, has a less concentrated setting than either of them. The
-principal house is Albano’s (<span class="allsmcap">I</span>; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>;
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 1–68), where there is action at the porch, within the hall,
-and in a discovered room behind.<a id="FNanchor_456" href="#Footnote_456" class="fnanchor">[456]</a> But there are also scenes in a
-shop (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii), in Laverdure’s lodging (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii),
-probably above, and in a schoolroom (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii). The two latter
-are also discovered.<a id="FNanchor_457" href="#Footnote_457" class="fnanchor">[457]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span> Nevertheless, I do not think that shifting
-scenes of the public theatre type are indicated. Albano’s house does
-not lend itself to public theatre methods. Act <span class="allsmcap">I</span> is beneath
-his wife Celia’s window.<a id="FNanchor_458" href="#Footnote_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a> Similarly <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii is before
-his porch. But <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv is in his hall, whence the company go
-to dinner within, and here they are disclosed in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> Hence,
-from <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 69 onwards, they begin to pass to the street, where
-they presently meet the duke’s troop. I do not know of any public play
-in which the porch, the hall, and an inner room of a house are all
-represented, and my feeling is that Albano’s occupied the back corner
-of a stage, with the porch and window above to one side, at right
-angles to the plane of the hall. At any rate I do not see any definite
-obstacle to the hypothesis that all Marston’s plays for Paul’s had
-continuous settings. For <i>What You Will</i> the ‘little’ stage would
-have been rather crowded. The induction hints that it was, and perhaps
-that spectators were on this occasion excluded, while the presenters
-went behind the back curtains.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the other Paul’s plays need not detain us as long as Marston’s.
-He has been thought to have helped in <i>Satiromastix</i>, but that
-must be regarded as substantially Dekker’s. Obviously it must have
-been capable of representation both at Paul’s and at the Globe. It
-needs the houses of Horace, Shorthose, and Vaughan, Prickshaft’s garden
-with a ‘bower’ in it, and the palace. Interior action is required in
-Horace’s study, which is discovered,<a id="FNanchor_459" href="#Footnote_459" class="fnanchor">[459]</a> the presence-chamber at the
-palace, where a ‘chaire is set under a canopie’,<a id="FNanchor_460" href="#Footnote_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a> and Shorthose’s
-hall.<a id="FNanchor_461" href="#Footnote_461" class="fnanchor">[461]</a> The ordinary methods at the Globe would be adequate. On the
-other hand, London, in spite of Horace, is the locality throughout,
-and at Paul’s the setting may have been continuous, just as well as in
-<i>What You Will</i>. Dekker is also the leading spirit in <i>Westward
-Ho!</i> and <i>Northward Ho!</i>, and in these we get, for the first
-time at Paul’s, plays for which a continuous setting seems quite
-impossible. Not only does <i>Westward Ho!</i> require no less than
-ten houses and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span> <i>Northward Ho!</i> seven, but also, although the
-greater part of both plays takes place in London, <i>Westward Ho!</i>
-has scenes at Brentford and <i>Northward Ho!</i> at Ware.<a id="FNanchor_462" href="#Footnote_462" class="fnanchor">[462]</a> The
-natural conclusion is that, for these plays at least, the procedure
-of the public theatres was adopted. It is, of course, the combination
-of numerous houses and changes of locality which leads me to this
-conclusion. Mahelot shows us that the ‘multiple’ staging of the
-Hôtel de Bourgogne permitted inconsistencies of locality, but could
-hardly accommodate more than five, or at most six, <i>maisons</i>.
-Once given the existence of alternative methods at Paul’s, it becomes
-rather difficult to say which was applied in any particular case.
-Chapman’s <i>Bussy d’Ambois</i> begins, like <i>The Fawn</i>, with
-an open-country scene, and thereafter uses only three houses, all in
-Paris; the presence-chamber at the palace (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-i; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i), Bussy’s chamber (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii), and Tamyra’s chamber in another house, Montsurry’s (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii, iv). Both
-chambers are trapped for spirits to rise, and Tamyra’s has in it a
-‘gulfe’, apparently screened by a ‘canopie’, which communicates with
-Bussy’s.<a id="FNanchor_463" href="#Footnote_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a> As the interplay of scenes in Act <span class="allsmcap">V</span> requires
-transit through the passage from one chamber to the other, it is
-natural to assume an unchanged setting.<a id="FNanchor_464" href="#Footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a></p>
-
-<p>The most prolific contributor to the Paul’s repertory was Middleton.
-His first play, <i>Blurt Master Constable</i>, needs five houses. They
-are all in Venice, and as in certain scenes more than one of them
-appears to be visible, they were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span> probably all set together.<a id="FNanchor_465" href="#Footnote_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a>
-Similarly, <i>The Phoenix</i> has six houses, all in Ferrara;<a id="FNanchor_466" href="#Footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a>
-and <i>Michaelmas Term</i> has five houses, all in London.<a id="FNanchor_467" href="#Footnote_467" class="fnanchor">[467]</a> On
-the other hand, although <i>A Mad World, my Masters</i> has only four
-houses,<a id="FNanchor_468" href="#Footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a> and <i>A Trick to Catch the Old One</i> seven,<a id="FNanchor_469" href="#Footnote_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a> yet
-both these plays resemble Dekker’s, in that the action is divided
-between London and one or more places in the country; and this, so far
-as it goes, seems to suggest settings on public theatre lines. I do
-not know whether Middleton wrote <i>The Puritan</i>, but I think that
-this play clearly had a continuous setting with only four houses, in
-London.<a id="FNanchor_470" href="#Footnote_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a> And although Beaumont’s <i>Woman Hater</i> requires<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span> seven
-houses, these are all within or hard by the palace in Milan, and action
-seems to pass freely from one to another.<a id="FNanchor_471" href="#Footnote_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a></p>
-
-<p>The evidence available does not dispose one to dogmatism. But this
-is the general impression which I get of the history of the Paul’s
-staging. When the performances were revived in 1599, the master had,
-as in the days before Lyly took the boys to Blackfriars, to make the
-best of a room originally designed for choir-practices. This was
-circular, and only had space for a comparatively small stage. At the
-back of this, entrance was given by a curtained recess, corresponding
-to the alcove of the public theatres, and known at Paul’s as the
-‘canopy’.<a id="FNanchor_472" href="#Footnote_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a> Above the canopy was a beam, which bore the post of the
-music-tree. On this post was a small stand, perhaps for the conductor
-of the music, and on each side of it was a music-house, forming a
-gallery,<a id="FNanchor_473" href="#Footnote_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a> which could represent a window or balcony. There were
-at least two other doors, either beneath the music-houses or at right
-angles to these, off the sides of the stage. The master began with
-continuous settings on the earlier sixteenth-century court model, using
-the doors and galleries as far as he could to represent houses, and
-supplementing these by temporary structures; and this plan fitted in
-with the general literary trend of his typical dramatists, especially
-Marston, to unity of locality. But in time the romantic element proved
-too much for him, and when he wanted to enlist the services of writers
-of the popular school, such as Dekker, he had to compromise. It may
-be that some structural change was carried out during the enforced
-suspension of performances in 1603. I do not think that there is any
-Paul’s play of earlier date which could not have been given in the
-old-fashioned manner. In any event, the increased number of houses and
-the not infrequent shiftings of locality from town to country, which
-are apparent in the Jacobean plays, seem to me, taken together, to be
-more than can be accounted for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span> on a theory of clumsy foreshortening,
-and to imply the adoption, either generally or occasionally, of some
-such principle of convertible houses, as was already in full swing upon
-the public stage.<a id="FNanchor_474" href="#Footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a></p>
-
-<p>I do not think that the history of the Blackfriars was materially
-different from that of Paul’s. There are in all twenty-four plays
-to be considered; an Elizabethan group of seven produced by the
-Children of the Chapel, and a Jacobean group of seventeen produced by
-the successive incarnations of the Revels company.<a id="FNanchor_475" href="#Footnote_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a> Structural
-alterations during 1603 are here less probable, for the house only
-dated from Burbadge’s enterprise of 1596. Burbadge is said to have
-intended a ‘public’ theatre, and it may be argued on <i>a priori</i>
-grounds that he would have planned for the type of staging familiar
-to him at the Theatre and subsequently elaborated at the Globe. The
-actual character of the plays does not, however, bear out this view.
-Like Paul’s, the Blackfriars relied at first in part upon revivals.
-One was <i>Love’s Metamorphosis</i>, already produced by Lyly under
-Court conditions with the earlier Paul’s boys, and <i>tout en
-pastoralle</i>.<a id="FNanchor_476" href="#Footnote_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a> Another, or if not, quite an archaistic play, was
-<i>Liberality and Prodigality</i>, the abstract plot of which only
-needs an equally abstract scene, with a ‘bower’ for Fortune, holding
-a throne and scaleable by a ladder (30, 290, 903, 932, 953), another
-‘bower’ for Virtue (132), an inn (47, 192, 370), and a high seat for a
-judge with his clerks beneath him (1245).<a id="FNanchor_477" href="#Footnote_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a> The two new playwrights
-may reasonably be supposed to have conformed to the traditional
-methods. Jonson’s <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> has a preliminary act of open
-country, by the Fountain of Self-Love, in Gargaphia. The rest is all at
-the Gargaphian palace, either in the presence, or in an ante-chamber
-thereto, perhaps before a curtain, or for one or two scenes in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-nymphs’ chamber (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i-v), and in or before the chamber of
-Asotus (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v).<a id="FNanchor_478" href="#Footnote_478" class="fnanchor">[478]</a> <i>Poetaster</i> is all at Rome, within
-and before the palace, the houses of Albius and Lupus, and the chamber
-of Ovid.<a id="FNanchor_479" href="#Footnote_479" class="fnanchor">[479]</a> There is certainly no need for any shifting of scenes so
-far. Nor does Chapman demand it. <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, except for
-one open-country scene, has only two houses, which are demonstrably
-contiguous and used together.<a id="FNanchor_480" href="#Footnote_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a> <i>The Gentleman Usher</i> has only
-two houses, supposed to be at a little distance from each other, and
-entailing a slight foreshortening, if they were placed at opposite ends
-of the stage.<a id="FNanchor_481" href="#Footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a> <i>All Fools</i> adopts the Italian convention of
-action in an open city space before three houses.<a id="FNanchor_482" href="#Footnote_482" class="fnanchor">[482]</a></p>
-
-<p>To the Jacobean repertory not less than nine writers contributed.
-Chapman still takes the lead with three more comedies and two tragedies
-of his own. In the comedies he tends somewhat to increase the number
-of his houses, although without any change of general locality. <i>M.
-d’Olive</i> has five houses.<a id="FNanchor_483" href="#Footnote_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span> <i>May Day</i> has four.<a id="FNanchor_484" href="#Footnote_484" class="fnanchor">[484]</a> <i>The
-Widow’s Tears</i> has four.<a id="FNanchor_485" href="#Footnote_485" class="fnanchor">[485]</a> But in all cases there is a good
-deal of interplay of action between one house and another, and all
-the probabilities are in favour of continuous setting. The tragedies
-are perhaps another matter. The houses are still not numerous; but
-the action is in each play divided between two localities. The
-<i>Conspiracy of Byron</i> is partly at Paris and partly at Brussels;
-the <i>Tragedy of Byron</i> partly at Paris and partly at Dijon.<a id="FNanchor_486" href="#Footnote_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a>
-Jonson’s <i>Case is Altered</i> has one open-country scene (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iv) near Milan. The other scenes require two houses within the city.
-One is Farneze’s palace, with a <i>cortile</i> where servants come
-and go, and a colonnade affording a private ‘walk’ for his daughters
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i). Hard by, and probably in Italian
-fashion forming part of the structure of the palace itself, is the
-cobbler’s shop of Farneze’s retainer, Juniper.<a id="FNanchor_487" href="#Footnote_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a> Near, too, is the
-house of Jaques, with a little walled backside, and a tree in it.<a id="FNanchor_488" href="#Footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a>
-A link with Paul’s is provided by three Blackfriars plays from Marston.
-Of these, the <i>Malcontent</i> is in his characteristic Italian
-manner. There is a short hunting scene (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii) in the middle
-of the play. For nearly all the rest the scene is the ‘great chamber’
-in the palace at Genoa, with a door to the apartment of the duchess
-at the back (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 1) and the chamber of Malevole visible
-above.<a id="FNanchor_489" href="#Footnote_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a> Part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span> of the last act, however, is before the citadel
-of Genoa, from which the action passes direct to the palace.<a id="FNanchor_490" href="#Footnote_490" class="fnanchor">[490]</a>
-<i>The Dutch Courtesan</i> is a London comedy with four houses, of
-the same type as <i>What You Will</i>, but less crowded.<a id="FNanchor_491" href="#Footnote_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a> In the
-tragedy of <i>Sophonisba</i>, on the other hand, we come for the first
-time at Blackfriars to a piece which seems hopelessly unamenable to
-continuous setting. It recalls the structure of such early public plays
-as the <i>Battle of Alcazar</i>. ‘The scene is Libya’, the prologue
-tells us. We get the camps of Massinissa (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii), Asdrubal
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii), and Scipio (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv). We
-get a battle-field with a ‘mount’ and a ‘throne’ in it (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii). We get the forest of Belos, with a cave’s mouth (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i).
-The city scenes are divided between Carthage and Cirta. At Carthage
-there is a council-chamber (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i) and also the chamber of
-Sophonisba (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii), where her bed is ‘discovered’.<a id="FNanchor_492" href="#Footnote_492" class="fnanchor">[492]</a>
-At Cirta there is the similar chamber of Syphax (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii) with a trapped altar.<a id="FNanchor_493" href="#Footnote_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a> A curious bit of continuous
-action, difficult to envisage, comprehends this and the forest at the
-junction of Acts <span class="allsmcap">IV</span> and <span class="allsmcap">V</span>. From a vault within it, a
-passage leads to the cave. Down this, in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, Sophonisba
-descends, followed by Syphax. A camp scene intervenes, and at the
-beginning of <span class="allsmcap">IV</span> Sophonisba emerges in the forest, is overtaken
-by Syphax, and sent back to Cirta. Then Syphax remembers that ‘in this
-desert’ lives the witch Erichtho. She enters, and promises to charm
-Sophonisba to his bed. Quite suddenly, and without any <i>Exit</i> or
-other indication of a change of locality, we are back in the chamber
-at Cirta. Music sounds within ‘the canopy’ and ‘above’. Erichtho,
-disguised as Sophonisba, enters the canopy, as to bed. Syphax<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-follows, and only discovers his misadventure at the beginning of Act
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>.<a id="FNanchor_494" href="#Footnote_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a> Even if the play was staged as a whole on public
-theatre methods, it is difficult not to suppose that the two entrances
-to the cave, at Cirta and in the forest, were shown together. It is
-to be added that, in a note to the print, Marston apologizes for ‘the
-fashion of the entrances’ on the ground that the play was ‘presented
-by youths and after the fashion of the private stage’. Somewhat
-exceptional also is the arrangement of <i>Eastward Ho!</i>, in which
-Chapman, Jonson, and Marston collaborated. The first three acts, taken
-by themselves, are easy enough. They need four houses in London. The
-most important is Touchstone’s shop, which is ‘discovered’.<a id="FNanchor_495" href="#Footnote_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a> The
-others are the exteriors of Sir Petronel’s house and Security’s house,
-with a window or balcony above, and a room in the Blue Anchor tavern
-at Billingsgate.<a id="FNanchor_496" href="#Footnote_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a> But throughout most of Act <span class="allsmcap">IV</span> the whole
-stage seems to be devoted to a complicated action, for which only
-one of these houses, the Blue Anchor, is required. A place above the
-stage represents Cuckold’s Haven, on the Surrey side of the Thames
-near Rotherhithe, where stood a pole bearing a pair of ox-horns, to
-which butchers did a folk-observance. Hither climbs Slitgut, and
-describes the wreck of a boat in the river beneath him.<a id="FNanchor_497" href="#Footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a> It is
-the boat in which an elopement was planned from the Blue Anchor in
-Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span>. Slitgut sees<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span> passengers landed successively ‘even
-just under me’, and then at St. Katharine’s, Wapping, and the Isle of
-Dogs. These are three places on the north bank, all to the east of
-Billingsgate and on the other side of the Tower, but as each rescue is
-described, the passengers enter the stage, and go off again. Evidently
-a wild foreshortening is deliberately involved. Now, although the
-print obscures the fact, must begin a new scene.<a id="FNanchor_498" href="#Footnote_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a> A night has
-passed, and Winifred, who landed at St. Katharine’s, returns to the
-stage, and is now before the Blue Anchor.<a id="FNanchor_499" href="#Footnote_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a> From <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii
-onwards the setting is normal again, with three houses, of which one is
-Touchstone’s. But the others are now the exterior of the Counter and
-of the lodging of Gertrude. One must conclude that in this play the
-Blackfriars management was trying an experiment, and made complete, or
-nearly complete, changes of setting, at the end of Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span>
-and again after <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. Touchstone’s, which was discovered,
-could be covered again. The other houses, except the tavern, were
-represented by mere doors or windows, and gave no trouble. The
-tavern, the introduction of which in the early acts already entailed
-foreshortening, was allowed to stand for <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, and was then
-removed, while Touchstone’s was discovered again.</p>
-
-<p>Middleton’s tendency to multiply his houses is noticeable, as at
-Paul’s, in <i>Your Five Gallants</i>. There are eight, in London, with
-an open-country scene in Combe Park (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, iii), and one
-cannot be confident of continuous setting.<a id="FNanchor_500" href="#Footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a> But a group of new
-writers, enlisted at Blackfriars in Jacobean days, conform well enough
-to the old traditions of the house. Daniel’s <i>Philotas</i> has the
-abstract stage characteristic of the closet tragedies to the type of
-which it really belongs. Any Renaissance façade would do; at most a
-hall in the court and the lodging of Philotas need be distinguished.
-Day’s <i>Isle of Gulls</i> is <i>tout en pastoralle</i>.<a id="FNanchor_501" href="#Footnote_501" class="fnanchor">[501]</a> His
-<i>Law Tricks</i> has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span> only four houses, in Genoa.<a id="FNanchor_502" href="#Footnote_502" class="fnanchor">[502]</a> Sharpham’s
-<i>Fleir</i>, after a prelude at Florence, which needs no house, has
-anything from three to six in London.<a id="FNanchor_503" href="#Footnote_503" class="fnanchor">[503]</a> Fletcher’s <i>Faithful
-Shepherdess</i>, again, is <i>tout en pastoralle</i>.<a id="FNanchor_504" href="#Footnote_504" class="fnanchor">[504]</a> Finally,
-<i>The Knight of the Burning Pestle</i> is, in the strict sense, an
-exception which proves the rule. Its shifts of locality are part of the
-burlesque, in which the popular plays are taken off for the amusement
-of the select audience of the Blackfriars. Its legitimate houses are
-only two, Venturewell’s shop and Merrithought’s dwelling, hard by one
-another.<a id="FNanchor_505" href="#Footnote_505" class="fnanchor">[505]</a> But the adventures of the prentice heroes take them not
-only over down and through forest to Waltham, where the Bell Inn must
-serve for a knightly castle, and the barber’s shop for Barbaroso’s
-cave, but also to the court of Moldavia, although the players regret
-that they cannot oblige the Citizen’s Wife by showing a house covered
-with black velvet and a king’s daughter standing in her window all in
-beaten gold, combing her golden locks with a comb of ivory.<a id="FNanchor_506" href="#Footnote_506" class="fnanchor">[506]</a> What
-visible parody of public stage methods heightened the fun, it is of
-course impossible to say.</p>
-
-<p>I do not propose to follow the Queen’s Revels to the Whitefriars, or
-to attempt any investigation into the characteristics of that house.
-It was occupied by the King’s Revels before the Queen’s Revels, and
-probably the Lady Elizabeth’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span> joined the Queen’s Revels there at a
-later date. But the number of plays which can definitely be assigned
-to it is clearly too small to form the basis of any satisfactory
-induction.<a id="FNanchor_507" href="#Footnote_507" class="fnanchor">[507]</a> So far as the Blackfriars is concerned, my conclusion
-must be much the same as for Paul’s&mdash;that, when plays began in 1600,
-the Chapel revived the methods of staging with which their predecessors
-had been familiar during the hey-day of the Court drama under Lyly;
-that these methods held their own in the competition with the public
-theatres, and were handed on to the Queen’s Revels; but that in
-course of time they were sometimes variegated by the introduction,
-for one reason or another, of some measure of scene-shifting in
-individual plays. This reason may have been the nature of the plot in
-<i>Sophonisba</i>, the desire to experiment in <i>Eastward Ho!</i>,
-the restlessness of the dramatist in <i>Your Five Gallants</i>, the
-spirit of raillery in <i>The Knight of the Burning Pestle</i>. Whether
-Chapman’s tragedies involved scene-shifting, I am not quite sure. The
-analogy of the Hôtel de Bourgogne, where a continuous setting was not
-inconsistent with the use of widely distant localities, must always
-be kept in mind. On the other hand, what did not appear absurd in
-Paris, might have appeared absurd in London, where the practice of the
-public theatres had taught the spectators to expect a higher degree of
-consistency. I am far from claiming that my theory of the survival of
-continuous setting at Paul’s and the Blackfriars has been demonstrated.
-Very possibly the matter is not capable of demonstration. Many, perhaps
-most, of the plays could be produced, if need be, by alternative
-methods. It is really on taking them in the mass that I cannot resist
-the feeling that ‘the fashion of the private stage’, as Marston called
-it, was something different from the fashion of the public stage. The
-technique of the dramatists corresponds to the structural conditions.
-An increased respect for unity of place is not the only factor,
-although it is the most important. An unnecessary multiplicity of
-houses is, except by Dekker and Middleton, avoided. Sometimes one or
-two suffice. There is much more interior action than in the popular
-plays. One hall or chamber scene can follow upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span> another more freely.
-A house may be used for a scene which would seem absurdly short if the
-setting were altered for it. More doors are perhaps available, so that
-some can be spared for entrance behind the houses. There is more coming
-and going between one house and another, although I have made it clear
-that even the public stage was not limited to one house at a time.<a id="FNanchor_508" href="#Footnote_508" class="fnanchor">[508]</a>
-One point is, I think, quite demonstrable. Marston has a reference
-to ‘the lower stage’ at Paul’s, but neither at Paul’s nor at the
-Blackfriars was there an upper stage capable of holding the action of
-a complete scene, such as we found at the sixteenth-century theatres,
-and apparently on a still larger scale at the Globe and the Fortune.
-A review of my notes will show that, although there is action ‘above’
-in many private house plays, it is generally a very slight action,
-amounting to little more than the use by one or two persons of a window
-or balcony. Bedchamber scenes or tavern scenes are provided for below;
-the public theatre, as often as not, put them above.<a id="FNanchor_509" href="#Footnote_509" class="fnanchor">[509]</a> I may recall,
-in confirmation, that the importance of the upper stage in the plays
-of the King’s men sensibly diminishes after their occupation of the
-Blackfriars.<a id="FNanchor_510" href="#Footnote_510" class="fnanchor">[510]</a></p>
-
-<p>There are enigmas still to be solved, and I fear insoluble. Were the
-continuous settings of the type which we find in Serlio, with the unity
-of a consistent architectural picture, or of the type which we find
-at the Hôtel de Bourgogne, with independent and sometimes incongruous
-juxtaposed <i>mansions</i>? The taste of the dramatists for Italian
-cities and the frequent recurrence of buildings which fit so well
-into a Serliesque scheme as the tavern, the shop, the house of the
-<i>ruffiana</i> or courtesan, may tempt one’s imagination towards the
-former. But Serlio does not seem to contemplate much interior action,
-and although the convention of a half out-of-doors <i>cortile</i> or
-<i>loggia</i> may help to get over this difficulty, the often crowded
-presences and the masks seem to call for an arrangement by which each
-<i>mansion</i> can at need become in its turn the background to the
-whole of the stage and attach to itself all the external doors. How
-were the open-country scenes managed, which we have noticed in several
-plays, as a prelude, or even an interruption, to the strict<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span> unity
-of place?<a id="FNanchor_511" href="#Footnote_511" class="fnanchor">[511]</a> Were these merely played on the edge of the stage, or
-are we to assume a curtain, cutting off the background of houses, and
-perhaps painted with an open-country or other appropriate perspective?
-And what use, if any, can we suppose to have been made of title or
-locality labels? The latter would not have had much point where the
-locality was unchanged; but Envy calls out ‘Rome’ three times in
-the prologue to the <i>Poetaster</i>, as if she saw it written up
-in three places. Percy may more naturally use them in <i>Cuckqueans
-and Cuckolds</i>, on a stage which represents a foreshortening of
-the distance between three distinct towns. Title-labels seem fairly
-probable. <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> and <i>The Knight of the Burning
-Pestle</i> bear testimony to them at the Blackfriars; <i>Wily
-Beguiled</i> perhaps at Paul’s.<a id="FNanchor_512" href="#Footnote_512" class="fnanchor">[512]</a> And if the prologues none the
-less thought it necessary to announce ‘The scene is Libya’, or ‘The
-scene Gargaphia, which I do vehemently suspect for some fustian
-country’, why, we must remember that there were many, even in a select
-Elizabethan audience, that could not hope to be saved by their book.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="smaller">BOOK V<br />
-<span class="subhed">PLAYS AND PLAYWRIGHTS</span></h2></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Tragedy, comedy, history, pastoral, pastoral-comical,
-historical-pastoral, tragical-historical,
-tragical-comical-historical-pastoral, scene individable or poem
-unlimited.&mdash;<i>Hamlet.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XXII<br />
-<span class="subhed">THE PRINTING OF PLAYS</span></h3></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The records of the Stationers’
-Company were utilized by W. Herbert in <i>Typographical
-Antiquities</i> (1785–90), based on an earlier edition (1749) by
-J. Ames, and revised, but not for the period most important to
-us, by T. F. Dibdin (1810–19). They are now largely available
-at first hand in E. Arber, <i>Transcript of the Registers of
-the Stationers’ Company, 1554–1640</i> (1875–94), and G. E.
-B. Eyre, <i>Transcript of the Registers of the Worshipful
-Company of Stationers, 1640–1708</i> (1913–14). Recent
-investigations are to be found in the <i>Transactions</i> and
-other publications of the Bibliographical Society, and in the
-periodicals <i>Bibliographica</i> and <i>The Library</i>. The
-best historical sketches are H. R. Plomer, <i>A Short History
-of English Printing</i> (1900), E. G. Duff, <i>The Introduction
-of Printing into England</i> (1908, <i>C. H.</i> ii. 310), H.
-G. Aldis, <i>The Book-Trade, 1557–1625</i> (1909, <i>C. H.</i>
-iv. 378), and R. B. McKerrow, <i>Booksellers, Printers, and the
-Stationers’ Trade</i> (1916, <i>Sh. England</i>, ii. 212). Of
-somewhat wider range is H. G. Aldis, <i>The Printed Book</i>
-(1916). Records of individual printers are in E. G. Duff,
-<i>A Century of the English Book Trade, 1457–1557</i> (1905),
-R. B. McKerrow, <i>Dictionary of Printers and Booksellers,
-1557–1640</i> (1910), and H. R. Plomer, <i>Dictionary of
-Booksellers and Printers, 1641–67</i> (1907). Special studies
-of value are R. B. McKerrow, <i>Printers and Publishers’
-Devices</i> (1913), and <i>Notes on Bibliographical Evidence
-for Literary Students</i> (1914). P. Sheavyn, <i>The Literary
-Profession in the Elizabethan Age</i> (1909), is not very
-accurate. The early history of the High Commission (1558–64) is
-studied in H. Gee, <i>The Elizabethan Clergy and the Settlement
-of Religion</i> (1898). The later period awaits fuller treatment
-than that in <i>An Account of the Courts Ecclesiastical</i> by
-W. Stubbs in the <i>Report of the Commission on Ecclesiastical
-Courts</i> (1883), i. 21. J. S. Burn, <i>The High Commission</i>
-(1865), is scrappy.</p>
-
-<p>For plays in particular, W. W. Greg, <i>List of English
-Plays</i> (1900), gives the title-pages, and Arber the
-registration entries. Various problems are discussed by A.
-W. Pollard, <i>Shakespeare Folios and Quartos</i> (1909) and
-<i>Shakespeare’s Fight with the Pirates</i> (1917, ed. 2, 1920),
-and in connexion with the Shakespearian quartos of 1619 (cf. ch.
-xxiii). New ground is opened by A. W. Pollard and J. D. Wilson,
-<i>The ‘Stolne and Surreptitious’ Shakespearian Texts</i>
-(<i>T. L. S.</i> Jan.–Aug. 1919), and J. D. Wilson, <i>The
-Copy for Hamlet, 1603, and the Hamlet Transcript, 1593</i>
-(1918). Other studies are C. Dewischeit, <i>Shakespeare und
-die Stenographie</i> (1898, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxiv. 170), B.
-A. P. van Dam and C. Stoffel, <i>William Shakespeare, Prosody
-and Text</i> (1900), <i>Chapters in English Printing, Prosody,
-and Pronunciation</i> (1902), P. Simpson, <i>Shakespearian
-Punctuation</i> (1911), E. M. Albright, ‘<i>To be Staied</i>’
-(1915, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxx. 451; cf. <i>M. L. N.</i>, Feb.
-1919), A. W. Pollard, <i>Ad Imprimendum Solum</i> (1919, <i>3
-Library</i>, x. 57), H. R. Shipheard, <i>Play-Publishing in
-Elizabethan Times</i> (1919, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxxiv. 580); M. A.
-Bayfield, <i>Shakespeare’s Versification</i> (1920); cf. <i>T.
-L. S.</i> (1919–20).</p>
-
-<p>The nature of stage-directions is considered in many
-works on staging (cf. <i>Bibl. Note</i> to ch. xviii),
-and in N. Delius, <i>Die Bühnenweisungen in den alten
-Shakespeare-Ausgaben</i> (1873, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, viii. 171),
-R. Koppel, <i>Scenen-Einteilung und Orts-Angaben in den
-Shakespeareschen Dramen</i> (1874, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, ix. 269),
-<i>Die unkritische Behandlung dramaturgischer Angaben<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span> und
-Anordnungen in den Shakespeare-Ausgaben</i> (1904, <i>E. S.</i>
-xxxiv. 1). The documents printed by Arber are so fundamental as
-to justify a short description. Each of his vols. i-iv gives the
-text, or most of the text, of four books, lettered A-D in the
-Company’s archives, interspersed with illustrative documents
-from other sources; vol. v consists of indices. Another series
-of books, containing minutes of the Court of Assistants from
-1603 onwards, remains unprinted (ii. 879). Book A contains the
-annual accounts of the wardens from 1554 to 1596. The Company’s
-year began on varying dates in the first half of July. From
-1557 to 1571 the accounts include detailed entries of the books
-for which fees were received and of the fines imposed upon
-members of the Company for irregularities. Thereafter they are
-abstracts only, and reference is made for the details of fees
-to ‘the register in the clarkes booke’ (i. 451). Unfortunately
-this book is not extant for 1571–6. After the appointment of
-Richard Collins in place of George Wapull as clerk in 1575, a
-new ‘booke of entrances’ was bought for the clerk (i. 475).
-This is Book B, which is divided into sections for records of
-different character, including book entries for 1576–95, and
-fines for 1576–1605. There are also some decrees and ordinances
-of the Court, most of which Arber does not print, and a few
-pages of miscellaneous memoranda at the beginning and end (ii.
-33–49, 884–6). Book C, bought ‘for the entrance of copies’ in
-1594–5 (i. 572), has similar memoranda (iii. 35–8, 677–98). It
-continues the book entries, and these alone, for 1595–1620. Book
-D continues them for 1620–45. Arber’s work stops at 1640. Eyre
-prints a transcript by H. R. Plomer of the rest of D and of
-Books E, F, and G, extending to 1708.]</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A historian of the stage owes so much of his material to the printed
-copies of plays, with their title-pages, their prefatory epistles, and
-their stage-directions, that he can hardly be dispensed from giving
-some account of the process by which plays got into print. Otherwise
-I should have been abundantly content to have left the subject with a
-reference to the researches of others, and notably of that accomplished
-bibliographer, my friend Mr. A. W. Pollard, to whom in any event the
-debt of these pages must be great. The earliest attempts to control
-the book-trade are of the nature of commercial restrictions, and
-concern themselves with the regulation of alien craftsmanship.<a id="FNanchor_513" href="#Footnote_513" class="fnanchor">[513]</a>
-But when Tudor policy had to deal with expressions of political and
-religious opinion, and in particular when the interlude as well as the
-pamphlet, not without encouragement from Cranmer and Cromwell, became
-an instrument of ecclesiastical controversy, it was not long before the
-State found itself committed to the methods of a literary censorship.
-We have already followed in detail the phases of the control to which
-the spoken play was subjected.<a id="FNanchor_514" href="#Footnote_514" class="fnanchor">[514]</a> The story of the printed play
-was closely analogous; and in both cases the ultimate term of the
-evolution, so far as our period is concerned, was the establishment of
-the authority of the Master of the Revels. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span> printing and selling
-of plays, however, was of course only one fragment of the general
-business of book-production. Censorship was applied to many kinds of
-books, and was also in practice closely bound up with the logically
-distinct problem of copyright. This to the Elizabethan mind was a
-principle debarring one publisher from producing and selling a book in
-which another member of his trade had already a vested interest. The
-conception of a copyright vested in the author as distinct from the
-publisher of a book had as yet hardly emerged.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest essay in censorship in fact took the form of an extension
-of the procedure, under which protection had for some time past been
-given to the copyright in individual books through the issue of a
-royal privilege forbidding their republication by any other than the
-privileged owner or printer.<a id="FNanchor_515" href="#Footnote_515" class="fnanchor">[515]</a> Three proclamations of Henry VIII
-against heretical or seditious books, in 1529, 1530, and 1536, were
-followed in 1538 by a fourth, which forbade the printing of any English
-book except with a licence given ‘upon examination made by some of his
-gracis priuie counsayle, or other suche as his highnes shall appoynte’,
-and further directed that a book so licensed should not bear the words
-‘Cum priuilegio regali’ without the addition of ‘ad imprimendum solum’,
-and that ‘the hole copie, or els at the least theffect of his licence
-and priuilege be therwith printed’.<a id="FNanchor_516" href="#Footnote_516" class="fnanchor">[516]</a> The intention was apparently
-to distinguish between a merely regulative privilege or licence to
-print, and the older and fuller type of privilege which also conveyed
-a protection of copyright. Finally, in 1546, a fifth proclamation
-laid down that every ‘Englishe boke, balet or playe’ must bear the
-names of the printer and author and the ‘daye of the printe’, and that
-an advance copy must be placed in the hands of the local mayor two
-days before publication.<a id="FNanchor_517" href="#Footnote_517" class="fnanchor">[517]</a> It is not quite<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span> clear whether these
-requirements were intended to replace, or merely to reinforce, that of
-a licence. Henry’s proclamations lost their validity upon his death
-in 1547, but the policy of licensing was continued by his successors.
-Under Edward VI we get, first a Privy Council order of 1549, directing
-that all English books printed or sold should be examined and allowed
-by ‘M<sup>r</sup> Secretary Peter, M<sup>r</sup> Secretary Smith and M<sup>r</sup> Cicill, or the
-one of them’, and secondly a proclamation of 1551, requiring allowance
-‘by his maiestie, or his priuie counsayl in writing signed with his
-maiesties most gratious hand or the handes of sixe of his sayd priuie
-counsayl’.<a id="FNanchor_518" href="#Footnote_518" class="fnanchor">[518]</a> Mary in her turn, though with a different emphasis
-on the kind of opinion to be suppressed, issued three proclamations
-against heretical books in 1553, 1555, and 1558, and in the first of
-these limited printers to books for which they had ‘her graces speciall
-licence in writynge’.<a id="FNanchor_519" href="#Footnote_519" class="fnanchor">[519]</a> It is noteworthy that both in 1551 and in
-1553 the printing and the playing of interludes were put upon exactly
-the same footing.</p>
-
-<p>Mary, however, took another step of the first importance for the
-further history of publishing, by the grant on 4 May 1557 a charter of
-incorporation to the London Company of Stationers.<a id="FNanchor_520" href="#Footnote_520" class="fnanchor">[520]</a> This was an
-old organization, traceable as far back as 1404.<a id="FNanchor_521" href="#Footnote_521" class="fnanchor">[521]</a> By the sixteenth
-century it had come to include the printers who manufactured, as
-well as the stationers who sold, books; and many, although not all
-of its members, exercised both avocations. No doubt the issue of the
-charter had its origin in mixed motives. The stationers wanted the
-status and the powers of economic regulation within their trade which
-it conferred; the Government wanted the aid of the stationers in
-establishing a more effective control over the printed promulgation
-of inconvenient doctrines. This preoccupation is clearly manifested
-in the preamble to the charter, with its assertion that ‘seueral
-seditious and heretical books’ are ‘daily published’; and the objects
-of both parties were met by a provision that ‘no person shall practise
-or exercise the art or mystery of printing or stamping any book
-unless the same person is, or shall be,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span> one of the society of the
-foresaid mystery of a stationer of the city aforesaid, or has for that
-purpose obtained our licence’. This practically freed the associated
-stationers from any danger of outside competition, and it immensely
-simplified the task of the heresy hunters by enlisting the help of
-the Company against the establishment of printing-presses by any but
-well-known and responsible craftsmen. Registration is always half-way
-towards regulation. The charter did not, however, dispense, even
-for the members of the Company, with the requirement of a licence;
-nor did it give the Company any specific functions in connexion
-with the issue of licences, and although Elizabeth confirmed her
-sister’s grant on 10 November 1559, she had already, in the course
-of the ecclesiastical settlement earlier in the year, taken steps to
-provide for the continuance of the old system, and specifically laid
-it down that the administration of the Company was to be subordinate
-thereto. The licensing authority rested ultimately upon the <i>Act of
-Supremacy</i>, by which the power of ecclesiastical jurisdiction for
-the ‘reformation, order, and correction’ of all ‘errors, heresies,
-schisms, abuses, offences, contempts, and enormities’ was annexed to
-the Crown, and the Crown was authorized to exercise its jurisdiction
-through the agency of a commission appointed under letters patent.<a id="FNanchor_522" href="#Footnote_522" class="fnanchor">[522]</a>
-This Act received the royal assent on 8 May 1559, together with
-the <i>Act of Uniformity</i> which established the Book of Common
-Prayer, and made it an offence ‘in any interludes, plays, songs,
-rhymes, or by other open words’ to ‘declare or speak anything in the
-derogation, depraving, or despising’ of that book.<a id="FNanchor_523" href="#Footnote_523" class="fnanchor">[523]</a> In the course
-of June followed a body of <i>Injunctions</i>, intended as a code of
-ecclesiastical discipline to be promulgated at a series of diocesan
-visitations held by commissioners under the <i>Act of Supremacy</i>.
-One of these <i>Injunctions</i> is directly concerned with the abuses
-of printers of books.<a id="FNanchor_524" href="#Footnote_524" class="fnanchor">[524]</a> It begins by forbidding any book or paper
-to be printed without an express written licence either from the Queen
-herself or from six of the Privy Council, or after perusal from two
-persons being either the Archbishop of Canterbury or York, the Bishop
-of London, the Chancellor of Oxford or Cambridge, or the Bishop or
-Archdeacon for the place of printing. One of the two must always be the
-Ordinary, and the names of the licensers are to be ‘added in the end’
-of every book. This seems sufficiently to cover the ground, but the
-<i>Injunction</i> goes on to make a special reference to ‘pamphlets,
-plays and ballads’, from which anything<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span> ‘heretical, seditious, or
-unseemly for Christian ears’ ought to be excluded; and for these it
-prescribes a licence from ‘such her majesty’s commissioners, or three
-of them, as be appointed in the city of London to hear and determine
-divers causes ecclesiastical’. These commissioners are also to punish
-breaches of the <i>Injunction</i>, and to take and notify an order as
-to the prohibition or permission of ‘all other books of matters of
-religion or policy, or governance’. An exemption is granted for books
-ordinarily used in universities or schools. The Master and Wardens of
-the Stationers’ Company are ‘straitly’ commanded to be obedient to
-the <i>Injunction</i>. The commission here referred to was not one of
-those entrusted with the diocesan visitations, but a more permanent
-body sitting in London itself, which came to be known as the High
-Commission. The reference to it in the <i>Injunction</i> reads like
-an afterthought, but as the principal members of this commission were
-the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of London, there is not
-so much inconsistency between the two forms of procedure laid down
-as might at first sight appear. The High Commission was not in fact
-yet in existence when the <i>Injunctions</i> were issued, but it was
-constituted under a patent of 19 July 1559, and was renewed from time
-to time by fresh patents throughout the reign.<a id="FNanchor_525" href="#Footnote_525" class="fnanchor">[525]</a> The original
-members, other than the two prelates, were chiefly Privy Councillors,
-Masters of Requests, and other lawyers. The size of the body was
-considerably increased by later patents, and a number of divines were
-added. The patent of 1559 conferred upon the commissioners a general
-power to exercise the royal jurisdiction in matters ecclesiastical. It
-does not repeat in terms the provisions for the ‘allowing’ of books
-contained in the <i>Injunctions</i>, but merely recites that ‘divers
-seditious books’ have been set forth, and empowers the commissioners to
-inquire into them.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Injunctions</i> and the Commission must be taken as embodying
-the official machinery for the licensing of books up to the time of
-the well-known Star Chamber order of 1586, although the continued
-anxiety of the government in the matter is shown by a series of
-proclamations and orders which suggest that no absolutely effective
-method of suppressing undesirable publications had as yet been
-attained.<a id="FNanchor_526" href="#Footnote_526" class="fnanchor">[526]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span> Mr. Pollard, who regards the procedure contemplated by
-the <i>Injunctions</i> as ‘impossible’, believes that in practice the
-Stationers’ Company, in ordinary cases, itself acted as a licensing
-authority.<a id="FNanchor_527" href="#Footnote_527" class="fnanchor">[527]</a> Certainly this is the testimony, as regards the
-period 1576–86, of a note of Sir John Lambe, Dean of the Arches, in
-1636, which is based wholly or in part upon information derived from
-Felix Kingston, then Master of the Company.<a id="FNanchor_528" href="#Footnote_528" class="fnanchor">[528]</a> Kingston added the
-detail that in the case of a divinity book of importance the opinion
-of theological experts was taken. Mr. Pollard expresses a doubt
-whether Lambe or Kingston had much evidence before them other than
-the registers of the Company which are still extant, and to these we
-are in a position to turn for confirmation or qualification of their
-statements.<a id="FNanchor_529" href="#Footnote_529" class="fnanchor">[529]</a> Unfortunately, the ordinances or constitutions under
-which the master and wardens acted from the time of the incorporation
-have not been preserved, and any additions made to these by the Court
-of Assistants before the Restoration have not been printed.<a id="FNanchor_530" href="#Footnote_530" class="fnanchor">[530]</a> We
-have some revised ordinances of 1678–82, and these help us by recording
-as of ‘ancient usage’ a practice of entering all publications, other
-than those under letters patent, in ‘the register-book of this
-company’.<a id="FNanchor_531" href="#Footnote_531" class="fnanchor">[531]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span> It is in fact this register, incorporated from 1557 to
-1571 in the annual accounts of the wardens and kept from 1576 onwards
-as a subsidiary book by the clerk, which furnishes our principal
-material. During 1557–71 the entries for each year are collected
-under a general heading, which takes various forms. In 1557–8 it is
-‘The entrynge of all such copyes as be lycensed to be prynted by the
-master and wardyns of the mystery of stacioners’; in 1558–9 simply
-‘Lycense for pryntinge’; in 1559–60, for which year the entries are
-mixed up with others, ‘Receptes for fynes, graunting of coppyes and
-other thynges’; in 1560–1 ‘For takynge of fynes for coppyes’. This
-formula lasts until 1565–6, when ‘The entrynge of coopyes’ takes its
-place. The wording of the individual entries also varies during the
-period, but generally it indicates the receipt of a money payment in
-return for a license.<a id="FNanchor_532" href="#Footnote_532" class="fnanchor">[532]</a> In a very few cases, by no means always
-of divinity books, the licence is said to be ‘by’, or the licence or
-perhaps the book itself, to be ‘authorized’ or ‘allowed’ or ‘perused’
-or ‘appointed’ by the Bishop of London; still more rarely by the
-Archbishop of Canterbury or by both prelates; once by the Archbishops
-of Canterbury and York; once by the Council.<a id="FNanchor_533" href="#Footnote_533" class="fnanchor">[533]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span></p>
-
-<p>Richard Collins, on his appointment as Clerk of the Company in 1575,
-records that one of his duties was to enter ‘lycences for pryntinge
-of copies’ and one section of his register is accordingly devoted to
-this purpose.<a id="FNanchor_534" href="#Footnote_534" class="fnanchor">[534]</a> It has no general heading, but the summary accounts
-of the wardens up to 1596 continue to refer to the receipts as ‘for
-licencinge of copies’.<a id="FNanchor_535" href="#Footnote_535" class="fnanchor">[535]</a> The character of the individual entries
-between 1576 and 1586 is much as in the account books. The name of
-a stationer is given in the margin and is followed by some such
-formula as ‘Receyved of him for his licence to prynte’ or more briefly
-‘Lycenced vnto him’, with the title of the book, any supplementary
-information which the clerk thought relevant, and a note of the payment
-made. Occasional alternatives are ‘Allowed’, ‘Admitted’, ‘Graunted’
-or ‘Tolerated’ ‘vnto him’, of which the three first appear to have
-been regarded as especially appropriate to transfers of existing
-copyrights;<a id="FNanchor_536" href="#Footnote_536" class="fnanchor">[536]</a> and towards the end of the period appears the more
-important variant ‘Allowed vnto him for his copie’.<a id="FNanchor_537" href="#Footnote_537" class="fnanchor">[537]</a> References
-to external authorizers gradually become rather more frequent,
-although they are still the exception and not the rule; the function
-is fulfilled, not only by the bishop, the archbishop, or the Council,
-but also upon occasion by the Lord Chancellor or the Secretary, by
-individual Privy Councillors, by the Lord Mayor, the Recorder or the
-Remembrancer of the City, and by certain masters and doctors, who
-may be the ministers mentioned by Felix Kingston, and who probably
-held regular deputations from a proper ecclesiastical authority as
-‘correctors’ to the printers.<a id="FNanchor_538" href="#Footnote_538" class="fnanchor">[538]</a> It is certain that such a post was
-held in 1571 by one Talbot, a servant of the Archbishop of Canterbury.
-On the other hand the clerk, at first tentatively and then as a matter
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span> regular practice, begins to record the part taken by the master and
-wardens. The first example is a very explicit entry, in which the book
-is said to be ‘licensed to be printed’ by the archbishop and ‘alowed’
-by the master and a warden.<a id="FNanchor_539" href="#Footnote_539" class="fnanchor">[539]</a> But the formula which becomes normal
-does not dwell on any differentiation of functions, and merely states
-the licence as being ‘under the hands of’ the wardens or of one of
-them or the master, or of these and of some one who may be presumed to
-be an external corrector. To the precise significance of ‘under the
-hands of’ I must return. Increased caution with regard to dangerous
-books is also borne witness to during this period by the occasional
-issue of a qualified licence. In 1580 Richard Jones has to sign his
-name in the register to a promise ‘to bring the whole impression’ of
-<i>The Labyrinth of Liberty</i> ‘into the Hall in case it be disliked
-when it is printed’.<a id="FNanchor_540" href="#Footnote_540" class="fnanchor">[540]</a> In 1583 the same stationer undertakes ‘to
-print of his own perill’.<a id="FNanchor_541" href="#Footnote_541" class="fnanchor">[541]</a> In 1584 it is a play which is thus
-brought into question, Lyly’s <i>Sapho and Phao</i>, and Thomas Cadman
-gets no more than ‘yt is graunted vnto him yat yf he gett ye commedie
-of Sappho laufully alowed vnto him, then none of this cumpanie shall
-interrupt him to enjoye yt’. Other entries direct that lawful authority
-must be obtained before printing, and in one case there is a specific
-reference to the royal <i>Injunctions</i>.<a id="FNanchor_542" href="#Footnote_542" class="fnanchor">[542]</a> Conditions of other
-kinds are also sometimes found in entries; a book must be printed at
-a particular press, or the licence is to be voided if it prove to be
-another man’s copy.<a id="FNanchor_543" href="#Footnote_543" class="fnanchor">[543]</a> The caution of the Stationers may have been
-motived by dissatisfaction on the part of the government which finally
-took shape in the issue of the Star Chamber order of 23 June 1586.
-This was a result of the firmer policy towards Puritan indiscipline
-initiated by Whitgift and the new High Commission which he procured on
-his succession to the primacy in 1583.<a id="FNanchor_544" href="#Footnote_544" class="fnanchor">[544]</a> It had two main<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span> objects.
-One, with which we are not immediately concerned, was to limit the
-number of printers and their presses; the other, to concentrate the
-censorship of all ordinary books, including plays, in the hands of the
-archbishop and the bishop. It is not clear whether the prelates were to
-act in their ordinary capacity or as High Commissioners; anyhow they
-had the authority of the High Commission, itself backed by the Privy
-Council, behind them. The effect of the order is shown in a bustle
-amongst the publishers to get on to the register a number of ballads
-and other trifles which they had hitherto neglected to enter, and in a
-considerable increase in the submissions of books for approval, either
-to the prelates themselves, or to persons who are now clearly acting
-as ecclesiastical deputies.<a id="FNanchor_545" href="#Footnote_545" class="fnanchor">[545]</a> On 30 June 1588 an official list of
-deputies was issued by the archbishop, and amongst these were several
-who had already authorized books before and after 1586. These deputies,
-and other correctors whose names appear in the register at later
-dates, are as a rule traceable as episcopal chaplains, prebendaries
-of St. Paul’s, or holders of London benefices.<a id="FNanchor_546" href="#Footnote_546" class="fnanchor">[546]</a> Some of them
-were themselves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span> members of the High Commission. Occasionally laymen
-were appointed.<a id="FNanchor_547" href="#Footnote_547" class="fnanchor">[547]</a> The main work of correction now fell to these
-officials, but books were still sometimes allowed by the archbishop or
-bishop in person, or by the Privy Council or some member of that body.</p>
-
-<p>The reaction of the changes of 1586–88 upon the entries in the register
-is on the whole one of degree rather than of kind. Occasionally the
-wording suggests a differentiation between the functions of the wardens
-and those of the ecclesiastical licensers, but more often the clerk
-contents himself with a mere record of what ‘hands’ each book was
-under.<a id="FNanchor_548" href="#Footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a> Some shifting of the point of view is doubtless involved in
-the fact that ‘Entered vnto him for his copie’ and ‘Allowed vnto him
-for his copie’ now become the normal formulas, and by 1590–1 ‘Licenced
-vnto him’ has disappeared altogether.<a id="FNanchor_549" href="#Footnote_549" class="fnanchor">[549]</a> But a great number of books,
-including most ballads and pamphlets and some plays, are still entered
-without note of any authority other than that of the wardens, and about
-1593 the proportion of cases submitted to the ecclesiastical deputies
-sensibly begins to slacken, although the continuance of conditional
-entries shows that some caution was exercised. An intervention of the
-prelates in 1599 reversed the tendency again.<a id="FNanchor_550" href="#Footnote_550" class="fnanchor">[550]</a> As regards plays
-in particular,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span> the wardens received a sharp reminder, ‘that noe
-playes be printed except they be allowed by suche as haue authority’;
-and although they do not seem to have interpreted this as requiring
-reference to a corrector in every case, conditional entries of plays
-become for a time numerous.<a id="FNanchor_551" href="#Footnote_551" class="fnanchor">[551]</a> They stop altogether in 1607, when the
-responsibility for play correction appears to have been taken over,
-presumably under an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span> arrangement with the prelates, by the Master of
-the Revels.<a id="FNanchor_552" href="#Footnote_552" class="fnanchor">[552]</a> Henceforward and to the end of Buck’s mastership,
-nearly all play entries are under the hands not only of the wardens,
-but of the Master or of a deputy acting on his behalf. Meanwhile, for
-books other than plays, the ecclesiastical authority succeeded more
-and more in establishing itself, although even up to the time of the
-Commonwealth the wardens never altogether ceased to enter ballads and
-such small deer on their own responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>A little more may be gleaned from the ‘Fynes for breakinge of good
-orders’, which like the book entries were recorded by the wardens in
-their annual accounts up to 1571 and by the clerk in his register
-from 1576 to 1605.<a id="FNanchor_553" href="#Footnote_553" class="fnanchor">[553]</a> But many of these were for irregularities in
-apprenticeship and the like, and where a particular book was concerned,
-the book is more often named than the precise offence committed in
-relation to it. The fine is for printing ‘contrary to the orders of
-this howse’, ‘contrary to our ordenaunces’, or merely ‘disorderly’.
-Trade defects, such as ‘stechyng’ of books, are sometimes in question,
-and sometimes the infringement of other men’s copies.<a id="FNanchor_554" href="#Footnote_554" class="fnanchor">[554]</a> But the
-character of the books concerned suggests that some at least of the
-fines for printing ‘without lycense’, ‘without aucthoritie’, ‘without
-alowance’, ‘without entrance’, ‘before the wardyns handes were to yt’
-were due to breaches of the regulations for censorship, and in a few
-instances the information is specific.<a id="FNanchor_555" href="#Footnote_555" class="fnanchor">[555]</a> The book is a ‘lewde’ book,
-or ‘not tolerable’, or has already been condemned to be burnt, or the
-printing is contrary to ‘her maiesties prohibicon’ or ‘the decrees
-of the star chamber’.<a id="FNanchor_556" href="#Footnote_556" class="fnanchor">[556]</a> More rarely a fine was accompanied by the
-sequestration of the offending books, or the breaking up of a press,
-or even imprisonment. In these cases the company may have been acting
-under stimulus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span> from higher powers; in dealing with a culprit in 1579,
-they direct that ‘for his offence, so farre as it toucheth ye same
-house only, he shall paye a fine’.<a id="FNanchor_557" href="#Footnote_557" class="fnanchor">[557]</a></p>
-
-<p>Putting together the entries and the fines, we can arrive at an
-approximate notion of the position occupied by the Stationers’ Company
-as an intermediary between the individual stationers and the higher
-powers in Church and State. That it is only approximate and that many
-points of detail remain obscure is largely due to the methods of the
-clerk. Richard Collins did not realize the importance, at least to the
-future historian, of set diplomatic formulas, and it is by no means
-clear to what extent the variations in the phrasing of his record
-correspond to variations in the facts recorded. But it is my impression
-that he was in substance a careful registrar, especially as regards the
-authority under which his entries were made, and that if he did not
-note the presence in any case of a corrector’s ‘hand’ to a book, it is
-fair evidence that such a hand was not before him. On this assumption
-the register confirms the inference to be drawn from the statements
-of Lambe and Kingston in 1636, that before 1586 the provision of the
-<i>Injunctions</i> for licensing by the High Commission for London
-was not ordinarily operative, and that as a rule the only actual
-licences issued were those of the Stationers’ Company, who used their
-own discretion in submitting books about which they felt doubtful to
-the bishop or the archbishop or to an authorized corrector.<a id="FNanchor_558" href="#Footnote_558" class="fnanchor">[558]</a> That
-books licensed by the Company without such reference were regarded as
-having been technically licensed under the <i>Injunctions</i>, one
-would hesitate to say. Licence is a fairly general term, and as used
-in the Stationers’ Register it does not necessarily cover anything
-more than a permit required by the internal ordinances of the Company
-itself. Certainly its officials claimed to issue licences to its
-members for other purposes than printing.<a id="FNanchor_559" href="#Footnote_559" class="fnanchor">[559]</a> What Lambe and Kingston
-do not tell us, and perhaps ought to have told us, is that, when the
-master and wardens did call in the assistance of expert referees, it
-was not to ‘ministers’ merely chosen by themselves that they applied,
-but to official correctors nominated by the High Commission, or by the
-archbishop or bishop on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span> its behalf. Nor must it be supposed that no
-supervision of the proceedings of the company was exercised by the High
-Commission itself. We find that body writing to the Company to uphold
-a patent in 1560.<a id="FNanchor_560" href="#Footnote_560" class="fnanchor">[560]</a> It was upon its motion in 1566 that the Privy
-Council made a Star Chamber order calling attention to irregularities
-which had taken place, and directing the master and wardens to search
-for the offenders.<a id="FNanchor_561" href="#Footnote_561" class="fnanchor">[561]</a> And its authority, concurrent with that of the
-Privy Council itself, to license books, is confirmed by a letter of
-the Council to the company in 1570.<a id="FNanchor_562" href="#Footnote_562" class="fnanchor">[562]</a> So much for the period before
-1586. Another thing which Lambe and Kingston do not tell us, and which
-the register, if it can be trusted, does, is that the effective change
-introduced by the Star Chamber of that year was only one of degree and
-not of kind. It is true that an increasing number of books came, after
-one set-back, to be submitted to correctors; that the clerk begins to
-lay emphasis in his wording upon entrance rather than upon licence;
-that there are some hints that the direct responsibility of the wardens
-was for a kind of ‘allowance’ distinct from and supplementary to that
-of censorship. But it does not appear to be true that, then or at any
-later time, they wholly refused to enter any book except after taking
-cognizance of an authority beyond their own.</p>
-
-<p>In fact the register, from the very beginning, was not purely, or
-perhaps even primarily, one of allowances. It had two other functions,
-even more important from the point of view of the internal economy
-of the Company. It was a fee-book, subsidiary to the annual accounts
-of the wardens, and showing the details of sums which they had to
-return in those accounts.<a id="FNanchor_563" href="#Footnote_563" class="fnanchor">[563]</a> And it was a register of copyrights.
-A stationer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span> brought his copy to the wardens and paid his fee, in
-order that he might be protected by an official acknowledgement of his
-interest in the book against any infringement by a trade competitor. No
-doubt the wardens would not, and under the ordinances of the company
-might not, give this acknowledgement, unless they were satisfied that
-the book was one which might lawfully be printed. But copyright was
-what the stationer wanted, for after all most books were not dangerous
-in the eyes even of an Elizabethan censorship, whereas there would be
-little profit in publishing, if any rival were at liberty to cut in
-and reprint for himself the result of a successful speculation. It is
-a clear proof of this that the entrances include, not only new books,
-but also those in which rights had been transferred from one stationer
-to another.<a id="FNanchor_564" href="#Footnote_564" class="fnanchor">[564]</a> Obviously no new allowance by a corrector would be
-required in such cases. And as regards copyright and licence alike,
-the entry in the register, although convenient to all concerned, was
-in itself no more than registration, the formal putting upon record
-of action already taken upon responsible authority. This authority
-did not rest with the clerk. In a few cases, indeed, he does seem to
-have entered an unimportant book at his own discretion.<a id="FNanchor_565" href="#Footnote_565" class="fnanchor">[565]</a> But his
-functions were really subordinate to those of the wardens, as is shown
-by his practice from about 1580, of regularly citing the ‘hands’ or
-signed directions of those officers, as well as of the correctors, upon
-which he was acting. These ‘hands’ are not in the register, and there
-is sufficient evidence that they were ordinarily endorsed upon the
-manuscript or a printed copy of the book itself.<a id="FNanchor_566" href="#Footnote_566" class="fnanchor">[566]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span> Exceptionally
-there might be an oral direction, or a separate letter or warrant of
-approval, which was probably preserved in a cupboard at the company’s
-hall.<a id="FNanchor_567" href="#Footnote_567" class="fnanchor">[567]</a> Here too were kept copies of prints, although not, I
-think, the endorsed copies, which seem to have remained with the
-stationers.<a id="FNanchor_568" href="#Footnote_568" class="fnanchor">[568]</a> I take it that the procedure was somewhat as follows.
-The stationer would bring his book to a warden together with the fee or
-some plausible excuse for deferring payment to a later date. The warden
-had to consider the questions both of property and of licence. Possibly
-the title of each book was published in the hall, in order that any
-other stationer who thought that he had an interest in it might make
-his claim.<a id="FNanchor_569" href="#Footnote_569" class="fnanchor">[569]</a> Cases of disputed interest would go for determination
-to the Court of Assistants, who with the master and wardens for the
-year formed the ultimate governing body of the company, and had
-power in the last resort to revoke an authority to print already
-granted.<a id="FNanchor_570" href="#Footnote_570" class="fnanchor">[570]</a> But if no difficulty as to ownership arose,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span> and if the
-book was already endorsed as allowable by a corrector, the warden would
-add his own endorsement, and it was then open to the stationer to take
-the book to the clerk, show the ‘hands’, pay the fee if it was still
-outstanding, and get the formalities completed by registration.<a id="FNanchor_571" href="#Footnote_571" class="fnanchor">[571]</a>
-If, however, the warden found no endorsement by a corrector on the
-copy, then there were three courses open to him. He might take the
-risk of passing an obviously harmless book on his own responsibility.
-He might refuse his ‘hand’ until the stationer had got that of the
-corrector. Or he might make a qualified endorsement, which the clerk
-would note in the register, sanctioning publication so far as copyright
-was concerned, but only upon condition that proper authority should
-first be obtained. The dates on the title-pages of plays, when compared
-with those of the entries, suggest that, as would indeed be natural,
-the procedure was completed before publication; not necessarily before
-printing, as the endorsements were sometimes on printed copies.<a id="FNanchor_572" href="#Footnote_572" class="fnanchor">[572]</a>
-Several cases of re-entry after a considerable interval may indicate
-that copyright lapsed unless it was exercised within a reasonable time.
-As a rule, a play appeared within a year or so after it was entered,
-and was either printed or published by the stationer who had entered
-it, or by some other to whom he is known, or may plausibly be supposed,
-to have transferred his interest. Where a considerable interval exists
-between the date of an entry and that of the first known print, it is
-sometimes possible that an earlier print has been lost.<a id="FNanchor_573" href="#Footnote_573" class="fnanchor">[573]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span></p>
-
-<p>I do not think that it can be assumed that the absence of an entry in
-the register is evidence that the book was not duly licensed, so far
-as the ecclesiastical authorities were concerned. If its status was
-subsequently questioned, the signed copy could itself be produced.
-Certainly, when a conditional entry had been made, requiring better
-authority to be obtained, the fulfilment of the condition was by
-no means always, although it was sometimes, recorded. Possibly the
-‘better authority’ was shown to the warden rather than the clerk.
-On the other hand, it is certain that, under the ordinances of the
-Company, publication without entrance exposed the stationer to a
-fine, and it is therefore probable that entrance was also necessary
-to secure copyright.<a id="FNanchor_574" href="#Footnote_574" class="fnanchor">[574]</a> Sometimes the omission was repaired on the
-occasion of a subsequent transfer of interest. So far as plays are
-concerned, there seems to have been greater laxity in this respect
-as time went on. Before 1586, or at any rate before 1584, there are
-hardly any unentered plays, if we make the reasonable assumption
-that certain prints of 1573 and 1575 appeared in the missing lists
-for 1571–5.<a id="FNanchor_575" href="#Footnote_575" class="fnanchor">[575]</a> Between 1584 and 1615 the number is considerable,
-being over fifty, or nearly a quarter of the total number of plays
-printed during that period. An examination of individual cases does
-not disclose any obvious reason why some plays should be entered and
-others not. The unentered plays are spread over the whole period
-concerned. They come from the repertories of nearly all the theatres.
-They include ‘surreptitious’ plays, which may be supposed to have been
-printed without the consent of the authors or owners, but they also
-include plays to which prefaces by authors or owners are prefixed. They
-were issued by publishers of good standing as well as by others less
-reputable; and as a rule their publishers appear to have been entering
-or not entering, quite indifferently, at about the same<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span> date. To this
-generalization I find an exception, in Thomas Archer, who printed
-six plays without entry between 1607 and 1613 and entered none.<a id="FNanchor_576" href="#Footnote_576" class="fnanchor">[576]</a>
-The large number of unentered plays is rather a puzzle, and I do not
-know the solution. In some cases, as we shall see, the publishers
-may have preferred not to court publicity for their enterprises by
-bringing them before the wardens. In others they may merely have been
-unbusinesslike, or may have thought that the chances of profit hardly
-justified the expenditure of sixpence on acquiring copyright. Yet many
-of the unentered plays went through more than one edition, including
-<i>Mucedorus</i>, a book of enduring popularity, and they do not appear
-to have been particularly subject to invasion by rival publishers. I
-will leave it to Mr. Pollard.</p>
-
-<p>These being the conditions, let us consider what number and what kinds
-of plays got into print. It will be convenient to deal separately with
-the two periods 1557–85 and 1586–1616. The operations of the Company
-under their charter had hardly begun before Mary died. The Elizabethan
-printing of plays opens in 1559 and for the first five years is of a
-retrospective character. Half a dozen publishers, led by John King, who
-died about 1561, and Thomas Colwell, who started business in the same
-year, issued or entered seventeen plays. Of these one is not extant.
-One is a ‘May-game’, perhaps contemporary. Five are translations;
-four are Marian farces of the school of Udall, one a <i>débat</i> by
-John Heywood, and five Protestant interludes of the reigns of Henry
-and Edward, roughly edited in some cases so as to adapt them to
-performance under the new queen.<a id="FNanchor_577" href="#Footnote_577" class="fnanchor">[577]</a> One more example of earlier Tudor
-drama, <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i>, in addition to mere reprints,
-appeared after 1565.<a id="FNanchor_578" href="#Footnote_578" class="fnanchor">[578]</a> And with that year, after a short lull of
-activity, begins the genuine Elizabethan harvest, which by 1585 had
-yielded forty-two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span> plays, of which thirty-nine are extant, although
-two only in the form of fragments. On analysis, the greater number
-of these, seventeen in all, fall into a group of moral interludes,
-often controversial in tone, and in some cases approximating, through
-the intermingling of concrete with abstract personages, on the one
-hand to classical comedy, on the other to the mediaeval miracle-play.
-There are also twelve translations or adaptations, including two from
-Italian comedy. There is one neo-classical tragedy. And there are
-nine plays which can best be classified as histories, of which seven
-have a classical and two a romantic colouring.<a id="FNanchor_579" href="#Footnote_579" class="fnanchor">[579]</a> It is of interest
-to compare this output of the printing-press with the chronicle of
-Court performances over the same years which is recorded in the Revels
-Accounts.<a id="FNanchor_580" href="#Footnote_580" class="fnanchor">[580]</a> Here we get, so far of course as can be judged from
-a bare enumeration of titles, fourteen morals, twenty-one classical
-histories, mainly shown by boys, twenty-two romantic histories, mainly
-shown by men, and perhaps three farces, two plays of contemporary
-realism, with one ‘antick’ play and two groups of short dramatic
-episodes. It is clear that the main types are the same in both lists.
-But only one of the printed plays, <i>Orestes</i>, actually appears in
-the Court records, although <i>Damon and Pythias</i>, <i>Gorboduc</i>,
-<i>Sapho and Phao</i>, <i>Campaspe</i>, and <i>The Arraignment of
-Paris</i> were also given at Court, and the Revels Accounts after<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>
-all only cover comparatively few years out of the whole period.<a id="FNanchor_581" href="#Footnote_581" class="fnanchor">[581]</a>
-And there is a great discrepancy in the proportions in which the
-various types are represented. The morals, which were obsolescent at
-Court, are far more numerous in print than the classical and romantic
-histories, which were already in enjoyment of their full vogue upon
-the boards. My definite impression is that these early printed morals,
-unlike the prints of later date, were in the main not drawn from the
-actual repertories of companies, but were literary products, written
-with a didactic purpose, and printed in the hope that they would be
-bought both by readers and by schoolmasters in search of suitable
-pieces for performance by their pupils. They belong, like some similar
-interludes, both original and translated, of earlier date, rather
-to the tradition of the humanist academic drama, than to that of
-the professional, or even quasi-professional, stage. There are many
-things about the prints which, although not individually decisive,
-tend when taken in bulk to confirm this theory. They are ‘compiled’,
-according to their title-pages; sometimes the author is declared a
-‘minister’ or a ‘learned clerke’.<a id="FNanchor_582" href="#Footnote_582" class="fnanchor">[582]</a> Nothing is, as a rule, said
-to indicate that they have been acted.<a id="FNanchor_583" href="#Footnote_583" class="fnanchor">[583]</a> They are advertised, not
-only as ‘new’, ‘merry’, ‘pretty’, ‘pleasant’, ‘delectable’, ‘witty’,
-‘full of mirth and pastime’, but also as ‘excellent’, ‘worthy’,
-‘godly’, ‘pithy’, ‘moral’, ‘pityfull’, ‘learned’, and ‘fruitfull’,
-and occasionally the precise didactic intention is more elaborately
-expounded either on the title-page or in a prologue.<a id="FNanchor_584" href="#Footnote_584" class="fnanchor">[584]</a> They are
-furnished with analyses showing the number of actors necessary to take
-all the parts, and in one case there is a significant note that the
-arrangement is ‘most convenient for such as be disposed, either to
-shew this comedie in priuate houses, or otherwise’.<a id="FNanchor_585" href="#Footnote_585" class="fnanchor">[585]</a> They often
-conclude with a generalized<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span> prayer for the Queen and the estates of
-the realm, which omits any special petition for the individual lord
-such as we have reason to believe the protected players used.<a id="FNanchor_586" href="#Footnote_586" class="fnanchor">[586]</a>
-The texts are much better than the later texts based upon acting
-copies. The stage-directions read like the work of authors rather
-than of book-keepers, notably in the use of ‘out’ rather than of ‘in’
-to indicate exits, and in the occasional insertion both of hints for
-‘business’ and of explanatory comments aimed at a reader rather than
-an actor.<a id="FNanchor_587" href="#Footnote_587" class="fnanchor">[587]</a> It should be added that this type of play begins to
-disappear at the point when the growing Calvinist spirit led to a sharp
-breach between the ministry and the stage, and discredited even moral
-play-writing amongst divines. The latest morals, of which there are
-some even during the second period of play-publication, have much more
-the look of rather antiquated survivals from working repertories.<a id="FNanchor_588" href="#Footnote_588" class="fnanchor">[588]</a>
-The ‘May-game’ of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span> <i>Robin Hood</i> seems to me to be of a literary
-origin similar to that of the contemporary ‘morals’.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the end of the period a new element is introduced with Lyly and
-Peele, who, like Edwardes before them, were not divines but secular
-scholars, and presumably desired a permanent life for their literary
-achievements. The publication of Lyly’s plays for Paul’s carries us on
-into the period 1586–1616, and the vaunting of their performance before
-the Queen is soon followed by that of other plays, beginning with
-<i>The Troublesome Reign of John</i>, as publicly acted in the City of
-London. During 1586–1616 two hundred and thirty-seven plays in all were
-published or at least entered on the Stationers’ Register, in addition
-to thirteen printed elsewhere than in London. Of many of these, and
-of some of those earlier published, there were one or more reprints.
-It is not until the last year of the period that the first example of
-a collective edition of the plays of any author makes its appearance.
-This is <i>The Workes of Benjamin Jonson</i>, which is moreover in
-folio, whereas the prints of individual plays were almost invariably
-in quarto.<a id="FNanchor_589" href="#Footnote_589" class="fnanchor">[589]</a> A second volume of Jonson’s <i>Works</i> was begun in
-1631 and completed in 1640. Shakespeare’s plays had to wait until 1623
-for collective treatment, Lyly’s until 1632, Marston’s until 1633,
-and Beaumont and Fletcher’s until 1647 and 1679, although a partial
-collection of Shakespearian plays in quarto has been shown to have
-been contemplated and abandoned in 1619.<a id="FNanchor_590" href="#Footnote_590" class="fnanchor">[590]</a> Of the two hundred and
-thirty-seven plays proposed for publication two hundred and fourteen
-are extant. Twenty-three are only known by entries in the Stationers’
-Register, and as plays were not always entered, it is conceivable that
-one or two may have been published, and have passed into oblivion. Of
-the two hundred and fourteen extant plays, six are translations from
-the Latin, Italian, or French, and seven may reasonably be suspected of
-being merely closet plays, intended for the eye of the reader alone.
-The other two hundred and one may be taken to have undergone the
-test<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span> of actual performance. Six were given by amateurs, at Court or
-elsewhere, and eleven, of which three are Latin and eight English, are
-University plays. So far as the professional companies are concerned,
-the repertories which have probably been best preserved, owing to
-the fact that the poets were in a position to influence publication,
-are those of the boys. We have thirty-one plays which, certainly or
-probably, came to the press from the Chapel and Queen’s Revels boys,
-twenty-five from the Paul’s boys, and eight from the King’s Revels
-boys. To the Queen’s men we may assign eleven plays, to Sussex’s three,
-to Pembroke’s five, to Derby’s four, to Oxford’s one, to Strange’s or
-the Admiral’s and Henry’s thirty-two, to the Chamberlain’s and King’s
-thirty-four, to Worcester’s and Anne’s sixteen, to Charles’s one.
-Some of these had at earlier dates been played by other companies.
-Fifteen plays remain, not a very large proportion, which cannot be
-safely assigned.<a id="FNanchor_591" href="#Footnote_591" class="fnanchor">[591]</a> There are twenty-seven manuscript English plays
-or fragments of plays or plots of plays, and twenty-one Latin ones,
-mostly of a university type, which also belong to the period 1586–1616.
-There are fifty-one plays which were certainly or probably produced
-before 1616, but were not printed until later, many of them in the
-Shakespeare and Beaumont and Fletcher folios. And there are some
-twenty-two others, which exist in late prints, but may be wholly, or
-more often partially, of early workmanship. The resultant total of
-three hundred and seven is considerable, but there is reason to suppose
-that it only represents a comparatively small fraction of the complete
-crop of these thirty pullulating dramatic years. Of over two hundred
-and eighty plays recorded by Henslowe as produced or commissioned by
-the companies for whom he acted as banker between 1592 and 1603, we
-have only some forty and perhaps revised versions of a few others.<a id="FNanchor_592" href="#Footnote_592" class="fnanchor">[592]</a>
-Thomas Heywood claimed in 1633 to have had ‘an entire hand, or at least
-a maine finger’, in not less than two hundred and twenty plays, and
-of these we can only identify or even guess at about two score, of
-which several are certainly lost. That any substantial number of plays
-got printed, but have failed to reach us, is improbable. From time
-to time an unknown print, generally of early date, turns up in some
-bibliographical backwater, but of the seventy-five titles which I have
-brought together under the head of ‘Lost Plays’ some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span> probably rest
-upon misunderstandings and others represent works which were not plays
-at all, while a large proportion are derived from late entries in the
-Stationers’ Register by Humphrey Moseley of plays which he may have
-possessed in manuscript but never actually proceeded to publish.<a id="FNanchor_593" href="#Footnote_593" class="fnanchor">[593]</a>
-Some of the earlier unfulfilled entries may be of similar type. An
-interesting piece of evidence pointing to the practically complete
-survival at any rate of seventeenth-century prints is afforded in a
-catalogue of his library of plays made by Sir John Harington in or
-about 1610.<a id="FNanchor_594" href="#Footnote_594" class="fnanchor">[594]</a> Harington possessed 129 distinct plays, as well as
-a number of duplicates. Only 9 of these were printed before 1586. He
-had 14 out of 38 printed during 1588–94, and 15 out of 25 printed
-during 1595–99. His absence in Ireland during 1599 probably led him
-to miss several belonging to that year, and his most vigorous period
-as a collector began with 1600. During 1600–10 he secured 90 out of
-105; that is to say exactly six-sevenths of the complete output of
-the London press. I neglect plays printed outside London in these
-figures. There is only one play among the 129 which is not known to us.
-Apparently it bore the title <i>Belinus and Brennus</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally supposed, and I think with justice, that the acting
-companies did not find it altogether to their advantage to have their
-plays printed. Heywood, indeed, in the epistle to his <i>English
-Traveller</i> (1633) tells us that this was sometimes the case.<a id="FNanchor_595" href="#Footnote_595" class="fnanchor">[595]</a>
-Presumably the danger was not so much that readers would not become
-spectators, as that other companies might buy the plays and act them;
-and of this practice there are some dubious instances, although at any
-rate by Caroline times it had been brought under control by the Lord
-Chamberlain.<a id="FNanchor_596" href="#Footnote_596" class="fnanchor">[596]</a> At any rate, we find the Admiral’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span> in 1600 borrowing
-40<i>s.</i> ‘to geue vnto the printer, to staye the printing of Patient
-Gresell’.<a id="FNanchor_597" href="#Footnote_597" class="fnanchor">[597]</a> We find the King’s Revels syndicate in 1608 entering
-into a formal agreement debarring its members from putting any of the
-play-books jointly owned by them into print. And we find the editor and
-publisher of <i>Troilus and Cressida</i>, although that had in fact
-never been played, bidding his readers in 1609 ‘thanke fortune for the
-scape it hath made amongst you; since by the grand possessors wills I
-beleeue you should have prayd for them rather than beene prayd’. The
-marked fluctuation in the output of plays in different years is capable
-of explanation on the theory that, so long as the companies were
-prosperous, they kept a tight hold on their ‘books’, and only let them
-pass into the hands of the publishers when adversity broke them up, or
-when they had some special need to raise funds. The periods of maximum
-output are 1594, 1600, and 1607. In 1594 the companies were reforming
-themselves after a long and disastrous spell of plague; and in
-particular the Queen’s, Pembroke’s, and Sussex’s men were all ruined,
-and their books were thrown in bulk upon the market.<a id="FNanchor_598" href="#Footnote_598" class="fnanchor">[598]</a> It has been
-suggested that the sales of 1600 may have been due to Privy Council
-restrictions of that year, which limited the number of companies, and
-forbade them to play for more than two days in the week.<a id="FNanchor_599" href="#Footnote_599" class="fnanchor">[599]</a> But it is
-very doubtful whether the limitation of days really became operative,
-and many of the plays published belonged to the two companies, the
-Chamberlain’s and the Admiral’s, who stood to gain by the elimination
-of competitors. An alternative reason might be found in the call for
-ready money involved by the building of the Globe in 1599 and the
-Fortune in 1600. The main factor in 1607 was the closing of Paul’s and
-the sale of the plays acted there.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes the companies were outwitted. Needy and unscrupulous
-stationers might use illegitimate means to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span> acquire texts for which
-they had not paid as a basis for ‘surreptitious’ or ‘piratical’
-prints.<a id="FNanchor_600" href="#Footnote_600" class="fnanchor">[600]</a> A hired actor might be bribed to disclose his ‘part’
-and so much as he could remember of the ‘parts’ of others. Dr. Greg
-has made it seem probable that the player of the Host was an agent
-in furnishing the text of the <i>Merry Wives</i>.<a id="FNanchor_601" href="#Footnote_601" class="fnanchor">[601]</a> A player of
-Voltimand and other minor parts may have been similarly guilty as
-regards <i>Hamlet</i>.<a id="FNanchor_602" href="#Footnote_602" class="fnanchor">[602]</a> Long before, the printer of <i>Gorboduc</i>
-had succeeded in ‘getting a copie thereof at some yongmans hand that
-lacked a little money and much discretion’. Or the poet himself might
-be to blame. Thomas Heywood takes credit in the epistle to <i>The Rape
-of Lucrece</i> that it had not been his custom ‘to commit my playes to
-the presse’, like others who ‘have vsed a double sale of their labours,
-first to the stage, and after to the presse’. Yet this had not saved
-his plays from piracy, for some of them had been ‘copied only by the
-eare’ and issued in a corrupt and mangled form. A quarter of a century
-later, in writing a prologue for a revival of his <i>If You Know not
-Me, You Know Nobody</i>, he tells us that this was one of the corrupt
-issues, and adds that</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5h">Some by Stenography drew</div>
- <div>The plot: put it in print: (scarce one word trew).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Modern critics have sought in shorthand the source of
-other ‘bad’ and probably surreptitious texts of plays, and one has gone
-so far as to trace in them the peculiarities of a particular system
-expounded in the <i>Characterie</i> (1588) of Timothy Bright.<a id="FNanchor_603" href="#Footnote_603" class="fnanchor">[603]</a> The
-whole question of surreptitious prints has naturally been explored most
-closely in connexion with the textual criticism of Shakespeare, and
-the latest investigator, Mr. Pollard, has come to the conclusion that,
-in spite of the general condemnation of the Folio editors, the only
-Shakespearian Quartos which can reasonably be labelled as surreptitious
-or as textually ‘bad’ are the First Quartos of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>,
-<i>Henry V</i>, <i>Merry Wives of Windsor</i>, <i>Hamlet</i>, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-<i>Pericles</i>, although he strongly suspects that there once existed
-a similar edition of <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i>.<a id="FNanchor_604" href="#Footnote_604" class="fnanchor">[604]</a> I have no ground
-for dissenting from this judgement.</p>
-
-<p>The question whether the actors, in protecting their property
-from the pirates, could look for any assistance from the official
-controllers of the press is one of some difficulty. We may perhaps
-infer, with the help of the conditional entries of <i>The Blind Beggar
-of Alexandria</i> and <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, and the special
-order made in the case of <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, that before assigning
-a ‘copy’ to one stationer the wardens of the Company took some steps
-to ascertain whether any other stationer laid a claim to it. It does
-not follow that they also inquired whether the applicant had come
-honestly or dishonestly by his manuscript.<a id="FNanchor_605" href="#Footnote_605" class="fnanchor">[605]</a> Mr. Pollard seems
-inclined to think that, although they were under no formal obligation
-to intervene, they would not be likely, as men of common sense, to
-encourage dishonesty.<a id="FNanchor_606" href="#Footnote_606" class="fnanchor">[606]</a> If this argument stood alone, I should
-not have much confidence in it. There is a Publishers’ Association
-to-day, doubtless composed of men of common sense, but it is not a
-body to which one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span> would naturally commit interests which might come
-into conflict with those of members of the trade. It would be another
-matter, however, if the actors were in a position to bring outside
-interest to bear against the pirates, through the licensers, or
-through the Privy Council on whom ultimately the licensers depended.
-And this in fact seems to have been the way in which a solution of
-the problem was gradually arrived at. Apart altogether from plays,
-there are instances upon record in which individuals, who were in a
-position to command influence, successfully adopted a similar method.
-We find Fulke Greville in 1586 writing to Sir Francis Walsingham,
-on the information of the stationer Ponsonby, to warn him that the
-publication of the <i>Arcadia</i> was being planned, and to advise him
-to get ‘made stay of that mercenary book’ by means of an application
-to the Archbishop or to Dr. Cosin, ‘who have, as he says, a copy
-to peruse to that end’.<a id="FNanchor_607" href="#Footnote_607" class="fnanchor">[607]</a> Similarly we find Francis Bacon, in
-the preface to his <i>Essayes</i> of 1597, excusing himself for
-the publication on the ground that surreptitious adventurers were
-at work, and ‘to labour the staie of them had bin troublesome and
-subiect to interpretation’. Evidently he had come to a compromise,
-of which the Stationers’ Register retains traces in the cancellation
-by a court of an entry of the <i>Essayes</i> to Richard Serger, and
-a re-entry to H. Hooper, the actual publisher, ‘under the handes of
-Master Francis Bacon, Master Doctor Stanhope, Master Barlowe, and
-Master Warden Lawson’.<a id="FNanchor_608" href="#Footnote_608" class="fnanchor">[608]</a> The actors, too, were not wholly without
-influence. They had their patrons and protectors, the Lord Chamberlain
-and the Lord Admiral, in the Privy Council, and although, as Mr.
-Pollard points out, it certainly would not have been good business
-to worry an important minister about every single forty-shilling
-piracy, it may have been worth while to seek a standing protection,
-analogous to the old-fashioned ‘privilege’, against a series of such
-annoyances. At any rate, this is what, while the Admiral’s contented
-themselves with buying off the printer of <i>Patient Grissell</i>, the
-Chamberlain’s apparently attempted, although at first with indifferent
-success, to secure. In 1597 John Danter, a stationer of the worst
-reputation, had printed a surreptitious and ‘bad’ edition of <i>Romeo
-and Juliet</i>, and possibly, if<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span> Mr. Pollard’s conjecture is right,
-another of <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i>. He had made no entry in the
-Register, and it was therefore open to another publisher, Cuthbert
-Burby, to issue, without breach of copyright, ‘corrected’ editions of
-the same plays.<a id="FNanchor_609" href="#Footnote_609" class="fnanchor">[609]</a> This he did, with suitable trumpetings of the
-corrections on the title-pages, and presumably by arrangement with the
-Chamberlain’s men. It was this affair which must, I think, have led
-the company to apply for protection to their lord. On 22 July 1598
-an entry was made in the Stationers’ Register of <i>The Merchant of
-Venice</i> for the printer James Roberts. This entry is conditional
-in form, but it differs from the normal conditional entries in that
-the requirement specified is not an indefinite ‘aucthoritie’ but a
-‘lycence from the Right honorable the lord chamberlen’. Roberts also
-entered <i>Cloth Breeches and Velvet Hose</i> on 27 May 1600, <i>A
-Larum for London</i> on 29 May 1600, and <i>Troilus and Cressida</i> on
-7 February 1603. These also are all conditional entries but of a normal
-type. No condition, however, is attached to his entry of <i>Hamlet</i>
-on 26 July 1602. Now comes a significant piece of evidence, which at
-least shows that in 1600, as well as in 1598, the Stationers’ Company
-were paying particular attention to entries of plays coming from the
-repertory of the Chamberlain’s men. The register contains, besides the
-formal entries, certain spare pages upon which the clerk was accustomed
-to make occasional memoranda, and amongst these memoranda we find the
-following:<a id="FNanchor_610" href="#Footnote_610" class="fnanchor">[610]</a></p>
-
-<p class="smaller center">My lord chamberlens menns plaies Entred<br />
-viz<br />
-A moral of ‘clothe breches and velvet hose’</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">27 May 1600<br />
- To Master<br />
- Robertes</div>
-
-<div class="sidenote">27 May<br />
- To hym</div>
-
-<table summary="memoranda" class="smaller">
- <tr>
- <td class="cht5">Allarum to London</td>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht1">4 Augusti</td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="ctr" rowspan="6">to be staied</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht4">As you like yt, a booke<br />
- Henry the ffift, a booke<br />
- Every man in his humour, a booke<br />
- The commedie of ‘muche A doo about nothing’, a booke</td>
-<td class="brckt"><img src="images/big_right_bracket.png" alt="big right bracket"
- style="height:5em;padding:0 0em 0 0em;" /></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span></p>
-
-<p>There are possibly two notes here, but we may reasonably date them both
-in 1600, as <i>Every Man In his Humour</i> was entered to Cuthbert
-Burby and Walter Burre on 14 August 1600 and <i>Much Ado about
-Nothing</i> to Andrew Wise and William Aspley on 23 August 1600, and
-these plays appeared in 1601 and 1600 respectively. <i>Henry V</i>
-was published, without entry and in a ‘bad’ text by Thomas Millington
-and John Busby, also in 1600, while <i>As You Like It</i> remained
-unprinted until 1623. Many attempts have been made to explain the story
-of 4 August. Mr. Fleay conjectured that it was due to difficulties of
-censorship; Mr. Furness that it was directed against James Roberts,
-whom he regarded on the strength of the conditional entries as a man
-of ‘shifty character’.<a id="FNanchor_611" href="#Footnote_611" class="fnanchor">[611]</a> But there is no reason to read Roberts’s
-name into the August memorandum at all; and I agree with Mr. Pollard
-that the evidence of dishonesty against him has been exaggerated, and
-that the privilege which he held for printing all play-bills for actors
-makes it prima facie unlikely that his relations with the companies
-would be irregular.<a id="FNanchor_612" href="#Footnote_612" class="fnanchor">[612]</a> On the other hand, I hesitate to accept Mr.
-Pollard’s counter-theory that the four conditional Roberts entries were
-of the nature of a deliberate plan ‘in the interest of the players in
-order to postpone their publication till it could not injure the run
-of the play and to make the task of the pirates more difficult’. One
-would of course suppose that any entry, conditional or not, might serve
-such a purpose, if the entering stationer was in league with the actors
-and deliberately reserved publication. This is presumably what the
-Admiral’s men paid Cuthbert Burby to do for <i>Patient Grissell</i>.
-Mr. Pollard applies the same theory to Edward Blount’s unconditional
-entries of <i>Pericles</i> and <i>Antony and Cleopatra</i> in 1608, and
-it would certainly explain the delays in the publication of <i>Troilus
-and Cressida</i> from 1603 to 1609 and of <i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>
-from 1608 to 1623, and the absence of any edition of <i>Cloth Breeches
-and Velvet Hose</i>. But it does not explain why <i>Hamlet</i>, entered
-by Roberts in 1602, was issued by others in the ‘bad’ text of 1603,
-or why <i>Pericles</i> was issued by Henry Gosson in the ‘bad’ text
-of 1609.<a id="FNanchor_613" href="#Footnote_613" class="fnanchor">[613]</a> Mr. Pollard’s interpretation of the facts appears to
-be influenced by the conditional character of four out of Roberts’s
-five entries<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span> during 1598–1603, and I understand him to believe that
-the ‘further aucthoritie’ required for <i>Cloth Breeches and Velvet
-Hose</i> and <i>A Larum for London</i> and the ‘sufficient aucthoritie’
-required for <i>Troilus and Cressida</i> were of the same nature as
-the licence from the Lord Chamberlain specifically required for <i>The
-Merchant of Venice</i>.<a id="FNanchor_614" href="#Footnote_614" class="fnanchor">[614]</a> It is not inconceivable that this may have
-been so, but one is bound to take the Roberts conditional entries side
-by side with the eight similar entries made between 1601 and 1606 for
-other men, and in three at least of these (<i>The Dutch Courtesan</i>,
-<i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, <i>The Fleir</i>) it is obvious that the
-authority demanded was that of the official correctors. Of course, the
-correctors may themselves have had a hint from the Lord Chamberlain
-to keep an eye upon the interests of his servants, but if the eleven
-conditionally entered plays of 1600–6 be looked at as a group, it will
-be seen that they are all plays of either a political or a satirical
-character, which might well therefore call for particular attention
-from the correctors in the discharge of their ordinary functions. I
-have already suggested that the normal conditional entries represent
-cases in which the wardens of the Stationers’ Company, while not
-prepared to license a book on their own responsibility, short-circuited
-as far as they could the procedure entailed. Properly they ought to
-have seen the corrector’s hand before adding their own endorsement.
-But if this was not forthcoming, the applicant may have been allowed,
-in order to save time, to have the purely trade formalities completed
-by a conditional entry, which would be a valid protection against
-a rival stationer, but would not, until the corrector’s hand was
-obtained, be sufficient authority for the actual printing. No doubt
-the clerk should have subsequently endorsed the entry after seeing
-the corrector’s hand, but he did not always do so, although in cases
-of transfer the transferee might ask for a record to be made, and in
-any event the owner of the copy had the book with the ‘hand’ to it.
-The Lord Chamberlain’s ‘stay’ was, I think, another matter. I suppose
-it to have been directed, not to the correctors, but to the wardens,
-and to have taken the form of a request not to enter any play of the
-Chamberlain’s men, otherwise entitled to licence or not, without
-satisfying themselves that the actors were assenting parties to the
-transaction. Common sense would certainly dictate compliance with
-such a request, coming from such a source. The plan seems to have
-worked well enough so far as <i>As You Like It</i>, <i>Every Man In
-his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span> Humour</i>, and <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i> were concerned,
-for we have no reason to doubt that the subsequent publication of
-two of these plays had the assent of the Chamberlain’s men, and the
-third was effectively suppressed. But somehow not only <i>Hamlet</i>
-but also <i>The Merry Wives of Windsor</i> slipped through in 1602,
-and although the actors apparently came to some arrangement with
-Roberts and furnished a revised text of <i>Hamlet</i>, the other play
-seems to have gone completely out of their control. Moreover, it was
-an obvious weakness of the method adopted, that it gave no security
-against a surreptitious printer who was in a position to dispense with
-an entry. Danter, after all, had published without entry in 1597. He
-had had to go without copyright; but an even more audacious device
-was successfully tried in 1600 with <i>Henry V</i>. This was one of
-the four plays so scrupulously ‘staied’ by the Stationers’ clerk on 4
-August. Not merely, however, was the play printed in 1600 by Thomas
-Creede for Thomas Millington and John Busby, but on 21 August it
-was entered on the Register as transferred to Thomas Pavier amongst
-other ‘thinges formerlye printed and sett ouer to’ him. I think the
-explanation is that the print of 1600 was treated as merely a reprint
-of the old play of <i>The Famous Victories of Henry V</i>, which was
-indeed to some extent Shakespeare’s source, and of which Creede held
-the copyright.<a id="FNanchor_615" href="#Footnote_615" class="fnanchor">[615]</a> Similarly, it is conceivable that the same John
-Busby and Nathaniel Butter forced the hands of the Chamberlain’s men
-into allowing the publication of <i>King Lear</i> in 1608 by a threat
-to issue it as a reprint of <i>King Leir</i>.<a id="FNanchor_616" href="#Footnote_616" class="fnanchor">[616]</a> Busby was also the
-enterer of <i>The Merry Wives</i>, and he and Butter, at whose hands
-it was that Heywood suffered, seem to have been the chief of the
-surreptitious printers after Danter’s death.</p>
-
-<p>The Chamberlain’s men would have been in a better position if their
-lord had brought his influence to bear, as Sidney’s friends had done,
-upon the correctors instead of the Stationers’ Company. Probably
-the mistake was retrieved in 1607 when the ‘allowing’ of plays for
-publication passed to the Master of the Revels, and he may even
-have extended his protection to the other companies which, like the
-Chamberlain’s, had now passed under royal protection. I do not suggest
-that the convenience of this arrangement was the sole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span> motive for the
-change; the episcopal correctors must have got into a good deal of hot
-water over the affair of <i>Eastward Ho!</i><a id="FNanchor_617" href="#Footnote_617" class="fnanchor">[617]</a> Even the Master of
-the Revels did not prevent the surreptitious issue of <i>Pericles</i>
-in 1609. In Caroline times we find successive Lord Chamberlains, to
-whom the Master of the Revels continued to be subordinate, directing
-the Stationers’ Company not to allow the repertories of the King’s men
-or of Beeston’s boys to be printed, and it is implied that there were
-older precedents for these protections.<a id="FNanchor_618" href="#Footnote_618" class="fnanchor">[618]</a></p>
-
-<p>A point might come at which it was really more to the advantage of the
-actors to have a play published than not. The prints were useful in
-the preparation of acting versions, and they saved the book-keepers
-from the trouble of having to prepare manuscript copies at the demand
-of stage-struck amateurs.<a id="FNanchor_619" href="#Footnote_619" class="fnanchor">[619]</a> The influence of the poets again was
-on the side of publication, and it is perhaps due to the greater
-share which they took in the management of the boys’ companies that
-so disproportionate a number of the plays preserved are of their
-acting. Heywood hints that thereby the poets sold their work twice. It
-is more charitable to assume that literary vanity was also a factor;
-and it is with playwrights of the more scholarly type, Ben Jonson
-and Marston, that a practice first emerges of printing plays at an
-early date after publication, and in the full literary trappings of
-dedicatory epistles and commendatory verses. Actor-playwrights, such
-as Heywood himself and Dekker, followed suit; but not Shakespeare, who
-had long ago dedicated his literary all to Southampton and penned no
-prefaces. The characteristic Elizabethan apologies, on such grounds as
-the pushfulness of publishers or the eagerness of friends to see the
-immortal work in type, need not be taken at their full face value.<a id="FNanchor_620" href="#Footnote_620" class="fnanchor">[620]</a>
-Opportunity was afforded on publication to restore passages which
-had been ‘cut’ to meet the necessities of stage-presentation, and of
-this, in the Second Quarto of <i>Hamlet</i>, even Shakespeare may have
-availed himself.<a id="FNanchor_621" href="#Footnote_621" class="fnanchor">[621]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span></p>
-
-<p>The conditions of printing therefore furnish us with every variety
-of text, from the carefully revised and punctuated versions of Ben
-Jonson’s <i>Works</i> of 1616 to the scrappy notes, from memory or
-shorthand, of an incompetent reporter. The average text lies between
-these extremes, and is probably derived from a play-house ‘book’ handed
-over by the actors to the printer. Mr. Pollard has dealt luminously
-with the question of the nature of the ‘book’, and has disposed of the
-assumption that it was normally a copy made by a ‘play-house’ scrivener
-of the author’s manuscript.<a id="FNanchor_622" href="#Footnote_622" class="fnanchor">[622]</a> For this assumption there is no
-evidence whatever. There is, indeed, little direct evidence, one way or
-other; but what there is points to the conclusion that the ‘original’
-or standard copy of a play kept in the play-house was the author’s
-autograph manuscript, endorsed with the licence of the Master of the
-Revels for performance, and marked by the book-keeper or for his use
-with indications of cuts and the like, and with stage-directions for
-exits and entrances and the disposition of properties, supplementary
-to those which the author had furnished.<a id="FNanchor_623" href="#Footnote_623" class="fnanchor">[623]</a> Most of the actual
-manuscripts of this type which remain in existence are of Caroline,
-rather than Elizabethan or Jacobean, date.<a id="FNanchor_624" href="#Footnote_624" class="fnanchor">[624]</a> But we have one of
-<i>The Second Maid’s Tragedy</i>, bearing Buck’s licence of 1611,
-and one of <i>Sir Thomas More</i>, belonging to the last decade of
-the sixteenth century, which has been submitted for licence without
-success, and is marked with instructions by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span> Master for the
-excision or alteration of obnoxious passages. It is a curious document.
-The draft of the original author has been patched and interpolated with
-partial redrafts in a variety of hands, amongst which, according to
-some palaeographers, is to be found that of Shakespeare. One wonders
-that any licenser should have been complaisant enough to consider the
-play at all in such a form; and obviously the instance is a crucial one
-against the theory of scrivener’s copies.<a id="FNanchor_625" href="#Footnote_625" class="fnanchor">[625]</a> It may also be argued
-on <i>a priori</i> grounds that such copies would be undesirable from
-the company’s point of view, both as being costly and as tending to
-multiply the opportunities for ‘surreptitious’ transmission to rivals
-or publishers. Naturally it was necessary to copy out individual
-parts for the actors, and Alleyn’s part in <i>Orlando Furioso</i>,
-with the ‘cues’, or tail ends of the speeches preceding his own, can
-still be seen at Dulwich.<a id="FNanchor_626" href="#Footnote_626" class="fnanchor">[626]</a> From these ‘parts’ the ‘original’
-could be reconstructed or ‘assembled’ in the event of destruction or
-loss.<a id="FNanchor_627" href="#Footnote_627" class="fnanchor">[627]</a> Apparently the book-keeper also made a ‘plot’ or scenario
-of the action, and fixed it on a peg for his own guidance and that of
-the property-man in securing the smooth progress of the play.<a id="FNanchor_628" href="#Footnote_628" class="fnanchor">[628]</a>
-Nor could the companies very well prevent the poets from keeping
-transcripts or at any rate rough copies, when they handed over their
-‘papers’, complete or in instalments, as they drew their ‘earnests’
-or payments ‘in full’.<a id="FNanchor_629" href="#Footnote_629" class="fnanchor">[629]</a> It does not follow that they always did
-so. We know that Daborne made fair copies for Henslowe;<a id="FNanchor_630" href="#Footnote_630" class="fnanchor">[630]</a> but the
-Folio editors tell us that what Shakespeare thought ‘he vttered with
-that easinesse,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span> that we haue scarse receiued from him a blot in his
-papers’, and Mr. Pollard points out that there would have been little
-meaning in this praise if what Shakespeare sent in had been anything
-but his first drafts.<a id="FNanchor_631" href="#Footnote_631" class="fnanchor">[631]</a></p>
-
-<p>The character of the stage-directions in plays confirm the view that
-many of them were printed from working play-house ‘originals’. They are
-primarily directions for the stage itself; it is only incidentally that
-they also serve to stimulate the reader’s imagination by indicating the
-action with which the lines before him would have been accompanied in
-a representation.<a id="FNanchor_632" href="#Footnote_632" class="fnanchor">[632]</a> Some of them are for the individual guidance of
-the actors, marginal hints as to the ‘business’ which will give point
-to their speeches. These are not very numerous in play-house texts; the
-‘kneeling’ and ‘kisses her’ so frequent in modern editions are merely
-attempts of the editors to show how intelligently they have interpreted
-the quite obvious implications of the dialogue. The more important
-directions are addressed rather to the prompter and the tire-man; they
-prescribe the exits and the entrances, the ordering of a procession or
-a dumb-show, the use of the curtains or other structural devices, the
-introduction of properties, the precise moment for the striking up of
-music or sounds ‘within’. It is by no means always possible, except
-where a manuscript betrays differences of handwriting, to distinguish
-between what the author, often himself an actor familiar with the
-possibilities of the stage, may have originally written, and what
-the book-keeper may have added. Either may well use the indicative
-or the imperative form, or merely an adverbial, participial, or
-substantival expression.<a id="FNanchor_633" href="#Footnote_633" class="fnanchor">[633]</a> But it is natural to trace the hand of
-the book-keeper where the direction reduces itself to the bare name of
-a property noted in the margin; even more so when it is followed by
-some such phrase as ‘ready’, ‘prepared’, or ‘set out’;<a id="FNanchor_634" href="#Footnote_634" class="fnanchor">[634]</a> and still
-more so when the note occurs at the point when the property has to
-be brought from the tire-room,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span> and some lines before it is actually
-required for use.<a id="FNanchor_635" href="#Footnote_635" class="fnanchor">[635]</a> The book-keeper must be responsible, too, for
-the directions into which, as not infrequently happens, the name of an
-actor has been inserted in place of that of the personage whom that
-actor represented.<a id="FNanchor_636" href="#Footnote_636" class="fnanchor">[636]</a> On the other hand, we may perhaps safely assign
-to the author directions addressed to some one else in the second
-person, those which leave something to be interpreted according to
-discretion, and those which contain any matter not really necessary
-for stage guidance.<a id="FNanchor_637" href="#Footnote_637" class="fnanchor">[637]</a> Such superfluous matter is only rarely found
-in texts of pure play-house origin, although even here an author
-may occasionally insert a word or two of explanation or descriptive
-colouring, possibly taken from the source upon which he has been
-working.<a id="FNanchor_638" href="#Footnote_638" class="fnanchor">[638]</a> In the main, however, descriptive stage-directions are
-characteristic of texts which, whether ultimately based upon play-house
-copies or not, have undergone a process of editing by the author or
-his representative, with an eye<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span> to the reader, before publication.
-Some literary rehandling of this sort is traceable, for example, in the
-First Folio of Shakespeare, although the hearts of the editors seem
-to have failed them before they had got very far with the task.<a id="FNanchor_639" href="#Footnote_639" class="fnanchor">[639]</a>
-Yet another type of descriptive stage-direction presents itself in
-certain ‘surreptitious’ prints, where we find the reporter eking out
-his inadequately recorded text by elaborate accounts of the details of
-the business which he had seen enacted before him.<a id="FNanchor_640" href="#Footnote_640" class="fnanchor">[640]</a> So too William
-Percy, apparently revising plays some of which had already been acted
-and which he hoped to see acted again, mingles his suggestions to a
-hypothetical manager with narratives in the past tense of how certain
-actors had carried out their parts.<a id="FNanchor_641" href="#Footnote_641" class="fnanchor">[641]</a></p>
-
-<p>It must not be assumed that, because a play was printed from a stage
-copy, the author had no chance of editing it. Probably the compositors
-treated the manuscript put before them very freely, modifying, if they
-did not obliterate, the individual notions of the author or scribe as
-to orthography and punctuation; and the master printer, or some press
-corrector in his employment, went over and ‘improved’ their work,
-perhaps not always with much reference to the original ‘copy’.<a id="FNanchor_642" href="#Footnote_642" class="fnanchor">[642]</a>
-This process of correction continued during the printing off of the
-successive sheets, with the result that different examples of the same
-imprint often show the same sheet in corrected and in uncorrected
-states.<a id="FNanchor_643" href="#Footnote_643" class="fnanchor">[643]</a> The trend of modern criticism is in the direction of
-regarding Shakespeare’s plays as printed, broadly speaking, without
-any editorial assistance from him; the early quartos from play-house
-manuscripts, the later quartos from the earlier quartos, the folio
-partly from play-house manuscripts, partly from earlier quartos used in
-the play-house instead of manuscripts, and bearing marks of adaptation
-to shifting stage requirements.<a id="FNanchor_644" href="#Footnote_644" class="fnanchor">[644]</a> On this theory, the aberrations
-of the printing-house, even with the author’s original text before
-them, have to account in the main for the unsatisfactory condition in
-which, in spite of such posthumous editing, not very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span> extensive, as was
-done for the folio, even the best texts of the plays have reached us.
-Whether it is sound or not&mdash;I think that it probably is&mdash;there were
-other playwrights who were far from adopting Shakespeare’s attitude of
-detachment from the literary fate of his works. Jonson was a careful
-editor. Marston, Middleton, and Heywood all apologize for misprints in
-various plays, which they say were printed without their knowledge, or
-when they were urgently occupied elsewhere; and the inference must be
-that in normal circumstances the responsibility would have rested with
-them.<a id="FNanchor_645" href="#Footnote_645" class="fnanchor">[645]</a> Marston, indeed, definitely says that he had ‘perused’ the
-second edition of <i>The Fawn</i>, in order ‘to make some satisfaction
-for the first faulty impression’.<a id="FNanchor_646" href="#Footnote_646" class="fnanchor">[646]</a></p>
-
-<p>The modern editions, with their uniform system of acts and scenes and
-their fanciful notes of locality&mdash;‘A room in the palace’, ‘Another
-room in the palace’&mdash;are again misleading in their relation to the
-early prints, especially those based upon the play-house. Notes of
-locality are very rare. Occasionally a definite shift from one country
-or town to another is recorded;<a id="FNanchor_647" href="#Footnote_647" class="fnanchor">[647]</a> and a few edited plays, such as
-Ben Jonson’s, prefix, with a ‘dramatis personae’, a general indication
-of ‘The scene’.<a id="FNanchor_648" href="#Footnote_648" class="fnanchor">[648]</a> For the rest, the reader is left to his own
-inferences, with such help as the dialogue and the presenters give him;
-and the modern editors, with a post-Restoration tradition of staging
-in their minds, have often inferred wrongly. Even the shoulder-notes
-appended to the accurate reprints of the Malone Society, although they
-do not attempt localities, err by introducing too many new scenes.
-In the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span> early prints the beginnings of scenes are rarely marked, and
-the beginnings of acts are left unmarked to an extent which is rather
-surprising. The practice is by no means uniform, and it is possible
-to distinguish different tendencies in texts of different origin. The
-Tudor interludes and the early Elizabethan plays of the more popular
-type are wholly undivided, and there was probably no break in the
-continuity of the performances.<a id="FNanchor_649" href="#Footnote_649" class="fnanchor">[649]</a> Acts and scenes, which are the
-outward form of a method of construction derived from the academic
-analysis of Latin comedy and tragedy, make their appearance, with other
-notes of neo-classic influence, in the farces of the school of Udall,
-in the Court tragedies, in translated plays, in Lyly’s comedies, and in
-a few others belonging to the same <i>milieu</i> of scholarship.<a id="FNanchor_650" href="#Footnote_650" class="fnanchor">[650]</a>
-Ben Jonson and a few other later writers adopt them in printing plays
-of theatrical origin.<a id="FNanchor_651" href="#Footnote_651" class="fnanchor">[651]</a> But the great majority of plays belonging
-to the public theatres continue to be printed without any divisions
-at all, while plays from the private houses are ordinarily divided
-into acts, but not into scenes, although the beginning of each act has
-usually some such heading as ‘Actus Primus, Scena prima’.<a id="FNanchor_652" href="#Footnote_652" class="fnanchor">[652]</a> This
-distinction corresponds to the greater significance of the act-interval
-in the performance of the boy companies; but, as I have pointed out
-in an earlier chapter, it is difficult to suppose that the public
-theatres paid no regard to act-intervals, and one cannot therefore
-quite understand why neither the poets nor the book-keepers were in the
-habit of showing them in the play-house ‘originals’ of plays.<a id="FNanchor_653" href="#Footnote_653" class="fnanchor">[653]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-Had they been shown there, they would almost inevitably have got into
-the prints. It is a peculiarity of the surreptitious First Quarto
-of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>, that its later sheets, which differ
-typographically from the earlier ones, although they do not number
-either acts or scenes, insert lines of ornament at the points at which
-acts and scenes may be supposed to begin. It must be added that, so far
-as an Elizabethan playwright looked upon his work as made up of scenes,
-his conception of a scene was not as a rule that familiar to us upon
-the modern stage. The modern scene may be defined as a piece of action
-continuous in time and place between two falls of a drop-curtain. The
-Elizabethans had no drop-curtain, and the drawing of an alcove curtain,
-at any rate while personages remain on the stage without, does not
-afford the same solution of continuity. The nearest analogy is perhaps
-in such a complete clearance of the stage, generally with a shift of
-locality, as enables the imagination to assume a time interval. A few
-texts, generally of the seventeenth century, are divided into scenes
-on this principle of clearance; and it was adopted by the editors of
-the First Folio, when, in a half-hearted way, they attempted to divide
-up the continuous texts of their manuscripts and quartos.<a id="FNanchor_654" href="#Footnote_654" class="fnanchor">[654]</a> But it
-was not the principle of the neo-classic dramatists, or of Ben Jonson
-and his school. For them a scene was a section, not of action, but
-of dialogue; and they started a new scene whenever a speaker, or at
-any rate a speaker of importance, entered or left the stage. This is
-the conception which is in the mind of Marston when he regrets, in
-the preface to <i>The Malcontent</i>, that ‘scenes, invented merely
-to be spoken, should be enforcively published to be read’. It is also
-the conception of the French classicist drama, although the English
-playwrights do not follow the French rule of <i>liaison</i>, which
-requires at least one speaker from each scene to remain on into the
-next, and thus secures continuity throughout each act by making a
-complete clearance of the stage impossible.<a id="FNanchor_655" href="#Footnote_655" class="fnanchor">[655]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XXIII<br />
-<span class="subhed">PLAYWRIGHTS</span></h3></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The abundant literature of
-the drama is more satisfactorily treated in the appendices
-to F. E. Schelling, <i>Elizabethan Drama</i> (1908), and
-vols. v and vi (1910) of the <i>Cambridge History of English
-Literature</i>, than in R. W. Lowe, <i>Bibliographical Account
-of English Theatrical Literature</i> (1888), K. L. Bates and
-L. B. Godfrey, <i>English Drama: a Working Basis</i> (1896),
-or W. D. Adams, <i>Dictionary of the Drama</i> (1904). There
-is an American pamphlet on <i>Materials for the Study of the
-English Drama, excluding Shakespeare</i> (1912, Newbery Library,
-Chicago), which I have not seen. Periodical lists of new
-books are published in the <i>Modern Language Review</i>, the
-<i>Beiblatt</i> to <i>Anglia</i>, and the <i>Bulletin</i> of the
-English Association, and annual bibliographies by the <i>Modern
-Humanities Research Association</i> (from 1921) and in the
-Shakespeare <i>Jahrbuch</i>. The bibliography by H. R. Tedder in
-the <i>Encyclopaedia Britannica</i> (11th ed.) s.v. Shakespeare,
-A. C. Shaw, <i>Index to the Shakespeare Memorial Library</i>
-(1900–3), and W. Jaggard, <i>Shakespeare Bibliography</i>
-(1911), on which, however, cf. C. S. Northup in <i>J. G. P.</i>
-xi. 218, are also useful.</p>
-
-<p>W. W. Greg, <i>Notes on Dramatic Bibliographers</i> (1911, <i>M.
-S. C.</i> i. 324), traces from the publishers’ advertisements
-of the Restoration a <i>catena</i> of play-lists in E.
-Phillips, <i>Theatrum Poetarum</i> (1675), W. Winstanley,
-<i>Lives of the Most Famous English Poets</i> (1687), G.
-Langbaine, <i>Momus Triumphans</i> (1688) and <i>Account of
-the English Dramatick Poets</i> (1691), C. Gildon, <i>Lives
-and Characters of the English Dramatick Poets</i> (1698), W.
-R. Chetwood, <i>The British Theatre</i> (1750), E. Capell,
-<i>Notitia Dramatica</i> (1783), and the various editions of
-the <i>Biographica Dramatica</i> from 1764 to 1812. More recent
-are J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps, <i>Dictionary of Old English
-Plays</i> (1860), and W. C. Hazlitt, <i>Manual of Old English
-Plays</i> (1892); but all are largely superseded by W. W. Greg,
-<i>A List of English Plays</i> (1900) and <i>A List of Masques,
-Pageants, &amp;c.</i> (1902). His account of Warburton’s collection
-in <i>The Bakings of Betsy</i> (<i>Library</i>, 1911) serves as
-a supplement. A few plays discovered later than 1900 appeared
-in an Irish sale of 1906 (cf. <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xliii. 310) and
-in the Mostyn sale of 1919 (cf. t.p. facsimiles in Sotheby’s
-sale catalogue). For the problems of the early prints, the
-<i>Bibliographical Note</i> to ch. xxii should be consulted.</p>
-
-<p>I ought to add that the notices of the early prints of plays
-in this and the following chapter lay no claim to minute
-bibliographical erudition, and that all deficiencies in this
-respect are likely to be corrected when the full results of Dr.
-Greg’s researches on the subject are published.</p>
-
-<p>The fundamental works on the history of the drama are A. W.
-Ward, <i>History of English Dramatic Literature</i> (1875,
-1899), F. G. Fleay, <i>Biographical Chronicle of the English
-Drama</i> (1891), F. E. Schelling, <i>Elizabethan Drama</i>
-(1908), the <i>Cambridge History of English Literature</i>,
-vols. v and vi (1910), and W. Creizenach, <i>Geschichte des
-neueren Dramas</i>, vols. iv, v (1909, 1916). These and others,
-with the relevant periodicals, are set out in the <i>General
-Bibliographical Note</i> (vol. i); and to them may be added
-F. S. Boas, <i>Shakspere and his Predecessors</i> (1896), B.
-Matthews, <i>The Development of the Drama</i> (1904), F. E.
-Schelling, <i>English Drama</i> (1914), A. Wynne, <i>The Growth
-of English Drama</i> (1914). Less systematic collections of
-studies<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span> are L. M. Griffiths, <i>Evenings with Shakespeare</i>
-(1889), J. R. Lowell, <i>Old English Dramatists</i> (1892), A.
-H. Tolman, <i>The Views about Hamlet</i> (1904), C. Crawford,
-<i>Collectanea</i> (1906–7), A. C. Swinburne, <i>The Age of
-Shakespeare</i> (1908). The older critical work of Charles Lamb,
-William Hazlitt, and others cannot be neglected, but need not be
-detailed here.</p>
-
-<p>Special dissertations on individual plays and playwrights
-are recorded in the body of this chapter. A few of wider
-scope may be roughly classified; as dealing with dramatic
-structure, H. Schwab, <i>Das Schauspiel im Schauspiel zur
-Zeit Shakespeares</i> (1896), F. A. Foster, <i>Dumb Show in
-Elizabethan Drama before 1620</i> (1911, <i>E. S.</i> xliv.
-8); with types of drama, H. W. Singer, <i>Das bürgerliche
-Trauerspiel in England</i> (1891), J. Seifert, <i>Wit-und
-Science Moralitäten</i> (1892), J. L. McConaughty, <i>The
-School Drama</i> (1913), E. N. S. Thompson, <i>The English
-Moral Plays</i> (1910), R. Fischer, <i>Zur Kunstentwickelung
-der englischen Tragödie bis zu Shakespeare</i> (1893), A. C.
-Bradley, <i>Shakespearean Tragedy</i> (1904), F. E. Schelling,
-<i>The English Chronicle Play</i> (1902), L. N. Chase, <i>The
-English Heroic Play</i> (1903), C. G. Child, <i>The Rise
-of the Heroic Play</i> (1904, <i>M. L. N.</i> xix), F. H.
-Ristine, <i>English Tragicomedy</i> (1910), C. R. Baskervill,
-<i>Some Evidence for Early Romantic Plays in England</i>
-(1916, <i>M. P.</i> xiv. 229, 467), L. M. Ellison, <i>The
-Early Romantic Drama at the English Court</i> (1917), H.
-Smith, <i>Pastoral Influence in the English Drama</i> (1897,
-<i>M. L. A.</i> xii. 355). A. H. Thorndike, <i>The Pastoral
-Element in the English Drama before 1605</i> (1900, <i>M. L.
-N.</i> xiv. 228), J. Laidler, <i>History of Pastoral Drama
-in England</i> (1905, <i>E. S.</i> xxxv. 193), W. W. Greg,
-<i>Pastoral Poetry and Pastoral Drama</i> (1906); with types
-of plot and characterization, H. Graf, <i>Der Miles Gloriosus
-im englischen Drama</i> (1891), E. Meyer, <i>Machiavelli and
-the Elizabethan Drama</i> (1897), G. B. Churchill, <i>Richard
-the Third up to Shakespeare</i> (1900), L. W. Cushman, <i>The
-Devil and the Vice in the English Dramatic Literature before
-Shakespeare</i> (1900), E. Eckhardt, <i>Die lustige Person im
-älteren englischen Drama</i> (1902), F. E. Schelling, <i>Some
-Features of the Supernatural as Represented in Plays of the
-Reigns of Elizabeth and James</i> (1903, <i>M. P.</i> i), H.
-Ankenbrand, <i>Die Figur des Geistes im Drama der englischen
-Renaissance</i> (1906), F. G. Hubbard, <i>Repetition and
-Parallelism in the Earlier Elizabethan Drama</i> (1905, <i>M.
-L. A.</i> xx), E. Eckhardt, <i>Die Dialekt-und Ausländertypen
-des älteren englischen Dramas</i> (1910–11), V. O. Freeburg,
-<i>Disguise Plots in Elizabethan Drama</i> (1915); with
-<i>Quellenforschung</i> and foreign influences, E. Koeppel,
-<i>Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen Jonson’s, Marston’s, und
-Beaumont und Fletcher’s</i> (1895), <i>Quellen-Studien zu den
-Dramen Chapman’s, Massinger’s und Ford’s</i> (1897), <i>Zur
-Quellen-Kunde der Stuarts-Dramen</i> (1896, <i>Archiv</i>,
-xcvii), <i>Studien zur Geschichte der italienischen Novelle
-in der englischen Litteratur des sechzehnten Jahrhunderts</i>
-(1892), L. L. Schücking, <i>Studien über die stofflichen
-Beziehungen der englischen Komödie zur italienischen bis
-Lilly</i> (1901), A. Ott, <i>Die italienische Novelle im
-englischen Drama von 1600</i> (1904), W. Smith, <i>The Commedia
-dell’ Arte</i> (1912), M. A. Scott, <i>Elizabethan Translations
-from the Italian</i> (1916), A. L. Stiefel, <i>Die Nachahmung
-spanischer Komödien in England unter den ersten Stuarts</i>
-(1890), <i>Die Nachahmung spanischer Komödien in England</i>
-(1897, <i>Archiv</i>, xcix), L. Bahlsen, <i>Spanische Quellen
-der dramatischen Litteratur besonders Englands zu Shakespeares
-Zeit</i> (1893, <i>Z. f. vergleichende Litteraturgeschichte</i>,
-N. F. vi), A. S. W. Rosenbach, <i>The Curious Impertinent
-in English Drama</i> (1902, <i>M. L. N.</i> xvii), J.
-Fitzmaurice-Kelly, <i>Cervantes in England</i> (1905), J. W.
-Cunliffe, <i>The Influence of Seneca on Elizabethan Tragedy</i>
-(1893), O. Ballweg, <i>Das klassizistische Drama zur Zeit
-Shakespeares</i> (1909), O. Ballmann, <i>Chaucers Einfluss
-auf das englische Drama</i> (1902, <i>Anglia</i>, xxv), R.
-M. Smith, <i>Froissart and the English Chronicle Play</i>
-(1915); with the interrelations of dramatists, A. H. Thorndike,
-<i>The Influence of Beaumont and Fletcher on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span> Shakespeare</i>
-(1901), E. Koeppel, <i>Studien über Shakespeares Wirkung auf
-zeitgenössische Dramatiker</i> (1905), <i>Ben Jonson’s Wirkung
-auf zeitgenössische Dramatiker</i> (1906).</p>
-
-<p>The special problem of the authorship of the so-called
-<i>Shakespeare Apocrypha</i> is dealt with in the editions
-thereof described below, and by Halliwell-Phillipps (ii. 413),
-Ward (ii. 209), R. Sachs, <i>Die Shakespeare zugeschriebenen
-zweifelhaften Stücke</i> (1892, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxvii), and
-A. F. Hopkinson, <i>Essays on Shakespeare’s Doubtful Plays</i>
-(1900). The analogous question of the possible non-Shakespearian
-authorship of plays or parts of plays published as his is too
-closely interwoven with specifically Shakespearian literature to
-be handled here; J. M. Robertson, in <i>Did Shakespeare Write
-Titus Andronicus?</i> (1905), <i>Shakespeare and Chapman</i>
-(1917), <i>The Shakespeare Canon</i> (1922), is searching;
-other dissertations are cited under the plays or playwrights
-concerned. The attempts to use metrical or other ‘tests’ in the
-discrimination of authorship or of the chronology of work have
-been predominantly applied to Shakespeare, although Beaumont and
-Fletcher (<i>vide infra</i>) and others have not been neglected.
-The broader discussions of E. N. S. Thompson, <i>Elizabethan
-Dramatic Collaboration</i> (1909, <i>E. S.</i> xl. 30) and E. H.
-C. Oliphant, <i>Problems of Authorship in Elizabethan Dramatic
-Literature</i> (1911, <i>M. P.</i> viii, 411) are of value.</p>
-
-<p>To the general histories of Elizabethan literature named in the
-<i>General Bibliographical Note</i> may be added <i>Chambers’s
-Cyclopaedia of English Literature</i> (1901–3), E. Gosse,
-<i>Modern English Literature</i> (1897), G. Saintsbury, <i>Short
-History of English Literature</i> (1900), A. Lang, <i>English
-Literature from ‘Beowulf’ to Swinburne</i> (1912), W. Minto,
-<i>Characteristics of English Poets from Chaucer to Shirley</i>
-(1874), G. Saintsbury, <i>Elizabethan Literature</i> (1887), E.
-Gosse, <i>The Jacobean Poets</i> (1894), T. Seccombe and J. W.
-Allen, <i>The Age of Shakespeare</i> (1903), F. E. Schelling,
-<i>English Literature during the Lifetime of Shakespeare</i>
-(1910); and for the international relations, G. Saintsbury,
-<i>The Earlier Renaissance</i> (1901), D. Hannay, <i>The Later
-Renaissance</i> (1898), H. J. C. Grierson, <i>The First Half
-of the Seventeenth Century</i> (1906), C. H. Herford, <i>The
-Literary Relations of England and Germany in the Sixteenth
-Century</i> (1886), L. Einstein, <i>The Italian Renaissance
-in England</i> (1902), S. Lee, <i>The French Renaissance in
-England</i> (1910), J. G. Underhill, <i>Spanish Literature in
-the England of the Tudors</i> (1899).</p>
-
-<p>I append a chronological list of miscellaneous collections of
-plays, covering those of more than one author. A few of minimum
-importance are omitted.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(<i>a</i>) <i>Shakespeare Apocrypha</i></p>
-
-<p>1664. M<sup>r</sup> William Shakespear’s Comedies, Histories, and
-Tragedies. Published according to the true Original Copies.
-The Third Impression. And unto this Impression is added seven
-Playes, never before printed in Folio, viz. Pericles Prince
-of Tyre. The London Prodigall. The History of Thomas L<sup>d</sup>
-Cromwell. Sir John Oldcastle Lord Cobham. The Puritan Widow.
-A Yorkshire Tragedy. The Tragedy of Locrine. <i>For P[hilip]
-C[hetwinde].</i> [A second issue of the Third Folio (F<sub>3</sub>) of
-Shakespeare. I cite these as ‘The 7 Plays’.]</p>
-
-<p>1685. M<sup>r</sup> William Shakespear’s Comedies, Histories, and
-Tragedies.... The Fourth Edition. <i>For H. Herringman, E.
-Brewster, and R. Bentley.</i> [The Fourth Folio (F<sub>4</sub>) of
-Shakespeare, The 7 Plays.]</p>
-
-<p>1709, 1714. N. Rowe, <i>The Works of Sh.</i> [The 7 Plays in
-vol. vi of 1709 and vol. viii of 1714.]</p>
-
-<p>1728, &amp;c. A. Pope, <i>The Works of Sh.</i> [The 7 Plays in vol.
-ix of 1728.]</p>
-
-<p>1780. [E. Malone], <i>Supplement to the Edition of Sh.’s Plays
-published in 1778 by S. Johnson and G. Steevens</i>. [The 7
-Plays in vol. ii.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span></p>
-
-<p>1848, 1855. W. G. Simms, <i>A Supplement to the Works of
-Sh.</i> (New York). [<i>T. N. K.</i> and the 7 Plays, except
-<i>Pericles</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1851?]. H. Tyrrell, <i>The Doubtful Plays of
-Sh.</i> [The 7 Plays, <i>T. A.</i>, <i>Edward III</i>, <i>Merry
-Devil of Edmonton</i>, <i>Fair Em</i>, <i>Mucedorus</i>,
-<i>Arden of Feversham</i>, <i>Birth of Merlin</i>, <i>T. N.
-K.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1852, 1887. W. Hazlitt, <i>The Supplementary Works of Sh.</i>
-[The 7 Plays, <i>T. A.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1854–74. N. Delius, <i>Pseudo-Shakespere’sche Dramen</i>.
-[<i>Edward III</i> (1854), <i>Arden of Feversham</i> (1855),
-<i>Birth of Merlin</i> (1856), <i>Mucedorus</i> (1874), <i>Fair
-Em</i> (1874), separately.]</p>
-
-<p>1869. M. Moltke, <i>Doubtful Plays of Sh.</i> (Tauchnitz).
-[<i>Edward III</i>, <i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i>, <i>Locrine</i>,
-<i>Yorkshire Tragedy</i>, <i>London Prodigal</i>, <i>Birth of
-Merlin</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1883–8. K. Warnke und L. Proescholdt, <i>Pseudo-Shakespearian
-Plays</i>. [<i>Fair Em</i> (1883), <i>Merry Devil of
-Edmonton</i> (1884), <i>Edward III</i> (1886), <i>Birth of
-Merlin</i> (1887), <i>Arden of Feversham</i> (1888), separately,
-with <i>Mucedorus</i> (1878) outside the series.]</p>
-
-<p>1891–1914. A. F. Hopkinson, <i>Sh.’s Doubtful Plays</i>
-(1891–5). <i>Old English Plays</i> (1901–2). <i>Sh.’s Doubtful
-Works</i> (1910–11). [Under the above collective titles were
-issued some, but not all, of a series of plays bearing separate
-dates as follows: <i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i> (1891, 1899),
-<i>Yorkshire Tragedy</i> (1891, 1910), <i>Edward III</i> (1891,
-1911), <i>Merry Devil of Edmonton</i> (1891, 1914), <i>Warning
-for Fair Women</i> (1891, 1904), <i>Locrine</i> (1892), <i>Birth
-of Merlin</i> (1892, 1901), <i>London Prodigal</i> (1893),
-<i>Mucedorus</i> (1893), <i>Sir John Oldcastle</i> (1894),
-<i>Puritan</i> (1894), <i>T. N. K.</i> (1894), <i>Fair Em</i>
-(1895), <i>Famous Victories of Henry V</i> (1896), <i>Contention
-of York and Lancaster</i> (1897), <i>Arden of Feversham</i>
-(1898, 1907), <i>True Tragedy of Richard III</i> (1901), <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i> (1902). My list may not be complete.]</p>
-
-<p>1908. C. F. T. Brooke, <i>The Sh. Apocrypha</i>. [The 7 Plays
-except <i>Pericles</i>, <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, <i>Edward
-III</i>, <i>Mucedorus</i>, <i>Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>,
-<i>Fair Em</i>, <i>T. N. K.</i>, <i>Birth of Merlin</i>, <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i>.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(<i>b</i>) <i>General Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1744. <i>A Select Collection of Old Plays.</i> 12 vols.
-(Dodsley). [Cited as <i>Dodsley</i><sup>1</sup>.]</p>
-
-<p>1750. [W. R. Chetwood], <i>A Select Collection of Old Plays</i>
-(Dublin).</p>
-
-<p>1773. T. Hawkins, <i>The Origin of the English Drama</i>. 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1779. [J. Nichols], <i>Six Old Plays</i>. 2 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1780. <i>A Select Collection of Old Plays.</i> The Second
-Edition ... by I. Reed. 12 vols. (Dodsley). [Cited as Dodsley<sup>2</sup>.]</p>
-
-<p>1810. [Sir W. Scott], <i>The Ancient British Drama</i>. 3 vols.
-(W. Miller). [Cited as <i>A. B. D.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1811. [Sir W. Scott], <i>The Modern British Drama</i>. 5 vols.
-(W. Miller). [Cited as <i>M. B. D.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1814–15. [C. W. Dilke], <i>Old English Plays</i>. 6 vols. [Cited
-as <i>O. E. P.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1825. <i>The Old English Drama.</i> 2 vols. (Hurst, Robinson,
-&amp; Co., and A. Constable). [Most of the plays have the separate
-imprint of C. Baldwyn, 1824.]</p>
-
-<p>1825–7. <i>Select Collection of Old Plays.</i> A new edition ...
-by I. Reed, O. Gilchrist and [J. P. Collier]. 12 vols. [Cited as
-Dodsley<sup>3</sup>.]</p>
-
-<p>1830. <i>The Old English Drama.</i> 3 vols. (Thomas White).</p>
-
-<p>1833. J. P. Collier, <i>Five Old Plays</i> (W. Pickering).
-[Half-title has ‘Old Plays, vol. xiii’, as a supplement to
-Dodsley.]</p>
-
-<p>1841–53. <i>Publications of the Shakespeare Society.</i>
-[Include, besides several plays of T. Heywood (q.v.), Dekker,
-Chettle, and Haughton’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span> <i>Patient Grissell</i>, Munday’s
-<i>John a Kent and John a Cumber</i>, Legge’s <i>Richardus
-Tertius</i>, Norton and Sackville’s <i>Gorboduc</i>,
-Merbury’s <i>Marriage between Wit and Wisdom</i>, and <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i>, <i>True Tragedy of Richard III</i>, <i>1
-Contention</i>, <i>True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York</i>,
-<i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, <i>Timon</i>, by various editors. Some
-copies of these plays, not including Heywood’s, were bound up in
-4 vols., with the general date 1853, as a <i>Supplement</i> to
-Dodsley.]</p>
-
-<p>1848. F. J. Child, <i>Four Old Plays</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1851. J. P. Collier, <i>Five Old Plays</i> (Roxburghe Club).</p>
-
-<p>1870. J. S. Keltie, <i>The Works of the British Dramatists</i>.</p>
-
-<p>[Many of the collections enumerated above are obsolete, and I
-have not usually thought it worth while to record here the plays
-included in them. Lists of the contents of most of them are
-given in Hazlitt; <i>Manual</i>, 267.]</p>
-
-<p>1874–6. <i>A Select Collection of Old English Plays</i>: Fourth
-Edition, now first Chronologically Arranged, Revised and
-Enlarged; with the notes of all the Commentators, and New Notes,
-by W. C. Hazlitt. Vols. i-ix (1874), x-xiv (1875), xv (1876).
-[Cited as Dodsley, or Dodsley<sup>4</sup>; incorporates with Collier’s
-edition of Dodsley the collections of 1833, 1848, 1851, and
-1853.]</p>
-
-<p>1875. W. C. Hazlitt, <i>Shakespeare’s Library</i>. Second
-Edition. Part i, 4 vols.; Part ii, 2 vols. [Part i is based on
-Collier’s <i>Shakespeare’s Library</i> (1844). Part ii, based
-on the collections of 1779 and 1841–53, adds the dramatic
-sources, Warner’s <i>Menaechmi</i>, <i>True Tragedie of Richard
-III</i>, Legge’s <i>Richardus Tertius</i>, <i>Troublesome Raigne
-of John</i>, <i>Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth</i>, <i>1
-Contention of York and Lancaster</i>, <i>True Tragedy of Richard
-Duke of York</i>, Shakespeare’s <i>Merry Wives of Windsor</i>
-(Q<sub>1</sub>), Whetstone’s <i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, <i>King
-Leire</i>, <i>Timon</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1878. R. Simpson, <i>The School of Shakspere</i>. 2 vols.
-[<i>Captain Thomas Stukeley</i>, <i>Nobody and Somebody</i>,
-<i>Histriomastix</i>, <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>,
-<i>Warning for Fair Women</i>, <i>Fair Em</i>, with <i>A Larum
-for London</i> (1872) separately printed.]</p>
-
-<p>1882–5. A. H. Bullen, <i>A Collection of Old English
-Plays</i>. 4 vols. [Cited as Bullen, <i>O. E. P. Maid’s
-Metamorphosis</i>, <i>Noble Soldier</i>, <i>Sir Giles
-Goosecap</i>, <i>Wisdom of Doctor Dodipoll</i>, <i>Charlemagne
-or The Distracted Emperor</i>, <i>Trial of Chivalry</i>,
-Yarington’s <i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i>, <i>Costly
-Whore</i>, <i>Every Woman in her Humour</i>, with later plays.]</p>
-
-<p>[1885]-91. <i>43 Shakspere Quarto Facsimiles.</i> Issued under
-the superintendence of F. J. Furnivall. [Photographic facsimiles
-by W. Griggs and C. Praetorius, with introductions by various
-editors, including, besides accepted Shakespearian plays,
-<i>Pericles</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>, Q<sub>2</sub>), <i>1 Contention</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>),
-<i>True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), <i>Whole
-Contention</i> (Q<sub>3</sub>), <i>Famous Victories of Henry V</i>
-(Q<sub>1</sub>), <i>Troublesome Raigne of John</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), <i>Taming of
-A Shrew</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>).]</p>
-
-<p>1888. <i>Nero and other Plays</i> (Mermaid Series). [<i>Nero</i>
-(1624), Porter’s <i>Two Angry Women of Abingdon</i>, Day’s
-<i>Parliament of Bees</i> and <i>Humour Out of Breath</i>,
-Field’s <i>Woman is a Weathercock</i> and <i>Amends for
-Ladies</i>, by various editors.]</p>
-
-<p>1896–1905. <i>The Temple Dramatists.</i> [Cited as <i>T. D.</i>
-Single plays by various editors, including, besides plays of
-Beaumont and Fletcher, Dekker, Heywood, Jonson, Kyd, Marlowe,
-Peele, Udall, Webster (q.v.), <i>Arden of Feversham</i>,
-<i>Edward III</i>, <i>Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>,
-<i>Selimus</i>, <i>T. N. K.</i>, <i>Return from Parnassus</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1897. J. M. Manly, <i>Specimens of the Pre-Shakspearean
-Drama</i>. 2 vols. issued. [Udall’s <i>Roister Doister</i>,
-<i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i>, Preston’s <i>Cambyses</i>,
-Norton and Sackville’s <i>Gorboduc</i>, Lyly’s <i>Campaspe</i>,
-Greene’s <i>James IV</i>, Peele’s <i>David and Bethsabe</i>,
-Kyd’s <i>Spanish Tragedy</i> in vol. ii; earlier plays in vol.
-i.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span></p>
-
-<p>1897. H. A. Evans, <i>English Masques</i> (Warwick Library).
-[Ten masks by Jonson (q.v.), Daniel’s <i>Twelve Goddesses</i>,
-Campion’s <i>Lords’ Mask</i>, Beaumont’s <i>Inner Temple
-Mask</i>, <i>Mask of Flowers</i>, and later masks.]</p>
-
-<p>1897–1912. <i>Jahrbuch der deutschen
-Shakespeare-Gesellschaft</i>, vols. xxxiii-xlviii. [Wilson’s
-<i>Cobbler’s Prophecy</i> (1897), <i>1 Richard II</i> (1899),
-Wager’s <i>The Longer Thou Livest, the More Fool Thou Art</i>
-(1900), <i>The Wars of Cyrus</i> (1901), Jonson’s <i>E. M.
-I.</i> (1902), Lupton’s <i>All for Money</i> (1904), Wapull’s
-<i>The Tide Tarrieth No Man</i> (1907), Lumley’s translation
-of <i>Iphigenia</i> (1910), <i>Caesar and Pompey</i>, or
-<i>Caesar’s Revenge</i> (1911, 1912), by various editors.]</p>
-
-<p>1898. A. Brandl, <i>Quellen des weltlichen Dramas in England
-vor Shakespeare</i>. Ein Ergänzungsband zu Dodsley’s Old
-English Plays. (<i>Quellen und Forschungen</i>, lxxx.) [<i>King
-Darius</i>, <i>Misogonus</i>, <i>Horestes</i>, Wilmot’s
-<i>Gismond of Salern</i>, <i>Common Conditions</i>, and earlier
-plays.]</p>
-
-<p>1902–8. <i>The Belles Lettres Series.</i> Section iii. <i>The
-English Drama.</i> General Editor, G. P. Baker. [Cited as
-<i>B. L.</i> Plays of Beaumont and Fletcher, Chapman, Dekker,
-Gascoigne, Jonson, Webster (q.v.), in separate volumes by
-various editors.]</p>
-
-<p>1902–14. <i>Materialien zur Kunde des älteren englischen
-Dramas</i> ... begründet und herausgegeben von W. Bang. 44
-vols. issued. (A. Uystpruyst, Louvain.) [Includes, with other
-‘material’, text facsimile reprints of plays, &amp;c., of Barnes,
-Brewer, Daniel, Chettle and Day, Dekker, Heywood, Jonson, Mason,
-Sharpham (q.v.), with <i>How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a
-Bad</i>, <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, the Latin <i>Victoria</i> of
-A. Fraunce and <i>Pedantius</i>, and translations from Seneca.]</p>
-
-<p>1903, 1913, 1914. C. M. Gayley, <i>Representative English
-Comedies</i>. 3 vols. [Plays of Udall, Lyly, Peele, Greene,
-Porter, Jonson, and Dekker, with <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i>,
-<i>Eastward Ho!</i>, <i>Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>, and later
-plays, by various editors.]</p>
-
-<p>1905–8. J. S. Farmer, <i>Publications of the Early English Drama
-Society</i>. [Modernized texts, mainly of little value, but
-including a volume of <i>Recently Recovered Plays</i>, from the
-quartos in the Irish sale of 1906.]</p>
-
-<p>1907–20. <i>Malone Society Reprints.</i> 46 vols. issued. [In
-progress; text-facsimile reprints of separate plays, by various
-editors, under general editorship of W. W. Greg; cited as <i>M.
-S. R.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1907–14. J. S. Farmer, <i>The Tudor Facsimile Texts</i>, with
-a Hand List (1914). [Photographic facsimiles, mostly by R. B.
-Fleming; cited as <i>T. F. T.</i> The Hand List states that 184
-vols. are included in the collection, but I believe that some
-were not actually issued before the editor’s death. Some or all
-of these, with reissues of others, appear in <i>Old English
-Plays, Student’s Facsimile Edition</i>; cited as <i>S. F. T.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1908–14. <i>The Shakespeare Classics.</i> General Editor, I.
-Gollancz. (<i>The Shakespeare Library</i>). [Includes Warner’s
-<i>Menaechmi</i> and <i>Leire</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, and
-<i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1911. W. A. Neilson, <i>The Chief Elizabethan Dramatists
-excluding Shakespeare</i>. [Plays by Lyly, Peele, Greene,
-Marlowe, Kyd, Chapman, Jonson, Dekker, Marston, Heywood,
-Beaumont, Fletcher, Webster, Middleton, and later writers; cited
-as <i>C. E. D.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1911. R. W. Bond, <i>Early Plays from the Italian</i>.
-[Gascoigne’s <i>Supposes</i>, <i>Bugbears</i>, <i>Misogonus</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1912. J. W. Cunliffe, <i>Early English Classical Tragedies</i>.
-[Norton and Sackville’s <i>Gorboduc</i>, Gascoigne and
-Kinwelmersh’s <i>Jocasta</i>, Wilmot’s <i>Gismond of
-Salerne</i>, Hughes’s <i>Misfortunes of Arthur</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1912. <i>Masterpieces of the English Drama.</i> General Editor,
-F. E. Schelling, [Cited as <i>M. E. D.</i> Plays of Marlowe,
-Beaumont and Fletcher, Webster and Tourneur (q.v.), with
-Massinger and Congreve, in separate volumes by various editors.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span></p>
-
-<p>1915. C. B. Wheeler, <i>Six Plays by Contemporaries of
-Shakespeare</i> (<i>World’s Classics</i>). [Dekker’s
-<i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, Beaumont and Fletcher’s <i>K. B.
-P.</i> and <i>Philaster</i>, Webster’s <i>White Devil</i> and
-<i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, Massinger’s <i>New Way to Pay Old
-Debts</i>.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>[In this chapter I give under the head of each playwright (<i>a</i>) a
-brief sketch of his life in relation to the stage, (<i>b</i>) a list of
-contemporary and later collections of his dramatic works, (<i>c</i>) a
-list of dissertations (books, pamphlets, articles in journals) bearing
-generally upon his life and works. Then I take each play, mask, &amp;c., up
-to 1616 and give (<i>a</i>) the MSS. if any; (<i>b</i>) the essential
-parts of the entry, if any, on the Stationers’ Register, including
-in brackets the name of any licenser other than an official of the
-Company, and occasionally adding a note of any transfer of copyright
-which seems of exceptional interest; (<i>c</i>) the essential parts
-of the title-page of the first known print; (<i>d</i>) a note of
-its prologues, epilogues, epistles, and other introductory matter;
-(<i>e</i>) the dates and imprints of later prints before the end of
-the seventeenth century with any new matter from their t.ps. bearing
-on stage history; (<i>f</i>) lists of all important 18th-20th century
-editions and dissertations, not of the collective or general type
-already dealt with; (<i>g</i>) such notes as may seem desirable on
-authorship, date, stage history and the like. Some of these notes are
-little more than compilations; others contain the results of such work
-as I have myself been able to do on the plays concerned. Similarly,
-I have in some cases recorded, on the authority of others, editions
-and dissertations which I have not personally examined. The section
-devoted to each playwright concludes with lists of work not extant and
-of work of which his authorship has, often foolishly, been conjectured.
-I ought to make it clear that many of my title-pages are borrowed from
-Dr. Greg, and that, while I have tried to give what is useful for
-the history of the stage, I have no competence in matters of minute
-bibliographical accuracy.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM ALABASTER (1567–1640)</p>
-
-<p>Alabaster, or Alablaster, was born at Hadleigh, Suffolk, in 1567 and
-entered Trinity College, Cambridge, from Westminster in 1583. His Latin
-poem <i>Eliseis</i> is mentioned by Spenser in <i>Colin Clout’s Come
-Home Again</i> (1591). He was incorporated M.A. of Oxford in 1592,
-and went as chaplain to Essex in the Cadiz expedition of 1596. On 22
-Sept. 1597 Richard Percival wrote to Sir Robert Cecil (<i>Hatfield
-MSS.</i> vii. 394), ‘Alabaster has made a tragedy against the Church of
-England’. Perhaps this is not to be taken literally, but only refers to
-his conversion to Catholicism. Chamberlain, 7, 64, records that he was
-‘clapt up for poperie’, had escaped from the Clink by 4 May 1598, but
-was recaptured at Rochelle. This was about the beginning of Aug. 1599
-(<i>Hatfield MSS.</i> ix. 282). Later he was reconverted and at his
-death in 1640 held the living of Therfield, Herts. He wrote on mystical
-theology, and a manuscript collection of 43 sonnets, mostly unprinted,
-is described by B. Dobell in <i>Athenaeum</i> (1903), ii. 856.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Roxana. c. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>T. C. C. MS.</i> (‘Authore Domino Alabaster’);
-<i>Camb. Univ. MS.</i> Ff. ii. 9; <i>Lambeth MS.</i> 838 (‘finis
-Roxanae Alabastricae’).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1632, May 9 (Herbert). ‘A Tragedy in Latyn called Roxana
-&amp;c.’ <i>Andrew Crooke</i> (Arber, iv. 277).</p>
-
-<p>1632. Roxana Tragædia olim Cantabrigiae, Acta in Col. Trin. Nunc primum
-in lucem edita, summaque cum diligentia ad castigatissimum exemplar
-comparata. <i>R. Badger for Andrew Crook.</i> [At end is Herbert’s
-imprimatur, dated ‘1 March, 1632’.]</p>
-
-<p>1632. Roxana Tragædia a plagiarii unguibus vindicata, aucta, &amp; agnita
-ab Authore Gulielmo Alabastro. <i>William Jones.</i> [Epistle by
-Gulielmus Alabaster to Sir Ralph Freeman; commendatory verses by Hugo
-Hollandius and Tho. Farnabius; engraved title-page, with representation
-of a stage (cf. ch. xviii, <i>Bibl. Note</i>).]</p>
-
-<p>The Epistle has ‘Ante quadraginta plus minus annos, morticinum
-hoc edidi duarum hebdomadarum abortum, et unius noctis spectaculo
-destinatum, non aevi integri’. The play is a Latin version of Luigi
-Groto’s <i>La Dalida</i> (1567).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SIR WILLIAM ALEXANDER, EARL OF STIRLING (<i>c.</i> 1568–1640).</p>
-
-<p>William Alexander of Menstrie, after an education at Glasgow and Leyden
-and travel in France, Spain, and Italy, was tutor to Prince Henry
-before the accession of James, and afterwards Gentleman extraordinary
-of the Privy Chamber both to Henry and to Charles. He was knighted
-about 1609, appointed a Master of Requests in 1614 and Secretary for
-Scotland in 1626. He was created Earl of Stirling in 1633. He formed
-literary friendships with Michael Drayton and William Drummond of
-Hawthornden, but Jonson complained (Laing, 11) that ‘Sir W. Alexander
-was not half kinde unto him, and neglected him, because a friend to
-Drayton’. His four tragedies read like closet plays, and his only
-connexion with the stage appears to be in some verses to Alleyn after
-the foundation of Dulwich in 1619 (Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>,
-178).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, April 30 (by order of Court). ‘A booke Called The
-Woorkes of William Alexander of Menstrie Conteyninge The Monarchicke
-Tragedies, Paranethis to the Prince and Aurora.’ <i>Edward Blunt</i>
-(Arber, iii. 260).</p>
-
-<p>1604. The Monarchicke Tragedies. By William Alexander of Menstrie.
-<i>V. S. for Edward Blount.</i> [<i>Croesus</i> and <i>Darius</i> (with
-a separate t.p.).]</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Monarchick Tragedies; Croesus, Darius, The Alexandraean,
-Iulius Caesar, Newly enlarged. By William Alexander, Gentleman of
-the Princes priuie Chamber. <i>Valentine Simmes for Ed. Blount.</i>
-[New issue, with additions. <i>Julius Caesar</i> has separate t.p.
-Commendatory verses, signed ‘Robert Ayton’.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. The Monarchicke Tragedies. The third Edition. By S<sup>r</sup>.
-W. Alexander Knight. <i>William Stansby.</i> [<i>Croesus</i>,
-<i>Darius</i>, <i>The Alexandraean<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span> Tragedy</i>, <i>Julius Caesar</i>,
-in revised texts, the last three with separate t.ps.]</p>
-
-<p>1637. Recreations with the Muses. By William Earle of Sterline. <i>Tho.
-Harper.</i> [<i>Croesus</i>, <i>Darius</i>, <i>The Alexandraean
-Tragedy</i>, <i>Julius Caesar</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1870–2. <i>Poetical Works.</i> 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1921. L. E. Kastner and H. B. Charlton, <i>The Poetical Works of
-Sir William Alexander, Earl of Stirling</i>. Vol. i. The Dramatic
-Works.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: C. Rogers, <i>Memorials of the Earl of S.
-and the House of A.</i> (1877); H. Beumelburg, <i>Sir W. A. Graf von
-S., als dramatischer Dichter</i> (1880, Halle <i>diss.</i>).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Darius &gt; 1603</i></p>
-
-<p>1603. <i>The Tragedie of Darius.</i> By William Alexander of Menstrie.
-<i>Robert Waldegrave. Edinburgh.</i> [Verses to James VI;
-Epistle to Reader; Commendatory verses by ‘Io Murray’ and ‘W. Quin’.]</p>
-
-<p>1604. <i>G. Elde for Edward Blount.</i> [Part of <i>Coll.</i> 1604,
-with separate t.p.; also in later <i>Colls.</i> Two sets of verses to
-King at end.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Croesus &gt; 1604</i></p>
-
-<p>1604. [Part of <i>Coll.</i> 1604; also in later <i>Colls.</i> Argument;
-Verses to King at end.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Alexandraean Tragedy &gt; 1607</i></p>
-
-<p>1605? [Hazlitt, <i>Manual</i>, 7, and others cite a print of this date,
-which is not confirmed by Greg, <i>Plays</i>, 1.]</p>
-
-<p>1607. (<i>Running Title</i>). The Alexandraean Tragedie. [Part of
-<i>Coll.</i> 1607; also in later <i>Colls.</i> Argument.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Julius Caesar &gt; 1607</i></p>
-
-<p>1607. The Tragedie of Iulius Caesar. By William Alexander, Gentleman
-of the Princes priuie Chamber. <i>Valentine Simmes for Ed. Blount.</i>
-[Part of <i>Coll.</i> 1607, with separate t.p.; also in later
-<i>Colls.</i> Argument.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in H. H. Furness, <i>Julius Caesar</i> (1913, <i>New
-Variorum Shakespeare</i>, xvii).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM ALLEY (<i>c.</i> 1510–70).</p>
-
-<p>Alley’s Πτωχὸμυσεῖον. <i>The Poore Mans Librarie</i> (1565)
-contains three and a half pages of dialogue between Larymos and
-Phronimos, described as from ‘a certaine interlude or plaie intituled
-<i>Aegio</i>. In the which playe ij persons interlocutorie do dispute,
-the one alledging for the defence of destenie and fatall necessitie,
-and the other confuting the same’. P. Simpson (<i>9 N. Q.</i> iii. 205)
-suggests that Alley was probably himself the author. The book consists
-of <i>praelectiones</i> delivered in 1561 at St. Paul’s, of which Alley
-had been a Prebendary. He became Bishop of Exeter in 1560. On his
-attitude to the public stage, cf. App. C. No. viii. It is therefore odd
-to find the Lord Bishop’s players at Barnstaple and Plymouth in 1560–1
-(Murray, ii. 78).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT AMERIE (<i>c.</i> 1610).</p>
-
-<p>The deviser of the show of <i>Chester’s Triumph</i> (1610). See ch.
-xxiv (C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT ARMIN (&gt; 1588–1610 &lt;). For biography see Actors (ch. xv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Two Maids of Moreclacke. 1607–8</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1609. The History of the two Maids of Moreclacke, With the life and
-simple maner of Iohn in the Hospitall. Played by the Children of the
-Kings Maiesties Reuels. Written by Robert Armin, seruant to the Kings
-most excellent Maiestie. <i>N. O. for Thomas Archer.</i> [Epistle to
-Reader, signed ‘Robert Armin’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in A. B. Grosart, <i>Works of R. A. Actor</i> (1880,
-<i>Choice Rarities of Ancient English Poetry</i>, ii), 63, and J.
-S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>). The epistle says that the play
-was ‘acted by the boyes of the Reuels, which perchaunce in part was
-sometime acted more naturally in the Citty, if not in the hole’, that
-the writer ‘would haue againe inacted Iohn my selfe but ... I cannot
-do as I would’, and that he had been ‘requested both of Court and
-Citty, to show him in priuate’. John is figured in a woodcut on the
-title-page, which is perhaps meant for a portrait of Armin. As a King’s
-man, and no boy, he can hardly have played with the King’s Revels;
-perhaps we should infer that the play was not originally written for
-them. All their productions seem to date from 1607–8.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Armin has been guessed at as the R. A. of <i>The Valiant Welshman</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS ASHTON (<i>ob.</i> 1578).</p>
-
-<p>Ashton took his B.A. in 1559–60, and became Fellow of Trinity,
-Cambridge. He was appointed Head Master of Shrewsbury School from 24
-June 1561 (G. W. Fisher, <i>Annals of Shrewsbury School</i>, 4). To the
-same year a local record, Robert Owen’s <i>Arms of the Bailiffs</i>
-(17th c.), assigns ‘M<sup>r</sup> Astons first playe upon the Passion of Christ’,
-and this is confirmed by an entry in the town accounts (Owen and
-Blakeway, <i>Hist. of Shrewsbury</i>, i. 353) of 20s. ‘spent upon
-M<sup>r</sup> Aston and a other gentellmane of Cambridge over pareadijs’ on 25
-May 1561. Whitsuntide plays had long been traditional at Shrewsbury
-(<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 250, 394, where the dates require
-correction). A local chronicle (<i>Shropshire Arch. Soc. Trans.</i>
-xxxvii. 54) has ‘Elizabeth 1565 [i. e. 1566; cf. App. A], The Queen
-came to Coventry intending for Salop to see M<sup>r</sup> Astons Play, but it was
-ended. The Play was performed in the Quarry, and lasted the Whitson
-[June 2] hollydays’. This play is given in <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, from
-local historians, as <i>Julian the Apostate</i>, but the same chronicle
-assigns that to 1556. Another chronicle (<i>Taylor MS.</i> of 16th-17th
-c.) records for 1568–9 (<i>Shropshire Arch. Soc. Trans.</i> iii. 268),
-‘This yeare at Whytsoontyde [29 May] was a notable stage playe playeed
-in Shrosberie in a place there callyd the quarrell which lastid all
-the hollydayes unto the which cam greate number of people of noblemen
-and others the which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span> was praysed greatlye and the chyff aucter therof
-was one Master Astoon beinge the head scoolemaster of the freescole
-there a godly and lernyd man who tooke marvelous greate paynes therin’.
-Robert Owen, who calls this Aston’s ‘great playe’ of the <i>Passion of
-Christ</i>, assigns it to 1568, but it is clear from the town accounts
-that 1569 is right (Fisher, 18). This is presumably the play referred
-to by Thomas Churchyard (q.v.) in <i>The Worthiness of Wales</i> (1587,
-ed. Spenser Soc. 85), where after describing ‘behind the walles ...
-a ground, newe made Theator wise’, able to seat 10,000, and used for
-plays, baiting, cockfights, and wrestling, he adds:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>At Astons Play, who had beheld this then,</div>
- <div>Might well have seene there twentie thousand men.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In the margin he comments, ‘Maister Aston was a good and
-godly Preacher’. A ‘ludus in quarell’ is noted in 1495, and this was
-‘where the plases [? playes] have bine accustomyd to be usyd’ in 1570
-(<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 251, 255). Ashton resigned his Mastership
-about 1571 and was in the service of the Earl of Essex at Chartley in
-1573. But he continued to work on the Statutes of the school, which as
-settled in 1578, the year of his death, provide that ‘Everie Thursdaie
-the Schollers of the first forme before they goo to plaie shall for
-exercise declame and plaie one acte of a comedie’ (Fisher, 17, 23; E.
-Calvert, <i>Shrewsbury School Register</i>). It is interesting to note
-that among Ashton’s pupils were Sir Philip Sidney and Fulke Greville,
-Lord Brooke, who entered the school together on 16 Nov. 1564.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JAMES ASKE (<i>c.</i> 1588).</p>
-
-<p>Author of <i>Elizabetha Triumphans</i> (1588), an account of
-Elizabeth’s visit to Tilbury. See ch. xxiv (C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS ATCHELOW (<i>c.</i> 1589).</p>
-
-<p>The reference to him in Nashe’s <i>Menaphon</i> epistle (App. C, No.
-xlii) rather suggests that he may have written plays.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS BACON (1561–1626).</p>
-
-<p>Bacon was son of Sir Nicholas Bacon, Lord Keeper, by Anne, daughter
-of Sir Anthony Cooke. He was at Trinity, Cambridge, from April 1573
-to March 1575, and entered Gray’s Inn in June 1576. He sat in the
-Parliaments of 1584 and 1586, and about 1591 attached himself to the
-rising fortunes of the Earl of Essex, who in 1595 gave him an estate
-at Twickenham. His public employment began as a Queen’s Counsel about
-1596. He was knighted on 23 July 1603, became Solicitor-General on 25
-June 1607, Attorney-General on 27 Oct. 1613, Lord Keeper on 7 March
-1617, and Lord Chancellor on 7 Jan. 1618. He was created Lord Verulam
-on 12 July 1618, and Viscount St. Albans on 27 Jan. 1621. Later in the
-same year he was disgraced for bribery. The edition of his <i>Works</i>
-(with his <i>Letters and Life</i>) by J. Spedding, R. L. Ellis, and D.
-D. Heath (1857–74) is exhaustive. Many papers of his brother Anthony
-are at Lambeth, and are drawn on by T. Birch, <i>Memoirs of the Reign
-of Elizabeth</i> (1754). F. J. Burgoyne, <i>Facsimile of a Manuscript
-at Alnwick</i> (1904), reproduces<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span> the <i>Northumberland MS.</i> which
-contains some of his writings, with others that may be his, and seems
-once to have contained more. Apart from philosophy, his chief literary
-work was <i>The Essayes or Counsels, Civill and Morall</i>, of which
-10 appeared in 1597, and were increased to 38 in 1612 and 58 in 1625.
-Essay xxxvii, added in 1625, is <i>Of Masks and Triumphs</i>, and,
-although Bacon was not a writer for the public stage, he had a hand, as
-deviser or patron, in several courtly shows.</p>
-
-<p>(i) He helped to devise dumb-shows for Thomas Hughes’s <i>Misfortunes
-of Arthur</i> (q.v.) given by Gray’s Inn at Greenwich on 28 Feb. 1588.</p>
-
-<p>(ii) The list of contents of the <i>Northumberland MS.</i> (Burgoyne,
-xii) includes an item, now missing from the MS., ‘Orations at Graies
-Inne Revells’, and Spedding, viii. 342, conjectures that Bacon wrote
-the speeches of the six councillors delivered on 3 Jan. 1595 as part of
-the <i>Gesta Grayorum</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>(iii) Rowland Whyte (<i>Sydney Papers</i>, i. 362) describes a device
-on the Queen’s day (17 Nov.), 1595, in which the speeches turned on the
-Earl of Essex’s love for Elizabeth, who said that, ‘if she had thought
-there had been so much said of her, she would not have been there that
-night’. A draft list of tilters, of whom the challengers were led by
-the Earl of Cumberland and the defendants by the Earl of Essex, is in
-<i>Various MSS.</i> iv. 163, and a final one, with descriptions of
-their appearance, in the <i>Anglorum Feriae</i> of Peele (q.v.). They
-were Cumberland, Knight of the Crown, Essex, Sussex, Southampton, as
-Sir Bevis, Bedford, Compton, Carew, the three brothers Knollys, Dudley,
-William Howard, Drury, Nowell, John Needham, Skydmore, Ratcliffe,
-Reynolds, Charles Blount, Carey. The device took place partly in the
-tiltyard, partly after supper. Before the entry of the tilters a page
-made a speech and secured the Queen’s glove. A dialogue followed
-between a Squire on one hand, and a Hermit, a Secretary, and a Soldier,
-who on the entry of Essex tried to beguile him from love. A postboy
-brought letters, which the Secretary gave to Essex. After supper,
-the argument between the Squire and the three tempters was resumed.
-Whyte adds, ‘The old man [the Hermit] was he that in Cambridg played
-Giraldy; Morley played the Secretary; and he that plaid Pedantiq was
-the soldior; and Toby Matthew acted the Squires part. The world makes
-many untrue constructions of these speaches, comparing the Hermitt and
-the Secretary to two of the Lords [Burghley and Robert Cecil?]; and the
-soldier to Sir Roger Williams.’ The Cambridge reference is apparently
-to <i>Laelia</i> (q.v.) and the performers of the Hermit and Soldier
-were therefore George Meriton and George Mountaine, of Queen’s. Morley
-might perhaps be Thomas Morley, the musician, a Gentleman of the Chapel.</p>
-
-<p>Several speeches, apparently belonging to this device, are preserved.
-Peele speaks of the balancing of Essex between war and statecraft as
-indicated in the tiltyard by ‘His mute approach and action of his
-mutes’, but they may have presented a written speech.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span></p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Lambeth MS.</i> v. 118 (copied by Birch in <i>Sloane
-MS.</i> 4457, f. 32) has, in Bacon’s hand, a speech by the Squire in
-the tiltyard, and four speeches by the Hermit, Soldier, Secretary, and
-Squire ‘in the Presence’. These are printed by Birch (1763), Nichols,
-<i>Eliz.</i> iii. 372, and Spedding, viii. 378.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Lambeth MS.</i> viii. 274 (copied by Birch in <i>Addl.
-MS.</i> 4164, f. 167) has, in Bacon’s hand, the beginning of a speech
-by the Secretary to the Squire, which mentions Philautia and Erophilus,
-and a letter from Philautia to the Queen. These are printed in
-Spedding, viii. 376.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) The <i>Northumberland MS.</i> ff. 47–53 (Burgoyne, 55)
-has ‘Speeches for my Lord of Essex at the tylt’. These deal with the
-attempts of Philautia to beguile Erophilus. Four of them are identical
-with the four speeches ‘in the Presence’ of (<i>a</i>); the fifth is a
-speech by the Hermit in the tiltyard. They were printed by Spedding,
-separately, in 1870, as <i>A Conference of Pleasure composed for some
-festive occasion about the year 1592 by Francis Bacon</i>; but 1592 is
-merely a guess which Whyte’s letter corrects.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> ccliv. 67, 68, docketed ‘A Device
-made by the Earl of Essex for the Entertainment of her Majesty’, has
-a speech by the Squire, distinct from any in the other MSS., a speech
-by the Attendant on an Indian Prince, which mentions Philautia, and
-a draft by Edward Reynolds, servant to Essex, of a French speech by
-Philautia. The two first of these are printed by Spedding, viii.
-388, and Devereux, <i>Lives of the Earls of Essex</i>, ii. 501. The
-references to Philautia are rather against Spedding’s view that these
-belong to some occasion other than that of 1595.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Henry Wotton says of Essex (<i>Reliquiae Wottonianae</i>, 21), ‘For
-his Writings, they are beyond example, especially in his ... things of
-delight at Court ... as may be yet seen in his Impresses and Inventions
-of entertainment; and above all in his darling piece of love, and self
-love’. This, for what it is worth&mdash;and Wotton was secretary to Essex
-in 1595, suggests that the Earl himself, rather than Bacon, was the
-author of the speeches, which in fact none of the MSS. directly ascribe
-to Bacon. But it is hard to distinguish the literary productions of a
-public man from those of his staff.</p>
-
-<p>(iv) The <i>Northumberland MS.</i> (Burgoyne, 65) has a speech of
-apology for absence, headed ‘ffor the Earle of Sussex at y<sup>e</sup> tilt an:
-96’, which might be Bacon’s, especially as he wrote from Gray’s Inn to
-the Earl of Shrewsbury on 15 Oct. 1596, ‘to borrow a horse and armour
-for some public show’ (Lodge, <i>App.</i> 79).</p>
-
-<p>(v) Beaumont (q.v.) acknowledges his encouragement of the Inner Temple
-and Gray’s Inn mask on 20 Feb. 1613, for the Princess Elizabeth’s
-wedding.</p>
-
-<p>(vi) He bore the expenses of the Gray’s Inn <i>Mask of Flowers</i>
-(q.v.) on 6 Jan. 1614 for the Earl of Somerset’s wedding. To this
-occasion probably belongs an undated letter signed ‘Fr. Bacon’, and
-addressed to an unknown lord (<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 214 from <i>Lansdowne
-MS.</i> 107, f. 13; Spedding, ii. 370; iv. 394), in which he expresses
-regret that ‘the joynt maske from the fowr Innes of Cowrt faileth’,
-and offers a mask<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span> for ‘this occasion’ by a dozen gentlemen of Gray’s
-Inn, ‘owt of the honor which they bear to your lordship, and my lord
-Chamberlayne, to whome at theyr last maske they were so much bownde’.
-The last mask would be (v) above, and the then Lord Chamberlain was
-Suffolk, prospective father-in-law of Somerset, to whom the letter may
-be supposed to be addressed. But it is odd that the letter is endorsed
-‘M<sup>r</sup>’ Fr. Bacon, and bound up with papers of Burghley, and it is just
-possible, although not, I think, likely, that the reference may be to
-some forgotten Elizabethan mask.</p>
-
-<p>(vii) A recent attempt has been made to assign to Bacon the academic
-<i>Pedantius</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN BADGER (<i>c.</i> 1575).</p>
-
-<p>A contributor to the Kenilworth entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C).
-Gascoigne calls him ‘Master Badger of Oxenforde, Maister of Arte, and
-Bedle in the same Universitie’. A John Badger of Ch. Ch. took his M.A.
-in 1555, and a superior bedel of divinity of the same name made his
-will on 15 July 1577 (Foster, <i>Alumni Oxonienses</i>, i. 54).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM BARKSTED.</p>
-
-<p>For biography, cf. ch. xv (Actors), and for his share in <i>The
-Insatiate Countess</i>, s.v. Marston.</p>
-
-<p>There is no reason to regard him as the ‘William Buckstead, Comedian’,
-whose name is at the end of a <i>Prologue to a playe to the cuntry
-people</i> in <i>Bodl. Ashm. MS.</i> 38 (198).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">BARNABE BARNES (<i>c.</i> 1569–1609).</p>
-
-<p>Barnes was born in Yorkshire, the son of Richard Barnes, bishop of
-Durham. He entered Brasenose College, Oxford, in 1586, but took no
-degree, accompanied Essex to France in 1591, and dedicated his poems
-<i>Parthenophil and Parthenophe</i> (1593) to William Percy (q.v.).
-He was a friend of Gabriel Harvey and abused by Nashe and Campion.
-In 1598 he was charged with an attempt at poison, but escaped from
-prison (<i>Athenaeum</i>, 1904, ii. 240). His <i>Poems</i> were
-edited by A. B. Grosart in <i>Occasional Issues</i> (1875). Hazlitt,
-<i>Manual</i>, 23, states that a manuscript of a play by him with the
-title <i>The Battle of Hexham</i> was sold with Isaac Reed’s books in
-1807, but this, which some writers call <i>The Battle of Evesham</i>,
-has not been traced. As Barnes was buried at Durham in Dec. 1609, it
-is probable that <i>The Madcap</i> ‘written by Barnes’, which Herbert
-licensed for Prince Charles’s men on 3 May 1624, was by another of the
-name.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Devil’s Charter. 2 Feb. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Oct. 16 (Buck). ‘The Tragedie of Pope Alexander the
-Sixt as it was played before his Maiestie.’ <i>John Wright</i> (Arber,
-iii. 361).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Divils Charter: A Tragedie Conteining the Life and Death of
-Pope Alexander the sixt. As it was plaide before the Kings Maiestie,
-vpon Candlemasse night last: by his Maiesties Seruants. But more
-exactly reuewed, corrected and augmented since by the Author, for the
-more pleasure and profit of the Reader. <i>G. E. for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span> John Wright.</i>
-[Dedication by Barnabe Barnes to Sir William Herbert and Sir William
-Pope; Prologue with dumb-show and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Extracts</i> by A. B. Grosart in Barnes’s <i>Poems</i> (1875), and
-editions by <i>R. B. McKerrow</i> (1904, <i>Materialien</i>, vi) and J.
-S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>)&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: A. E. H. Swaen,
-G. C. Moore Smith, and R. B. McKerrow, <i>Notes on the D. C. by B.
-B.</i> (1906, <i>M. L. R.</i> i. 122).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">DAVID, LORD BARRY (1585–1610).</p>
-
-<p>David Barry was the eldest son of the ninth Viscount Buttevant, and
-the ‘Lo:’ on his title-page represents a courtesy title of ‘Lord’, or
-‘Lording’ as it is given in the lawsuit of <i>Androwes v. Slater</i>,
-which arose out of the interest acquired by him in 1608 in the
-Whitefriars theatre (q.v.). Kirkman’s play-lists (Greg, <i>Masques</i>,
-ci) and Wood, <i>Athenae Oxon.</i> ii. 655, have him as ‘Lord’ Barrey,
-which did not prevent Langbaine (1691) and others from turning him into
-‘Lodowick’.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: J. Q. Adams, <i>Lordinge (alias
-Lodowick) Barry</i> (1912, <i>M. P.</i> ix. 567); W. J. Lawrence,
-<i>The Mystery of Lodowick Barry</i> (1917, <i>University of North
-Carolina Studies in Philology</i>, xiv. 52).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ram Alley. 1607–8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1610, Nov. 9 (Buck). ‘A booke called, Ramme Alley, or
-merry trickes. <i>Robert Wilson</i> (Arber, iii. 448).</p>
-
-<p>1611. Ram-Alley: Or Merrie-Trickes. A Comedy Diuers times heretofore
-acted. By the Children of the Kings Reuels. Written by Lo: Barrey.
-<i>G. Eld for Robert Wilson.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1636; 1639.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>4</sup> (1875, x) and by W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B.
-D.</i> ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 31, attempts to place the play at the Christmas of 1609, but
-it is improbable that the King’s Revels ever played outside 1607–8.
-Archer’s play-list of 1656 gives it to Massinger. There are references
-(ed. Dodsley, pp. 280, 348, 369) to the baboons, which apparently
-amused London about 1603–5 (cf. s.v. <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>), and to
-the Jacobean knightings (p. 272).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS BEAUMONT (<i>c.</i> 1584–1616).</p>
-
-<p>Beaumont was third son of Francis Beaumont, Justice of Common Pleas,
-sprung from a gentle Leicestershire family, settled at Grace Dieu
-priory in Charnwood Forest. He was born in 1584 or 1585 and had a
-brother, Sir John, also known as a poet. He entered Broadgates Hall,
-Oxford, in 1597, but took no degree, and the Inner Temple in 1600. In
-1614 or 1615 he had a daughter by his marriage, probably recent, to
-Ursula Isley of Sundridge Hall, Kent, and another daughter was born
-after his death on 6 March 1616. He was buried in Westminster Abbey.</p>
-
-<p>Beaumont contributed a humorous grammar lecture (preserved in <i>Sloane
-MS.</i> 1709, f. 13; cf. E. J. L. Scott in <i>Athenaeum</i> for 27 Jan.
-1894) to some Inner Temple Christmas revels of uncertain date. This has
-allusions to ‘the most plodderly plotted shew of Lady Amity’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span> given ‘in
-this ill-instructed hall the last Christmas’, and to seeing a play at
-the Bankside for sixpence. His poetical career probably begins with the
-anonymous <i>Salmacis and Hermaphroditus</i> of 1602. His non-dramatic
-poems, of which the most important is an epistle to Elizabeth Countess
-of Rutland in 1612, appeared after his death in volumes of 1618, 1640,
-and 1653, which certainly ascribe to him much that is not his. His
-connexion with the stage seems to have begun about 1606, possibly
-through Michael Drayton, a family friend, in whose <i>Eglogs</i> of
-that year he appears as ‘sweet Palmeo’. But his first play, <i>The
-Woman Hater</i>, written independently for Paul’s, shows him under the
-influence of Ben Jonson, who wrote him an affectionate epigram (lv),
-told Drummond in 1619 that ‘Francis Beaumont loved too much himself
-and his own verses’ (Laing, 10), and according to Dryden (<i>Essay
-on Dramatick Poesie</i>) ‘submitted all his writings to his censure,
-and, ’tis thought, used his judgment in correcting, if not contriving,
-all his plots’. To Jonson’s <i>Volpone</i> (1607) commendatory verses
-were contributed both by Beaumont, whose own <i>Knight of the Burning
-Pestle</i> was produced in the same year, and by John Fletcher, whose
-names are thus first combined. Jonson and Beaumont, in their turn,
-wrote verses for Fletcher’s <i>The Faithful Shepherdess</i>, probably
-written in 1608 or 1609 and published in 1609 or 1610. About 1608 or
-1609 it may also be supposed that the famous literary collaboration
-began. This, although it can only be proved to have covered some
-half-dozen plays, left the two names so closely associated that when,
-in 1647 and 1679, the actors and publishers issued collections of
-fifty-three pieces, in all or most of which Fletcher had had, or was
-supposed to have had, a hand, they described them all as ‘by Francis
-Beaumont and John Fletcher’, and thus left to modern scholarship a task
-with which it is still grappling. A contemporary protest by Sir Aston
-Cockaine pointed out the small share of Beaumont and the large share
-of Massinger in the 1647 volume; and the process of metrical analysis
-initiated by Fleay and Boyle may be regarded as fairly successful
-in fixing the characteristics of the very marked style of Fletcher,
-although it certainly raises more questions than it solves as to the
-possible shares not only of Massinger, but of Jonson, Field, Tourneur,
-Daborne, Middleton, Rowley, and Shirley, as collaborators or revisers,
-in the plays as they have come down to us. Since Fletcher wrote up to
-his death in 1625, much of this investigation lies outside my limits,
-and it is fortunate that the task of selecting the plays which may,
-certainly or possibly, fall before Beaumont’s death in 1616 is one
-in which a fair number of definite data are available to eke out the
-slippery metrical evidence. It would seem that the collaboration began
-about 1608 and lasted in full swing for about four or five years, that
-in it Beaumont was the ruling spirit, and that it covered plays, not
-only for the Queen’s Revels, for whom both poets had already written
-independently, and for their successors the Lady Elizabeth’s, but
-also, and concurrently, for the King’s. According to Dryden, two or
-three plays were written ‘very unsuccessfully’ before the triumph
-of <i>Philaster</i>, but these may include the independent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span> plays,
-of which we know that the <i>Knight of the Burning Pestle</i> and
-the <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i> failed. The Folios contain a copy of
-verses written by Beaumont to Jonson (ed. Waller, x. 199) ‘before he
-and M<sup>r</sup>. Fletcher came to <i>London</i>, with two of the precedent
-Comedies then not finish’d, which deferr’d their merry meetings
-at the <i>Mermaid</i>’, but this probably relates to a temporary
-<i>villeggiatura</i> and cannot be precisely dated. It is no doubt to
-this period of 1608–13 that we may refer the gossip of Aubrey, i. 96,
-who learnt from Sir James Hales and others that Beaumont and Fletcher
-‘lived together on the Banke-Side, not far from the Play-house, both
-batchelors; lay together; had one wench in the house between them,
-which they did so admire; the same cloathes and cloake, &amp;c., betweene
-them’. Obviously these conditions ended when Beaumont married an
-heiress about 1613, and it seems probable that from this date onwards
-he ceased to be an active playwright, although he contributed a mask to
-the Princess Elizabeth’s wedding at Shrovetide of that year, and his
-hand can be traced, perhaps later still, in <i>The Scornful Lady</i>.
-At any rate, about 1613 Fletcher was not merely writing independent
-plays&mdash;a practice which, unlike Beaumont, he may never have wholly
-dropped&mdash;but also looking about for other contributors. There is
-some converging evidence of his collaboration about this date with
-Shakespeare; and Henslowe’s correspondence (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 66)
-shows him quite clearly as engaged on a play, possibly <i>The Honest
-Man’s Fortune</i>, with no less than three others, Daborne, Field, and
-Massinger. It is not probable that, from 1616 onwards, Fletcher wrote
-for any company but the King’s men. Of the fifty-two plays included
-in the Ff., forty-four can be shown from title-pages, actor-lists,
-licences by the Master of the Revels, and a Lord Chamberlain’s order
-of 1641 (<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 364) to have belonged to the King’s, six
-by title-pages and another Lord Chamberlain’s order (<i>Variorum</i>,
-iii. 159) to have belonged to the Cockpit theatre, and two, <i>Wit at
-Several Weapons</i> and <i>Four Plays in One</i>, together with <i>The
-Faithful Friends</i>, which does not appear in the Ff., cannot be
-assigned to any company. But some of the King’s men’s plays and some
-or all of the Cockpit plays had originally belonged to Paul’s, the
-Queen’s Revels, or the Lady Elizabeth’s, and it is probable that all
-these formed part of the Lady Elizabeth’s repertory in 1616, and that
-upon the reorganization of the company which then took place they were
-divided into two groups, of which one passed with Field to the King’s,
-while the other remained with his late fellows and was ultimately left
-with Christopher Beeston when their occupation of the Cockpit ended in
-1625.</p>
-
-<p>I classify the plays dealt with in these notes as follows: (<i>a</i>)
-Plays wholly or substantially by Beaumont&mdash;<i>The Woman Hater</i>,
-<i>The Knight of the Burning Pestle</i>; (<i>b</i>) Plays of the
-Beaumont-Fletcher collaboration&mdash;<i>Philaster</i>, <i>A Maid’s
-Tragedy</i>, <i>A King and No King</i>, <i>Four Plays in One</i>,
-<i>Cupid’s Revenge</i>, <i>The Coxcomb</i>, <i>The Scornful Lady</i>;
-(<i>c</i>) Plays wholly or substantially by Fletcher&mdash;<i>The Woman’s
-Prize</i>, <i>The Faithful Shepherdess</i>, <i>Monsieur Thomas</i>,
-<i>Valentinian</i>, <i>Bonduca</i>, <i>Wit Without Money</i>;
-(<i>d</i>) Plays of doubtful authorship and, in some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span> cases,
-period&mdash;<i>The Captain</i>, <i>The Honest Man’s Fortune</i>, <i>The
-Two Noble Kinsmen</i>, <i>The Faithful Friends</i>, <i>Thierry and
-Theodoret</i>, <i>Wit at Several Weapons</i>, <i>Love’s Cure</i>,
-<i>The Night Walker</i>. Full treatment of <i>The Two Noble
-Kinsmen</i>, as of <i>Henry VIII</i>, in which Fletcher certainly
-had a hand, is only possible in relation to Shakespeare. I have not
-thought it necessary to include every play which, or a hypothetical
-version of which, an unsupported conjecture, generally from Mr.
-Oliphant, puts earlier than 1616. <i>The Queen of Corinth</i>, <i>The
-Noble Gentleman</i>, <i>The Little French Lawyer</i>, <i>The Laws of
-Candy</i>, <i>The Knight of Malta</i>, <i>The Fair Maid of the Inn</i>,
-<i>The Chances</i>, <i>Beggar’s Bush</i>, <i>The Bloody Brother</i>,
-<i>Love’s Pilgrimage</i>, <i>Nice Valour</i>, and <i>Rule a Wife and
-Have a Wife</i> are omitted on this principle, and I believe I might
-safely have extended the same treatment to some of those in my class
-(<i>d</i>).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1646, Sept. 4 (Langley). ‘These severall Tragedies &amp;
-Comedies hereunder mencioned (viz<sup>t</sup>.) ... [thirty plays named] ...
-by M<sup>r</sup>. Beamont and M<sup>r</sup>. Flesher.’ <i>H. Robinson and H. Moseley</i>
-(Eyre, i. 244).</p>
-
-<p>1660, June 29. ‘The severall Plays following, vizt.... [names] ... all
-six copies written by Fra: Beamont &amp; John Fletcher.’ <i>H. Robinson and
-H. Moseley</i> (Eyre, ii. 268).</p>
-
-<p>F<sub>1</sub>, 1647. Comedies and Tragedies Written by Francis Beaumont and
-Iohn Fletcher Gentlemen. Never printed before, And now published by
-the Authours Originall Copies. <i>For H. Robinson and H. Moseley.</i>
-[Twenty-nine plays of the 1646 entry, excluding <i>The Wildgoose
-Chase</i>, and the five plays and one mask of the 1660 entry, none
-but the mask previously printed; Portrait of Fletcher by W. Marshall;
-Epistle to Philip Earl of Pembroke and Montgomery, signed ‘John Lowin,
-Richard Robinson, Eylaerd Swanston, Hugh Clearke, Stephen Hammerton,
-Joseph Taylor, Robert Benfield, Thomas Pollard, William Allen,
-Theophilus Bird’; Epistle to the Reader, signed ‘Ja. Shirley’; The
-Stationer to the Readers, signed ‘Humphrey Moseley’ and dated ‘Feb.
-14<sup>th</sup> 1646’; Thirty-seven sets of Commendatory verses, variously
-signed; Postscript; cf. W. W. Greg in <i>4 Library</i>, ii. 109.]</p>
-
-<p>F<sub>2</sub>, 1679. Fifty Comedies and Tragedies. Written by Francis Beaumont
-and John Fletcher, Gentlemen. All in one Volume. Published by the
-Authors Original Copies, the Songs to each Play being added. <i>J.
-Macock, for John Martyn, Henry Herringman, Richard Marriot.</i> [The
-thirty-four plays and one mask of F<sub>1</sub>, with eighteen other plays,
-all previously printed; Epistle by the Stationers to the Reader; Actor
-Lists prefixed to many of the plays.]</p>
-
-<p>1711. The Works of B. and F. 7 vols. <i>Jacob Tonson.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by Theobald, Seward and Sympson (1750, 10 vols.), G.
-Colman (1778, 10 vols.; 1811, 3 vols.), H. Weber (1812, 14 vols.,
-adding <i>The Faithful Friends</i>), G. Darley (1839, 2 vols.; 1862–6,
-2 vols.), A. Dyce (1843–6, 11 vols.; 1852, 2 vols.).</p>
-
-<p>1905–12. A. Glover and A. R. Waller. <i>The Works of F. B. and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span> J.
-F.</i> 10 vols. (<i>C. E. C.</i>). [Text of F<sub>2</sub>, with collations of
-F<sub>1</sub> and Q<sub>q</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>1904–12 (in progress). A. H. Bullen, <i>The Works of F. B. and J. F.
-Variorum Edition.</i> 4 vols. issued. [Text based on Dyce; editions of
-separate plays by P. A. Daniel, R. W. Bond, W. W. Greg, R. B. McKerrow,
-J. Masefield, M. Luce, C. Brett, R. G. Martin, E. K. Chambers.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Selections</i></p>
-
-<p>1887. J. S. L. Strachey, <i>The Best Plays of B. and F.</i> 2
-vols. (Mermaid Series). [<i>Maid’s Tragedy</i>, <i>Philaster</i>,
-<i>Thierry and Theodoret</i>, <i>K. B. P.</i>, <i>King and No King</i>,
-<i>Bonduca</i>, <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i>, <i>Valentinian</i>, and
-later plays.]</p>
-
-<p>1912. F. E. Schelling, <i>Beaumont and Fletcher</i> (<i>M. E. D.</i>).
-[<i>Philaster</i>, <i>Maid’s Tragedy</i>, <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i>,
-<i>Bonduca</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: A. C. Swinburne, <i>B. and F.</i> (1875–94,
-<i>Studies in Prose and Poetry</i>), <i>The Earlier Plays of B. and
-F.</i> (1910, <i>English Review</i>); F. G. Fleay, <i>On Metrical
-Tests as applied to Dramatic Poetry: Part ii, B., F., Massinger</i>
-(1874, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 51, 23*, 61*, reprinted, 1876–8, with
-alterations in <i>Shakespeare Manual</i>, 151), <i>On the Chronology
-of the Plays of F. and Massinger</i> (1886, <i>E. S.</i> ix. 12), and
-in <i>B. C.</i> (1891), i. 164; R. Boyle, <i>B., F., and Massinger</i>
-(1882–7, <i>E. S.</i> v. 74, vii. 66, viii. 39, ix. 209, x. 383),
-<i>B., F., and Massinger</i> (1886, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 579), <i>Mr.
-Oliphant on B. and F.</i> (1892–3, <i>E. S.</i> xvii. 171, xviii. 292),
-<i>Daborne’s Share in the B. and F. Plays</i> (1899, <i>E. S.</i> xxvi.
-352); G. C. Macaulay, <i>F. B.: a Critical Study</i> (1883), <i>B. and
-F.</i> (1910, <i>C. H.</i> vi. 107); E. H. C. Oliphant, <i>The Works
-of B. and F.</i> (1890–2, <i>E. S.</i> xiv. 53, xv. 321, xvi. 180); E.
-Koeppel, <i>Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen Ben Jonson’s, John Marston’s
-und B. und F.’s</i> (1895, <i>Münchener Beiträge</i>, xi); C. E.
-Norton, <i>F. B.’s Letter to Ben Jonson</i> (1896, <i>Harvard Studies
-and Notes</i>, v. 19); A. H. Thorndike, <i>The Influence of B. and F.
-on Shakspere</i> (1901); O. L. Hatcher, <i>J. F.: a Study in Dramatic
-Method</i> (1905); R. M. Alden, <i>Introduction to B.’s Plays</i>
-(1910, <i>B. L.</i>); C. M. Gayley, <i>F. B.: Dramatist</i> (1914);
-W. E. Farnham, <i>Colloquial Contractions in B., F., Massinger and
-Shakespeare as a Test of Authorship</i> (1916, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxxi.
-326).</p>
-
-<p><i>Bibliographies</i>: A. C. Potter, <i>A Bibl. of B. and F.</i> (1890,
-<i>Harvard Bibl. Contributions</i>, 39); B. Leonhardt, <i>Litteratur
-über B. und F.</i> (1896, <i>Anglia</i>, xix. 36, 542).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Woman Hater, c. 1606</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, May 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called “The Woman Hater” as
-it hath ben lately acted by the Children of Powles.’ <i>Eleazar Edgar
-and Robert Jackson</i> (Arber, iii. 349). [A note ‘Sir George Buckes
-hand alsoe to it’.]</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Woman Hater. As it hath beene lately Acted by the Children of
-Paules. <i>Sold by John Hodgets.</i> [Prologue in prose.]</p>
-
-<p>1607. <i>R. R. sold by John Hodgets.</i> [A reissue.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span></p>
-
-<p>S. R. 1613, April 19. Transfer of Edgar’s share to John Hodgettes
-(Arber, iii. 521).</p>
-
-<p>1648.... As it hath beene Acted by his Majesties Servants with great
-Applause. Written by John Fletcher Gent. <i>For Humphrey Moseley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1649. The Woman Hater, or the Hungry Courtier. A Comedy ... Written by
-Francis Beamont and John Fletcher, Gent. <i>For Humphrey Moseley.</i>
-[A reissue. Prologue in verse, said by Fleay, i. 177, to be Davenant’s,
-and Epilogue, used also for <i>The Noble Gentleman</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 177, and Gayley, 73, put the date in the spring of 1607,
-finding a reference in ‘a favourite on the sudden’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii)
-to the success of Robert Carr in taking the fancy of James at the
-tilt of 24 March 1607, to which Fleay adds that ‘another inundation’
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i) recalls a flood of 20 Jan. 1607. Neither argument
-is convincing, and it is not known that the Paul’s boys went on into
-1607; they are last heard of in July 1606. The prologue expresses
-the author’s intention not to lose his ears, perhaps an allusion to
-Jonson’s and Chapman’s peril after <i>Eastward Ho!</i> in 1605. Gayley
-notes in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii what certainly looks like a reminiscence of
-<i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> xiv. 51 and xv. 87, but it is
-no easier to be precise about the date of <i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>
-than about that of <i>The Woman Hater</i>. The play is universally
-regarded as substantially Beaumont’s and the original prologue only
-speaks of a single author, but Davenant in 1649 evidently supposed
-it to be Fletcher’s, saying ‘full twenty yeares, he wore the bayes’.
-Boyle, Oliphant, Alden, and Gayley suggest among them <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i,
-ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii, v as scenes to which Fletcher
-or some other collaborator may have given touches.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Knight of the Burning Pestle. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. The Knight of the Burning Pestle. <i>For Walter Burre.</i>
-[Epistle to Robert Keysar, signed ‘W. B.’, Induction with Prologue,
-Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1635.... Full of Mirth and Delight. Written by Francis Beaumont and
-Iohn Fletcher, Gent. As it is now Acted by Her Maiesties Servants at
-the Private house in Drury Lane. <i>N. O. for I. S.</i> [Epistle to
-Readers, Prologue (from Lyly’s <i>Sapho and Phaon</i>).]</p>
-
-<p>1635.... Francis Beamont....</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by F. W. Moorman (1898, <i>T. D.</i>), H. S. Murch
-(1908, <i>Yale Studies</i>, xxxiii), R. M. Alden (1910, <i>B. L.</i>),
-W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: R.
-Boyle, <i>B. and F.’s K. B. P.</i> (1889, <i>E. S.</i> xiii. 156);
-B. Leonhardt, <i>Ueber B. und F.’s K. B. P.</i> (1885, <i>Annaberg
-programme</i>), <i>Die Text-Varianten von B. und F.’s K. B. P.</i>
-(1896, <i>Anglia</i>, xix. 509).</p>
-
-<p>The Epistle tells us that the play was ‘in eight daies ... begot and
-borne’, ‘exposed to the wide world, who ... utterly reiected it’,
-preserved by Keysar and sent to Burre, who had ‘fostred it priuately
-in my bosome these two yeares’. The play ‘hopes his father will beget
-him a yonger brother’. Burre adds, ‘Perhaps it will be thought to bee
-of the race of Don Quixote: we both may confidently sweare, it is his
-elder aboue a yeare’. The references to the actors in the induction as
-boys and the known connexion of Keysar with the Queen’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span> Revels fix the
-company. The date is more difficult. It cannot be earlier than 1607,
-since the reference to a play at the Red Bull in which the Sophy of
-Persia christens a child (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 46) is to Day’s <i>Travels
-of Three English Brothers</i> of that year. With other allusions, not
-in themselves conclusive, 1607 would agree well enough, notably with
-Ind. 8, ‘This seuen yeares there hath beene playes at this house’, for
-it was just seven years in the autumn of 1607 since Evans set up plays
-at the Blackfriars. The trouble is <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 73, ‘Read the play
-of the <i>Foure Prentices of London</i>, where they tosse their pikes
-so’, for this implies that the <i>Four Prentices</i> was not merely
-produced but in print, and the earliest extant edition is of 1615. It
-is, however, quite possible that the play may have been in print, even
-as far back as 1594 (cf. s.v. Heywood). Others put it, and with it the
-<i>K. B. P.</i>, in 1610, in which case the production would have been
-at the Whitefriars, the history of which can only be traced back two
-or three years and not seven years before 1610. On the whole, I think
-the reference to <i>Don Quixote</i> in the Epistle is in favour of
-1607 rather than 1610. It is, of course, conceivable that Burre only
-meant to claim that the <i>K. B. P.</i> was a year older than Thomas
-Shelton’s translation of <i>Don Quixote</i>, which was entered in
-<i>S. R.</i> on 19 Jan. 1611 and published in 1612. Even this brings
-us back to the very beginning of 1610, and the boast would have been a
-fairly idle one, as Shelton states in his preface that the translation
-was actually made ‘some five or six yeares agoe’. Shelton’s editor,
-Mr. Fitzmaurice-Kelly, has shown that it was based on the Brussels
-edition of 1607. If we put it in 1608 and the <i>K. B. P.</i> in 1607
-the year’s priority of the latter is preserved. Most certainly the
-<i>K. B. P.</i> was not prior to the Spanish <i>Don Quixote</i> of
-1605. Its dependence on Cervantes is not such as necessarily to imply
-that Beaumont had read the romance, but he had certainly heard of its
-general drift and of the particular episodes of the inn taken for a
-castle and the barber’s basin. Fleay, Boyle, Moorman, Murch, and Alden
-are inclined to assign to Fletcher some or all of the scenes in which
-Jasper and Luce and Humphrey take part; but Macaulay, Oliphant and
-Gayley regard the play, except perhaps for a touch or two, as wholly
-Beaumont’s. Certainly the Epistle suggests that the play had but one
-‘father’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Faithful Shepherdess. 1608–9</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Faithfull Shepherdesse. By John Fletcher. <i>For R.
-Bonian and H. Walley.</i> [Commendatory verses by N. F. (‘Nath. Field’,
-Q<sub>2</sub>), Fr. Beaumont, Ben Jonson, G. Chapman; Dedicatory verses to Sir
-Walter Aston, Sir William Skipwith, Sir Robert Townsend, all signed
-‘John Fletcher’; Epistle to Reader, signed ‘John Fletcher’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1628, Dec. 8. Transfer from Walley to R. Meighen (Arber,
-iv. 206).</p>
-
-<p>1629.... newly corrected ... <i>T. C. for R. Meighen</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1634.... Acted at Somerset House before the King and Queene on Twelfe
-night last, 1633. And divers times since with great applause<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span> at the
-Private House in Blacke-Friers, by his Majesties Servants.... <i>A. M.
-for Meighen.</i> [Verses to Joseph Taylor, signed ‘Shakerley Marmion’,
-and Prologue, both for the performance of 6 Jan. 1634.]</p>
-
-<p>1656; 1665.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by F. W. Moorman (1897, <i>T. D.</i>), W. W. Greg
-(1908, Bullen, iii), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Jonson told Drummond in the winter of 1618–19 (Laing, 17) that
-‘Flesher and Beaumont, ten yeers since, hath written the Faithfull
-Shipheardesse, a Tragicomedie, well done’. This gives us the date
-1608–9, which there is nothing to contradict. The undated Q<sub>1</sub> may
-be put in 1609 or 1610, as Skipwith died on 3 May 1610 and the short
-partnership of the publishers is traceable from 22 Dec. 1608 to 14 Jan.
-1610. It is, moreover, in Sir John Harington’s catalogue of his plays,
-which was made up in 1609 or 1610 (cf. ch. xxii). The presence of
-Field, Chapman, and Jonson amongst the verse-writers and the mentions
-in Beaumont’s verses of ‘the waxlights’ and of a boy dancing between
-the acts point to the Queen’s Revels as the producers. It is clear also
-from the verses that the play was damned, and that Fletcher alone, in
-spite of Drummond’s report, was the author. This is not doubted on
-internal grounds.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Woman’s Prize, or, The Tamer Tamed. 1604 &lt;</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. The Womans Prize, or The Tamer Tam’d. A Comedy. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.
-Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 198, Oliphant, and Thorndike, 70, accumulate inconclusive
-evidence bearing on the date, of which the most that can be said is
-that an answer to <i>The Taming of the Shrew</i> would have more point
-the nearer it came to the date of the original, and that the references
-to the siege of Ostend in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii would be topical during or
-not long after that siege, which ended on 8 Sept. 1604. On the other
-hand, Gayley (<i>R. E. C.</i> iii, lxvi) calls attention to possible
-reminiscences of <i>Epicoene</i> (<i>1609</i>) and <i>Alchemist</i>
-(<i>1610</i>). I see no justification for supposing that a play written
-in 1605 would undergo revision, as has been suggested, in 1610–14.
-A revival by the King’s in 1633 got them into some trouble with
-Sir Henry Herbert, who claimed the right to purge even an old play
-of ‘oaths, prophaness, and ribaldrye’ (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 208).
-Possibly the play is also <i>The Woman is too Hard for Him</i>, which
-the King’s took to Court on 26 Nov. 1621 (Murray, ii. 193). But the
-original writing was not necessarily for this company. There is general
-agreement in assigning the play to Fletcher alone.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Philaster &gt; 1610</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1620, Jan. 10 (Taverner). ‘A Play Called Philaster.’
-<i>Thomas Walkley</i> (Arber, iii. 662).</p>
-
-<p>1620. Phylaster, Or Loue lyes a Bleeding. Acted at the Globe by his
-Maiesties Seruants. Written by Francis Baymont and Iohn Fletcher. Gent.
-<i>For Thomas Walkley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1622.... As it hath beene diuerse times Acted, at the Globe, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-Blacke-friers, by his Maiesties Seruants.... The Second Impression,
-corrected, and amended. <i>For Thomas Walkley.</i> [Epistle to the
-Reader by Walkley. Different text of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv, v.]</p>
-
-<p>1628. <i>A. M. for Richard Hawkins.</i> [Epistle by the Stationer to
-the Understanding Gentry.]</p>
-
-<p>1634; 1639; 1652; <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1663]; 1687.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. S. L. Strachey (1887, <i>Mermaid</i>, i), F. S.
-Boas (1898, <i>T. D.</i>), P. A. Daniel (1904, <i>Variorum</i>, i),
-A. H. Thorndike (1906, <i>B. L.</i>), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: B. Leonhardt, <i>Über die Beziehungen
-von B. und F.’s P. zu Shakespeare’s Hamlet und Cymbeline</i> (1885,
-<i>Anglia</i>, viii. 424) and <i>Die Text-Varianten von B. und F.’s
-P.</i> (1896, <i>Anglia</i>, xix. 34).</p>
-
-<p>The play is apparently referred to in John Davies of Hereford,
-<i>Scourge of Folly</i> (<i>S. R.</i> 8 Oct. 1610), ep. 206:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1"><i>To the well deseruing</i> M^r John Fletcher.</div>
- <div><i>Loue lies ableeding</i>, if it should not proue</div>
- <div>Her vttmost art to shew why it doth loue.</div>
- <div>Thou being the <i>Subiect</i> (now) It raignes vpon:</div>
- <div>Raign’st in <i>Arte</i>, <i>Iudgement</i>, and <i>Inuention</i>:</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>For this I loue thee: and can doe no lesse</i></div>
- <div class="i1"><i>For thine as faire, as faithfull</i> Shepheardesse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">If so, the date 1608–10 is suggested, and I do not think
-that it is possible to be more precise. No trustworthy argument can
-be based with Gayley, 342, on the fact that Davies’s epigram follows
-that praising Ostler as ‘Roscius’ and ‘sole king of actors’; and I fear
-that the view of Thorndike, 65, that 1608 is a ‘probable’ conjecture is
-biased by a desire to assume priority to <i>Cymbeline</i>. There were
-two Court performances in the winter of 1612–13, and Fleay, i. 189,
-suggests that the versions of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv, v which
-appear in Q<sub>1</sub> were made for these. The epistle to Q<sub>2</sub> describes
-them as ‘dangerous and gaping wounds ... received in the first
-impression’. There is general agreement that most of the play, whether
-Davies knew it or not, is Beaumont’s. Most critics assign <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii, iv and some the whole or parts of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ii, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii, iv, and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii to Fletcher.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Coxcomb. 1608 &lt; &gt; 10</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. The Coxcomb. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>. ‘The Principal Actors were Nathan Field, Joseph
-Taylor, Giles Gary, Emanuel Read, Rich. Allen, Hugh Atawell, Robert
-Benfeild, Will Barcksted.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: A. S. W. Rosenbach, <i>The Curious Impertinent in
-English Dramatic Literature</i> (1902, <i>M. L. N.</i> xvii. 179).</p>
-
-<p>The play was given at Court by the Queen’s Revels on 2 or 3 Nov.
-1612. It passed, doubtless, through the Lady Elizabeth’s, to whom the
-actor-list probably belongs, to the King’s, who took it to Court on 5
-March 1622 (Murray, ii. 193) and again on 17 Nov. 1636 (Cunningham,
-xxiv). There was thus more than one opportunity for the prologue, which
-speaks of the play as having a mixed reception at first, partly because
-of its length, then ‘long forgot’, and now revived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span> and shortened. The
-original date may be between the issue in 1608 of Baudouin’s French
-translation of <i>The Curious Impertinent</i> from <i>Don Quixote</i>,
-which in original or translation suggested its plot, and Jonson’s
-<i>Alchemist</i> (1610), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> vii. 39, ‘You are ... a Don
-Quixote. Or a Knight o’ the curious coxcombe’. The prologue refers
-to ‘makers’, and there is fair agreement in giving some or all of
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv, vi, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii, and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii to Beaumont and the rest to Fletcher. Fleay, Boyle, Oliphant, and
-Gayley think that there has been revision by a later writer, perhaps
-Massinger or W. Rowley.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Maid’s Tragedy &gt; 1611</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1619, April 28 (Buck). ‘A play Called The maides tragedy.’
-<i>Higgenbotham and Constable</i> (Arber, iii. 647).</p>
-
-<p>1619. The Maides Tragedy. As it hath beene divers times Acted at
-the Blacke-friers by the King’s Maiesties Seruants. <i>For Francis
-Constable.</i></p>
-
-<p>1622.... Newly perused, augmented, and inlarged, This second
-Impression. <i>For Francis Constable.</i></p>
-
-<p>1630.... Written by Francis Beaumont, and Iohn Fletcher Gentlemen. The
-Third Impression, Reuised and Refined. <i>A. M. for Richard Hawkins.</i></p>
-
-<p>1638; 1641; 1650 [1660?]; 1661.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. S. L. Strachey (1887, <i>Mermaid</i>, i), P.
-A. Daniel (1904, <i>Variorum</i>, i), A. H. Thorndike (1906, <i>B.
-L.</i>), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>:
-B. Leonhardt, <i>Die Text-Varianten in B. und F.’s M. T.</i> (1900,
-<i>Anglia</i>, xxiii. 14).</p>
-
-<p>The play must have been known by 31 Oct. 1611 when Buck named the
-<i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> (q.v.) after it, and it was given
-at Court during 1612–13. An inferior limit is not attainable and
-any date within <i>c.</i> 1608–11 is possible. Gayley, 349, asks us
-to accept the play as more mature than, and therefore later than,
-<i>Philaster</i>. Fleay, i. 192, thinks that the mask in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-ii was added after the floods in the winter of 1612, but you cannot
-bring Neptune into a mask without mention of floods. As to authorship
-there is some division of opinion, especially on <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii
-and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii; subject thereto, a balance of opinion gives
-<span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iv and
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv to Beaumont, and only <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i,
-ii, iii to Fletcher.</p>
-
-<p>An episode (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii) consists of a mask at the wedding of
-Amintor and Evadne, with an introductory dialogue between Calianax,
-Diagoras, who keeps the doors, and guests desiring admission. ‘The
-ladies are all placed above,’ says Diagoras, ‘save those that come in
-the King’s troop.’ Calianax has an ‘office’, evidently as Chamberlain.
-‘He would run raging among them, and break a dozen wiser heads than his
-own in the twinkling of an eye.’</p>
-
-<p>The maskers are Proteus and other sea-gods; the presenters Night,
-Cinthia, Neptune, Aeolus, Favonius, and other winds, who ‘rise’ or come
-‘out of a rock’. There are two ‘measures’ between hymeneal songs, but
-no mention of taking out ladies.</p>
-
-<p>In an earlier passage (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 9) a poet says of masks, ‘They
-must<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span> commend their King, and speak in praise Of the Assembly, bless
-the Bride and Bridegroom, In person of some God; th’are tyed to rules
-Of flattery’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A King and No King. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1618, Aug. 7 (Buck). ‘A play Called A king and noe kinge.’
-<i>Blount</i> (Arber, iii. 631).</p>
-
-<p>1619. A King and no King. Acted at the Globe, by his Maiesties
-Seruants: Written by Francis Beamount and Iohn Flecher. <i>For Thomas
-Walkley.</i> [Epistle to Sir Henry Nevill, signed ‘Thomas Walkley’.]</p>
-
-<p>1625.... Acted at the Blacke-Fryars, by his Maiesties Seruants. And now
-the second time Printed, according to the true Copie.... <i>For Thomas
-Walkley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1631; 1639; 1655; 1661; 1676.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by R. W. Bond (1904, Bullen, i), R. M. Alden
-(1910, <i>B. L.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: B. Leonhardt, <i>Die
-Text-Varianten von B.’s und F.’s A K. and No K.</i> (1903,
-<i>Anglia</i>, xxvi. 313).</p>
-
-<p>This is a fixed point, both for date and authorship, in the history
-of the collaboration. Herbert records (<i>Var.</i> iii. 263) that
-it was ‘allowed to be acted in 1611’ by Sir George Buck. It was in
-fact acted at Court by the King’s on 26 Dec. 1611 and again during
-1612–13. A performance at Hampton Court on 10 Jan. 1637 is also
-upon record (Cunningham, xxv). The epistle, which tells us that the
-publisher received the play from Nevill, speaks of ‘the authors’ and of
-their ‘future labours’; rather oddly, as Beaumont was dead. There is
-practical unanimity in assigning <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III</span>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, iv to Beaumont and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i,
-ii, iii and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, iii to Fletcher.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cupid’s Revenge &gt; 1612</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1615, April 24 (Buck). ‘A play called Cupid’s revenge.’
-<i>Josias Harrison</i> (Arber, iii. 566).</p>
-
-<p>1615. Cupid’s Revenge. As it hath beene diuers times Acted by the
-Children of her Maiesties Reuels. By Iohn Fletcher. <i>Thomas Creede
-for Josias Harrison.</i> [Epistle by Printer to Reader.]</p>
-
-<p>1630.... As it was often Acted (with great applause) by the Children
-of the Reuells. Written by Fran. Beaumont &amp; Io. Fletcher. The second
-edition. <i>For Thomas Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p>1635.... The third Edition. <i>A. M.</i></p>
-
-<p>The play was given by the Queen’s Revels at Court on 5 Jan. 1612, 1
-Jan. 1613, and either 9 Jan. or 27 Feb. 1613. It was revived by the
-Lady Elizabeth’s at Court on 28 Dec. 1624, and is in the Cockpit list
-of 1639. It cannot therefore be later than 1611–12, while no close
-inferior limit can be fixed. Fleay, i. 187, argues that it has been
-altered for Court, chiefly by turning a wicked king, queen, and prince
-into a duke, duchess, and marquis. I doubt if this implies revision
-as distinct from censorship, and in any case it does not, as Fleay
-suggests, imply the intervention of a reviser other than the original
-authors. The suggestion has led to chaos in the distribution of
-authorship, since various critics have introduced Daborne, Field, and
-Massinger as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span> possible collaborators or revisers. The stationer speaks
-of a single ‘author’, meaning Fletcher, but says he was ‘not acquainted
-with him’. And the critics at least agree in finding both Beaumont and
-Fletcher, pretty well throughout.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Captain. 1609 &lt; &gt; 12</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. The Captain. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. The Captain. A Comedy. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>.] ‘The principal Actors
-were, Richard Burbadge, Henry Condel, William Ostler, Alexander Cooke.’</p>
-
-<p>The play was given by the King’s at Court during 1612–13, and
-presumably falls between that date and the admission of Ostler to the
-company in 1609. The 1679 print, by a confusion, gives the scene as
-‘Venice, Spain’, but this hardly justifies the suggestion of Fleay, i.
-195, that we have a version of Fletcher’s work altered for the Court
-by Barnes. He had formerly conjectured collaboration between Fletcher
-and Jonson (<i>E. S.</i> ix. 18). The prologue speaks of ‘the author’;
-Fleay thinks that the mention of ‘twelve pence’ as the price of a seat
-indicates a revival. Several critics find Massinger; Oliphant finds
-Rowley; and Boyle and Oliphant find Beaumont, as did Macaulay, 196, in
-1883, but apparently not in 1910 (<i>C. H.</i> vi. 137).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Two Noble Kinsmen. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1634, April 8 (Herbert). ‘A Tragicomedy called the two
-noble kinsmen by John Fletcher and William Shakespeare.’ <i>John
-Waterson</i> (Arber, iv. 316).</p>
-
-<p>1634. The Two Noble Kinsmen: Presented at the Black-friers by the Kings
-Maiesties servants, with great applause: Written by the memorable
-Worthies of their time; Mr. John Fletcher, and Mr. William Shakspeare.
-Gent. <i>Tho. Cotes for Iohn Waterson.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub> of Beaumont and Fletcher.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. W. Skeat (1875), H. Littledale (1876–85,
-<i>N. S. S.</i>), C. H. Herford (1897, <i>T. D.</i>), J. S. Farmer
-(1910, <i>T. F. T.</i>), and with <i>Works</i> of Beaumont and
-Fletcher, <i>Sh. Apocrypha</i>, and sometimes <i>Works</i> of
-Shakespeare.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: W. Spalding, <i>A Letter on Sh.’s
-Authorship of T. N. K.</i> (1833; 1876, <i>N. S. S.</i>); S. Hickson,
-<i>The Shares of Sh. and F. in T. N. K.</i> (1847, <i>Westminster
-Review</i>, xlvii. 59; 1874, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 25*, with additions
-by F. G. Fleay and F. J. Furnivall); N. Delius, <i>Die angebliche
-Autorschaft des T. N. K.</i> (1878, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xiii. 16); R.
-Boyle, <i>Sh. und die beiden edlen Vettern</i> (1881, <i>E. S.</i> iv.
-34), <i>On Massinger and T. N. K.</i> (1882, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i>
-371); T. Bierfreund, <i>Palamon og Arcite</i> (1891); E. H. C. Oliphant
-(1892, <i>E. S.</i> xv. 323); B. Leuschner, <i>Über das Verhältniss von
-T. N. K. zu Chaucer’s Knightes Tale</i> (1903, <i>Halle diss.</i>); O.
-Petersen, <i>The T. N. K.</i> (1914, <i>Anglia</i>, xxxviii. 213); H.
-D. Sykes, <i>The T. N. K.</i> (1916, <i>M. L. R.</i> xi. 136); A. H.
-Cruickshank, <i>Massinger and T. N. K.</i> (1922).</p>
-
-<p>The date of <i>T. N. K.</i> is fairly well fixed to 1613 by its
-adaptation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span> Beaumont’s wedding mask of Shrovetide in that year;
-there would be a confirmation in Jonson, <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>
-(1614), iv. 3,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Quarlous.</i> Well my word is out of the <i>Arcadia</i>, then: <i>Argalus</i>.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Win-wife.</i> And mine out of the play, <i>Palemon</i>;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">did not the juxtaposition of the <i>Arcadia</i> suggest that the
-allusion may be, not to the Palamon of <i>T. N. K.</i> but to the
-Palaemon of Daniel’s <i>The Queen’s Arcadia</i> (1606). In spite of the
-evidence of the t.p. attempts have been made to substitute Beaumont,
-or, more persistently, Massinger, for Shakespeare as Fletcher’s
-collaborator. This question can only be discussed effectively in
-connexion with Shakespeare.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Honest Man’s Fortune. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Dyce MS.</i> 9, formerly in Heber collection.</p>
-
-<p>1647. The Honest Mans Fortune. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. After play, verses ‘Upon
-an Honest Mans Fortune. By M<sup>r</sup>. John Fletcher’, beginning ‘You that can
-look through Heaven, and tell the Stars’.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. The Honest Man’s Fortune. A Tragicomedie. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>. ‘The
-principal actors were Nathan Field, Joseph Taylor, Rob. Benfield, Will
-Eglestone, Emanuel Read, Thomas Basse.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: K. Richter, <i>H. M. F. und seine Quellen</i>
-(1905, <i>Halle diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>On the fly-leaf of the MS. is ‘The Honest Man’s Fortune, Plaide in the
-yeare 1613’, and in another hand at the end of the text, ‘This Play,
-being an olde one, and the Originall lost was reallow’d by mee this 8
-Febru. 1624. Att the intreaty of Mr. &emsp;&emsp;.’ The last word
-is torn off, but a third hand has added ‘Taylor’. The MS. contains
-some alterations, partly by the licenser, partly by the stage-manager
-or prompter. The latter include the names of three actors, ‘G[eorge]
-Ver[non]’, ‘J: R Cro’ and ‘G. Rick’. The ending of the last scene in
-the MS. differs from that of the Ff. The endorsement is confirmed
-by Herbert’s entry in his diary (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 229), ‘For
-the King’s company. An olde play called The Honest Mans Fortune, the
-originall being lost, was re-allowed by mee at M<sup>r</sup>. Taylor’s intreaty,
-and on condition to give mee a booke [The Arcadia], this 8 Februa.
-1624.’ The actor-list suggests that the original performers were Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, after the Queen’s Revels had joined them in March
-1613. Fleay, i. 196, suggests that this is the play by Fletcher, Field,
-Massinger, and Daborne which is the subject of some of Henslowe’s
-correspondence and was finally delivered on 5 Aug. 1613 (Greg,
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 65, 90). Attempts to combine this indication
-with stylistic evidence have led the critics to some agreement that
-Fletcher is only responsible for <span class="allsmcap">V</span> and that Massinger is to be
-found in <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, and for the rest into a quagmire of conjecture
-amongst the names of Beaumont, Fletcher, Massinger, Field, Daborne,
-Tourneur, and Cartwright. The appended verses of the Ff. are not in the
-<i>Dyce MS.</i>, but they are in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 25707, f. 66, and
-<i>Bodl. Rawlinson Poet. MS.</i> 160, f. 20, where they are ascribed to
-Fletcher, and in Beaumont’s <i>Poems</i> (1653).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Bonduca. 1609 &lt; &gt; 14</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. Bonduca, A Tragedy. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>. ‘The Principal Actors were Richard Burbadge,
-Henry Condel, William Eglestone, Nich. Toolie, William Ostler, John
-Lowin, John Underwood, Richard Robinson.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: B. Leonhardt, <i>Die Text-Varianten von B. und
-F.’s B.</i> (1898, <i>Anglia</i>, xx. 421) and <i>Bonduca</i> (<i>E.
-S.</i> xiii. 36).</p>
-
-<p>The actor-list is of the King’s men between 1609–11 or between
-1613–14, as these are the only periods during which Ecclestone and
-Ostler can have played together. The authorship is generally regarded
-as substantially Fletcher’s; and the occasional use of rhyme in
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv hardly justifies Oliphant’s theory
-of an earlier version by Beaumont, or the ascription by Fleay and
-Macaulay of these scenes to Field, whose connexion with the King’s does
-not seem to antedate 1616.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Monsieur Thomas. 1610 &lt; &gt; 16</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1639, Jan. 22 (Wykes). ‘A Comedy called Monsieur Thomas,
-by master John Fletcher.’ <i>Waterson</i> (Arber, iv. 451).</p>
-
-<p>1639. Monsieur Thomas. A Comedy. Acted at the Private House in Blacke
-Fryers. The Author, Iohn Fletcher, Gent. <i>Thomas Harper for John
-Waterson.</i> [Epistle to Charles Cotton, signed ‘Richard Brome’ and
-commendatory verses by the same.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [<i>c.</i> 1661]. Fathers Own Son. A Comedy. Formerly
-Acted at the Private House in Black Fryers; and now at the Theatre in
-Vere Street by His Majesties Servants. The Author John Fletcher Gent.
-<i>For Robert Crofts.</i> [Reissue with fresh t.p.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by R. G. Martin (1912, Bullen,
-iv).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: H. Guskar, <i>Fletcher’s Monsieur Thomas
-und seine Quellen</i> (1905, <i>Anglia</i>, xxviii. 397; xxix. 1); A.
-L. Stiefel, <i>Zur Quellenfrage von John Fletcher’s Monsieur Thomas</i>
-(1906, <i>E. S.</i> xxxvi. 238); O. L. Hatcher, <i>The Sources of
-Fletcher’s Monsieur Thomas</i> (1907, <i>Anglia</i>, xxx. 89).</p>
-
-<p>The title-page printed at the time of the revival by the King’s men
-of the Restoration enables us to identify <i>Monsieur Thomas</i> with
-the <i>Father’s Own Son</i> of the Cockpit repertory in 1639, and like
-the other plays of the Beaumont and Fletcher series in that repertory
-it was probably written by 1616, and either for the Queen’s Revels or
-for the Lady Elizabeth’s. An allusion in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 104 to ‘all
-the feathers in the Friars’ might indicate production at Porter’s Hall
-in the Blackfriars about that year. The play cannot be earlier than
-its source, Part ii (1610) of H. d’Urfé’s <i>Astrée</i>, and by 1610
-the more permanent Blackfriars house had passed to the King’s, by whom
-the performances referred to on the original title-page must therefore
-have been given. Perhaps the explanation is that there had been some
-misunderstanding about the distribution of the Lady Elizabeth’s men’s
-plays between the King’s and the Cockpit, and that a revival by the
-King’s in 1639 led the Cockpit managers to get the Lord Chamberlain’s
-order of 10 Aug. 1639 (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 159) appropriating their
-repertory to them. The authorship is ascribed with general assent to
-Fletcher alone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Valentinian. 1610 &lt; &gt; 14</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. The Tragedy of Valentinian. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>. ‘The principal Actors were, Richard Burbadge,
-Henry Condel, John Lowin, William Ostler, John Underwood.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by R. G. Martin (1912, Bullen, iv).</p>
-
-<p>The actor-list is of the King’s men before the death of Ostler on 16
-Dec. 1614, and the play must fall between this date and the publication
-of its source, Part ii (1610) of H. d’Urfé’s <i>Astrée</i>. There is
-general agreement in assigning it to Fletcher alone.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Wit Without Money, c. 1614</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1639, April 25 (Wykes). ‘These fiue playes ... Witt
-without money.’ <i>Crooke and William Cooke</i> (Arber, iv. 464).</p>
-
-<p>1639. Wit Without Money. A Comedie, As it hath beene Presented with
-good Applause at the private house in Drurie Lane, by her Majesties
-Servants. Written by Francis Beamount and John Flecher. Gent. <i>Thomas
-Cotes for Andrew Crooke and William Cooke.</i></p>
-
-<p>1661.... The Second Impression Corrected. <i>For Andrew Crooke.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by R. B. McKerrow (1905, Bullen, ii).</p>
-
-<p>Allusions to the New River opened in 1613 (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 61) and to
-an alleged Sussex dragon of Aug. 1614 (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv. 53) suggest
-production not long after the latter date. There is general agreement
-in assigning the play to Fletcher alone. It passed into the Cockpit
-repertory and was played there both by Queen Henrietta’s men and in
-1637 by Beeston’s boys (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 159, 239). Probably,
-therefore, it was written for the Lady Elizabeth’s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Scornful Lady. 1613 &lt; &gt; 17</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1616, March 19 (Buck). ‘A plaie called The scornefull
-ladie written by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher.’ <i>Miles
-Partriche</i> (Arber, iii. 585).</p>
-
-<p>1616. The Scornful Ladie. A Comedie. As it was Acted (with great
-applause) by the Children of Her Maiesties Reuels in the Blacke-Fryers.
-Written by Fra. Beaumont and Io. Fletcher, Gent. <i>For Miles
-Partriche.</i></p>
-
-<p>1625.... As it was now lately Acted (with great applause) by the Kings
-Maiesties seruants, at the Blacke-Fryers.... <i>For M. P., sold by
-Thomas Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p>1630, 1635, 1639, 1651 (<i>bis</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by R. W. Bond (1904, Bullen, i).</p>
-
-<p>References to ‘talk of the Cleve wars’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 66) and
-‘some cast Cleve captain’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 54) cannot be earlier than
-1609 when the wars broke out after the death of the Duke of Cleves on
-25 March, and there can hardly have been ‘cast’ captains until some
-time after July 1610 when English troops first took part. Fleay, i.
-181, calls attention to an allusion to the binding by itself of the
-Apocrypha (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 46) which was discussed for the A. V. and
-the Douay Version, both completed in 1610; and Gayley to a reminiscence
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 341)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span> of <i>Epicoene</i> which, however, was acted
-in 1609, not, as Gayley thinks, 1610. None of these indications,
-however, are of much importance in view of another traced by Gayley
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 17):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1">I will style thee noble, nay, Don Diego;</div>
- <div>I’ll woo thy infanta for thee.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Don Diego Sarmiento’s negotiations for a Spanish match with Prince
-Charles began on 27 May 1613. The play must therefore be 1613–16. In
-any case the ‘Blackfriars’ of the title-page must be the Porter’s Hall
-house of 1615–17. Even if the end of 1609 were a possible date, Murray,
-i. 153, is wrong in supposing that the Revels were then at Blackfriars.
-There is fair unanimity in assigning <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, the whole or part of
-<span class="allsmcap">II</span>, and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii to Beaumont, and the rest to Fletcher,
-but Bond and Gayley suggest that <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, at least, might be
-Massinger’s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Thierry and Theodoret (?)</i></p>
-
-<p>1621. The Tragedy of Thierry King of France, and his Brother Theodoret.
-As it was diuerse times acted at the Blacke-Friers by the Kings
-Maiesties Seruants. <i>For Thomas Walkley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1648.... Written by John Fletcher Gent. <i>For Humphrey Moseley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1649.... Written by Fracis Beamont and John Fletcher Gent. <i>For
-Humphrey Moseley.</i> [A reissue, with Prologue and Epilogue, not
-written for the play; cf. Fleay, i. 205.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: B. Leonhardt, <i>Die Text-Varianten von B. und
-F.’s T. and T.</i> (1903, <i>Anglia</i>, xxvi. 345).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 205, dates the play <i>c.</i> 1617, supposing it to be a
-satire on the French Court, and the name De Vitry to be that of the
-slayer of the Maréchal d’Ancre. Thorndike, 79, has little difficulty
-in disposing of this theory, although it may be pointed out that the
-Privy Council did in fact intervene to suppress a play about the
-Maréchal in 1617 (Gildersleeve, 113); but he is less successful in
-attempting to show any special plausibility in a date as early as 1607.
-A former conjecture by Fleay (<i>E. S.</i> ix. 21) that <span class="allsmcap">III</span>
-and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i are fragments of the anonymous <i>Branholt</i> of the
-Admiral’s in 1597 may also be dismissed with Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 188). Most critics find, in addition to Fletcher, Massinger, as
-collaborator or reviser, according to the date given to the play, and
-some add Field or Daborne. Oliphant and Thorndike find Beaumont. So did
-Macaulay, 196, in 1883, but apparently not in 1910 (<i>C. H.</i> vi.
-138).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Nightwalker or The Little Thief (?)</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 25 April 1639 (Wykes). ‘These fiue playes ... Night
-walters.... <i>Crooke and William Cooke</i> (Arber, iv. 464).</p>
-
-<p>1640. The Night-Walker, or the Little Theife. A Comedy, As it was
-presented by her Majesties Servants, at the Private House in Drury
-Lane. Written by John Fletcher. Gent. <i>Tho. Cotes for Andrew Crooke
-and William Cooke.</i> [Epistle to William Hudson, signed ‘A. C.’.]</p>
-
-<p>1661. <i>For Andrew Crook.</i></p>
-
-<p>Herbert licensed this as ‘a play of Fletchers corrected by Sherley’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>
-on 11 May 1633 and it was played at Court by Queen Henrietta’s men on
-30 Jan. 1634 (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 236). The only justification for
-placing Fletcher’s version earlier than 1616 is the suspicion that
-the only plays of Beaumont or Fletcher which passed to the Cockpit
-repertory were some of those written for the Queen’s Revels or the Lady
-Elizabeth’s before that date.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Four Plays in One (?)</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. Four Plays, or Moral Representations in One. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.
-Induction with 2 Prologues, The Triumph of Honour, the Triumph of Love
-with Prologue, the Triumph of Death with Prologue, the Triumph of Time
-with Prologue, Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: W. J. Lawrence, <i>The Date of F. P. in O.</i>
-(<i>T. L. S.</i> 11 Dec. 1919).</p>
-
-<p>This does not seem to have passed to the King’s men or the Cockpit, and
-cannot be assigned to any particular company. It has been supposed to
-be a boys’ play, presumably because it has much music and dancing. It
-has also much pageantry in dumb-shows and so forth and stage machinery.
-Conceivably it might have been written for private performance in place
-of a mask. <i>Time</i>, in particular, has much the form of a mask,
-with antimask. But composite plays of this type were well known on the
-public stage. There is no clear indication of date. Fleay, i. 179,
-suggested 1608 because <i>The Yorkshire Tragedy</i>, printed that year,
-is also described in its heading as ‘one of the Four Plays in One’, but
-presumably it belonged to another series. Thorndike, 85, points out
-that the antimask established itself in Court masks in 1608. Gayley,
-301, puts <i>Death</i> and <i>Time</i> in 1610, because he thinks
-that they fall stylistically between <i>The Faithfull Shepherdess</i>
-and <i>Philaster</i>, and the rest in 1612, because he thinks they
-are Field’s and that they cannot be before 1611, since they are not
-mentioned, like <i>Amends for Ladies</i>, as forthcoming in the
-epistle to <i>Woman a Weathercock</i> in that year. This hardly bears
-analysis, and indeed Field is regarded as the author of the Induction
-and <i>Honour</i> only by Oliphant and Gayley and of <i>Love</i> only
-by Gayley himself. All these are generally assigned to Beaumont, and
-<i>Death</i> and <i>Time</i> universally to Fletcher. Lawrence’s
-attempt to attach the piece to the wedding festivities of 1612–13 does
-not seem to me at all convincing.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Love’s Cure; or, The Martial Maid</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1647. Loves Cure, or the Martial Maid. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. A Prologue at
-the reviving of this Play. Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. Loves Cure, or the Martial Maid A Comedy. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: A. L. Stiefel, <i>Die Nachahmung spanischer
-Komödien in England</i> (1897, <i>Archiv</i>, xcix. 271).</p>
-
-<p>The prologue, evidently later than Fletcher’s death in 1625, clearly
-assigns the authorship to Beaumont and Fletcher, although the epilogue,
-of uncertain date, speaks of ‘our author’. This is the only sound
-reason for thinking that the original composition was in Beaumont’s
-lifetime. The internal evidence for an early date cited<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span> by Fleay, i.
-180, and Thorndike, 72, becomes trivial when we eliminate what merely
-fixes the historic time of the play to 1604–9, and proves nothing as to
-the time of composition. On the other hand, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5h">the cold Muscovite ...</div>
- <div>That lay here lieger in the last great frost,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">points to a date later than the winter of 1621, as I
-cannot trace any earlier great frost in which a Muscovite embassy can
-have been in London (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, cxxiii, 11, 100; cxxiv.
-40). Further, the critics seem confident that the dominant hand in
-the play as it exists is Massinger’s, and that Beaumont and Fletcher
-show, if at all, faintly through his revision. The play belonged to the
-repertory of the King’s men by 1641 (<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 364).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Wit at Several Weapons</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1647. Wit at several weapons. A Comedy. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. The epilogue at
-the reviving of this Play.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The history of the play is very obscure. It is neither in the Cockpit
-repertory of 1639 nor in that of the King’s in 1641, and the guesses of
-Fleay, i. 218, that it may be <i>The Devil of Dowgate or Usury Put to
-Use</i>, licensed by Herbert for the King’s on 17 Oct. 1623, and <i>The
-Buck is a Thief</i>, played at Court by the same men on 28 Dec. 1623,
-are unsupported and mutually destructive. The epilogue, clearly written
-after the death of Fletcher, tells us that ‘’twas well receiv’d before’
-and that Fletcher ‘had to do in’ it, and goes on to qualify this by
-adding&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i8">that if he but writ</div>
- <div>An Act, or two, the whole Play rose up wit.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The critics find varying amounts of Fletcher, with
-work of other hands, which some of them venture to identify as those
-of Middleton and Rowley. Oliphant, followed by Thorndike, 87, finds
-Beaumont, and the latter points to allusions which are not inconsistent
-with, but certainly do not prove, 1609–10, or even an earlier date.
-Macaulay, 196, also found Beaumont in 1883, but seems to have retired
-upon Middleton and Rowley in 1910 (<i>C. H.</i> vi. 138).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Faithful Friends</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Dyce MS.</i> 10, formerly in the Heber collection.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1660, June 29. ‘The Faithfull Friend a Comedy, by Francis
-Beamont &amp; John Fletcher’. <i>H. Moseley</i> (Eyre, ii. 271).</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by A. Dyce in <i>Works</i> (1812).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay in 1889 (<i>E. S.</i> xiii. 32) saw evidence of a date in 1614
-in certain possible allusions (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 45–52, 123–6) to the
-Earl of Somerset and his wedding on 26 Dec. 1613, and suggested Field
-and Daborne as the authors. In 1891 (i. 81, 201) he gave the whole to
-Daborne, except <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v, which he thought of later date, and
-supposed it to be the subject of Daborne’s letter of 11 March 1614 to
-Henslowe, which was in fact probably <i>The Owl</i> (Greg, <i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 82). Oliphant thinks it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span> a revision by Massinger and Field
-in 1614 of a play by Beaumont and Fletcher, perhaps as early as 1604.
-With this exception no critic seems much to believe in the presence of
-Beaumont or Fletcher, and Boyle, who suggests Shirley, points out that
-the allusion in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 124 to the relation between Philip III
-and the Duke of Lerma as in the past would come more naturally after
-Philip’s death in 1621 or at least after Lerma’s disgrace in 1618. The
-MS. is in various hands, one of which has made corrections. Some of
-these seem on internal evidence to have been due to suggestions of the
-censor, others to play-house exigencies.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Among plays entered in S. R. by Humphrey Moseley on 29 June 1660 (Eyre,
-ii. 271) is ‘The History of Madon King of Brittain, by F. Beamont’.
-Madan is a character in <i>Locrine</i>, but even Moseley can hardly
-have ascribed that long-printed play to Beaumont.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Inner Temple and Gray’s Inn Mask. 20 Feb. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, Feb. 27 (Nidd). ‘A booke called the [description] of
-the maske performed before the kinge by the gent. of the Myddle temple
-and Lincolns Inne with the maske of Grayes Inne and the Inner Temple.’
-<i>George Norton</i> (Arber, iii. 516).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Masque of the Inner Temple and Grayes Inn: Grayes
-Inne and the Inner Temple, presented before his Maiestie, the Queenes
-Maiestie, the Prince, Count Palatine and the Lady Elizabeth their
-Highnesses, in the Banquetting-house at Whitehall on Saturday the
-twentieth day of Februarie, 1612. <i>F. K. for George Norton.</i>
-[Epistle to Sir Francis Bacon and the Benchers.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> ... By Francis Beaumont, Gent. <i>F. K. for George
-Norton.</i></p>
-
-<p>1647. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>1653. Poems: by Francis Beaumont, Gent. [&amp;c.] <i>for Laurence
-Blaiklock</i>. [The Masque is included.]</p>
-
-<p>1653. Poems ... <i>for William Hope</i>. [A reissue.]</p>
-
-<p>1660. Poems. The golden remains of those so much admired dramatick
-poets, Francis Beaumont &amp; John Fletcher, Gent. [&amp;c.] <i>for William
-Hope</i>. [A reissue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679. [Part of F<sub>2</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The texts of 1647–79 give a shorter description than the original
-Q<sub>q</sub>, and omit the epistle.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), ii. 591.</p>
-
-<p>For general notices of the wedding masks, see ch. xxiv and the account
-of Campion’s <i>Lords’ Mask</i>; but it may be noted that the narrative
-in the <i>Mercure François</i> gives a very inaccurate description of
-Beaumont’s work as left to us, introducing an Atlas and an Aletheia who
-find no places in the text.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in carnation, were fifteen knights of Olympia; the
-musicians twelve priests of Jove; the presenters Mercury and Iris.
-There were two antimasks, Mercury’s of four Naiads, five Hyades, four
-Cupids, and four Statues, ‘not of one kinde or liverie (because<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-that had been so much in use heretofore)’, and Iris’s of a ‘rurall
-company’ consisting of a Pedant, a May Lord and Lady, a Servingman and
-Chambermaid, a Country Clown or Shepherd and Country Wench, a Host
-and Hostess, a He Baboon and She Baboon, and a He Fool and She Fool
-‘ushering them in’.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the Banqueting House at Whitehall. The Hall was
-originally appointed, and on Shrove-Tuesday, 16 Feb., the mask came
-by water from Winchester House in the royal barge, attended by many
-gentlemen of the Inns in other barges. They landed at the Privy Stairs,
-watched by the King and princes from the Privy Gallery, and were
-conducted to the Vestry. But the actual mask was put off until 20 Feb.,
-in view of the press in the Hall, and then given in Banqueting House.
-Beaumont’s description passes lightly over this <i>contretemps</i>, but
-cf. <i>infra</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The ‘fabricke’ was a mountain, with separate ‘traverses’ discovering
-its lower and its higher slopes. From the former issued the presenters
-and antimasks, whose ‘measures’ were both encored by the King, but
-unluckily ‘one of the Statuaes by that time was undressed’. The latter
-bore the ‘maine masque’ in two pavilions before the altar of Jupiter.
-The maskers descended, danced two measures, then took their ladies to
-dance galliards, durets, corantoes, &amp;c., then danced ‘their parting
-measure’ and ascended.</p>
-
-<p>Phineas Pett, Master of the Shipwrights’ Company in 1613, relates
-(<i>Archaeologia</i>, xii. 266) that he was</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘intreated by divers gentlemen of the inns of business, whereof
-Sir Francis Bacon was chief, to attend the bringing of a mask
-by water in the night from St. Mary Over’s to Whitehall in some
-of the gallies; but the tide falling out very contrary and the
-company attending the maskers very unruly, the project could not
-be performed so exactly as was purposed and expected. But yet
-they were safely landed at the plying stairs at Whitehall, for
-which my paines the gentlemen gave me a fair recompence.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Chamberlain (Birch, i. 227) says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘On Tuesday it came to Gray’s Inn and the Inner Temple’s turn to
-come with their mask, whereof Sir Francis Bacon was the chief
-contriver; and because the former came on horseback and in open
-chariots, they made choice to come by water from Winchester
-Place, in Southwark, which suited well with their device, which
-was the marriage of the river of Thames to the Rhine; and their
-show by water was very gallant, by reason of infinite store
-of lights, very curiously set and placed, and many boats and
-barges, with devices of light and lamps, with three peals of
-ordnance, one at their taking water, another in the Temple
-garden, and the last at their landing; which passage by water
-cost them better than three hundred pounds. They were received
-at the Privy Stairs, and great expectation there was that they
-should every way excel their competitors that went before them;
-both in device, daintiness of apparel, and, above all, in
-dancing, wherein they are held excellent, and esteemed for the
-properer men. But by what ill planet it fell out, I know not,
-they came home as they went, without doing anything; the reason
-whereof I cannot yet learn thoroughly, but only that the hall
-was so full that it was not possible to avoid it, or make room
-for them; besides that, most of the ladies were in the galleries
-to see them land, and could not get in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">But the worst of all was, that the King was so wearied and
-sleepy, with sitting up almost two whole nights before, that he
-had no edge to it. Whereupon, Sir Francis Bacon adventured to
-entreat of his majesty that by this difference he would not, as
-it were, bury them quick; and I hear the King should answer,
-that then they must bury him quick, for he could last no longer,
-but withal gave them very good words, and appointed them to come
-again on Saturday. But the grace of their mask is quite gone,
-when their apparel hath been already showed, and their devices
-vented, so that how it will fall out God knows, for they are
-much discouraged and out of countenance, and the world says it
-comes to pass after the old proverb, the properer man the worse
-luck.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In a later letter (Birch, i. 229) Chamberlain concludes
-the story:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘And our Gray’s Inn men and the Inner Templars were nothing
-discouraged, for all the first dodge, but on Saturday last
-performed their parts exceeding well and with great applause and
-approbation, both from the King and all the company.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In a third letter, to Winwood (iii, 435), he describes
-the adventures of the mask more briefly, and adds the detail that the
-performance was</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘in the new bankquetting house, which for a kind of amends was
-granted to them, though with much repining and contradiction of
-their emulators.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Chamberlain refers to the ‘new’ room of 1607, and not
-to that just put up for the wedding. This was used for the banquet.
-Foscarini reports (<i>V. P.</i> xii. 532) that:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘After the ballet was over their Majesties and their Highnesses
-passed into a great Hall especially built for the purpose, where
-were long tables laden with comfits and thousands of mottoes.
-After the King had made the round of the tables, everything was
-in a moment rapaciously swept away.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The records of the Inns throw light on the finance and organization
-of the mask. From those of the Inner Temple (Inderwick, ii. 72, 76,
-81, 92, 99) we learn that the Inn’s share of the cost was ‘not so
-little as 1200<sup>li</sup>’, that there were payments to Lewis Hele, Nicholas
-Polhill, and Fenner, and for ‘scarlet for the marshal of the mask’,
-that there was a rehearsal for the benchers at Ely House, and that
-funds were raised up to 1616 by assessments of £2 and £1 and by
-assigning the revenue derived from admission fees to chambers. Those
-of Gray’s Inn (Fletcher, 201–8) contain an order for such things to
-be bought ‘as M<sup>r</sup>. Solicitor [Bacon] shall thinke fitt’. One Will
-Gerrard was appointed Treasurer, and an assessment of from £1 to £4
-according to status was to be made for a sum equal to that raised by
-the Inner Temple. There was evidently some difficulty in liquidating
-the bills. In May 1613 an order was made ‘that the gent. late actors in
-the maske at the court shall bring in all ther masking apparrel w<sup>ch</sup>
-they had of the howse charge ... or else the value therof’. In June a
-further order was drafted and then stayed, calling attention to the
-‘sad contempts’ of those affected by the former, ‘albeit none of them
-did contribute anything to the charge’. Each suit had cost 100 marks.
-The offenders were to be discommonsed. In November and again in the
-following February it was found necessary to appropriate admission fees
-towards the debt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD BERNARD (1568–1641).</p>
-
-<p>The translator was born at Epworth, Lincolnshire, took his M.A. from
-Christ’s, Cambridge, in 1598, and became incumbent successively of
-Worksop, Notts., and Batcombe, Somerset.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Terence in English &gt; 1598</i></p>
-
-<p>1598. Terence in English. Fabulae comici facetissimi et elegantissimi
-poetae Terentii omnes Anglice factae primumque hac nova forma nunc
-editae: opera ac industria R. B. in Axholmiensi insula Lincolnsherii
-Epwortheatis. <i>John Legat, Cambridge.</i> [Epistle to Christopher and
-other sons of Sir W. Wray and nephews of Lady Bowes and Lady St. Paul,
-signed by ‘Richard Bernard’, and dated from Epworth, 30 May; Epistle
-to Reader. Includes <i>Adelphi</i>, <i>Andria</i>, <i>Eunuchus</i>,
-<i>Heautontimorumenus</i>, <i>Hecyra</i>, <i>Phormio</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1607.... Secunda editio multo emendatior ... <i>John Legat</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1614, 1629, 1641.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM BIRD (&gt;1597–1619&lt;).</p>
-
-<p>One of the Admiral’s men (cf. ch. xiii), who collaborated with S.
-Rowley (q.v.) in <i>Judas</i> (1601) and in additions to <i>Dr.
-Faustus</i> in 1602.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD BOWER (?-1561).</p>
-
-<p>On his Mastership of the Chapel, cf. ch. xii. He has been supposed to
-be the R. B. who wrote <i>Apius and Virginia</i>, and his hand has also
-been sought in the anonymous <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i> and <i>Common
-Conditions</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SAMUEL BRANDON (?-?).</p>
-
-<p>Beyond his play, nothing is known of him.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Virtuous Octavia. 1594 &lt; &gt; 8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1598, Oct. 5. ‘A booke, intituled, The Tragicomoedye
-of the vertuous Octavia, donne by Samuell Brandon.’ <i>Ponsonby</i>
-(Arber, iii. 127).</p>
-
-<p>1598. The Tragicomoedi of the vertuous Octauia. Done by Samuel
-Brandon. <i>For William Ponsonby.</i> [Verses to Lady Lucia Audelay;
-<i>All’autore</i>, signed ‘Mia’; <i>Prosopopeia al libro</i>, signed
-‘S. B.’; Argument. After text, Epistle to Mary Thinne, signed ‘S. B.’;
-Argument; verse epistles <i>Octavia to Antonius</i> and <i>Antonius to
-Octavia</i>.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by R. B. McKerrow (1909, <i>M. S. R.</i>) and J. S.
-Farmer (1912, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>This is in the manner of Daniel’s <i>Cleopatra</i> (1594), and probably
-a closet drama.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">NICHOLAS BRETON (<i>c.</i> 1545–<i>c.</i> 1626).</p>
-
-<p>A poet and pamphleteer, who possibly contributed to the Elvetham
-entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C) in 1591.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ANTHONY BREWER (<i>c.</i> 1607).</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is known of Brewer beyond his play, unless, as is possible, he
-is the ‘Anth. Brew’ who was acting <i>c.</i> 1624 at the Cockpit (cf.
-F. S. Boas, <i>A Seventeenth Century Theatrical Repertoire</i> in <i>3
-Library</i> for July 1917).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Lovesick King. c. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1655, June 20. ‘A booke called The Lovesick King, an
-English tragicall history with the life &amp; death of Cartis Mundy the
-faire Nunne of Winchester. Written by Anthony Brewer, gent.’ <i>John
-Sweeting</i> (Eyre, i. 486).</p>
-
-<p>1655. The Lovesick King, An English Tragical History: With The Life
-and Death of Cartesmunda, the fair Nun of Winchester. Written by Anth.
-Brewer, Gent. <i>For Robert Pollard, and John Sweeting.</i></p>
-
-<p>1680. The Perjured Nun.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. R. Chetwood (1750, <i>S. C.</i>) and A. E. H.
-Swaen (1907, <i>Materialien</i>, xviii).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: A. E. H.
-Swaen, <i>The Date of B.’s L. K.</i> (1908, <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 87).</p>
-
-<p>There are small bits of evidence, in the use of Danish names from
-<i>Hamlet</i> and other Elizabethan plays, and in a jest on ‘Mondays
-vein to poetize’ (l. 548), to suggest a date of composition long before
-that of publication, but a borrowing from <i>The Knight of the Burning
-Pestle</i> makes it improbable that this can be earlier than 1607.
-The amount of Newcastle local colour and a special mention of ‘those
-Players of Interludes that dwels at <i>Newcastle</i>’ (l. 534) led
-Fleay, i. 34, to conjecture that it was acted in that town.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Anthony Brewer has been confused with Thomas Brewer, or perhaps with
-more than one writer of that name, who wrote various works of popular
-literature, and to whom yet others bearing only the initials T. B.
-are credited, between 1608 and 1656. Thus <i>The Country Girl</i>,
-printed as by T. B. in 1647, is ascribed in Kirkman’s play-lists of
-1661 and 1671 to Antony Brewer, but in Archer’s list of 1656 to Thomas.
-Oliphant (<i>M. P.</i> viii. 422) points out that the scene is in part
-at Edmonton, and thinks it a revision by Massinger of an early work by
-Thomas, who published a pamphlet entitled <i>The Life and Death of the
-Merry Devil of Edmonton</i> in 1608.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ARTHUR BROOKE (<i>ob.</i> 1563).</p>
-
-<p>In 1562 he was admitted to the Inner Temple without fee ‘in
-consideration of certain plays and shows at Christmas last set forth
-by him’ (Inderwick, <i>Inner Temple Records</i>, i. 219). Possibly
-he refers to one of these plays when he says in the epistle to his
-<i>Romeus and Juliet</i> (1562), ‘I saw the same argument lately set
-foorth on stage with more commendation then I can looke for: (being
-there much better set forth then I have or can dooe)’; but if so, he
-clearly was not himself the author.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SAMUEL BROOKE (<i>c.</i> 1574–1631).</p>
-
-<p>Brooke was of a York family, and, like his brother Christopher, the
-poet, a friend of John Donne, whose marriage he earned a prison by
-celebrating in 1601. He entered Trinity, Cambridge, <i>c.</i> 1592,
-took his B.A. in 1595 and his M.A. in 1598. He became chaplain to
-Prince Henry, and subsequently Gresham Professor of Divinity and
-chaplain successively to James and Charles. In 1629 he became Master of
-Trinity, and in 1631, just before his death, Archdeacon of Coventry.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Adelphe. 27 Feb. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>T. C. C. MS.</i> R. 3. 9. ‘Comoedia in Collegii Trin.
-aula bis publice acta. Authore D<sup>no</sup> D<sup>re</sup> Brooke, Coll. Trin.’;
-<i>T. C. C. MS.</i> R. 10. 4, with prologue dated 1662.</p>
-
-<p>The play was produced on 27 Feb. 1613 and repeated on 2 March 1613
-during the visit of Charles and the Elector Frederick to Cambridge.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Scyros. 3 March 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>T. C. C. MS.</i> R. 3. 9. ‘Fabula Pastoralis acta
-coram Principe Charolo et comite Palatino mensis Martii 30 <span class="allsmcap">A.
-D.</span> 1612. Authore D<sup>re</sup> Brooke Coll. Trin.’; <i>T. C. C. MSS.</i>
-R. 3. 37; R. 10. 4; R. 17. 10; O. 3. 4; <i>Emanuel, Cambridge, MS.</i>
-iii. i. 17; <i>Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS.</i> Ee. v. 16.</p>
-
-<p>This also was produced during the visit of Charles and Frederick to
-Cambridge. As pointed out by Greg, <i>Pastoral</i>, 251, the ‘Martii
-30’ of the MSS. is an error for ‘Martii 3<sup>o</sup>’. The play is a version of
-the <i>Filli di Sciro</i> (1607) of G. Bonarelli della Rovere.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Melanthe. 10 March 1615</i></p>
-
-<p>1615, March 27. Melanthe Fabula pastoralis acta cum Jacobus, Magnae
-Brit. Franc. &amp; Hiberniae Rex, Cantabrigiam suam nuper inviseret,
-ibidemque Musarum atque eius animi gratia dies quinque commoraretur.
-Egerunt Alumni Coll. San. et Individuae Trinitatis. Cantabrigiae.
-<i>Cantrellus Legge.</i></p>
-
-<p>The ascription to Brooke is due to the <i>Dering MS.</i> (<i>Gent.
-Mag.</i> 1756, p. 223). Chamberlain (Birch, i. 304) says that the play
-was ‘excellently well written, and as well acted’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM BROWNE (1591–1643?).</p>
-
-<p>Browne was born at Tavistock, educated at the Grammar School there and
-at Exeter College, Oxford, and entered the Inner Temple from Clifford’s
-Inn in Nov. 1611. He is known as a poet, especially by <i>Britannia’s
-Pastorals</i> (1613, 1616), but beyond his mask has no connexion with
-the stage. In later life he was of the household of the Herberts at
-Wilton.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ulysses and Circe. 13 Jan. 1615</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] (<i>a</i>) Emmanuel College, Cambridge, with title, ‘The
-Inner Temple Masque. Presented by the gentlemen there. Jan. 13, 1614.’
-[Epistle to Inner Temple, signed ‘W. Browne’.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span></p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Collection of H. Chandos Pole-Gell, Hopton Hall, Wirksworth
-(in 1894).</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> with Browne’s <i>Works</i> by T. Davies (1772), W. C.
-Hazlitt (1868), and G. Goodwin (1894).</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in green and white, were Knights; the first antimaskers,
-with an ‘antic measure’, two Actaeons, two Midases, two Lycaons, two
-Baboons, and Grillus; the second antimaskers, ‘to a softer tune’, four
-Maids of Circe and three Nereids; the musicians Sirens, Echoes, a
-Woodman, and others; the presenters Triton, Circe, and Ulysses.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the hall of the Inner Temple. Towards the lower end
-was discovered a sea-cliff. The drawing of a traverse discovered a
-wood, in which later two gates flew open, disclosing the maskers asleep
-in an arbour at the end of a glade. Awaked by a charm, they danced
-their first and second measures, took out ladies for ‘the old measures,
-galliards, corantoes, the brawls, etc.’, and danced their last measure.</p>
-
-<p>The Inner Temple records (Inderwick, ii. 99) mention an order of 21
-April 1616 for recompense to the chief cook on account of damage to
-his room in the cloister when it and its chimney were broken down at
-Christmas twelvemonth ‘by such as climbed up at the windows of the hall
-to see the mask’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SIR GEORGE BUCK (<i>ob.</i> 1623).</p>
-
-<p>He was Master of the Revels (cf. ch. iii). For a very doubtful
-ascription to him, on manuscript authority alleged by Collier, of the
-dumb-shows to <i>Locrine</i>, cf. ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JAMES CALFHILL (1530?-1570).</p>
-
-<p>Calfhill was an Eton and King’s College, Cambridge, man, who migrated
-to Oxford and became Student of Christ Church in 1548 and Canon in
-1560. He was in Orders and was Rector of West Horsley when Elizabeth
-was there in 1559. After various preferments, he was nominated Bishop
-of Worcester in 1570, but died before consecration.</p>
-
-<p>On 6 July 1564 Walter Haddon wrote to Abp. Parker (<i>Parker
-Correspondence</i>, 218) deprecating the tone of a sermon by Calfhill
-before the Queen, and said ‘Nunquam in illo loco quisquam minus
-satisfecit, quod maiorem ex eo dolorem omnibus attulit, quoniam admodum
-est illis artibus instructus quas illius theatri celebritas postulat’.
-No play by Calfhill is extant, but his Latin tragedy of <i>Progne</i>
-was given before Elizabeth at Christ Church on 5 Sept. 1566 (cf. ch.
-iv), and appears from Bereblock’s synopsis to have been based on an
-earlier Latin <i>Progne</i> (1558) by Gregorio Corraro.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS CAMPION (1567–1620).</p>
-
-<p>Thomas, son of John Campion, a Chancery clerk of Herts. extraction,
-was born on 12 Feb. 1567, educated at Peterhouse, Cambridge, where he
-took no degree, and admitted on 27 April 1586 to Gray’s Inn, where
-he took part as Hidaspis and Melancholy in the comedy of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span> 16 Jan.
-1588 (cf. ch. vii). He left the law, and probably served in Essex’s
-expedition of 1591 to France. He first appeared as a poet, anonymously,
-in the appendix to Sidney’s <i>Astrophel and Stella</i> (1591), and
-has left several books of songs written as airs for music, often of
-his own composition, as well as a collection of Latin epigrams and
-<i>Observations in the Art of English Poesie</i> (1602). I do not know
-whether he can be the ‘Campnies’ who performed at the Gray’s Inn mask
-of Shrovetide 1595 at Court (cf. s.v. <i>Gesta Grayorum</i>), but one
-of the two hymns in that mask, <i>A Hymn in Praise of Neptune</i> is
-assigned to him by Francis Davison, <i>Poetical Rhapsody</i> (1602),
-sig. K 8, and it is possible that the second hymn, beginning ‘Shadows
-before the shining sun do vanish’, which Davison does not himself
-appear to claim, may also be his. By 1607 he had taken the degree
-of M.D., probably abroad, and he practised as a physician. Through
-Sir Thomas Monson he was entangled, although in no very blameworthy
-capacity, in the Somerset scandals of 1613–15. On 1 March 1620 he died,
-probably of the plague, naming as his legatee Philip Rosseter, with
-whom he had written <i>A Booke of Airs</i> in 1601.</p>
-
-<p>Campion is not traceable as a writer for the stage, although his
-connexion with Monson and Rosseter would have made it not surprising
-to find him concerned with the Queen’s Revels syndicate of 1610. But
-his contribution to the <i>Gesta Grayorum</i> foreshadowed his place,
-second only to Jonson’s, who wrote a <i>Discourse of Poesie</i> (Laing,
-1), now lost, against him, in the mask-poetry of the Jacobean period.
-In addition to his acknowledged masks he may also be responsible for
-part or all of the Gray’s Inn <i>Mountebanks Mask</i> of 1618, printed
-by Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> iii. 320, as a second part of the <i>Gesta
-Grayorum</i>, and by Bullen, <i>Marston</i>, iii. 417, although the
-ascription to Marston is extremely improbable.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1828. J. Nichols. <i>Progresses [&amp;c.] of James the First</i>, ii. 105,
-554, 630, 707. [The four masks.]</p>
-
-<p>1889. A. H. Bullen, <i>Works of T. C.</i> [English and Latin.]</p>
-
-<p>1903. A. H. Bullen, <i>Works of T. C.</i> [English only.]</p>
-
-<p>1907. P. Vivian, <i>Poetical Works (in English) of T. C.</i> (<i>Muses’
-Library</i>).</p>
-
-<p>1909. P. Vivian, <i>C.’s Works</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation.</i>&mdash;T. MacDonagh, <i>T. C. and the Art of English
-Poetry</i> (1913).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lord Hay’s Mask. 6 Jan. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Jan. 26 (Gwyn). ‘A booke called the discription of A
-maske presented before the Kings maiestie at Whitehall on Twelf-night
-last in honour of the Lord Haies and his bryde Daughter and heire to
-the right honorable the Lord Denny, their mariage havinge ben at Court
-the same day solemnised.’ <i>John Browne</i> (Arber, iii. 337).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The discription of a Maske, Presented before the Kinges Maiestie
-at White-Hall, on Twelfth Night last, in honour of the Lord Hayes,
-and his Bride, Daughter and Heire to the Honourable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span> the Lord Dennye,
-their Marriage hauing been the same Day at Court solemnized. To this
-by occasion other small Poems are adioyned. Inuented and set forth by
-Thomas Campion Doctor of Phisicke. <i>John Windet for John Browne.</i>
-[Engraving of the maskers’ habit; Verses to James, Lord De Walden and
-Lord and Lady Hay.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in carnation and silver, concealed at first in a ‘false
-habit’ of green leaves and silver, were nine Knights of Apollo; the
-torchbearers the nine Hours of Night; the presenters Flora, Zephyrus,
-Night, and Hesperus; the musicians Sylvans, who, as the mask was
-predominantly musical, were aided by consorts of instruments and voices
-above the scene and on either side of the hall.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the ‘great hall’ at Whitehall. At the upper end were
-the cloth and chair of state, with ‘scaffolds and seats on either side
-continued to the screen’. Eighteen feet from the screen was a stage,
-which stood three feet higher than the ‘dancing-place’ in front of
-it, and was enclosed by a ‘double veil’ or vertically divided curtain
-representing clouds. The Bower of Flora stood on the right and the
-House of Night on the left at the ends of the screen, and between them
-a grove, behind which, under the window, rose hills with a Tree of
-Diana. In the grove were nine golden trees which performed the first
-dance, and then, at the touch of Night’s wand, were drawn down by an
-engine under the stage, and cleft to reveal the maskers. After two
-more ‘new’ dances, they took out the ladies for ‘measures’. Then they
-danced ‘their lighter dances as corantoes, levaltas and galliards’;
-then a fourth ‘new’ dance; and then ‘putting off their vizards and
-helmets, made a low honour to the King, and attended his Majesty to the
-banqueting place’.</p>
-
-<p>The mask was given, presumably by friends of the bridegroom, in honour
-of the wedding of James Lord Hay and Honora, daughter of Lord Denny.
-The maskers were Lord Walden, Sir Thomas Howard, Sir Henry Carey, Sir
-Richard Preston, Sir John Ashley, Sir Thomas Jarret, Sir John Digby,
-Sir Thomas Badger, and Mr. Goringe. One air for a song and one for a
-song and dance were made by Campion, two for dances by Mr. Lupo, and
-one for a dance by Mr. Thomas Giles.</p>
-
-<p>Few contemporary references to the mask exist. It is probably that
-described in a letter, which I have not seen, from Lady Pembroke to
-Lord Shrewsbury, calendared among other <i>Talbot MSS.</i> of 1607 in
-Lodge, App. 121. No ambassadors were invited&mdash;‘<i>Dieu merci</i>’&mdash;says
-the French ambassador, and Anne, declaring herself ill, stayed away
-(La Boderie, ii. 12, 30). Expenditure on preparing the hall appears in
-the accounts of the Treasurer of the Chamber and the Office of Works
-(Reyher, 520).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Lords’ Mask. 14 Feb. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. <i>For John Budge.</i> [Annexed to <i>Caversham Entertainment</i>
-(q.v.).]</p>
-
-<p>This was for the wedding of Elizabeth. The men maskers, in cloth of
-silver, were eight transformed Stars, the women, also in silver,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-eight transformed Statues; the torchbearers sixteen Fiery Spirits; the
-antimaskers six men and six women Frantics; the presenters Orpheus,
-Mania, Entheus, Prometheus, and Sibylla.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the Banqueting House at Whitehall. The lower part of
-the scene, when discovered, represented a wood, with the thicket of
-Orpheus on the right and the cave of Mania on the left. After the ‘mad
-measure’ of the antimask, the upper part of the scene was discovered
-‘by the fall of a curtain’. Here, amidst clouds, were eight Stars which
-danced, vanishing to give place to the eight men maskers in the House
-of Prometheus. The torchbearers emerged below, and danced. The maskers
-descended on a cloud, behind which the lower part of the scene was
-turned to a façade with four Statues in niches. These and then a second
-four were transformed to women. Then the maskers gave their ‘first new
-entering dance’ and their second dance, and took out the bridal pair
-and others, ‘men women, and women men’. The scene again changed to a
-prospective of porticoes leading to Sibylla’s trophy, an obelisk of
-Fame. A ‘song and dance triumphant’ followed, and finally the maskers’
-‘last new dance’ concluded all ‘at their going out’.</p>
-
-<p>This was a mask of lords and ladies, at the cost of the Exchequer.
-The only names on record are those of the Earls of Montgomery and
-Salisbury, Lord Hay, and Ann Dudley (<i>vide infra</i>). Campion notes
-the ‘extraordinary industry and skill’ of Inigo Jones in ‘the whole
-invention’, and particularly his ‘neat artifice’ in contriving the
-‘motion’ of the Stars.</p>
-
-<p>The wedding masks were naturally of special interest to the Court
-gossips. Chamberlain wrote to Winwood (iii. 421) on 9 Jan.: ‘It is
-said the Lords and Ladyes about the court have appointed a maske
-upon their own charge; but I hear there is order given for £1500 to
-provide one upon the King’s cost, and a £1000 for fireworks. The Inns
-of Court are likewise dealt with for two masks against that time, and
-mean to furnish themselves for the service.’ On 29 Jan. he added (iii.
-429), ‘Great preparations here are of braverie, masks and fireworks
-against the marriage.’ On 14 Jan. one G. F. Biondi informed Carleton
-(<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxii. 12) that the Earls of Montgomery and
-Salisbury and Lord Hay were practising for the wedding mask. On 20
-Jan. Sir Charles Montagu wrote to Sir Edward Montagu (<i>H. M. C.
-Buccleugh MSS.</i> i. 239): ‘Here is not any news stirring, only much
-preparations at this wedding for masks, whereof shall be three, one of
-eight lords and eight ladies, whereof my cousin Ann Dudley one, and two
-from the Inner Courts, who they say will lay it on.’</p>
-
-<p>The Lords’ mask is certainly less prominent than those of the Inns of
-Court (<i>vide sub</i> Beaumont and Chapman) in the actual descriptions
-of the wedding. All three are recorded in Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 916,
-in <i>Wilbraham’s Journal</i> (<i>Camden Misc.</i> x), 110, in reports
-of the Venetian ambassador (<i>V. P.</i> xii. 499, 532), and in the
-contemporary printed accounts of the whole ceremonies (cf. ch. xxiv).
-These do not add much to the printed descriptions of the mask-writers,
-on which, indeed, they are largely based. The fullest unofficial
-account was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span> given by Chamberlain to Alice and Dudley Carleton in three
-letters (Birch, i. 224, 229; <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxii. 30, 31,
-48). On 18 Feb. he wrote: ‘That night [of the wedding] was the Lords’
-mask, whereof I hear no great commendation, save only for riches, their
-devices being long and tedious, and more like a play than a mask.’
-This criticism he repeated in a letter to Winwood (iii. 435). To Alice
-Carleton he added, after describing the bravery of the Inns of Court:
-‘All this time there was a course taken, and so notified, that no
-lady or gentlewoman should be admitted to any of these sights with a
-vardingale, which was to gain the more room, and I hope may serve to
-make them quite left off in time. And yet there were more scaffolds,
-and more provision made for room than ever I saw, both in the hall and
-banqueting room, besides a new room built to dine and dance in.’ On
-25 February, when all was over, he reported: ‘Our revels and triumphs
-within doors gave great contentment, being both dainty and curious
-in devices and sumptuous in show, specially the inns of court, whose
-two masks stood them in better than £4000, besides the gallantry and
-expense of private gentlemen that were but <i>ante ambul[at]ores</i>
-and went only to accompany them.... The next night [21 Feb.] the King
-invited the maskers, with their assistants, to the number of forty, to
-a solemn supper in the new marriage room, where they were well treated
-and much graced with kissing her majesty’s hand, and every one having a
-particular <i>accoglienza</i> from him. The King husbanded this matter
-so well that this feast was not at his own cost, but he and his company
-won it upon a wager of running at the ring, of the prince and his nine
-followers, who paid £30 a man. The King, queen, prince, Palatine and
-Lady Elizabeth sat at table by themselves, and the great lords and
-ladies, with the maskers, above four score in all, sat at another long
-table, so that there was no room for them that made the feast, but they
-were fain to be lookers on, which the young Lady Rich took no great
-pleasure in, to see her husband, who was one that paid, not so much
-as drink for his money. The ambassadors that were at this wedding and
-shows were the French, Venetian, Count Henry [of Nassau] and Caron
-for the States. The Spaniard was or would be sick, and the archduke’s
-ambassador being invited for the second day, made a sullen excuse; and
-those that were present were not altogether so well pleased but that
-I hear every one had some punctilio of disgust.’ John Finett, in a
-letter of 22 Feb. to Carleton (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxii. 32), says
-the mask of the Lords was ‘rich and ingenious’ and those of the Inns
-‘much commended’. His letter is largely taken up with the ambassadorial
-troubles to which Chamberlain refers. Later he dealt with these in
-<i>Philoxenis</i> (1656), 1 (cf. Sullivan, 79). The chief marfeast was
-the archiducal ambassador Boiscot, who resented an invitation to the
-second or third day, while in the diplomatic absence through sickness
-of the Spaniard the Venetian ambassador was asked with the French for
-the first day. Finett was charged with various plausible explanations.
-James did not think it his business to decide questions of precedence.
-It was customary to group Venice and France. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span> Venetian had brought
-an extraordinary message of congratulation from his State, and had put
-his retinue into royal liveries at great expense. The wedding was a
-continuing feast, and all its days equally glorious. In fact, whether
-at Christmas or Shrovetide, the last day was in some ways the most
-honourable, and it had originally been planned to have the Lords’
-mask on Shrove-Tuesday. But Boiscot could not be persuaded to accept
-his invitation. The ambassadors who did attend were troublesome, at
-supper, rather than at the mask. The French ambassador ‘made an offer
-to precede the prince’. His wife nearly left because she was placed
-below, instead of above, the Viscountesses. The Venetian claimed a
-chair instead of a stool, and a place above the carver, but in vain.
-His rebuff did not prevent him from speaking well of the Lords’ mask,
-which he called ‘very beautiful’, specially noting the three changes of
-scene.</p>
-
-<p>Several financial documents relating to the mask are preserved (Reyher,
-508, 522; Devon, 158, 164; Collier, i. 364; Hazlitt, <i>E. D. S.</i>
-43; <i>Archaeologia</i>, xxvi. 380). In <i>Abstract</i> 14 the charges
-are given as £400, but the total charges must have been much higher.
-Chamberlain (<i>vide supra</i>) spoke of £1,500 as assigned to them.
-A list of personal fees, paid through Meredith Morgan, alone (Reyher,
-509) amounts to £411 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> Campion had £66 13<i>s.</i>
-4<i>d.</i>, Jones £50, the dancers Jerome Herne, Bochan, Thomas Giles
-and Confess £30 or £40 each, the musicians John Cooper, Robert Johnson,
-and Thomas Lupo £10 or £20 each. One Steven Thomas had £15, ‘he that
-played to y<sup>e</sup> boyes’ £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, and ‘2 that played to
-y<sup>e</sup> Antick Maske’ £11; while fees of £1 each went to 42 musicians, 12
-mad folks, 5 speakers, 10 of the King’s violins and 3 grooms of the
-chamber. The supervision of ‘emptions and provisions’ was entrusted to
-the Lord Chamberlain and the Master of the Horse.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Caversham Entertainment. 27–8 April 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. A Relation of the late royall Entertainment giuen by the Right
-Honorable the Lord Knowles, at Cawsome-House neere Redding: to our
-most Gracious Queene, Queene Anne, in her Progresse toward the Bathe,
-vpon the seuen and eight and twentie dayes of Aprill. 1613. Whereunto
-is annexed the Description, Speeches and Songs of the Lords Maske,
-presented in the Banquetting-house on the Marriage night of the High
-and Mightie, Count Palatine, and the Royally descended the Ladie
-Elizabeth. Written by Thomas Campion. <i>For John Budge.</i></p>
-
-<p>On arrival were speeches, a song, and a dance by a Cynic, a Traveller,
-two Keepers, and two Robin Hood men at the park gate; then speeches in
-the lower garden by a Gardener, and a song by his man and boy; then a
-concealed song in the upper garden.</p>
-
-<p>After supper was a mask in the hall by eight ‘noble and princely
-personages’ in green with vizards, accompanied by eight pages as
-torchbearers, and presented by the Cynic, Traveller, Gardener, and
-their ‘crew’, and Sylvanus. The maskers gave a ‘new dance’; then took
-out the ladies, among whom Anne ‘vouchsafed to make herself the head
-of their revels, and graciously to adorn the place with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span> her personal
-dancing’; ‘much of the night being thus spent with variety of dances,
-the masquers made a conclusion with a second new dance’.</p>
-
-<p>On departure were a speech and song by the Gardeners, and presents of a
-bag of linen, apron, and mantle by three country maids.</p>
-
-<p>Chamberlain wrote of this entertainment to Winwood (iii. 454) on 6 May,
-‘The King brought her on her way to Hampton Court; her next move was
-to Windsor, then to Causham, a house of the Lord Knolles not far from
-Reading, where she was entertained with Revells, and a gallant mask
-performed by the Lord Chamberlain’s four sons, the Earl of Dorset, the
-Lord North, Sir Henry Rich, and Sir Henry Carie, and at her parting
-presented with a dainty coverled or quilt, a rich carrquenet, and a
-curious cabinet, to the value in all of 1500<sup>l</sup>.’ He seems to have
-sent a similar account in an unprinted letter of 29 April to Carleton
-(<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxii. 120). The four sons of Lord Chamberlain
-Suffolk who appear in other masks are Theophilus Lord Walden, Sir
-Thomas, Sir Henry, and Sir Charles Howard.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lord Somerset’s Mask [Squires]. 26 Dec. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1614. The Description of a Maske: Presented in the Banqueting roome at
-Whitehall, on Saint Stephens night last, At the Mariage of the Right
-Honourable the Earle of Somerset: And the right noble the Lady Frances
-Howard. Written by Thomas Campion. Whereunto are annexed diuers choyse
-Ayres composed for this Maske that may be sung with a single voyce to
-the Lute or Base-Viall. <i>E. A. for Laurence Lisle.</i></p>
-
-<p>The maskers were twelve Disenchanted Knights; the first antimaskers
-four Enchanters and Enchantresses, four Winds, four Elements, and four
-Parts of the Earth; the second antimaskers twelve Skippers in red and
-white; the presenters four Squires and three Destinies; the musicians
-Eternity, Harmony, and a chorus of nine.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the banqueting room at Whitehall, of which the upper
-part, ‘where the state is placed’, and the sides were ‘theatred’ with
-pillars and scaffolds. At the lower end was a triumphal arch, ‘which
-enclosed the whole works’ and behind it the scene, from which a curtain
-was drawn. Above was a clouded sky; beneath a sea bounded by two
-promontories bearing pillars of gold, and in front ‘a pair of stairs
-made exceeding curiously in form of a scallop shell’, between two
-gardens with seats for the maskers. After the first antimask, danced
-‘in a strange kind of confusion’, the Destinies brought the Queen a
-golden tree, whence she plucked a bough to disenchant the Knights,
-who then appeared, six from a cloud, six from the golden pillars.
-The scene changed, and ‘London with the Thames is very artificially
-presented’. The maskers gave the first and second dance, and then
-danced with the ladies, ‘wherein spending as much time as they held
-fitting, they returned to the seats provided for them’. Barges then
-brought the second antimask. After the maskers’ last dance, the Squires
-complimented the royalties and bridal pair.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span></p>
-
-<p>This was a wedding mask, by lords and gentlemen. The maskers were
-the Duke of Lennox, the Earls of Pembroke, Dorset, Salisbury, and
-Montgomery, the Lords Walden, Scroope, North, and Hay, Sir Thomas,
-Sir Henry, and Sir Charles Howard. The ‘workmanship’ was undertaken
-by ‘M. Constantine’ [Servi], ‘but he being too much of himself, and
-no way to be drawn to impart his intentions, failed so far in the
-assurance he gave that the main invention, even at the last cast, was
-of force drawn into a far narrower compass than was from the beginning
-intended’. One song was by Nicholas Lanier; three were by [Giovanni]
-Coprario and were sung by John Allen and Lanier. G. F. Biondi informed
-Carleton on 24 Nov. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxv. 25) of the ‘costly
-ballets’ preparing for Somerset’s wedding. On 25 Nov. Chamberlain wrote
-to Carleton (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxv. 28; Birch, i. 278): ‘All
-the talk is now of masking and feasting at these towardly marriages,
-whereof the one is appointed on St. Stephen’s day, in Christmas,
-the other for Twelfthtide. The King bears the charge of the first,
-all saving the apparel, and no doubt the queen will do as much on
-her side, which must be a mask of maids, if they may be found....
-The maskers, besides the lord chamberlain’s four sons, are named to
-be the Earls of Rutland, Pembroke, Montgomery, Dorset, Salisbury,
-the Lords Chandos, North, Compton, and Hay; Edward Sackville, that
-killed the Lord Bruce, was in the list, but was put out again; and
-I marvel he would offer himself, knowing how little gracious he is,
-and that he hath been assaulted once or twice since his return.’ The
-Queen’s entertainment, which did not prove to be a mask, was Daniel’s
-<i>Hymen’s Triumph</i>. The actual list of performers in the mask of 26
-Dec. was somewhat differently made up. On 18 Nov. Lord Suffolk had sent
-invitations through Sir Thomas Lake to the Earl of Rutland and Lord
-Willoughby d’Eresby (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxv. 15; Reyher, 505),
-but apparently neither accepted. He also wrote to Lake on 8 Dec. (<i>S.
-P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxv. 37) hoping that Sackville might be allowed to
-take part, not in the mask, but in the tilt (as in fact he did), at
-his cousin’s wedding. On 30 Dec. Chamberlain sent Alice Carleton an
-accurate list of the actual maskers (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxv. 53;
-Birch, i. 285), with the comment, ‘I hear little or no commendation
-of the mask made by the lords that night, either for device or
-dancing, only it was rich and costly’. The ‘great bravery’ and masks
-at the wedding are briefly recorded by Gawdy, 175, and a list of the
-festivities is given by Howes in Stowe, <i>Annales</i> (1615), 928.
-He records five in all: ‘A gallant maske of Lords’ [Campion’s] on 26
-Dec., the wedding night, ‘a maske of the princes gentlemen’ on 29 Dec.
-and 3 Jan. [Jonson’s <i>Irish Mask</i>], ‘2 seuerall pleasant maskes’
-at Merchant Taylors on 4 Jan. [including Middleton’s lost <i>Mask of
-Cupid</i>], and a Gray’s Inn mask on 6 Jan. [<i>Flowers</i>].</p>
-
-<p>The ambassadorial complications of the year are described by Finett,
-12 (cf. Sullivan, 84). Spain had been in the background at the
-royal wedding of the previous year, and as there was a new Spanish
-ambassador (Sarmiento) this was made an excuse for asking him with
-the archiducal ambassador on 26 Dec. and the French and Venetian<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-ambassadors on 6 Jan. By way of compensation these were also asked to
-the Roxburghe-Drummond wedding on 2 Feb. They received purely formal
-invitations to the Somerset wedding, and returned excuses for staying
-away. The agents of Florence and Savoy were asked, and when they raised
-the question of precedence were told that they were not ambassadors and
-might scramble for places.</p>
-
-<p>I am not quite clear whether the costs of this mask, as well as of
-Jonson’s <i>Irish Mask</i>, fell on the Exchequer. Chamberlain’s notice
-of 25 Nov. (<i>vide supra</i>) is not conclusive. Reyher, 523, assigns
-most of the financial documents to the <i>Irish Mask</i>, but an
-account of the Works for an arch and pilasters to the Lords’ mask; and
-the payment to Meredith Morgan in Sept. 1614 (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-lxxvii. 92), which he does not cite, appears from the Calendar to be
-for more than one mask. The <i>Irish Mask</i> needed no costly scenery.</p>
-
-<p>J[ohn] B[ruce], (<i>Camden Misc.</i> v), describes a late eighteenth
-or early nineteenth century forgery, of unknown origin, purporting to
-describe one of the masks at the Somerset wedding and other events. The
-details used belong partly to 1613–14 and partly to 1614–15.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ELIZABETH, LADY CARY (1586–1639).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mariam. 1602 &lt; &gt; 5.</i></p>
-
-<p>I have omitted a notice of this closet play, printed in 1613, by a
-slip, and can only add to the edition (<i>M. S. C.</i>) of 1914 that
-Lady Cary was married in 1602 (Chamberlain, 199), not 1600. She wrote
-an earlier play on a Syracusan theme.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SIR ROBERT CECIL, EARL OF SALISBURY (1563–1612).</p>
-
-<p>But few details of the numerous royal entertainments given by Sir
-William Cecil, Lord Burghley, and his sons Sir Thomas Cecil, Lord
-Burghley and afterwards Earl of Exeter, and Sir Robert Cecil, Earl of
-Salisbury, are upon record. It is, on the whole, convenient to note
-here, rather than in ch. xxiv, those which have a literary element.
-Robert Cecil contributed to that of 1594, and possibly to others.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">i. <i>Theobalds Entertainment of 1571 (William Lord Burghley).</i></p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth was presented with verses and a picture of the newly-finished
-house on 21 Sept. 1571 (Haynes-Murdin, ii. 772).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ii. <i>Theobalds Entertainment of 1591 (William Lord Burghley).</i></p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth came for 10–20 May 1591, and knighted Robert Cecil.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Strype, <i>Annals</i>, iv. 108, and Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i>
-iii. 75, print a mock charter, dated 10 May 1591, and addressed by
-Lord Chancellor Hatton, in the Queen’s name, ‘To the disconsolate and
-retired spryte, the Heremite of Tybole’, in which he is called upon to
-return to the world.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Collier, i. 276, followed by Bullen, <i>Peele</i>, ii.
-305, prints from a MS. in the collection of Frederic Ouvry a Hermit’s
-speech, subscribed with the initials G. P. and said by Collier to be in
-Peele’s hand. This is a petition to the Queen for a writ to cause the
-founder of the hermit’s cell to restore it. This founder has himself
-occupied it for two years<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span> and a few months since the death of his
-wife, and has obliged the hermit to govern his house. Numerous personal
-allusions make it clear that the ‘founder’ is Burghley, and as Lady
-Burghley died 4 April 1589, the date should be in 1591.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) Bullen, <i>Peele</i>, ii. 309, following Dyce, prints two
-speeches by a Gardener and a Mole Catcher, communicated by Collier to
-Dyce from another MS. The ascription to Peele is conjectural, and R.
-W. Bond, <i>Lyly</i>, i. 417, claims them, also by conjecture, for
-Lyly. However this may be, they are addressed to the Queen, who has
-reigned thirty-three years, and introduce the gift of a jewel in a
-box. Elizabeth had not reigned full thirty-three years in May 1591,
-but perhaps near enough. That Theobalds was the locality is indicated
-by a reference to Pymms at Edmonton, a Cecil property 6 miles from
-Theobalds, as occupied by ‘the youngest son of this honourable old
-man’. One is bound to mistrust manuscripts communicated by Collier,
-but there is evidence that Burghley retired to ‘Colling’s Lodge’ near
-Theobalds in grief at his wife’s death in 1589, and also that in 1591,
-when he failed to establish Robert Cecil as Secretary, he made a
-diplomatic pretence of giving up public life (Hume, <i>The Great Lord
-Burghley</i>, 439, 446).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">iii. <i>Theobalds Entertainment of 1594 (William Lord Burghley)</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Hermit was brought into play again when Elizabeth next visited
-Theobalds, in 1594 (13–23 June). He delivered an Oration, in which he
-recalled the recovery of his cell at her last coming, and expressed
-a fear that ‘my young master’ might wish to use it. No doubt the
-alternative was that Robert Cecil should become Secretary. The oration,
-‘penned by Sir Robert Cecill’, is printed by Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> iii.
-241, from <i>Bodl. Rawlinson MS. D</i> 692 (<i>Bodl.</i> 13464), f. 106.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">iv. <i>Wimbledon Entertainment of 1599 (Thomas Lord Burghley)</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A visit of 27–30 July 1599 is the probable occasion for an address of
-welcome, not mimetic in character, by a porter, John Joye, preserved
-in <i>Bodl. Tanner MS.</i> 306, f. 266, and endorsed ‘The queenes
-entertainment att Wimbledon 99’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">v. <i>Cecil House Entertainment of 1602 (Sir Robert Cecil).</i></p>
-
-<p>Elizabeth dined with Cecil on 6 Dec. 1602.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Manningham, 99, records, ‘Sundry devises; at hir entraunce,
-three women, a maid, a widdowe, and a wife, each commending their owne
-states, but the Virgin preferred; an other, on attired in habit of a
-Turke desyrous to see hir Majestie, but as a straunger without hope of
-such grace, in regard of the retired manner of hir Lord, complained;
-answere made, howe gracious hir Majestie in admitting to presence, and
-howe able to discourse in anie language; whiche the Turke admired,
-and, admitted, presents hir with a riche mantle.’ Chamberlain, 169,
-adds, ‘You like the Lord Kepers devises so ill, that I cared not to get
-Mr. Secretaries that were not much better, saving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span> a pretty dialogue
-of John Davies ’twixt a Maide, a widow, and a wife.’ <i>A Contention
-Betwixt a Wife, a Widdow, and a Maide</i> was registered on 2 Apr. 1604
-(Arber iii. 258), appeared with the initials I. D. in Francis Davison’s
-<i>Poetical Rhapsody</i> (ed. 2, 1608) and is reprinted by Grosart in
-the <i>Poems</i> of Sir John Davies (q.v.) from the ed. of 1621, where
-it is ascribed to ‘Sir I. D.’.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> iii. 76, prints from <i>Harl. MS.</i>
-286, f. 248, ‘A Conference betweene a Gent. Huisher and a Poet, before
-the Queene, at M<sup>r</sup>. Secretaryes House. By John Davies.’ He assigns it
-to 1591, but Cecil was not then Secretary, and it probably belongs to
-1602.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) <i>Hatfield MSS</i>. xii. 568 has verses endorsed ‘1602’ and
-beginning ‘Now we have present made, To Cynthya, Phebe, Flora’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">vi. <i>Theobalds Entertainment of 1606 (Earl of Salisbury).</i></p>
-
-<p>See s.v. Jonson; also the mask described by Harington (ch. v).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">vii. <i>Theobalds Entertainment of 1607 (Earl of Salisbury).</i></p>
-
-<p>See s.v. Jonson.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE CHAPMAN (<i>c.</i> 1560–1634).</p>
-
-<p>Chapman was born in 1559 or 1560 near Hitchin in Hertfordshire.
-Anthony Wood believed him to have been at Oxford, and possibly also at
-Cambridge, but neither residence can be verified. It is conjectured
-that residence at Hitchin and soldiering in the Low Countries may have
-helped to fill the long period before his first appearance as a writer,
-unless indeed the isolated translation <i>Fedele and Fortunio</i>
-(1584) is his, with <i>The Shadow of Night</i> (1594). This shows him
-a member of the philosophical circle of which the centre was Thomas
-Harriot. The suggestion of W. Minto that he was the ‘rival poet’ of
-Shakespeare’s <i>Sonnets</i> is elaborated by Acheson, who believes
-that Shakespeare drew him as Holophernes and as Thersites, and accepted
-by Robertson; it would be more plausible if any relation between the
-Earl of Southampton and Chapman, earlier than a stray dedication shared
-with many others in 1609, could be established. By 1596, and possibly
-earlier, Chapman was in Henslowe’s pay as a writer for the Admiral’s.
-His plays, which proved popular, included, besides the extant <i>Blind
-Beggar of Alexandria</i> and <i>Humorous Day’s Mirth</i>, five others,
-of which some and perhaps all have vanished. These were <i>The Isle
-of a Woman</i>, afterwards called <i>The Fount of New Fashions</i>
-(May–Oct. 1598), <i>The World Runs on Wheels</i>, afterwards called
-<i>All Fools but the Fool</i> (Jan.–July 1599), <i>Four Kings</i> (Oct.
-1598–Jan. 1599), a ‘tragedy of Bengemens plotte’ (Oct.–Jan. 1598;
-cf. s.v. Jonson) and a pastoral tragedy (July 1599). His reputation
-both for tragedy and for comedy was established when Meres wrote his
-<i>Palladis Tamia</i> in 1598. During 1599 Chapman disappears from
-Henslowe’s diary, and in 1600 or soon after began his series of plays
-for the Chapel, afterwards Queen’s Revels, children. This lasted until
-1608, when his first indiscretion of <i>Eastward Ho!</i> (1605), in
-reply to which he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span> caricatured as Bellamont in Dekker and Webster’s
-<i>Northward Ho!</i>, was followed by a second in <i>Byron</i>. He now
-probably dropped his connexion with the stage, at any rate for many
-years. After completing Marlowe’s <i>Hero and Leander</i> in 1598, he
-had begun his series of Homeric translations, and these Prince Henry,
-to whom he had been appointed sewer in ordinary at the beginning of
-James’s reign, now bade him pursue, with the promise of £300, to which
-on his death-bed in 1612 he added another of a life-pension. These
-James failed to redeem, and Chapman also lost his place as sewer. His
-correspondence contains complaints of poverty, probably of this or a
-later date, and indications of an attempt, with funds supplied by a
-brother, to mend his fortunes by marriage with a widow. He found a new
-patron in the Earl of Somerset, wrote one of the masks for the wedding
-of the Princess Elizabeth in 1613, and went on with Homer, completing
-his task in 1624. He lived until 12 May 1634, and his tomb by Inigo
-Jones still stands at St. Giles-in-the-Fields. In his later years he
-seems to have touched up some of his dramatic work and possibly to have
-lent a hand to the younger dramatist Shirley. Jonson told Drummond in
-1619 that ‘next himself, only Fletcher and Chapman could make a mask’,
-and that ‘Chapman and Fletcher were loved of him’ (Laing, 4, 12), and
-some of Jonson’s extant letters appear to confirm the kindly relations
-which these phrases suggest. But a fragment of invective against Jonson
-left by Chapman on his death-bed suggests that they did not endure for
-ever.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1873. [R. H. Shepherd.] <i>The Comedies and Tragedies of George
-Chapman.</i> 3 vols. (<i>Pearson reprints</i>). [Omits <i>Eastward
-Ho!</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1874–5. R. H. Shepherd. <i>The Works of George Chapman.</i> 3 vols.
-[With Swinburne’s essay. Includes <i>The Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i>
-and <i>Two Wise Men and All the Rest Fools</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1895. W. L. Phelps. <i>The Best Plays of George Chapman</i> (<i>Mermaid
-Series</i>). [<i>All Fools</i>, the two <i>Bussy</i> and the two
-<i>Byron</i> plays.]</p>
-
-<p>1910–14. T. M. Parrott. <i>The Plays and Poems of George Chapman.</i>
-3 vols. [Includes <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, <i>The Ball</i>,
-<i>Alphonsus Emperor of Germany</i>, and <i>Revenge for Honour</i>. The
-<i>Poems</i> not yet issued.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: F. Bodenstedt, <i>C. in seinem Verhältniss zu
-Shakespeare</i> (1865, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, i. 300); A. C. Swinburne,
-<i>G. C.: A Critical Essay</i> (1875); E. Koeppel, <i>Quellen-Studien
-zu den Dramen G. C.’s, &amp;c.</i> (1897, <i>Quellen und Forschungen</i>,
-lxxxii); B. Dobell, <i>Newly discovered Documents of the Elizabethan
-and Jacobean Periods</i> (1901, <i>Ath.</i> i. 369, 403, 433, 465); A.
-Acheson, <i>Shakespeare and the Rival Poet</i> (1903); E. E. Stoll,
-<i>On the Dates of some of C.’s Plays</i> (1905, <i>M. L. N.</i> xx.
-206); T. M. Parrott, <i>Notes on the Text of C.’s Plays</i> (1907,
-<i>Anglia</i>, xxx. 349, 501); F. L. Schoell, <i>Chapman as a Comic
-Writer</i> (1911, <i>Paris diss.</i>, unprinted, but used by Parrott);
-J. M. Robertson, <i>Shakespeare and C.</i> (1917).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><i>The Blind Beggar of Alexandria. 1596</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1598, Aug. 15. ‘A booke intituled The blynde begger
-of Alexandrya, vppon Condicon thatt yt belonge to noe other man.’
-<i>William Jones</i> (Arber, iii. 124).</p>
-
-<p>1598. The Blinde begger of Alexandria, most pleasantly discoursing his
-variable humours in disguised shapes full of conceite and pleasure.
-As it hath beene sundry times publickly acted in London, by the right
-honorable the Earle of Nottingham, Lord high Admirall his seruantes. By
-George Chapman: Gentleman. <i>For William Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p>The play was produced by the Admiral’s on 12 Feb. 1596; properties
-were bought for a revival in May and June 1601. P. A. Daniel shows in
-<i>Academy</i> (1888), ii. 224, that five of the six passages under the
-head of <i>Irus</i> in <i>Edward Pudsey’s Notebook</i>, taken in error
-by R. Savage, <i>Stratford upon Avon Notebooks</i>, i. 7 (1888) to be
-from an unknown play of Shakespeare, appear with slight variants in the
-1598 text. This, which is very short, probably represents a ‘cut’ stage
-copy. Pudsey is traceable as an actor (cf. ch. xv) in 1626.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>An Humorous Day’s Mirth. 1597</i></p>
-
-<p>1599. A pleasant Comedy entituled: An Numerous dayes Myrth. As it hath
-beene sundrie times publikely acted by the right honourable the Earle
-of Nottingham Lord high Admirall his seruants. By G. C. <i>Valentine
-Syms</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The 1598 inventories of the Admiral’s (Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-115, 119) include Verone’s son’s hose and Labesha’s cloak, which
-justifies Fleay, i. 55, in identifying the play with the comedy of
-<i>Humours</i> produced by that company on 1 May 1597. It is doubtless
-also the play of which John Chamberlain wrote to Dudley Carleton
-(Chamberlain, 4) on 11 June 1597, ‘We have here a new play of humors
-in very great request, and I was drawne along to it by the common
-applause, but my opinion of it is (as the fellow saide of the shearing
-of hogges), that there was a great crie for so litle wolle.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Gentleman Usher. 1602</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] For an unverified MS. cf. s.v. <i>Monsieur D’Olive.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, Nov. 26 (Harsnett). ‘A book called Vincentio and
-Margaret.’ <i>Valentine Syms</i> (iii. 305).</p>
-
-<p>1606. The Gentleman Usher. By George Chapman. <i>V. S. for Thomas
-Thorpe.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by T. M. Parrott (1907, <i>B.
-L.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: O. Cohn, <i>Zu den Quellen von C.’s G.
-U.</i> (1912, <i>Frankfort Festschrift</i>, 229).</p>
-
-<p>There is no indication of a company, but the use of a mask and songs
-confirm the general probability that the play was written for the
-Chapel or Revels. It was later than <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i> (q.v.),
-to the title-rôle of which <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 81 alludes, but of this also
-the date is uncertain. Parrott’s ‘1602’ is plausible enough, but 1604
-is also possible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>All Fools. 1604</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1605. Al Fooles A Comedy, Presented at the Black Fryers, And lately
-before his Maiestie. Written by George Chapman. <i>For Thomas
-Thorpe.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue. The copies show many textual
-variations.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>2, 3</sup> (1780–1827) and by W. Scott
-(1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> ii) and T. M. Parrott (1907, <i>B.
-L.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: M. Stier, <i>C.’s All Fools mit
-Berücksichtigung seiner Quellen</i> (1904, <i>Halle diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Court performance was on 1 Jan. 1605 (cf. App. B), and the play
-was therefore probably on the Blackfriars stage in 1604. There is a
-reminiscence of Ophelia’s flowers in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 232, and the
-prologue seems to criticize the <i>Poetomachia</i>.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who can show cause why th’ ancient comic vein</div>
- <div>Of Eupolis and Cratinus (now reviv’d</div>
- <div>Subject to personal application)</div>
- <div>Should be exploded by some bitter spleens.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">But in Jan.–July 1599 Henslowe paid Chapman £8 10<i>s.</i> on behalf
-of the Admiral’s for <i>The World Runs on Wheels</i>. The last
-entry is for ‘his boocke called the world Rones a whelles &amp; now all
-foolles but the foolle’. This seems to me, more clearly than to Greg
-(<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 203), to indicate a single play and a changed
-title. I am less certain, however, that he is right in adopting the
-view of Fleay, i. 59, that it was an earlier version of the Blackfriars
-play. It may be so, and the date of ‘the seventeenth of November,
-fifteen hundred and so forth’ used for a deed in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 331
-lends some confirmation. But the change of company raises a doubt,
-and there is no ‘fool’ in <i>All Fools</i>. An alternative conjecture
-is that the Admiral’s reverted to the original title for their play,
-leaving a modification of the amended one available for Chapman in
-1604. Collier (Dodsley<sup>3</sup>) printed a dedicatory sonnet to Sir Thomas
-Walsingham. This exists only in a single copy, in which it has been
-printed on an inserted leaf. T. J. Wise (<i>Ath.</i> 1908, i. 788) and
-Parrott, ii. 726, show clearly that it is a forgery.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Monsieur D’Olive. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] See <i>infra</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1606. Monsieur D’Olive. A Comedie, as it was sundrie times acted by her
-Majesties children at the Blacke-Friers. By George Chapman. <i>T. C.
-for William Holmes</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> iii).</p>
-
-<p>The title-page suggests a Revels rather than a Chapel play, and Fleay,
-i. 59, Stoll, and Parrott all arrive at 1604 for the date, which is
-rendered probable by allusions to the Jacobean knights (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i.
-263; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 77), to the calling in of monopolies (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i. 284), to the preparation of costly embassies (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 114),
-and perhaps to the royal dislike of tobacco (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 164).
-There is a reminiscence of <i>Hamlet</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 393, in
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 91:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i10">our great men</div>
- <div>Like to a mass of clouds that now seem like</div>
- <div>An elephant, and straightways like an ox,</div>
- <div>And then a mouse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">On the inadequate ground that woman’s ‘will’ is mentioned in
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 89,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span> Fleay regarded the play as a revision of one
-written by Chapman for the Admiral’s in 1598 under the title of
-<i>The Will of a Woman</i>. But Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 194)
-interprets Henslowe’s entry ‘the iylle of a woman’ as <i>The Isle of
-Women</i>. The 1598 play seems to have been renamed <i>The Fount of New
-Fashions</i>. Hazlitt, <i>Manual</i>, 89, 94, says part Heber’s sale
-included MSS. both of <i>The Fount of New Fashions</i>, and of <i>The
-Gentleman Usher</i> under the title of <i>The Will of a Woman</i>, but
-Greg could not find these in the sale catalogue.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Bussy D’Ambois. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, June 3 (Buck). ‘The tragedie of Busye D’Amboise.
-Made by George Chapman.’ <i>William Aspley</i> (Arber, iii. 350).</p>
-
-<p>1607. Bussy D’Ambois. A Tragedie: As it hath been often presented at
-Paules. <i>For William Aspley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1608. <i>For William Aspley.</i> [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>1641. As it hath been often Acted with great Applause. Being much
-corrected and amended by the Author before his death. <i>A. N. for
-Robert Lunne.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1646. <i>T. W. for Robert Lunne.</i> [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>1657.... the Author, George Chapman, Gent. Before his death. <i>For
-Joshua Kirton.</i> [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> iii), F.
-S. Boas (1905, <i>B. L.</i>), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: T. M. Parrott, <i>The Date of C.’s B.
-d’A.</i> (1908, <i>M. L. R.</i> iii. 126).</p>
-
-<p>The play was acted by Paul’s, who disappear in 1606. It has been
-suggested that it dates in some form from 1598 or earlier, because Pero
-is a female character, and an Admiral’s inventory of 1598 (<i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 120) has ‘Perowes sewt, which W<sup>m</sup> Sley were’. As Sly had
-been a Chamberlain’s man since 1594, this must have been a relic of
-some obsolete play. But the impossible theory seems to have left
-a trace on the suggestion of Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 198) that
-Chapman may have worked on the basis of the series of plays on <i>The
-Civil Wars of France</i> written by Dekker (q.v.) and others for the
-Admiral’s at a later date in 1598 than that of the inventories. From
-one of these plays, however, might come the reminiscence of a ‘trusty
-Damboys’ in <i>Satiromastix</i> (1601), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 174. For
-<i>Bussy</i> itself a jest on ‘leap-year’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 82) points
-to either 1600 or 1604, and allusions to Elizabeth as an ‘old queen’
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 12), to a ‘knight of the new edition’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-ii. 124), with which may be compared Day, <i>Isle of Gulls</i> (1606),
-i. 3, ‘gentlemen ... of the best and last edition, of the Dukes own
-making’, and to a ‘new denizened lord’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 173) point
-to 1604 rather than 1600. The play was revived by the King’s men and
-played at Court on 7 April 1634 (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 237), and to
-this date probably belongs the prologue in the edition of 1641. Here
-the actors declare that the piece, which evidently others had ventured
-to play, was</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i10">known,</div>
- <div>And still believed in Court to be our own.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">They add that</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i8">Field is gone,</div>
- <div>Whose action first did give it name,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">and that his successor (perhaps Taylor) is prevented by his grey
-beard from taking the young hero, which therefore falls to a ‘third
-man’ who has been liked as Richard. Gayton, <i>Festivous Notes on Don
-Quixote</i> (1654), 25, tells us that Eliard Swanston played Bussy;
-doubtless he is the third man. The revision of the text, incorporated
-in the 1641 edition, may obviously date either from this or for some
-earlier revival. It is not necessary to assume that the performances
-by Field referred to in the prologue were earlier than 1616, when he
-joined the King’s. Parrott, however, makes it plausible that they might
-have been for the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars in 1609–12, about the
-time when the <i>Revenge</i> was played by the same company. If so, the
-Revels must have acquired <i>Bussy</i> after the Paul’s performances
-ended in 1606. It is, of course, quite possible that they were only
-recovering a play originally written for them, and carried by Kirkham
-to Paul’s in 1605.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Eastward Ho! 1605</i></p>
-
-<p class="center sm p0">With Jonson and Marston.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, Sept. 4 (Wilson). ‘A Comedie called Eastward Ho:’
-<i>William Aspley and Thomas Thorp</i> (Arber, iii. 300).</p>
-
-<p>1605. Eastward Hoe. As It was playd in the Black-friers. By The
-Children of her Maiesties Reuels. Made by Geo: Chapman. Ben Ionson.
-Ioh: Marston. <i>For William Aspley.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue. Two
-issues (<i>a</i>) and (<i>b</i>). Of (<i>a</i>) only signatures E<sub>3</sub>
-and E<sub>4</sub> exist, inserted between signatures E<sub>2</sub> and E<sub>3</sub> of a
-complete copy of (<i>b</i>) in the Dyce collection; neither Greg,
-<i>Masques</i>, cxxii, nor Parrott, <i>Comedies</i>, 862, is quite
-accurate here.]</p>
-
-<p>1605. <i>For William Aspley.</i> [Another edition, reset.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1, 2, 3</sup> (1744–1825), by W. R. Chetwood in
-<i>Memoirs of Ben Jonson</i> (1756), W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i>
-ii), F. E. Schelling (1903, <i>B. L.</i>), J. W. Cunliffe (1913, <i>R.
-E. C.</i> ii), J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>); and with Marston’s
-<i>Works</i> (q.v.).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: C. Edmonds, <i>The Original
-of the Hero in the Comedy of E. H.</i> (<i>Athenaeum</i>, 13 Oct.
-1883); H. D. Curtis, <i>Source of the Petronel-Winifred Plot in E.
-H.</i> (1907, <i>M. P.</i> v. 105).</p>
-
-<p>Jonson told Drummond in 1619 (Laing, 20): ‘He was dilated by Sir James
-Murray to the King, for writing something against the Scots, in a play
-Eastward Hoe, and voluntarly imprissoned himself with Chapman and
-Marston, who had written it amongst them. The report was, that they
-should then [have] had their ears cut and noses. After their delivery,
-he banqueted all his friends; there was Camden, Selden, and others;
-at the midst of the feast his old Mother dranke to him, and shew him
-a paper which she had (if the sentence had taken execution) to have
-mixed in the prisson among his drinke, which was full of lustie strong
-poison, and that she was no churle, she told, she minded first to have
-drunk of it herself.’ The <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> contain a letter (i)
-from Jonson (Cunningham, <i>Jonson</i>, i. xlix), endorsed ‘1605’, to
-the Earl of Salisbury, created 4 May 1605. Another copy is in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-MS. described by B. Dobell, with ten other letters, of which Dobell,
-followed by Schelling, prints three by Jonson, (ii) to an unnamed
-lord, probably Suffolk, (iii) to an unnamed earl, (iv) to an unnamed
-‘excellentest of Ladies’, and three by Chapman, (v) to the King, (vi)
-to Lord Chamberlain Suffolk, (vii) to an unnamed lord, probably also
-Suffolk. These, with four others by Chapman not printed, have no dates,
-but all, with (i), seem to refer to the same joint imprisonment of
-the two poets. In (i) Jonson says that he and Chapman are in prison
-‘unexamined and unheard’. The cause is a play of which ‘no man can
-justly complain’, for since his ‘first error’ and its ‘bondage’ [1597]
-Jonson has ‘attempered my style’ and his books have never ‘given
-offence to a nation, to a public order or state, or to any person of
-honour or authority’. The other letters add a few facts. In (v) Chapman
-says that the ‘chief offences are but two clawses, and both of them
-not our owne’; in (vi) that ‘our unhappie booke was presented without
-your Lordshippes allowance’; and in (vii) that they are grateful
-for an expected pardon of which they have heard from Lord Aubigny.
-Castelain, <i>Jonson</i>, 901, doubts whether this correspondence
-refers to <i>Eastward Ho!</i>, chiefly because there is no mention of
-Marston, and after hesitating over <i>Sejanus</i>, suggests <i>Sir
-Giles Goosecap</i> (q.v.), which is not worth consideration. Jonson was
-in trouble for <i>Sejanus</i> (q.v.), but on grounds not touched on in
-these letters, and Chapman was not concerned. I feel no doubt that the
-imprisonment was that for <i>Eastward Ho!</i> Probably Drummond was
-wrong about Marston, who escaped. His ‘absence’ is noted in the t.p.
-of Q<sub>2</sub> of <i>The Fawn</i> (1606), and chaffed by A. Nixon, <i>The
-Black Year</i> (1606): ‘Others ... arraign other mens works ... when
-their own are sacrificed in Paul’s Churchyard, for bringing in the
-Dutch Courtesan to corrupt English conditions and sent away westward
-for carping both at court, city, and country.’ Evidently Jonson and
-Chapman, justly or not, put the blame of the obnoxious clauses upon
-him, and renewed acrimony against Jonson may be traced in his Epistles
-of 1606. I am inclined to think that it was the publication of the play
-in the autumn of 1605, rather than its presentation on the stage, that
-brought the poets into trouble. This would account for the suppression
-of a passage reflecting upon the Scots (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 40–7) which
-appeared in the first issue of Q<sub>1</sub> (cf. Parrott, ii. 862). Other
-quips at the intruding nation, at James’s liberal knightings, and even
-at his northern accent (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 50, 98; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 83;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 179) appear to have escaped censure. Nor was the play
-as a whole banned. It passed to the Lady Elizabeth’s, who revived it in
-1613 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 71) and gave it at Court on 25 Jan. 1614
-(cf. App. B). There seems to be an allusion to Suffolk’s intervention
-in Chapman’s gratulatory verses to <i>Sejanus</i> (1605):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Most Noble Suffolke, who by Nature Noble,</div>
- <div class="i1">And judgement vertuous, cannot fall by Fortune,</div>
- <div>Who when our Hearde, came not to drink, but trouble</div>
- <div class="i1">The Muses waters, did a Wall importune,</div>
- <div>(Midst of assaults) about their sacred River.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The imprisonment was over by Nov. 1605, when Jonson (q.v.) was employed
-about the Gunpowder plot. I put it and the correspondence in Oct. or
-Nov. The play may have been staged at any time between that and the
-staging of Dekker and Webster’s <i>Westward Hoe</i>, late in 1604, to
-which its prologue refers. Several attempts have been made to divide
-up the play. Fleay, ii. 81, gives Marston <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-i, Chapman <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, Jonson <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-ii-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. Parrott gives Marston <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, Chapman <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i, Jonson the prologue and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii-v. Cunliffe gives Marston
-<span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, the rest to Chapman,
-and nothing to Jonson but plotting and supervision. All make
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii a Chapman scene, so that, if Chapman spoke the truth,
-Marston must have interpolated the obnoxious clauses.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>May Day. c. 1609</i></p>
-
-<p>1611. May Day. A witty Comedie, diuers times acted at the Blacke
-Fryers. Written by George Chapman. <i>For John Browne.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i>
-iv).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: A. L. Stiefel, <i>G. C. und das italienische
-Drama</i> (1899, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxv. 180).</p>
-
-<p>The <i>chorus iuvenum</i> with which the play opens fixes it to the
-occupancy of the Blackfriars by the Chapel and Revels in 1600–9.
-Parrott suggests 1602 on the ground of reminiscences of 1599–1601
-plays, of which the most important is a quotation in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i.
-18 of Marston’s <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i> (1599), <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii.
-20. But the force of this argument is weakened by the admission of a
-clear imitation in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 378 <i>sqq.</i> of ch. v. of Dekker’s
-<i>Gull’s Hornbook</i> (1609), which it seems to me a little arbitrary
-to explain by a revision. The other reasons given by Fleay, i. 57, for
-a date <i>c.</i> 1601 are fantastic. So is his suggestion that the play
-is founded on the anonymous <i>Disguises</i> produced by the Admiral’s
-on 2 Oct. 1595, which, as pointed out by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii.
-177), rests merely on the fact that the title would be appropriate.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Widow’s Tears. 1603 &lt; &gt; 9</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1612, Apr. 17. <i>John Browne</i> [see <i>The Revenge of
-Bussy D’Ambois</i>].</p>
-
-<p>1612. The Widdowes Teares. A Comedie. As it was often presented in the
-blacke and white Friers. Written by Geor: Chap. <i>For John Browne.</i>
-[Epistle to Jo. Reed of Mitton, Gloucestershire, signed ‘Geo. Chapman’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Dodsley<sup>1, 2, 3</sup> (1744–1827).</p>
-
-<p>The play was given at Court on 27 Feb. 1613, but the reference on the
-title-page to Blackfriars shows that it was originally produced by the
-Chapel or Revels not later than 1609 and probably before <i>Byron</i>
-(1608). Wallace, ii. 115, identifies it with the Chapel play seen by
-the Duke of Stettin in 1602 (cf. ch. xii), but Gerschow’s description
-in no way, except for the presence of a widow, fits the plot. The
-reference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span> to the ‘number of strange knights abroad’ (iv. 1. 28) and
-perhaps also that to the crying down of monopolies (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 125)
-are Jacobean, rather than Elizabethan (cf. <i>M. d’Olive</i>). Fleay,
-i. 61, and Parrott think that the satire of justice in the last act
-shows resentment at Chapman’s treatment in connexion with <i>Eastward
-Ho!</i>, and suggest 1605. It would be equally sound to argue that
-this is just the date when Chapman would have been most careful to
-avoid criticism of this kind. The Epistle says, ‘This poor comedy
-(of many desired to see printed) I thought not utterly unworthy that
-affectionate design in me’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Charles, Duke of Byron. 1608</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, June 5 (Buck). ‘A booke called The Conspiracy and
-Tragedie of Charles Duke of Byronn written by Georg Chapman.’ <i>Thomas
-Thorp</i> (Arber, iii. 380).</p>
-
-<p>1608. The Conspiracie, And Tragedie of Charles Duke of Byron, Marshall
-of France. Acted lately in two playes, at the Black-Friers. Written
-by George Chapman. <i>G. Eld for Thomas Thorpe.</i> [Epistle to Sir
-Thomas and Thomas Walsingham, signed ‘George Chapman’, and Prologue.
-Half-title to Part II, ‘The Tragedie of Charles Duke of Byron. By
-George Chapman.’]</p>
-
-<p>1625.... at the Blacke-Friers, and other publique Stages.... <i>N. O.
-for Thomas Thorpe.</i> [Separate t.p. to Part II.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: T. M. Parrott, <i>The Text of C.’s Byron</i>
-(1908, <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 40).</p>
-
-<p>There can be no doubt (cf. vol. ii, p. 53) that this is the play
-denounced by the French ambassador, Antoine Lefèvre de la Boderie, in
-the following letter to Pierre Brulart de Puisieux, Marquis de Sillery,
-on 8 April 1608 (printed by J. J. Jusserand in <i>M. L. R.</i> vi. 203,
-from <i>Bibl. Nat. MS. Fr.</i> 15984):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘Environ la micaresme ces certains comédiens à qui j’avois
-fait deffendre de jouer l’histoire du feu mareschal de Biron,
-voyant toutte la cour dehors, ne laissèrent de le faire, et non
-seulement cela, mais y introduisirent la Royne et Madame de
-Verneuil, la première traitant celle-cy fort mal de paroles,
-et luy donnant un soufflet. En ayant eu advis de-là à quelques
-jours, aussi-tost je m’en allay trouver le Comte de Salsbury
-et luy fis plainte de ce que non seulement ces compaignons-là
-contrevenoient à la deffense qui leur avoit esté faicte, mais
-y adjoustoient des choses non seulement plus importantes, mais
-qui n’avoient que faire avec le mareschal de Biron, et au partir
-de-là estoient toutes faulses, dont en vérité il se montra
-fort courroucé. Et dès l’heure mesme envoya pour les prendre.
-Toutteffois il ne s’en trouva que trois, qui aussi-tost furent
-menez en la prison où ilz sont encore; mais le principal qui
-est le compositeur eschapa. Un jour ou deux devant, ilz avoient
-dépêché leur Roy, sa mine d’Escosse et tous ses Favorits d’une
-estrange sorte; [<i>in cipher</i> car apres luy avoir fait
-dépiter le ciel sur le vol d’un oyseau, et faict battre un
-gentilhomme pour avoir rompu ses chiens, ilz le dépeignoient
-ivre pour le moins une fois le jour. Ce qu’ayant sçu, je pensay
-qu’il seroit assez en colère contre lesdits commédiens, sans
-que je l’y misse davantage, et qu’il valoit mieux référer leur
-châtiment à l’irrévérence qu’ilz lui avoient portée, qu’à ce
-qu’ilz pourroient avoir dit desdites Dames], et pour ce, je
-me résolus de n’en plus parler, mais considérer ce qu’ilz
-firent. Quand ledit Sieur Roy a esté icy, il<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span> a tesmoigné estre
-extrèmement irrité contre ces maraults-là, et a commandé qu’ilz
-soient chastiez et surtout qu’on eust à faire diligence de
-trouver le compositeur. Mesme il a fait deffense que l’on n’eust
-plus à jouer de Comédies dedans Londres, pour lever laquelle
-deffense quatre autres compagnies qui y sont encore, offrent
-desja cent mille francs, lesquels pourront bien leur en redonner
-la permission; mais pour le moins sera-ce à condition qu’ilz ne
-représenteront plus aucune histoire moderne ni ne parleront des
-choses du temps à peine de la vie. Si j’eusse creu qu’il y eust
-eu de la suggestion en ce qu’avoient dit lesdits comédiens, j’en
-eusse fait du bruit davantage; mais ayant tout subjet d’estimer
-le contraire, j’ay pensay que le meilleur estoit de ne point le
-remuer davantage, et laisser audit Roy la vengeance de son fait
-mesme. Touttefois si vous jugez de-là, Monsieur; que je n’y aye
-fait assez, il est encore temps.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In <i>M. L. Review</i>, iv. 158, I reprinted a less good text from
-<i>Ambassades de M. De La Boderie</i> (1750), iii. 196. The letter
-is often dated 1605 and ascribed to De La Boderie’s predecessor, M.
-de Beaumont, on the strength of a summary in F. L. G. von Raumer,
-<i>History of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries</i>, ii. 219. The
-text has been ruthlessly censored; in particular the peccant scene has
-been cut out of Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span> of Part ii, and most of Act <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>
-of Part i, dealing with Byron’s visit to England, has been suppressed
-or altered. The Epistle offers ‘these poor dismembered poems’, and they
-are probably the subject of two undated and unsigned letters printed
-by Dobell in <i>Ath.</i> (1901), i. 433. The first, to one Mr. Crane,
-secretary to the Duke of Lennox, inquires whether the writer can leave
-a ‘shelter’ to which ‘the austeritie of this offended time’ has sent
-him. The other is by ‘the poor subject of your office’ and evidently
-addressed to the Master of the Revels, and complains of his strictness
-in revising for the press what the Council had passed for presentment.
-Worcester’s men had an anonymous play of <i>Byron</i> (<i>Burone</i>
-or <i>Berowne</i>) in 1602, and Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 231) thinks
-that to this Chapman’s may have borne some relation. But Chapman’s
-source was Grimeston, <i>General Inventorie of the History of
-France</i> (1607).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois. c. 1610</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1612, Apr. 17 (Buck). ‘Twoo play bookes, th’ one called,
-The revenge of Bussy D’Amboys, beinge a tragedy, thother called, The
-wydowes teares, beinge a Comedy, bothe written by George Chapman.’
-<i>Browne</i> (Arber, iii. 481). [Only a 6<i>d.</i> fee charged for the
-two.]</p>
-
-<p>1613. The Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois. A Tragedie. As it hath beene often
-presented at the priuate Play-house in the White-Fryers. Written by
-George Chapman, Gentleman. <i>T. S., sold by Iohn Helme.</i> [Epistle
-to Sir Thomas Howard, signed ‘Geo. Chapman’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by F. S. Boas (1905, <i>B. L.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Boas has shown that Chapman used Grimeston, <i>General Inventorie
-of the History of France</i> (1607). Probably the play was written
-for the Queen’s Revels to accompany <i>Bussy</i>. But whether it was
-first produced at Whitefriars in 1609–12, or at Blackfriars in 1608–9,
-can hardly be settled. The title-page and the probability that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-<i>Byron</i> affair would render it judicious to defer further plays
-by Chapman rather point to the Whitefriars. The Epistle commends the
-play because ‘Howsoever therefore in the scenical presentation it might
-meet with some maligners, yet considering even therein it passed with
-approbation of more worthy judgments’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Chabot Admiral of France, c. 1613</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1638, Oct. 24 (Wykes). ‘A Booke called Phillip Chalbott
-Admirall of France and the Ball. By James Shirley. vj<sup>d</sup>.’ <i>Crooke and
-William Cooke</i> (Arber, iv. 441).</p>
-
-<p>1639. The Tragedie of Chabot Admirall of France. As it was presented by
-her Majesties Servants, at the private House in Drury Lane. Written by
-George Chapman, and James Shirly. <i>Tho. Cotes for Andrew Crooke and
-William Cooke.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by E. Lehman (1906, <i>Pennsylvania Univ. Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The play was licensed by Herbert as Shirley’s on 29 April 1635
-(<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 232). But critics agree in finding much of
-Chapman in it, and suppose Shirley to have been a reviser rather
-than a collaborator. Parrott regards <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-iii, and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii as substantially Chapman; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i and
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i as substantially Shirley; and the rest as Chapman
-revised. He suggests that Chapman’s version was for the Queen’s
-Revels <i>c.</i> 1613. Fleay, ii. 241, put it in 1604, but it cannot
-be earlier than the 1611 edition of its source, E. Pasquier, <i>Les
-Recherches de la France</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Caesar and Pompey, c. 1613</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1631, May 18 (Herbert). ‘A Playe called Caesar and Pompey
-by George Chapman.’ <i>Harper</i> (Arber, iv. 253).</p>
-
-<p>1631. The Warres of Pompey and Caesar. Out of whose euents is euicted
-this Proposition. Only a iust man is a freeman. By G. C. <i>Thomas
-Harper, sold by Godfrey Emondson, and Thomas Alchorne.</i> [Epistle to
-the Earl of Middlesex, signed ‘Geo. Chapman’.]</p>
-
-<p>1631.... Caesar and Pompey: A Roman Tragedy, declaring their Warres....
-By George Chapman. <i>Thomas Harper</i> [&amp;c.]. [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>1653.... As it was Acted at the Black Fryers.... [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>Chapman says that the play was written ‘long since’ and ‘never touched
-at the stage’. Various dates have been conjectured; the last, Parrott’s
-1612–13, ‘based upon somewhat intangible evidence of style and rhythm’
-will do as well as another. Parrott is puzzled by the 1653 title-page
-and thinks that, in spite of the Epistle, the play was acted. Might it
-not have been acted by the King’s after the original publication in
-1631? Plays on Caesar were so common that it is not worth pursuing the
-suggestion of Fleay, i. 65, that fragments of the Admiral’s anonymous
-<i>Caesar and Pompey</i> of 1594–5 may survive here.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful and Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Chapman’s lost plays for the Admiral’s men of 1598–9 have already been
-noted. Two plays, ‘The Fatall Love, a French Tragedy’, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span> ‘A Tragedy
-of a Yorkshire Gentlewoman and her sonne’, were entered as his in the
-<i>S. R.</i> by Humphrey Moseley on 29 June 1660 (Eyre, ii. 271). They
-appear, without Chapman’s name, in Warburton’s list of burnt plays
-(W. W. Greg in <i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231). The improbable ascriptions
-to Chapman of <i>The Ball</i> (1639) and <i>Revenge for Honour</i>
-(1654) on their t.ps. and of <i>Two Wise Men and All the Rest Fools</i>
-(1619) by Kirkman in 1661 do not inspire confidence in this late entry,
-and even if they were Chapman’s, the plays were not necessarily of
-our period. But it has been suggested that <i>Fatal Love</i> may be
-the anonymous <i>Charlemagne</i> (q.v.). J. M. Robertson assigns to
-Chapman <i>A Lover’s Complaint</i>, accepts the conjecture of Minto and
-Acheson that he was the ‘rival poet’ of Shakespeare’s <i>Sonnets</i>,
-believes him to be criticized in the Holophernes of <i>L. L. L.</i>
-and regards him as the second hand of <i>Timon of Athens</i>, and with
-varying degrees of assurance as Shakespeare’s predecessor, collaborator
-or reviser, in <i>Per.</i>, <i>T. C.</i>, <i>Tp.</i>, <i>Ham.</i>,
-<i>Cymb.</i>, <i>J. C.</i>, <i>T. of S.</i>, <i>Hen. VI</i>, <i>Hen.
-V</i>, <i>C. of E.</i>, <i>2 Gent.</i>, <i>All’s Well</i>, <i>M.
-W.</i>, <i>K. J.</i>, <i>Hen. VIII</i>. These are issues which cannot
-be discussed here. The records do not suggest any association between
-Chapman and the Chamberlain’s or King’s men, except possibly in
-Caroline days.</p>
-
-<p>For other ascriptions to Chapman, see in ch. xxiv, <i>Alphonsus</i>,
-<i>Fedele and Fortunio</i>, <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>,
-<i>Histriomastix</i>, and <i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">MASK</p>
-
-<p class="center p0"><i>Middle Temple and Lincoln’s Inn Mask. 15 Feb. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, 27 Feb. (Nidd). ‘A booke called the [description] of
-the maske performed before the kinge by the gent. of the Myddle temple
-and Lincolns Inne with the maske of Grayes Inne and the Inner Temple.’
-<i>George Norton</i> (Arber, iii. 516).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Memorable Maske of the two Honorable Houses or Inns
-of Court; the Middle Temple, and Lyncolnes Inne. As it was performed
-before the King, at White-Hall on Shroue Munday at night; being
-the 15. of February 1613. At the princely Celebration of the most
-Royall Nuptialls of the Palsgraue, and his thrice gratious Princesse
-Elizabeth, &amp;c. With a description of their whole show; in the manner
-of their march on horse-backe to the Court from the Maister of the
-Rolls his house: with all their right Noble consorts, and most
-showfull attendants. Inuented, and fashioned, with the ground, and
-speciall structure of the whole worke, By our Kingdomes most Artfull
-and Ingenious Architect Innigo Iones. Supplied, Aplied, Digested, and
-Written, By Geo. Chapman. <i>G. Eld for George Norton.</i> [Epistle by
-Chapman to Sir Edward Philips, Master of the Rolls, naming him and Sir
-Henry Hobart, the Attorney-General, as furtherers of the mask; after
-text, <i>A Hymne to Hymen</i>. R. B. McKerrow, <i>Bibl. Evidence</i>
-(<i>Bibl. Soc. Trans.</i> xii. 267), shows the priority of this
-edition. Parts of the description are separated from the speeches to
-which they belong, with an explanation that Chapman was ‘prevented by
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span> unexpected haste of the printer, which he never let me know, and
-never sending me a proofe till he had past their speeches, I had no
-reason to imagine hee could have been so forward’.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> <i>F. K. for George Norton.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), ii. 566.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in cloth of silver embroidered with gold, olive-coloured
-vizards, and feathers on their heads, were Princes of Virginia; the
-torchbearers also Virginians; the musicians Phoebades or Priests of
-Virginia; the antimaskers a ‘mocke-maske’ of Baboons; the presenters
-Plutus, Capriccio a Man of Wit, Honour, Eunomia her Priest, and Phemis
-her Herald.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the Hall at Whitehall, whither the maskers rode
-from the house of the Master of the Rolls, with their musicians
-and presenters in chariots, Moors to attend their horses, and a
-large escort of gentlemen and halberdiers. They dismounted in the
-tiltyard, where the King and lords beheld them from a gallery. The
-scene represented a high rock, which cracked to emit Capriccio, and
-had the Temple of Honour on one side, and a hollow tree, ‘the bare
-receptacle of the baboonerie’, on the other. After ‘the presentment’
-and the ‘anticke’ dance of the ‘ante-maske’, the top of the rock
-opened to disclose the maskers and torchbearers in a mine of gold
-under the setting sun. They descended by steps within the rock. First
-the torchbearers ‘performed another ante-maske, dancing with torches
-lighted at both ends’. Then the maskers danced two dances, followed by
-others with the ladies, and finally a ‘dance, that brought them off’ to
-the Temple of Honour.</p>
-
-<p>For general notices of the wedding masks, see ch. xxiv and the account
-of Campion’s Lords’ mask. The German <i>Beschreibung</i> (1613) gives a
-long abstract of Chapman’s (extract in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxix. 172),
-but this is clearly paraphrased from the author’s own description. It
-was perhaps natural for Sir Edward Philips to write to Carleton on 25
-Feb. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxii. 46) that this particular mask
-was ‘praised above all others’. But Chamberlain is no less laudatory
-(Birch, i. 226):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘On Monday night, was the Middle Temple and Lincoln’s Inn mask
-prepared in the hall at court, whereas the Lords’ was in the
-banqueting room. It went from the Rolls, all up Fleet Street
-and the Strand, and made such a gallant and glorious show,
-that it is highly commended. They had forty gentlemen of best
-choice out of both houses, and the twelve maskers, with their
-torchbearers and pages, rode likewise upon horses exceedingly
-well trapped and furnished, besides a dozen little boys, dressed
-like baboons, that served for an antimask, and, they say,
-performed it exceedingly well when they came to it; and three
-open chariots, drawn with four horses apiece, that carried their
-musicians and other personages that had parts to speak. All
-which, together with their trumpeters and other attendants, were
-so well set out, that it is generally held for the best show
-that hath been seen many a day. The King stood in the gallery
-to behold them, and made them ride about the Tilt-yard, and
-then they were received into St. James’ Park, and so out, all
-along the galleries, into the hall, where themselves and their
-devices, which they say were excellent, made such a glittering
-show, that the King and all the company were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span> exceedingly
-pleased, and especially with their dancing, which was beyond all
-that hath been seen yet. The King made the masters [? maskers]
-kiss his hand on parting, and gave them many thanks, saying, he
-never saw so many proper men together, and himself accompanied
-them at the banquet, and took care it should be well ordered,
-and speaks much of them behind their backs, and strokes the
-Master of the Rolls and Dick Martin, who were chief doers and
-undertakers.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Chamberlain wrote more briefly, but with equal commendation, to Winwood
-(iii. 435), while the Venetian ambassador reported that the mask was
-danced ‘with such finish that it left nothing to be desired’ (<i>V.
-P.</i> xii. 532).</p>
-
-<p>The mask is but briefly noticed in the published records of the Middle
-Temple (Hopwood, 40, 42); more fully in those of Lincoln’s Inn (Walker,
-ii. 150–6, 163, 170, 198, 255, 271). The Inn’s share of the cost was
-£1,086 8<i>s.</i> 11<i>d.</i> and presumably that of the Middle Temple
-as much. A levy was made of from £1 10<i>s.</i> to £4, according
-to status, and some of the benchers and others advanced funds. A
-dispute about the repayment of an advance by Lord Chief Justice
-Richardson was still unsettled in 1634. An account of Christopher
-Brooke as ‘Expenditour for the maske’ includes £100 to Inigo Jones
-for works for the hall and street, £45 to Robert Johnson for music
-and songs, £2 to Richard Ansell, matlayer, £1 to the King’s Ushers
-of the Hall, and payments for a pair of stockings and other apparel
-to ‘Heminge’s boy’, and for the services of John and Robert Dowland,
-Philip Rosseter and Thomas Ford as musicians. The attitude of the young
-lawyer may be illustrated from a letter of Sir S. Radcliffe on 1 Feb.
-(<i>Letters</i>, 78), although I do not know his Inn: ‘I have taken
-up 30<sup>s</sup> of James Singleton, which or y<sup>e</sup> greater part thereof is to
-be paid toward y<sup>e</sup> great mask at y<sup>e</sup> marriage at Shrovetide. It is a
-duty for y<sup>e</sup> honour of our Inn, and unto which I could not refuse to
-contribute with any credit.’</p>
-
-<p>A letter by Chapman, partly printed by B. Dobell in <i>Ath.</i> (1901),
-i. 466, is a complaint to an unnamed paymaster about his reward for a
-mask given in the royal presence at a date later than Prince Henry’s
-death. While others of his faculty got 100 marks or £50, he is ‘put
-with taylors and shoomakers, and such snipperados, to be paid by a
-bill of particulars’. Dobell does not seem to think that this was the
-wedding mask, but I see no clear reason why it should not have been.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY CHEKE (<i>c.</i> 1561).</p>
-
-<p>If the translator, as stated in <i>D. N. B.</i>, was Henry the son
-of Sir John Cheke and was born <i>c.</i> 1548, he must have been a
-precocious scholar.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Free Will &gt; 1561</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1561, May 11. ‘ij. bokes, the one called ... and the other
-of Frewill.’ <i>John Tysdayle</i> (Arber, i. 156).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> A certayne Tragedie wrytten fyrst in Italian, by F. N.
-B. entituled, Freewyl, and translated into Englishe, by Henry Cheeke.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-<i>John Tisdale.</i> [Epistles to Lady Cheyne, signed H. C., and to the
-Reader. Cheyne arms on v<sup>o</sup> of t.p.]</p>
-
-<p>The translation is from the <i>Tragedia del Libero Arbitrio</i> (1546)
-of Francesco Nigri de Bassano. It is presumably distinct from that
-which Sir Thomas Hoby in his <i>Travaile and Life</i> (<i>Camden
-Misc.</i> x. 63) says he made at Augsburg in Aug.–Nov. 1550, and
-dedicated to the Marquis of Northampton.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY CHETTLE (<i>c.</i> 1560– &gt; 1607).</p>
-
-<p>Chettle was apprenticed, as the son of Robert Chettle of London, dyer,
-to Thomas East, printer, on 29 Sept. 1577, and took up the freedom
-of the Stationers’ Company on 6 Oct. 1584. During 1589–91 he was in
-partnership as a printer with John Danter and William Hoskins. The
-partnership was then dissolved, and Chettle’s imprint is not found on
-any book of later date (McKerrow, <i>Dictionary</i>, 68, 84, 144). But
-evidently his connexion with the press and with Danter continued, for
-in 1596 Nashe inserted into <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i>
-(<i>Works</i>, iii. 131) a letter from him offering to set up the book
-and signed ‘Your old Compositer, Henry Chettle’. Nashe’s <i>Strange
-News</i> (1592) and <i>Terrors of the Night</i> (1594) had come,
-like <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> itself, from Danter’s
-press. The object of the letter was to defend Nashe against a charge
-in Gabriel Harvey’s <i>Pierce’s Supererogation</i> (1593) of having
-abused Chettle. He had in fact in <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (1592) called
-<i>Greenes Groats-worth of Wit</i> ‘a scald triuial lying pamphlet’,
-and none of his doing. And of the <i>Groats-worth</i> Chettle had acted
-as editor, as he himself explains in the Epistle to his <i>Kind Hearts
-Dream</i> (cf. App. C, No. xlix), in which, however, he exculpates
-Nashe from any share in the book. By 1595 he was married and had lost
-a daughter Mary, who was buried at St. John’s, Windsor (E. Ashmole,
-<i>Antiquities of Berkshire</i>, iii. 75). By 1598 he had taken to
-writing for the stage, and in his <i>Palladis Tamia</i> of that
-year Meres includes him in ‘the best for Comedy amongst vs’. Of all
-Henslowe’s band of needy writers for the Admiral’s and Worcester’s
-from 1598 to 1603, he was the most prolific and one of the neediest.
-Of the forty-eight plays in which he had a hand during this period,
-no more than five, or possibly six, survive. His personal loans from
-Henslowe were numerous and often very small. Some were on account of
-the Admiral’s; others on a private account noted in the margin of
-Henslowe’s diary. On 16 Sept. 1598 he owed the Admiral’s £8 9<i>s.</i>
-in balance, ‘al his boockes &amp; recknynges payd’. In Nov. 1598 he had
-loans ‘for to areste one with Lord Lester’. In Jan. 1599 he was in the
-Marshalsea, and in May borrowed to avoid arrest by one Ingrome. On 25
-Mar. 1602 he was driven, apparently in view of a payment of £3, to seal
-a bond to write for the Admiral’s. This did not prevent him from also
-writing for Worcester’s in the autumn. More than once his manuscript
-had to be redeemed from pawn (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 250). His
-<i>England’s Mourning Garment</i>, a eulogy of Elizabeth, is reprinted
-in C. M. Ingleby, <i>Shakespere Allusion-Books</i>, Part i (<i>N. S.
-S.</i> 1874), 77. Herein he speaks of himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span> as ‘courting it now and
-than’, when he was ‘yong, almost thirtie yeeres agoe’, and calls on a
-number of poets under fanciful names to sing the dead queen’s praise.
-They are Daniel, Warner, Chapman (Coryn), Jonson (our English Horace),
-Shakespeare (Melicert), Drayton (Coridon), Lodge (Musidore), Dekker
-(Antihorace), Marston (Moelibee), and Petowe (?). Chettle was therefore
-alive in 1603, but he is spoken of as dead in Dekker’s <i>Knight’s
-Conjuring</i> (1607).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598</i></p>
-
-<p>For Chettle’s relation to these two plays, see s.v. Munday.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Patient Grissel. 1600</i></p>
-
-<p>With Dekker (q.v.) and Haughton.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green. 1600</i></p>
-
-<p>With Day (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602</i></p>
-
-<p>With Dekker (q.v.), Heywood, Smith, and Webster, as <i>Lady Jane, or
-The Overthrow of Rebels</i>, but whether anything of Chettle’s survives
-in the extant text is doubtful.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hoffman</i> or <i>A Revenge for a Father. 1602 &lt;</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, Feb. 26 (Herbert). ‘A play called Hoffman the
-Revengfull ffather.’ <i>John Grove</i> (Arber, iv. 229).</p>
-
-<p>1631. The Tragedy of Hoffman or A Reuenge for a Father, As it hath bin
-diuers times acted with great applause, at the Phenix in Druery-lane.
-<i>I. N. for Hugh Perry.</i> [Epistle to Richard Kiluert, signed ‘Hvgh
-Perry’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by H. B. L[eonard] (1852), R. Ackermann (1894), and J.
-S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: N. Delius,
-<i>C.’s H. und Shakespeare’s Hamlet</i> (1874, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, ix.
-166); A. H. Thorndike, <i>The Relations of Hamlet to Contemporary
-Revenge Plays</i> (1902, <i>M. L. A.</i> xvii. 125).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe paid Chettle, on behalf of the Admiral’s, £1 in earnest of ‘a
-Danyshe tragedy’ on 7 July 1602, and 5<i>s.</i> in part payment for a
-tragedy of ‘Howghman’ on 29 Dec. It seems natural to take the latter,
-and perhaps also the former, entry as relating to this play, although
-it does not bear Chettle’s name on the title-page. But its completion
-was presumably later than the termination of Henslowe’s record in 1603.
-Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 226) rightly repudiates the suggestion of
-Fleay, i. 70, 291, that we are justified in regarding <i>Hoffman</i>
-the unnamed tragedy of Chettle and Heywood in Jan. 1603, for which a
-blank can of course afford no evidence. But ‘the Prince of the burning
-crowne’ is referred to in Kempe’s <i>Nine Daies Wonder</i>, 22, not as
-a ‘play’, but as a suggested theme for a ballad writer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful and Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Chettle’s hand has been suggested in the anonymous <i>Trial of
-Chivalry</i> (<i>vide infra</i>) and <i>The Weakest Goeth to the
-Wall</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The following is a complete list of the plays, wholly or partly by
-Chettle, recorded in Henslowe’s diary.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(<i>a</i>) <i>Plays for the Admiral’s, 1598–1603</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(i), (ii) <i>1, 2 Robin Hood.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Munday (q.v.), Feb.–Mar. and Nov. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(iii) <i>The Famous Wars of Henry I and the Prince of Wales.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker (q.v.) and Drayton, Mar. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(iv), (v) <i>1, 2 Earl Godwin and His Three Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson, March-June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(vi) <i>Pierce of Exton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson, April 1598, but apparently not
-finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(vii), (viii) <i>1, 2 Black Bateman of the North.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Wilson, and for Part 1, Dekker and Drayton, May–July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(ix) <i>The Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-Lion.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton, Munday, and Wilson, June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(x) <i>A Woman’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">July 1598, but apparently unfinished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xi) <i>Hot Anger Soon Cold.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Jonson and Porter, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xii) <i>Chance Medley.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">By Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, Munday, and Wilson, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xiii) <i>Catiline’s Conspiracy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Wilson, Aug. 1598, but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xiv) <i>Vayvode.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Apparently an old play revised by Chettle, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xv) <i>2 Brute.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Sept.–Oct. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xvi) <i>’Tis no Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Nov. 1598, but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xvii) <i>Polyphemus, or Troy’s Revenge.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Feb. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xviii) <i>The Spencers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Porter, March 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xix) <i>Troilus and Cressida.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker (q.v.), April 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xx) <i>Agamemnon, or Orestes Furious.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, May 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxi) <i>The Stepmother’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Aug.–Oct. 1599.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxii) <i>Robert II or The Scot’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Jonson, and possibly Marston (q.v.), Sept. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxiii) <i>Patient Grissell.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker (q.v.) and Haughton, Oct.–Dec. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxiv) <i>The Orphan’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Nov. 1599–Sept. 1601, but apparently not finished, unless Greg rightly
-traces it in Yarington’s <i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxv) <i>The Arcadian Virgin.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Haughton, Dec. 1599, but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxvi) <i>Damon and Pythias.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Feb.–May 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxvii) <i>The Seven Wise Masters.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, Dekker, and Haughton, March 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxviii) <i>The Golden Ass</i>, or <i>Cupid and Psyche</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Dekker, April-May 1600; on possible borrowings from this,
-cf. s.v. Heywood, <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxix) <i>The Wooing of Death.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">May 1600, but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxx) <i>1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day (q.v.), May 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxi) <i>All Is Not Gold That Glisters.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">March-April 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxii) <i>King Sebastian of Portingale.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, April-May 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxiii), (xxxiv) <i>1, 2 Cardinal Wolsey.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Apparently Chettle wrote a play on <i>The Life of Cardinal Wolsey</i>
-in June–Aug. 1601, to which was afterwards prefixed a play on <i>The
-Rising of Cardinal Wolsey</i>, by Chettle, Drayton, Munday, and Smith,
-written in Aug.–Nov. 1601 (cf. Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 218). Chettle
-was ‘mendynge’ <i>The Life</i> in May–June 1602, and on 25 July Richard
-Hadsor wrote to Sir R. Cecil of the attainder of the Earl of Kildare’s
-grandfather ‘by the policy of Cardinal Wolsey, as it is set forth and
-played now upon the stage in London’ (<i>Hatfield MSS.</i> xii. 248).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxv) <i>Too Good To Be True.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway and Smith, Nov. 1601–Jan. 1602; the alternative title ‘or
-Northern Man’ in one of Henslowe’s entries is a forgery by Collier (cf.
-Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, i. xliii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxvi) <i>Friar Rush and the Proud Women of Antwerp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Written by Day and Haughton in 1601 and mended by Chettle in Jan. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxvii) <i>Love Parts Friendship.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Smith, May 1602; identified by Bullen with the anonymous <i>Trial
-of Chivalry</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxviii) <i>Tobias.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">May–June 1602.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xxxix) <i>Hoffman.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">July–Dec. 1602, but apparently not finished. <i>Vide supra.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xl) <i>Felmelanco.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Robensone (q.v.), Sept. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xli), (xlii) <i>1, 2 The London Florentine.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Part 1 with Heywood, Dec. 1602–Jan. 1603; one payment had been made to
-Chettle for Part 2 before the diary entries stopped.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xliii) [Unnamed play].</p>
-
-<p class="p0">‘for a prologe &amp; a epyloge for the corte’, 29 Dec. 1602.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(<i>b</i>) <i>Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xliv) [Unnamed play. Collier’s <i>Robin Goodfellow</i> is forged].</p>
-
-<p class="p0">A tragedy, Aug. 1602, but perhaps not finished, unless identical,
-as suggested by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 229), with the anonymous
-<i>Byron</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xlv) <i>1 Lady Jane</i>, or <i>The Overthrow of Rebels</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker (q.v.), Heywood, Smith, and Webster, Oct. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xlvi) <i>Christmas Comes but Once a Year.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Heywood, and Webster, Nov. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xlvii) [Unnamed play. Collier’s <i>Like Quits Like</i> is forged].</p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Heywood, Jan. 1603, but apparently not finished, or possibly
-identical, as suggested by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 235), with
-(xlviii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(xlviii) <i>Shore.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, May 1603, but not finished before the diary ended.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS CHURCHYARD (1520?-1604).</p>
-
-<p>The best account of Churchyard is that by H. W. Adnitt in <i>Shropshire
-Arch. Soc. Trans.</i> iii (1880), 1, with a bibliography of his
-numerous poems. For his share in the devices of the Bristol
-entertainment (<i>1574</i>) and the Suffolk and Norfolk progress
-(<i>1578</i>), of both of which he published descriptions, cf. ch.
-xxiv. He was also engaged by the Shrewsbury corporation to prepare a
-show for an expected but abandoned royal visit in 1575 (<i>Mediaeval
-Stage</i>, ii. 255). His <i>A Handful of Gladsome Verses given to the
-Queenes Maiesty at Woodstocke this Prograce</i> (1592) is reprinted in
-H. Huth and W. C. Hazlitt, <i>Fugitive Tracts</i> (1875), i. It is not
-mimetic. His own account of his work in <i>Churchyard’s Challenge</i>
-(1593) suggests that he took a considerable part in Elizabethan
-pageantry. He says that he wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The deuises of warre and a play at Awsterley. Her Highnes being
-at Sir Thomas Greshams’,</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The deuises and speeches that men and boyes shewed within many
-prograces’.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">And amongst ‘Workes ... gotten from me of some such noble
-friends as I am loath to offend’ he includes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘A book of a sumptuous shew in Shrouetide, by Sir Walter Rawley,
-Sir Robart Carey, M. Chidley, and M. Arthur Gorge, in which book
-was the whole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span> seruice of my L. of Lester mencioned that he and
-his traine did in Flaunders, and the gentlemen Pencioners proued
-to be a great peece of honor to the Court: all which book was in
-as good verse as euer I made: an honorable knight, dwelling in
-the Black-Friers, can witness the same, because I read it vnto
-him.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The natural date for this ‘shew’ is Shrovetide 1587. I do not know
-why Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> ii. 279, dates the Osterley device 1579.
-Elizabeth was often there, but I find no evidence of a visit in 1579.
-Lowndes speaks of the work as in print, but I doubt whether he has
-any authority beyond Churchyard’s own notice, which does not prove
-publication.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ANTHONY CHUTE (<i>ob. c.</i> 1595).</p>
-
-<p>Nashe in his <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (1596,
-<i>Works</i>, iii. 107), attacking Chute as a friend of Gabriel
-Harvey, says, ‘he hath kneaded and daub’d vp a Commedie, called The
-transformation of the King of <i>Trinidadoes</i> two Daughters, Madame
-<i>Panachaea</i> and the Nymphe <i>Tobacco</i>; and, to approue his
-Heraldrie, scutchend out the honorable Armes of the smoakie Societie’.
-I hesitate to take this literally.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE CLIFFORD (1558–1605).</p>
-
-<p>George Clifford was born 8 Aug. 1558, succeeded as third Earl of
-Cumberland 8 Jan. 1570, and died 30 Oct. 1605. A recent biography is
-G. C. Williamson, <i>George, Third Earl of Cumberland</i> (1920). He
-married Margaret Russell, daughter of Francis, second Earl of Bedford,
-on 24 June 1577. His daughter, Anne Clifford, who left an interesting
-autobiography, married firstly Richard, third Earl of Dorset, and
-secondly Philip, fourth Earl of Pembroke. Cumberland was prominent in
-Elizabethan naval adventure and shone in the tilt. He is recorded as
-appearing on 17 Nov. 1587 (Gawdy, 25) and 26 Aug. 1588 (<i>Sp. P.</i>
-iv. 419). On 17 Nov. 1590 he succeeded Sir Henry Lee (q.v.) as Knight
-of the Crown. Thereafter he was the regular challenger for the Queen’s
-Day tilt, often with the assistance of the Earl of Essex. On 17 Nov.
-1592 they came together armed into the privy chamber, and issued a
-challenge to maintain against all comers on the following 26 Feb. ‘that
-ther M. is most worthyest and most fayrest Amadis de Gaule’ (Gawdy,
-67). Cumberland’s tiltyard speeches, as Knight of Pendragon Castle, in
-1591 (misdated 1592) and 1593 are printed by Williamson, 108, 121, from
-manuscripts at Appleby Castle.</p>
-
-<p>His appearance as Knight of the Crown on 17 Nov. 1595 is noted in
-Peele’s (q.v.) <i>Anglorum Feriae</i>. In F. Davison’s <i>Poetical
-Rhapsody</i> (1602, ed. Bullen, ii. 128) is an ode <i>Of Cynthia</i>,
-with the note ‘This Song was sung before her sacred Maiestie at a shew
-on horse-backe, wherwith the right Honorable the Earle of Cumberland
-presented her Highnesse on Maie day last’. This is reprinted by R.
-W. Bond (<i>Lyly</i>, i. 414) with alternative ascriptions to Lyly
-and to Sir John Davies. But Cumberland himself wrote verses. I do not
-know why Bullen and Bond assume that the show was on 1 May 1600. The
-<i>Cumberland MSS.</i> at Bolton, Yorkshire, once contained a prose
-speech, now lost, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span> character of a melancholy knight, headed ‘A
-Copie of my Lord of Combrlandes Speeche to y<sup>e</sup> Queene, upon y<sup>e</sup> 17 day
-of November, 1600’. This was printed by T. D. Whitaker, <i>History
-of Craven</i> (1805, ed. Morant, 1878, p. 355), and reprinted by
-Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> iii. 522, and by Bond, <i>Lyly</i>, i. 415, with
-a conjectural attribution to Lyly. In 1601 Cumberland conveyed to Sir
-John Davies a suggestion from Sir R. Cecil that he should write a
-‘speech for introduction of the barriers’ (<i>Hatfield MSS.</i> xi.
-544), and in letters of 1602 he promised Cecil to appear at the tilt
-on Queen’s Day, but later tried to excuse himself on the ground that a
-damaged arm would not let him carry a staff (<i>Hatfield MSS.</i> xii.
-438, 459, 574). Anne Clifford records ‘speeches and delicate presents’
-at Grafton when James and Anne visited the Earl there on 27 June 1603
-(Wiffen, ii. 71).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JO. COOKE (<i>c.</i> 1612).</p>
-
-<p>Beyond his play, practically nothing is known of Cooke. It is not
-even clear whether ‘Jo.’ stands for John, or for Joshua; the latter
-is suggested by the manuscript ascription on a copy of the anonymous
-<i>How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad</i> (q.v.). Can
-Cooke be identical with the I. Cocke who contributed to Stephens’s
-<i>Characters</i> in 1615 (cf. App. C, No. lx)? Collier, iii. 408,
-conjectures that he was a brother John named, probably as dead, in the
-will (3 Jan. 1614) of Alexander Cooke the actor (cf. ch. xv). There is
-an entry in S. R. on 22 May 1604 of a lost ‘Fyftie epigrams written by
-J. Cooke Gent’, and a ‘I. Cooke’ wrote commendatory verses to Drayton’s
-<i>Legend of Cromwell</i> (1607).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Greenes Tu Quoque or The City Gallant. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>1614. Greene’s Tu quoque, or, The Cittie Gallant. As it hath beene
-diuers times acted by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by Io.
-Cooke, Gent. <i>For John Trundle.</i> [Epistle to the Reader, signed
-‘Thomas Heywood’, and a couplet ‘Upon the Death of Thomas Greene’,
-signed ‘W. R.’]</p>
-
-<p>1622. <i>For Thomas Dewe.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> <i>M. Flesher.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Heywood writes ‘to gratulate the love and memory of my worthy friend
-the author, and my entirely beloved fellow the actor’, both of whom
-were evidently dead. Satire of Coryat’s <i>Crudities</i> gives a date
-between its publication in 1611 and the performances of the play by the
-Queen’s men at Court on 27 Dec. 1611 and 2 Feb. 1612 (cf. App. B). In
-Aug. 1612 died Thomas Greene, who had evidently played Bubble at the
-Red Bull (ed. Dodsley, p. 240):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Geraldine.</i> Why, then, we’ll go to the Red Bull: they say
-Green’s a good clown.</p>
-
-<p><i>Bubble.</i> Green! Green’s an ass.</p>
-
-<p><i>Scattergood.</i> Wherefore do you say so?</p>
-
-<p><i>Bubble.</i> Indeed I ha’ no reason; for they say he is as
-like me as ever he can look.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Chetwood’s assertion of a 1599 print is negligible.
-The Queen of Bohemia’s men revived the play at Court on 6 Jan. 1625
-(<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 228).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">AQUILA CRUSO (<i>c.</i> 1610).</p>
-
-<p>Author of the academic <i>Euribates Pseudomagus</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT DABORNE (?-1628).</p>
-
-<p>Daborne claimed to be of ‘generous’ descent, and it has been
-conjectured that he belonged to a family at Guildford, Surrey. Nothing
-is known of him until he appears with Rosseter and others as a patentee
-for the Queen’s Revels in 1610. Presumably he wrote for this company,
-and when they amalgamated with the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1613 came into
-relations with Henslowe, who acted as paymaster for the combination.
-The Dulwich collection contains between thirty and forty letters,
-bonds, and receipts bearing upon these relations. A few are undated;
-the rest extend from 17 April 1613 to 4 July 1615. Most of them were
-printed by Malone (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 336), Collier (<i>Alleyn
-Papers</i>, 56), and Swaen (<i>Anglia</i>, xx. 155), and all, with
-a stray fragment from <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 24, are in Greg,
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 65, 126. There and in <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 141,
-Dr. Greg attempts an arrangement of them and of the plays to which
-they relate, which seems to me substantially sound. They show Daborne,
-during the twelve months from April 1613, to which they mainly belong,
-writing regularly for the Lady Elizabeth’s, but prepared at any moment
-to sell a play to the King’s if he can get a better bargain. Lawsuits
-and general poverty made him constantly desirous of obtaining small
-advances from Henslowe, and on one occasion he was in the Clink. In
-the course of the year he was at work on at least five plays (<i>vide
-infra</i>), alone or in co-operation now with Tourneur, now with Field,
-Massinger, and Fletcher. Modern conjectures have assigned him some
-share in plays of the Beaumont and Fletcher series which there is no
-external evidence to connect with his name. However this may be, it
-is clear that, unless his activity in 1613–14 was abnormal, he must
-have written much of which we know nothing. He is still traceable in
-connexion with the stage up to 1616, giving a joint bond with Massinger
-in Aug. 1615, receiving an acquittance of debts through his wife
-Francisce from Henslowe on his death-bed in Jan. 1616 (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 20), and witnessing the agreement between Alleyn and Meade and
-Prince Charles’s men on the following 20 March. But he must have taken
-orders by 1618, when he published a sermon, and he became Chancellor
-of Waterford in 1619, Prebendary of Lismore in 1620, and Dean of
-Lismore in 1621. On 23 March 1628 he ‘died amphibious by the ministry’
-according to <i>The Time Poets</i> (<i>Choice Drollery</i>, 1656, sig.
-B).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collection</i></p>
-
-<p>1898–9. A. E. H. Swaen in <i>Anglia</i>, xx. 153; xxi. 373.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: R. Boyle, <i>D.’s Share in the Beaumont and
-Fletcher Plays</i> (1899, <i>E. S.</i> xxvi. 352).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Christian Turned Turk. 1609 &lt; &gt; 12</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1612, Feb. 1 (Buck). ‘A booke called A Christian turned
-Turke, or the tragicall lyffes and deathes of the 2 famous pyrates Ward
-and Danseker, as it hath bene publiquely acted written by Robert Daborn
-gent.’ <i>William Barrenger</i> (Arber, iii. 476).</p>
-
-<p>1612. A Christian turn’d Turke: or, The Tragicall Liues and Deaths
-of the two Famous Pyrates, Ward and Dansiker. As it hath beene
-publickly Acted. Written by Robert Daborn, Gentleman. <i>For William
-Barrenger.</i> [Epistle by Daborne to the Reader, Prologue and
-Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>This may, as Fleay, i. 83, says, be a Queen’s Revels play, but he
-gives no definite proof, and if it is the ‘unwilling error’ apologized
-for in the epilogue to <i>Mucedorus</i> (1610), it is more likely to
-proceed from the King’s men. It appears to be indebted to pamphlets
-on the career of its heroes, printed in 1609. The Epistle explains
-the publishing of ‘this oppressed and much martird Tragedy, not that
-I promise to my selfe any reputation hereby, or affect to see my name
-in Print, vsherd with new praises, for feare the Reader should call
-in question their iudgements that giue applause in the action; for
-had this wind moued me, I had preuented others shame in subscribing
-some of my former labors, or let them gone out in the diuels name
-alone; which since impudence will not suffer, I am content they passe
-together; it is then to publish my innocence concerning the wrong of
-worthy personages, together with doing some right to the much-suffering
-Actors that hath caused my name to cast it selfe in the common rack of
-censure’. I do not know why the play should have been ‘martir’d’, but
-incidentally Daborne seems to be claiming a share in Dekker’s <i>If It
-be not Good, the Devil is in It</i> (1612).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Poor Man’s Comfort, c. 1617</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Egerton MS.</i> 1994, f. 268.</p>
-
-<p>[Scribal signature ‘By P. Massam’ at end.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1655, June 20. ‘A booke called The Poore Mans comfort,
-a Tragicomedie written by Robert Dawborne, M<sup>r</sup> of Arts.’ <i>John
-Sweeting</i> (Eyre, i. 486).</p>
-
-<p>1655. The Poor-Mans Comfort. A Tragi-Comedy, As it was diuers times
-Acted at the Cockpit in Drury Lane with great applause. Written
-by Robert Dauborne Master of Arts. <i>For Rob: Pollard and John
-Sweeting.</i> [Prologue, signed ‘Per E. M.’]</p>
-
-<p>The stage-direction to l. 186 is ‘Enter 2 Lords, Sands, Ellis’. Perhaps
-we have here the names of two actors, Ellis Worth, who was with Anne’s
-men at the Cockpit in 1617–19, and Gregory Sanderson, who joined
-the same company before May, 1619. But there is also a James Sands,
-traceable as a boy of the King’s in 1605. The performances named on the
-title-page are not necessarily the original ones and the play may have
-been produced by the Queen’s at the Red Bull, but 1617 is as likely a
-date as another, and when a courtier says of a poor man’s suit (l. 877)
-that it is ‘some suit from porters<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span> hall, belike not worth begging’,
-there may conceivably be an allusion to attempts to preserve the
-Porter’s Hall theatre from destruction in the latter year. In any case,
-Daborne is not likely to have written the play after he took orders.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful and Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>The Henslowe correspondence appears to show Daborne as engaged between
-17 April 1613 and 2 April 1614 on the following plays:</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>Machiavel and the Devil</i> (17 April-<i>c.</i> 25 June
-1613), possibly, according to Fleay and Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 152,
-based on the old <i>Machiavel</i> revived by Strange’s men in 1592.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>The Arraignment of London</i>, probably identical with
-<i>The Bellman of London</i> (5 June–9 Dec. 1613), with Cyril Tourneur,
-possibly, as Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 75, suggests, based on
-Dekker’s tract, <i>The Bellman of London</i> (1608).</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) An unnamed play with Field, Massinger, and Fletcher, the
-subject of undated correspondence (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 65 and
-possibly 70, 84) and possibly also of dated letters of July 1613 (<i>H.
-P.</i> 74).</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) <i>The Owl</i> (9 Dec. 1613–28 March 1614). A comedy of this
-name is in Archer’s list of 1656, but Greg, <i>Masques</i>, xcv, thinks
-that Jonson’s <i>Mask of Owls</i> may be meant.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>e</i>) <i>The She Saint</i> (2 April 1614).</p>
-
-<p>Daborne has been suggested as a contributor to the <i>Cupid’s
-Revenge</i>, <i>Faithful Friends</i>, <i>Honest Man’s Fortune</i>,
-<i>Thierry and Theodoret</i>, and later plays of the Beaumont (q.v.)
-and Fletcher series, and attempts have been made to identify more than
-one of these with (<i>c</i>) above.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SAMUEL DANIEL (<i>c.</i> 1563–1619).</p>
-
-<p>Daniel was born in Somerset, probably near Taunton, about 1563. His
-father is said to have been John Daniel, a musician; he certainly had
-a brother John, of the same profession. In 1579 he entered Magdalen
-Hall, Oxford, but took no degree. He visited France about January 1585
-and sent an account of political affairs from the Rue St. Jacques to
-Walsingham in the following March (<i>S. P. F.</i> xix. 388). His first
-work was a translation of the <i>Imprese</i> of Paulus Jovius (1585).
-In 1586 he served Sir Edward Stafford, the English ambassador in Paris,
-and as a young man visited Italy. He was domesticated at Wilton, and
-under the patronage of Mary, Lady Pembroke, wrote his sonnets to Delia,
-the publication of which, partial in 1591 and complete in 1592, gave
-him a considerable reputation as a poet. The attempt of Fleay, i. 86,
-to identify Delia with Elizabeth Carey, daughter of Sir George Carey,
-afterwards Lord Hunsdon, breaks down. Nashe in <i>The Terrors of the
-Night</i> (1594, ed. McKerrow, i. 342) calls her a ‘second Delia’,
-and obviously the first was not, as Fleay suggests, Queen Elizabeth,
-but the heroine of the sonnets. Delia dwelt on an Avon, but the fact
-that in 1602 Lord Hunsdon took the waters at Bath does not give him a
-seat on the Avon there. Lady Pembroke’s <i>Octavia</i> (q.v.) inspired
-Daniel’s book-drama <i>Cleopatra</i> (1594). Other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span> poems, notably
-<i>The History of the Civil Wars</i> (1595), followed. Tradition makes
-Daniel poet laureate after Spenser’s death in 1599. There was probably
-no such post, but it is clear from verses prefixed to a single copy
-(B.M.C. 21, 2, 17) of the <i>Works</i> of 1601, which are clearly
-addressed to Elizabeth, and not, as Grosart, i. 2, says, Anne, that he
-had some allowance at Court:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I, who by that most blessed hand sustain’d,</div>
- <div>In quietnes, do eate the bread of rest.</div>
- <div class="right">(Grosart, i. 9.)</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Possibly, however, this grant was a little later than
-1599. Daniel acted as tutor to Anne Clifford, daughter of the Earl of
-Cumberland, at Skipton Castle, probably by 1599, when he published
-his <i>Poetical Essays</i>, which include an <i>Epistle</i> to Lady
-Cumberland. It might have been either Herbert or Clifford influence
-which brought him into favour with Lady Bedford and led to his
-selection as poet for the first Queen’s mask at the Christmas of 1603.
-No doubt this preference aroused jealousies, and to about this date one
-may reasonably assign Jonson’s verse-letter to Lady Rutland (<i>The
-Forest</i>, xii) in which he speaks of his devotion to Lady Bedford:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">though she have a better verser got,</div>
- <div>(Or Poet, in the court-account), than I,</div>
- <div>And who doth me, though I not him envy.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In 1619 Jonson told Drummond that he had answered
-Daniel’s <i>Defence of Ryme</i> (?1603), that ‘Samuel Daniel was a
-good honest man, had no children; but no poet’, and that ‘Daniel was
-at jealousies with him’ (Laing, 1, 2, 10). All this suggests to me
-a rivalry at the Jacobean, rather than the Elizabethan Court, and I
-concur in the criticisms of Small, 181, upon the elaborate attempts
-of Fleay, i. 84, 359, to trace attacks on Daniel in Jonson’s earlier
-comedies. Fleay makes Daniel Fastidious Brisk in <i>Every Man Out of
-his Humour</i>, Hedon in <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, and alternatively
-Hermogenes Tigellius and Tibullus in <i>The Poetaster</i>, as well as
-Emulo in the <i>Patient Grissel</i> of Dekker and others. In most of
-these equations he is followed by others, notably Penniman, who adds
-(<i>Poetaster</i>, xxxvii) Matheo in <i>Every Man In his Humour</i>
-and Gullio in the anonymous <i>1 Return from Parnassus</i>. For
-all this the only basis is that Brisk, Matheo, and Gullio imitate
-or parody Daniel’s poetry. What other poetry, then, would affected
-young men at the end of the sixteenth century be likely to imitate?
-Some indirect literary criticism on Daniel may be implied, but this
-does not constitute the imitators portraits of Daniel. Fleay’s
-further identifications of Daniel with Littlewit in <i>Bartholomew
-Fair</i> and Dacus in the <i>Epigrams</i> of Sir John Davies are
-equally unsatisfactory. To return to biography. In 1604 Daniel, for
-the first time so far as is known, became connected with the stage,
-through his appointment as licenser for the Queen’s Revels by their
-patent of 4 Feb. Collier, <i>New Facts</i>, 47, prints, as preserved
-at Bridgewater House, two undated letters from Daniel to Sir Thomas
-Egerton. One, intended to suggest that Shakespeare was a rival
-candidate for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span> post in the Queen’s Revels, is a forgery, and this
-makes it impossible to attach much credit to the other, in which the
-writer mentions the ‘preferment of my brother’ and that he himself has
-‘bene constrayned to live with children’. Moreover, the manuscript was
-not forthcoming in 1861 (Ingleby, 247, 307). Daniel evidently took a
-part in the management of the Revels company; the indiscretion of his
-<i>Philotas</i> did not prevent him from acting as payee for their
-plays of 1604–5. But his connexion with them probably ceased when
-<i>Eastward Ho!</i> led, later in 1605, to the withdrawal of Anne’s
-patronage. The irrepressible Mr. Fleay (i. 110) thinks that they then
-satirized him as Damoetas in Day’s <i>Isle of Gulls</i> (1606). Daniel
-wrote one more mask and two pastorals, all for Court performances.
-By 1607 he was Groom of Anne’s Privy Chamber, and by 1613 Gentleman
-Extraordinary of the same Chamber. In 1615 his brother John obtained
-through his influence a patent for the Children of the Queen’s Chamber
-of Bristol (cf. ch. xii). He is said to have had a wife Justina, who
-was probably the sister of John Florio, whom he called ‘brother’ in
-1611. The suggestion of Bolton Corney (<i>3 N. Q.</i> viii. 4, 40, 52)
-that this only meant fellow servant of the Queen is not plausible;
-this relation would have been expressed by ‘fellow’. He had a house
-in Old Street, but kept up his Somerset connexion, and was buried at
-Beckington, where he had a farm named Ridge, in Oct. 1619.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1599. The Poeticall Essayes of Sam. Danyel. Newly corrected
-and augmented. <i>P. Short for Simon Waterson.</i> [Includes
-<i>Cleopatra</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1601. The Works of Samuel Daniel Newly Augmented. <i>For Simon
-Waterson.</i> [<i>Cleopatra.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1602. [Reissue of 1601 with fresh t.p.]</p>
-
-<p>1605. Certaine Small Poems Lately Printed: with the Tragedie of
-Philotas. Written by Samuel Daniel. <i>G. Eld for Simon Waterson.</i>
-[<i>Cleopatra</i>, <i>Philotas</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1607. Certain Small Workes Heretofore Divulged by Samuel Daniel one of
-the Groomes of the Queenes Maiesties priuie Chamber, and now againe
-by him corrected and augmented. <i>I. W. for Simon Waterson.</i> [Two
-issues. <i>Cleopatra</i>, <i>Philotas</i>, <i>The Queen’s Arcadia</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1611. Certain Small Workes.... <i>I. L. for Simon Waterson.</i> [Two
-issues. <i>Cleopatra</i>, <i>Philotas</i>, <i>The Queen’s Arcadia</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1623. The Whole Workes of Samuel Daniel Esquire in Poetrie. <i>Nicholas
-Okes for Simon Waterson.</i> [<i>Cleopatra</i>, <i>Philotas</i>, <i>The
-Queen’s Arcadia</i>, <i>Hymen’s Triumph</i>, <i>The Vision of the
-Twelve Goddesses</i>. This was edited by John Daniel.]</p>
-
-<p>1635. Drammaticke Poems, written by Samuel Danniell Esquire, one of
-the Groomes of the most Honorable Privie Chamber to Queene Anne. <i>T.
-Cotes for John Waterson.</i> [Reissue of 1623 with fresh t.p.]</p>
-
-<p>1718. <i>For R. G. Gosling, W. Mears, J. Browne.</i></p>
-
-<p>1885–96. The Complete Works in Verse and Prose of Samuel Daniel. Edited
-by A. B. Grosart. 5 vols. [Vol. iii (1885) contains the plays and
-masks.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cleopatra &gt; 1593</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1593, Oct. 19. ‘A booke intituled The Tragedye of
-Cleopatra.’ <i>Symond Waterson</i> (Arber, ii. 638).</p>
-
-<p>1594. Delia and Rosamond augmented. Cleopatra. By Samuel Daniel.
-<i>James Roberts and Edward Allde for Simon Waterson.</i> [Two
-editions. Verse Epistle to Lady Pembroke.]</p>
-
-<p>1595. <i>James Roberts and Edward Allde for Simon Waterson.</i></p>
-
-<p>1598. <i>Peter Short for Simon Waterson.</i></p>
-
-<p>Also in <i>Colls.</i> 1599–1635.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by M. Lederer (1911, <i>Materialien</i>, xxxi).</p>
-
-<p>The play is in the classical manner, with choruses. The Epistle speaks
-of the play as motived by Lady Pembroke’s ‘well grac’d <i>Antony</i>’;
-the Apology to <i>Philotas</i> shows that it was not acted. In 1607
-it is described as ‘newly altered’, and is in fact largely rewritten,
-perhaps under the stimulus of the production of Shakespeare’s <i>Antony
-and Cleopatra</i>. The 1607 text is repeated in 1611, and the Epistle
-to Lady Pembroke is rewritten. But the text of 1623 is the earlier
-version again.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Philotas. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, Nov. 29 (Pasfield). ‘A Booke called the tragedie of
-Philotus wrytten by Samuel Daniell.’ <i>Waterson and Edward Blunt</i>
-(Arber, iii. 277).</p>
-
-<p>1605. [Part of <i>Coll.</i> 1605. Verse Epistle to Prince Henry, signed
-‘Sam. Dan.’; Apology.]</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Tragedie of Philotas. By Sam. Daniel. <i>Melch. Bradwood for
-Edward Blount.</i> [Shortened version of Epistle to Henry.]</p>
-
-<p>Also in <i>Colls.</i> 1607–35.</p>
-
-<p>The play is in the classical manner, with choruses. From the Apology,
-motived by ‘the wrong application and misconceiving’ of it, I extract:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Above eight yeares since [1596], meeting with my deare friend
-D. Lateware, (whose memory I reverence) in his Lords Chamber
-and mine, I told him the purpose I had for <i>Philotas</i>:
-who sayd that himselfe had written the same argument, and
-caused it to be presented in St. John’s Colledge in Oxford;
-where as I after heard, it was worthily and with great applause
-performed.... And living in the Country, about foure yeares
-since, and neere halfe a yeare before the late Tragedy of ours
-(whereunto this is now most ignorantly resembled) unfortunately
-fell out heere in England [Sept., 1600], I began the same,
-and wrote three Acts thereof,&mdash;as many to whom I then shewed
-it can witnesse,&mdash;purposing to have had it presented in Bath
-by certaine Gentlemens sonnes, as a private recreation for
-the Christmas, before the Shrovetide of that unhappy disorder
-[Feb. 1601]. But by reason of some occasion then falling out,
-and being called upon by my Printer for a new impression of my
-workes, with some additions to the Civill Warres, I intermitted
-this other subject. Which now lying by mee, and driven by
-necessity to make use of my pen, and the Stage to bee the
-mouth of my lines, which before were never heard to speake
-but in silence, I thought the representing so true a History,
-in the ancient forme of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span> a Tragedy, could not but have had
-an unreproveable passage with the time, and the better sort
-of men; seeing with what idle fictions, and grosse follies,
-the Stage at this day abused mens recreations.... And for any
-resemblance, that thorough the ignorance of the History may be
-applied to the late Earle of Essex, it can hold in no proportion
-but only in his weaknesses, which I would wish all that love
-his memory not to revive. And for mine owne part, having beene
-perticularly beholding to his bounty, I would to God his errors
-and disobedience to his Sovereigne might be so deepe buried
-underneath the earth, and in so low a tombe from his other
-parts, that hee might never be remembered among the examples
-of disloyalty in this Kingdome, or paraleld with Forreine
-Conspirators.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Apology is fixed by its own data to the autumn of
-1604, and the performance was pretty clearly by the Queen’s Revels in
-the same year. Daniel was called before the Privy Council on account of
-the play, and used the name of the Earl of Devonshire in his defence.
-The earl was displeased and a letter of excuse from Daniel is extant
-(Grosart, i. xxii, from <i>S. P. D. Jac. I, 1603–10</i>, p. 18) in
-which, after asserting that he had satisfied Lord Cranborne [Robert
-Cecil], he says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘First I tolde the Lordes I had written 3 Acts of this tragedie
-the Christmas before my L. of Essex troubles, as diuers in the
-cittie could witnes. I saide the maister of the Revells had
-pervsed it. I said I had read some parte of it to your honour,
-and this I said having none els of powre to grace mee now in
-Corte &amp; hoping that you out of your knowledg of bookes, or
-fauour of letters &amp; mee, might answere that there is nothing
-in it disagreeing nor any thing, as I protest there is not,
-but out of the vniuersall notions of ambition and envie, the
-perpetuall argumentes of books or tragedies. I did not say you
-incouraged me vnto the presenting of it; yf I should I had beene
-a villayne, for that when I shewd it to your honour I was not
-resolud to haue had it acted, nor should it haue bene had not my
-necessities ouermaistred mee.’</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Queen’s Arcadia. 1605</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, Nov. 26 (Pasfield). ‘A book called The Quenes
-Arcadia. Presented by the university of Oxon in Christchurch.’
-<i>Waterson</i> (Arber, iii. 305).</p>
-
-<p>1606. The Queenes Arcadia. A Pastorall Trage-comedie presented to
-her Maiestie and her Ladies, by the Vniuersitie of Oxford in Christs
-Church, In August last. <i>G. Eld for Simon Waterson.</i> [Dedicatory
-verses to the Queen.]</p>
-
-<p>See <i>Collections</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The performance was by Christ Church men on 30 Aug. 1605 during the
-royal visit to Oxford (cf. ch. iv). The original title appears to have
-been <i>Arcadia Reformed</i>. Chamberlain told Winwood (ii. 140) that
-the other plays were dull, but Daniel’s ‘made amends for all; being
-indeed very excelent, and some parts exactly acted’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hymen’s Triumph. 1614</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Drummond MS.</i> in Edinburgh Univ. Library. [Sonnet
-to Lady Roxborough, signed ‘Samuel Danyel’. The manuscript given to
-the library by William Drummond of Hawthornden, a kinsman of Lady
-Roxborough, in 1627, is fully described by W. W. Greg in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span> <i>M. L.
-Q.</i> vi. 59. It is partly holograph, and represents an earlier state
-of the text than the quarto of 1615. A letter of 1621 from Drummond
-to Sir Robert Ker, afterwards Earl of Ancrum, amongst the <i>Lothian
-MSS.</i> (<i>Hist. MSS.</i> i. 116), expresses an intention of printing
-what appears to have been the same manuscript.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1615, Jan. 13 (Buck). ‘A play called Hymens triumphes.’
-<i>Francis Constable</i> (iii. 561), [The clerk first wrote ‘Hymens
-pastoralls’.]</p>
-
-<p>1615. Hymens Triumph. A Pastorall Tragicomaedie. Presented at the
-Queenes Court in the Strand at her Maiesties magnificent intertainement
-of the Kings most excellent Maiestie, being at the Nuptials of the Lord
-Roxborough. By Samuel Daniel. <i>For Francis Constable.</i> [Dedicatory
-verses to the Queen, signed ‘Sam. Daniel’, and Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>See <i>Collections</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Ker, Lord Roxborough, was married to Jean Drummond, daughter
-of Patrick, third Lord Drummond, and long a lady of Anne’s household.
-The wedding was originally fixed for 6 Jan. 1614, and the Queen meant
-to celebrate it with ‘a masque of maids, if they may be found’ (Birch,
-i. 279). It was, however, put off until Candlemas, doubtless to avoid
-competition with Somerset’s wedding, and appears from the dedication
-also to have served for a house-warming, to which Anne invited James
-on the completion of some alterations to Somerset House. Finett
-(<i>Philoxenis</i>, 16), who describes the complications caused by an
-invitation to the French ambassador, gives the date as 2 Feb., which is
-in itself the more probable; but John Chamberlain gives 3 Feb., unless
-there is an error in the dating of the two letters to Carleton, cited
-by Greg from <i>Addl. MS.</i> 4173, ff. 368, 371, as of 3 and 10 Feb.
-In the first he writes, ‘This day the Lord of Roxburgh marries M<sup>rs</sup>.
-Jane Drummond at Somerset House, whither the King is invited to lie
-this night; &amp; shall be entertained with shews &amp; devices, specially a
-Pastoral, that shall be represented in a little square paved Court’;
-and in the second, ‘This day sevennight the Lord of Roxburgh married
-M<sup>rs</sup>. Jane Drummond at Somerset House or Queen’s Court (as it must
-now be called). The King tarried there till Saturday after dinner. The
-Entertainment was great, &amp; cost the Queen, as she says, above 3000£.
-The Pastoral made by Samuel Daniel was solemn &amp; dull; but perhaps
-better to be read than represented.’ Gawdy, 175, also mentions the
-‘pastoral’. There is nothing to show who were the performers.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Daniel has been suggested as the author of the anonymous <i>Maid’s
-Metamorphosis</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">MASKS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Vision of the Twelve Goddesses. 8 Jan. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p>1604. The true discription of a Royall Masque. Presented at Hampton
-Court, vpon Sunday night, being the eight of Ianuary, 1604.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span> And
-Personated by the Queenes most Excellent Majestie, attended by Eleuen
-Ladies of Honour. <i>Edward Allde.</i></p>
-
-<p>1604. The Vision of the 12. Goddesses, presented in a Maske the 8 of
-Ianuary, at Hampton Court: By the Queenes most Excellent Maiestie,
-and her Ladies. <i>T. C. for Simon Waterson.</i> [A preface to
-Lucy, Countess of Bedford, is signed by Daniel, who states that the
-publication was motived by ‘the unmannerly presumption of an indiscreet
-Printer, who without warrant hath divulged the late shewe ... and the
-same very disorderly set forth’. Lady Bedford had ‘preferred’ Daniel to
-the Queen ‘in this imployment’.]</p>
-
-<p>See <i>Collections</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by Nichols, <i>James</i>, i. 305 (1828), E. Law (1880),
-and H. A. Evans (1897, <i>English Masques</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in various colours and with appropriate emblems, were
-twelve Goddesses, and were attended by torchbearers (cf. Carleton,
-<i>infra</i>); the presenters, ‘for the introducing this show’, Night,
-Sleep, Iris, Sibylla, and the Graces; the cornets, Satyrs.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the Hall at Hampton Court. At the lower end was a
-mountain, from which the maskers descended, and in which the cornets
-played; at the upper end the cave of Sleep and, on the left (Carleton),
-a temple of Peace, in the cupola of which was ‘the consort music’,
-while viols and lutes were ‘on one side of the hall’.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers presented their emblems, which Sibylla laid upon the altar
-of the temple. They danced ‘their own measures’, then took out the
-lords for ‘certain measures, galliards, and corantoes’, and after a
-‘short departing dance’ reascended the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>This was a Queen’s mask, danced, according to manuscript notes in a
-copy of the Allde edition (B.M. 161, a. 41) thought by Mr. Law to
-be ‘in a hand very like Lord Worcester’s’ (<i>vide infra</i>), and
-possibly identical with the ‘original MS. of this mask’ from which the
-same names are given in Collier, i. 347, by the Queen (Pallas), the
-Countesses of Suffolk (Juno), Hertford (Diana), Bedford (Vesta), Derby
-(Proserpine), and Nottingham (Concordia), and the Ladies Rich (Venus),
-Hatton (Macaria), Walsingham (Astraea), Susan Vere (Flora), Dorothy
-Hastings (Ceres), and Elizabeth Howard (Tethys).</p>
-
-<p>Anticipations of masks at Court during the winter of 1603–4 are to
-be found in letters to Lord Shrewsbury from Arabella Stuart on 18
-Dec. (Bradley, ii. 193), ‘The Queene intendeth to make a Mask this
-Christmas, to which end my Lady of Suffolk and my Lady Walsingham hath
-warrants to take of the late Queenes best apparell out of the Tower at
-theyr discretion. Certain Noblemen (whom I may not yet name to you,
-because some of them have made me of theyr counsell) intend another.
-Certain gentlemen of good sort another’; from Cecil on 23 Dec. (Lodge,
-iii. 81), ‘masks and much more’; and from Sir Thomas Edmondes on 23
-Dec. (Lodge, iii. 83):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Both the King’s and Queen’s Majesty have a humour to have some
-masks this Christmas time, and therefore, for that purpose, both
-the young lords and chief gentlemen of one part, and the Queen
-and her ladies of the other part, do severally undertake the
-accomplishment and furnishing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span> thereof; and, because there is
-use of invention therein, special choice is made of Mr. Sanford
-to direct the order and course for the ladies’;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">also in the letters of Carleton to Chamberlain on 27 Nov.
-(Birch, i. 24; <i>Hardwicke Papers</i>, i. 383), ‘many plays and shows
-are bespoken, to give entertainment to our ambassadors’, and 22 Dec.
-(<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, v. 20; Law, 9):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘We shall have a merry Christmas at Hampton Court, for both
-male and female maskes are all ready bespoken, whereof the Duke
-[of Lennox] is <i>rector chori</i> of th’ one side and the La:
-Bedford of the other.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">I suppose Mr. Sanford to be Henry Sanford, who, like
-Daniel, had been of the Wilton household (cf. Aubrey, i. 311) and may
-well have lent him his aid.</p>
-
-<p>The masks of lords on 1 Jan. and of Scots on 6 Jan. are not preserved.
-The latter is perhaps most memorable because Ben Jonson and his friend
-Sir John Roe were thrust out from it by the Lord Chamberlain (cf. ch.
-vi). Arabella Stuart briefly told Shrewsbury on 10 Jan. that there were
-three masks (Bradley, ii. 199). <i>Wilbraham’s Journal</i> (<i>Camden
-Misc.</i> x), 66, records:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘manie plaies and daunces with swordes: one mask by English
-and Scottish lords: another by the Queen’s Maiestie and eleven
-more ladies of her chamber presenting giftes as goddesses.
-These maskes, especialli the laste, costes 2000 or 3000<sup>l</sup>, the
-aparells: rare musick, fine songes: and in jewels most riche
-20000<sup>l</sup>, the lest to my judgment: and her Maiestie 100,000<sup>l</sup>.
-After Christmas was running at the ring by the King and 8 or
-9 lordes for the honour of those goddesses and then they all
-feasted together privatelie.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">But the fullest description was given by Carleton to
-Chamberlain on 15 Jan. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, vi. 21, printed by Law,
-33, 45; Sullivan, 192).</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘On New yeares night we had a play of Robin goode-fellow
-and a maske brought in by a magicien of China. There was a
-heaven built at the lower end of the hall, owt of which our
-magicien came downe and after he had made a long sleepy speech
-to the King of the nature of the cuntry from whence he came
-comparing it with owrs for strength and plenty, he sayde he had
-broughte in cloudes certain Indian and China Knights to see
-the magnificency of this court. And theruppon a trauers was
-drawne and the maskers seen sitting in a voulty place with theyr
-torchbearers and other lights which was no vnpleasing spectacle.
-The maskers were brought in by two boyes and two musitiens who
-began with a song and whilst that went forward they presented
-themselves to the King. The first gave the King an Impresa in
-a shield with a sonet in a paper to exprese his deuice and
-presented a jewell of 40,000£ valew which the King is to buy of
-Peter Van Lore, but that is more than euery man knew and it made
-a faire shew to the French Ambassadors eye whose master would
-have bin well pleased with such a maskers present but not at
-that prise. The rest in theyr order deliuered theyr scutchins
-with letters and there was no great stay at any of them saue
-only at one who was putt to the interpretacion of his deuise. It
-was a faire horse colt in a faire greene field which he meant
-to be a colt of Busephalus race and had this virtu of his sire
-that none could mount him but one as great at lest as Alexander.
-The King made himself merry with threatening to send this colt
-to the stable and he could not breake loose till he promised to
-dance as well as Bankes his horse. The first measure was full
-of changes and seemed confused but was well gone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span> through with
-all, and for the ordinary measures they tooke out the Queen,
-the ladies of Derby, Harford, Suffolke, Bedford, Susan Vere,
-Suthwell th’ elder and Rich. In the corantoes they ran over
-some other of the young ladies, and so ended as they began with
-a song; and that done, the magicien dissolved his enchantment,
-and made the maskers appear in theyr likenes to be th’ Erle of
-Pembroke, the Duke, Mons<sup>r</sup>. d’Aubigny, yong Somerset, Philip
-Harbert the young Bucephal, James Hayes, Richard Preston,
-and Sir Henry Godier. Theyr attire was rich but somewhat too
-heavy and cumbersome for dancers which putt them besides ther
-galliardes. They had loose robes of crimsen sattin embrodered
-with gold and bordered with brood siluer laces, dublets and
-bases of cloth of siluer; buskins, swordes and hatts alike and
-in theyr hats ech of them an Indian bird for a fether with
-some jewells. The twelfe-day the French Ambassador was feasted
-publikely; and at night there was a play in the Queens presence
-with a masquerado of certaine Scotchmen who came in with a sword
-dance not vnlike a matachin, and performed it clenly.... The
-Sunday following was the great day of the Queenes maske.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This Carleton describes at length; I only note points
-which supplement Daniel’s description.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The Hale was so much lessened by the workes that were in it,
-so as none could be admitted but men of apparance, the one end
-was made into a rock and in several places the waightes placed;
-in attire like savages. Through the midst from the top came a
-winding stayre of breadth for three to march; and so descended
-the maskers by three and three; which being all seene on the
-stayres at once was the best presentacion I have at any time
-seene. Theyre attire was alike, loose mantles and petticotes but
-of different colors, the stuffs embrodered sattins and cloth
-of gold and silver, for which they were beholding to Queen
-Elizabeth’s wardrobe.... Only Pallas had a trick by herself for
-her clothes were not so much below the knee, but that we might
-see a woman had both feete and legs which I never knew before.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">He describes the torchbearers as pages in white satin
-loose gowns, although Daniel says they were ‘in the like several
-colours’ to the maskers. The temple was ‘on the left side of the hall
-towards the upper end’. For the ‘common measures’ the lords taken out
-were Pembroke, Lennox, Suffolk, Henry Howard, Southampton, Devonshire,
-Sidney, Nottingham, Monteagle, Northumberland, Knollys, and Worcester.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘For galliardes and corantoes they went by discretion, and the
-yong Prince was tost from hand to hand like a tennis bal. The
-Lady Bedford and Lady Susan tooke owt the two ambassadors; and
-they bestirred themselfe very liuely: speceally the Spaniard for
-the Spanish galliard shewed himself a lusty old reueller.... But
-of all for goode grace and goode footmanship Pallas bare the
-bell away.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dancers unmasked about midnight, and then came a banquet in the
-presence-chamber, ‘which was dispatched with the accustomed confusion’.</p>
-
-<p>Carleton also mentions the trouble between the Spanish and French
-ambassadors, which is also referred to in a letter of O. Renzo to G.
-A. Frederico (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, vi. 37; cf. Sullivan, 195), and
-is the subject of several dispatches by and to the Comte de Beaumont<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-(<i>King’s MSS.</i> cxxiv, ff. 328, 359<sup>v</sup>, 363, 373, 381, 383<sup>v</sup>, 389;
-cf. Reyher, 519, Sullivan, 193–5). was the object of the Court not
-to invite both ambassadors together, as this would entail an awkward
-decision as to precedence. Beaumont was asked first, to the mask on 1
-Jan. He hesitated to accept, expressing a fear that it was intended to
-ask De Taxis to the Queen’s mask on Twelfth Night, ‘dernier jour des
-festes de Noël selon la facon d’Angleterre et le plus honnorable de
-tout pour la cérémonie qui s’y obserue de tout temps publiquement’.
-After some negotiation he extracted a promise from James that, if the
-Spaniard was present at all, it would be in a private capacity, and he
-then dropped the point, and accepted his own invitation, threatening to
-kill De Taxis in the presence if he dared to dispute precedence with
-him. On 5 Jan. he learnt that Anne had refused to dance if De Taxis was
-not present, and that the promise would be broken. He protested, and
-his protest was met by an invitation for the Twelfth Night to which he
-had attached such importance. But the Queen’s mask was put off until
-8 Jan., a Scottish mask substituted on 6 Jan., and on 8 Jan. De Taxis
-was present, revelling it in red, while Anne paid him the compliment of
-wearing a red favour on her costume.</p>
-
-<p>Reyher, 519, cites references to the Queen’s mask in the accounts
-of the Treasurer of the Chamber and of the Office of Works. E. Law
-(<i>Hist. of Hampton Court</i>, ii. 10) gives, presumably from one of
-these, ‘making readie the lower ende with certain roomes of the hall at
-Hampton Court for the Queenes Maiestie and ladies against their mask by
-the space of three dayes’.</p>
-
-<p>Allde’s edition must have been quickly printed. On 2 Feb. Lord
-Worcester wrote to Lord Shrewsbury (Lodge, iii. 87): ‘Whereas your
-Lordship saith you were never particularly advertised of the mask, I
-have been at sixpence charge with you to send you the book, which will
-inform you better than I can, having noted the names of the ladies
-applied to each goddess; and for the other, I would likewise have sent
-you the ballet, if I could have got it for money, but these books, as
-I hear, are all called in, and in truth I will not take upon me to set
-that down which wiser than myself do not understand.’</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Tethys’ Festival. 5 June 1610</i></p>
-
-<p>1610. Tethys Festiual: or the Queenes Wake. Celebrated at Whitehall,
-the fifth day of June 1610. Deuised by Samuel Daniel, one of the
-Groomes of her Maiesties most Honourable priuie Chamber. <i>For John
-Budge.</i> [Annexed with separate title-page to <i>The Creation of
-Henry Prince of Wales</i> (q.v.). A Preface to the Reader criticizes,
-though not by name, Ben Jonson’s descriptions of his masks.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), ii. 346.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in sky-blue and cloth of silver, were Tethys and thirteen
-Nymphs of as many English Rivers; the antimaskers, in light robes
-adorned with flowers, eight Naiads; the presenters Zephyrus and two
-Tritons, whom with the Naiads Daniel calls ‘the Ante-maske or first
-shew’, and Mercury. Torchbearers were dispensed with, for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span> ‘they would
-have pestered the roome, which the season would not well permit’.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was probably the Banqueting Room at Whitehall. The scene
-was supplemented by a Tree of Victory on a mount to the right of ‘the
-state’. A ‘travers’ representing a cloud served for a curtain, and was
-drawn to discover, within a framework borne on pilasters, in front
-of which stood Neptune and Nereus on pedestals, a haven, whence the
-‘Ante-maske’ issued. They presented on behalf of Tethys a trident to
-the King, and a sword and scarf to Henry, and the Naiads danced round
-Zephyrus. The scene was then changed, under cover of three circles of
-moving lights and glasses, to show five niches, of which the central
-one represented a throne for Tethys, with Thames at her feet, and the
-others four caverns, each containing three Nymphs.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers marched to the Tree of Victory, at which they offered their
-flowers, and under which Tethys reposed between the dances. Of these
-they gave two; then took out the Lords for ‘measures, corantos, and
-galliardes’; and then gave their ‘retyring daunce’. Apparently as an
-innovation, ‘to avoid the confusion which usually attendeth the desolve
-of these shewes’, the presenters stayed the dissolve, and Mercury sent
-the Duke of York and six young noblemen to conduct the Queen and ladies
-back ‘in their owne forme’.</p>
-
-<p>This was a Queen’s mask, and Daniel notes ‘that there were none of
-inferior sort mixed among these great personages of state and honour
-(as usually there have been); but all was performed by themselves
-with a due reservation of their dignity. The maskers were the
-Queen (Tethys), the Lady Elizabeth (Thames), Lady Arabella Stuart
-(Trent), the Countesses of Arundel (Arun), Derby (Darwent), Essex
-(Lee), Dorset (Air), and Montgomery (Severn), Viscountess Haddington
-(Rother), and the Ladies Elizabeth Gray (Medway), Elizabeth Guilford
-(Dulesse), Katherine Petre (Olwy), Winter (Wye), and Windsor (Usk).
-The antimaskers were ‘eight little Ladies’. The Duke of York played
-Zephyrus, and two gentlemen ‘of good worth and respect’ the Tritons.
-‘The artificiall part’, says Daniel, ‘only speakes Master Inago Jones.’</p>
-
-<p>On 13 Jan. 1610 Chamberlain wrote to Winwood (iii. 117, misdated
-‘February’) that ‘the Queen would likewise have a mask against
-Candlemas or Shrovetide’. Doubtless it was deferred to the Creation,
-for which on 24 May the same writer (Winwood, iii. 175) mentions Anne
-as preparing and practising a mask. Winwood’s papers (iii. 179) also
-contain a description, unsigned, but believed by their editor to be
-written by John Finett, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The next day was graced with a most glorious Maske, which
-was double. In the first, came first in the little Duke of
-Yorke between two great Sea Slaves, the cheefest of Neptune’s
-servants, attended upon by twelve [eight] little Ladies, all
-of them the daughters of Earls or Barons. By one of these
-men a speech was made unto the King and Prince, expressing
-the conceipt of the maske; by the other a sword worth 20,000
-crowns at the least was put into the Duke of York’s hands,
-who presented the same unto the Prince his brother from the
-first of those ladies which were to follow in the next maske.
-This done, the Duke returned into his former<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span> place in midst
-of the stage, and the little ladies performed their dance to
-the amazement of all the beholders, considering the tenderness
-of their years and the many intricate changes of the dance;
-which was so disposed, that which way soever the changes went
-the little Duke was still found to be in the midst of these
-little dancers. These light skirmishers having done their
-<i>devoir</i>, in came the Princesses; first the Queen, next the
-Lady Elizabeth’s Grace, then the Lady Arbella, the Countesses
-of Arundell, Derby, Essex, Dorset, and Montgomery, the Lady
-Hadington, the Lady Elizabeth Grey, the Lady Windsor, the Lady
-Katherine Peter, the Lady Elizabeth Guilford, and the Lady Mary
-[Anne] Wintour. By that time these had done, it was high time
-to go to bed, for it was within half an hour of the sun’s, not
-setting, but rising. Howbeit, a farther time was to be spent in
-viewing and scrambling at one of the most magnificent banquets
-that I have seen. The ambassadors of Spaine, of Venice, and of
-the Low Countries were present at this and all the rest of these
-glorious sights, and in truth so they were.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Brief notices in Stowe’s <i>Annales</i> (902, paged 907
-in error) and in letters by Carleton to Sir Thomas Edmondes (Birch, i.
-114) and by John Noies to his wife (<i>Hist. MSS. Various Colls.</i>
-iii. 261) add nothing to Finett’s account. There were no very serious
-ambassadorial complications, as the death of Henri IV put an invitation
-to the French ambassador out of the question (cf. Sullivan, 59). Correr
-notes with satisfaction that, as ambassador from Venice, he had as
-good a box as that of the Spanish ambassador, while, to please Spanish
-susceptibilities, that of the Dutch ambassador was less good (<i>V.
-P.</i> xi. 507).</p>
-
-<p>The mask was ‘excessively costly’ (<i>V. P.</i> xii. 86). Several
-financial documents relating to it are on record (Reyher, 507, 521;
-Devon, 105, 127; Sullivan, 219, 221; <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, liii.
-4, 74; lix. 12), including a warrant of 4 March, which recites the
-Queen’s pleasure that the Lord Chamberlain and Master of the Horse
-‘shall take some paines to look into the emptions and provisions of all
-things necessarie’, another of 25 May for an imprest to Inigo Jones,
-an embroiderer’s bill for £55, and a silkman’s for £1,071 5<i>s.</i>,
-with an endorsement by Lord Knyvet, referring the prices to the Privy
-Council, and counter-signatures by the Lord Chamberlain and the Master
-of the Horse. In this case the dresses of the maskers seem to have
-been provided for them. An allusion in a letter of Donne to Sir Henry
-Goodyere (<i>Letters</i>, i. 240) makes a sportive suggestion for a
-source of revenue ‘if Mr. Inago Jones be not satisfied for his last
-masque (because I hear say it cannot come to much)’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN DAVIDSON (1549?-1603).</p>
-
-<p>A Regent of St. Leonard’s College, St. Andrew’s, and afterwards
-minister of Liberton and a bitter satirist on behalf of the extreme
-Kirk party in Scotland.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Siege of Edinburgh Castle. 1571</i></p>
-
-<p>James Melville writes s.a. 1571: ‘This yeir in the monethe of July,
-Mr. Jhone Davidsone an of our Regents maid a play at the mariage of
-Mr. Jhone Coluin, quhilk I saw playit in Mr. Knox presence, wherin,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-according to Mr. Knox doctrine, the castell of Edinbruche was besiged,
-takin, and the Captan, with an or two with him, hangit in effigie.’<a id="FNanchor_656" href="#Footnote_656" class="fnanchor">[656]</a></p>
-
-<p>This was in intelligent anticipation of events. Edinburgh Castle was
-held by Kirkcaldy of Grange for Mary in 1571. On 28 May 1573 it was
-taken by the English on behalf of the party of James VI, and Kirkcaldy
-was hanged.</p>
-
-<p>Melville also records plays at the ‘Bachelor Act’ of 1573 at St.
-Andrews.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SIR JOHN DAVIES (1569–1626).</p>
-
-<p>Davies was a Winchester and Queen’s College, Oxford, man, who
-entered the Middle Temple on 3 Feb. 1588, served successively as
-Solicitor-General (1603–6) and Attorney-General (1606–19) in Ireland,
-and was Speaker of the Irish Parliament in 1613. His principal poems
-are <i>Orchestra</i> (1594) and <i>Nosce Teipsum</i> (1599). He was
-invited by the Earl of Cumberland (q.v.) to write verses for ‘barriers’
-in 1601, and contributed to the entertainments of Elizabeth by Sir
-Thomas Egerton (cf. ch. xxiv) and Sir Robert Cecil (q.v.) in 1602.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Works</i> by A. B. Grosart (1869–76, <i>Fuller Worthies Library</i>.
-3 vols.).</p>
-
-<p><i>Poems</i> by A. B. Grosart (1876, <i>Early English Poets</i>. 2
-vols.).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: M. Seemann, <i>Sir J. D., sein Leben und seine
-Werke</i> (1913, <i>Wiener Beiträge</i>, xli).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">R. DAVIES (<i>c.</i> 1610).</p>
-
-<p>Contributor to <i>Chester’s Triumph</i> (cf. ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS DAVISON (<i>c.</i> 1575–<i>c.</i> 1619).</p>
-
-<p>He was son of William Davison, Secretary of State, and compiler of <i>A
-Poetical Rapsody</i> (1602), of which the best edition is that of A. H.
-Bullen (1890–1). He entered Gray’s Inn in 1593: for his contribution
-to the Gray’s Inn mask of 1595, see s.v. <span class="smcap">Anon.</span> <i>Gesta
-Grayorum</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN DAY (<i>c.</i> 1574–<i>c.</i> 1640).</p>
-
-<p>Day was described as son of Walter Dey, husbandman, of Cawston,
-Norfolk, when at the age of eighteen he became a sizar of Gonville
-and Caius, Cambridge, on 24 Oct. 1592; on 4 May 1593 he was expelled
-for stealing a book (Venn, <i>Caius</i>, i. 146). He next appears in
-Henslowe’s diary, first as selling an old play for the Admiral’s in
-July 1598, and then as writing busily for that company in 1599–1603
-and for Worcester’s in 1602–3. Most of this work was in collaboration,
-occasionally with Dekker, frequently with Chettle, Hathway, Haughton,
-or Smith. From this period little or nothing survives except <i>The
-Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i>. Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 126,
-doubts whether an acrostic on Thomas Downton signed ‘John Daye’,
-contributed by J. F. Herbert to <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, i. 19, and
-now at Dulwich, is to be ascribed to the dramatist. Day’s independent
-plays, written about<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span> 1604–8, and his <i>Parliament of Bees</i> are of
-finer literary quality than this early record would suggest. But Ben
-Jonson classed him to Drummond in 1619 amongst the ‘rogues’ and ‘base
-fellows’ who were ‘not of the number of the faithfull, i.e. Poets’
-(Laing, 4, 11). He must have lived long, as John Tatham, who included
-an elegy on him as his ‘loving friend’ in his <i>Fancies Theater</i>
-(1640), was then only about twenty-eight. He appears to have been
-still writing plays in 1623, but there is no trace of any substantial
-body of work after 1608. Fleay, i. 115, suggests from the tone of his
-manuscript pamphlet <i>Peregrinatio Scholastica</i> that he took orders.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collection</i></p>
-
-<p>1881. A. H. Bullen, <i>The Works of John Day</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green. 1600</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1657, Sept. 14. ‘A booke called The pleasant history of
-the blind beggar of Bednall Greene, declaring his life and death &amp;c.’
-<i>Francis Grove</i> (Eyre, ii. 145).</p>
-
-<p>1659. The Blind Beggar of Bednal-Green, with The merry humor of Tom
-Strowd the Norfolk Yeoman, as it was divers times publickly acted by
-the Princes Servants. Written by John Day. <i>For R. Pollard and Tho.
-Dring.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Bang (1902, <i>Materialien</i>, i) and J. S.
-Farmer (1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Prince’s men of the title are probably the later Prince Charles’s
-(1631–41), but these were the ultimate successors of Prince Henry’s,
-formerly the Admiral’s, who produced, between May 1600 and Sept. 1601,
-three parts of a play called indifferently by Henslowe <i>The Blind
-Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> and <i>Thomas Strowd</i>. Payments were
-made for the first part to Day and Chettle and for the other two to Day
-and Haughton. On the assumption that the extant play is Part i, Bullen,
-<i>Introd.</i> 8 and Fleay, i. 107, make divergent suggestions as to
-the division of responsibility between Day and Chettle. At l. 2177 is
-the s.d. ‘Enter Captain Westford, Sill Clark’; probably the performance
-in which this actor took part was a Caroline one.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Law Tricks, or Who Would Have Thought It. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, March 28 (Buck). ‘A booke called A most wytty and
-merry conceited comedie called who would a thought it or Lawetrykes.’
-<i>Richard Moore</i> (Arber, iii. 372).</p>
-
-<p>1608. Law-Trickes or, who would have Thought it. As it hath bene diuers
-times Acted by the Children of the Reuels. Written by John Day. <i>For
-Richard More.</i> [Epistle by the Book to the Reader; Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>The name given to the company suggests that the play was on the stage
-in 1605–6. But I think the original production must have been in 1604,
-as the dispute between Westminster and Winchester for ‘terms’, in which
-Winchester is said to have been successful, ‘on Saint Lukes day, coming
-shalbe a twelue-month’ (ed. Bullen, p. 61)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span> can only refer to the term
-held at Winchester in 1603. An inundation in July is also mentioned (p.
-61), and Stowe, <i>Annales</i> (1615), 844, has a corresponding record
-for 1604, but gives the day as 3 Aug.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Isle of Gulls. 1606</i></p>
-
-<p>1606. The Ile of Guls. As it hath been often playd in the blacke
-Fryars, by the Children of the Reuels. Written by Iohn Day. <i>Sold by
-John Hodgets.</i> [Induction and Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>1606. <i>For John Trundle, sold by John Hodgets.</i></p>
-
-<p>1633. <i>For William Sheares.</i></p>
-
-<p>The play is thus referred to by Sir Edward Hoby in a letter of 7 March
-1606 to Sir Thomas Edmondes (Birch, i. 59): ‘At this time (<i>c.</i>
-15 Feb.) was much speech of a play in the Black Friars, where, in the
-“Isle of Gulls”, from the highest to the lowest, all men’s parts were
-acted of two divers nations: as I understand sundry were committed
-to Bridewell.’ A passage in iv. 4 (Bullen, p. 91), probably written
-with <i>Eastward Ho!</i> in mind, refers to the ‘libelling’ ascribed
-to poets by ‘some Dor’ and ‘false informers’; and the Induction
-defends the play itself against the charge that a ‘great mans life’ is
-‘charactred’ in Damoetas. Nevertheless, Damoetas, the royal favourite,
-‘a little hillock made great with others ruines’ (p. 13) inevitably
-suggests Sir Robert Carr, and Fleay, i. 109, points out that the ‘Duke’
-and ‘Duchess’ of the dramatis personae have been substituted for a
-‘King’ and ‘Queen’. It may not be possible now to verify all the men
-whose ‘parts’ were acted; evidently the Arcadians and Lacedaemonians
-stand for the two ‘nations’ of English and Scotch. I do not see any
-ground for Fleay’s attempt to treat the play, not as a political, but
-as a literary satire, identifying Damoetas with Daniel, and tracing
-allusions to Jonson, Marston, and Chapman in the Induction. Hoby’s
-indication of date is confirmed by references to the ‘Eastward,
-Westward or Northward hoe’ (p. 3; cf. s.vv. Chapman, Dekker), to the
-quartering for treason on 30 Jan. 1606 (pp. 3, 51), and conceivably to
-Jonson’s <i>Volpone</i> of 1605 or early 1606 (p. 88, ‘you wil ha my
-humor brought ath stage for a vserer’).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Travels of Three English Brothers. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, June 29 (Buck). ‘A playe called the trauailles of
-the Three Englishe brothers as yt was played at the Curten.’ <i>John
-Wright</i> (Arber, iii. 354).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Travailes of The three English Brothers.</p>
-
-<table summary="brothers">
- <tr>
- <td>Sir Thomas<br />
- Sir Anthony<br />
- Mr. Robert</td>
- <td class="brckt"><img src="images/big_right_bracket.png" alt="big right bracket"
- style="height:3.5em;padding:0 0em 0 0em;" /></td>
- <td class="ctr">Shirley.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p-left">As it is now play’d by her Maiesties Seruants. <i>For
-John Wright.</i> [Epistle to the Family of the Sherleys, signed ‘Iohn
-Day, William Rowley, George Wilkins’, Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>The source was a pamphlet on the Sherleys by A. Nixon (S. R. 8 June
-1607) and the play seems to have been still on the stage when it was
-printed. Some suggestions as to the division of authorship are in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-Fleay, ii. 277, Bullen, <i>Introd.</i> 19, and C. W. Stork, <i>William
-Rowley</i>, 57. A scene at Venice (Bullen, p. 55) introduces Will
-Kempe, who mentions Vennar’s <i>England’s Joy</i> (1602), and prepares
-to play an ‘extemporall merriment’ with an Italian Harlaken. He has
-come from England with a boy. The Epilogue refers to ‘some that fill up
-this round circumference’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Humour out of Breath. 1607–8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, April 12 (Buck). ‘A booke called Humour out of
-breathe.’ <i>John Helme</i> (Arber, iii. 374).</p>
-
-<p>1608. Humour out of breath. A Comedie Diuers times latelie acted, By
-the Children Of The Kings Reuells. Written by Iohn Day. <i>For John
-Helme.</i> [Epistle to Signior Nobody, signed ‘Iohn Daye’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. O. Halliwell (1860), A. Symons in <i>Nero and
-Other Plays</i> (1888, <i>Mermaid Series</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The date must be taken as 1607–8, since the King’s Revels are not
-traceable before 1607. Fleay, i. 111, notes a reference in iii. 4 to
-the ‘great frost’ of that Christmas. The Epistle speaks of the play
-as ‘sufficiently featur’d too, had it been all of one man’s getting’,
-which may be a hint of divided authorship.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Parliament of Bees. 1608 &lt; &gt; 16</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Lansdowne MS.</i> 725, with title. ‘An olde manuscript
-conteyning the Parliament of Bees, found in a Hollow Tree in a garden
-at Hibla, in a Strange Languadge, And now faithfully Translated into
-Easie English Verse by John Daye, Cantabridg.’ [Epistles to William
-Augustine, signed ‘John Day, Cant.’ and to the Reader, signed ‘Jo:
-Daye’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1641, March 23 (Hansley). ‘A booke called The Parliam<sup>t</sup> of
-Bees, &amp;c., by John Day.’ <i>Will Ley</i> (Eyre, i. 17).</p>
-
-<p>1641. The Parliament of Bees, With their proper Characters. Or A
-Bee-hive furnisht with twelve Honycombes, as Pleasant as Profitable.
-Being an Allegoricall description of the actions of good and bad men in
-these our daies. By John Daye, Sometimes Student of Caius Colledge in
-Cambridge. <i>For William Lee.</i> [Epistle to George Butler, signed
-‘John Day’, The Author’s Commission to his Bees, similarly signed, and
-The Book to the Reader. The text varies considerably from that of the
-manuscript.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by A. Symons in <i>Nero and Other Plays</i> (1888,
-<i>Mermaid Series</i>).</p>
-
-<p>This is neither a play nor a mask, but a set of twelve short
-‘Characters’ or ‘Colloquies’ in dialogue. The existence of an edition
-of 1607 is asserted in Gildon’s abridgement (1699) of Langbaine, but
-cannot be verified, and is most improbable, since the manuscript
-Epistle refers to an earlier work already dedicated by Day, as ‘an
-unknowing venturer’, to Augustine, and this must surely be the
-allegorical treatise <i>Peregrinatio Scholastica</i> printed by Bullen
-(<i>Introd.</i> 35) from <i>Sloane MS.</i> 3150 with an Epistle by Day
-to William Austin, who may reasonably be identified with Augustine. But
-the <i>Peregrinatio</i>, although Day’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span> first venture in dedication,
-was not a very early work, for Day admits that ‘I boast not that
-gaudie spring of credit and youthfull florish of opinion as some other
-filde in the same rancke with me’. Moreover, it describes (p. 50) an
-‘ante-maske’, and this term, so far as we know, first came into use
-about 1608 (cf. ch. vi). The <i>Bees</i> therefore must be later still.
-On the other hand, it can hardly be later than about 1616, when died
-Philip Henslowe, whom it is impossible to resist seeing with Fleay, i.
-115, in the Fenerator or Usuring Bee (p. 63). Like Henslowe he is a
-‘broaker’ and ‘takes up’ clothes; and</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Most of the timber that his state repairs,</div>
- <div>He hew’s out o’ the bones of foundred players:</div>
- <div>They feed on Poets braines, he eats their breath.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Now of the twelve Characters of the <i>Bees</i>, five
-(2, 3, 7, 8, 9) are reproduced, in many parts verbatim, subject to an
-alteration of names, in <i>The Wonder of a Kingdom</i>, printed as
-Dekker’s (q.v.) in 1636, but probably identical with <i>Come See a
-Wonder</i>, licensed by Herbert as Day’s in 1623. Two others (4, 5) are
-similarly reproduced in <i>The Noble Soldier</i>, printed in 1634 under
-the initials ‘S. R.’, probably indicating Samuel Rowley, but possibly
-also containing work by Dekker. The precise relation of Day to these
-plays is indeterminate, but the scenes more obviously ‘belong’ to the
-<i>Bees</i> than to the plays, and if the <i>Bees</i> was written but
-not printed in 1608–16, the chances are that Day used it as a quarry of
-material when he was called upon to work, as reviser or collaborator,
-on the plays. Meanwhile, Austin, if he was the Southwark and Lincoln’s
-Inn writer of that name (<i>D. N. B.</i>), died in 1634, and when the
-<i>Bees</i> was ultimately printed in 1641 a new dedicatee had to be
-found.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost and Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>For the Admiral’s, 1598–1603.</p>
-
-<p>Day appears to have sold the company an old play <i>1 The Conquest
-of Brute</i> in July 1598, and to have subsequently written or
-collaborated in the following plays:</p>
-
-<p>1599–1600: <i>Cox of Collumpton</i>, with Haughton; <i>Thomas
-Merry</i>, or <i>Beech’s Tragedy</i>, with Haughton; <i>The Seven
-Wise Masters</i>, with Chettle, Dekker, and Haughton; <i>Cupid and
-Psyche</i>, with Chettle and Dekker; <i>1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal
-Green</i>, with Chettle; and the unfinished <i>Spanish Moor’s
-Tragedy</i>, with Dekker and Haughton.</p>
-
-<p>1600–1: <i>2 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i>, with Haughton; <i>Six
-Yeomen of the West</i>, with Haughton.</p>
-
-<p>1601–2: <i>The Conquest of the West Indies</i>, with Haughton and
-Smith; <i>3 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i>, with Haughton; <i>Friar
-Rush and The Proud Woman of Antwerp</i>, with Chettle and Haughton;
-<i>The Bristol Tragedy</i>; and the unfinished <i>2 Tom Dough</i>, with
-Haughton.</p>
-
-<p>1602–3: <i>Merry as May Be</i>, with Hathway and Smith; <i>The Boss of
-Billingsgate</i>, with Hathway and another.</p>
-
-<p class="p1">For Worcester’s men.</p>
-
-<p>1602–3: <i>1 and 2 The Black Dog of Newgate</i>, with Hathway, Smith,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-and another; <i>The Unfortunate General</i>, with Hathway, Smith, and a
-third; and the unfinished <i>Shore</i>, with Chettle.</p>
-
-<p>Of the above only <i>The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> and a note
-of <i>Cox of Collumpton</i> (cf. ch. xiii, s.v. Admiral’s) survive;
-for speculations as to others see Heywood, <i>Pleasant Dialogues and
-Dramas</i> (<i>Cupid and Psyche</i>), Marlowe, <i>Lust’s Dominion</i>
-(<i>Spanish Moor’s Tragedy</i>), Yarington, <i>Two Lamentable
-Tragedies</i> (<i>Thomas Merry</i>), and the anonymous <i>Edward IV</i>
-(<i>Shore</i>) and <i>Fair Maid of Bristol</i> (<i>Bristow Tragedy</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe’s correspondence (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56, 127) contains
-notes from Day and others about some of the Admiral’s plays and a few
-lines which may be from <i>The Conquest of the Indies</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Day’s <i>Mad Pranks of Merry Mall of the Bankside</i> (S. R. 7 Aug.
-1610) was probably a pamphlet (cf. Dekker, <i>The Roaring Girl</i>).
-Bullen, <i>Introd.</i> 11, thinks the <i>Guy Earl of Warwick</i>
-(1661), printed as ‘by B. J.’, too bad to be Day and Dekker’s <i>Life
-and Death of Guy of Warwick</i> (S. R. 15 Jan. 1620). On 30 July 1623
-Herbert licensed a <i>Bellman of Paris</i> by Day and Dekker for the
-Prince’s (Herbert, 24). <i>The Maiden’s Holiday</i> by Marlowe (q.v.)
-and Day (S. R. 8 April 1654) appears in Warburton’s list of burnt plays
-(<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231) as Marlowe’s.</p>
-
-<p>For other ascriptions to Day see <i>The Maid’s Metamorphosis</i> and
-<i>Parnassus</i> in ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS DEKKER (<i>c.</i> 1572–<i>c.</i> 1632).</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Dekker was of London origin, but though the name occurs in
-Southwark, Cripplegate, and Bishopsgate records, neither his parentage
-nor his marriage, if he was married, can be definitely traced. He
-was not unlettered, but nothing is known of his education, and the
-conjecture that he trailed a pike in the Netherlands is merely based on
-his acquaintance with war and with Dutch. The Epistle to his <i>English
-Villanies</i>, with its reference to ‘my three score years’, first
-appeared in the edition of 1632; he was therefore born about 1572. He
-first emerges, in Henslowe’s diary, as a playwright for the Admiral’s
-in 1598, and may very well have been working for them during 1594–8,
-a period for which Henslowe records plays only and not authors. The
-further conjecture of Fleay, i. 119, that this employment went as
-far back as 1588–91 is hazardous, and in fact led Fleay to put his
-birth-date as far back as 1567. It was based on the fact that the
-German repertories of 1620 and 1626 contain traces of his work, and
-on Fleay’s erroneous belief (cf. ch. xiv) that all the plays in these
-repertories were taken to Germany by Robert Browne as early as 1592.
-But it is smiled upon by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 256) as regards
-<i>The Virgin Martyr</i> alone. Between 1598 and 1602 Dekker wrote
-busily, and as a rule in collaboration, first for the Admiral’s at
-the Rose and Fortune, and afterwards for Worcester’s at the Rose.
-He had a hand in some forty-four plays, of which, in anything like
-their original form, only half a dozen survive. <i>Satiromastix</i>,
-written for the Chamberlain’s men and the Paul’s boys in 1601, shows
-that his activities were not limited to the Henslowe companies. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-intervention in the <i>Poetomachia</i> led Jonson to portray him as
-Demetrius Fannius ‘the dresser of plays’ in <i>The Poetaster</i>; that
-he is also Thersites in <i>Troilus and Cressida</i> is a not very
-plausible conjecture. Long after, in 1619, Jonson classed him among
-the ‘rogues’ (Laing, 4). In 1604, however, he shared with Jonson the
-responsibility for the London devices at James’s coronation entry.
-About this time began his career as a writer of popular pamphlets, in
-which he proved the most effective successor of Thomas Nashe. These,
-and in particular <i>The Gull’s Hornbook</i> (1609), are full of
-touches drawn from his experience as a dramatist. Nor did he wholly
-desert the stage, collaborating with Middleton for the Prince’s and
-with Webster for Paul’s, and writing also, apparently alone, for the
-Queen’s. In 1612 he devised the Lord Mayor’s pageant. In 1613 he fell
-upon evil days. He had always been impecunious, and Henslowe (i. 83,
-101, 161) had lent him money to discharge him from the Counter in 1598
-and from an arrest by the Chamberlain’s in 1599. Now he fell into
-the King’s Bench for debt, and apparently lay there until 1619. The
-relationship of his later work to that of Ford, Massinger, Day, and
-others, lies rather beyond the scope of this inquiry, but in view of
-the persistent attempts to find early elements in all his plays, I
-have made my list comprehensive. He is not traceable after 1632, and
-is probably the Thomas Decker, householder, buried at St. James’s,
-Clerkenwell, on 25 Aug. 1632. A Clerkenwell recusant of this name is
-recorded in 1626 and 1628 (<i>Middlesex County Records</i>, iii. 12,
-19).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1873. [R. H. Shepherd], <i>The Dramatic Works of Thomas Dekker</i>.
-4 vols. (<i>Pearson Reprints</i>). [Contains 15 plays and 4
-Entertainments.]</p>
-
-<p>1884–6. A. B. Grosart, <i>The Non-Dramatic Works of Thomas Dekker</i>.
-5 vols. (Huth Library). [Contains nearly all the pamphlets, with
-<i>Patient Grissell</i>. A better edition of <i>The Gull’s Hornbook</i>
-is that by R. B. McKerrow (1904); a chapter is in App. H.]</p>
-
-<p>1887. E. Rhys, <i>Thomas Dekker</i> (<i>Mermaid Series</i>). [Contains
-<i>The Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, <i>1, 2 The Honest Whore</i>, <i>Old
-Fortunatus</i>, <i>The Witch of Edmonton</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: M. L. Hunt, <i>Thomas Dekker: A Study</i> (1911,
-<i>Columbia Studies in English</i>); W. Bang, <i>Dekker-Studien</i>
-(1900, <i>E. S.</i> xxviii. 208); F. E. Pierce, <i>The Collaboration of
-Webster with Dekker</i> (1909, <i>Yale Studies</i>, xxxvii) and <i>The
-Collaboration of Dekker and Ford</i> (1912, <i>Anglia</i>, xxxvi, 141,
-289); E. E. Stoll, <i>John Webster</i> (1905), ch. ii, and <i>The
-Influence of Jonson on Dekker</i> (1906, <i>M. L. N.</i> xxi. 20); R.
-Brooke, <i>John Webster and the Elizabethan Drama</i> (1916); F. P.
-Wilson, <i>Three Notes on Thomas Dekker</i> (1920, <i>M. L. R.</i> xv.
-82).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Old Fortunatus. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Feb. 20. ‘A commedie called old Fortunatus in his
-newe lyuerie.’ <i>William Aspley</i> (Arber, iii. 156).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span></p>
-
-<p>1600. The Pleasant Comedie of Old Fortunatus. As it was plaied before
-the Queenes Maiestie this Christmas, by the Right Honourable the Earle
-of Nottingham, Lord high Admirall of England his Seruants. <i>S. S. for
-William Aspley</i>. [Prologue at Court, another Prologue, and Epilogue
-at Court; signed at end Tho. Dekker.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> iii), H. Scherer (1901,
-<i>Münchener Beiträge</i>, xxi), O. Smeaton (1904, <i>T. D.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Admiral’s revived, from 3 Feb. to 26 May 1596, ‘the 1 parte of
-Forteunatus’. Nothing is heard of a second part, but during 9–30 Nov.
-1599 Dekker received £6 on account of the Admiral’s for ‘the hole
-history of Fortunatus’, followed on 1 Dec. by £1 for altering the
-book and on 12 Dec. £2 ‘for the eande of Fortewnatus for the corte’.
-The company were at Court on 27 Dec. 1599 and 1 Jan. 1600. <i>The
-Shoemaker’s Holiday</i> was played on 1 Jan.; <i>Fortunatus</i>
-therefore on 27 Dec. The Prologue (l. 21) makes it ‘a iust yeere’
-since the speaker saw the Queen, presumably on 27 Dec. 1598. The S.
-R. entry suggests that the 1599 play was a revision of the 1596 one.
-Probably Dekker boiled the old two parts down into one play; the
-juncture may, as suggested by Fleay, i. 126, and Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 179), come about l. 1315. The Court additions clearly include,
-besides the Prologue and the Epilogue with its reference to Elizabeth’s
-forty-second regnal year (1599–1600), the compliment of ll. 2799–834 at
-the ‘eande’ of the play. The ‘small circumference’ of the theatrical
-prologue was doubtless the Rose. Dekker may or may not have been
-the original author of the two-part play; probably he was not, if
-Fleay is right in assigning it to <i>c.</i> 1590 on the strength
-of the allusions to the Marprelate controversy left in the 1600
-text, e.g. l. 59. I should not wonder if Greene, who called his son
-Fortunatus, were the original author. A Fortunatus play is traceable
-in German repertories of 1608 and 1626 and an extant version in the
-collection of 1620 owes something to Dekker’s (Herz, 97; cf. P. Harms,
-<i>Die deutschen Fortunatus-Dramen</i> in <i>Theatergeschichtliche
-Forschungen</i>, v). But Dekker’s own source, directly or indirectly,
-was a German folk-tale, which had been dramatized by Hans Sachs as
-early as 1553.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Shoemaker’s Holiday. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1610, April 19. Transfer from Simmes to J. Wright of ‘A
-booke called the shoomakers holyday or the gentle crafte’ subject to an
-agreement for Simmes to ‘haue the workmanshipp of the printinge thereof
-for the vse of the sayd John Wrighte duringe his lyfe, yf he haue a
-printinge house of his owne’ (Arber, iii. 431).</p>
-
-<p>1600. The Shomakers Holiday. Or The Gentle Craft. With the humorous
-life of Simon Eyre, shoomaker, and Lord Maior of London. As it was
-acted before the Queenes most excellent Maiestie on New yeares day at
-night last, by the right honourable the Earle of Notingham, Lord high
-Admirall of England, his seruants. <i>Valentine Simmes</i>. [Epistle to
-Professors of the Gentle Craft and Prologue before the Queen.]</p>
-
-<p>1610, 1618, 1624, 1631, 1657.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by E. Fritsche (1862), K. Warnke and E. Proescholdt
-(1886), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>), and A. F. Lange (1914,
-<i>R. E. C.</i> iii).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe advanced £3 ‘to bye a boocke called the gentle Craft of Thomas
-Dickers’ on 15 July 1599. Probably the hiatus in the Diary conceals
-other payments for the play, and there is nothing in the form of the
-entry to justify the suspicions of Fleay, i. 124, that it was not
-new and was not by Dekker himself. Moreover, the source was a prose
-tract of <i>The Gentle Craft</i> by T. D[eloney], published in 1598.
-The Admiral’s were at Court on 1 Jan. 1600, but not on 1 Jan. 1601. A
-writer signing himself Dramaticus, in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, iv. 110,
-describes a copy in which a contemporary hand has written the names
-‘T. Dekker, R. Wilson’ at the end of the Epistle, together with the
-names of the actors in the margin of the text. A few of these are not
-otherwise traceable in the Admiral’s. Fleay and Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 203) unite in condemning this communication as an obvious forgery;
-but I rather wish they had given their reasons.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Patient Grissell. 1600</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Chettle and Haughton.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, March 28. ‘The Plaie of Patient Grissell.’
-<i>Cuthbert Burby</i> (Arber, iii. 158).</p>
-
-<p>1603. The Pleasant Comodie of Patient Grissill. As it hath beene
-sundrie times lately plaid by the right honorable the Earle of
-Nottingham (Lord high Admirall) his seruants. <i>For Henry Rocket.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1841, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>), A.
-B. Grosart (1886, <i>Dekker</i>, v. 109), G. Hübsch (1893,
-<i>Erlanger Beiträge</i>, xv), J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i> by A. E. H. Swaen in <i>E. S.</i>
-xxii. 451, Fr. v. Westenholz, <i>Die Griseldis-Sage in der
-Literaturgeschichte</i> (1888).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe paid £10 10<i>s.</i> to Dekker, Chettle, and Haughton for
-the play between 16 Oct. and 29 Dec. 1599, also £1 for Grissell’s
-gown on 26 Jan. 1600 and £2 ‘to staye the printing’ on 18 March 1600.
-The text refers to ‘wonders of 1599’ (l. 2220) and to ‘this yeare’
-as ‘leap yeare’ (l. 157). The production was doubtless <i>c.</i>
-Feb.–March 1600. Fleay, i. 271, attempts to divide the work amongst
-the three contributors; cf. Hunt, 60. I see nothing to commend the
-theory of W. Bang (<i>E. S.</i> xxviii. 208) that the play was written
-by Chettle <i>c.</i> 1590–4 and revised with Dekker, Haughton, and
-Jonson. No doubt the dandy’s duel, in which clothes alone suffer, of
-Emulo-Sir Owen resembles that of Brisk-Luculento in <i>Every Man Out
-of his Humour</i>, but this may be due to a common origin in fact (cf.
-Fleay, i. 361; Penniman, <i>War</i>, 70; Small, 43). Fleay, followed
-by Penniman, identifies Emulo with Samuel Daniel, but Small, 42, 184,
-satisfactorily disposes of this suggestion. There seems no reason to
-regard <i>Patient Grissell</i> as part of the <i>Poetomachia</i>.
-A ‘Comoedia von der Crysella’ is in the German repertory of 1626;
-the theme had, however, already been dealt with in a play of
-<i>Griseldis</i> by Hans Sachs (Herz, 66, 78).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Satiromastix. 1601</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Marston?</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1601, Nov. 11. ‘Vppon condicon that yt be lycensed to
-be printed, A booke called the vntrussinge of the humorous poetes by
-Thomas Decker.’ <i>John Barnes</i> (Arber, iii. 195).</p>
-
-<p>1602. Satiromastix. Or The vntrussing of the Humorous Poet. As it
-hath bin presented publikely, by the Right Honorable, the Lord
-Chamberlaine his Seruants; and priuately, by the Children of Paules.
-By Thomas Dekker. <i>For Edward White.</i> [Epistle to the World,
-note <i>Ad Lectorem</i> of <i>errata</i>, and Epilogue. Scherer, xiv,
-distinguishes two editions, but T. M. Parrott’s review in <i>M. L.
-R.</i> vi. 398 regards these as only variant states of one edition.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by T. Hawkins (1773, <i>O. E. D.</i> iii), H. Scherer
-(1907, <i>Materialien</i>, xx), J. H. Penniman (1913, <i>B. L.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Epistle refers to the <i>Poetomachia</i> between ‘Horace’
-and ‘a band of leane-witted Poetasters’, and on the place of
-<i>Satiromastix</i> in this fray there is little to be added to Small,
-119. Jonson is satirized as Horace. Asinius Bubo is some unknown
-satellite of his, probably the same who appears as Simplicius Faber
-in Marston’s <i>What You Will</i> (q.v.). Crispinus, Demetrius, and
-Tucca are taken over from Jonson’s <i>Poetaster</i> (q.v.). The
-satirical matter is engrafted on to a play with a tragic plot and
-comic sub-plot, both wholly unconcerned with the <i>Poetomachia</i>.
-Jonson must have known that the attack was in preparation, when he
-made Tucca abuse Histrio for threatening to ‘play’ him, and Histrio
-say that he had hired Demetrius [Dekker] ‘to abuse Horace, and bring
-him in, in a play’ (<i>Poetaster</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 212, 339). But
-obviously Dekker cannot have done much of his satire until he had seen
-<i>Poetaster</i>, to many details of which it retorts. It is perhaps
-rather fantastic to hold that, as he chaffs Jonson for the boast that
-he wrote <i>Poetaster</i> in fifteen weeks (<i>Satiromastix</i>, 641),
-he must himself have taken less. In any case a date of production
-between that of <i>Poetaster</i> in the spring of 1601 and the S. R.
-entry on 11 Nov. 1601 is indicated. The argument of Scherer, x, for
-a date about Christmas 1601, and therefore after the S. R. entry, is
-rebutted by Parrott. It is generally held that Marston helped Dekker
-with the play, in spite of the single name on the title-page. No
-doubt Tucca in <i>Poetaster</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 352, suggests to
-Histrio that Crispinus shall help Demetrius, and the plural is used in
-<i>Satiromastix</i> (<i>Epistle</i>, 12, and <i>Epilogue</i>, 2700) and
-in Jonson’s own <i>Apologetical Dialogue</i> to <i>Poetaster</i> (l.
-141) of the ‘poetasters’ who were Jonson’s ‘untrussers’. Small, 122,
-finds Marston in the plot and characterization, but not in the style.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Webster, and possibly Chettle, Heywood, and Smith.</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Famous History of Sir Thomas Wyat. With the Coronation of
-Queen Mary, and the coming in of King Philip. As it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span> plaied by the
-Queens Maiesties Seruants. Written by Thomas Dickers and Iohn Webster.
-<i>E. A. for Thomas Archer.</i></p>
-
-<p>1612. <i>For Thomas Archer.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. Blew (1876), and J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F.
-T.</i>) and with <i>Works</i> of Webster (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe, on behalf of Worcester’s men, paid Chettle, Dekker, Heywood,
-Smith, and Webster, for <i>1 Lady Jane</i> in Oct. 1602. He then bought
-properties for <i>The Overthrow of Rebels</i>, almost certainly the
-same play, and began to pay Dekker for a <i>2 Lady Jane</i>, which
-apparently remained unfinished, at any rate at the time. One or both of
-these plays, or possibly only the shares of Dekker and Webster in one
-or both of them, may reasonably be taken to survive in <i>Sir Thomas
-Wyatt</i>. Stoll, 49, thinks the play, as we have it, is practically
-Dekker’s and that there is ‘no one thing’ that can be claimed ‘with any
-degree of assurance’ for Webster. But this is not the general view.
-Fleay, ii. 269, followed in the main by Hunt, 76, gives Webster scc.
-i-ix, Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 233) scc. i-x and xvi (with hesitation
-as to iii-v), Pierce, after a careful application of a number of
-‘tests’ bearing both on style and on matter, scc. ii, v, vi, x, xiv,
-xvi; but he thinks that some or all of these were retouched by Dekker.
-Brooke inclines to trace Webster in scc. ii, xvi, Heywood in scc. vi,
-x, and a good deal of Dekker. Hunt thinks the planning due to Chettle.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Honest Whore. 1604, c. 1605</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Middleton.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, Nov. 9 (Pasfield). ‘A Booke called The humors of the
-patient man, The longinge wyfe and the honest whore.’ <i>Thomas Man the
-younger</i> (Arber, iii. 275).</p>
-
-<p>1608, April 29 (Buck). ‘A booke called the second parte of the
-conuerted Courtisan or honest Whore.’ <i>Thomas Man Junior</i> (Arber,
-iii. 376). [No fee entered.]</p>
-
-<p>1630, June 29 (Herbert). ‘The second parte of the Honest Hoore by
-Thomas Dekker.’ <i>Butter</i> (Arber, iv. 238).</p>
-
-<p>1604. The Honest Whore, With, The Humours of the Patient Man, and the
-Longing Wife. Tho: Dekker. <i>V. S. for John Hodgets.</i> [Part i.]</p>
-
-<p>1605, 1615, 1616, <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [All Part i.]</p>
-
-<p>1630. The Second Part of the Honest Whore, With the Humors of the
-Patient Man, the Impatient Wife: the Honest Whore, perswaded by strong
-Arguments to turne Curtizan againe: her braue refuting those Arguments.
-And lastly, the Comicall Passages of an Italian Bridewell, where the
-Scaene ends. Written by Thomas Dekker. <i>Elizabeth Allde for Nathaniel
-Butter.</i> [Part ii.]</p>
-
-<p>1635. The Honest Whore, With, The Humours of the Patient Man, and the
-Longing Wife, Written by Thomas Dekker, As it hath beene Acted by her
-Maiesties Servants with great Applause. <i>N. Okes, sold by Richard
-Collins.</i> [Part i.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i) and W. A. Neilson
-(1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span></p>
-
-<p>Henslowe made a payment to Dekker and Middleton for ‘the pasyent man
-&amp; the onest hore’ between 1 Jan. and 14 March 1604, on account of the
-Prince’s men, and the mention of Towne in a stage-direction to Part i
-(ed. Pearson, ii. 78) shows that it was in fact acted by this company.
-Fleay, i. 132, and Hunt, 94, cite some allusions in Part ii suggesting
-a date soon after that of Part i, and this would be consistent with
-Henslowian methods. There is more difference of opinion about the
-partition of the work. Of Part i Fleay gives scc. i, iii, and xiii-xv
-alone to Dekker, and Hunt finds the influence of Middleton in the theme
-and plot of both Parts. Bullen, however (<i>Middleton</i>, i. xxv),
-thinks Middleton’s share ‘inconsiderable’, giving him only <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-v and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, with a hand in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i and in a few comic
-scenes of Part ii. Ward, ii. 462, holds a similar view.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Westward Ho! 1604</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Webster.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, March 2. ‘A commodie called westward Hoe presented
-by the Children of Paules provided yat he get further authoritie before
-yt be printed.’ <i>Henry Rocket</i> (Arber, iii. 283). [Entry crossed
-out and marked ‘vacat’.]</p>
-
-<p>1607. Westward Hoe. As it hath beene diuers times Acted by the
-Children of Paules. Written by Tho: Decker, and Iohn Webster. <i>Sold
-by John Hodgets.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> with <i>Works</i> of Webster (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>The allusions cited by Fleay, ii. 269, Stoll, 14, Hunt, 101, agree
-with a date of production at the end of 1604. Fleay assigns Acts
-<span class="allsmcap">I-III</span> and a part of <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii to Webster; the rest of
-Acts <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span> to Dekker. But Stoll, 79, thinks that
-Webster only had ‘some slight, undetermined part in the more colourless
-and stereotyped portions ... under the shaping and guiding hand of
-Dekker’, and Pierce, 131, after an elaborate application of tests,
-can only give him all or most of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii
-and a small part of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. Brooke finds
-traces of Webster in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii and Dekker in
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ii and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, and has some useful criticism
-of the ‘tests’ employed by Pierce.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Northward Ho! 1605</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Webster.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Aug. 6 (Buck). ‘A booke Called Northward Ho.’
-<i>George Elde</i> (Arber, iii. 358).</p>
-
-<p>1607. North-Ward Hoe. Sundry times Acted by the Children of Paules. By
-Thomas Decker, and Iohn Webster. <i>G. Eld.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>) and in
-<i>Works</i> of Webster (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>The play is a reply to <i>Eastward Ho!</i> which was itself a reply to
-<i>Westward Ho!</i> and was on the stage before May 1605, and it is
-referred to with the other two plays in Day’s <i>Isle of Gulls</i>,
-which was on the stage in Feb. 1606. This pretty well fixes its date
-to the end of 1605. I do not think that Stoll, 16, is justified in his
-argument for a date later than Jan. 1606, since, even if the comparison
-of the life of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span> gallant to a squib is a borrowing from Marston’s
-<i>Fawn</i>, it seems probable that the <i>Fawn</i> itself was
-originally written by 1604, although possibly touched up early in 1606.
-Fleay, ii. 270, identifies Bellamont with Chapman, one of the authors
-of <i>Eastward Ho!</i> and Stoll, 65, argues in support of this. It is
-plausible, but does not carry with it Fleay’s identification of Jenkins
-with Drayton. Fleay gives Webster <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, but Stoll finds as little of him
-as in <i>Westward Ho!</i> and Pierce, 131, only gives him all or most
-of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, and the beginning of v and a small
-part of <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. Brooke traces Webster in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i and
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i and Dekker in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Whore of Babylon 1605 &lt; &gt; 7</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, April 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called the Whore of
-Babilon.’ <i>Nathanael Butter and John Trundell</i> (Arber, iii. 347).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Whore of Babylon. As it was Acted by the Princes Seruants.
-Written by Thomas Dekker. <i>For N. Butter.</i> [Epistle to the Reader
-and Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 133, and Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 210) regard the play as
-a revision of <i>Truth’s Supplication to Candlelight</i>, for which
-Henslowe, on behalf of the Admiral’s, was paying Dekker in Jan. 1600
-and buying a robe for Time in April 1600. Truth and Time, but not
-Candlelight, are characters in the play, which deals with Catholic
-intrigues against Elizabeth, represented as Titania, and her suitors.
-I do not feel sure that it would have been allowed to be staged in
-Elizabeth’s lifetime. In any case it must have been revised <i>c.</i>
-1605–7, in view of the references, not only to the death of Essex (ed.
-Pearson, p. 246) and the reign of James (p. 234), but to the <i>Isle of
-Gulls</i> of 1605 (p. 214). The Cockpit, alluded to (p. 214) as a place
-where follies are shown in apes, is of course that in the palace, where
-Henry saw plays. The Epistle and Prologue have clear references to a
-production in ‘Fortune’s dial’ and the ‘square’ of the Fortune, and the
-former criticizes players; but hardly proves the definite breach with
-the Prince’s suggested by Fleay and Greg.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Roaring Girl. c. 1610</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Middleton.</p>
-
-<p>1611. The Roaring Girle. Or Moll Cut-Purse, As it hath lately beene
-Acted on the Fortune-stage by the Prince his Players. Written by T.
-Middleton and T. Dekkar. <i>For Thomas Archer.</i> [Epistle to the
-Comic Play-Readers, signed ‘Thomas Middleton’, Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> ii), A. H. Bullen
-(1885, <i>Middleton</i>, iv. 1), and J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F.
-T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i, 132, thinks the play written about 1604–5, but not produced
-until 1610. This is fantastic and Bullen points out that Mary Frith,
-the heroine, born not earlier than <i>c.</i> 1584–5, had hardly won her
-notoriety by 1604. By 1610 she certainly had, and the ‘foule’ book of
-her ‘base trickes’ referred to in the Epilogue was probably John Day’s
-<i>Mad Pranks of Merry Mall of the Bankside</i>, entered on S. R.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span> 7
-Aug. 1610, but not extant. The Epilogue also tells the audience that,
-if they are dissatisfied,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The Roring Girle her selfe some few dayes hence,</div>
- <div>Shall on this Stage, give larger recompence.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">I think this can only refer to a contemplated personal
-appearance of Mary Frith on the stage; it has been interpreted as
-referring to another forthcoming play. Moll Cutpurse appears in
-Field’s <i>Amends for Ladies</i>, but this was not a Fortune play.
-Bullen (<i>Middleton</i>, i. xxxv) regards the play as an example
-of collaboration, and gives Dekker <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, and
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>; Middleton, with occasional hesitation, the rest. Fleay, i.
-132, only gives Middleton <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>If It be not Good, the Devil is in It. 1610 &lt; &gt; 12</i></p>
-
-<p>1612. If It Be Not Good, the Diuel is in it. A New Play, As it hath bin
-lately Acted, with great applause, by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants:
-At the Red Bull. Written by Thomas Dekker. <i>For I. T. sold by Edward
-Marchant.</i> [Epistle to the Queen’s men signed Tho: Dekker, Prologue,
-and Epilogue. The running title is ‘If this be not a good Play, the
-Diuell is in it’.]</p>
-
-<p>The Epistle tells us that after ‘Fortune’ (the Admiral’s) had ‘set her
-foote vpon’ the play, the Queen’s had ‘raised it up ... the Frontispice
-onely a little more garnished’. Fleay, i. 133, attempts to fix the
-play to 1610, but hardly proves more than that it cannot be earlier
-than 14 May 1610, as the murder on that day of Henri IV is referred to
-(ed. Pearson, p. 354). The Epistle also refers to a coming new play by
-Dekker’s ‘worthy friend’, perhaps Webster (q.v.). In the opening scene
-the devil Lurchall is addressed as Grumball, which suggests the actor
-Armin (cf. ch. xv). Daborne (q.v.) in the Epistle to his <i>Christian
-Turned Turk</i> seems to claim a share in this play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Match Me in London</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, 8 Nov. (Herbert). ‘A Play called Mach mee in London
-by Thomas Decker.’ <i>Seile</i> (Arber, iv. 242).</p>
-
-<p>1631. A Tragi-Comedy: Called, Match mee in London. As it hath beene
-often presented; First, at the Bull in St. Iohns-street; And lately,
-at the Priuate-House in Drury Lane, called the Phoenix. Written by
-Tho: Dekker. <i>B. Alsop and T. Fawcet for H. Seile.</i> [Epistle to
-Lodowick Carlell signed ‘Tho: Dekker’.]</p>
-
-<p>Herbert’s diary contains the entry on 21 Aug. 1623, ‘For the L.
-Elizabeth’s servants of the Cockpit. An old play called Match me in
-London which had been formerly allowed by Sir G. Bucke.’ On this, some
-rather slight evidence from allusions, and a general theory that Dekker
-did not write plays during his imprisonment of 1613–19, Fleay, i. 134,
-puts the original production by Queen Anne’s men <i>c.</i> 1611 and
-Hunt, 160, in 1612–13. As there are some allusions to cards and the
-game of maw, Fleay thinks the play a revision of <i>The Set at Maw</i>
-produced by the Admiral’s on 15 Dec. 1594. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span> ii.
-172) points out the weakness of the evidence, but finds some possible
-traces of revision in the text.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Virgin Martyr. c. 1620</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Massinger.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1621, 7 Dec. (Buck). ‘A Tragedy called The Virgin Martir.’
-<i>Thomas Jones</i> (Arber, iv. 62).</p>
-
-<p>1622. The Virgin Martir, A Tragedie, as it hath bin divers times
-publickely Acted with great Applause, By the seruants of his Maiesties
-Reuels. Written by Phillip Messenger and Thomas Deker. <i>B. A. for
-Thomas Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p>1631, 1651, 1661.</p>
-
-<p>The play is said to have been ‘reformed’ and licensed by Buck for the
-Red Bull on 6 Oct. 1620 (Herbert, 29). An additional scene, licensed
-on 7 July 1624 (<i>Var.</i> i. 424), did not find its way into print.
-Fleay, i. 135, 212, asserts that the 1620 play was a refashioning
-by Massinger of a play by Dekker for the Queen’s about 1611, itself
-a recast of <i>Diocletian</i>, produced by the Admiral’s on 16 Nov.
-1594, but ‘dating from 1591 at the latest’. He considers <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-i, iii, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii, and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii of the 1620 version
-to be still Dekker’s. Ward, iii. 12, and Hunt, 156, give most of
-the play to Dekker. But all these views are impressionistic, and
-there is no special reason to suppose that Massinger revised, rather
-than collaborated with, Dekker, or to assume a version of <i>c.</i>
-1611. As for an earlier version still, Fleay’s evidence is trivial.
-In any case 1591 is out of the question, as Henslowe marked the
-<i>Diocletian</i> of 1594 ‘n.e.’ Nor does he say it was by Dekker. A
-play on Dorothea the Martyr had made its way into Germany by 1626,
-but later German repertories disclose that there was also a distinct
-play on Diocletian (Herz, 66, 103; Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 172).
-Greg, however, finds parts of <i>The Virgin Martyr</i>, ‘presumably
-Dekker’s’, to be ‘undoubtedly early’. Oliphant (<i>E. S.</i> xvi. 191)
-makes the alternative suggestion that <i>Diocletian</i> was the basis
-of Fletcher’s <i>Prophetess</i>, in which he believes the latter part
-of <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i to be by an older hand, which he
-cannot identify. All this is very indefinite.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Witch of Edmonton. 1621</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Ford and W. Rowley.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1658, May 21. ‘A booke called The witch of Edmonton, a
-Tragicomedy by Will: Rowley, &amp;c.’ <i>Edward Blackmore</i> (Eyre, ii.
-178).</p>
-
-<p>1658. The Witch of Edmonton, A known true Story. Composed into a
-Tragi-Comedy By divers well-esteemed Poets; William Rowley, Thomas
-Dekker, John Ford, &amp;c. Acted by the Princes Servants; often at the
-Cock-Pit in Drury Lane, once at Court, with singular Applause. Never
-printed till now. <i>J. Cottrel for Edward Blackmore.</i> [Prologue
-signed ‘Master Bird’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> with <i>Works</i> of John Ford, by H. Weber (1811), W.
-Gifford<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span> (1827), H. Coleridge (1840, 1848, 1851), A. Dyce (1869), A. H.
-Bullen (1895).</p>
-
-<p>I include this for the sake of completeness, but it is based upon a
-pamphlet published in 1621 and was played at Court by the Prince’s men
-on 29 Dec. 1621 (Murray, ii. 193). It is generally regarded as written
-in collaboration. Views as to its division amongst the writers are
-summarized by Hunt, 178, and Pierce (<i>Anglia</i>, xxxvi. 289). The
-latter finds Dekker in nearly all the scenes, Ford in four, Rowley
-perhaps in five.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Wonder of a Kingdom. 1623</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>Possibly with</i> Day.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1631, May 16 (Herbert). ‘A Comedy called The Wonder of a
-Kingdome by Thomas Decker.’ <i>John Jackman</i> (Arber, iv. 253).</p>
-
-<p>1636, Feb. 24. ‘Vnder the hands of Sir Henry Herbert and Master
-Kingston Warden (dated the 7th of May 1631) a Play called The Wonder of
-a Kingdome by Thomas Decker.’ <i>Nicholas Vavasour</i> (Arber, iv. 355).</p>
-
-<p>1636. The Wonder of a Kingdome. Written by Thomas Dekker. <i>Robert
-Raworth for Nicholas Vavasour.</i></p>
-
-<p>Herbert’s diary for 18 Sept. 1623 has the entry: ‘For a company of
-strangers. A new comedy called Come see a wonder, written by John Daye.
-It was acted at the Red Bull and licensed without my hand to it because
-they were none of the 4 companies.’ As <i>The Wonder of a Kingdom</i>
-contains scenes which are obviously from Day’s <i>Parliament of
-Bees</i> (<i>1608–16</i>) it is possible either to adopt the simple
-theory of a collaboration between Day and Dekker in 1623, or to hold
-with Fleay, i. 136, and Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 174, that Day’s
-‘new’ play of 1623 was a revision of an earlier one by Dekker. The
-mention of cards in the closing lines seems an inadequate ground for
-Fleay’s further theory, apparently approved by Greg, that the original
-play was <i>The Mack</i>, produced by the Admiral’s on 21 Feb. 1595.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Sun’s Darling. 1624</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Ford.</p>
-
-<p>1656. The Sun’s-Darling: A Moral Masque: As it hath been often
-presented at Whitehall, by their Majesties Servants; and after at the
-Cockpit in Drury Lane, with great Applause. Written by John Foard and
-Tho. Decker Gent. <i>J. Bell for Andrew Penneycuicke.</i></p>
-
-<p>1657. Reissue with same imprint.</p>
-
-<p>1657. Reissue with same imprint.... ‘As it hath been often presented by
-their Majesties Servants; at the Cockpit in Drury Lane’....</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> with <i>Works</i> of John Ford, by H. Weber (1811), W.
-Gifford (1827), H. Coleridge (1840, 1848, 1851), A. Dyce (1869), A. H.
-Bullen (1895).</p>
-
-<p>The play was licensed by Herbert for the Lady Elizabeth’s at the
-Cockpit on 3 March 1624 (Chalmers, <i>S. A.</i> 217; Herbert, 27) and
-included in a list of Cockpit plays in 1639 (<i>Variorum</i>, iii.
-159). Fleay, i. 232, Ward, ii. 470, and Pierce (<i>Anglia</i>, xxxvi.
-141) regard it as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span> a revision by Ford of earlier work by Dekker, and
-the latter regards the last page of Act <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, Acts <span class="allsmcap">II</span>
-and <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, and the prose of Acts <span class="allsmcap">IV</span> and <span class="allsmcap">V</span> as
-substantially Dekker’s. It is perhaps a step from this to the theory of
-Fleay and Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 190) that the play represents the
-<i>Phaethon</i>, which Dekker wrote for the Admiral’s in Jan. 1598 and
-afterwards altered for a Court performance at Christmas 1600. There are
-allusions to ‘humours’ and to ‘pampered jades of Asia’ (ed. Pearson,
-pp. 316, 318) which look early, but Phaethon is not a character, nor
-is the story his. A priest of the Sun appears in Act <span class="allsmcap">I</span>: I am
-surprised that Fleay did not identify him, though he is not mad, with
-the ‘mad priest of the sun’ referred to in Greene’s (q.v.) Epistle to
-<i>Perimedes</i>. The play is not a ‘masque’ in the ordinary sense.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Noble Soldier &gt; 1631</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Day and S. Rowley?</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1631, May 16 (Herbert). ‘A Tragedy called The noble
-Spanish Souldier by Thomas Deckar.’ <i>John Jackman</i> (Arber, iv.
-253).</p>
-
-<p>1633, Dec. 9. ‘Entred for his Copy vnder the handes of Sir Henry
-Herbert and Master Kingston warden <i>Anno Domini</i> 1631. a Tragedy
-called <i>The Noble Spanish soldior</i> written by master Decker.’
-<i>Nicholas Vavasour</i> (Arber, iv. 310).</p>
-
-<p>1634. The Noble Souldier, Or, A Contract Broken, justly reveng’d. A
-Tragedy. Written by S. R. <i>For Nicholas Vavasour.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by A. H. Bullen (1882, <i>O. E. P.</i> i) and J. S.
-Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The printer tells us that the author was dead in 1634.</p>
-
-<p>The initials may indicate Samuel Rowley of the Admiral’s and Prince
-Henry’s. Bullen and Hunt, 187, think that Dekker revised work by
-Rowley. But probably Day also contributed, for <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii, and parts of
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii and <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv are drawn like scenes in <i>The
-Wonder of a Kingdom</i> from his <i>Parliament of Bees</i> (1608–16).
-Fleay, i. 128, identifies the play with <i>The Spanish Fig</i> for
-which Henslowe made a payment on behalf of the Admiral’s in Jan. 1602.
-This Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 220) thinks ‘plausible’, regarding the
-play as ‘certainly an old play of about 1600, presumably by Dekker and
-Rowley with later additions by Day’. He notes that the King is not,
-as Fleay alleged, poisoned with a Spanish fig, but a Spanish fig is
-mentioned, ‘and it is quite possible that such may have been the mode
-of poisoning in the original piece’. Henslowe does not name the payee
-for <i>The Spanish Fig</i>, and it was apparently not finished at the
-time.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost and Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>It will be convenient to set out all the certain or conjectured work by
-Dekker mentioned in Henslowe’s Diary.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1 sm">(a) <i>Conjectural anonymous Work before 1598</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(i) <i>Philipo and Hippolito.</i></p>
-
-<p>Produced as a new play by the Admiral’s on 9 July 1594. The ascription
-to Dekker, confident in Fleay, i. 213, and regarded as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span> possible
-by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 165), appears to be due to the entry
-of a <i>Philenzo and Hypollita</i> by Massinger, who revised other
-early work of Dekker, in the S. R. on 29 June 1660, to the entry of
-a <i>Philenzo and Hipolito</i> by Massinger in Warburton’s list of
-burnt plays (<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231), and to the appearance of a
-<i>Julio and Hyppolita</i> in the German collection of 1620. A copy of
-Massinger’s play is said (Collier, <i>Henslowe</i>, xxxi) to be amongst
-the <i>Conway MSS.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>The Jew of Venice.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Entered as a play by Dekker in the S. R. on 9 Sept. 1653 (<i>3
-Library</i>, ii. 241). It has been suggested (Fleay, i. 121, and
-<i>Sh.</i> 30, 197; Greg in <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 170) that it was the
-source of a German play printed from a Vienna MS. by Meissner, 131 (cf.
-Herz, 84). In this a personage disguises himself as a French doctor,
-which leads to the conjectural identification of its English original
-both with <i>The Venetian Comedy</i> produced by the Admiral’s on 27
-Aug. 1594 and with <i>The French Doctor</i> performed by the same men
-on 19 Oct. 1594 and later dates and bought by them from Alleyn in
-1602. The weakest point in all this guesswork is the appearance of
-common themes in the German play and in <i>The Merchant of Venice</i>,
-which Fleay explains to his own satisfaction by the assumption that
-Shakespeare based <i>The Merchant of Venice</i> on Dekker’s work.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>Dr. Faustus.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Revived by the Admiral’s on 30 Sept. 1594. On the possibility that the
-1604 text contains comic scenes written by Dekker for this revival, cf.
-s.v. Marlowe.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>Diocletian.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Produced by the Admiral’s, 16 Nov. 1599; cf. s.v. <i>The Virgin
-Martyr</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>The Set at Maw.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Produced by the Admiral’s on 14 Dec. 1594; cf. s.v. <i>Match Me in
-London</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>Antony and Valia.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Revived by the Admiral’s, 4 Jan. 1595, and ascribed by Fleay, i.
-213, with some encouragement from Greg in <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 174,
-to Dekker, on the ground of entries in the S. R. on 29 June 1660 and
-in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231) of an
-<i>Antonio and Vallia</i> by Massinger, who revised other early work by
-Dekker.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>The Mack.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Produced by the Admiral’s on 21 Feb. 1595; cf. s.v. <i>The Wonder of a
-Kingdom</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>1 Fortunatus.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Revived by the Admiral’s on 3 Feb. 1596; cf. s.v. <i>Old Fortunatus</i>
-(<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Stukeley.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Produced by the Admiral’s on 11 Dec. 1596. On Fleay’s ascription to
-Dekker, cf. s.v. <i>Captain Thomas Stukeley</i> (Anon.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>Prologue to Tamberlaine.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">This rests on a forged entry in Henslowe’s Diary for 20 Dec. 1597; cf.
-s.v. Marlowe.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1 sm">(b) <i>Work for Admiral’s, 1598–1602</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(i) <i>Phaethon.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments in Jan. 1598 and for alterations for the Court in Dec. 1600;
-cf. s.v. <i>The Sun’s Darling</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>The Triplicity or Triangle of Cuckolds.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment in March 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>The Wars of Henry I or The Welshman’s Prize.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, with Chettle and Drayton, March 1598. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 192) speculates on possible relations of the plays to others on a
-Welshman and on Henry I.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>1 Earl Godwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, March 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Pierce of Exton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, April 1598. Apparently the
-play was not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>1 Black Bateman of the North.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, May 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>2 Earl Godwin.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, May–June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>The Madman’s Morris.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton and Wilson, July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Hannibal and Hermes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton and Wilson, July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>2 Hannibal and Hermes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 195) gives this name to (xiii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>Pierce of Winchester.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton and Wilson, July–Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xii) <i>Chance Medley.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments to Dekker (or Chettle), with Munday, Drayton, and Wilson, Aug.
-1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiii) <i>Worse Afeared than Hurt.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton, Aug.–Sept. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiv) <i>1 Civil Wars of France.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, with Drayton, Sept. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xv) <i>Connan Prince of Cornwall.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton, Oct. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvi) <i>2 Civil Wars of France.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, with Drayton, Nov. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvii) <i>3 Civil Wars of France.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton, Nov.–Dec. 1598.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xviii) <i>Introduction to Civil Wars of France.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, Jan. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xix) <i>Troilus and Cressida.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, April 1599. A fragmentary ‘plot’ (cf. ch. xxiv)
-may belong to this play.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xx) <i>Agamemnon or Orestes Furious.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, May 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxi) <i>The Gentle Craft.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, July 1599; cf. <i>The Shoemaker’s Holiday</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxii) <i>The Stepmother’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Aug.–Oct. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxiii) <i>Bear a Brain.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, Aug. 1599; cf. s.vv. <i>The Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>
-(<i>supra</i>) and <i>Look About You</i> (Anon.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxiv) <i>Page of Plymouth.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Jonson, Aug.–Sept. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxv) <i>Robert II or The Scot’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Jonson, ‘&amp; other Jentellman’ (? Marston, q.v.),
-Sept. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxvi) <i>Patient Grissell.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle and Haughton, Oct.–Dec. 1599; cf. <i>supra</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxvii) <i>Fortunatus.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, Nov.–Dec. 1599; cf. s.v. <i>Old Fortunatus</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxviii) <i>Truth’s Supplication to Candlelight.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, Jan. 1600. Apparently the play was not finished; cf. s.v.
-<i>The Whore of Babylon</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxix) <i>The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, with Day and Haughton, Feb. 1600. Apparently the play was not
-finished; cf. s.v. <i>Lust’s Dominion</i> (Marlowe).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxx) <i>The Seven Wise Masters.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Day, and Haughton, March 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxi) <i>The Golden Ass</i> or <i>Cupid and Psyche</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle and Day, April-May 1600; on borrowings from
-this, cf. s.v. Heywood, <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxii) <i>1 Fair Constance of Rome.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson (q.v.), June 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxiii) <i><a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Fortune’s Tennis.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, Sept. 1600. A fragmentary plot (cf. ch. xxiv) is perhaps less
-likely to belong to this than to Munday’s <i>Set at Tennis</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxiv) <i>King Sebastian of Portugal.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, April-May 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxv) <i>The Spanish Fig.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, Jan. 1602. The payee is unnamed; cf. <i>The Noble Soldier</i>
-(<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxvi) Prologue and Epilogue to <i>Pontius Pilate</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, Jan. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxvii) Alterations to <i>Tasso’s Melancholy</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, Jan.–Dec. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxviii) <i>Jephthah</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Munday, May 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxxix) <i>Caesar’s Fall, or The Two Shapes</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Drayton, Middleton, Munday, and Webster, May 1602.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1 sm">(c) <i>Work for Worcester’s, 1602</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(i) <i>A Medicine for a Curst Wife.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, July–Sept. 1602. The play was begun for the Admiral’s and
-transferred to Worcester’s.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>Additions to Sir John Oldcastle.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, Aug.–Sept. 1602; cf. s.v. Drayton.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>1 Lady Jane</i>, or <i>The Overthrow of Rebels</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Heywood, Smith, and Webster, Oct. 1602; cf.
-s.v. <i>Sir Thomas Wyatt</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>2 Lady Jane.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment, Oct. 1602. Apparently the play was not finished; cf. s.v.
-<i>Sir Thomas Wyatt</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Christmas Comes but Once a Year.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Heywood, and Webster, Nov. 1602.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1 sm">(d) <i>Work for Prince’s, 1604</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>The Patient Man and the Honest Whore.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Middleton, Jan.–March 1602; cf. s.v. <i>The Honest
-Whore</i> (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-
-<p>The following plays are assigned to Dekker in S. R. but are now lost:</p>
-
-<p><i>The Life and Death of Guy of Warwick</i>, with Day (S. R. 15 Jan.
-1620).</p>
-
-<p><i>Gustavus King of Swethland</i> (S. R. 29 June 1660).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Tale of Ioconda and Astolso</i>, a Comedy (S. R. 29 June 1660).</p>
-
-<p>The two latter are also in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (<i>3
-Library</i>, ii. 231).</p>
-
-
-
-<p>The following are assigned to Dekker in Herbert’s licence entries:</p>
-
-<p>A French Tragedy of <i>The Bellman of Paris</i>, by Dekker and Day, for
-the Prince’s, on 30 July 1623.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Fairy Knight</i>, by Dekker and Ford, for the Prince’s, on 11
-June 1624.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Bristow Merchant</i>, by Dekker and Ford, for the Palsgrave’s,
-on 22 Oct. 1624.</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 232, seems to have nothing but the names to go upon in
-suggesting identifications of the two latter with the <i>Huon of
-Bordeaux</i>, revived by Sussex’s on 28 Dec. 1593, and Day’s <i>Bristol
-Tragedy</i> (q.v.) respectively.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span></p>
-
-<p>For other ascriptions to Dekker see <i>Capt. T. Stukeley</i>,
-<i>Charlemagne</i>, <i>London Prodigal</i>, <i>Sir Thomas More</i>,
-<i>The Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i> in ch. xxiv. He has also been
-conjectured to be the author of the songs in the 1632 edition of Lyly’s
-plays.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Coronation Entertainment. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p>See ch. xxiv, C.</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Troia Nova Triumphans. 29 Oct. 1612</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1612, Oct. 21. ‘To be prynted when yt is further
-Aucthorised, A Booke called Troia Nova triumphans. London triumphinge.
-or the solemne receauinge of Sir John Swynerton knight into the citye
-at his Retourne from Westminster after the taking his oathe written by
-Thomas Decker.’ <i>Nicholas Okes</i> (Arber, iii. 500).</p>
-
-<p>1612. Troia-Noua Triumphans. London Triumphing, or, The Solemne,
-Magnificent, and Memorable Receiuing of that worthy Gentleman, Sir Iohn
-Swinerton Knight, into the Citty of London, after his Returne from
-taking the Oath of Maioralty at Westminster, on the Morrow next after
-Simon and Iudes day, being the 29. of October, 1612. All the Showes,
-Pageants, Chariots of Triumph, with other Deuices (both on the Water
-and Land) here fully expressed. By Thomas Dekker. <i>Nicholas Okes,
-sold by John Wright.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Fairholt (1844), ii. 7.</p>
-
-<p>The opening of the description refers to ‘our best-to-be-beloved
-friends, the noblest strangers’. John Chamberlain (Birch, i. 202) says
-that the Palsgrave was present and Henry kept away by his illness,
-that the show was ‘somewhat extraordinary’ and the water procession
-wrecked by ‘great winds’. At Paul’s Chain the Mayor was met by the
-‘first triumph’, a sea-chariot, bearing Neptune and Luna, with a
-ship of wine. Neptune made a speech. At Paul’s Churchyard came ‘the
-second land-triumph’, the throne or chariot of Virtue, drawn by four
-horses on which sat Time, Mercury, Desire, and Industry. Virtue made
-a speech, and both pageants preceded the Mayor down Cheapside. At the
-little Conduit in Cheapside was the Castle of Envy, between whom and
-Virtue there was a dialogue, followed by fireworks from the castle. At
-the Cross in Cheapside was another ‘triumph’, the House of Fame, with
-representations of famous Merchant Tailors, ‘a perticular roome being
-reserved for one that represents the person of Henry, the now Prince
-of Wales’. After a speech by Fame, the pageant joined the procession,
-and from it was heard a song on the way to the Guildhall. On the way
-to Paul’s after dinner, Virtue and Envy were again beheld, and at the
-Mayor’s door a speech was made by Justice.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS DELONEY (<i>c.</i> 1543–<i>c.</i> 1600).</p>
-
-<p>A ballad writer and pamphleteer, who wrote a ballad on the visit to
-Tilbury in 1588. See ch. xxiv, C.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT DEVEREUX, EARL OF ESSEX (1566–1601).</p>
-
-<p>It is possible that Essex, who sometimes dabbled in literature, had
-himself a hand in the device of <i>Love and Self-Love</i>, with which
-he entertained Elizabeth on 17 Nov. 1595, and of which some of the
-speeches are generally credited to Bacon (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM DODD (<i>c.</i> 1597–1602).</p>
-
-<p>A Scholar and Fellow of St. John’s, Cambridge, and a conjectured author
-of <i>Parnassus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">MICHAEL DRAYTON (<i>c.</i> 1563–1631).</p>
-
-<p>Drayton was born at Hartshill in Warwickshire, and brought up in the
-household of Sir Henry Goodyere of Polesworth, whose daughter Anne,
-afterwards Lady Rainsford, is the Idea of his pastorals and sonnets.
-With <i>The Harmony of the Church</i> (1591) began a life-long series
-of ambitious poems, in all the characteristic Elizabethan manners,
-for which Drayton found many patrons, notably Lucy Lady Bedford, Sir
-Walter Aston of Tixall, Prince Henry and Prince Charles, and Edward
-Earl of Dorset. The guerdons of his pen were not sufficient to keep him
-from having recourse to the stage. Meres classed him in 1598 among the
-‘best for tragedy’, and Henslowe’s diary shows him a busy writer for
-the Admiral’s men, almost invariably in collaboration with Dekker and
-others, from Dec. 1597 to Jan. 1599, and a more occasional one from
-Oct. 1599 to May 1602. At a later date he may possibly have written for
-Queen Anne’s men, since commendatory verses by T. Greene are prefixed
-to his <i>Poems</i> of 1605. In 1608 he belonged to the King’s Revels
-syndicate at Whitefriars. No later connexion with the stage can be
-traced, and he took no steps to print his plays with his other works.
-His Elegy to Henry Reynolds of <i>Poets and Poesie</i> (C. Brett,
-<i>Drayton’s Minor Poems</i>, 108) does honour to Marlowe, Shakespeare,
-Jonson, and Beaumont, and tradition makes him a partaker in the
-drinking-bout that led to Shakespeare’s end. Jonson wrote commendatory
-verses for him in 1627, but in 1619 had told Drummond (Laing, 10) that
-‘Drayton feared him; and he esteemed not of him’. The irresponsible
-Fleay, i. 361; ii. 271, 323, identifies him with Luculento of <i>E.
-M. O.</i>, Captain Jenkins of Dekker and Webster’s <i>Northward
-Ho!</i>, and the eponym of the anonymous <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>;
-Small, 98, with the Decius criticized in the anonymous <i>Jack Drum’s
-Entertainment</i>, who may also be Dekker.</p>
-
-<p>The collections of Drayton’s <i>Poems</i> do not include his
-plays.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: O. Elton, <i>M. D.</i> (1895, <i>Spenser
-Soc.</i>, 1905); L. Whitaker, <i>M. D. as a Dramatist</i> (1903, <i>M.
-L. A.</i> xviii. 378).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sir John Oldcastle. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Hathaway, Munday, and Wilson.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Aug. 11 (Vicars). ‘The first parte of the history
-of the life of Sir John Oldcastell lord Cobham. Item the second and
-last parte of the history of Sir John Oldcastell lord Cobham with his
-martyrdom,’ <i>Thomas Pavier</i> (Arber, iii. 169).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span></p>
-
-<p>1600. The first part Of the true and honorable historie, of the life of
-Sir John Oldcastle, the good Lord Cobham. As it hath been lately acted
-by the right honorable the Earle of Notingham Lord high Admirall of
-England his seruants. <i>V. S. for Thomas Pavier.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>1600.... Written by William Shakespeare. <i>For T. P.</i> [Probably a
-forgery of later date than that given in the imprint; cf. p. 479.]</p>
-
-<p>1664. In Third Folio Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p>1685. In Fourth Folio Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in collections of the Shakespeare <i>Apocrypha</i>,
-and by W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i), P. Simpson (1908, <i>M. S.
-R.</i>), J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe advanced £10 to the Admiral’s as payment to Munday, Drayton,
-Wilson, and Hathway for the first part of ‘the lyfe of S<sup>r</sup> Jhon
-Ouldcasstell’ and in earnest for the second part on 16 Oct. 1599,
-and an additional 10<i>s.</i> for the poets ‘at the playnge of S<sup>r</sup>
-John Oldcastell the ferste tyme as a gefte’ between 1 and 8 Nov.
-1599. Drayton had £4 for the second part between 19 and 26 Dec. 1599,
-and properties were being bought for it in March 1600. It is not
-preserved. By Aug. 1602 the play had been transferred to Worcester’s
-men. More properties were bought, doubtless for a revival, and Dekker
-had £2 10<i>s.</i> for ‘new a dicyons’. Fleay, ii. 116, attempts to
-disentangle the work of the collaborators. Clearly the play was an
-answer to <i>Henry IV</i>, in which Sir John Falstaff was originally
-Sir John Oldcastle, and this is made clear in the prologue:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>It is no pampered glutton we present,</div>
- <div>Nor aged Councellour to youthfull sinne.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful and Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>For ascriptions see <i>Edward IV</i>, <i>London Prodigal</i>, <i>Merry
-Devil of Edmonton</i>, <i>Sir T. More</i>, and <i>Thomas Lord
-Cromwell</i> in ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-<p>The complete series of his work for the Admiral’s during 1597–1602 is
-as follows:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>Mother Redcap.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Munday, Dec. 1597–Jan. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>The Welshman’s Prize, or The Famous Wars of Henry I and the
-Prince of Wales.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle and Dekker, March 1598. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 192) thinks that the play may have had some relation to Davenport’s
-<i>Henry I</i> of 1624 entered as by Shakespeare and Davenport in S. R.
-on 9 Sept. 1653.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>1 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, March 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>2 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, May to June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Pierce of Exton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payment of £2, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, April 1598; but
-apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>1 Black Bateman of the North.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Dekker, and Wilson, May 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-lion.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle, Munday, and Wilson, June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>The Madman’s Morris.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker and Wilson, July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Hannibal and Hermes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker and Wilson, July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>Pierce of Winchester.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker and Wilson, July–Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>Chance Medley.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle or Dekker, Munday, and Wilson, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xii) <i>Worse Afeared than Hurt.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker, Aug.–Sept. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiii-xv) <i>1, 2, 3 The Civil Wars of France.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker, Sept.–Dec. 1598. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 198)
-suggests some relation with Chapman’s <i>Bussy D’Ambois</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvi) <i>Connan Prince of Cornwall.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker, Oct. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvii) <i>William Longsword.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Apparently Drayton’s only unaided play and unfinished. His autograph
-receipt for a payment in Jan. 1599 is in Henslowe, i. 59.</p>
-
-<p class="p1">
-[There is now a break in Drayton’s dramatic activities, but not in his
-relations with Henslowe, for whom he acted as a witness on 8 July 1599.
-On 9 Aug. 1598 he had stood security for the delivery of a play by
-Munday (Henslowe, i. 60, 93).]</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xviii-xix) <i>1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">See above.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xx) <i>Owen Tudor.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Hathway, Munday, and Wilson, Jan. 1600; but apparently
-not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxi) <i>1 Fair Constance of Rome.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson (q.v.), June 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxii) <i>The Rising of Cardinal Wolsey.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Chettle (q.v.), Munday, and Smith, Aug.–Nov. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxiii) <i>Caesar’s Fall, or The Two Shapes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Payments, with Dekker, Middleton, Munday, and Webster, May 1602.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GILBERT DUGDALE (<i>c.</i> 1604).</p>
-
-<p>Author of <i>Time Triumphant</i>, an account of the entry and
-coronation of James I (cf. ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN DUTTON (<i>c.</i> 1598–1602).</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps only a ‘ghost-name’, but conceivably the author of
-<i>Parnassus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN DYMMOCKE (<i>c.</i> 1601).</p>
-
-<p>Possibly the translator of <i>Pastor Fido</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD EDES (1555–1604).</p>
-
-<p>Edes, or Eedes, entered Christ Church, Oxford, from Westminster in
-1571, took his B.A. in 1574, his M.A. in 1578, and was University
-Proctor in 1583. He took orders, became Chaplain to the Queen, and
-was appointed Canon of Christ Church in 1586 and Dean of Worcester
-in 1597. Some of his verse, both in English and Latin, has survived,
-and Meres includes him in 1598 amongst ‘our best for Tragedie’. The
-Epilogue, in Latin prose, of a play called <i>Caesar Interfectus</i>,
-which was both written and spoken by him, is given by F. Peck in <i>A
-Collection of Curious Historical Pieces</i>, appended to his <i>Memoirs
-of Cromwell</i> (1740), and by Boas, 163, from <i>Bodl. MS. Top.
-Oxon.</i> e. 5, f. 359. A later hand has added the date 1582, from
-which Boas infers that <i>Caesar Interfectus</i>, of which Edes was
-probably the author, was one of three tragedies recorded in the Christ
-Church accounts for Feb.–March 1582. Edes appears to have written or
-contributed to Sir Henry Lee’s (q.v.) Woodstock Entertainment of 1592.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD EDWARDES (<i>c.</i> 1523–1566).</p>
-
-<p>Edwardes was a Somersetshire man. He entered Corpus Christi College,
-Oxford, on 11 May 1540, and became Senior Student of Christ Church in
-1547. Before the end of Edward’s reign he was seeking his fortune at
-Court and had a fee or annuity of £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> (Stopes,
-<i>Hunnis</i>, 147). He must not be identified with the George
-Edwardes of Chapel lists, <i>c.</i> 1553 (ibid. 23; <i>Shakespeare’s
-Environment</i>, 238; Rimbault, x), but was of the Chapel by 1 Jan.
-1557 (Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> i. xxxv; <i>Illustrations</i>, App. 14),
-when he made a New Year’s gift of ‘certeigne verses’, and was confirmed
-in office by an Elizabethan patent of 27 May 1560. He succeeded Bower
-as Master of the Children, receiving his patent of appointment on
-27 Oct. 1561 and a commission to take up children on 4 Dec. 1561
-(Wallace, i. 106; ii. 65; cf. ch. xii). Barnabe Googe in his <i>Eglogs,
-Epytaphes and Sonettes</i> (15 March 1563) puts his ‘doyngs’ above
-those of Plautus and Terence. In addition to plays at Court, he took
-his boys on 2 Feb. 1565 and 2 Feb. 1566 to Lincoln’s Inn (cf. ch. vii),
-of which he had become a member on 25 Nov. 1564 (<i>L. I. Admission
-Register</i>, i. 72). He appeared at Court as a ‘post’ on behalf of
-the challengers for a tilt in Nov. 1565 (cf. ch. iv). In 1566 he
-helped in the entertainment of Elizabeth at Oxford, and on Oct. 31 of
-that year he died. His reputation as poet and dramatist is testified
-to in verses by Barnabe Googe, George Turberville, Thomas Twine, and
-others and proved enduring. The author [Richard Puttenham?] of <i>The
-Arte of English Poesie</i> (1589) couples him with the Earl of Oxford
-as deserving the highest price for comedy and enterlude, and Francis
-Meres in his <i>Palladis Tamia</i> (1598) includes him amongst those
-‘best for comedy’. Several of his poems are in <i>The Paradise of
-Dainty Devices</i> (1576). Warton, iv. 218, says that William Collins
-(the poet) had a volume of prose stories printed in 1570, ‘sett forth
-by maister Richard Edwardes mayster of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span> maiesties revels’. One of
-these contained a version of the jest used in the <i>Induction</i> of
-<i>The Taming of the Shrew</i> (q.v.). There is nothing else to connect
-Edwardes with the Revels office, and probably ‘revels’ in Warton’s
-account is a mistake for ‘children’ or ‘chapel’.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: W. Y. Durand, <i>Notes on R. E.</i> (1902, <i>J.
-G. P.</i> iv. 348), <i>Some Errors concerning R. E.</i> (1908, <i>M. L.
-N.</i> xxiii. 129).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Damon and Pythias. 1565</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1567–8. ‘A boke intituled ye tragecall comodye of Damonde
-and Pethyas.’ <i>Rycharde Jonnes</i> (Arber, i. 354).</p>
-
-<p>Warton, iv. 214, describes an edition, not now known, as printed by
-William How in Fleet Street. The Tragical comedie of Damon and Pythias,
-newly imprinted as the same was playde before the queenes maiestie by
-the children of her grace’s chapple. Made by Mayster Edwards, then
-being master of the children. <i>William How.</i> [Only known through
-the description of Warton, iv. 214.]</p>
-
-<p>1571. The excellent Comedie of two the moste faithfullest Freendes,
-Damon and Pithias. Newly Imprinted, as the same was shewed before the
-Queenes Maiestie, by the Children of her Graces Chappell, except the
-Prologue that is somewhat altered for the proper vse of them that
-hereafter shall haue occasion to plaie it, either in Priuate, or open
-Audience. Made by Maister Edwards, then beynge Maister of the Children.
-<i>Richard Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p>1582. <i>Richard Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, iv (1874), and by W. Scott
-(1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i) and J. S. Farmer (1908, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: W. Y. Durand, <i>A Local Hit in E.’s D.
-and P.</i> (<i>M. L. N.</i> xxii. 236).</p>
-
-<p>The play is not divided into acts or scenes; the characters include
-Carisophus a parasite, and Grim the Collier. The prologue [not that
-used at Court] warns the audience that they will be ‘frustrate quite
-of toying plays’ and that the author’s muse that ‘masked in delight’
-and to some ‘seemed too much in young desires to range’ will leave such
-sports and write a ‘tragical comedy ... mixed with mirth and care’.
-Edwardes adds (cf. App. C, No. ix):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Wherein, talking of courtly toys, we do protest this flat,</div>
- <div>We talk of Dionysius court, we mean no court but that.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">A song at the end wishes Elizabeth joy and describes
-her as ‘void of all sickness, in most perfect health’. Durand uses
-this reference to date the play in the early months of 1565, since a
-letter of De Silva (<i>Sp. P.</i> i. 400) records that Elizabeth had
-a feverish cold since 8 Dec. 1564, but was better by 2 Jan. 1565. He
-identifies the play with the ‘Edwardes tragedy’ of the Revels Accounts
-for 1564–5 (cf. App. B), and points out that there is an entry in
-those accounts for ‘rugge bumbayst and cottone for hosse’, and that
-in <i>Damon and Pythias</i> (Dodsley, iv. 71) the boys have stuffed
-breeches with ‘seven ells of rug’ to one hose. A proclamation of 6 May
-1562 (<i>Procl.</i> 562) had forbidden the use of more than a yard and
-three-quarters of stuff in the ‘stockes’ of hose, and an enforcing
-proclamation (<i>Procl.</i> 619) was required on 12 Feb. 1566. Boas,
-157, notes a revival at Merton in 1568.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span></p>
-
-<p>Fleay, 60, thinks that the play contains attacks on the Paul’s boys
-in return for satire of Edwardes as Ralph Roister in Ulpian Fulwell’s
-<i>Like Will to Like</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Palamon and Arcite. 1566</i></p>
-
-<p>This play was acted in two parts on 2 and 4 Sept. 1566, before
-Elizabeth in the Hall of Christ Church, Oxford (cf. ch. iv). The first
-night was made memorable by the fall of part of the staircase wall,
-by which three persons were killed. The Queen was sorry, but the play
-went on. She gave Edwardes great thanks for his pains. The play was
-in English. Several contemporary writers assign it to Edwardes, and
-Nicholas Robinson adds that he and other Christ Church men translated
-it out of Latin, and that he remained two months in Oxford working at
-it. Bereblock gives a long analysis of the action, which shows that,
-even if there is no error as to the intervening Latin version, the
-original source was clearly Chaucer’s <i>Knight’s Tale</i>. W. Y.
-Durand, <i>Journ. Germ. Phil.</i> iv. 356, argues that Edwardes’s play
-was not a source of <i>Two Noble Kinsmen</i>, on the ground of the
-divergence between that and Bereblock’s summary.</p>
-
-<p>There is no evidence of any edition of the play, although Plummer, xxi,
-says that it ‘has been several times printed’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii. 295, assigns to Edwardes <i>Godly Queen Hester</i>, a play
-of which he had only seen a few lines, and which W. W. Greg, in his
-edition in <i>Materialien</i>, v, has shown with great probability
-to date from about 1525–9. His hand has also been sought in R. B.’s
-<i>Apius and Virginia</i> and in <i>Misogonus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ELIZABETH (1533–1603).</p>
-
-<p>H. H. E. Craster (<i>E. H. R.</i> xxix. 722) includes in a list of
-Elizabeth’s English translations a chorus from Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span> of
-the pseudo-Senecan <i>Hercules Oetaeus</i>, extant in <i>Bodl. MS. e
-Museo</i>, 55, f. 48, and printed in H. Walpole, <i>Royal and Noble
-Authors</i> (ed. Park, 1806), i. 102. It probably dates later than
-1561. But he can find no evidence for a Latin version of a play of
-Euripides referred to by Walpole, i. 85.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD FARRANT (?-1580).</p>
-
-<p>Farrant’s career as Master of the Children of Windsor and Deputy Master
-of the Children of the Chapel and founder of the first Blackfriars
-theatre has been described in chh. xii and xvii. It is not improbable
-that he wrote plays for the boys, and W. J. Lawrence, <i>The Earliest
-Private Theatre Play</i> (<i>T. L. S.</i>, 11 Aug. 1921), thinks that
-one of these was <i>Wars of Cyrus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv), probably based
-on W. Barker’s translation (1567) of Xenophon’s <i>Cyropaedia</i>,
-and that the song of Panthea ascribed to Farrant in a Christ Church
-manuscript (cf. vol. ii, p. 63) has dropped out from the extant text
-of this. Farrant’s song, ‘O Jove from stately throne’, mentioning
-Altages,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span> may be from another play. I think that <i>Wars of Cyrus</i>,
-as it stands, is clearly post-<i>Tamburlaine</i>, and although there
-are indications of lost songs at ll. 985, 1628, there is none pointing
-to a lament of Panthea. But conceivably the play was based on one by
-Farrant.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE FEREBE (<i>c.</i> 1573–1613 &lt;)</p>
-
-<p>A musician and Vicar of Bishop’s Cannings, Wilts.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Shepherd’s Song. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, June 16. ‘A thinge called The Shepeherdes songe
-before Queene Anne in 4. partes complete Musical vpon the playnes of
-Salisbury &amp;c.’ <i>Walter Dight</i> (Arber, iii. 526).</p>
-
-<p>Aubrey, i. 251, says ‘when queen Anne came to Bathe, her way lay to
-traverse the famous Wensdyke, which runnes through his parish. He
-made severall of his neighbours good musitians, to play with him in
-consort, and to sing. Against her majesties comeing, he made a pleasant
-pastorall, and gave her an entertaynment with his fellow songsters
-in shepherds’ weeds and bagpipes, he himself like an old bard. After
-that wind musique was over, they sang their pastorall eglogues
-(which I have, to insert into Liber B).’ Wood’s similar account in
-<i>Fasti</i> (1815), i. 270, is probably based on Aubrey’s. He dates
-the entertainment June 11 (cf. ch. iv. and App. A, s. ann. 1613), and
-gives the opening of the song as</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Shine, O thou sacred Shepherds Star,</div>
- <div class="i2">On silly shepherd swaines.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Aubrey has a shorter notice in another manuscript and
-adds, ‘He gave another entertaynment in Cote-field to King James,
-with carters singing, with whipps in their hands; and afterwards, a
-footeball play’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE FERRERS (<i>c.</i> 1500–79).</p>
-
-<p>A Lincoln’s Inn lawyer, son of Thomas Ferrers of St. Albans, who
-was Page of the Chamber to Henry VIII, and acted as Lord of Misrule
-to Edward VI at the Christmases of 1551–2 and 1552–3 (<i>Mediaeval
-Stage</i>, i. 405; Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and M.</i> 56, 77, 90). He
-sat in Parliaments of both Mary and Elizabeth, and wrote some of the
-poems in <i>The Mirror for Magistrates</i> (1559–78). He contributed
-verses to the Kenilworth entertainment of 1575, must then have been a
-very old man, and died in 1579. Puttenham says of Edward VI’s time,
-‘Maister <i>Edward Ferrys</i> ... wrate for the most part to the stage,
-in Tragedie and sometimes in Comedie or Enterlude’, and again, ‘For
-Tragedie, the Lord of Buckhurst &amp; Maister <i>Edward Ferrys</i>, for
-such doings as I haue sene of theirs, do deserue the hyest price’; and
-is followed by Meres, who places ‘Master Edward Ferris, the author of
-the <i>Mirror for Magistrates</i>’ amongst ‘our best for Tragedie’ (cf.
-App. C, Nos. xli, lii). Obviously George Ferrers is meant, but Anthony
-Wood hunted out an Edward Ferrers, belonging to another family, of
-Baddesley Clinton, in Warwickshire, and took him for the dramatist.
-He died in 1564 and had a son Henry, amongst whose papers were found
-verses belonging to certain entertainments, mostly of the early
-‘nineties,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span> which an indiscreet editor thereupon ascribed to George
-Ferrers (cf. s.v. Sir H. Lee).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">NATHAN FIELD (1587–?).</p>
-
-<p>For life <i>vide supra</i> Actors (ch. xv).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Woman is a Weathercock. 1609</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1611, Nov. 23 (Buck). ‘A booke called, A woman is a
-weather-cocke, beinge a Comedye.’ <i>John Budge</i> (Arber, iii. 471).</p>
-
-<p>1612. A Woman is a Weather-cocke. A New Comedy, As it was acted before
-the King in White-Hall. And diuers times Priuately at the White-Friers,
-By the Children of her Maiesties Reuels. Written by Nat: Field. <i>For
-John Budge.</i> [Epistles to Any Woman that hath been no Weathercock
-and to the Reader, both signed ‘N. F.’, and Commendatory verses ‘To
-his loved son, Nat. Field, and his Weathercock Woman’, signed ‘George
-Chapman’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>O. E. D.</i> (1830, ii), by J. P. Collier (1833,
-<i>Five Old Plays</i>), in Dodsley<sup>4</sup> (1875, xi), and by A. W. Verity in
-<i>Nero and Other Plays</i> (1888, <i>Mermaid Series</i>).</p>
-
-<p>This must, I suppose, have been one of the five plays given at Court
-by the Children of the Whitefriars in the winter of 1609–10. Fleay, i.
-185, notes that <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii refers to the Cleve wars, which began in
-1609. The Revels children were not at Court in 1610–11. In his verses
-to <i>The Faithful Shepherdess</i> (1609–10) Field hopes for his ‘muse
-in swathing clouts’, to ‘perfect such a work as’ Fletcher’s. The first
-Epistle promises that when his next play is printed, any woman ‘shall
-see what amends I have made to her and all the sex’; the second ends,
-‘If thou hast anything to say to me, thou know’st where to hear of me
-for a year or two, and no more, I assure thee’, as if Field did not
-mean to spend his life as a player.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Amends for Ladies. &gt; 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>1618. Amends for Ladies. A Comedie. As it was acted at the
-Blacke-Fryers, both by the Princes Seruants, and the Lady Elizabeths.
-By Nat. Field. <i>G. Eld for Math. Walbancke.</i></p>
-
-<p>1639.... With the merry prankes of Moll Cut-Purse: Or, the humour of
-roaring A Comedy full of honest mirth and wit.... <i>Io. Okes for Math.
-Walbancke.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i>, with <i>A W. is a W.</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>The title-page points to performances in Porter’s Hall (<i>c.</i>
-1615–16) by the combined companies of the Prince and Princess; but the
-Epistle to <i>A W. is a W.</i> (q.v.) makes it clear that the play was
-at least planned, and probably written, by the end of 1611. Collier,
-iii. 434, and Fleay, i. 201, confirm this from an allusion to the play
-in A. Stafford’s <i>Admonition to a Discontented Romanist</i>, appended
-to his <i>Niobe Dissolved into a Nilus</i> (S. R. 10 Oct. 1611). Fleay
-is less happy in fixing an inferior limit of date by the publication
-of the version of the <i>Curious Impertinent</i> story in Shelton’s
-<i>Don Quixote</i> (1612), since that story was certainly available in
-Baudouin’s French translation as early as 1608.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span> The introduction of
-Moll Cutpurse suggests rivalry with Dekker and Middleton’s <i>Roaring
-Girl</i> (also <i>c.</i> 1610–11) at the Fortune, which theatre is
-chaffed in ii. 1 and iii. 4.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Later Play</i></p>
-
-<p><i>The Fatal Dowry</i> (1632), a King’s men’s play, assigned on the
-title-page to P. M. and N. F., probably dates from 1616–19. C. Beck,
-<i>Philip Massinger, The Fatall Dowry, Einleitung zu einer neuen
-Ausgabe</i> (1906, <i>Erlangen diss.</i>), assigns the prose of
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i to Field. There is an edition by C.
-L. Lockert (1918).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Attempts have been made to trace Field’s hand in <i>Bonduca</i>,
-<i>Cupid’s Revenge</i>, <i>Faithful Friends</i>, <i>Honest Man’s
-Fortune</i>, <i>Thierry and Theodoret</i>, and <i>Four Plays in
-One</i>, all belonging to the Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher series, and
-in <i>Charlemagne</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN FLETCHER (1579–1625).</p>
-
-<p>Fletcher was born in Dec. 1579 at Rye, Sussex, the living of his father
-Richard Fletcher, who became Bishop of Bristol, Worcester, and in 1594
-London. His cousins, Giles and Phineas, are known as poets. He seems
-too young for the John Fletcher of London who entered Corpus Christi,
-Cambridge, in 1591. After his father’s death in 1596, nothing is heard
-of him until his emergence as a dramatist, and of this the date cannot
-be precisely fixed. Davenant says that ‘full twenty yeares, he wore
-the bayes’, which would give 1605, but this is in a prologue to <i>The
-Woman Hater</i>, which Davenant apparently thought Fletcher’s, although
-it is Beaumont’s; and Oliphant’s attempt to find his hand, on metrical
-grounds, in <i>Captain Thomas Stukeley</i> (1605) rests only on one
-not very conclusive scene. But he had almost certainly written for the
-Queen’s Revels before the beginning, about 1608, of his collaboration
-with Beaumont, under whom his later career is outlined. It is possible
-that he is the John Fletcher who married Joan Herring on 3 Nov. 1612
-at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, and had a son John about Feb. 1620 in St.
-Bartholomew’s the Great (Dyce, i. lxxiii), and if so one may put the
-fact with Aubrey’s gossip (cf. s.v. Beaumont), and with Oldwit’s speech
-in Shadwell’s <i>Bury-Fair</i> (1689): ‘I knew Fletcher, my friend
-Fletcher, and his maid Joan; well, I shall never forget him: I have
-supped with him at his house on the Bankside; he loved a fat loin of
-pork of all things in the world; and Joan his maid had her beer-glass
-of sack; and we all kissed her, i’ faith, and were as merry as passed.’
-I have sometimes wondered whether Jonson is chaffing Beaumont and
-Fletcher in <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (1614), <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, iv, as
-Damon and Pythias, ‘two faithfull friends o’ the Bankside’, that ‘have
-both but one drabbe’, and enter with a gammon of bacon under their
-cloaks. I do not think this can refer to Francis Bacon. Fletcher died
-in Aug. 1625 and was buried in St. Saviour’s (<i>Athenaeum</i>, 1886,
-ii. 252).</p>
-
-<p>For Plays <i>vide</i> s.v. Beaumont, and for the ascribed lost play of
-<i>Cardenio</i>, s.v. Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">PHINEAS FLETCHER (1582–1650).</p>
-
-<p>Phineas Fletcher, son of Giles, a diplomatist and poet, brother of
-Giles, a poet, and first cousin of John (q.v.), was baptized at
-Cranbrook, Kent, on 8 April 1582. From Eton he passed to King’s
-College, Cambridge, where he took his B.A. in 1604, his M.A. in 1608,
-and became a Fellow in 1611. He was Chaplain to Sir Henry Willoughby of
-Risley from 1616 to 1621, and thereafter Rector of Hilgay, Norfolk, to
-his death in 1650. He wrote much Spenserian poetry, but his dramatic
-work was purely academic. In addition to <i>Sicelides</i>, he may have
-written an English comedy, for which a payment was made to him by
-King’s about Easter 1607 (Boas, i. xx).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1869. A. B. Grosart, <i>The Poems of P. F.</i> 4 vols. (<i>Fuller
-Worthies Library</i>).</p>
-
-<p>1908–9. F. S. Boas, <i>The Poetical Works of Giles Fletcher and P.
-F.</i> 2 vols. (<i>Cambridge English Classics</i>).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sicelides. 1615</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>Bodl. Rawl. Poet. MS.</i> 214.</p>
-
-<p><i>Addl. MS. 4453.</i> ‘Sicelides: a Piscatorie made by Phinees
-Fletcher and acted in Kings Colledge in Cambridge.’ [A shorter version
-than that of Q. and the <i>Rawl. MS.</i>]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1631, April 25 (Herbert). ‘A play called Scicelides, acted
-at Cambridge.’ <i>William Sheeres</i> (Arber, iv. 251).</p>
-
-<p>1631. Sicelides A Piscatory, As it hath been Acted in Kings Colledge,
-in Cambridge. <i>I. N. for William Sheares.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>A reference (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv) to the shoes hung up by Thomas Coryat in
-Odcombe church indicates a date of composition not earlier than 1612.
-The play was intended for performance before James at Cambridge, but
-was actually given before the University after his visit, on 13 March
-1615 (cf. ch. iv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS FLOWER (<i>c.</i> 1588).</p>
-
-<p>A Gray’s Inn lawyer, one of the devisers of dumb-shows and directors
-for the <i>Misfortunes of Arthur</i> of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588,
-for which he also wrote two choruses.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN FORD (1586–1639 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>Ford’s dramatic career, including whatever share he may have had with
-Dekker (q.v.) in <i>Sun’s Darling</i> and <i>Witch of Edmonton</i>,
-falls substantially outside my period. But amongst plays entered as his
-by Humphrey Moseley on 29 June 1660 (Eyre, ii. 271) are:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘An ill begining has A good end, and a bad begining may have a
-good end, a Comedy.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">‘The London Merchant, a Comedy.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">These ascriptions recur in Warburton’s list of lost plays
-(<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231), where the first play has the title ‘A
-good beginning may have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span> A good end’. It is possible, therefore, that
-Ford either wrote or revised the play of ‘A badd beginininge makes a
-good endinge’, which was performed by the King’s men at Court during
-1612–13 (cf. App. B). One may suspect the <i>London Merchant</i> to be
-a mistake for the <i>Bristow Merchant</i> of Ford and Dekker (q.v.) in
-1624. The offer of the title in <i>K. B. P.</i> ind. 11 hardly proves
-that there was really a play of <i>The London Merchant</i>. Ford’s
-<i>Honor Triumphant: or The Peeres Challenge, by Armes defensible at
-Tilt, Turney, and Barriers</i> (1606; ed. <i>Sh. Soc.</i> 1843) is a
-thesis motived by the jousts in honour of Christian of Denmark (cf. ch.
-iv). It has an Epistle to the Countesses of Pembroke and Montgomery,
-and contains four arguments in defence of amorous propositions
-addressed respectively to the Duke of Lennox and the Earls of Arundel,
-Pembroke, and Montgomery.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">EDWARD FORSETT (<i>c.</i> 1553–<i>c.</i> 1630).</p>
-
-<p>A political writer (<i>D. N. B.</i>) and probable author of the
-academic <i>Pedantius</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ABRAHAM FRAUNCE (<i>c.</i> 1558–1633 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>Fraunce was a native of Shrewsbury, and passed from the school of
-that place, where he obtained the friendship of Philip Sidney, to St.
-John’s, Cambridge, in 1576. He took his B.A. in 1580, played in Legge’s
-academic <i>Richardus Tertius</i> and in <i>Hymenaeus</i> (Boas, 394),
-which he may conceivably have written (cf. App. K), became Fellow of
-the college in 1581, and took his M.A. in 1583. He became a Gray’s Inn
-man, dedicated various treatises on logic and experiments in English
-hexameters to members of the Sidney and Herbert families during
-1583–92, and appears to have obtained through their influence some
-office under the Presidency of Wales. He dropped almost entirely out of
-letters, but seems to have been still alive in 1633.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Latin Play</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Victoria. 1580 &lt; &gt; 3</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] In possession of Lord De L’Isle and Dudley at Penshurst,
-headed ‘Victoria’. [Lines ‘Philippo Sidneio’, signed ‘Abrahamus
-Fransus’. Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by G. C. Moore Smith (1906, <i>Materialien</i>, xiv).</p>
-
-<p>The play is an adaptation of <i>Il Fedele</i> (1575) by Luigi
-Pasqualigo, which is also the foundation of the anonymous <i>Two
-Italian Gentlemen</i> (q.v.). As Sidney was knighted on 13 Jan. 1583,
-the play was probably written, perhaps for performance at St. John’s,
-Cambridge, before that date and after Fraunce took his B.A. in 1580.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Translation</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Phillis and Amyntas. 1591</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1591, Feb. 9 (Bp. of London). ‘A book intituled The
-Countesse of Pembrookes Ivye churche, and Emanuel.’ <i>William
-Ponsonby</i> (Arber, ii. 575).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span></p>
-
-<p>1591. The Countesse of Pembrokes Yuychurch. Containing the affectionate
-life, and vnfortunate death of Phillis and Amyntas: That in a
-Pastorall; This in a Funerall; both in English Hexameters. By Abraham
-Fraunce. <i>Thomas Orwin for William Ponsonby.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: E. Köppel, <i>Die englischen Tasso-Übersetzungen
-des 16. Jahrhunderts</i> (1889, <i>Anglia</i>, xi).</p>
-
-<p>This consists of a slightly altered translation of the <i>Aminta</i>
-(1573) of Torquato Tasso, followed by a reprint of Fraunce’s English
-version (1587) of Thomas Watson’s <i>Amyntas</i> (1585), which is not a
-play, but a collection of Latin eclogues. There is nothing to show that
-Fraunce’s version of <i>Aminta</i> was ever acted.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM FULBECK (1560–1603?).</p>
-
-<p>He entered Gray’s Inn in 1584, contributed two speeches to the
-<i>Misfortunes of Arthur</i> of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588, and wrote
-various legal and historical books.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ULPIAN FULWELL (<i>c.</i> 1568).</p>
-
-<p>Fulwell was born in Somersetshire and educated at St. Mary’s
-Hall, Oxford. On 14 April 1577 he was of the parish of Naunton,
-Gloucestershire, and married Mary Whorewood of Lapworth,
-Warwickshire.<a id="FNanchor_657" href="#Footnote_657" class="fnanchor">[657]</a></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Like Will to Like. c. 1568</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1568–9. ‘A play lyke Wyll to lyke quod the Devell to the
-Collyer.’ <i>John Alde</i> (Arber, i. 379).</p>
-
-<p>1568. An Enterlude Intituled Like wil to like quod the Deuel to the
-Colier, very godly and ful of pleasant mirth.... Made by Vlpian
-Fulwell. <i>John Allde.</i></p>
-
-<p>1587. <i>Edward Allde.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, iii (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1909,
-<i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A non-controversial moral. The characters, allegorical and typical,
-are arranged for five actors, and include Ralph Roister, and ‘Nicholas
-Newfangle the Vice’, who ‘rideth away upon the Devil’s back’ (Dodsley,
-iii. 357). There is a prayer for the Queen at the end.</p>
-
-<p>This might be <i>The Collier</i> played at Court in 1576. Fleay, 60;
-i. 235, puts it in 1561–3, assigns it to the Paul’s boys, and suggests
-that Richard Edwardes (q.v.) is satirized as Ralph Roister. Greg
-(<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 228) suggests that Fulwell’s may be the play
-revived by Pembroke’s at the Rose on 28 Oct. 1600 as ‘the [devell]
-licke vnto licke’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM GAGER (&gt; 1560–1621).</p>
-
-<p>Gager entered Christ Church, Oxford, from Westminster in 1574, and took
-his B.A. in 1577, his M.A. in 1580, and his D.C.L. in 1589. In 1606
-he became Chancellor of the diocese of Ely. He had a high reputation
-for his Latin verses, many of which are contained in <i>Exequiae D.
-Philippi Sidnaei</i> (1587) and other University volumes. A large
-collection in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 22583 includes lines to George Peele<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span>
-(q.v.). Meres in 1598 counts him as one of ‘the best for comedy amongst
-vs’. His correspondence with John Rainolds affords a summary of the
-controversy on the ethics of the stage in its academic aspect.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Latin Plays</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Meleager. Feb. 1582</i></p>
-
-<p>1592. Meleager. Tragoedia noua. Bis publice acta in aede Christi
-Oxoniae. <i>Oxoniae. Joseph Barnes.</i> [Epistle to Earl of Essex, ‘ex
-aede Christi Oxoniae, Calendis Ianuarij <span class="allsmcap">MDXCII</span>. Gulielmus
-Gagerus’; Commendatory verses by Richard Edes, Alberico Gentili,
-and I. C[ase?]; Epistle <i>Ad lectorem Academicum</i>; <i>Prologus
-ad academicos</i>; <i>Argumentum</i>; <i>Prologus ad illustrissimos
-Penbrochiae ac Lecestriae Comites</i>. At end, <i>Epilogus ad
-Academicos</i>; <i>Epilogus ad clarissimos Comites Penbrochiensem ac
-Lecestrensem</i>; <i>Panniculus Hippolyto ... assutus</i> (<i>vide
-infra</i>); <i>Apollo</i> προλογίζει <i>ad serenissimam Reginam
-Elizabetham 1592</i>; <i>Prologus in Bellum Grammaticale ad eandem
-sacram Maiestatem</i>; <i>Epilogus in eandem Comoediam ad Eandem</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>The dedication says ‘Annus iam pene vndecimus agitur ... ex quo
-Meleager primum, octauus ex quo iterum in Scenam venit’, and adds that
-Pembroke, Leicester, and Sidney were present on the second occasion.
-<i>Meleager</i> is ‘primogenitus meus’. The first production was
-doubtless one of those recorded in the Christ Church accounts in Feb.
-1582 (Boas, 162), and the second during Leicester’s visit as Chancellor
-in Jan. 1585 (Boas, 192).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Dido. 12 June 1583</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>Christ Church, Oxford, MS</i>. [complete text].</p>
-
-<p><i>Addl. MS.</i> 22583. [Acts <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III</span> only, with
-Prologue, Argument, and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> of B.M. fragment by A. Dyce (1850, <i>Marlowe’s
-Works</i>). <i>Abstract</i> from <i>Ch. Ch. MS.</i> in Boas, 183.</p>
-
-<p>The play was produced before Alasco at Christ Church on 12 June 1583.
-It is unlikely that it influenced Marlowe’s play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ulysses Redux. 6 Feb. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p>1592. Vlysses Redux Tragoedia Nova. In Aede Christi Oxoniae Publice
-Academicis Recitata, Octavo Idus Februarii. 1591. <i>Oxoniae. Joseph
-Barnes.</i> [<i>Prologus ad Academicos</i>; Epistle to Lord Buckhurst,
-‘ex aede Christi Oxoniae sexto Idus Maij, 1592 ... Gulielmus Gagerus’;
-Commendatory verses by Thomas Holland, Alberico Gentili, Richard
-Edes, Henry Bust, Matthew Gwinne, Richard Late-warr, Francis Sidney,
-John Hoschines (Hoskins), William Ballowe, James Weston; Verses <i>Ad
-Zoilum</i>; Epistle <i>Ad Criticum</i>. At end, <i>Prologus in Rivales
-Comoediam</i>; <i>Prologus in Hippolytum Senecae Tragoediam</i>;
-<i>Epilogus in eundem</i>; <i>Momus</i>; <i>Epilogus Responsiuus</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>The play was produced on Sunday, 6 Feb. 1592, and an indiscreet
-invitation to John Rainolds opened the flood-gates of controversy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span>
-upon Gager’s head (cf. vol. i, p. 251 and App. C, No. 1). Gager’s
-<i>Rivales</i> was revived on 7 Feb. and the pseudo-Senecan
-<i>Hippolytus</i>, with Gager’s <i>Panniculus</i>, on 8 Feb. followed
-by a speech in the character of Momus as a carper at plays, and a reply
-to Momus by way of Epilogue. The latter was printed in an enlarged form
-given to it during the course of the controversy (Boas, 197, 234, with
-dates which disregard leap-year).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Additions to Hippolytus. 8 Feb. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p>1592. Panniculus Hippolyto Senecae assutus, 1591. [Appended to
-<i>Meleager</i>; for Gager’s prologue, &amp;c., cf. s.v. <i>Ulysses
-Redux</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>These consist of two scenes, one of the nature of an opening, the other
-an insertion between Act <span class="allsmcap">I</span> and Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, written for a
-performance of the play at Christ Church on 8 Feb. 1592.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Oedipus</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Addl. MS.</i> 22583, f. 31, includes with other poems by Gager five
-scenes from a tragedy on <i>Oedipus</i>, of which nothing more is known.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Rivales. 11 June 1583</i></p>
-
-<p>This comedy was produced before Alasco at Christ Church, on 11 June
-1583. It is assigned to Gager by A. Wood, <i>Annals</i>, ii. 216, and
-referred to as his in the controversy with Rainolds (Boas, 181), who
-speaks of it as ‘the vnprinted Comedie’, and criticizes its ‘filth’.
-It contained scenes of country wooing, drunken sailors, a <i>miles
-gloriosus</i>, a <i>blanda lena</i>. The prologue to <i>Dido</i> says
-of it:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Hesterna Mopsum scena ridiculum dedit.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It was revived at Christ Church on 7 Feb. 1592 (Boas,
-197) and again at the same place before Elizabeth on 26 Sept. 1592,
-when, according to a Cambridge critic, it was ‘but meanely performed’.
-Presumably it is the prologue for this revival which is printed with
-<i>Ulysses Redux</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">BERNARD GARTER (<i>c.</i> 1578).</p>
-
-<p>A London citizen, whose few and mainly non-dramatic writings were
-produced from 1565 to 1579. For his description of the Norwich
-entertainment (<i>1578</i>), cf. ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS GARTER (<i>c.</i> 1569).</p>
-
-<p>He may conceivably be identical with Bernard Garter, since Thomas and
-Bernard are respectively given from different sources (cf. <i>D. N.
-B.</i>) as the name of the father of Bernard Garter of Brigstocke,
-Northants, whose son was alive in 1634.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Susanna, c. 1569</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1568–9. ‘Ye playe of Susanna.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i>
-(Arber, i. 383).</p>
-
-<p>1578?</p>
-
-<p>No copy is known, but S. Jones, <i>Biographica Dramatica</i>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span>(1812), iii. 310, says: ‘Susanna. By Thomas Garter 4<sup>to</sup> 1578. The
-running title of this play is, <i>The Commody of the moste vertuous and
-godlye Susanna</i>.’ According to Greg, <i>Masques</i>, cxxiii, the
-original authority for the statement is a manuscript note by Thomas
-Coxeter (<i>ob.</i> 1747) in a copy of G. Jacob’s <i>Lives of the
-Dramatic Poets</i> (1719–20). ‘Susanna’ is in Rogers and Ley’s list,
-and an interlude ‘Susanna’s Tears’ in Archer’s and Kirkman’s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE GASCOIGNE (<i>c.</i> 1535–77).</p>
-
-<p>George Gascoigne was son of Sir John Gascoigne of Cardington,
-Bedfordshire. He was probably born between 1530 and 1535, and was
-educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and Gray’s Inn. He misspent
-his youth as a dissipated hanger-on at Court, under the patronage of
-Arthur, Lord Grey of Wilton and others, and won some reputation as
-a versifier. About 1566 he married Elizabeth Breton of Walthamstow,
-widow of a London merchant, and mother of Nicholas Breton, the poet.
-From March 1573 to Oct. 1574 he served as a volunteer under William of
-Orange in the Netherlands. In 1575 he was assisting in preparing shows
-before Elizabeth at Kenilworth and Woodstock. It is possible that he
-was again in the Netherlands and present at the sack of Antwerp in
-1576. On 7 Oct. 1577 he died at Stamford.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1573] A Hundreth sundrie Flowres bounde up in one small
-Poesie.... <i>For Richard Smith.</i> [Datable by a prefatory epistle of
-20 Jan. 1573, signed ‘H. W.’ and a reference in Gascoigne’s own epistle
-of 31 Jan. 1575 to Q<sub>2</sub>. Includes <i>Jocasta</i>, <i>Supposes</i>, and
-the Mask.]</p>
-
-<p>1575. The Posies of George Gascoigne Esquire. Corrected, perfected,
-and augmented by the Authour. <i>H. Bynneman for Richard Smith.</i> [A
-second issue, <i>For Richard Smith</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1587. The whole workes of George Gascoigne Esquyre: Newlye compyled
-into one Volume.... <i>Abel Jeffes.</i> [Adds the <i>Princely
-Pleasures</i>. A second issue, ‘The pleasauntest workes....’]</p>
-
-<p>1869–70. W. C. Hazlitt, <i>The Complete Poems of George Gascoigne</i>.
-2 vols. (<i>Roxburghe Library</i>). [Adds <i>Glass of Government</i>
-and <i>Hemetes</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1907–10. J. W. Cunliffe, <i>The Complete Works of George Gascoigne</i>.
-2 vols. (<i>C. E. C.</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: F. E. Schelling, <i>The Life and Writings of
-George Gascoigne</i> (1893, <i>Pennsylvania Univ. Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Jocasta. 1566</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Francis Kinwelmershe.</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>B.M. Addl. MS.</i> 34063, formerly the property of
-Roger, second Lord North, whose name and the motto ‘Durum Pati <a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>68’
-are on the title.</p>
-
-<p>1573. Iocasta: A Tragedie written in Greke by Euripides, translated
-and digested into Acte by George Gascoyne, and Francis<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span> Kinwelmershe
-of Grayes Inne, and there by them presented. 1566. <i>Henry Bynneman
-for Richard Smith.</i> [Part of <i>Collection</i>, 1573; also in 1575,
-1587. Argument; Epilogue ‘Done by Chr. Yeluerton’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by F. J. Child (1848, <i>Four Old Plays</i>)
-and J. W. Cunliffe (1906, <i>B. L.</i>, and 1912, <i>E. E. C.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: M. T. W. Foerster, <i>Gascoigne’s J. a
-Translation from the Italian</i> (1904, <i>M. P.</i> ii. 147).</p>
-
-<p>A blank-verse translation of Lodovico Dolce’s <i>Giocasta</i> (1549),
-itself a paraphrase or adaptation of the <i>Phoenissae</i> of Euripides
-(Creizenach, ii. 408). After Acts <span class="allsmcap">I</span> and <span class="allsmcap">IV</span> appears
-‘Done by F. Kinwelmarshe’ and after <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III</span>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span> ‘Done by G. Gascoigne’. Before each act is a description of
-a dumb-show and of its accompanying music.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Supposes. 1566</i></p>
-
-<p>1573. Supposes: A Comedie written in the Italian tongue by Ariosto,
-and Englished by George Gascoyne of Grayes Inne Esquire, and there
-presented. [Part of <i>Collection</i>, 1573; also in 1575 (with
-addition of ‘1566’ to title) and 1587. Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by T. Hawkins (1773, <i>O. E. D.</i> iii), J. W.
-Cunliffe (1906, <i>B. L.</i>), and R. W. Bond (1911, <i>E. P. I.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A prose translation of Ludovico Ariosto’s <i>I Suppositi</i> (1509).
-There was probably a revival at Trinity, Oxford, on 8 Jan. 1582, when
-Richard Madox records, ‘We supt at y<sup>e</sup> presidents lodging and after had
-y<sup>e</sup> supposes handeled in y<sup>e</sup> haul indifferently’ (Boas, 161).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Glass of Government. c. 1575</i></p>
-
-<p>1575. The Glasse of Governement. A tragicall Comedie so entituled,
-bycause therein are handled aswell the rewardes for Vertues, as also
-the punishment for Vices. Done by George Gascoigne Esquier. 1575. Seen
-and allowed, according to the order appointed in the Queenes Maiesties
-Injunctions. <i>For C. Barker.</i> [Colophon] <i>H. M. for Christopher
-Barker.</i> [Epistle to Sir Owen Hopton, by ‘G. Gascoigne’, dated 26
-Apr. 1575; Commendatory verses by B. C.; Argument; Prologue; Epilogue.
-A reissue has a variant colophon (<i>Henry Middleton</i>) and Errata.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S.
-F.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: C. H. Herford, <i>G.’s G. of G.</i>
-(<i>E. S.</i> ix. 201).</p>
-
-<p>This, perhaps only a closet drama, is an adaptation of the ‘Christian
-Terence’ (cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 216), with which Gascoigne
-may have become familiar in Holland during 1573–4. The prologue (cf.
-App. C, No. xiv) warns that the play is not a mere ‘worthie jest’, and
-that</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who list laye out some pence in such a marte,</div>
- <div>Bellsavage fayre were fittest for his purse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">MASK</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Montague Mask. 1572</i></p>
-
-<p>1573. A Devise of a Maske for the right honourable Viscount Mountacute.
-[Part of <i>Collection</i>, 1573; also in 1575, 1587.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span></p>
-
-<p>Anthony and Elizabeth Browne, children of Anthony, first Viscount
-Montague, married Mary and Robert, children of Sir William Dormer of
-Eythorpe, Bucks., in 1572 (cf. ch. v).</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENTS</p>
-
-<p>See s.v. Lee, <i>Woodstock Entertainment</i> (<i>1575</i>) and ch.
-xxiv, s.v. <i>Kenilworth Entertainment</i> (<i>1575</i>).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS GOFFE (1591–1629).</p>
-
-<p><i>Selimus</i> and the <i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> have been
-ascribed to him, but as regards the first absurdly, and as regards the
-second not plausibly, since he only took his B.A. degree in 1613. His
-known plays are later in date than 1616.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ARTHUR GOLDING (1536–1605 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>Arthur was son of John Golding of Belchamp St. Paul, Essex, and
-brother-in-law of John, 16th Earl of Oxford. He was a friend of Sidney
-and known to Elizabethan statesmen of puritanical leanings. Almost his
-only original work was a <i>Discourse upon the Earthquake</i> (1580),
-but he was a voluminous translator of theological and classical works,
-including Ovid’s <i>Metamorphoses</i> (1565, 1567). Beza’s tragedy was
-written when he was Professor at Lausanne in 1550 (Creizenach, ii. 456).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Abraham’s Sacrifice. 1575</i></p>
-
-<p>1577. A Tragedie of Abrahams Sacrifice, Written in french, by Theodore
-Beza, and translated into Inglish by A. G. Finished at Powles Belchamp
-in Essex, the xj of August, 1575. <i>Thomas Vautrollier.</i> [Woodcuts,
-which do not suggest a scenic representation.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by M. W. Wallace (1907, <i>Toronto Philological
-Series</i>).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY GOLDINGHAM (<i>c.</i> 1575).</p>
-
-<p>A contributor to the Kenilworth and Norwich entertainments (cf. ch.
-xxiv, C) and writer of <i>The Garden Plot</i> (1825, <i>Roxburghe
-Club</i>). Gawdy, 13, mentions ‘a yonge gentleman touard my L. of
-Leycester called Mr. Goldingam’, as concerned <i>c.</i> 1587 in a
-street brawl.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM GOLDINGHAM (<i>c.</i> 1567).</p>
-
-<p>Author of the academic <i>Herodes</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY GOLDWELL (<i>c.</i> 1581).</p>
-
-<p>Describer of <i>The Fortress of Perfect Beauty</i> (cf. ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">STEPHEN GOSSON (1554–1624).</p>
-
-<p>Gosson was born in Kent during 1554, was at Corpus Christi, Oxford,
-1572 to 1576, then came to London, where he obtained some reputation
-as playwright and poet. Meres in <i>Palladis Tamia</i> (1598)
-commends his pastorals, which are lost. Lodge speaks of him also as
-a ‘player’.<a id="FNanchor_658" href="#Footnote_658" class="fnanchor">[658]</a> In 1579 he forsook the stage, became a tutor in the
-country and published <i>The School of Abuse</i> (App. C, No. xxii).
-This he dedicated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span> to Sidney, but ‘was for his labour scorned’. He was
-answered the same year in a lost pamphlet called <i>Strange News out
-of Afric</i> and also by Lodge (q.v.), and rejoined with <i>A Short
-Apology of the School of Abuse</i> (App. C, No. xxiv). The players
-revived his plays to spite him and on 23 Feb. 1582 produced <i>The
-Play of Plays and Pastimes</i> to confute him. In the same year he
-produced his final contribution to the controversy in <i>Plays Confuted
-in Five Actions</i> (App. C, No. xxx). In 1591 Gosson became Rector of
-Great Wigborough, Essex, and in 1595 published the anonymous pamphlet
-<i>Pleasant Quips for Upstart Newfangled Gentlewomen</i>. In 1600 he
-became Rector of St. Botolph’s, Bishopsgate. In 1616 and 1617 he wrote
-to Alleyn (q.v.) as his ‘very loving and ancient friend’.<a id="FNanchor_659" href="#Footnote_659" class="fnanchor">[659]</a> He died
-13 Feb. 1624.</p>
-
-<p>Gosson claims to have written both tragedies and comedies,<a id="FNanchor_660" href="#Footnote_660" class="fnanchor">[660]</a> but
-no play of his is extant. He names three of them. Of <i>Catiline’s
-Conspiracies</i> he says that it was ‘usually brought into the
-Theater and that ‘because it is known to be a pig of mine own sow, I
-will speak the less of it; only giving you to understand, that the
-whole mark which I shot at in that work was to show the reward of
-traitors in Catiline, and the necessary government of learned men in
-the person of Cicero, which foresees every danger that is likely to
-happen and forestalls it continually ere it take effect’.<a id="FNanchor_661" href="#Footnote_661" class="fnanchor">[661]</a> Lodge
-disparages the originality of this play and compares it unfavourably
-with Wilson’s <i>Short and Sweet</i><a id="FNanchor_662" href="#Footnote_662" class="fnanchor">[662]</a> (q.v.). Of two other plays
-Gosson says: ‘Since my publishing the <i>School of Abuse</i> two plays
-of my making were brought to the stage; the one was a cast of Italian
-devices, called, The Comedy of <i>Captain Mario</i>; the other a
-Moral, <i>Praise at Parting</i>. These they very impudently affirm to
-be written by me since I had set out my invective against them. I can
-not deny they were both mine, but they were both penned two years at
-the least before I forsook them, as by their own friends I am able to
-prove.’<a id="FNanchor_663" href="#Footnote_663" class="fnanchor">[663]</a> It is conceivable that Gosson may be the translator of
-<i>Fedele and Fortunio</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT GREENE (1558–92).</p>
-
-<p>Robert Greene was baptized at Norwich on 11 July 1558. He entered St.
-John’s College, Cambridge, as a sizar in 1575 and took his B.A. in 1578
-and his M.A. by 1583, when he was residing in Clare Hall. The addition
-of an Oxford degree in July 1588 enabled him to describe himself as
-<i>Academiae Utriusque Magister in Artibus</i>. He has been identified
-with a Robert Greene who was Vicar of Tollesbury, Essex, in 1584–5,
-but there is no real evidence that he took orders. The earlier part of
-his career may be gathered from his autobiographic pamphlet, <i>The
-Repentance of Robert Greene</i> (1592), eked out by the portraits, also
-evidently in a measure autobiographic, of Francesco in <i>Never Too
-Late</i> (1590) and of Roberto in <i>Green’s Groats-worth of Wit bought
-with a Million of Repentance</i> (1592). It seems that he travelled in
-youth and learnt much wickedness; then married and lived for a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span> while
-with his wife and had a child by her. During this period he began his
-series of euphuistic love-romances. About 1586, however, he deserted
-his wife, and lived a dissolute life in London with the sister of
-Cutting Ball, a thief who ended his days at Tyburn, as his mistress.
-By her he had a base-born son, Fortunatus. He does not seem to have
-been long in London before he ‘had wholly betaken me to the penning
-of plays which was my continual exercise’.<a id="FNanchor_664" href="#Footnote_664" class="fnanchor">[664]</a> His adoption of his
-profession seems to be described in <i>The Groats-worth of Wit</i>.
-Roberto meets a player, goes with him, and soon becomes ‘famozed for
-an arch-plaimaking poet’.<a id="FNanchor_665" href="#Footnote_665" class="fnanchor">[665]</a> Similarly, in <i>Never Too Late</i>,
-Francesco ‘fell in amongst a company of players, who persuaded him to
-try his wit in writing of comedies, tragedies, or pastorals, and if he
-could perform anything worthy of the stage, then they would largely
-reward him for his pains’. Hereupon Francesco ‘writ a comedy, which so
-generally pleased the audience that happy were those actors in short
-time, that could get any of his works, he grew so exquisite in that
-faculty’.<a id="FNanchor_666" href="#Footnote_666" class="fnanchor">[666]</a> Greene’s early dramatic efforts seem to have brought him
-into rivalry with Marlowe (q.v.). In the preface to <i>Perimedes the
-Blacksmith</i> (S. R. 29 March 1588) he writes: ‘I keep my old course
-to palter up something in prose, using mine old poesie still, Omne
-tulit punctum, although lately two Gentlemen Poets made two mad men of
-Rome beat it out of their paper bucklers: and had it in derision for
-that I could not make my verses jet upon the stage in tragical buskins,
-every word filling the mouth like the faburden of Bo-Bell, daring God
-out of heaven with that Atheist <i>Tamburlan</i>, or blaspheming with
-the mad priest of the Sun.... Such mad and scoffing poets that have
-poetical spirits, as bred of Merlin’s race, if there be any in England
-that set the end of scholarism in an English blank-verse, I think
-either it is the humour of a novice that tickles them with self-love,
-or too much frequenting the hot-house (to use the German proverb) hath
-sweat out all the greatest part of their wits.... I but answer in print
-what they have offered on the stage.’<a id="FNanchor_667" href="#Footnote_667" class="fnanchor">[667]</a> The references here to
-Marlowe are unmistakable. His fellow ‘gentleman poet’ is unknown; but
-the ‘mad priest of the Sun’ suggests the play of ‘the lyfe and deathe
-of Heliogabilus’, entered on S. R. to John Danter on 19 June 1594, but
-now lost.<a id="FNanchor_668" href="#Footnote_668" class="fnanchor">[668]</a> In 1589 Greene published his <i>Menaphon</i> (S. R.
-23 Aug.), in which he further alluded to Marlowe as the teller of ‘a
-Canterbury tale; some prophetical full-mouth that as he were a Cobler’s
-eldest son, would by the last tell where anothers shoe wrings’.<a id="FNanchor_669" href="#Footnote_669" class="fnanchor">[669]</a>
-Doron, in the same story, appears to parody a passage in the anonymous
-play of <i>The Taming of A Shrew</i>, which is further alluded to in a
-prefatory epistle <i>To the Gentlemen Students of Both Universities</i>
-contributed to Greene’s book by Thomas Nashe. Herein Nashe, while
-praising Peele and his <i>Arraignment of Paris</i>, satirizes
-Marlowe, Kyd, and particularly the players (cf. App. C, No. xlii). To
-<i>Menaphon</i> are also<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span> prefixed lines by Thomas Brabine which tells
-the ‘wits’ that ‘strive to thunder from a stage-man’s throat’ how the
-novel is beyond them. ‘Players, avaunt!’<a id="FNanchor_670" href="#Footnote_670" class="fnanchor">[670]</a> In the following year,
-1590, Greene continued the attack on the players in the autobiographic
-romance, already referred to, of <i>Never Too Late</i> (cf. App. C,
-No. xliii). In 1590 Greene, whose publications had hitherto been
-mainly toys of love and romance, began a series of moral pamphlets,
-full of professions of repentance and denunciations of villainy. To
-these belong, as well as <i>Never Too Late</i>, <i>Greene’s Mourning
-Garment</i> (1590) and <i>Greene’s Farewell to Folly</i> (1591).
-A preface to the latter contains some satirical references to the
-anonymous play of <i>Fair Em</i> (cf. ch. xxiv.) One R. W. retorted
-upon Greene in a pamphlet called <i>Martine Mar-Sextus</i> (S. R. 8
-Nov. 1591), in which he abuses lascivious authors who finally ‘put on a
-mourning garment and cry Farewell’.<a id="FNanchor_671" href="#Footnote_671" class="fnanchor">[671]</a> Similarly, Greene’s exposures
-of ‘cony-catching’ or ‘sharping’ provoked the following passage in the
-<i>Defence of Cony-catching</i> (S. R. 21 April 1592) by one Cuthbert
-Conycatcher: ‘What if I should prove you a cony-catcher, Master R. G.,
-would it not make you blush at the matter?... Ask the Queen’s players
-if you sold them not Orlando Furioso for twenty nobles, and when they
-were in the country sold the same play to the Lord Admiral’s men for
-as many more.... I hear, when this was objected, that you made this
-excuse; that there was no more faith to be held with players than with
-them that valued faith at the price of a feather; for as they were
-comedians to act, so the actions of their lives were camelion-like;
-that they were uncertain, variable, time-pleasers, men that measured
-honesty by profit, and that regarded their authors not by desert but
-by necessity of time.’<a id="FNanchor_672" href="#Footnote_672" class="fnanchor">[672]</a> It is probable that the change in the tone
-of Greene’s writings did not correspond to any very thorough-going
-reformation of life. There is nothing to show that Greene had any
-share in the Martinist controversy. But he became involved in one of
-the personal animosities to which it led. Richard Harvey, the brother
-of Gabriel, in his <i>Lamb of God</i> (S. R. 23 Oct. 1589), while
-attacking Lyly as Paphatchet, had ‘mistermed all our other poets and
-writers about London, piperly make-plaies and make-bates. Hence Greene,
-beeing chiefe agent for the companie [i.e. the London poets] (for
-hee writ more than foure other, how well I will not say: but <i>sat
-citò, si sat benè</i>) tooke occasion to canuaze him a little.’<a id="FNanchor_673" href="#Footnote_673" class="fnanchor">[673]</a>
-Apparently he called the Harveys, in his <i>A Quip for an Upstart
-Courtier</i> (S. R. 21 July 1592, cf. App. C, No. xlvii), the sons of
-a ropemaker, which is what they were.<a id="FNanchor_674" href="#Footnote_674" class="fnanchor">[674]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span> In August Greene partook
-freely of Rhenish wine and pickled herrings at a supper with Nashe and
-one Will Monox, and fell into a surfeit. On 3 September he died in a
-squalid lodging, after writing a touching letter to his deserted wife,
-and begging his landlady, Mrs. Isam, to lay a wreath of bays upon him.
-These details are recorded by Gabriel Harvey, who visited the place
-and wrote an account of his enemy’s end in a letter to a friend, which
-he published in his <i>Four Letters and Certain Sonnets: especially
-Touching Robert Greene, and Other Parties by him Abused</i> (S. R. 4
-Dec. 1592).<a id="FNanchor_675" href="#Footnote_675" class="fnanchor">[675]</a> This brought Nashe upon him in the <i>Strange News of
-the Intercepting of Certain Letters</i><a id="FNanchor_676" href="#Footnote_676" class="fnanchor">[676]</a> (S. R. 12 Jan. 1593) and
-began a controversy between the two which lasted for several years. In
-<i>Pierce’s Supererogation</i> (27 Apr. 1593) Harvey spoke of ‘Nash,
-the ape of Greene, Greene the ape of Euphues, Euphues the ape of Envy’,
-and declared that Nashe ‘shamefully and odiously misuseth every friend
-or acquaintance as he hath served ... Greene, Marlowe, Chettle, and
-whom not?’<a id="FNanchor_677" href="#Footnote_677" class="fnanchor">[677]</a> In <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (1596), Nashe
-defends himself against these accusations. ‘I never abusd Marloe,
-Greene, Chettle in my life.... He girds me with imitating of Greene....
-I scorne it ... hee subscribing to me in anything but plotting Plaies,
-wherein he was his crafts master.’<a id="FNanchor_678" href="#Footnote_678" class="fnanchor">[678]</a> The alleged abuse of Marlowe,
-Greene, and Chettle belongs to the history of another pamphlet. This is
-<i>Green’s Groats-worth of Wit, Bought with a Million of Repentance</i>
-(S. R. 20 Sept. 1592, ‘upon the peril of Henry Chettle’<a id="FNanchor_679" href="#Footnote_679" class="fnanchor">[679]</a>).
-According to the title-page, it was ‘written before his death and
-published at his dying request’. To this is appended the famous address
-<i>To those Gentlemen, his Quondam Acquaintance, that spend their
-wits in making Plays</i>.<a id="FNanchor_680" href="#Footnote_680" class="fnanchor">[680]</a> The reference here to Shakespeare is
-undeniable. Of the three playwrights warned, the first and third are
-almost certainly Marlowe and Peele; the third may be Lodge, but on
-the whole is far more likely to be Nashe (q.v.). It appears, however,
-that Nashe himself was supposed to have had a hand in the authorship.
-Chettle did his best to take the responsibility off Nashe’s shoulders
-in the preface to his <i>Kind-Hart’s Dream</i> (S. R. 8 Dec. 1592; cf.
-App. C, No. xlix). In the epistle prefixed to the second edition of
-<i>Pierce Penniless his Supplication to the Devil</i> (<i>Works</i>, i.
-154), written early in 1593, Nashe denies the charge for himself and
-calls <i>The Groats-worth</i> ‘a scald trivial lying pamphlet’; and
-it is perhaps to this that Harvey refers as abuse of Greene, Marlowe,
-and Chettle, although it is not clear how Marlowe comes in. There is
-an echo of Greene’s hit at the ‘upstart crow, beautified with our
-feathers’ in the lines of R. B., <i>Greene’s Funerals</i> (1594, ed.
-McKerrow, 1911, p. 81):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Greene, gaue the ground, to all that wrote upon him.</div>
- <div>Nay more the men, that so eclipst his fame:</div>
- <div>Purloynde his plumes, can they deny the same?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">It should be added that the theory that Greene himself was actor as
-well as playwright rests on a misinterpretation of a phrase of Harvey’s
-and is inconsistent with the invariable tone of his references to the
-profession.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1831. A. Dyce, <i>The Dramatic Works of R. G.</i> 2 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1861, &amp;c. A. Dyce, <i>The Dramatic and Poetical Works of R. G. and
-George Peele</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1881–6. A. B. Grosart, <i>The Complete Works in Prose and Verse of R.
-G.</i> 15 vols. (<i>Huth Library</i>).</p>
-
-<p>1905. J. C. Collins, <i>The Plays and Poems of R. G.</i> 2 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1909. T. H. Dickinson, <i>The Plays of R. G.</i> (<i>Mermaid
-Series</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: W. Bernhardi, <i>R. G.’s Leben und Schriften</i>
-(1874); J. M. Brown, <i>An Early Rival of Shakespeare</i> (1877);
-N. Storojenko, <i>R. G.: His Life and Works</i> (1878, tr. E. A. B.
-Hodgetts, in Grosart, i); R. Simpson, <i>Account of R. G., his Life
-and Works, and his Attacks on Shakspere</i>, in <i>School of Sh.</i>
-(1878), ii; C. H. Herford, <i>G.’s Romances and Shakespeare</i> (1888,
-<i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 181); K. Knauth, <i>Ueber die Metrik R. G.’s</i>
-(1890, Halle diss.); H. Conrad, <i>R. G. als Dramatiker</i> (1894,
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxix. 210); W. Creizenach, <i>G. über Shakespeare</i>
-(1898, <i>Wiener Festschrift</i>); G. E. Woodberry, <i>G.’s Place in
-Comedy</i>, and C. M. Gayley, <i>R. G., His Life and the Order of his
-Plays</i> (1903, <i>R. E. C.</i> i); K. Ehrke, <i>R. G.’s Dramen</i>
-(1904); S. L. Wolff, <i>R. G. and the Italian Renaissance</i> (1907,
-<i>E. S.</i> xxxvii. 321); F. Brie, <i>Lyly und G.</i> (1910, <i>E.
-S.</i> xlii. 217); J. C. Jordan, <i>R. G.</i> (1915).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Alphonsus. c. 1587</i></p>
-
-<p>1599. The Comicall Historie of Alphonsus King of Aragon. As it hath
-bene sundrie times Acted. Made by R. G. <i>Thomas Creede</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There is general agreement that, on grounds of style, this should
-be the earliest of Greene’s extant plays. In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 1444 is
-an allusion to ‘mighty Tamberlaine’, and the play reads throughout
-like an attempt to emulate the success of Marlowe’s play of 1587 (?).
-In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i Mahomet speaks out of a brazen head. The play may
-therefore be alluded to in the ‘Mahomet’s poo [pow]’ of Peele’s (q.v.)
-<i>Farewell</i> of April 1589, although Peele may have intended his
-own lost play of <i>The Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek</i>.
-There is no reference in <i>Alphonsus</i> to the Armada of 1588. On
-the whole, the winter of 1587 appears the most likely date for it, and
-if so, it is possibly the play whose ill success is recorded by Greene
-in the preface to <i>Perimedes</i> (1588). The Admiral’s revived a
-<i>Mahomet</i> on 16 Aug. 1594, inventoried ‘owld Mahemetes head’ in
-1598, and revived the play again in Aug. 1601, buying the book from
-Alleyn, who might have brought it from Strange’s, or bought it from
-the Queen’s (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 167; <i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-116). Collins dates <i>Alphonsus</i> in 1591, on a theory, inconsistent
-with the biographical indications of the pamphlets, that Greene’s
-play-writing did not begin much before that year. A ‘Tragicomoedia von
-einem Königk in Arragona’ played at Dresden in 1626 might be either
-this play or <i>Mucedorus</i> (Herz, 66, 78).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Looking Glass for London and England. c. 1590</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Lodge.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, March 5. ‘A booke intituled the lookinge glasse for
-London by Thomas Lodg and Robert Greene gent.’ <i>Thomas Creede</i>
-(Arber, ii. 645).</p>
-
-<p>1594. A Looking Glasse for London and England. Made by Thomas Lodge
-Gentleman, and Robert Greene. In Artibus Magister. <i>Thomas Creede,
-sold by William Barley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1598. <i>Thomas Creede, sold by William Barley.</i></p>
-
-<p>1602. <i>Thomas Creede, for Thomas Pavier.</i></p>
-
-<p>1617. <i>Bernard Alsop.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The facts of Lodge’s (q.v.) life leave 1588, before the Canaries
-voyage, or 1589–91, between that voyage and Cavendish’s expedition,
-as possible dates for the play. In favour of the former is Lodge’s
-expressed intention in 1589 to give up ‘penny-knave’s delight’. On
-the other hand, the subject is closely related to that of Greene’s
-moral pamphlets, the series of which begins in 1590, and the fall of
-Nineveh is referred to in <i>The Mourning Garment</i> of that year.
-Fleay, ii. 54, and Collins, i. 137, accept 1590 as the date of the
-play. Gayley, 405, puts it in 1587, largely on the impossible notion
-that its ‘priest of the sun’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 1540) is that referred
-to in the <i>Perimedes</i> preface, but partly also from the absence
-of any reference to the Armada. It is possible that ‘pleasing Alcon’
-in Spenser’s <i>Colin Clout’s Come Home Again</i> (1591) may refer to
-Lodge as the author of the character Alcon in this play. <i>The Looking
-Glass</i> was revived by Strange’s men on 8 March 1592. The clown is
-sometimes called Adam in the course of the dialogue (ll. 1235 sqq.,
-1589 sqq., 2120 sqq.), and a comparison with <i>James IV</i> suggests
-that the original performer was John Adams of the Queen’s men, from
-whom Henslowe may have acquired the play. Fleay, ii. 54, and Gayley,
-405, make attempts to distinguish Greene’s share from Lodge’s, but
-do not support their results by arguments. Crawford, <i>England’s
-Parnassus</i>, xxxii, 441, does not regard Allot’s ascription of the
-passages he borrowed to Greene and Lodge respectively as trustworthy.
-Unnamed English actors played a ‘comedia auss dem propheten Jona’ at
-Nördlingen in 1605 (Herz, 78).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>, <i>c. 1589</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, May 14. ‘A booke entituled the Historye of ffryer
-Bacon and ffryer Boungaye.’ <i>Adam Islip</i> (Arber, ii. 649).
-[Against this and other plays entered on the same day, Adam Islip’s
-name is crossed out and Edward White’s substituted.]</p>
-
-<p>1594. The Honorable Historie of frier Bacon, and frier Bongay. As it
-was plaid by her Maiesties seruants. Made by Robert Greene Maister of
-Arts. <i>For Edward White.</i> [Malone dated one of his copies of the
-1630 edition ‘1599’ in error; cf. Gayley, 430.]</p>
-
-<p>1630.... As it was lately plaid by the Prince Palatine his Seruants....
-<i>Elizabeth Allde</i>. [The t.p. has a woodcut representing Act
-<span class="allsmcap">II</span>, sc. iii.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span></p>
-
-<p>1655. <i>Jean Bell.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by A. W. Ward (1878, &amp;c.), C. M. Gayley (1903, <i>R.
-E. C.</i> i), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>), and J. S. Farmer
-(1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: O. Ritter, <i>De R. G.
-Fabula: F. B. and F. B.</i> (1866, <i>Thorn diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, in <i>Appendix B</i> to Ward’s ed., argues from <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i.
-137, ‘next Friday is S. James’, that the date of the play is 1589, in
-which year St. James’s Day fell on a Friday. This does not seem to me
-a very reliable argument. Probably the play followed not long after
-Marlowe’s <i>Doctor Faustus</i> (q.v.), itself probably written in
-1588–9. The date of 1589, which Ward, i. 396, and Gayley, 411, accept,
-is likely enough. Collins prefers 1591–2, and notes (ii. 4) a general
-resemblance in tone and theme to <i>Fair Em</i>, but there is nothing
-to indicate the priority of either play, and no charge of plagiarism
-in the pamphlets (<i>vide supra</i>) to which <i>Fair Em</i> gave
-rise. <i>Friar Bacon</i> was revived by Strange’s men on 19 Feb. 1592,
-and again by the Queen’s and Sussex’s men together on 1 April 1594.
-Doubtless it was Henslowe’s property, as Middleton wrote a prologue and
-epilogue for a performance by the Admiral’s men at Court at Christmas
-1602 (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 149).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Orlando Furioso. c. 1591</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] The Dulwich MSS. contain an actor’s copy with cues of
-Orlando’s part. Doubtless it belonged to Alleyn. The fragment covers
-ll. 595–1592 of the Q<sub>q</sub>, but contains passages not in those texts. It
-is printed by Collier, <i>Alleyn Papers</i>, 198, Collins, i. 266, and
-Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 155.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1593, Dec. 7. ‘A plaie booke, intituled, the historye
-of Orlando ffurioso, one of the xij peeres of Ffraunce.’ <i>John
-Danter</i> (Arber, ii. 641).</p>
-
-<p>1594, May 28. ‘Entred for his copie by consent of John Danter.... A
-booke entytuled The historie of Orlando furioso, &amp;c. Prouided alwaies,
-and yt is agreed that soe often as the same booke shalbe printed, the
-saide John Danter to haue thimpryntinge thereof.’ <i>Cuthbert Burby</i>
-(Arber, ii. 650).</p>
-
-<p>1594. The Historie of Orlando Furioso One of the twelve Pieres of
-France. As it was plaid before the Queenes Maiestie. <i>John Danter for
-Cuthbert Burby.</i></p>
-
-<p>1599. <i>Simon Stafford for Cuthbert Burby.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. W. Greg (1907, <i>M. S. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Armada (1588) is referred to in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 87. Two passages are
-common to the play and Peele’s <i>Old Wive’s Tale</i> (before 1595),
-and were probably borrowed by Peele with the name Sacripant, which
-Greene got from Ariosto. The play cannot be the ‘King Charlemagne’ of
-Peele’s (q.v.) <i>Farewell</i> (April 1589), as Charlemagne does not
-appear in it. The appearance of Sir John Harington’s translation of
-Ariosto’s <i>Orlando Furioso</i> in 1591 suggests that as a likely
-date. This also would fit the story (<i>vide supra</i>) of the second
-sale to the Admiral’s men, when the Queen’s ‘were in the country’ (cf.
-vol. ii, p. 112). Strange’s men played <i>Orlando</i> for Henslowe on
-22 Feb. 1592. Collins, i. 217, seems to accept 1591 as the date, but
-Fleay, i. 263, Ward, i. 395, and Gayley, 409,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span> prefer 1588–9. So does
-Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 150) on the assumption that <i>Old Wive’s
-Tale</i> (q.v.) ‘must belong to 1590’. A ‘Comoedia von Orlando Furioso’
-was acted at Dresden in 1626 (Herz, 66, 77).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>James the Fourth. c. 1591</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, May 14. ‘A booke intituled the Scottishe story of
-James the Ffourth slayne at Fflodden intermixed with a plesant Comedie
-presented by Oboron Kinge of ffayres.’ <i>Thomas Creede</i> (Arber, ii.
-648.)</p>
-
-<p>1598. The Scottish Historie of Iames the fourth, slaine at Flodden.
-Entermixed with a pleasant Comedie, presented by Oboram, King of
-Fayeries: As it hath bene sundrie times publikely plaide. Written by
-Robert Greene, Maister of Arts. <i>Thomas Creede.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. M. Manly (1897, <i>Specimens</i>,
-ii. 327) and A. E. H. Swaen and W. W. Greg (1921, <i>M. S.
-R.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: W. Creizenach, <i>Zu G.’s J. IV</i>
-(1885, <i>Anglia</i>, viii. 419).</p>
-
-<p>There is very little to date the play. Its comparative merit perhaps
-justifies placing it, as Greene’s maturest drama, in 1591. Collins, i.
-44, agrees; but Fleay, i. 265; Ward, i. 400; Gayley, 415, prefer 1590.
-Fleay finds traces of a second hand, whom he believes to be Lodge, but
-he is not convincing. In l. 2269 the name Adam appears for Oberon in
-a stage-direction, which, when compared with <i>A Looking-Glass</i>,
-suggests that the actor was John Adams of the Queen’s.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Warburton’s list of burnt plays (<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231) contains
-the duplicate entries ‘His<sup>t</sup> of Jobe by Rob. Green’ and ‘The Trag<sup>d</sup> of
-Jobe. Good.’ Greg suggests a confusion with Sir Robert Le Grys, who
-appears in the list as ‘S<sup>r</sup> Rob. le Green’.</p>
-
-<p>The statement that Greene had a share in a play on Henry VIII
-(<i>Variorum</i>, xix. 500) seems to be based on a confusion with a
-Robert Greene named by Stowe as an authority for his <i>Annales</i>
-(Collins, i. 69).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Greene’s hand has been sought in <i>Contention of York and
-Lancaster</i>, <i>Edward III</i>, <i>Fair Em</i>, <i>George a
-Greene</i>, <i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i>, <i>Knack to Know
-a Knave</i>, <i>Thracian Wonder</i>, <i>Leire</i>, <i>Locrine</i>,
-<i>Mucedorus</i>, <i>Selimus</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, <i>Thomas
-Lord Cromwell</i> (cf. ch. xxiv), and Shakespeare’s <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i> and <i>Henry VI</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FULKE GREVILLE, LORD BROOKE (<i>c.</i> 1554–1628).</p>
-
-<p>Greville’s father, Sir Fulke, was a cadet of the Grevilles of Milcote,
-and held great estates in Warwickshire. The son was born at Beauchamp
-Court ten years before he entered Shrewsbury School on 17 Oct. 1564
-with Philip Sidney, of whom he wrote, <i>c.</i> 1610–12, a <i>Life</i>
-(ed. Nowell Smith, 1907). In 1568 he went to Jesus College, Cambridge,
-and from 1577 was a courtier in high favour with Elizabeth, and
-entrusted with minor diplomatic and administrative tasks. He took
-part in the great tilt of 15 May 1581 (cf. ch. xxiv) and was a steady
-patron of learning and letters. His own plays were for the closet. He
-was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span> knighted in 1597. James granted him Warwick Castle in 1605, but
-he was no friend of Robert Cecil, and took no great part in affairs
-until 1614, when he became Chancellor of the Exchequer. In 1621 he was
-created Lord Brooke. On 1 Sept. 1628 he was stabbed to death by his
-servant Ralph Haywood. D. Lloyd, <i>Statesmen of England</i> (1665),
-504, makes him claim to have been ‘master’ to Shakespeare and Jonson.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1632, Nov. 10 (Herbert). ‘A booke called Certaine learned
-and elegant Workes of Fulke Lord Brooke the perticular names are as
-followeth (viz<sup>t</sup>) ... The Tragedy of Alaham. The Tragedy of Mustapha
-(by assignment from Master Butter).... <i>Seile</i> (Arber, iv. 288).</p>
-
-<p>1633. Certaine Learned and Elegant Workes of the Right Honorable Fulke
-Lord Brooke, Written in his Youth, and familiar exercise with Sir
-Philip Sidney. The seuerall Names of which Workes the following page
-doth declare. <i>E. P. for Henry Seyle.</i> [Contains <i>Alaham</i> and
-<i>Mustapha</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1670. The Remains of Sir Fulk Grevill Lord Brooke: Being Poems of
-Monarchy and Religion: Never before Printed. <i>T. N. for Henry
-Herringham.</i> [Contains <i>Alaham</i> and <i>Mustapha</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1870. A. B. Grosart, <i>The Works in Verse and Prose Complete of the
-Lord Brooke</i>. 4 vols. (<i>Fuller Worthies Library</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: M. W. Croll, <i>The Works of F. G.</i> (1903,
-<i>Pennsylvania thesis</i>); R. M. Cushman (<i>M. L. N.</i> xxiv. 180).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Alaham. c. 1600</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] Holograph at Warwick Castle (cf. Grosart, iv. 336).</p>
-
-<p>1633. [Part of <i>Coll.</i> 1633. Prologue and Epilogue; at end, ‘This
-Tragedy, called Alaham, may be printed, this 13 day of June 1632, Henry
-Herbert.’]</p>
-
-<p>Croll dates 1586–1600 on metrical grounds, and Cushman 1598–1603, as
-bearing on Elizabethan politics after Burghley’s death.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mustapha. 1603 &lt; &gt; 8</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] Holograph at Warwick Castle (cf. Grosart, iv. 336).
-<i>Camb. Univ. MS.</i> F. f. 2. 35.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, Nov. 25 (Buck). ‘A booke called the Tragedy of
-Mustapha and Zangar.’ <i>Nathanaell Butter</i> (Arber, iii. 396).</p>
-
-<p>1609. The Tragedy of Mustapha. <i>For Nathaniel Butter.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1632, Nov. 10. Transfer from Butter to Seile (Arber, iv.
-288) (<i>vide Collections</i>, <i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Cushman dates 1603–9, as bearing on the Jacobean doctrine of divine
-right.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">MATTHEW GWINNE (<i>c.</i> 1558–1627).</p>
-
-<p>Gwinne, the son of a London grocer of Welsh descent, entered St.
-John’s, Oxford, from Merchant Taylors in 1574, and became Fellow of the
-College, taking his B.A. in 1578, his M.A. in 1582, and his M.D.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span> in
-1593. In 1592 he was one of the overseers for the plays at the visit of
-Elizabeth (Boas, 252). He became Professor of Physic at Gresham College
-in 1597 and afterwards practised as a physician in London.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">LATIN PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Nero &gt; 1603</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1603, Feb. 23 (Buckerydge). ‘A booke called Nero Tragedia
-nova Matheo Gwyn medicine Doctore Colegij Divi Johannis precursoris
-apud Oxonienses socio Collecta.’ <i>Edward Blunt</i> (Arber, iii. 228).</p>
-
-<p>1603. Nero Tragoedia Nova; Matthaeo Gwinne Med. Doct. Collegii
-Diui Joannis Praecursoris apud Oxonienses Socio collecta è Tacito,
-Suetonio, Dione, Seneca. <i>Ed. Blount.</i> [Epistle to James,
-‘Londini ex aedibus Greshamiis Cal. Jul. 1603’, signed ‘Matthaeus
-Gvvinne’; commendatory verses to Justus Lipsius, signed ‘Io. Sandsbury
-Ioannensis’; Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1603. <i>Ed. Blount.</i> [Epistle to Thomas Egerton and Francis Leigh,
-‘Londini ex aedibus Greshamiis in festo Cinerum 1603’; Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1639. <i>M. F. Prostant apud R. Mynne.</i></p>
-
-<p>Boas, 390, assigns the play to St. John’s, Oxford, <i>c.</i> Easter
-1603, but the S. R. entry and the ‘Elisa regnat’ of the Epilogue point
-to an Elizabethan date.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Vertumnus. 29 Aug. 1605</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Inner Temple Petyt MS.</i> 538, 43, f. 293, has a
-<i>scenario</i>, with the title ‘The yeare about’.</p>
-
-<p>1607. Vertumnus sive Annus Recurrens Oxonii, xxix Augusti, Anno. 1605.
-Coram Iacobo Rege, Henrico Principe, Proceribus. A Joannensibus in
-Scena recitatus ab vno scriptus, Phrasi Comica propè Tragicis Senariis.
-<i>Nicholas Okes, impensis Ed. Blount.</i> [Epistle to Henry, signed
-‘Matthaeus Gwinne’; Verses to Earl of Montgomery; commendatory verses,
-signed ‘Guil. Paddy’, ‘Ioa. Craigius’, ‘Io. Sansbery Ioannensis’,
-‘Θώμας ὁ Φρεάῤῥεος’; <i>Author ad Librum</i>. Appended are verses,
-signed ‘M. G.’ and headed ‘Ad Regis introitum, è Ioannensi Collegio
-extra portam Vrbis Borealem sito, tres quasi Sibyllae, sic (ut e sylua)
-salutarunt’, which are thought to have given a hint for <i>Macbeth</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>This was shown to James during his visit to Oxford, and it sent him to
-sleep. The performance was at Christ Church by men of St. John’s.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">STEPHEN HARRISON (<i>c.</i> 1604).</p>
-
-<p>Designer and describer of the arches at the coronation of James I (cf.
-ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD HATHWAY (<i>c.</i> 1600).</p>
-
-<p>Practically nothing is known of Hathway outside Henslowe’s diary,
-although he was included by Meres amongst the ‘best for comedy’ in
-1598, and wrote commendatory verses for Bodenham’s <i>Belvedere</i>
-(1600). It is only conjecture that relates him to the Hathaways of
-Shottery in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span> Warwickshire, of whom was Shakespeare’s father-in-law,
-also a Richard. He has left nothing beyond an undetermined share
-of <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i>, but the following plays by him are
-traceable in the diary:</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(a) <i>Plays for the Admiral’s, 1598–1602</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>King Arthur.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">April 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>Valentine and Orson.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Munday, July 1598. It is uncertain what relation, if any, this
-bore to an anonymous play of the same name which was twice entered in
-the S. R. on 23 May 1595 and 31 March 1600 (Arber, ii. 298, iii. 159),
-was ascribed in both entries to the Queen’s and not the Admiral’s, and
-is not known to be extant.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii, iv) <i>1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton (q.v.), Munday, and Wilson, Oct.–Dec. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Owen Tudor.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton, Munday, and Wilson, Jan. 1600; but apparently not
-finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>1 Fair Constance of Rome.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Drayton, Munday, and Wilson (q.v.), June 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>2 Fair Constance of Rome.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">June 1600; but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>Hannibal and Scipio.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Rankins, Jan. 1601. Greg, ii. 216, bravely suggests that Nabbes’s
-play of the same name, printed as a piece of Queen Henrietta’s men in
-1637, may have been a revision of this.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Scogan and Skelton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Rankins, Jan.–March 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>The Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Rankins, Mar.–Apr. 1601, but never finished, as shown by a letter
-to Henslowe from S. Rowley, bidding him let Hathway ‘have his papars
-agayne’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi, xii) <i>1, 2 The Six Clothiers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Haughton and Smith, Oct.–Nov. 1601; but the second part was
-apparently unfinished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiii) <i>Too Good To Be True.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle (q.v.) and Smith, Nov. 1601–Jan. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiv) <i>Merry as May Be.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Smith, Nov. 1602.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(b) <i>Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xv, xvi) <i>1, 2 The Black Dog of Newgate.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, Smith, and an anonymous ‘other poete’, Nov. 1602–Feb. 1603.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvii) <i>The Unfortunate General.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, Smith, and a third, Jan. 1603.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">(c) <i>Play for the Admiral’s, 1603</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xviii) <i>The Boss of Billingsgate.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and one or more other ‘felowe poetes’, March 1603.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CHRISTOPHER HATTON (1540–91).</p>
-
-<p>Christopher Hatton, of Holdenby, Northants, entered the Inner Temple
-in Nov. 1559. He was Master of the Game at the Grand Christmas of
-1561, and the mask to which he is said to have owed his introduction
-to Elizabeth’s favour was probably that which the revellers took to
-Court, together with Norton (q.v.) and Sackville’s <i>Gorboduc</i> on
-18 Jan. 1562. He became a Gentleman Pensioner in 1564, Gentleman of
-the Privy Chamber, Captain of the Guard in 1572, Vice-Chamberlain and
-Privy Councillor in 1578, when he was knighted, and Lord Chancellor
-on 25 April 1587. He was conspicuous at Court in masks and tilts, and
-is reported, even as Lord Chancellor, to have laid aside his gown and
-danced at the wedding of his nephew and heir, Sir William Newport,
-alias Hatton, to Elizabeth Gawdy at Holdenby in June 1590.</p>
-
-<p>His only contribution to the drama is as writer of an act of <i>Gismond
-of Salerne</i> at the Inner Temple in 1568 (cf. s.v. Wilmot).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM HAUGHTON (<i>c.</i> 1575–1605).</p>
-
-<p>Beyond his extant work and the entries in Henslowe’s diary, in the
-earliest of which, on 5 Nov. 1597, he appears as ‘yonge’ Haughton,
-little is known of Haughton. Cooper, <i>Ath. Cantab.</i> ii. 399,
-identified him with an alleged Oxford M.A. of the same name who was
-incorporated at Cambridge in 1604, but turns out to have misread the
-name, which is ‘Langton’ (Baugh, 15). He worked for the Admiral’s
-during 1597–1602, and found himself in the Clink in March 1600. Baugh,
-22, prints his will, made on 6 June 1605, and proved on 20 July.
-He left a widow Alice and children. Wentworth Smith (q.v.) and one
-Elizabeth Lewes were witnesses. He was then of Allhallows, Stainings.
-He cannot be traced in the parish, but the name, which in his will is
-Houghton, is also spelt by Henslowe Harton, Horton, Hauton, Hawton,
-Howghton, Haughtoun, Haulton, and Harvghton, and was common in London.
-He might be related to a William Houghton, saddler, who held a house in
-Turnmill Street in 1577 (Baugh, 11), since in 1601 (<i>H. P.</i> 57)
-Day requested that a sum due to Haughton and himself might be paid to
-‘Will Hamton sadler’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Englishmen for My Money</i>, or <i>A Woman Will Have Her Will.
-1598</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1601, Aug. 3. ‘A comedy of A woman Will haue her Will.’
-<i>William White</i> (Arber, iii. 190).</p>
-
-<p>1616. English-Men For my Money: or, A pleasant Comedy, called, A Woman
-will haue her Will. <i>W. White.</i></p>
-
-<p>1626.... As it hath beene diuers times Acted with great applause. <i>I.
-N., sold by Hugh Perry.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span></p>
-
-<p>1631. <i>A. M., sold by Richard Thrale.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>O. E. D.</i> (1830, i) and Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, x (1875),
-and by J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F. T.</i>), W. W. Greg (1912, <i>M. S.
-R.</i>), and A. C. Baugh, (1917).</p>
-
-<p>The evidence for Haughton’s evidence is in two payments in Henslowe’s
-diary of 18 Feb. and early in May 1598 on behalf of the Admiral’s. The
-sum of these is only £2, but it seems possible that at least one, and
-perhaps more than one, other payment was made for the book in 1597 (cf.
-Henslowe, ii. 191).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Patient Grissell. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p class=" center p0"><i>With</i> Chettle and Dekker (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost and Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>The following plays by Haughton, all for the Admiral’s, are traceable
-in Henslowe’s diary:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>A Woman Will Have Her Will.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">See <i>supra</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>The Poor Man’s Paradise.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Aug. 1599; apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>Cox of Collumpton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, Nov. 1599; on a ‘note’ of the play by Simon Forman, cf. ch.
-xiii (Admiral’s).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>Thomas Merry</i>, or <i>Beech’s Tragedy</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, Nov.–Dec. 1599, on the same theme as one of Yarington’s
-<i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>The Arcadian Virgin.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dec. 1599; apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>Patient Grissell.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle and Dekker (q.v.), Oct.–Dec. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Dekker, Feb. 1600; but apparently then unfinished;
-possibly identical with <i>Lust’s Dominion</i> (cf. s.v. Marlowe).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>The Seven Wise Masters.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Day, and Dekker, March 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Ferrex and Porrex.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">March-April 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>The English Fugitives.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">April 1600, but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>The Devil and His Dame.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">6 May 1600; probably the extant anonymous <i>Grim the Collier of
-Croydon</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xii) <i>Strange News Out of Poland.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With ‘M<sup>r</sup>. Pett’, May 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiii) <i>Judas.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Haughton had 10<i>s.</i> for this, May 1600; apparently the play was
-finished by Bird and S. Rowley, Dec. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiv) <i>Robin Hood’s Pennorths.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Dec. 1600–Jan. 1601; but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xv, xvi) <i>2, 3 The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day (q.v.), Jan.–July 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvii) <i>The Conquest of the West Indies.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Smith, April-Sept. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xviii) <i>The Six Yeomen of the West.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, May–June 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xix) <i>Friar Rush and the Proud Woman of Antwerp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle and Day, July 1601–Jan. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xx) <i>2 Tom Dough.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, July–Sept. 1601; but apparently not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxi, xxii) <i>1, 2 The Six Clothiers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway and Smith, Oct.–Nov. 1601; but apparently the second part
-was not finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xxiii) <i>William Cartwright.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Sept. 1602; perhaps never finished.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WALTER HAWKESWORTH (?-1606).</p>
-
-<p>A Yorkshireman by birth, Hawkesworth entered Trinity College,
-Cambridge, in 1588, and became a Fellow, taking his B.A. in 1592 and
-his M.A. in 1595. In 1605 he went as secretary to the English embassy
-in Madrid, where he died.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">LATIN PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Leander. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>T. C. C. MS.</i> R. 3. 9. <i>Sloane MS.</i> 1762.
-[‘Authore M<sup>ro</sup> Haukesworth, Collegii Trinitatis olim Socio Acta est
-secundo <span class="allsmcap">A. D.</span> 1602 comitiis Baccalaureorum ... primo acta est
-<span class="allsmcap">A. D.</span> 1598.’ Prologue, ‘ut primo acta est’; Additions for
-revival; Actor-lists.]</p>
-
-<p><i>St. John’s, Cambridge, MS.</i> J. 8. [Dated at end ‘7 Jan. 1599’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Emmanuel, Cambridge, MS.</i> I. 2. 30.</p>
-
-<p><i>Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS.</i> Ee. v. 16.</p>
-
-<p><i>Bodl. Rawl. Misc. MS.</i> 341.</p>
-
-<p><i>Lambeth MS.</i> 838.</p>
-
-<p>The production in 1599 and 1603 indicated by the MSS. agrees with the
-Trinity names in the actor-lists (Boas, 399).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Labyrinthus. 1603</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>T. C. C. MS.</i> R. 3. 6.</p>
-
-<p><i>Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS.</i> Ee. v. 16. [Both ‘M<sup>ro</sup> Haukesworth’.
-Prologue. Actor-list in <i>T. C. C. MS.</i>]</p>
-
-<p><i>St. John’s, Cambridge, MS.</i> J. 8. <i>T. C. C. MS.</i> R. 3. 9.
-<i>Bodl. Douce MSS.</i> 43, 315. <i>Lambeth MS.</i> 838.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1635, July 17 (Weekes). ‘A Latyn Comedy called Laborinthus
-&amp;c.’ <i>Robinson</i> (Arber, iv. 343).</p>
-
-<p>1636. Labyrinthus Comoedia, habita coram Sereniss. Rege Iacobo in
-Academia Cantabrigiensi. <i>Londini, Excudebat H. R.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>An allusion in the text (v. 5) to the marriage ‘<i>heri</i>’ of Leander
-and Flaminia has led to the assumption that production was on the day
-after the revival of <i>Leander</i> in 1603; the actor-list has some
-inconsistencies, and is not quite conclusive for any year of the period
-1603–6 (Boas, 317, 400).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">MARY HERBERT, COUNTESS OF PEMBROKE (1561–1621).</p>
-
-<p>Mary, daughter of Sir Henry, and sister of Sir Philip, Sidney, married
-Henry, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, in 1577. She had literary tastes and was
-a liberal patroness of poets, notably Samuel Daniel. Most of her time
-appears to have been spent at her husband’s Wiltshire seats of Wilton,
-Ivychurch, and Ramsbury, but in the reign of James she rented Crosby
-Hall in Bishopsgate, and in 1615 the King granted her for life the
-manor of Houghton Conquest, Beds.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: F. B. Young, <i>Mary Sidney, Countess of
-Pembroke</i> (1912).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">TRANSLATION</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Antony. 1590</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1592, May 3. ‘Item Anthonius a tragedie wrytten also in
-French by Robert Garnier ... donne in English by the Countesse of
-Pembrok.’ <i>William Ponsonby</i> (Arber, ii. 611).</p>
-
-<p>1592. A Discourse of Life and Death. Written in French by Ph. Mornay.
-Antonius, A Tragoedie written also in French by Ro. Garnier Both done
-in English by the Countesse of Pembroke. <i>For William Ponsonby.</i></p>
-
-<p>1595. The Tragedie of Antonie. Doone ... <i>For William Ponsonby</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by A. Luce (1897). The <i>Marc-Antoine</i> (1578) of
-Robert Garnier was reissued in his <i>Huit Tragédies</i> (1580).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENT</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Astraea. 1592</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>In Davison’s <i>Poetical Rapsody</i> (1602, S. R. 28 May 1602) is
-‘A Dialogue betweene two Shepheards, Thenot and Piers, in Praise of
-Astrea. Made by the excellent Lady the Lady Mary Countesse of Pembrook
-at the Queenes Maiesties being at her house at &mdash;&mdash; Anno 15&mdash;’.</p>
-
-<p>S. Lee (<i>D. N. B.</i>) puts the visit at Wilton ‘late in 1599’. But
-there was no progress in 1599, and progresses to Wilts. planned in
-1600, 1601, and 1602 were abandoned. Presumably the verses were written
-for the visit to Ramsbury of 27–9 Aug. 1592 (cf. App. A).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JASPER HEYWOOD (1535–98).</p>
-
-<p>Translator of Seneca (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS HEYWOOD (<i>c.</i> 1570–1641).</p>
-
-<p>Heywood regarded Lincolnshire as his ‘country’ and had an uncle
-Edmund, who had a friend Sir Henry Appleton. K. L. Bates has found
-Edmund Heywood’s will of 7 Oct. 1624 in which Thomas Heywood and
-his wife are mentioned, and has shown it to be not improbable that
-Edmund was the son of Richard Heywood, a London barrister who had
-manors in Lincolnshire. If so, Thomas was probably the son of Edmund’s
-disinherited elder brother Christopher who was aged 30 in 1570. And if
-Richard Heywood is the same who appears in the circle of Sir Thomas
-More, a family connexion with the dramatist John Heywood may be
-conjectured. The date of Thomas’s birth is unknown, but he tells us
-that he was at Cambridge, although a tradition that he became Fellow
-of Peterhouse cannot be confirmed, and is therefore not likely to have
-begun his stage career before the age of 18 or thereabouts. Perhaps we
-may conjecture that he was born <i>c.</i> 1570, for a Thomas Heywood
-is traceable in the St. Saviour’s, Southwark, token-books from 1588
-to 1607, and children of Thomas Heywood ‘player’ were baptized in the
-same parish from 28 June 1590 to 5 Sept. 1605 (Collier, in <i>Bodl.
-MS.</i> 29445). This is consistent with his knowledge (App. C, No.
-lvii) of Tarlton, but not of earlier actors. He may, therefore, so far
-as dates are concerned, easily have written <i>The Four Prentices</i>
-as early as 1592; but that he in fact did so, as well as his possible
-contributions to the Admiral’s repertory of 1594–7, are matters of
-inference (cf. Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 284). The editors of the
-<i>Apology for Actors</i> (Introd. v) say that in his <i>Funeral
-Elegy upon James I</i> (1625) he claims to have been ‘the theatrical
-servant of the Earl of Southampton, the patron of Shakespeare’. I have
-never seen the Elegy. It is not in the B. M., but a copy passed from
-the Bindley to the Brown collection. There is no other evidence that
-Southampton ever had a company of players. The first dated notice of
-Heywood is in a payment of Oct. 1596 on behalf of the Admiral’s ‘for
-Hawodes bocke’. On 25 March 1598 he bound himself to Henslowe for two
-years as an actor, doubtless for the Admiral’s, then in process of
-reconstitution. Between Dec. 1598 and Feb. 1599 he wrote two plays
-for this company, and then disappears from their records. He was not
-yet out of his time with Henslowe, but if <i>Edward IV</i> is really
-his, he may have been enabled to transfer his services to Derby’s men,
-who seem to have established themselves in London in the course of
-1599. By the autumn of 1602 he was a member of Worcester’s, for whom
-he had probably already written <i>How a Man may Choose a Good Wife
-from a Bad</i>. He now reappears in Henslowe’s diary both as actor and
-as playwright. On 1 Sept, he borrowed 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> to buy
-garters, and between 4 Sept, and 6 March 1603 he wrote or collaborated
-in not less than seven plays for the company. During the same winter
-he also helped in one play for the Admiral’s. It seems probable that
-some of his earlier work was transferred to Worcester’s. He remained
-with them, and in succession to them Queen Anne’s, until the company
-broke up soon after the death of the Queen in 1619. Very little of
-his work got into print. Of the twelve plays at most which appeared
-before 1619, the first seven<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span> were unauthorized issues; from 1608
-onwards, he himself published five with prefatory epistles. About this
-date, perhaps in the enforced leisure of plague-time, he also began
-to produce non-dramatic works, both in prose and verse, of which the
-<i>Apology for Actors</i>, published in 1612, but written some years
-earlier (cf. App. C, No. lvii), is the most important. The loss of his
-<i>Lives of All the Poets</i>, apparently begun <i>c.</i> 1614 and
-never finished, is irreparable. After 1619 Heywood is not traceable
-at all as an actor; nor for a good many years, with the exception
-of one play, <i>The Captives</i>, for the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1624,
-as a playwright, either on the stage or in print. In 1623 a Thomas
-Heywarde lived near Clerkenwell Hill (<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi. 345)
-and is probably the dramatist. In 1624 he claims in the Epistle to
-<i>Gynaikeion</i> the renewed patronage of the Earl of Worcester, since
-‘I was your creature, and amongst other your servants, you bestowed me
-upon the excellent princesse Q. Anne ... but by her lamented death,
-your gift is returned againe into your hands’. But about 1630 he
-emerges again. Old plays of his were revived and new ones produced both
-by Queen Henrietta’s men at the Cockpit and the King’s at the Globe
-and Blackfriars. He wrote the Lord Mayor’s pageants for a series of
-years. He sent ten more plays to the press, and included a number of
-prologues, epilogues, and complimentary speeches of recent composition
-in his <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i> of 1637. This period lies
-outside my survey. I have dealt with all plays in which there is a
-reasonable prospect of finding early work, but have not thought it
-necessary to discuss <i>The English Traveller</i>, or <i>A Maidenhead
-Well Lost</i>, merely because of tenuous attempts by Fleay to connect
-them with lost plays written for Worcester’s or still earlier anonymous
-work for the Admiral’s, any more than <i>The Fair Maid of the West</i>,
-<i>The Late Lancashire Witches</i>, or <i>A Challenge for Beauty</i>,
-with regard to which no such suggestion is made. As to <i>Love’s
-Mistress</i>, see the note on <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>.
-The Epistle to <i>The English Traveller</i> (1633) is worth quoting.
-Heywood describes the play as ‘one reserued amongst two hundred and
-twenty, in which I haue had either an entire hand, or at the least a
-maine finger’, and goes on to explain why his pieces have not appeared
-as <i>Works</i>. ‘One reason is, that many of them by shifting and
-change of Companies, haue beene negligently lost, Others of them are
-still retained in the hands of some Actors, who thinke it against their
-peculiar profit to haue them come in Print, and a third, That it neuer
-was any great ambition in me, to bee in this kind Volumniously read.’
-Heywood’s statement would give him an average of over five plays a
-year throughout a forty years’ career, and even if we assume that he
-included every piece which he revised or supplied with a prologue, it
-is obvious that the score or so plays that we have and the dozen or so
-others of which we know the names must fall very short of his total
-output. ‘Tho. Heywood, Poet’, was buried at St. James’s, Clerkenwell,
-on 16 Aug. 1641 (<i>Harl. Soc. Reg.</i> xvii. 248), and therefore
-the alleged mention of him as still alive in <i>The Satire against
-Separatists</i> (1648) must rest on a misunderstanding.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1842–51. B. Field and J. P. Collier, <i>The Dramatic Works of Thomas
-Heywood</i>. 2 vols. (<i>Shakespeare Society</i>). [Intended for a
-complete edition, although issued in single parts; a title-page for
-vol. i was issued in 1850 and the 10th Report of the Society treats
-the plays for 1851 as completing vol. ii. Twelve plays were issued, as
-cited <i>infra</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1874. <i>The Dramatic Works of Thomas Heywood.</i> 6 vols. (<i>Pearson
-Reprints</i>). [All the undoubted plays, with <i>Edward IV</i> and
-<i>Fair Maid of the Exchange</i>; also Lord Mayors’ Pageants and part
-of <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1888. A. W. Verity, <i>The Best Plays of Thomas Heywood</i> (<i>Mermaid
-Series</i>). [<i>Woman Killed with Kindness</i>, <i>Fair Maid of the
-West</i>, <i>English Traveller</i>, <i>Wise Woman of Hogsdon</i>,
-<i>Rape of Lucrece.</i>]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: K. L. Bates, <i>A Conjecture as to Thomas
-Heywood’s Family</i> (1913, <i>J. G. P.</i> xii. 1); P. Aronstein,
-<i>Thomas Heywood</i> (1913, <i>Anglia</i>, xxxvii. 163).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Four Prentices of London. 1592</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, June 19. ‘An enterlude entituled Godfrey of
-Bulloigne with the Conquest of Jerusalem.’ <i>John Danter</i> (Arber,
-ii. 654).</p>
-
-<p>1615. The Foure Prentises of London. With the Conquest of Ierusalem.
-As it hath bene diuerse times Acted, at the Red Bull, by the Queenes
-Maiesties Seruants. Written by Thomas Heywood. <i>For I. W.</i>
-[Epistle to the Prentices, signed ‘Thomas Heywood’ and Prologue, really
-an Induction.]</p>
-
-<p>1632.... Written and newly reuised by Thomas Heywood. <i>Nicholas
-Okes.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>2, 3</sup> (1780–1827) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> iii).</p>
-
-<p>The Prologue gives the title as <i>True and Strange, or The Four
-Prentises of London</i>. The Epistle speaks of the play as written
-‘many yeares since, in my infancy of iudgment in this kinde of poetry,
-and my first practice’ and ‘some fifteene or sixteene yeares agoe’.
-This would, by itself, suggest a date shortly after the publication
-of Fairfax’s translation from Tasso under the title of <i>Godfrey of
-Bulloigne, or The Recouerie of Ierusalem</i> in 1600. But the Epistle
-also refers to a recent revival of ‘the commendable practice of long
-forgotten armes’ in ‘the Artillery Garden’. This, according to Stowe,
-<i>Annales</i> (1615), 906, was in 1610, which leads Fleay, i. 182,
-followed by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 166), to assume that the Epistle
-was written for an edition, now lost, of about that date. In support
-they cite Beaumont’s <i>K. B. P.</i> iv. 1 (dating it 1610 instead of
-1607), ‘Read the play of the <i>Foure Prentices of London</i>, where
-they tosse their pikes so’. Then, calculating back sixteen years,
-they arrive at the anonymous <i>Godfrey of Bulloigne</i> produced by
-the Admiral’s on 19 July 1594, and identify this with <i>The Four
-Prentices</i>, in which Godfrey is a character. But this <i>Godfrey of
-Bulloigne</i> was a second part, and it is difficult to suppose that
-the first part was anything but the play entered on the S. R. earlier
-in 1594. This, from its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span> title, clearly left no room for a second part
-covering the same ground as <i>The Four Prentices</i>, which ends
-with the capture of Jerusalem. If then Heywood’s play is as old as
-1594 at all, it must be identified with the first part of <i>Godfrey
-of Bulloigne</i>. And is not this in its turn likely to be the
-<i>Jerusalem</i> played by Strange’s men on 22 March and 25 April 1592?
-If so, Heywood’s career began very early, and, as we can hardly put his
-Epistle earlier than the opening of the Artillery Garden in 1610, his
-‘fifteene or sixteene yeares’ must be rather an understatement. There
-is of course nothing in the Epistle itself to suggest that the play had
-been previously printed, but we know from the Epistle to <i>Lucrece</i>
-that the earliest published plays by Heywood were surreptitious.</p>
-
-<p>Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 230, hesitatingly suggests that a purchase
-by Worcester’s of ‘iiij lances for the comody of Thomas Hewedes &amp; M<sup>r</sup>.
-Smythes’ on 3 Sept. 1602 may have been for a revival of <i>The Four
-Prentices</i>, ‘where they tosse their pikes so’, transferred from the
-Admiral’s. But I think his afterthought, that the comedy was Heywood
-and Smith’s <i>Albere Galles</i>, paid for on the next day, is sound.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602</i></p>
-
-<p>See s.v. Dekker.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Royal King and the Loyal Subject. 1602</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1637, March 25 (Thomas Herbert, deputy to Sir Henry
-Herbert). ‘A Comedy called the Royall king and the Loyall Subiects by
-Master Heywood.’ <i>James Beckett</i> (Arber, iv. 376).</p>
-
-<p>1637. The Royall King, and the Loyall Subject. As it hath beene Acted
-with great Applause by the Queenes Maiesties Servants. Written by
-Thomas Heywood. <i>Nich. and John Okes for James Becket.</i> [Prologue
-to the Stage and Epilogue to the Reader.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1850, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>) and K. W.
-Tibbals (1906, <i>Pennsylvania Univ. Publ.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>:
-O. Kämpfer, <i>Th. Heywood’s The Royal King and Painter’s Palace of
-Pleasure</i> (1903, <i>Halle diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Epilogue describes the play as ‘old’, and apparently relates it to
-a time when rhyme, of which it makes considerable use, was more looked
-after than ‘strong lines’, and when stuffed and puffed doublets and
-trunk-hose were worn, which would fit the beginning of the seventeenth
-century. An anonymous Marshal is a leading character, and the
-identification by Fleay, i. 300, with the <i>Marshal Osric</i> written
-by Heywood and Smith for Worcester’s in Sept. 1602 is not the worst of
-his guesses.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Woman Killed With Kindness. 1603</i></p>
-
-<p>1607. A Woman Kilde with Kindnesse. Written by Tho: Heywood. <i>William
-Jaggard, sold by John Hodgets.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1617.... As it hath beene oftentimes Acted by the Queenes Maiest.
-Seruants.... The third Edition. <i>Isaac Jaggard.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1, 2, 3</sup> (1744–1827) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> ii), J. P. Collier (1850, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>), A. W. Ward
-(1897, <i>T. D.</i>), F. J. Cox (1907), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>), K. L. Bates<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span> (1919).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: R. G. Martin, <i>A
-New Source for a Woman Killed with Kindness</i> (1911, <i>E. S.</i>
-xliii. 229).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe, on behalf of Worcester’s, paid Heywood £6 for this play in
-Feb. and March 1603 and also bought properties for it. It is mentioned
-in T. M., <i>The Black Book of London</i> (1604), sig. E3.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Wise Woman of Hogsdon. c. 1604</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1638, Mar. 12 (Wykes). ‘A Play called The wise woman of
-Hogsden by Thomas Haywood.’ <i>Henry Sheapard</i> (Arber, iv. 411).</p>
-
-<p>1638. The Wise Woman of Hogsdon. A Comedie. As it hath been sundry
-times Acted with great Applause. Written by Tho: Heywood. <i>M. P. for
-Henry Shephard.</i></p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 291, suggested a date <i>c.</i> 1604 on the grounds of
-allusions to other plays of which <i>A Woman Killed with Kindness</i>
-is the latest (ed. Pearson, v. 316), and a conjectural identification
-with Heywood’s <i>How to Learn of a Woman to Woo</i>, played by the
-Queen’s at Court on 30 Dec. 1604. The approximate date is accepted
-by Ward, ii. 574, and others. It may be added that there are obvious
-parallelisms with the anonymous <i>How a Man may Choose a Good Wife
-from a Bad</i> (1602) generally assigned to Heywood.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>If You Know not Me, You Know Nobody. 1605</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, July 5 (Hartwell). ‘A booke called yf you knowe not
-me you knowe no body.’ <i>Nathaniel Butter</i> (Arber, iii. 295).</p>
-
-<p>1605, Sept. 14 (Hartwell). ‘A Booke called the Second parte of Yf you
-knowe not me you knowe no bodie with the buildinge of the exchange.’
-<i>Nathaniel Butter</i> (Arber, iii. 301).</p>
-
-<p class="center">[<i>Part i</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1605. If you Know not me, You Know no bodie: Or, The troubles of Queene
-Elizabeth. <i>For Nathaniel Butter.</i></p>
-
-<p>1606, 1608, 1610, 1613, 1623, 1632, 1639.</p>
-
-<p class="center">[<i>Part ii</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1606. The Second Part of, If you Know not me, you know no bodie. With
-the building of the Royall Exchange: And the famous Victorie of Queene
-Elizabeth, in the Yeare 1588. <i>For Nathaniell Butter.</i></p>
-
-<p>1609.... With the Humors of Hobson and Tawny-cote. <i>For Nathaniell
-Butter.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1623?].</p>
-
-<p>1632. <i>For Nathaniel Butter.</i> [With different version of Act
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1851, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>) and J. Blew
-(1876).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: B. A. P. van Dam and C. Stoffel, <i>The
-Fifth Act of Thomas Heywood’s Queen Elizabeth: Second Part</i> (1902,
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxviii. 153).</p>
-
-<p><i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>, 248, has ‘A Prologue to the Play
-of Queene Elizabeth as it was last revived at the Cockpit, in which
-the Author taxeth the most corrupted copy now imprinted, which was
-published without his consent’. It says:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This: (by what fate I know not) sure no merit,</div>
- <div>That it disclaimes, may for the age inherit.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span></div>
- <div>Writing ’bove one and twenty; but ill nurst,</div>
- <div>And yet receiv’d, as well perform’d at first,</div>
- <div>Grac’t and frequented, for the cradle age,</div>
- <div>Did throng the Seates, the Boxes, and the Stage</div>
- <div>So much; that some by Stenography drew</div>
- <div>The plot: put it in print: (scarce one word trew:)</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">There is also an Epilogue, which shows that both parts
-were revived. The piracy may serve to date the original production in
-1605 and the Caroline revival probably led to the reprints of 1632. As
-the play passed to the Cockpit, it was presumably written for Queen
-Anne’s. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 223) rightly resists the suggestion
-that it was the old <i>Philip of Spain</i> bought by the Admiral’s
-from Alleyn in 1602. It is only Part i which has characteristics
-attributable to stenography, and this remained unrevised. According to
-Van Dam and Stoffel, the 1606 and 1632 editions of Part ii represent
-the same original text, in the first case shortened for representation,
-in the second altered by a press-corrector.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Fortune by Land and Sea. c. 1607</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p class="center p0"><i>With</i> W. Rowley.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1655, June 20. ‘Fortune by Land &amp; sea, a tragicomedie,
-written by Tho: Heywood &amp; Wm. Rowley.’ <i>John Sweeting</i> (Eyre, i.
-486).</p>
-
-<p>1655. Fortune by Land and Sea. A Tragi-Comedy. As it was Acted with
-great Applause by the Queens Servants. Written by Tho. Haywood and
-William Rowly. <i>For John Sweeting and Robert Pollard.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by B. Field (1846, <i>Sh.
-Soc.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: Oxoniensis, <i>Illustration of Fortune
-by Land and Sea</i> (1847, <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, iii. 7).</p>
-
-<p>The action is placed in the reign of Elizabeth (cf. ed. Pearson, vi,
-pp. 409, 431), but this may be due merely to the fact that the source
-is a pamphlet (S. R. 15 Aug. 1586) dealing with Elizabethan piracy.
-Rowley’s co-operation suggests the date 1607–9 when he was writing for
-Queen Anne’s men, and other trifling evidence (Aronstein, 237) makes
-such a date plausible.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Rape of Lucrece. 1603 &lt; &gt; 8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, June 3 (Buck). ‘A Booke called A Romane tragedie
-called The Rape of Lucrece.’ <i>John Busby and Nathanael Butter</i>
-(Arber, iii. 380).</p>
-
-<p>1608. The Rape of Lucrece. A True Roman Tragedie. With the seuerall
-Songes in their apt places, by Valerius, the merrie Lord amongst the
-Roman Peeres. Acted by her Maiesties Seruants at the Red Bull, neare
-Clarkenwell. Written by Thomas Heywood. <i>For I. B.</i> [Epistle to
-the Reader, signed ‘T. H.’]</p>
-
-<p>1609. <i>For I. B.</i></p>
-
-<p>1630.... The fourth Impression.... <i>For Nathaniel Butter.</i></p>
-
-<p>1638.... The copy revised, and sundry Songs before omitted, now
-inserted in their right places.... <i>John Raworth for Nathaniel
-Butter.</i> [Note to the Reader at end.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in 1825 (<i>O. E. D.</i> i).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span></p>
-
-<p>Fleay, i. 292, notes the mention of ‘the King’s head’ as a tavern sign
-for ‘the Gentry’, which suggests a Jacobean date. The play was given at
-Court, apparently by the King’s and Queen’s men together, on 13 Jan.
-1612. The Epistle says that it has not been Heywood’s custom ‘to commit
-my Playes to the Presse’, like others who ‘have used a double sale of
-their labours, first to the Stage, and after to the Presse’. He now
-does so because ‘some of my Playes have (unknowne to me, and without
-any of my direction) accidentally come into the Printers hands (and
-therefore so corrupt and mangled, copied only by the eare) that I have
-beene as unable to knowe them, as ashamed to challenge them’. A play
-on the subject seems to have been on tour in Germany in 1619 (Herz,
-98). <i>The Rape of Lucrece</i> was on the Cockpit stage in 1628,
-according to a newsletter in <i>Athenaeum</i> (1879), ii. 497, and to
-the 1638 edition are appended songs ‘added by the stranger that lately
-acted Valerius his part’. It is in the Cockpit list of plays in 1639
-(<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 159).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Golden Age &gt; 1611</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1611, Oct. 14 (Buck). William Barrenger, ‘A booke called,
-The golden age with the liues of Jupiter and Saturne.’ <i>William
-Barrenger</i> (Arber, iii. 470).</p>
-
-<p>1611. The Golden Age. Or The liues of Iupiter and Saturne, with the
-defining of the Heathen Gods. As it hath beene sundry times acted at
-the Red Bull, by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by Thomas
-Heywood. <i>For William Barrenger.</i> [Epistle to the Reader, signed
-‘T. H.’ Some copies have ‘defining’ corrected to ‘deifying’ in the
-title.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by J. P. Collier (1851, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The Epistle describes the play as ‘the eldest brother of three Ages,
-that haue aduentured the Stage, but the onely yet, that hath beene
-iudged to the presse’, and promises the others. It came to the press
-‘accidentally’, but Heywood, ‘at length hauing notice thereof’,
-prefaced it, as it had ‘already past the approbation of auditors’.
-Fleay, i. 283, followed hesitatingly by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 175), thinks it a revision of the <i>Olympo</i> or <i>Seleo &amp;
-Olempo</i>, which he interprets <i>Coelo et Olympo</i>, produced by
-the Admiral’s on 5 March 1595. The Admiral’s inventories show that
-they had a play with Neptune in it, but it is only at the very end of
-<i>The Golden Age</i> that the sons of Saturn draw lots and Jupiter
-wins Heaven or Olympus. Fleay’s assumption that the play was revised
-<i>c.</i> 1610, because of Dekker, <i>If it be not Good</i>, i. 1, ‘The
-Golden Age is moulding new again’, is equally hazardous.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Silver Age &gt; 1612</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. The Silver Age, Including. The loue of Iupiter to Alcmena: The
-birth of Hercules. And the Rape of Proserpine. Concluding, With the
-Arraignement of the Moone. Written by Thomas Heywood. <i>Nicholas Okes,
-sold by Beniamin Lightfoote.</i> [Epistle to the Reader, signed ‘T.
-H,’; Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by J. P. Collier (1851, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Epistle says, ‘Wee begunne with <i>Gold</i>, follow with
-<i>Siluer</i>, proceede with <i>Brasse</i>, and purpose by Gods grace,
-to end with <i>Iron</i>’. Fleay, i. 283, and Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 175) take this and <i>The Brazen Age</i> to be the two parts of
-the anonymous <i>Hercules</i>, produced by the Admiral’s men on 7
-and 23 May 1595 respectively. It may be so. But the text presumably
-represents the play as given at Court, apparently by the King’s and
-Queen’s men together, on 12 Jan. 1612. An Anglo-German <i>Amphitryo</i>
-traceable in 1626 and 1678 may be based on Heywood’s work (Herz, 66;
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xli. 201).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Brazen Age &gt; 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. The Brazen Age, The first Act containing, The death of the
-Centaure Nessus, The Second, The Tragedy of Meleager: The Third The
-Tragedy of Iason and Medea. The Fourth. Vulcans Net. The Fifth. The
-Labours and death of Hercules: Written by Thomas Heywood. <i>Nicholas
-Okes for Samuel Rand.</i> [Epistle to the Reader; Prologue and
-Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>Cf. s.v. <i>The Silver Age</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Iron Age. c. 1613</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1632. [<i>Part i</i>] The Iron Age: Contayning the Rape of Hellen: The
-siege of Troy: The Combate betwixt Hector and Aiax: Hector and Troilus
-slayne by Achilles: Achilles slaine by Paris: Aiax and Vlesses contend
-for the Armour of Achilles: The Death of Aiax, &amp;c. Written by Thomas
-Heywood. <i>Nicholas Okes.</i> [Epistles to Thomas Hammon and to the
-Reader, signed ‘Thomas Heywood’.]</p>
-
-<p>1632. [<i>Part ii</i>] The Second Part of the Iron Age. Which
-contayneth the death of Penthesilea, Paris, Priam, and Hecuba: The
-burning of Troy: The deaths of Agamemnon, Menelaus, Clitemnestra,
-Hellena, Orestes, Egistus, Pillades, King Diomed, Pyrhus, Cethus,
-Synon, Thersites, &amp;c. Written by Thomas Heywood. <i>Nicholas Okes.</i>
-[Epistles to the Reader and to Thomas Mannering, signed ‘Thomas
-Heywood’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: R. G. Martin, <i>A New Specimen of the Revenge
-Play</i> (1918, <i>M. P.</i> xvi. 1).</p>
-
-<p>The Epistles tell us that ‘these were the playes often (and not
-with the least applause,) Publickely Acted by two Companies, vppon
-one Stage at once, and haue at sundry times thronged three seuerall
-Theaters, with numerous and mighty Auditories’; also that they ‘haue
-beene long since Writ’. This, however, was in 1632, and I can only
-read the Epistles to the earlier <i>Ages</i> as indicating that the
-<i>Iron Age</i> was contemplated, but not yet in existence, up to
-1613. I should therefore put the play <i>c.</i> 1613, and take the
-three theatres at which it was given to be the Curtain, Red Bull,
-and Cockpit. Fleay, i. 285, thinks that Part i was the anonymous
-<i>Troy</i> produced by the Admiral’s on 22 June 1596. More plausible
-is the conjecture of Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 180) that this was ‘an
-earlier and shorter version later expanded into the two-part play’.
-Spencer had a play on the Destruction of Troy at Nuremberg in 1613
-(Herz, 66).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas. 1630–6</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1635, Aug. 29 (Weekes). ‘A booke called Pleasant Dialogues
-and Dramma’s selected out of Lucian Erasmus Textor Ovid &amp;c. by Thomas
-Heywood.’ <i>Richard Hearne</i> (Arber, iv. 347).</p>
-
-<p>1637. Pleasant Dialogues and Dramma’s, selected out of Lucian, Erasmus,
-Textor, Ovid, &amp;c. With sundry Emblems extracted from the most elegant
-Iacobus Catsius. As also certaine Elegies, Epitaphs, and Epithalamions
-or Nuptiall Songs; Anagrams and Acrosticks; With divers Speeches (upon
-severall occasions) spoken to their most Excellent Majesties, King
-Charles, and Queene Mary. With other Fancies translated from Beza,
-Bucanan, and sundry Italian Poets. By Tho. Heywood. <i>R. O. for R.
-H., sold by Thomas Slater.</i> [Epistle to the Generous Reader, signed
-‘Tho. Heywood’, and Congratulatory Poems by Sh. Marmion, D. E., and S.
-N.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. Bang (1903, <i>Materialien</i>, iii).</p>
-
-<p>The section called ‘Sundry Fancies writ upon severall occasions’
-(Bang, 231) includes a number of Prologues and Epilogues, of which
-those which are datable fall between 1630 and 1636. Bang regards all
-the contents of the volume as of about this period. Fleay, i. 285, had
-suggested that <i>Deorum Judicium</i>, <i>Jupiter and Io</i>, <i>Apollo
-and Daphne</i>, <i>Amphrisa</i>, and possibly <i>Misanthropos</i>
-formed the anonymous <i>Five Plays in One</i> produced by the
-Admiral’s on 7 April 1597, and also that <i>Misanthropos</i>, which
-he supposed to bear the name <i>Time’s Triumph</i>, was played with
-<i>Faustus</i> on 13 April 1597 and carelessly entered by Henslowe
-as ‘times triumpe &amp; fortus’. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 183) says
-of the <i>Dialogues and Dramas</i>, ‘many of the pieces in that
-collection are undoubtedly early’. He rejects Fleay’s views as to
-<i>Misanthropos</i> on the grounds that it is ‘unrelieved tediousness’
-and has no claim to the title <i>Time’s Triumph</i>, and is doubtful
-as to <i>Deorum Judicium</i>. The three others he seems inclined
-to accept as possibly belonging to the 1597 series, especially
-<i>Jupiter and Io</i>, where the unappropriated head of Argus in one
-of the Admiral’s inventories tempts him. He is also attracted by an
-alternative suggestion of Fleay’s that one of the <i>Five Plays in
-One</i> may have been a <i>Cupid and Psyche</i>, afterwards worked up
-into <i>Love’s Mistress</i> (1636). This he says, ‘if it existed’,
-would suit very well. Unfortunately, there is no evidence that it
-did exist. Moreover, P. A. Daniel has shown that certain lines found
-in <i>Love’s Mistress</i> are assigned to Dekker in <i>England’s
-Parnassus</i> (1600, ed. Crawford, xxxi. 509, 529) and must be from
-the <i>Cupid and Psyche</i> produced by the Admiral’s <i>c.</i> June
-1600 (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 212). There is no indication that Heywood
-collaborated with Dekker, Chettle, and Day in this; but it occurs to me
-that, if he was still at the Rose, he may have acted in the play and
-cribbed years afterwards from the manuscript of his part. I will only
-add that <i>Misanthropos</i> and <i>Deorum Judicium</i> seem to me out
-of the question. They belong to the series of ‘dialogues’ which Heywood
-in his Epistle clearly treats as distinct from the ‘dramas’, for after
-describing them he goes on, ‘For such as delight in Stage-poetry, here
-are also divers Dramma’s, never<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span> before published: Which, though some
-may condemne for their shortnesse, others againe will commend for
-their sweetnesse’. It is only <i>Jupiter and Io</i> and <i>Apollo and
-Daphne</i>, which are based on Ovid, and <i>Amphrisa</i>, for which
-there is no known source, that can belong to this group; and Heywood
-gives no indication as to their date.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost and Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>On <i>How to Learn of a Woman to Woo</i>, see s.v. <i>The Wise Woman of
-Hogsden</i>. The author of <i>The Second Part of Hudibras</i> (1663)
-names Heywood as the author of <i>The Bold Beauchamps</i>, which is
-mentioned with <i>Jane Shore</i> in <i>The Knight of the Burning
-Pestle</i>, Ind. 59.</p>
-
-<p>The following is a complete list of the plays, by Heywood or
-conjecturally assigned to him, which are recorded in Henslowe’s diary:</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Possible plays for the Admiral’s, 1594–7</i></p>
-
-<p>For conjectures as to the authorship by Heywood of <i>Godfrey of
-Bulloigne</i> (1594), <i>The Siege of London</i> (&gt;1594), <i>Wonder
-of a Woman</i> (1595), <i>Seleo and Olympo</i> (1595), <i>1, 2
-Hercules</i> (1595), <i>Troy</i> (1596), <i>Five Plays in One</i>
-(1597), <i>Time’s Triumph</i> (&gt;1597), see <i>The Four Prentices</i>,
-the anonymous <i>Edward IV</i>, W. Rowley’s <i>A New Wonder</i>, <i>The
-Golden Age</i>, <i>The Silver Age</i>, <i>The Iron Age</i>, <i>Pleasant
-Dialogues and Dramas</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Plays for the Admiral’s, 1598–1603</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>War without Blows and Love without Suit.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Dec. 1598–Jan. 1599; identified, not plausibly, by Fleay, i. 287, with
-the anonymous <i>Thracian Wonder</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>Joan as Good as my Lady.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Feb. 1599, identified, conjecturally, by Fleay, i. 298, with <i>A
-Maidenhead Well Lost</i>, printed as Heywood’s in 1634.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>1 The London Florentine.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dec. 1602–Jan. 1603.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>Albere Galles.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Smith, Sept. 1602, possibly identical with the anonymous <i>Nobody
-and Somebody</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Cutting Dick</i> (additions only).</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Sept. 1602, identified by Fleay, ii. 319, with the anonymous <i>Trial
-of Chivalry</i>, but not plausibly (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 231).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>Marshal Osric.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Smith, Sept. 1602, conceivably identical with <i>The Royal King
-and the Loyal Subject</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>1 Lady Jane.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dekker, Smith, and Webster, Oct. 1602, doubtless
-represented by the extant <i>Sir Thomas Wyatt</i> of Dekker (q.v.) and
-Webster, in which, however, Heywood’s hand has not been traced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>Christmas Comes but Once a Year</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dekker, and Webster, Nov. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>The Blind Eats many a Fly</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Nov. 1602–Jan. 1603.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) [Unnamed play.]</p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Jan. 1603, but apparently not finished, or possibly
-identical with the <i>Shore</i> of Chettle (q.v.) and Day. The title
-<i>Like Quits Like</i>, inserted into one entry for this play, is a
-forgery (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, i. xliii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>A Woman Killed With Kindness</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Feb.–March 1603. <i>Vide supra.</i></p>
-
-<p>Heywood’s hand or ‘finger’ has also been suggested in the <i>Appius and
-Virginia</i> printed as Webster’s (q.v.), in <i>Pericles</i>, and in
-<i>Fair Maid of the Exchange</i>, <i>George a Greene</i>, <i>How a Man
-May Choose a Good Wife from a Bad</i>, <i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i>, and
-<i>Work for Cutlers</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GRIFFIN HIGGS (1589–1659).</p>
-
-<p>A student at St. John’s, Oxford (1606), afterwards Fellow of Merton
-(1611), Chaplain to Elizabeth, Queen of Bohemia (1627), and Dean of
-Lichfield (1638). The MS. of <i>The Christmas Prince</i> (<i>1607</i>)
-was once thought to be in his handwriting (cf. ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS HUGHES (<i>c.</i> 1588).</p>
-
-<p>A Cheshire man, who matriculated from Queens’ College, Cambridge, in
-Nov. 1571 and became Fellow of the College on 8 Sept. 1576.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Misfortunes of Arthur. 28 Feb. 1588</i></p>
-
-<p>1587. Certain deuises and shewes presented to her Maiestie by the
-Gentlemen of Grayes Inne at her Highnesse Court in Greenewich, the
-twenty-eighth day of Februarie in the thirtieth yeare of her Maiesties
-most happy Raigne. <i>Robert Robinson.</i> [‘An Introduction penned by
-Nicholas Trotte Gentleman one of the society of Grayes Inne’; followed
-by ‘The misfortunes of Arthur (Vther Pendragons Sonne) reduced into
-Tragicall notes by Thomas Hughes one of the societie of Grayes Inne.
-And here set downe as it past from vnder his handes and as it was
-presented, excepting certaine wordes and lines, where some of the
-Actors either helped their memories by brief omission: or fitted their
-acting by some alteration. With a note at the ende, of such speaches
-as were penned by others in lue of some of these hereafter following’;
-Arguments, Dumb-Shows, and Choruses between the Acts; at end, two
-substituted speeches ‘penned by William Fulbecke gentleman, one of the
-societie of Grayes Inne’; followed by ‘Besides these speaches there was
-also penned a Chorus for the first act, and an other for the second
-act, by Maister Frauncis Flower, which were pronounced accordingly.
-The dumbe showes were partly deuised by Maister Christopher Yeluerton,
-Maister Frauncis Bacon, Maister Iohn Lancaster and others, partly by
-the saide Maister Flower, who with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span> Maister Penroodocke and the said
-Maister Lancaster directed these proceedings at Court.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Collier, <i>Five Old Plays</i> (1833), and Dodsley<sup>4</sup>
-(1874, iv), and by H. C. Grumbine (1900), J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>), and J. W. Cunliffe (1912, <i>E. E. C. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Of the seven collaborators, three&mdash;Bacon, Yelverton, and
-Fulbecke&mdash;subsequently attained distinction. It is to be wished that
-editors of more important plays had been as communicative as offended
-dignity, or some other cause, made Thomas Hughes.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM HUNNIS (?-1597).</p>
-
-<p>[Nearly all that is known of Hunnis, except as regards his connexion
-with the Blackfriars, and much that is conjectural has been gathered
-and fully illustrated by Mrs. C. C. Stopes in <i>Athenaeum</i> and
-<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i> papers, and finally in <i>William Hunnis
-and the Revels of the Chapel Royal</i> (1910, <i>Materialien</i>,
-xxix).]</p>
-
-<p>The date of Hunnis’s birth is unknown, except as far as it can be
-inferred from the reference to him as ‘in winter of thine age’ in 1578.
-He is described on the title-page of his translation of <i>Certayne
-Psalmes</i> (1550) as ‘seruant’ to Sir William Herbert, who became
-Earl of Pembroke. He is in the lists of the Gentlemen of the Chapel
-about 1553, but he took part in plots against Mary and in 1556 was
-sent to the Tower. He lost his post, but this was restored between
-Elizabeth’s accession in 1558 and the opening of the extant <i>Cheque
-Book</i> of the Chapel in 1561, and on 15 Nov. 1566 he was appointed
-Master of the Children in succession to Richard Edwardes (q.v.). For
-the history of his Mastership, cf. ch. xii (Chapel). Early in 1559 he
-married Margaret, widow of Nicholas Brigham, Teller of the Exchequer,
-through whom he acquired a life-interest in the secularized Almonry at
-Westminster. She died in June 1559, and about 1560 Hunnis married Agnes
-Blancke, widow of a Grocer. He took out the freedom of the Grocers’
-Company, and had a shop in Southwark. He was elected to the livery of
-the Company in 1567, but disappears from its records before 1586. In
-1569 he obtained a grant of arms, and is described as of Middlesex.
-From 1576–85, however, he seems to have had a house at Great Ilford,
-Barking, Essex. His only known child, Robin, was page to Walter Earl
-of Essex in Ireland, and is said in <i>Leicester’s Commonwealth</i>
-to have tasted the poison with which Leicester killed Essex in 1576
-and to have lost his hair. But he became a Rider of the Stable under
-Leicester as Master of the Horse during 1579–83, and received payments
-for posting services in later years up to 1593. In 1562 William Hunnis
-became Keeper of the Orchard and Gardens at Greenwich, and held this
-post with his Mastership to his death. He supplied greenery and flowers
-for the Banqueting Houses of 1569 and 1571 (cf. ch. i). In 1570 the
-Queen recommended him to the City as Taker of Tolls and Dues on London
-Bridge, and his claim was bought off for £40. In 1583 he called
-attention to the poor remuneration of the Mastership, and in 1585 he
-received grants of land at Great Ilford and elsewhere. He died on 6
-June 1597.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span></p>
-
-<p>Hunnis published several volumes of moral and religious verse, original
-and translated: <i>Certayne Psalmes</i> (1550); <i>A Godly new Dialogue
-of Christ and a Sinner</i> (S. R. 1564, if this is rightly identified
-with the <i>Dialogue</i> of Hunnis’s 1583 volume); <i>A Hive Full of
-Honey</i> (1578, S. R. 1 Dec. 1577, dedicated to Leicester); <i>A
-Handful of Honnisuckles</i> (<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>, S. R. 11 Dec. 1578, a New
-Year’s gift to the Ladies of the Privy Chamber); <i>Seven Sobbes of
-a Sorrowful Soule for Sinne</i> (1583, S. R. 7 Nov. 1581, with the
-<i>Handful of Honnisuckles</i>, <i>The Widow’s Mite</i>, and <i>A
-Comfortable Dialogue between Christ and a Sinner</i>, dedicated to
-Lady Sussex); <i>Hunnies Recreations</i> (1588, S. R. 4 Dec. 1587,
-dedicated to Sir Thomas Heneage). Several poems by Hunnis are also
-with those of Richard Edwardes and others in <i>The Paradyse of Daynty
-Deuises</i> (1567); one, the <i>Nosegay</i>, in Clement Robinson’s
-<i>A Handfull of Pleasant Delites</i> (1584); and it is usual to
-assign to him two bearing the initials W. H., <i>Wodenfride’s Song in
-Praise of Amargana</i> and <i>Another of the Same</i>, in <i>England’s
-Helicon</i> (1600).</p>
-
-<p>The name of no play by Hunnis has been preserved, although he may
-probably enough have written some of those produced by the Chapel boys
-during his Mastership. That he was a dramatist is testified to by the
-following lines contributed by Thomas Newton, one of the translators of
-Seneca, to his <i>Hive Full of Honey</i>.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">In prime of youth thy pleasant Penne depaincted Sonets sweete,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Delightfull to the greedy Eare, for youthfull Humour meete.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Therein appeared thy pregnant wit, and store of fyled Phraze</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Enough t’ astoune the doltish Drone, and lumpish Lout amaze,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Thy Enterludes, thy gallant Layes, thy Rond’letts and thy Songes,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Thy Nosegay and thy Widowes’ Mite, with that thereto belonges....</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">... Descendinge then in riper years to stuffe of further reache,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Thy schooled Quill by deeper skill did graver matters teache,</div>
- <div>And now to knit a perfect Knot; In winter of thine age</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Such argument thou chosen hast for this thy Style full sage.</div>
- <div>As far surmounts the Residue.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Newton’s account of his friend’s poetic evolution seems to assign
-his ‘enterludes’ to an early period of mainly secular verse; but if
-this preceded his <i>Certayne Psalmes</i> of 1550, which are surely
-of ‘graver matters’, it must have gone back to Henry VIII’s reign,
-far away from his Mastership. On the other hand, Hunnis was certainly
-contributing secular verse and devices to the Kenilworth festivities
-(cf. s.v. Gascoigne) only three years before Newton wrote. Mrs.
-Stopes suggests, with some plausibility, that the Amargana songs of
-<i>England’s Helicon</i> may come from an interlude. She also assigns
-to Hunnis, by conjecture, <i>Godly Queen Hester</i>, in which stress is
-laid on Hester’s Chapel Royal, and <i>Jacob and Esau</i> (1568, S. R.
-1557–8), which suggests gardens.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">LEONARD HUTTEN (<i>c.</i> 1557–1632).</p>
-
-<p>Possibly the author of the academic <i>Bellum Grammaticale</i> (cf.
-App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS INGELEND.</p>
-
-<p>Lee (<i>D. N. B.</i>) conjecturally identifies Ingelend with a man of
-the same name who married a Northamptonshire heiress.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Disobedient Child, c. 1560</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1569–70. ‘An enterlude for boyes to handle and to passe
-tyme at christinmas.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i> (Arber, i. 398). [The
-method of exhaustions points to this as the entry of the play.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> A pretie and Mery new Enterlude: called the Disobedient
-Child. Compiled by Thomas Ingelend late Student in Cambridge. <i>Thomas
-Colwell.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. O. Halliwell (1848, <i>Percy Soc.</i> lxxv),
-in Dodsley<sup>4</sup> (1874, ii), and by J. S. Farmer (1908, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: F. Holthausen, <i>Studien zum älteren
-englischen Drama</i> (1902, <i>E. S.</i> xxxi. 90).</p>
-
-<p>J. Bolte, <i>Vahlen-Festschrift</i>, 594, regards this as a
-translation of the <i>Iuvenis, Pater, Uxor</i> of J. Ravisius Textor
-(<i>Dialogi</i>, ed. 1651, 71), which Holthausen reprints, but which is
-only a short piece in one scene. Brandl, lxxiii, traces the influence
-of the <i>Studentes</i> (1549) of Christopherus Stymmelius (Bahlmann,
-<i>Lat. Dr.</i> 98). The closing prayer is for Elizabeth.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JAMES I (1566–1625).</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>An Epithalamion on the Marquis of Huntly’s Marriage. 21 July 1588</i></p>
-
-<p>R. S. Rait, <i>Lusus Regis</i> (1901), 2, printed from <i>Bodleian
-MS.</i> 27843 verses by James I, which he dated <i>c.</i> 1581. The
-occasion and correct date are supplied by another text, with a title,
-in A. F. Westcott, <i>New Poems of James I</i> (1911). The bridal pair
-were George Gordon, 6th Earl and afterwards 1st Marquis of Huntly,
-and Henrietta Stuart, daughter of Esme, Duke of Lennox. The verses
-consist of a hymeneal dialogue, with a preliminary invocation by the
-writer, and speeches by Mercury, Nimphes, Agrestis, Skolar, Woman, The
-Vertuouse Man, Zani, The Landvart Gentleman, The Soldat. The earlier
-lines seem intended to accompany a tilting at the ring or some such
-contest, but at l. 74 is a reference to the coming of ‘strangers in a
-maske’.</p>
-
-<p>Westcott, lviii, says that James helped William Fowler in devising a
-mimetic show for the banquet at the baptism of Prince Henry on 23 Aug.
-1594.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN JEFFERE (?-?).</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is known of him, beyond his possible authorship of the
-following play:</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Bugbears. 1563 &lt;</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Lansdowne MS.</i> 807, f. 57. [The MS. contains the
-relics of John Warburton’s collection, and on a slip once attached to
-the fly-leaf is his famous list of burnt plays, which includes ‘Bugbear
-C. Jo<sup>n</sup>. Geffrey’ (Greg in <i>3 Library</i>, ii. 232). It appears to be
-the work of at least five hands, of which one, acting as a corrector,
-as well as a scribe, may be that of the author. The initials J. B.
-against a line or two inserted at the end do not appear to be his, but,
-as there was no single scribe, he may be writer of a final note to
-the text, written in printing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[352]</span> characters, ‘Soli deo honor et gloria
-Johannus Jeffere scribebat hoc’. This note is followed by the songs and
-their music, and at the top of the first is written ‘Giles peperel for
-Iphiginia’. On the last page are the names ‘Thomas Ba ...’ and ‘Frances
-Whitton’, which probably do not indicate authorship. A title-page may
-be missing, and a later hand has written at the head of the text, ‘The
-Buggbears’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. Grabau (1896–7, <i>Archiv</i>, xcviii. 301; xcix.
-311) and R. W. Bond (1911, <i>E. P. I.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: W.
-Dibelius (<i>Archiv</i>, cxii. 204).</p>
-
-<p>The play is an adaptation of A. F. Grazzini, <i>La Spiritata</i>
-(1561), and uses also material from J. Weier (<i>De Praestigiis
-Daemonum</i>) (1563) and from the life of Michel de Nôtredame
-(Nostradamus), not necessarily later than his death in 1566. Bond is
-inclined to date the play, partly on metrical grounds, about 1564
-or 1565. Grabau and Dibelius suggest a date after 1585, apparently
-under the impression that the name Giles in the superscription to the
-music may indicate the composition of Nathaniel Giles, of the Chapel
-Royal, who took his Mus. Bac. in 1585. But the name, whether of a
-composer, or of the actor of the part of Iphigenia, is Giles Peperel.
-The performers were ‘boyes’, but the temptation to identify the play
-with the <i>Effiginia</i> shown by Paul’s at Court on 28 Dec. 1571 is
-repressed by the description of <i>Effiginia</i> in the Revels account
-as a ‘tragedye’, whereas <i>The Bugbears</i> is a comedy. Moreover,
-Iphigenia is not a leading part, although one added by the English
-adapter.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">LAURENCE JOHNSON (<i>c.</i> 1577).</p>
-
-<p>A possible author of <i>Misogonus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">BENJAMIN JONSON (1572–1637).</p>
-
-<p>Benjamin Johnson, or Jonson, as he took the fancy to spell his name,
-was born, probably on 11 June 1572, at Westminster, after the death
-of his father, a minister, of Scottish origin. He was withheld, or
-withdrawn, from the University education justified by his scholastic
-attainments at Westminster to follow his step-father’s occupation of
-bricklaying, and when this proved intolerable, he served as a soldier
-in the Netherlands. In a prologue to <i>The Sad Shepherd</i>, left
-unfinished at his death in August 1637, he describes himself as ‘He
-that has feasted you these forty years’, and by 1597 at latest his
-connexion with the stage had begun. Aubrey tells us (ii. 12, 226) that
-he ‘acted and wrote, but both ill, at the Green Curtaine, a kind of
-nursery or obscure play-house, somewhere in the suburbes (I thinke
-towards Shoreditch or Clarkenwell)’, and again that he ‘was never a
-good actor, but an excellent instructor’. The earliest contemporary
-records, however, show Jonson not at the Curtain, but on the Bankside.
-On 28 July 1597 Henslowe (i. 200) recorded a personal loan to ‘Bengemen
-Johnson player’ of £4 ‘to be payd yt agayne when so euer ether I or
-any for me shall demande yt’, and on the very same day he opened on
-another page of his diary (i. 47) an account headed ‘Received of
-Bengemenes Johnsones share as ffoloweth 1597’ and entered in it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span> the
-receipt of a single sum of 3<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i>, to which no addition
-was ever made. Did these entries stand alone, one would infer, on the
-analogy of other transactions of Henslowe’s and from the signatures of
-two Admiral’s men as witnesses to the loan, that Jonson had purchased
-a share in the Admiral’s company for £4, that he borrowed the means
-to do this from Henslowe, and that Henslowe was to recoup himself by
-periodical deductions from the takings of the company as they passed
-through his hands. But there is no other evidence that Jonson ever
-had an interest in the Admiral’s, and there are facts which, if one
-could believe that Henslowe would regard the takings of any company
-but the Admiral’s as security for a loan, would lead to the conclusion
-that Jonson’s ‘share’ was with Pembroke’s men at the Swan. The day of
-Henslowe’s entries, 28 July 1597, is the very day on which the theatres
-were suppressed as a result of the performance of <i>The Isle of
-Dogs</i> (cf. App. D, No. cx), and it is hardly possible to doubt that
-Jonson was one of the actors who had a hand with Nashe (q.v.) in that
-play. The Privy Council registers record his release, with Shaw and
-Spencer of Pembroke’s men, from the Marshalsea on 3 Oct. 1597 (Dasent,
-xxviii. 33; cf. App. D, No. cxii); while Dekker in <i>Satiromastix</i>
-(l. 1513) makes Horace admit that he had played Zulziman in Paris
-Garden, and Tucca upbraid him because ‘when the Stagerites banisht
-thee into the Ile of Dogs, thou turn’dst Bandog (villanous Guy) &amp; ever
-since bitest’. The same passage confirms Aubrey’s indication that
-Jonson was actor, and a bad actor, as well as poet. ‘Thou putst vp a
-supplication’, says Tucca, ‘to be a poor iorneyman player, and hadst
-beene still so, but that thou couldst not set a good face vpon ’t:
-thou hast forgot how thou amblest (in leather pilch) by a play-wagon,
-in the high way, and took’st mad Ieronimoes part, to get seruice among
-the mimickes.’ Elsewhere (l. 633) Tucca taunts him that ‘when thou
-ranst mad for the death of Horatio, thou borrowedst a gowne of Roscius
-the stager, (that honest Nicodemus) and sentst it home lowsie’. This
-imprisonment for the <i>Isle of Dogs</i> is no doubt the ‘bondage’
-for his ‘first error’ to which Jonson refers in writing to Salisbury
-about <i>Eastward Ho!</i> in 1605, and the ‘close imprisonment, under
-Queen Elizabeth’, during which he told Drummond he was beset by spies
-(Laing, 19). Released, Jonson borrowed 5<i>s.</i> more from Henslowe
-(i. 200) on 5 Jan. 1598, and entered into a relationship with him and
-the Admiral’s as a dramatist, which lasted intermittently until 1602.
-It was broken, not only by plays for the King’s men, whose employment
-of him, which may have been at the Curtain, was due, according to Rowe,
-to the critical instinct of Shakespeare (H.-P. ii. 74), and for the
-Chapel children when these were established at Blackfriars in 1600,
-but also by a quarrel with Gabriel Spencer, whose death at his hands
-during a duel with swords in Hoxton Fields on 22 Sept. 1598 was ‘harde
-&amp; heavey’ news to Henslowe (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 48) and brought
-Jonson to trial for murder, from which he only escaped by reading his
-neck-verse (Jeaffreson, <i>Middlesex County Records</i>, i. xxxviii;
-iv. 350; cf. Laing, 19). Jonson’s pen was critical, and to the years
-1600–2 belongs the series of conflicts with other poets and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span> with the
-actors generically known as the <i>Poetomachia</i> or Stage Quarrel
-(cf. ch. xi). Meanwhile Jonson, perhaps encouraged by his success in
-introducing a mask into <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> (1601), seems to have
-conceived the ambition of becoming a Court poet. At first he was not
-wholly successful, and the selection of Daniel to write the chief
-Christmas mask of 1603–4 appears to have provoked an antagonism between
-the two poets, which shows itself in Jonson’s qualified acknowledgement
-to Lady Rutland of the favours done him by Lady Bedford (<i>Forest</i>,
-xii):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4">though she have a better verser got,</div>
- <div>(Or poet, in the court-account) than I,</div>
- <div>And who doth me, though I not him envy,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and long after in the remark to Drummond (Laing, 10)
-that ‘Daniel was at jealousies with him’. But the mask was a form of
-art singularly suited to Jonson’s genius. In the next year he came to
-his own, and of ten masks at Court during 1605–12 not less than eight
-are his. This employment secured him a considerable vogue as a writer
-of entertainments and complimentary verses, and a standing with James
-himself, with the Earl of Salisbury, and with other persons of honour,
-which not only brought him pecuniary profit, but also enabled him to
-withstand the political attacks made upon <i>Sejanus</i>, for which
-he was haled before the Council, and upon <i>Eastward Ho!</i>, for
-which he was once more imprisoned. During this period he continued to
-write plays, with no undue frequency, both for the King’s men and for
-the Queen’s Revels and their successors, the Lady Elizabeth’s. As a
-rule, he had published his plays, other than those bought by Henslowe,
-soon after they were produced, and in 1612 he seems to have formed the
-design of collecting them, with his masks and occasional verses, into a
-volume of Works. Probably the design was deferred, owing to his absence
-in France as tutor to the son of Sir Walter Raleigh, from the autumn
-of 1612 (<i>M. P.</i> xi. 279) to some date in 1613 earlier than 29
-June, when he witnessed the burning of the Globe (<i>M. L. R.</i> iv.
-83). For the same reason he took no part in the masks for the Princess
-Elizabeth’s wedding at Shrovetide. But he returned in time for that
-of the Earl of Somerset at Christmas 1613, and wrote three more masks
-before his folio <i>Works</i> actually appeared in 1616. In the same
-year he received a royal pension of 100 marks.</p>
-
-<p>Jonson’s later life can only be briefly summarized. During a visit to
-Scotland he paid a visit to William Drummond of Hawthornden in January
-1619, and of his conversation his host took notes which preserve many
-biographical details and many critical utterances upon the men, books,
-and manners of his time. In 1621 (cf. ch. iii) he obtained a reversion
-of the Mastership of the Revels, which he never lived to enjoy. His
-masks continued until 1631, when an unfortunate quarrel with Inigo
-Jones brought them to an end. His play-writing, dropped after 1616,
-was resumed about 1625, and to this period belong his share in <i>The
-Bloody Brother</i> of the Beaumont and Fletcher series, <i>The Staple
-of News</i>, <i>The New Inn</i>, <i>The Magnetic Lady</i>, and <i>The
-Tale of a Tub</i>. In 1637, probably on 6 August, he died. He had told<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span>
-Drummond ‘that the half of his comedies were not in print’, as well as
-that ‘of all his playes he never gained two hundreth pounds’ (Laing,
-27, 35), and in 1631 he began the publication, by instalments, of a
-second volume of his Works. This was completed after his death, with
-the aid of Sir Kenelm Digby, in 1640 and 1641. But it did not include
-<i>The Case is Altered</i>, the printing of which in 1609 probably
-lacked his authority, or the Henslowe plays, of which his manuscripts,
-if he had any, may have perished when his library was burnt in 1623.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>F<sub>1</sub></i> (<i>1616</i>)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1615, Jan. 20 (Tavernour). William Stansbye, ‘Certayne
-Masques at the Court never yet printed written by Ben Johnson’ (Arber,
-iii. 562).</p>
-
-<p>1616. The Workes of Beniamin Jonson. <i>W. Stansby, sold by Rich.
-Meighen.</i> [Contains (<i>a</i>) commendatory verses, some reprinted
-from Qq, signed ‘I. Selden I.C.’, ‘Ed. Heyward’, ‘Geor. Chapman’, ‘H.
-Holland’, ‘I. D.’, ‘E. Bolton’, and for three sets ‘Franc. Beaumont’;
-(<i>b</i>) nine plays, being all printed in Q, except <i>The Case is
-Altered</i>; (<i>c</i>) the five early entertainments; (<i>d</i>)
-the eleven early masks and two barriers, with separate title-page
-‘Masques at Court, London, 1616’; (<i>e</i>) non-dramatic matter. For
-bibliographical details on both Ff., see B. Nicholson, <i>B. J.’s
-Folios and the Bibliographers</i> (1870, <i>4 N. Q.</i> v. 573);
-Greg, <i>Plays</i>, 55, and <i>Masques</i>, xiii, 11; G. A. Aitken,
-<i>B. J.’s Works</i> (<i>10 N. Q.</i> xi. 421); the introductions
-to the Yale editions; and B. A. P. van Dam and C. Stoffel, <i>The
-Authority of the B. J. Folio of 1616</i> (1903, <i>Anglia</i>, xxvi.
-377), whose conclusion that Jonson did not supervise F<sub>1</sub> is not
-generally accepted. It is to be noted that, contrary to the usual
-seventeenth-century practice, some, and possibly all, of the dates
-assigned to productions in F<sub>1</sub> follow the Circumcision and not the
-Annunciation style; cf. Thorndike, 17, whose demonstration leaves it
-conceivable that Jonson only adopted the change of style from a given
-date, say, 1 Jan. 1600, when it came into force in Scotland.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>F<sub>2</sub></i> (<i>1631–41</i>)</p>
-
-<p>1640. The Workes of Beniamin Jonson. <i>Richard Bishop, sold by Andrew
-Crooke.</i> [Same contents as F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>1640. The Workes of Benjamin Jonson. The second volume. Containing
-these Playes, Viz. 1 Bartholomew Fayre. 2 The Staple of Newes. 3 The
-Divell is an Asse. <i>For Richard Meighen.</i> [Contains (<i>a</i>)
-reissue of folio sheets of three plays named with separate title-pages
-of 1631; (<i>b</i>) <i>The Magnetic Lady</i>, <i>A Tale of a Tub</i>,
-<i>The Sad Shepherd</i>, <i>Mortimer his Fall</i>; (<i>c</i>) later
-masks; (<i>d</i>) non-dramatic matter. The editor is known to have been
-Sir Kenelm Digby.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1658, Sept. 17. ‘A booke called Ben Johnsons Workes ye 3<sup>d</sup>
-volume containing these peeces, viz<sup>t</sup>. Ffifteene masques at court and
-elsewhere. Horace his art of Poetry Englished. English Gramar. Timber
-or Discoveries. Underwoods consisting of divers poems. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span> Magnetick
-Lady. A Tale of a Tub. The sad shephard or a tale of Robin hood. The
-Devill is an asse. Salvo iure cuiuscunque. <i>Thomas Walkley</i> (Eyre,
-ii. 196).</p>
-
-<p>1658, Nov. 20. Transfer of ‘Ben Johnsons workes ye 3<sup>d</sup> vol’ from
-Walkley to Humphrey Moseley (Eyre, ii. 206). [Neither Walkley nor
-Moseley ever published the <i>Works</i>.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>F<sub>3</sub></i> (<i>1692</i>)</p>
-
-<p>1692. The Works of Ben Jonson, Which were formerly Printed in Two
-Volumes, are now Reprinted in One. To which is added a Comedy, called
-the New Inn. With Additions never before Published. <i>Thomas Hodgkin,
-for H. Herringham</i> [&amp;c.].</p>
-
-<p>The more important of the later collections are:</p>
-
-<p>1756. P. Whalley, <i>The Works of B. J.</i> 7 vols. [Adds <i>The Case
-is Altered</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1816, 1846. W. Gifford, <i>The Works of B. J.</i> 9 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1828. J. Nichols, <i>The Progresses, Processions and Magnificent
-Festivities of King James the First</i>. 4 vols. [Prints the masks.]</p>
-
-<p>1871, &amp;c. W. Gifford, edited by F. Cunningham, <i>The Works of B.
-J.</i> 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1875. W. Gifford, edited by F. Cunningham, <i>The Works of B. J.</i> 9
-vols.</p>
-
-<p>1893–5. B. Nicholson, <i>The Best Plays of B. J.</i> 3 vols.
-(<i>Mermaid Series</i>). [The nine plays of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>1905–8 (<i>in progress</i>). W. Bang, <i>B. J.’s Dramen in Neudruck
-herausgegeben nach der Folio 1616</i>. (<i>Materialien</i>, vi.)</p>
-
-<p>1906. H. C. Hart, <i>The Plays of B. J.</i> 2 vols. (<i>Methuen’s
-Standard Library</i>). [<i>Case is Altered</i>, <i>E. M. I.</i>, <i>E.
-M. O.</i>, <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, <i>Poetaster</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>In the absence of a complete modern critical edition, such as is
-promised by C. H. Herford and P. Simpson from the Clarendon Press,
-reference must usually be made to the editions of single plays in the
-<i>Yale Studies</i> and <i>Belles Lettres Series</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Select Dissertations</i>: W. R. Chetwood, <i>Memoirs of the Life
-and Writings of B. J.</i> (1756); O. Gilchrist, <i>An Examination of
-the Charges of B. J.’s Enmity to Shakespeare</i> (1808), <i>A Letter
-to W. Gifford</i> (1811); D. Laing, <i>Notes of B. J.’s Conversations
-with Drummond of Hawthornden</i> (1842, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>); B. Nicholson,
-<i>The Orthography of B. J.’s Name</i> (1880, <i>Antiquary</i>, ii.
-55); W. Wilke, <i>Metrische Untersuchungen zu B. J.</i> (1884, <i>Halle
-diss.</i>), <i>Anwendung der Rhyme-test und Double-endings test auf.
-B. J.’s Dramen</i> (1888, <i>Anglia</i>, x. 512); J. A. Symonds, <i>B.
-J.</i> (1888, <i>English Worthies</i>); A. C. Swinburne, <i>A Study of
-B. J.</i> (1889); P. Aronstein, <i>B. J.’s Theorie des Lustspiels</i>
-(1895, <i>Anglia</i>, xvii. 466), <i>Shakespeare and B. J.</i> (1904,
-<i>E. S.</i> xxxiv. 193); <i>B. J.</i> (1906, <i>Literarhistorische
-Forschungen</i>, xxxiv); E. Koeppel, <i>Quellen-Studien zu den Dramen
-B. J.’s, John Marston’s, und Beaumont und Fletcher’s</i> (1895,
-<i>Münchener Beiträge</i>, xi), <i>B. J.’s Wirkung auf zeitgenössische
-Dramatiker</i> (1906, <i>Anglistische Forschungen</i>, xx); J. H.
-Penniman, <i>The War of the Theatres</i> (1897, <i>Pennsylvania Univ.
-Series</i>, iv. 3); E. Woodbridge,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span> <i>Studies in J.’s Comedy</i>
-(1898, <i>Yale Studies</i>, v); R. A. Small, <i>The Stage-Quarrel
-between B. J. and the so-called Poetasters</i> (1899); B. Dobell,
-<i>Newly Discovered Documents</i> (1901, <i>Athenaeum</i>, i. 369,
-403, 433, 465); J. Hofmiller, <i>Die ersten sechs Masken B. J.’s
-in ihrem Verhältnis zur antiken Literatur</i> (1901, <i>Freising
-progr.</i>); H. C. Hart, <i>B. J., Gabriel Harvey and Nash</i>, &amp;c.
-(1903–4, <i>9 N. Q.</i> xi. 201, 281, 343, 501; xii. 161, 263, 342,
-403, 482; <i>10 N. Q.</i> i. 381); G. Sarrazin, <i>Nym und B. J.</i>
-(1904, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xl. 212); M, Castelain, <i>B. J., l’Homme
-et l’Œuvre</i> (1907); <i>Shakespeare and B. J.</i> (1907, <i>Revue
-Germanique</i>, iii. 21, 133); C. R. Baskervill, <i>English Elements in
-J.’s Early Comedy</i> (1911, <i>Texas Univ. Bulletin</i>, 178); W. D.
-Briggs, <i>Studies in B. J.</i> (1913–14, <i>Anglia</i>, xxxvii. 463;
-xxxviii. 101), <i>On Certain Incidents in B. J.’s Life</i> (1913, <i>M.
-P.</i> xi. 279), <i>The Birth-date of B. J.</i> (1918, <i>M. L. N.</i>
-xxxiii. 137); G. Gregory Smith, <i>Ben Jonson</i> (1919, <i>English Men
-of Letters</i>); J. Q. Adams, <i>The Bones of Ben Jonson</i> (1919,
-<i>S. P.</i> xvi. 289). For fuller lists, see Castelain, xxiii, and
-<i>C. H.</i> vi. 417.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Case is Altered. 1597 (?)-1609</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1609, Jan. 26 (Segar, ‘deputy to Sir George Bucke’). ‘A
-booke called The case is altered.’ <i>Henry Walley</i>, <i>Richard
-Bonion</i> (Arber, iii. 400).</p>
-
-<p>1609, July 20. ‘Entred for their copie by direction of master Waterson
-warden, a booke called the case is altered whiche was entred for H.
-Walley and Richard Bonyon the 26 of January last.’ <i>Henry Walley</i>,
-<i>Richard Bonyon</i>, <i>Bartholomew Sutton</i> (Arber, iii. 416).</p>
-
-<p>1609. [Three issues, with different t.ps.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) Ben: Ionson, His Case is Alterd. As it hath beene sundry
-times Acted by the Children of the Blacke-friers. <i>For Bartholomew
-Sutton.</i> [B.M. 644, b. 54.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) A Pleasant Comedy, called: The Case is Alterd. As it hath
-beene sundry times acted by the children of the Black-friers. Written
-by Ben. Ionson. <i>For Bartholomew Sutton and William Barrenger.</i>
-[B.M. T. 492 (9); Bodl.; W. A. White.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) A Pleasant Comedy, called: The Case is Alterd. As it hath
-been sundry times acted by the children of the Black-friers. <i>For
-Bartholomew Sutton and William Barrenger.</i> [Devonshire.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. E. Selin (1917, <i>Yale Studies</i>,
-lvi).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: C. Crawford, <i>B. J.’s C. A.: its Date</i>
-(1909, <i>10 N. Q.</i> xi. 41).</p>
-
-<p>As Nashe, <i>Lenten Stuff</i> (<i>Works</i>, iii. 220), which was
-entered in S. R. on 11 Jan. 1599, refers to ‘the merry coblers cutte
-in that witty play of <i>the Case is altered</i>’, and as <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i chaffs Anthony Munday as ‘in print already for the best plotter’,
-alluding to the description of him in Francis Meres’s <i>Palladis
-Tamia</i> (S. R. 7 Sept. 1598), the date would seem at first sight to
-be closely fixed to the last few months of 1598. But <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i
-has almost certainly undergone interpolation. Antonio Balladino, who
-appears in this scene alone, and whose dramatic function is confused
-with that later (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii) assigned to Valentine, is only
-introduced for the sake of a satirical portrait of Munday. He is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span>
-‘pageant poet to the City of Milan’, at any rate ‘when a worse cannot
-be had’. He boasts that ‘I do use as much stale stuff, though I say it
-myself, as any man does in that kind’, and again, ‘An they’ll give me
-twenty pound a play, I’ll not raise my vein’. Some ‘will have every
-day new tricks, and write you nothing but humours’; this pleases the
-gentlemen, but he is for ‘the penny’. Crawford points out that there
-are four quotations from the play in Bodenham’s <i>Belvedere</i>
-(1600), of which Munday was the compiler, and suggests that he would
-have left it alone had the ridicule of himself then been a part of it.
-I should put the scene later still. Antonio makes an offer of ‘one
-of the books’ of his last pageant, and as far as is known, although
-Munday may have been arranging city pageants long before, the first
-which he printed was that for 1605. Nor does the reference to plays
-of ‘tricks’ and ‘humours’ necessarily imply proximity to Jonson’s own
-early comedies, for Day’s <i>Law Tricks</i> and his <i>Humour out of
-Breath</i>, as well as probably the anonymous <i>Every Woman in her
-Humour</i>, belong to 1604–8. Moreover, the play was certainly on
-the stage about this time, since the actors are called ‘Children of
-Blackfriars’, although of course this would not be inconsistent with
-their having first produced it when they bore some other name. The
-text is in an odd state. Up to the end of Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span> it has been
-arranged in scenes, on the principle usually adopted by Jonson; after
-‘Actus 3 [an error for 4] Scaene 1’ there is no further division, and
-in Act <span class="allsmcap">V</span> verse and prose are confused. As Jonson was careful
-about the printing of his plays, as there is no epistle, and as <i>C.
-A.</i> was left out of the Ff., there is some reason to suppose that
-the publication in this state was not due to him. Is it possible
-that Day, whom Jonson described to Drummond as a ‘rogue’ and a ‘base
-fellow’, was concerned in this transaction? It is obvious that, if
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i is a later addition, the original production may have
-been earlier than 1598. And the original company is unknown. The mere
-fact that the Children of the Blackfriars revived it shortly before
-1609 does not in the least prove that it was originally written for the
-Children of the Chapel. If Chapman’s <i>All Fools</i> is a Blackfriars
-revival of an Admiral’s play, <i>C. A.</i> might even more easily be a
-Blackfriars revival of a play written, say, for the extinct Pembroke’s.
-With the assumption that <i>C. A.</i> was a Chapel play disappears the
-assumption that the Chapel themselves began their renewed dramatic
-activities at a date earlier than the end of 1600. Selin shows a fair
-amount of stylistic correspondence with Jonson’s other work, but it is
-quite possible that, as suggested by Herford (<i>R. E. C.</i> ii. 9),
-he had a collaborator. If so, Chapman seems plausible.</p>
-
-<p><i>C. A.</i> has nothing to do with the <i>Poetomachia</i>. Hart (<i>9
-N. Q.</i> xi. 501, xii. 161, 263) finds in the vocabulary of Juniper
-a parody of the affected phraseology of Gabriel Harvey, and in the
-critical attitude of Valentine a foreshadowing of such autobiographical
-studies as that of Asper in <i>E. M. O.</i> His suggestion that the
-cudgel-play between Onion and Martino in II. vii represents the
-controversy between Nashe and Martin Marprelate is perhaps less
-plausible. Nashe would be very likely to think the chaff of Harvey
-‘witty’.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Every Man In his Humour. 1598</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> [1600], Aug. 4. ‘Euery man in his humour, a booke ... to
-be staied’ (Arber, iii. 37). [<i>As You Like It</i>, <i>Henry V</i>,
-and <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i> are included in the entry, which
-appears to be an exceptional memorandum. The year 1600 is conjectured
-from the fact that the entry follows another of May 1600.]</p>
-
-<p>1600, Aug. 14 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called Euery man in his humour.’
-<i>Burby and Walter Burre</i> (Arber, iii. 169).</p>
-
-<p>1609, Oct. 16. Transfer of Mrs. Burby’s share to Welby (Arber, iii.
-421).</p>
-
-<p>1601. Every Man In his Humor. As it hath beene sundry times publickly
-acted by the right Honorable the Lord Chamberlaine his seruants.
-Written by Ben. Iohnson. <i>For Walter Burre.</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. Euery Man In His Humour. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere 1598.
-By the then Lord Chamberlaine his Seruants. The Author B. I. <i>By
-William Stansby.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. Epistle to William Camden, signed
-‘Ben. Ionson’, and Prologue. After text: ‘This Comoedie was first
-Acted, in the yeere 1598. By the then L. Chamberlayne his Seruants.
-The principall Comœdians were, Will. Shakespeare, Ric. Burbadge,
-Aug. Philips, Ioh. Hemings, Hen. Condel, Tho. Pope, Will. Slye, Chr.
-Beeston, Will. Kempe, Ioh. Duke. With the allowance of the Master of
-Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Scott (1811, <i>M. B. D.</i> iii), H. B.
-Wheatley (1877), W. M. Dixon (1901, <i>T. D.</i>), H. Maas (1901,
-<i>Rostock diss.</i>), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>), C. H.
-Herford (1913, <i>R. E. C.</i> ii), P. Simpson (1919), H. H. Carter
-(1921, <i>Yale Studies</i>, lii), and facsimile reprints of Q<sub>1</sub> by
-C. Grabau (1902, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxviii. 1), W. Bang and W. W. Greg
-(1905, <i>Materialien</i>, x).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: A. Buff, <i>The
-Quarto Edition of B. J.’s E. M. I.</i> (1877, <i>E. S.</i> i. 181), B.
-Nicholson, <i>On the Dates of the Two Versions of E. M. I.</i> (1882,
-<i>Antiquary</i>, vi. 15, 106).</p>
-
-<p>The date assigned by F<sub>1</sub> is confirmed by an allusion (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-iv. 15) to the ‘fencing Burgullian’ or Burgundian, John Barrose, who
-challenged all fencers in that year, and was hanged for murder on
-10 July (Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 787). The production must have been
-shortly before 20 Sept, when Toby Mathew wrote to Dudley Carleton
-(<i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cclxviii. 61; Simpson, ix) of an Almain who
-lost 300 crowns at ‘a new play called, Euery mans humour’. Two
-short passages were taken from the play in R. Allot’s <i>England’s
-Parnassus</i> (1600, ed. Crawford, xxxii. 110, 112, 436) which is
-earlier than Q<sub>1</sub>. The Q<sub>1</sub> text (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 184) contains a
-hit at Anthony Munday in ‘that he liue in more penurie of wit and
-inuention, then eyther the Hall-Beadle, or Poet Nuntius’. This has
-disappeared from F<sub>1</sub>, which in other respects represents a complete
-revision of the Q<sub>1</sub> text. Many passages have been improved from a
-literary point of view; the scene has been transferred from Italy to
-London and the names anglicized; the oaths have all been expunged or
-softened. Fleay, i. 358, finding references to a ‘queen’ in F<sub>1</sub>
-for the ‘duke’ of Q<sub>1</sub> and an apparent dating of St. Mark’s Day on
-a Friday, assigned the revision to 1601, and conjectured that it was
-done by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span> Jonson for the Chapel, that the Chamberlain’s published the Q
-in revenge, and that Jonson tried to stay it. Here he is followed by
-Castelain. But Q<sub>1</sub> is a good edition and there is no sign whatever
-that it had not Jonson’s authority, and as the entry in S. R. covers
-other Chamberlain’s plays, it is pretty clear that the company caused
-the ‘staying’. St. Mark’s Day did not, as Fleay thought, fall on a
-Friday in 1601, and if it had, the dating is unchanged from Q<sub>1</sub> and
-the references to a queen may, as Simpson suggests, be due to Jonson’s
-conscientious desire to preserve consistency with the original date of
-1598. Nor is the play likely to have passed to the Chapel, since the
-King’s men played it before James on 2 Feb. 1605 (cf. App. B). This
-revival would be the natural time for a revision, and in fact seems to
-me on the whole the most likely date, in spite of two trifling bits
-of evidence which would fit in rather better a year later. These are
-references to the siege of Strigonium or Graan (1595) as ten years
-since (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 103), and to a present by the Turkey company
-to the Grand Signior (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 78), which was perhaps the
-gift worth £5,000 sent about Christmas 1605 (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-xv. 3; xvii. 35; xx. 27). No doubt also the revision of oaths in
-Jacobean plays is usually taken as due to the <i>Act against Abuses
-of Players</i> (1606), although it is conceivable that the personal
-taste of James may have required a similar revision of plays selected
-for Court performance at an earlier date. Or this particular bit of
-revision, which was done for other plays before F<sub>1</sub>, may be of later
-date than the rest. Simpson is in favour, largely on literary grounds,
-for a revision in 1612, in preparation for F<sub>1</sub>. The Prologue, which
-is not in Q, probably belongs to the revision, or at any rate to a
-revival later than 1598, since it criticizes not only ‘Yorke, and
-Lancasters long jarres’, but also plays in which ‘Chorus wafts you
-ore the seas’, as in <i>Henry V</i> (1599). These allusions would not
-come so well in 1612; on the other hand, Simpson’s date would enable
-us to suppose that the play in which the public ‘grac’d monsters’ was
-the <i>Tempest</i> (cf. the similar jibe in <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>).
-The character Matheo or Mathew represents a young gull of literary
-tendencies, and is made to spout passages from, or imitations of,
-Daniel’s verses. Perhaps this implies some indirect criticism of
-Daniel, but it can hardly be regarded as a personal attack upon him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Every Man Out of his Humour. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, April 8 (Harsnett). ‘A Comicall Satyre of euery man
-out of his humour.’ <i>William Holme</i> (Arber, iii. 159).</p>
-
-<p>1638, April 28. Transfer by Smethwicke to Bishop (Arber, iv. 417).</p>
-
-<p>Q<sub>1</sub>, 1600. The Comicall Satyre of Every Man Out Of His Humor. As
-it was first composed by the Author B. I. Containing more than hath
-been Publickely Spoken or Acted. With the seuerall Character of euery
-Person. <i>For William Holme.</i> [Names and description of Characters;
-Publisher’s note, ‘It was not neere his thoughts that hath publisht
-this, either to traduce the Authour; or to make vulgar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span> and cheape, any
-the peculiar &amp; sufficient deserts of the Actors; but rather (whereas
-many Censures flutter’d about it) to giue all leaue, and leisure, to
-iudge with Distinction’; Induction, by Asper, who becomes Macilente
-and speaks Epilogue, Carlo Buffone who speaks in lieu of Prologue, and
-Mitis and Cordatus, who remain on stage as Grex or typical spectators.]</p>
-
-<p>Q<sub>2</sub>, 1600. [<i>Peter Short</i>] <i>For William Holme</i>. [W. W. Greg
-(1920, <i>4 Library</i>, i. 153) distinguished Q<sub>1</sub>, of which he found
-a copy in Brit. Mus. C. 34, i. 29, from Q<sub>2</sub>, (Bodl. and Dyce).]</p>
-
-<p>Q<sub>3</sub>, 1600. <i>For Nicholas Linge.</i> [‘A careless and ignorant
-reprint’ (Greg) of Q<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>F<sub>1</sub>, 1616. Euery Man Out Of His Humour. A Comicall Satyre. Acted in
-the yeere 1599. By the then Lord Chamberlaine his Seruants. The Author
-B. I. <i>William Stansby for Iohn Smithwicke.</i> [Epistle to the Inns
-of Court, signed ‘Ben. Ionson’. After text: ‘This Comicall Satyre
-was first acted in the yeere 1599. By the then Lord Chamberlaine his
-Seruants. The principall Comœdians were, Ric. Burbadge, Ioh. Hemings,
-Aug. Philips, Hen. Condel, Wil. Sly, Tho. Pope. With the allowance of
-the Master of Revels.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Facsimile reprints</i> of Q<sub>1</sub> by W. W. Greg and F. P. Wilson
-(1920, <i>M. S. R.</i>) and of Q<sub>2, 3</sub> by W. Bang and W. W. Greg
-(1907, <i>Materialien</i>, xvi, xvii).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: C. A.
-Herpich, <i>Shakespeare and B. J. Did They Quarrel?</i> (1902, <i>9 N.
-Q.</i> ix. 282); Van Dam and C. Stoffel, <i>The Authority of the B. J.
-Folio of 1616</i> (1903, <i>Anglia</i>, xxvi. 377); W. Bang, <i>B. J.
-und Castiglione’s Cortegiano</i> (1906, <i>E. S.</i> xxxvi. 330).</p>
-
-<p>In the main the text of F<sub>1</sub> follows that of Q<sub>1</sub> with some slight
-revision of wording and oaths. The arrangement of the epilogues is
-somewhat different, but seems intended to represent the same original
-stage history. In Q<sub>1</sub> Macilente speaks an epilogue, ‘with Aspers
-tongue (though not his shape)’, evidently used in the theatre as it
-begs ‘The happier spirits in this faire-fild Globe’ to confirm applause</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3">as their pleasures Pattent: which so sign’d,</div>
- <div>Our leane and spent Endeuours shall renue</div>
- <div>Their Beauties with the <i>Spring</i> to smile on you.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Then comes a ‘Finis’ and on the next page, ‘It had
-another <i>Catastrophe</i> or Conclusion at the first Playing: which
-(διὰ τὸ τὴν βασίλισσαν προσωποποιεῖσθαι) many seem’d not to relish it:
-and therefore ’twas since alter’d: yet that a right-ei’d and solide
-<i>Reader</i> may perceiue it was not so great a part of the Heauen
-awry, as they would make it; we request him but to looke downe vpon
-these following Reasons.’ There follows an apology, from which it is
-clear that originally Macilente was cured of his envious humour by the
-appearance on the stage of the Queen; and this introduces a different
-epilogue of the nature of an address to her. At the end of all comes a
-short dialogue between Macilente, as Asper, and the <i>Grex</i>. There
-is no mention of the Globe, but as the whole point of the objection
-to this epilogue, which it is not suggested that Elizabeth herself
-shared, lay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span> in the miming of the Queen, one would take it, did the
-Q<sub>1</sub> stand alone, to have been, like its substitute, a theatre and not
-a Court epilogue. In F<sub>1</sub>, however, we get successively (<i>a</i>)
-a shortened version of the later epilogue, (<i>b</i>) the dialogue
-with the <i>Grex</i>, followed by ‘The End’, and (<i>c</i>) a version
-of the original epilogue, altered so as to make it less of a direct
-address and headed ‘Which, in the presentation before Queen E. was
-thus varyed’. It seems to me a little difficult to believe that the
-play was given at Court before it had been ‘practised’ in public
-performances, and I conclude that, having suppressed the address to a
-mimic Elizabeth at the Globe, Jonson revived it in a slightly altered
-form when he took the play to Court at Christmas. As to the date of
-production, Fleay, i. 361, excels himself in the suggestion that ‘the
-mention of “spring” and the allusion to the company’s new “patent”
-for the Globe in the epilogue’ fix it to <i>c.</i> April 1599. Even
-if this were the original epilogue, it alludes to a coming and not a
-present spring, and might have been written at any time in the winter,
-either before or after the New Year. Obviously, too, there can be no
-allusion to an Elizabethan patent for the Globe, which never existed. I
-do not agree with Small, 21, that the Globe was not opened until early
-in 1600, nor do I think that any inference can be drawn from the not
-very clear notes of dramatic time in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-ii. At first sight it seems natural to suppose that the phrase ‘would
-I had one of Kempes shooes to throw after you’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v) was
-written later than at any rate the planning of the famous morris to
-Norwich, which lasted from 11 Feb. to 11 March 1600 and at the end of
-which Kempe hung his shoes in Norwich Guildhall. Certainly it cannot
-refer, as Fleay thinks, merely to Kempe’s leaving the Chamberlain’s
-men. Conceivably it might be an interpolation of later date than the
-original production. Creizenach, 303, however, points out that in 1599
-Thomas Platter saw a comedy in which a servant took off his shoe and
-threw it at his master, and suggests that this was a bit of common-form
-stage clownery, in which case the Norwich dance would not be concerned.
-The performance described by Platter was in September or October, and
-apparently at the Curtain (cf. ch. xvi, introd.). Kempe may quite well
-have been playing then at the Curtain with a fresh company after the
-Chamberlain’s moved to the Globe. Perhaps the episode had already found
-a place in Phillips’s <i>Jig of the Slippers</i>, printed in 1595 and
-now lost (cf. ch. xviii). If 1600 is the date of <i>E. M. O.</i>, the
-Court performance may have been that of 3 February, or perhaps more
-probably may have fallen in the following winter, which would explain
-the divergence between Q<sub>1</sub> and F<sub>1</sub> as to the epilogues. But it must
-be remembered that the F<sub>1</sub> date is 1599, and that most, if not quite
-all, of the F<sub>1</sub> dates follow Circumcision style, although Jonson may
-not have adopted this style as early as 1600. On the whole, I think
-that the balance of probability is distinctly in favour of 1599. If so,
-the production must have been fairly late in that year, as there is a
-hit (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i) at the <i>Histriomastix</i> of the same autumn.
-The play has been hunted through and through for personalities, most
-of which are effectively refuted by Small. Most of the characters are
-types rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span> than individuals, and social types rather than literary
-or stage types. I do not think there are portraits of Daniel, Lyly,
-Drayton, Donne, Chapman, Munday, Shakespeare, Burbadge, in the play or
-its induction at all. Nor do I think there are portraits in the strict
-sense of Marston and Dekker, although no doubt some parody of Marston’s
-‘fustian’ vocabulary is put into the mouth of Clove (iii. 1), and, on
-the other hand, the characters of Carlo Buffone and Fastidious Brisk
-have analogies with the Anaides and Hedon of <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>,
-and these again with the Demetrius and Crispinus of <i>Poetaster</i>,
-who are undoubtedly Dekker and Marston. But we know from Aubrey, ii.
-184, that Carlo was Charles Chester, a loose-tongued man about town,
-to whom there are many contemporary references. To those collected
-by Small and Hart (<i>10 N. Q.</i> i. 381) I may add Chamberlain,
-7, Harington, <i>Ulysses upon Ajax</i> (1596), 58, and <i>Hatfield
-Papers</i>, iv. 210, 221; x. 287. The practical joke of sealing up
-Carlo’s mouth with wax (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii) was, according to Aubrey,
-played upon Chester by Raleigh, and there may be traits of Raleigh in
-Puntarvolo, perhaps combined with others of Sir John Harington, while
-Hart finds in the mouths both of Puntarvolo and of Fastidious Brisk the
-vocabulary of Gabriel Harvey. The play was revived at Court on 8 Jan.
-1605.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cynthia’s Revels. 1600–1</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1601, May 23 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called Narcissus the
-fountaine of self-love.’ <i>Walter Burre</i> (Arber, iii. 185).</p>
-
-<p>1601. The Fountaine of Selfe-Loue. Or Cynthias Reuels. As it hath beene
-sundry times priuately acted in the Black-Friers by the Children of her
-Maiesties Chappell. Written by Ben: Iohnson. <i>For Walter Burre.</i>
-[Induction, Prologue, and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. Cynthias Revels, Or The Fountayne of selfe-loue. A Comicall
-Satyre. Acted in the yeere 1600. By the then Children of Queene
-Elizabeth’s Chappel. The Author B. I. <i>William Stansby.</i> [Part of
-F<sub>1</sub>. Epistle to the Court, signed ‘Ben Ionson’, Induction, Prologue,
-and Epilogue. After text: ‘This Comicall Satyre was first acted, in
-the yeere 1600. By the then Children of Queene Elizabeths Chappell.
-The principall Comœdians were, Nat. Field, Ioh. Underwood, Sal. Pavy,
-Rob. Baxter, Tho. Day, Ioh. Frost. With the allowance of the Master of
-Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by A. C. Judson (1912, <i>Yale Studies</i>,
-xlv), and facsimile reprint of Q by W. Bang and L. Krebs (1908,
-<i>Materialien</i>, xxii).</p>
-
-<p>The difference between the Q and F<sub>1</sub> texts amounts to more than
-mere revision of wording and of oaths. <i>Criticus</i> is renamed
-<i>Crites</i>, and the latter half of the play is given in a longer
-form, parts of <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, and the whole of
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i-iv appearing in F<sub>1</sub> alone. I think the explanation is
-to be found in a shortening of the original text for representation,
-rather than in subsequent additions. Jonson’s date for the play is
-1600. This Small, 23, would translate as Feb. or March 1601, neglecting
-the difficulty due to the possibility that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span> Jonson’s date represents
-Circumcision style. He relies on <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> xi, where Cynthia says:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For so Actaeon, by presuming farre,</div>
- <div>Did (to our griefe) incurre a fatall doome;</div>
- <div>... But are we therefore judged too extreme?</div>
- <div>Seemes it no crime, to enter sacred bowers,</div>
- <div>And hallowed places, with impure aspect,</div>
- <div>Most lewdly to pollute?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Rightly rejecting the suggestion of Fleay, i. 363, that
-this alludes to Nashe and the <i>Isle of Dogs</i>, Small refers it to
-the disgrace of Essex, and therefore dates the play after his execution
-on 25 Feb. 1601. But surely the presumption which Jonson has in mind
-is not Essex’s rebellion, but his invasion of Elizabeth’s apartment on
-his return from Ireland in 1599, and the ‘fatall doome’ is merely his
-loss of offices in June 1600. I do not believe that a Court dramatist
-would have dared to refer to Essex at all after 25 Feb. 1601. I feel
-little doubt that the play was the subject of the Chapel presentation
-on 6 Jan. 1601, and the description of this by the Treasurer of the
-Chamber as including a ‘show’, which puzzled Small, is explained by the
-presence of a full-blown Court mask in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vii-x. The original
-production will have been in the winter of 1600, soon after Evans set
-up the Chapel plays. As to personalities, Small rightly rejects the
-identifications of Hedon with Daniel, Anaides with Marston, and Asotus
-with Lodge. Amorphus repeats the type of Puntarvolo from <i>E. M.
-O.</i> and like Puntarvolo may show traces of the Harveian vocabulary.
-As <i>Satiromastix</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 191, applies to Crispinus and
-Demetrius the descriptions (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii) of Hedon as ‘a light
-voluptuous reveller’ and Anaides as ‘a strange arrogating puff’, it
-seems clear that Marston and Dekker, rightly or wrongly, fitted on
-these caps. Similarly, there is a clear attempt in <i>Satiromastix</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 376, ‘You must be call’d Asper, and Criticus, and
-Horace’, to charge Jonson with lauding himself as Criticus. But the
-description of the ‘creature of a most perfect and diuine temper’
-in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii surely goes beyond even Jonson’s capacity of
-self-praise. I wonder whether he can have meant Donne, whom he seems
-from a remark to Drummond (Laing, 6) to have introduced as Criticus in
-an introductory dialogue to the <i>Ars Poetica</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Of the three children who appear in the induction, both Q and F<sub>1</sub>
-name one as Jack. He might be either Underwood or Frost. Q alone
-(l. 214) names another, who played Anaides, as Sall, i.e. Salathiel
-Pavy. An interesting light is thrown on the beginnings of the Chapel
-enterprise by the criticism (<i>Ind.</i> 188), ‘They say, the
-<i>Vmbrae</i>, or Ghosts of some three or foure Playes, departed a
-dozen yeares since, haue been seene walking on your Stage here.’</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Poetaster. 1601</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1601, Dec. 21 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called Poetaster or his
-arrainement.’ <i>Matthew Lownes</i> (Arber, iii. 198).</p>
-
-<p>1602. Poetaster or The Arraignment: As it hath beene sundry times
-priuately acted in the Blacke-Friers, by the Children of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span> Maiesties
-Chappell. Composed by Ben. Iohnson. <i>For M. L.</i> [Prologue; after
-text, Note to Reader: ‘Here (Reader) in place of the Epilogue, was
-meant to thee an Apology from the Author, with his reasons for the
-publishing of this booke: but (since he is no lesse restrain’d, then
-thou depriv’d of it by Authoritie) hee praies thee to think charitably
-of what thou hast read, till thou maist heare him speake what hee hath
-written.’]</p>
-
-<p>1616. Poëtaster, Or His Arraignement. A Comicall Satyre, Acted, in the
-yeere 1601. By the then Children of Queene Elizabeths Chappel. The
-Author B. I. <i>W. Stansby for M. Lownes.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. Epistle
-to Richard Martin, by ‘Ben. Ionson’; Prologue. After text, Note to
-Reader, with ‘an apologeticall Dialogue: which was only once spoken
-vpon the stage, and all the answere I euer gaue, to sundry impotent
-libells then cast out (and some yet remayning) against me, and this
-Play’. After the dialogue: ‘This comicall Satyre was first acted, in
-the yeere 1601. By the then Children of Queene Elizabeths Chappell.
-The principall Comœdians were, Nat. Field, Ioh. Vnderwood, Sal. Pavy,
-Will. Ostler, Tho. Day, Tho. Marton. With the allowance of the Master
-of Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by H. S. Mallory (1905, <i>Yale Studies</i>, xxvii), J.
-H. Penniman (1913, <i>B. L.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The play is admittedly an attack upon the poetaster represented as
-Crispinus, and his identity is clear from Jonson’s own statement
-to Drummond (Laing, 20) that ‘he had many quarrells with Marston,
-beat him, and took his pistol from him, wrote his Poetaster on him’.
-Marston’s vocabulary is elaborately ridiculed in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. Nor
-is there any reason to doubt that Demetrius Fannius, ‘a dresser of
-plaies about the towne, here’, who has been ‘hir’d to abuse Horace,
-and bring him in, in a play’ (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 367), is Dekker, who
-certainly associated himself with Marston as a victim of Jonson’s
-arraignment, and wrote <i>Satiromastix</i> (q.v.) in reply. At the
-same time these characters continue the types of Hedon and Anaides
-from <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, although these were not literary
-men. Horace is Jonson himself, as the rival portrait of Horace in
-<i>Satiromastix</i> shows, while Dekker tells us that Tucca is ‘honest
-Capten Hannam’, doubtless the Jack Hannam traceable as a Captain under
-Drake in 1585; cf. the reference to him in a letter of that year
-printed by F. P. Wilson in <i>M. L. R.</i> xv. 81. Fleay, i. 367, has
-a long list of identifications of minor personages, Ovid with Donne,
-Tibullus with Daniel, and so forth, all of which may safely be laid
-aside, and in particular I do not think that the fine eulogies of
-Virgil (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i) are meant for Chapman, or for Shakespeare,
-applicable as some of them are to him, or for any one but Virgil. On
-the matter of identifications there is little to add to the admirable
-treatment of Small, 25. But in addition to the personal attacks,
-the play clearly contains a more generalized criticism of actors,
-the challenge of which seems to have been specially taken up by the
-Chamberlain’s men (cf. ch. xi), while there is evidence that Tucca
-and, I suppose, Lupus were taken amiss by the soldiers and the lawyers
-respectively. The latter at least were powerful, and in the epistle
-to Martin Jonson speaks of the play as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span> one ‘for whose innocence,
-as for the Authors, you were once a noble and timely undertaker, to
-the greatest Iustice of this Kingdome’, and on behalf of posterity
-acknowledges a debt for ‘the reading of that ... which so much
-ignorance, and malice of the times, then conspir’d to haue supprest’.
-Evidently Jonson had not made matters better by his Apologetical
-Dialogue, the printing of which with the play was restrained. In this
-he denies that he</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i16">tax’d</div>
- <div>The Law, and Lawyers; Captaines; and the Players</div>
- <div>By their particular names;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">but admits his intention to try and shame the</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Fellowes of practis’d and most laxative tongues,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">of whom he says, that during</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i13h">three yeeres,</div>
- <div>They did provoke me with their petulant stiles</div>
- <div>On every stage.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Now he has done with it, will not answer the ‘libells’,
-or the ‘untrussers’ (i. e. <i>Satiromastix</i>), and is turning to
-tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>Jonson gives the date of production as 1601. The play followed
-<i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, criticisms on the epilogue of which inspired
-its ‘armed Prologue’, who sets a foot on Envy. Envy has been waiting
-fifteen weeks since the plot was an ‘embrion’, and this is chaffed in
-<i>Satiromastix</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 447, ‘What, will he bee fifteene
-weekes about this cockatrice’s egge too?’ Later (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 218)
-Horace is told, ‘You and your itchy poetry breake out like Christmas,
-but once a yeare’. This stung Jonson, who replied in the Apologetical
-Dialogue,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i1"><i>Polyposus.</i><span style="margin-left: 6em">They say you are slow,</span></div>
- <div>And scarse bring forth a play a yeere.</div>
- <div class="i1"><i>Author.</i><span style="margin-left: 11em">’Tis true.</span></div>
- <div>I would they could not say that I did that.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The year’s interval must not be pressed too closely.
-On the other hand, I do not know why Small, 25, assumes that the
-fifteen weeks spent on the <i>Poetaster</i> began directly after
-<i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> was produced, whatever that date may be. It
-must have come very near that of <i>Satiromastix</i>, for Horace knows
-that Demetrius has been hired to write a play on him. On the other
-hand, <i>Satiromastix</i> cannot possibly have been actually written
-until the contents of <i>Poetaster</i> were known to Dekker. The S.
-R. entry of <i>Satiromastix</i> is 11 Nov. 1601, and the two dates of
-production may reasonably be placed in the late spring or early autumn
-of the same year. The Note to the Reader in Q shows that the Dialogue
-had been restrained before <i>Poetaster</i> itself appeared in 1602.
-Probably it was spoken in December between the two S. R. entries. Hart
-(<i>9 N. Q.</i> xi. 202) assuming that the contemplated tragedy was
-<i>Sejanus</i> (q.v.) put it in 1603, but this is too late.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sejanus. 1603</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, Nov. 2 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called the tragedie of
-Seianus written by Beniamin Johnson.’ <i>Edward Blunt</i> (Arber, iii.
-273).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span></p>
-
-<p>1605, Aug. 6. Transfer from Blount to Thomas Thorpe (Arber, iii. 297).</p>
-
-<p>1610, Oct. 3. Transfer from Thorpe to Walter Burre (Arber, iii. 445).</p>
-
-<p>1605. Seianus his fall. Written by Ben: Ionson. <i>G. Eld for Thomas
-Thorpe.</i> [Epistle to Readers, signed ‘Ben. Jonson’; Commendatory
-Verses, signed ‘Georgius Chapmannus’, ‘Hugh Holland’, ‘Cygnus’, ‘Th.
-R.’, ‘Johannes Marstonius’, ‘William Strachey’, ‘ΦΙΛΟΣ’, ‘Ev. B.’;
-Argument.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. Seianus his Fall. A Tragœdie. Acted, in the yeere 1603. By the
-K. Maiesties Servants. The Author B. I. <i>William Stansby.</i> [Part
-of F<sub>1</sub>. Epistle to Esmé, Lord Aubigny, signed ‘Ben. Ionson’. After
-text: ‘This Tragœdie was first acted, in the yeere 1603. By the Kings
-Maiesties Servants. The principall Tragœdians were, Ric. Burbadge,
-Will. Shake-Speare, Aug. Philips, Ioh. Hemings, Will. Sly, Hen. Condel,
-Ioh. Lowin, Alex. Cooke. With the allowance of the Master of Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. D. Briggs (1911, <i>B. L.</i>) and W. A.
-Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: B. Nicholson,
-<i>Shakespeare not the Part-Author of B. J.’s S.</i> (1874,
-<i>Acad.</i> ii. 536); W. A. Henderson, <i>Shakespeare and S.</i>
-(1894, <i>8 N. Q.</i> v. 502).</p>
-
-<p>As the theatres were probably closed from Elizabeth’s death to March
-1604, the production may have been at Court in the autumn or winter
-of 1603, although, if <i>Sejanus</i> is the something ‘high, and
-aloofe’ contemplated at the end of the Apologetical Dialogue to
-<i>Poetaster</i> (q.v.), it must have been in Jonson’s mind since 1601.
-The epistle to Aubigny admits the ‘violence’ which the play received in
-public, and ‘Ev. B.’s’ verses indicate that this ‘beastly rage’ was at
-the Globe. Marston’s verses were presumably written before his renewed
-quarrel with Jonson over <i>Eastward Ho!</i> (q.v.), and there appears
-to be an unkindly reference to <i>Sejanus</i> in the epistle to his
-<i>Sophonisba</i> (1606). But either <i>Eastward Ho!</i> or something
-else caused publication to be delayed for nearly a year after the S.
-R. entry, since Chapman’s verses contain a compliment to the Earl of
-Suffolk,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Who when our Hearde came not to drink, but trouble</div>
- <div class="i1">The Muses waters, did a Wall importune,</div>
- <div>(Midst of assaults) about their sacred River,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">which seems to refer to his share in freeing Jonson
-and Chapman from prison about Sept. or Oct. 1605. Chapman also has
-compliments to the Earls of Northampton and Northumberland. It must
-therefore be to a later date that Jonson referred, when he told
-Drummond (Laing, 22) that ‘Northampton was his mortall enimie for
-beating, on a St. George’s day, one of his attenders; He was called
-before the Councell for his Sejanus, and accused both of poperie and
-treason by him’. Fleay, i. 372, suggests that the reference at the end
-of the Q version of the Argument to treason against princes, ‘for guard
-of whose piety and vertue, the <i>Angels</i> are in continuall watch,
-and <i>God</i> himselfe miraculously working’, implies publication
-after the discovery of the Plot. On the other hand, one would have
-expected Chapman’s reference to Northumberland, if not already printed,
-to be suppressed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span> in view of the almost immediate suspicion of a
-connexion with the Plot that fell upon him. Castelain, 907, considers,
-and rightly rejects, another suggestion by Fleay that <i>Sejanus</i>
-and not <i>Eastward Ho!</i> was the cause of the imprisonment of Jonson
-and Chapman in 1605. Fleay supposed that Chapman was the collaborator
-of whom Jonson wrote in the Q epistle, ‘I would informe you, that this
-Booke, in all numbers, is not the same with that which was acted on
-the publike Stage, wherein a second pen had good share; in place of
-which I have rather chosen, to put weaker (and no doubt lesse pleasing)
-of mine own, then to defraud so happy a <i>Genius</i> of his right,
-by my lothed usurpation’. Shakespeare also has been guessed at. If
-Jonson’s language was seriously meant, there were not, of course, many
-contemporaries of whom he would have so spoken. Probably the problem is
-insoluble, as the subject-matter of it has disappeared. It is difficult
-to believe that the collaborator was Samuel Sheppard, who in his <i>The
-Times Displayed in Six Sestyads</i> (1646) claims to have ‘dictated
-to’ Ben Jonson ‘when as Sejanus’ fall he writ’. Perhaps he means ‘been
-amanuensis to’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Eastward Ho!</i> (<i>1605</i>)</p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Chapman (q.v.) <i>and</i> Marston.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Volpone</i> or <i>The Fox. 1606</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] J. S. Farmer (<i>Introd.</i> to <i>Believe As You List</i>
-in <i>T. F. T.</i>) states that a holograph MS. is extant. He may have
-heard of a modern text by L. H. Holt, used by J. D. Rea. If so, App. N
-is in error.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1610, Oct. 3. Transfer from Thomas Thorpe to Walter Burre
-of ‘2 bookes the one called, Seianus his fall, the other, Vulpone or
-the ffoxe’ (Arber, iii. 445).</p>
-
-<p>1607. Ben: Ionson his Volpone Or The Foxe. <i>For Thomas Thorpe.</i>
-[Dedicatory epistle by ‘Ben. Ionson’ to the two Universities, dated
-‘From my House in the Black-Friars, the 11<sup>th</sup> day of February, 1607’;
-Commendatory Verses, signed ‘I. D[onne]’, ‘E. Bolton’, ‘F[rancis]
-B[eaumont]’, ‘T. R.’, ‘D. D.’, ‘I. C.’, ‘G. C.’, ‘E. S.’, ‘I. F.’;
-Argument; Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. Volpone, or The Foxe. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere 1605. By the
-K. Maiesties Servants. The Author B. I. <i>William Stansby.</i> [Part
-of F<sub>1</sub>. After text: ‘This Comoedie was first acted, in the yeere
-1605. By the Kings Maiesties Servants. The principall Comœdians were,
-Ric. Burbadge, Ioh. Hemings, Hen. Condel, Ioh. Lowin, Will. Sly, Alex.
-Cooke. With the allowance of the Master of Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Scott (1811, <i>M. B. D.</i> iii) in
-<i>O. E. D.</i> (1830, i) and by H. B. Wilkins (1906), W. A.
-Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>), J. D. Rea (1919, <i>Yale
-Studies</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: F. Holthausen, <i>Die Quelle von
-B. J.’s V.</i> (1889, <i>Anglia</i>, xii. 519); J. Q. Adams, <i>The
-Sources of B. J.’s V.</i> (1904, <i>M. P.</i> ii. 289); L. H. Holt,
-<i>Notes on J.’s V.</i> (1905, <i>M. L. N.</i> xx. 63).</p>
-
-<p>Jonson dates the production 1605, and the uncertainty as to the style
-he used leaves it possible that this may cover the earlier part of
-1606. Fleay, i. 373, attempts to get nearer with the help of the news<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span>
-from London brought to Venice by Peregrine in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. Some of
-this does not help us much. The baboons had probably been in London as
-early as 1603 at least (cf. s.v. <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>). The Tower
-lioness had a whelp on 5 Aug. 1604, another on 26 Feb. 1605, and two
-more on 27 July 1605 (Stowe, ed. 1615, 844, 857, 870). The ‘another
-whelp’ of <i>Volpone</i> would suggest Feb.–July 1605. On the other
-hand, the whale at Woolwich is recorded by Stowe, 880, a few days after
-the porpoise at West Ham (not ‘above the bridge’ as in <i>Volpone</i>)
-on 19 Jan. 1606. Holt argues from this that, as Peregrine left England
-seven weeks before, the play must have been produced in March 1606,
-but this identification of actual and dramatic time can hardly be
-taken for granted. There are also allusions to meteors at Berwick and
-a new star, both in 1604, and to the building of a raven in a royal
-ship and the death of Stone the fool, which have not been dated and
-might help. Gawdy, 146, writes on 18 June 1604 that ‘Stone was knighted
-last weeke, I meane not Stone the foole, but Stone of Cheapsyde’.
-Stone the fool was whipped about March, 1605 (Winwood, ii. 52). The
-suggested allusion to <i>Volpone</i> in Day’s <i>Isle of Gulls</i>
-(q.v.) of Feb. 1606 is rather dubious. The ambiguity of style must
-also leave us uncertain whether Q and its dedication belong to 1607 or
-1608, and therefore whether ‘their love and acceptance shewn to his
-poeme in the presentation’ by the Universities was in 1606 or 1607.
-This epistle contains a justification of Jonson’s comic method. He has
-had to undergo the ‘imputation of sharpnesse’, but has never provoked
-a ‘nation, societie, or generall order, or state’, or any ‘publique
-person’. Nor has he been ‘particular’ or ‘personall’, except to ‘a
-mimick, cheater, bawd, or buffon, creatures (for their insolencies)
-worthy to be tax’d’. But that he has not wholly forgotten the
-<i>Poetomachia</i> is clear from a reference to the ‘petulant stiles’
-of other poets, while in the prologue he recalls the old criticism that
-he was a year about each play, and asserts that he wrote <i>Volpone</i>
-in five weeks. The commendatory verses suggest that the play was
-successful. Fleay’s theory that it is referred to in the epilogue
-to the anonymous <i>Mucedorus</i> (q.v.), as having given offence,
-will not bear analysis. The passage in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv about English
-borrowings from Guarini and Montaigne is too general in its application
-to be construed as a specific attack on Daniel. But the gossip of
-Aubrey, ii. 246, on Thomas Sutton, the founder of the Charterhouse,
-relates that ‘’Twas from him that B. Johnson took his hint of the fox,
-and by Seigneur Volpone is meant Sutton’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Epicoene. 1609</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1610, Sept. 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called, Epicoene or the
-silent woman by Ben Johnson.’ <i>John Browne and John Busby</i> (Arber,
-iii. 444).</p>
-
-<p>1612, Sept. 28. Transfer from Browne to Walter Burre (Arber, iii. 498).</p>
-
-<p>1609, 1612. Prints of both dates are cited, but neither is now
-traceable. The former, in view of the S. R. date, can hardly have
-existed; the latter appears to have been seen by Gifford, and for it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span>the commendatory verses by Beaumont, found at the beginning of F<sub>1</sub>,
-were probably written.</p>
-
-<p>1616. Epicoene, Or The silent Woman. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere
-1609. By the Children of her Maiesties Revells. The Author B. I. <i>W.
-Stansby.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>. Epistle to Sir Francis Stuart, signed
-‘Ben. Ionson’; Two Prologues, the second ‘Occasion’d by some persons
-impertinent exception’; after text: ‘This Comœdie was first acted,
-in the yeere 1609. By the Children of her Maiesties Revells. The
-principall Comœdians were, Nat. Field, Will. Barksted, Gil. Carie,
-Will. Pen, Hug. Attawel, Ric. Allin, Ioh. Smith, Ioh. Blaney. With the
-allowance of the Master of Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p>1620. <i>William Stansby, sold by John Browne.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>O. E. D.</i> (1830, iii) and by A. Henry (1906,
-<i>Yale Studies</i>, xxxi) and C. M. Gayley (1913, <i>R. E. C.</i> ii).</p>
-
-<p>The first prologue speaks of the play as fit for ‘your men, and
-daughters of <i>white-Friars’</i>, and at Whitefriars the play was
-probably produced by the Revels children, either at the end of 1609,
-or, if Jonson’s chronology permits, early in 1610. Jonson told Drummond
-(Laing, 41) that, ‘When his play of a Silent Woman was first acted,
-ther was found verses after on the stage against him, concluding that
-that play was well named the Silent Woman, ther was never one man to
-say <i>Plaudite</i> to it’. Fleay, i. 374, suggests an equation between
-Sir John Daw and Sir John Harington. In <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 86 Clerimont
-says of Lady Haughty, the President of the Collegiates, ‘A poxe of
-her autumnall face, her peec’d beautie’. I hope that this was not, as
-suggested by H. J. C. Grierson, <i>Poems of Donne</i>, ii. 63, a hit at
-Lady Danvers, on whom Donne wrote (Elegy ix):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No <i>Spring</i>, nor <i>Summer</i> Beauty hath such grace,</div>
- <div>As I have seen in one <i>Autumnall</i> face.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In any case, I do not suppose that these are the passages which led to
-the ‘exception’ necessitating the second prologue. This ends with the
-lines:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If any, yet, will (with particular slight</div>
- <div class="i1">Of application) wrest what he doth write;</div>
- <div>And that he meant or him, or her, will say:</div>
- <div class="i1">They make a libell, which he made a play.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Jonson evidently refers to the same matter in the Epistle, where
-he says: ‘There is not a line, or syllable in it changed from the
-simplicity of the first copy. And, when you shall consider, through the
-certaine hatred of some, how much a mans innocency may bee indanger’d
-by an vn-certaine accusation; you will, I doubt not, so beginne to
-hate the iniquitie of such natures, as I shall loue the contumely done
-me, whose end was so honorable, as to be wip’d off by your sentence.’
-I think the explanation is to be found in a dispatch of the Venetian
-ambassador on 8 Feb. 1610 (<i>V. P.</i> xi. 427), who reports that Lady
-Arabella Stuart ‘complains that in a certain comedy the playwright
-introduced an allusion to her person and the part played by the
-Prince<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span> of Moldavia. The play was suppressed.’ The reference may be to
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 17 of the play:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>La Foole.</i> He [<i>Daw</i>] has his boxe of instruments ...
-to draw maps of euery place, and person, where he comes.</p>
-
-<p class="p0"><i>Clerimont.</i> How, maps of persons!</p>
-
-<p class="p0"><i>La Foole.</i> Yes, sir, of Nomentack, when he was here, and
-of the Prince of <i>Moldauia</i>, and of his mistris, mistris
-<i>Epicoene</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0"><i>Clerimont.</i> Away! he has not found out her latitude, I
-hope.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Prince of Moldavia visited London in 1607 and is said to have been
-a suitor for Arabella, but if Jonson’s text is really not ‘changed
-from the simplicity of the first copy’, it is clear that Arabella
-misunderstood it, since Epicoene was Daw’s mistress.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Alchemist. 1610</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1610, Oct. 3 (Buck). ‘A Comoedy called The Alchymist made
-by Ben: Johnson.’ <i>Walter Burre</i> (Arber, iii. 445).</p>
-
-<p>1612. The Alchemist. Written by Ben Ionson. <i>Thomas Snodham for
-Walter Burre, sold by John Stepneth.</i> [Epistles to Lady Wroth,
-signed ‘Ben. Jonson’ and to the Reader; Commendatory Verses, signed
-‘George Lucy’; Argument and Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. The Alchemist. A Comœdie. Acted in the yeere 1610. By the Kings
-Maiesties Seruants. The author B. I. <i>W. Stansby.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.
-After text: ‘This Comoedie was first acted, in the yeere 1610. By the
-Kings Maiesties Servants. The principall Comœdians were, Ric. Burbadge,
-Ioh. Hemings, Ioh. Lowin, Will. Ostler, Hen. Condel, Ioh. Vnderwood,
-Alex. Cooke, Nic. Tooley, Rob. Armin, Will. Eglestone. With the
-allowance of the Master of Revells.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Scott (1811, <i>M. B. D.</i> iii), C. M. Hathaway
-(1903, <i>Yale Studies</i>, xvii), H. C. Hart (1903, <i>King’s
-Library</i>), F. E. Schelling (1903, <i>B. L.</i>), W. A. Neilson
-(1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>), G. A. Smithson (1913, <i>R. E. C.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Jonson’s date is confirmed by the references in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vi. 31
-and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 29 to the age of Dame Pliant, who is 19 and was
-born in 1591. In view of the S. R. entry, one would take the production
-to have fallen in the earlier half of the year, before the plague
-reached forty deaths, which it did from 12 July to 29 Nov. The action
-is set in plague-time, but obviously the experience of 1609 and early
-years might suggest this. Fleay, i. 375, and others following him
-argue that the action of the play is confined to one day, that this
-is fixed by <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> v. 102 to ‘the second day of the fourth week
-in the eighth month’, and that this must be 24 October. They are not
-deterred by the discrepancy of this with <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 129, which
-gives only a fifteen-days interval before ‘the second day, of the third
-weeke, in the ninth month’, i. e. on their principles 17 November.
-And they get over the S.R. entry by assuming that Jonson planned to
-stage the play on 24 October and then, finding early in October that
-the plague continued, decided to publish it at once. This seems to me
-extraordinarily thin, in the absence of clearer knowledge as to the
-system of chronology employed by Ananias of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span> Amsterdam. Aubrey, i. 213,
-says that John Dee ‘used to distill egge-shells, and ’twas from hence
-that Ben Johnson had his hint of the alkimist, whom he meant’. The play
-was given by the King’s men at Court during 1612–13.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Catiline his Conspiracy. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>1611. Catiline his Conspiracy. Written by Ben: Ionson. <i>For Walter
-Burre.</i> [Epistles to William Earl of Pembroke, and to the Reader,
-both signed ‘Ben. Jonson’; Commendatory Verses, signed ‘Franc:
-Beaumont’, ‘John Fletcher’, ‘Nat. Field’.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. Catiline his Conspiracy. A Tragoedie. Acted in the yeere 1611. By
-the Kings Maiesties Seruants. The Author B. I. <i>William Stansby.</i>
-[Part of F<sub>1</sub>. After text: ‘This Tragœdie was first Acted, in the
-yeere 1611. By the Kings Maiesties Servants. The principall Tragœdians
-were, Ric. Burbadge, Ioh. Hemings, Alex. Cooke, Hen. Condel, Ioh.
-Lowin, Ioh. Underwood, Wil. Ostler, Nic. Tooly, Ric. Robinson, Wil.
-Eglestone.’]</p>
-
-<p>1635.... ‘now Acted by his Maiesties Servants’.... <i>N. Okes for I.
-S.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by L. H. Harris (1916, <i>Yale Studies</i>,
-liii).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: A. Vogt, <i>B. J.’s Tragödie C. und ihre
-Quellen</i> (1905, <i>Halle diss.</i>).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Bartholomew Fair. 1614</i></p>
-
-<p>1631. Bartholomew Fayre: A Comedie, Acted in the Yeare, 1614. By the
-Lady Elizabeths Seruants. And then dedicated to King Iames of most
-Blessed Memorie; By the Author, Beniamin Iohnson. <i>I. B. for Robert
-Allot.</i> [Part of F<sub>2</sub>. Prologue to the King; Induction; Epilogue.
-Jonson wrote (n.d.) to the Earl of Newcastle (<i>Harl. MS.</i> 4955,
-quoted in Gifford’s memoir and by Brinsley Nicholson in <i>4 N. Q.</i>
-v. 574): ‘It is the lewd printer’s fault that I can send ... no more of
-my book. I sent you one piece before, The Fair, ... and now I send you
-this other morsel, The fine gentleman that walks the town, The Fiend;
-but before he will perfect the rest I fear he will come himself to be a
-part under the title of The Absolute Knave, which he hath played with
-me.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. S. Alden (1904, <i>Yale Studies</i>,
-xxv).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: C. R. Baskervill, <i>Some Parallels to B.
-F.</i> (1908, <i>M. P.</i> vi. 109).</p>
-
-<p>No dedication to James, other than the prologue and epilogue, appears
-to be preserved, but Aubrey, ii. 14, says that ‘King James made
-him write against the Puritans, who began to be troublesome in his
-time’. The play was given at Court on 1 Nov. 1614 (App. B), and a
-mock indenture between the author and the spectators at the Hope,
-on 31 Oct. 1614, is recited in the Induction and presumably fixes
-the date of production. One must not therefore assume that a ballad
-of <i>Rome for Company in Bartholomew Faire</i>, registered on 22
-Oct. 1614 (Arber, iii. 554), was aimed at Jonson. Greg, <i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 78, follows Malone and Fleay, i. 80, in inferring from a
-mention of a forthcoming ‘Johnsons play’ in a letter of 13 Nov. 1613
-from Daborne to Henslowe that the production may have been intended for
-1613, but I think that Daborne refers to the revival of <i>Eastward<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span>
-Ho!</i> The Induction describes the locality of the Hope as ‘being
-as durty as <i>Smithfield</i>, and as stinking euery whit’, and
-possibly glances at the <i>Winter’s Tale</i> and <i>Tempest</i> in
-disclaiming the introduction of ‘a <i>Seruant-monster</i>’ and ‘a nest
-of <i>Antiques</i>’, since the author is ‘loth to make Nature afraid in
-his <i>Playes</i>, like those that beget <i>Tales</i>, <i>Tempests</i>,
-and such like <i>Drolleries</i>’. There is no actor-list, but in
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii ‘Your best <i>Actor</i>. Your <i>Field</i>?’ is
-referred to on a level with ‘your <i>Burbage</i>’. Similarly the puppet
-Leander is said to shake his head ‘like an hostler’ and it is declared
-that ‘one <i>Taylor</i>, would goe neere to beat all this company,
-with a hand bound behinde him’. Field and Taylor were both of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men in 1614, while the allusion to Ostler of the King’s men
-is apparently satirical. The suggestion of Ordish, 225, that Taylor is
-the water poet, who had recently appeared on the Hope stage, is less
-probable. The ‘word out of the play, <i>Palemon</i>’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii)
-is set against another, <i>Argalus</i> ‘out of the <i>Arcadia</i>’, and
-might therefore, as Fleay, i. 377, thinks, refer to Daniel’s <i>Queen’s
-Arcadia</i> (1605), but the Palamon of <i>T. N. K.</i> was probably
-quite recent. I see no reason to accept Fleay’s identification of
-Littlewit with Daniel; that of Lanthorn Leatherhead with Inigo Jones
-is more plausible. Gifford suggested that the burlesque puppet-play
-of Damon and Pythias in V. iv may have been retrieved by Jonson from
-earlier work, perhaps for the real puppet-stage, since ‘Old Cole’ is a
-character, and in <i>Satiromastix</i> Horace is called ‘puppet-teacher’
-(1980) and in another passage (607) ‘olde Coale’, and told that
-Crispinus and Demetrius ‘shal be thy Damons and thou their Pithyasse’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Devil Is An Ass 1616</i></p>
-
-<p>1631. The Diuell is an Asse: A Comedie Acted in the yeare, 1616.
-By His Maiesties Seruants. The Author Ben: Ionson. <i>I. B. for
-Robert Allot.</i> [Part of F<sub>2</sub>. Prologue and Epilogue. The play is
-referred to in Jonson’s letter to the Earl of Newcastle, quoted under
-<i>Bartholomew Fair</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1641. <i>Imprinted at London.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. S. Johnson (1905, <i>Yale Studies</i>,
-xxix).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: E. Holstein, <i>Verhältnis von B. J.’s
-D. A. und John Wilson’s Belphegor zu Machiavelli’s Novelle vom
-Belfagor</i> (1901).</p>
-
-<p>In the play itself are introduced references to a performance of <i>The
-Devil</i> as a new play, to its playbill, to the Blackfriars as the
-house, and to Dick Robinson as a player of female parts (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iv. 43; vi. 31; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> viii. 64; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v. 38). Probably
-the production was towards the end rather than the beginning of 1616.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>I do not feel able to accept the view, expounded by Fleay, i. 370,
-386, and adopted by some later writers, that <i>A Tale of a Tub</i>,
-licensed by Herbert on 7 May 1633, was only a revision of one of
-Jonson’s Elizabethan plays. It appears to rest almost wholly upon
-references to a ‘queen’. These are purely dramatic, and part of an
-attempt to give the action an old-fashioned setting. The queen intended
-is not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span> Elizabeth, but Mary. There are also references to ‘last King
-Harry’s time’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii), ‘King Edward, our late liege and
-sovereign lord’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v). A character says, ‘He was King Harry’s
-doctor and my god-phere’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i). The priest is ‘Canon’ or
-‘Sir’ Hugh, and has a ‘Latin tongue’ (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vii). ‘Old John
-Heywood’ is alive (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii).</p>
-
-<p>In 1619 Jonson told Drummond (Laing, 27) ‘That the half of his
-Comedies were not in print’. The unprinted ones of course included
-<i>Bartholomew Fair</i> and <i>The Devil is an Ass</i>. He went on
-to describe ‘a pastorall intitled The May Lord’, in which he figured
-himself as Alkin. As it had a ‘first storie’, it may not have been
-dramatic. But Alkin appears in <i>The Sad Shepherd</i>, a fragment of
-a dramatic pastoral, printed in F<sub>2</sub> with a prologue in which Jonson
-describes himself as ‘He that hath feasted you these forty yeares’, and
-which therefore cannot have been written long before his death in 1637.
-This is edited by W. W. Greg (1905, <i>Materialien</i>, xi) with an
-elaborate discussion in which he arrives at the sound conclusions that
-the theory of its substantial identity with <i>The May Lord</i> must
-be rejected, and that there is no definite evidence to oppose to the
-apparent indication of its date in the prologue.</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful whether any of Jonson’s early work for Pembroke’s and
-the Admiral’s, except perhaps <i>The Case is Altered</i>, ever found
-its way into print. The record of all the following plays, except the
-first, is in Henslowe’s diary (cf. Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 288).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(<i>a</i>) <i>The Isle of Dogs.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">See s.v. Nashe.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">(<i>b</i>) On 3 Dec. 1597 he received £1 ‘vpon a boocke w<sup>ch</sup> he
-showed the plotte vnto the company w<sup>ch</sup> he promysed to dd vnto the
-company at crysmas’. It is just possible that this was <i>Dido and
-Aeneas</i>, produced by the Admiral’s on 8 Jan. 1598. But no further
-payment to Jonson is recorded, and it is more likely that <i>Dido and
-Aeneas</i> was taken over from Pembroke’s repertory; and it may be that
-Jonson had not carried out his contract before the fray with Spencer in
-Sept. 1598, and that this is the ‘Bengemens plotte’ on which Chapman
-was writing a tragedy on the following 23 Oct. The theory that it is
-the <i>Fall of Mortimer</i>, still little more than a plot when Jonson
-died, may safely be rejected (Henslowe, ii. 188, 199, 224).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(<i>c</i>) <i>Hot Anger Soon Cold.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Written with Chettle and Porter in Aug. 1598 (Henslowe, ii. 196).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(<i>d</i>) <i>Page of Plymouth.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Written with Dekker in Aug. and Sept. 1599 (Henslowe, ii. 205).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(<i>e</i>) <i>Robert the Second, King of Scots.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">A tragedy, written with Chettle, Dekker, ‘&amp; other Jentellman’ (probably
-Marston) in Sept. 1599 (Henslowe, ii. 205).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(<i>f</i>) Additions to <i>Jeronimo</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">See s.v. Kyd, <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(<i>g</i>) <i>Richard Crookback.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">For this Jonson received a sum ‘in earnest’ on 22 June 1602, but it is
-not certain that it was ever finished (Henslowe, ii, 222).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Jonson’s hand has been sought in <i>The Captain</i> of the Beaumont
-(q.v.) and Fletcher series, and the anonymous <i>Puritan</i> (cf. ch.
-xxiv).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">MASKS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mask of Blackness. 6 Jan. 1605</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Brit. Mus. Royal MS.</i> 17 B. xxxi. [‘The Twelvth
-Nights Reuells.’ Not holograph, but signed ‘Hos ego versiculos feci.
-Ben. Jonson.’ A shorter text than that of the printed descriptions, in
-present tense, as for a programme.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, April 21 (Buck). ‘The Characters of Twoo Royall
-Maskes. Invented by Ben. Johnson.’ <i>Thomas Thorpe</i> (Arber, iii.
-375).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Characters of Two royall Masques. The one of
-Blacknesse, The other of Beautie. personated By the most magnificent of
-Queenes Anne Queene of Great Britaine, &amp;c. With her honorable Ladyes,
-1605. and 1608. at Whitehall: and Inuented by Ben: Ionson. <i>For
-Thomas Thorp.</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. The Queenes Masques. The first, Of Blacknesse: Personated at the
-Court, at White-Hall, on the Twelu’th night, 1605. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in J. P. Collier, <i>Five Court Masques</i> (1848,
-<i>Sh. Soc.</i> from MS.).</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in azure and silver, were twelve nymphs, ‘negroes and
-the daughters of Niger’; the torchbearers, in sea-green, Oceaniae;
-the presenters Oceanus, Niger, and Aethiopia the Moon; the musicians
-Tritons, Sea-maids, and Echoes.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the old Elizabethan banqueting-house at Whitehall
-(Carleton; Office of Works). The curtain represented a ‘landtschap’ of
-woods with hunting scenes, ‘which falling’, according to the Quarto,
-‘an artificial sea was seen to shoot forth’. The MS. describes the
-landscape as ‘drawne uppon a downe right cloth, strayned for the scene,
-... which openinge in manner of a curtine’, the sea shoots forth. On
-the sea were the maskers in a concave shell, and the torchbearers borne
-by sea-monsters.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, on landing, presented their fans. They gave ‘their own
-single dance’, and then made ‘choice of their men’ for ‘several
-measures and corantoes’. A final dance took them back to their shell.</p>
-
-<p>This was a Queen’s mask, danced by the Queen, the Countesses of
-Bedford, Derby, and Suffolk, the Ladies Rich, Bevill, Howard of
-Effingham, Wroth, and Walsingham, Lady Elizabeth Howard, Anne Lady
-Herbert, and Susan Lady Herbert. The ‘bodily part’ was the ‘design and
-act’ of Inigo Jones.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Thomas Edmondes told Lord Shrewsbury on 5 Dec. that the mask was to
-cost the Exchequer £3,000 (Lodge, iii. 114). The same sum was stated by
-Chamberlain to Winwood on 18 Dec. to have been ‘delivered a month ago’
-(Winwood, ii. 41). Molin (<i>V. P.</i> x. 201) reported the amount on
-19 Dec. as 25,000 crowns. On 12 Dec. John Packer wrote to Winwood of
-the preparations, and after naming some of the maskers added, ‘The Lady
-of Northumberland is excused by sickness, Lady Hartford by the measles.
-Lady of Nottingham hath<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span> the polypus in her nostril, which some fear
-must be cut off. The Lady Hatton would feign have had a part, but some
-unknown reason kept her out’ (Winwood, ii. 39). The performance was
-described by Carleton to Winwood, as following the creation of Prince
-Charles as Duke of York on 6 Jan. (Winwood, ii. 44): ‘At night we had
-the Queen’s maske in the Banquetting-House, or rather her pagent. There
-was a great engine at the lower end of the room, which had motion,
-and in it were the images of sea-horses with other terrible fishes,
-which were ridden by Moors: The indecorum was, that there was all
-fish and no water. At the further end was a great shell in form of a
-skallop, wherein were four seats; on the lowest sat the Queen with my
-Lady Bedford; on the rest were placed the Ladies Suffolk, Darby, Rich,
-Effingham, Ann Herbert, Susan Herbert, Elizabeth Howard, Walsingham,
-and Bevil. Their apparell was rich, but too light and curtizan-like for
-such great ones. Instead of vizzards, their faces, and arms up to the
-elbows, were painted black, which was disguise sufficient, for they
-were hard to be known; but it became them nothing so well as their
-red and white, and you cannot imagine a more ugly sight, then a troop
-of lean-cheek’d Moors. The Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were both
-present, and sate by the King in state, at which Monsieur Beaumont
-quarrells so extreamly, that he saith the whole court is Spanish. But
-by his favour, he should fall out with none but himself, for they were
-all indifferently invited to come as private men, to a private sport;
-which he refusing, the Spanish ambassador willingly accepted, and
-being there, seeing no cause to the contrary, he put off Don Taxis,
-and took upon him El Señor Embaxadour, wherein he outstript our little
-Monsieur. He was ... taken out to dance, and footed it like a lusty old
-gallant with his country woman. He took out the Queen, and forgot not
-to kiss her hand, though there was danger it would have left a mark on
-his lips. The night’s work was concluded with a banquet in the great
-Chamber, which was so furiously assaulted, that down went table and
-tressels before one bit was touched.’ Carleton gives some additional
-information in another account, which he sent to Chamberlain on 7 Jan.
-(<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xii. 6, quoted by Sullivan, 28), as that the
-‘black faces and hands, which were painted and bare up to the elbowes,
-was a very lothsome sight’, and he was ‘sory that strangers should see
-owr court so strangely disguised’; that ‘the confusion in getting in
-was so great, that some Ladies lie by it and complain of the fury of
-the white stafes’; that ‘in the passages through the galleries they
-were shutt up in several heapes betwixt dores and there stayed till
-all was ended’; and that there were losses ‘of chaynes, jewels, purces
-and such like loose ware’. References in letters to one Benson and by
-the Earl of Errol to Cecil (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xii. 16; xix. 25)
-add nothing material. Carleton’s account of the triumph of the Spanish
-ambassador is confirmed by reports of the Venetian (<i>V. P.</i> x.
-212) and French (<i>B. M. King’s MS.</i> cxxvii, ff. 117, 127<sup>v</sup>, 177<sup>v</sup>;
-cf. Sullivan, 196–8) ambassadors. Beaumont had pleaded illness in order
-to avoid attending a mask on 27 Dec. 1604 in private, and the Court
-chose to assume<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span> that he was still ill on 6 Jan. This gave De Taxis and
-Molin an opening to get their private invitations converted into public
-ones. Beaumont lost his temper and accused Sir Lewis Lewknor and other
-officials of intriguing against him, but he had to accept his defeat.</p>
-
-<p>The Accounts of the Master of the Revels (Cunningham, 204) record
-‘The Queens Ma<sup>tis</sup> Maske of Moures with Aleven Laydies of honnour’
-as given on 6 Jan. Reyher, 358, 520, notes references to the mask in
-accounts of the Treasurer of the Chamber and of the Office of Works,
-and quotes from the latter items for ‘framinge and settinge vpp of a
-great stage in the banquettinge house xl foote square and iiij<sup>or</sup>
-foote in heighte with wheeles to goe on ... framinge and settinge vpp
-an other stage’.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the notices of the Queen’s mask also refer to another mask
-which was performed ‘among the noblemen and gentlemen’ (Lodge, iii.
-114) on 27 Dec. 1604, at the wedding of Sir Philip Herbert and Lady
-Susan Vere, daughter of the Earl of Oxford. The bride was herself a
-dancer in the Queen’s mask. The wedding mask, the subject of which
-was Juno and Hymenaeus, is unfortunately lost. The Revels Accounts
-(Cunningham, 204) tell us that it was ‘presented by the Earl of
-Pembroke, the Lord Willowbie and 6 Knightes more of the Court’, and
-Stowe’s <i>Chronicle</i>, 856, briefly records ‘braue Masks of the
-most noble ladies’. Carleton gave Winwood details of the wedding, and
-said (Winwood, ii. 43): ‘At night there was a mask in the Hall, which
-for conceit and fashion was suitable to the occasion. The actors were
-the Earle of Pembrook, the Lord Willoby, Sir Samuel [James?] Hays, Sir
-Thomas Germain, Sir Robert Cary, Sir John Lee, Sir Richard Preston,
-and Sir Thomas Bager. There was no smal loss that night of chaines
-and jewells, and many great ladies were made shorter by the skirts,
-and were well enough served that they could keep cut no better.’
-Carleton wrote to Chamberlain (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xii. 6, quoted
-by Sullivan, 25): ‘Theyre conceit was a representacion of Junoes
-temple at the lower end of the great hall, which was vawted and within
-it the maskers seated with staves of lights about them, and it was
-no ill shew. They were brought in by the fower seasons of the yeare
-and Hymeneus: which for songs and speaches was as goode as a play.
-Theyre apparel was rather costly then cumly; but theyr dancing full
-of life and variety; onely S<sup>r</sup> Tho: Germain had lead in his heales
-and sometimes forgott what he was doing.’ There was a diplomatic
-contretemps on this occasion. At the wedding dinner the Venetian
-ambassador Molin was given precedence of the Queen’s brother, the Duke
-of Holstein, to the annoyance of the latter. But after dinner Molin was
-led to a closet and forgotten there until supper was already begun.
-Meanwhile the Duke took his place. There was a personal apology from
-the King, and at the mask Molin was given a stool in the royal box to
-the right of the King, and the Duke one to the left of the Queen. He
-preferred to stand for three hours rather than make use of it (Winwood,
-ii. 43; Sullivan, 25; <i>V. P.</i> x. 206).</p>
-
-<p>Carleton wrote to Winwood (ii. 44), ‘They say the Duke of Holst will
-come upon us with an after reckoning, and that we shall see him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span> on
-Candlemas night in a mask, as he hath shewed himself a lusty reveller
-all this Christmas’. But if this mask ever took place, nothing is known
-of it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hymenaei. 5 Jan. 1606</i></p>
-
-<p>1606. Hymenaei: or The Solemnities of Masque, and Barriers,
-Magnificently performed on the eleventh, and twelfth Nights,
-from Christmas; At Court: To the auspicious celebrating of the
-Marriage-vnion, betweene Robert, Earle of Essex, and the Lady Frances,
-second Daughter to the most noble Earle of Suffolke. By Ben: Ionson.
-<i>Valentine Sims for Thomas Thorp.</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. Hymenaei, or The solemnities of Masque and Barriers at a
-Marriage. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>This was a double mask of eight men and eight women. The men, in
-carnation cloth of silver, with variously coloured mantles and watchet
-cloth of silver bases, were Humours and Affections; the women, in white
-cloth of silver, with carnation and blue undergarments, the Powers of
-Juno; the presenters Hymen, with a bride, bridegroom, and bridal train,
-Reason, and Order; the musicians the Hours.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was probably the Elizabethan banqueting-house, which seems
-to have been repaired in 1604 (Reyher, 340). ‘The scene being drawn’
-discovered first an altar for Hymen and ‘a microcosm or globe’, which
-turned and disclosed the men maskers in a ‘mine’ or ‘grot’. On either
-side of the globe stood great statues of Hercules and Atlas. They bore
-up the ‘upper part of the scene’, representing clouds, which opened to
-disclose the upper regions, whence the women descended on <i>nimbi</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Each set of maskers had a dance at entry. They then danced together a
-measure with strains ‘all notably different, some of them formed into
-letters very signifying to the name of the bridegroom’. This done,
-they ‘dissolved’ and took forth others for measures, galliards, and
-corantoes. After these ‘intermixed dances’ came ‘their last dances’,
-and they departed in a bridal procession with an epithalamion.</p>
-
-<p>The mask was in honour of the wedding of the Earl of Essex and Frances
-Howard, daughter of the Earl of Suffolk, and was probably given by
-their friends. The only Household expenses appear to have been for the
-making ready of the room (Reyher, 520), but Lady Rutland’s share seems
-to have cost the Earl over £100 (<i>Hist. MSS. Rutland Accounts</i>,
-iv. 457). The dancers were the Countesses of Montgomery, Bedford, and
-Rutland, the Ladies Knollys, Berkeley, Dorothy Hastings, and Blanch
-Somerset, and Mrs. A. Sackville, with the Earls of Montgomery and
-Arundel, Lords Willoughby and Howard de Walden, Sir James Hay, Sir
-Thomas Howard, Sir Thomas Somerset, and Sir John Ashley. The ‘design
-and act’ and the device of the costumes were by Inigo Jones, the songs
-by Alphonso Ferrabosco, and the dances by Thomas Giles.</p>
-
-<p>On the next day followed a Barriers, in which, after a dialogue by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span>
-Jonson between Truth and Opinion, sixteen knights fought on the side of
-either disputant (cf. vol. i, p. 146).</p>
-
-<p>The following account was sent by John Pory to Sir Robert Cotton on 7
-Jan. (<i>B.M. Cotton MS. Julius</i> C. iii. 301, printed in Goodman,
-ii. 124; Collier, i. 350; Birch, i. 42; Sullivan, 199):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘I haue seen both the mask on Sunday and the barriers on Mundy
-night. The Bridegroom carried himself as grauely and gracefully
-as if he were of his fathers age. He had greater guiftes giuen
-him then my lord Montgomery had, his plate being valued at
-3000£ and his jewels, mony and other guiftes at 1600£ more.
-But to returne to the maske; both Inigo, Ben, and the actors
-men and women did their partes with great commendation. The
-conceite or soule of the mask was Hymen bringing in a bride
-and Juno pronuba’s priest a bridegroom, proclaiming those two
-should be sacrificed to nuptial vnion, and here the poet made
-an apostrophe to the vnion of the kingdoms. But before the
-sacrifice could be performed, Ben Jonson turned the globe of
-the earth standing behind the altar, and within the concaue
-sate the 8 men maskers representing the 4 humours and the fower
-affections which leapt forth to disturb the sacrifice to vnion;
-but amidst their fury Reason that sate aboue them all, crowned
-with burning tapers, came down and silenced them. These eight
-together with Reason their moderatresse mounted aboue their
-heades, sate somewhat like the ladies in the scallop shell the
-last year. Aboue the globe of erth houered a middle region of
-cloudes in the center wherof stood a grand consort of musicians,
-and vpon the cantons or hornes sate the ladies 4 at one corner,
-and 4 at another, who descended vpon the stage, not after the
-stale downright perpendicular fashion, like a bucket into a
-well; but came gently sloping down. These eight, after the
-sacrifice was ended, represented the 8 nuptial powers of Juno
-pronuba who came downe to confirme the vnion. The men were clad
-in crimzon and the weomen in white. They had euery one a white
-plume of the richest herons fethers, and were so rich in jewels
-vpon their heades as was most glorious. I think they hired and
-borrowed all the principal jewels and ropes of perle both in
-court and citty. The Spanish ambassador seemed but poore to
-the meanest of them. They danced all variety of dances, both
-seuerally and promiscue; and then the women took in men as
-namely the Prince (who danced with as great perfection and as
-setled a maiesty as could be deuised) the Spanish ambassador,
-the Archdukes, Ambassador, the Duke, etc., and the men gleaned
-out the Queen, the bride, and the greatest of the ladies. The
-second night the barriers were as well performed by fifteen
-against fifteen; the Duke of Lennox being chieftain on the one
-side, and my Lord of Sussex on the other.’</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mask of Beauty. 10 Jan. 1608</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, 21 April. [See <i>Mask of Blackness</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [See <i>Mask of Blackness</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. The Second Masque. Which was of Beautie; Was presented in the
-same Court, at White-Hall, on the Sunday night after the Twelfth Night.
-1608. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.] The maskers, in orange-tawny and silver and
-green and silver, were the twelve Daughters of Niger of the Mask of
-Blackness, now laved white, with four more; the torchbearers Cupids;
-the presenters January, Boreas, Vulturnus, Thamesis; the musicians
-Echoes and Shades of old Poets.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the new banqueting-house at Whitehall. January was
-throned in midst of the house. The curtain, representing Night,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span>
-was drawn to discover the maskers on a Throne of Beauty, borne by a
-floating isle.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers gave two dances, which were repeated at the King’s request,
-and then danced ‘with the lords’. They danced galliards and corantoes.
-They then gave a third dance, and a fourth, which took them into their
-throne again.</p>
-
-<p>This was a Queen’s mask, danced by the Queen, Arabella Stuart, the
-Countesses of Arundel, Derby, Bedford, and Montgomery, and the Ladies
-Elizabeth Guildford, Katherine Petre, Anne Winter, Windsor, Anne
-Clifford, Mary Neville, Elizabeth Hatton, Elizabeth Gerard, Chichester,
-and Walsingham. The torchbearers were ‘chosen out of the best and
-ingenious youth of the Kingdom’. The scene was ‘put in act’ by the
-King’s master carpenter. Thomas Giles made the dances and played
-Thamesis.</p>
-
-<p>The mask was announced by 9 Dec. (<i>V. P.</i> xi. 74). On 10 Dec. La
-Boderie (ii. 490) reported that it would cost 6,000 or 7,000 crowns,
-and that nearly all the ladies invited by the Queen to take part in it
-were Catholics. Anne’s preparations were in swing before 17 Dec. (<i>V.
-P.</i> xi. 76). On 22 Dec. La Boderie reported (iii. 6) that he had
-underestimated the cost, which would not be less than 30,000 crowns,
-and was causing much annoyance to the Privy Council. On 31 Dec. Donne
-(<i>Letters</i>, i. 182) intended to deliver a letter ‘when the rage
-of the mask is past’. Lord Arundel notes his wife’s practising early
-in Jan. (Lodge, App. 124). The original date was 6 Jan. ‘The Mask goes
-forward for Twelfth-day’, wrote Chamberlain to Carleton on 5 Jan.
-(<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xxxi. 2; Birch, i. 69), ‘though I doubt the
-new room will be scant ready’. But on 8 Jan. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-xxxi. 4; Birch, i. 71) he wrote again:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘We had great hopes of having you here this day, and then I
-would not have given my part of the mask for any of their
-places that shall be present, for I suppose you and your lady
-would find easily passage, being so befriended; for the show is
-put off till Sunday, by reason that all things are not ready.
-Whatsoever the device may be, and what success they may have in
-their dancing, yet you would have been sure to have seen great
-riches in jewels, when one lady, and that under a baroness, is
-said to be furnished far better then a hundred thousand pounds.
-And the Lady Arabella goes beyond her; and the queen must not
-come behind.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The delay was really due to ambassadorial complications, which are
-reported by Giustinian (<i>V. P.</i> xi. 83, 86) and very fully by La
-Boderie (iii. 1–75; cf. Sullivan, 35, 201). The original intention was
-to invite the Spanish and Venetian, but not the French and Flemish
-ambassadors. This, according to Giustinian, offended La Boderie,
-because Venice was ‘the nobler company’. But the real sting lay in
-the invitation to Spain. This was represented to La Boderie about 23
-Dec. as the personal act of Anne, in the face of a remonstrance by
-James on the ground of the preference already shown to Spain in 1605.
-La Boderie replied that he had already been slighted at the King of
-Denmark’s visit, that the mask was a public occasion, and that Henri
-would certainly hold James responsible. A few days later<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span> he was told
-that James was greatly annoyed at his wife’s levity, and would ask
-him and the Venetian ambassador to dinner; but La Boderie refused to
-accept this as a compliment equivalent to seeing the Queen dance,
-and supping with the King before 10,000 persons. He urged that both
-ambassadors or neither should be invited, and hinted that, if Anne was
-so openly Spanish in her tendencies, Henri might feel obliged to leave
-the mission in charge of a secretary. An offer was made to invite La
-Boderie’s wife, but this he naturally refused. The Council tried in
-vain to make Anne hear reason, but finally let the mask proceed, and
-countered Henri diplomatically by calling his attention to the money
-debts due from France to England. Meanwhile Giustinian had pressed for
-his own invitation in place of the Flemish ambassador, and obtained it.
-The Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were therefore present. La Boderie
-reported that much attention was paid to Giustinian, and little to the
-Spanish ambassador, and also that James was so angry with Anne that he
-left for a hunting trip the next day without seeing her. Giustinian
-admired the mask, which was, James told him (<i>V. P.</i> xi. 86), ‘to
-consecrate the birth of the Great Hall, which his predecessors had
-left him built merely in wood, but which he had converted into stone’.
-Probably this is the mask described in a letter of Lady Pembroke to
-Lord Shrewsbury calendared without date among letters of 1607–8 in
-Lodge, iii, App. 121. On 28 Jan. the Spanish ambassador invited the
-fifteen ladies who had danced to dinner (Lodge, iii. 223; La Boderie,
-iii. 81). On 29 Jan. Lord Lisle wrote to the Earl of Shrewsbury
-regretting that he could not send him the verses, because Ben Jonson
-was busy writing more for the Haddington wedding (Lodge, App. 102).</p>
-
-<p>A warrant for expenses was signed 11 Dec. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-xxviii). A payment was made to Bethell (Reyher, 520).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lord Haddington’s Mask</i> [<i>The Hue and Cry after Cupid</i>].
-<i>9 Feb. 1608</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Description of the Masque. With the Nuptiall
-Songs. Celebrating the happy Marriage of Iohn, Lord Ramsey, Viscount
-Hadington, with the Lady Elizabeth Ratcliffe, Daughter to the right
-Honor: Robert, Earle of Sussex. At Court On the Shroue-Tuesday at
-night. 1608. Deuised by Ben: Ionson. [<i>No imprint.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1616. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.] The maskers were the twelve Signs of the Zodiac
-in carnation and silver; the antimaskers Cupid and twelve Joci and
-Risus, who danced ‘with their antic faces’; the presenters Venus, the
-Graces and Cupid, Hymen, Vulcan and the Cyclopes; the musicians Priests
-of Hymen, while the Cyclopes beat time with their sledges.</p>
-
-<p>Pilasters hung with amorous trophies supported gigantic figures of
-Triumph and Victory ‘in place of the arch, and holding a gyrlond of
-myrtle for the key’. The scene was a steep red cliff (Radcliffe), over
-which clouds broke for the issue of the chariot of Venus. After the
-antimasque, the cliff parted, to discover the maskers in a turning
-sphere of silver. The maskers gave four dances, interspersed with
-verses of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span> an epithalamion. The mask was given by the maskers, seven
-Scottish and five English lords and gentlemen, the Duke of Lennox,
-the Earls of Arundel, Pembroke, and Montgomery, Lords D’Aubigny, De
-Walden, Hay, and Sanquhar, the Master of Mar, Sir Robert Rich, Sir John
-Kennedy, and Mr. Erskine. (Quarto and Lodge, iii. 223.) The ‘device and
-act of the scene’ were supplied by Inigo Jones, the tunes by Alphonso
-Ferrabosco, and two dances each by Hierome Herne and Thomas Giles, who
-also beat time as Cyclopes.</p>
-
-<p>Rowland White told Lord Shrewsbury on 26 Jan. that the mask was ‘now
-the only thing thought upon at court’, and would cost the maskers about
-£300 a man (Lodge, iii. 223). Jonson was busy with the verses on 29
-Jan. (Lodge, App. 102).</p>
-
-<p>Sussex and Haddington intended to ask the French ambassador both
-to the wedding dinner and to the mask and banquet, but the Lord
-Chamberlain, having Spanish sympathies, would not consent. In the end
-he was asked by James himself to the mask and banquet, at which Prince
-Henry would preside. He accepted, and suggested that Henri should
-present Haddington with a ring, but this was not done. He thought the
-mask ‘assez maigre’, but Anne was very gracious, and James regretted
-that etiquette did not allow him to sit at the banquet in person. La
-Boderie’s wife and daughter, who danced with the Duke of York, were
-also present. Unfortunately he did not receive in time an instruction
-from Paris to keep away if the Flemish ambassador was asked, and did
-not protest against this invitation on his own responsibility, partly
-out of annoyance with the Venetian for attending the Queen’s mask
-without him, and partly for fear of losing his own invitation. The
-Fleming had had far less consideration than himself (La Boderie, iii.
-75–144). So both the French and the Flemish ambassador were present,
-with two princes of Saxony (<i>V. P.</i> xi. 97).</p>
-
-<p>English criticisms were more kindly than La Boderie’s. Sir Henry
-Saville described it to Sir Richard Beaumont on the same night as a
-‘singular brave mask’, at which he had been until three in the morning
-(<i>Beaumont Papers</i>, 17), and Chamberlain wrote to Carleton on 11
-Feb. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xxxi. 26; Birch, i. 72): ‘I can send you
-no perfect relation of the marriage nor mask on Tuesday, only they say
-all, but especially the motions, were well performed; as Venus, with
-her chariot drawn by swans, coming in a cloud to seek her son; who
-with his companions, Lusus, Risus, and Janus [? Jocus], and four or
-five more wags, were dancing a matachina, and acted it very antiquely,
-before the twelve signs, who were the master maskers, descended from
-the zodiac, and played their parts more gravely, being very gracefully
-attired.’</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mask of Queens. 2 Feb. 1609</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] (a) <i>B.M. Harl. MS.</i> 6947, f. 143 (printed Reyher,
-506). [Apparently a short descriptive analysis or programme, without
-the words of the dialogue and songs.]</p>
-
-<p>(b) <i>B.M. Royal MS.</i> 18 A. xlv. [Holograph. Epistle to Prince
-Henry.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1609, Feb. 22 (Segar). ‘A booke called, The maske of
-Queenes Celebrated, done by Beniamin Johnson.’ <i>Richard Bonion and
-Henry Walley</i> (Arber, iii. 402).</p>
-
-<p>1609. The Masque of Queenes Celebrated From the House of Fame: By the
-most absolute in all State, And Titles. Anne, Queene of Great Britaine,
-&amp;c. With her Honourable Ladies. At White-Hall, Febr. 2. 1609. Written
-by Ben: Ionson. <i>N. Okes for R. Bonian and H. Wally.</i> [Epistle to
-Prince Henry.]</p>
-
-<p>1616. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in J. P. Collier, <i>Five Court Masques</i> (1848,
-<i>Sh. Soc.</i> from <i>Royal MS.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Jonson prefaces that ‘because Her Majesty (best knowing that a
-principal part of life in these spectacles lay in their variety) had
-commanded me to think on some dance, or shew, that might precede
-hers, and have the place of a foil, or false masque: I was careful
-to decline, not only from others, but mine own steps in that kind,
-since the last year, I had an antimasque of boys; and therefore now
-devised that twelve women, in the habit of hags or witches, sustaining
-the persons of Ignorance, Suspicion, Credulity, &amp;c., the opposites to
-good Fame, should fill that part, not as a masque, but as a spectacle
-of strangeness’ [it is called a ‘maske’ in the programme] ‘producing
-multiplicity of gesture, and not unaptly sorting with the current and
-whole fall of the device’.</p>
-
-<p>The maskers, in various habits, eight designs for which are in <i>Sh.
-England</i>, ii. 311, were Bel-Anna and eleven other Queens, who were
-attended by torchbearers; the antimaskers eleven Hags and their dame
-Ate; the presenters Perseus or Heroic Virtue and Fame.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was the new banqueting-house at Whitehall (<i>T. of C.
-Acct.</i>, quoted by Sullivan, 54). The scene at first represented a
-Hell, whence the antimask issued. In the middle of a ‘magical dance’
-it vanished at a blast of music, ‘and the whole face of the scene
-altered’, becoming the House of Fame, a ‘<i>machina versatilis</i>’,
-which showed first Perseus and the maskers and then Fame. Descending,
-the maskers made their entry in three chariots, to which the Hags were
-bound. They danced their first and second dances; then ‘took out the
-men, and danced the measures’ for nearly an hour. After an interval for
-a song, came their third dance, ‘graphically disposed into letters,
-and honouring the name of the most sweet and ingenious Prince, Charles
-Duke of York’. Galliards and corantoes followed, and after their ‘last
-dance’ they returned in their chariots to the House of Fame.</p>
-
-<p>This was a Queen’s mask, danced by the Queen, the Countesses of
-Arundel, Derby, Huntingdon, Bedford, Essex, and Montgomery, the
-Viscountess Cranborne, and the Ladies Elizabeth Guildford, Anne Winter,
-Windsor, and Anne Clifford. Inigo Jones was responsible for the attire
-of the Hags, and ‘the invention and architecture of the whole scene and
-machine’; Alphonso Ferrabosco for the airs of the songs; Thomas Giles
-for the third dance, and Hierome Herne for the dance of Hags. John
-Allen, ‘her Majesty’s servant’, sang a ditty between the measures and
-the third dance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span></p>
-
-<p>As early as 14 Nov. Donne wrote to Sir Henry Goodyere (<i>Letters</i>,
-i. 199), ‘The King ... hath left with the Queen a commandment to
-meditate upon a masque for Christmas, so that they grow serious about
-that already’. The performance was originally intended for 6 Jan.
-(<i>V. P.</i> xi. 219), but on 10 Jan. Chamberlain wrote to Carleton
-(Birch, i. 87), ‘The mask at court is put off till Candlemas, as it
-is thought the Spaniard may be gone, for the French ambassador hath
-been so long and so much neglected, that it is doubted more would
-not be well endured’. The intrigues which determined this delay are
-described in the diplomatic correspondence of the French and Venetian
-ambassadors (La Boderie, iv. 104, 123, 136, 145, 175, 228; <i>V.
-P.</i> xi. 212, 219, 222, 231, 234; cf. Sullivan, 47, 212). Hints of a
-<i>rapprochement</i> between France and Spain had made James anxious
-to conciliate Henri IV. Even Anne had learnt discretion, and desired
-that La Boderie should be present at the mask. He was advised by
-Salisbury to ask for an invitation, which he did, through his wife and
-Lady Bedford. He had instructions from Henri to retire from Court and
-leave a secretary in charge if his master’s dignity was compromised.
-Unfortunately the Spanish ambassador leiger was reinforced by an
-ambassador extraordinary, Don Fernandez de Girone, and took advantage
-of this to press on his side for an invitation. Etiquette gave a
-precedence to ambassadors extraordinary, and all that could be done
-was to wait until Don Fernandez was gone. This was not until 1 Feb. La
-Boderie was at the mask, and treated with much courtesy. He excused
-himself from dancing, but the Duke of York took out his daughter,
-and he supped with the King and the princes. He found the mask ‘fort
-riche, et s’il m’est loisible de le dire, plus superbe qu’ingenieux’.
-He also thought that of the ‘intermédes’ there were ‘trop et d’assez
-tristes’. The Spanish influence, however, was sufficiently strong, when
-exercised on behalf of Flanders, to disappoint the Venetian ambassador
-of a promised invitation, and La Boderie was the only diplomatic
-representative present. Anne asked Correr to come privately, but this
-he would not do, and she said she should trouble herself no more about
-masks.</p>
-
-<p>It was at first intended to limit the cost of the mask to £1,000, but
-on 27 Nov. Sir Thomas Lake wrote to Salisbury that the King would allow
-a ‘reasonable encrease’ upon this, and had agreed that certain lords
-should sign and allow bills for the charges (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-xxxvii. 96, printed and misdated 1607 in Sullivan, 201). This duty
-was apparently assigned to Lord Suffolk as Lord Chamberlain and Lord
-Worcester as Master of the Horse, in whose names a warrant was issued
-on 1 Dec. (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xxxviii. 1). The financial documents
-cited by Reyher, 520, suggest that the actual payments passed through
-the hands of Inigo Jones and Henry Reynolds. Reyher, 72, reckons the
-total cost at near £5,000. This seems very high. A contemporary writer,
-W. Ffarrington (<i>Chetham Soc.</i> xxxix. 151), gives the estimate of
-‘them that had a hand in the business as “at the leaste two thousand
-pounde”’.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Oberon, the Faery Prince. 1 Jan. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. Oberon the Faery Prince. A Masque of Prince Henries. <i>W.
-Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers were Oberon and his Knights, accompanied by the Faies,
-‘some bearing lights’; the antimaskers Satyrs; the presenters Sylvans;
-some of the musicians Satyrs and Faies.</p>
-
-<p>This was ‘a very stately maske ... in the beautifull roome at
-Whitehall, which roome is generally called the Banquetting-house;
-and the King new builded it about foure yeeres past’ (Stowe,
-<i>Annales</i>, 910). ‘The first face of the scene’ was a cliff, from
-which the antimask issued. The scene opened to discover the front of a
-palace, and this again, after ‘an antick dance’ ended by the crowing
-of the cock, to disclose ‘the nation of Faies’, with the maskers on
-‘sieges’ and Oberon in a chariot drawn by two white bears. ‘The lesser
-Faies’ danced; then came a first and second ‘masque-dance’, then
-‘measures, corantos, galliards, etc.’, and finally a ‘last dance into
-the work’.</p>
-
-<p>This was a Prince’s mask, and clearly Henry was Oberon, but the names
-of the other maskers are not preserved.</p>
-
-<p>Henry’s preparation for a mask is mentioned on 15 Nov. by Correr,
-who reports that he would have liked it to be on horseback, if James
-had consented (<i>V. P.</i> xii. 79), on 3 Dec. by Thomas Screven
-(<i>Rutland MSS.</i> iv. 211), ‘The Prince is com to St. James and
-prepareth for a mask’, and on 15 Dec. by John More (Winwood, iii. 239),
-‘Yet doth the Prince make but one mask’.</p>
-
-<p>The diplomatic tendency at this time was to detach France from growing
-relations from Spain, and it was intended that both the masks of the
-winter 1610–11 should serve to entertain the Marshal de Laverdin,
-expected as ambassador extraordinary from Paris for the signature of a
-treaty. But the Regent Marie de Médicis was not anxious to emphasize
-the occasion, and the Marshal did not arrive in time for the Prince’s
-mask, which took place on 1 Jan. ‘It looked’, says Correr, ‘as though
-he did not understand the honour done him by the King and the Prince.’
-The Spanish and Venetian ambassadors were therefore invited, and were
-present. The Dutch ambassador was invited, but professed illness, to
-avoid complications with the Spaniard. Correr found the mask ‘very
-beautiful throughout, very decorative, but most remarkable for the
-grace of the Prince’s every movement’ (<i>Rutland MSS.</i> i. 426;
-<i>V. P.</i> xii. 101, 106; cf. Sullivan, 61).</p>
-
-<p>None of the above notices in fact identify Henry’s mask of 1 Jan.
-1611 with the undated <i>Oberon</i>, but proof is forthcoming from
-an Exchequer payment of May 1611 for ‘the late Princes barriers and
-masks’ (text in Reyher, 511) which specifies ‘the Satires and faeries’.
-The amount was £247 9<i>s.</i>, and the items include payments to
-composers, musicians, and players. We learn that [Robert] Johnson
-and [Thomas] Giles provided the dances, and Alphonse [Ferrabosco]
-singers and lutenists, that the violins were Thomas Lupo the elder,
-Alexander Chisan, and Rowland Rubidge, and that ‘xiij<sup>n</sup> Holt boyes’
-were employed, presumably as fays. There is a sum of £15 for ‘players<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span>
-imployed in the maske’ and £15 more for ‘players imployed in the
-barriers’, about which barriers no more is known. This account,
-subscribed by Sir Thomas Chaloner, by no means exhausts the expense
-of the mask. Other financial documents (Devon, 131, 134, 136; cf.
-Reyher, 521) show payments of £40 each to Jonson and Inigo Jones, and
-£20 each to Ferrabosco, Jerome Herne, and Confess. These were from the
-Exchequer. An additional £16 to Inigo Jones ‘devyser for the saide
-maske’ fell upon Henry’s privy purse, together with heavy bills to
-mercers and other tradesmen, amounting to £1,076 6<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i>
-(Cunningham, viii, from <i>Audit Office Declared Accts.</i>). Correr
-had reported on 22 Nov. that neither of the masks of this winter was
-to ‘be so costly as last year’s, which to say sooth was excessively
-costly’ (<i>V. P.</i> xii. 86). The anticipation can hardly have
-been fulfilled. I suppose that ‘last year’s’ means the <i>Tethys’
-Festival</i> of June 1610, as no mask during the winter of 1609–10 is
-traceable.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Love Freed from Ignorance and Folly. 3 Feb. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. A Masque of her Maiesties. Love freed from Ignorance and Folly.
-<i>W. Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers were eleven Daughters of the Morn, led by the Queen of the
-Orient; the antimaskers twelve Follies or She-Fools; the presenters
-Cupid and Ignorance, a Sphinx; the musicians twelve Priests of the
-Muses, who also danced a measure, and three Graces, with others.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was probably the banqueting-hall. The scene is not
-described. There were two ‘masque-dances’, with ‘measures and revels’
-between them. This was a Queen’s mask, but the names of the maskers are
-not preserved.</p>
-
-<p>John More wrote on 15 Dec. (Winwood, iii. 239), ‘Yet doth the Prince
-make but one mask, and the Queen but two, which doth cost her majesty
-but £600.’ Perhaps the writer was mistaken. Anne had not given more
-than one mask in any winter, nor is there any trace of a second in
-that of 1610–11. Correr, on 22 Nov., anticipates one only, not to be
-so costly as last year’s. It was to precede the Prince’s. It was,
-however, put off to Twelfth Night, and then again to Candlemas, ‘either
-because the stage machinery is not in order, or because their Majesties
-thought it well to let the Marshal depart first’. This was Marshal de
-Laverdin, whose departure from France as ambassador extraordinary was
-delayed (cf. <i>Mask of Oberon</i>). He was present at the mask when it
-actually took place on 3 Feb., the day after Candlemas. Apparently the
-Venetian ambassador was also invited. (<i>V. P.</i> xii. 86, 101, 106,
-110, 115.)</p>
-
-<p>Several financial documents bearing on the mask exist (<i>S. P. D.
-Jac. I</i>, lvii, Nov.; Devon, 135; Reyher, 509, 521), and show that
-the contemplated £600 was in fact exceeded. An account signed by the
-Earls of Suffolk and Worcester, to whom the oversight of the charges
-was doubtless assigned as Household officers, shows that in addition
-to £600 14<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> spent in defraying the bills of Inigo
-Jones and others and in rewards, there was a further expenditure of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span>
-£118 7<i>s.</i> by the Wardrobe, and even then no items are included
-for the dresses of the main maskers, which were probably paid for
-by the wearers. The rewards include £2 each to five boys who played
-the Graces, Sphinx, and Cupid, and £1 each to the twelve Fools. This
-enables us to identify Jonson’s undated mask with that of 1611. Ben
-Jonson and Inigo Jones had £40 each; Alphonso [Ferrabosco] £20 for the
-songs; [Robert] Johnson and Thomas Lupo £5 each for setting the songs
-to lutes and setting the dances to violins, and Confess and Bochan £50
-and £20 for teaching the dances.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Love Restored. 6 Jan. 1612</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. Love Restored, In a Masque at Court, by Gentlemen the Kings
-Seruants. <i>W. Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers were the ten Ornaments of Court&mdash;Honour, Courtesy, Valour,
-Urbanity, Confidence, Alacrity, Promptness, Industry, Hability,
-Reality; the presenters Masquerado, Plutus, Robin Goodfellow, and
-Cupid, who entered in a chariot attended by the maskers. There were
-three dances. Jonson’s description is exceptionally meagre.</p>
-
-<p>The dialogue finds its humour in the details of mask-presentation
-themselves. Masquerado, in his vizard, apologizes for the absence of
-musicians and the hoarseness of ‘the rogue play-boy, that acts Cupid’.
-Plutus criticizes the expense and the corruption of manners involved in
-masks. Robin Goodfellow narrates his difficulties in obtaining access.
-He has tried in vain to get through the Woodyard on to the Terrace, but
-the Guard pushed him off a ladder into the Verge. The Carpenters’ way
-also failed him. He has offered, or thought of offering, himself as an
-‘enginer’ belonging to the ‘motions’, but they were ‘ceased’; as an
-old tire-woman; as a musician; as a feather-maker of Blackfriars; as a
-‘bombard man’, carrying ‘bouge’ to country ladies who had fasted for
-the fine sight since seven in the morning; as a citizen’s wife, exposed
-to the liberties of the ‘black-guard’; as a wireman or a chandler; and
-finally in his own shape as ‘part of the Device’.</p>
-
-<p>There are several financial documents relating to a mask at Christmas
-1611, for which funds were issued to one Meredith Morgan (<i>S. P. D.
-Jac. I</i>, lxvii, Dec.; lxviii, Jan.; Reyher, 521). The Revels Account
-(Cunningham, 211) records a ‘princes Mask performed by Gentelmen of
-his High [&emsp;&emsp;]’ on 6 Jan. 1612. According to Chamberlain, the
-Queen was at Greenwich ‘practising for a new mask’ on 20 Nov., but this
-was put off in December as ‘unseasonable’ so soon after the death of
-the Queen of Spain (Birch, i. 148, 152). Jonson does not date <i>Love
-Restored</i>, but Dr. Brotanek has successfully assigned it to 1611–12
-on the ground of its reference to ‘the Christmas cut-purse’, of whom
-Chamberlain wrote to Carleton on 31 Dec. 1611 that ‘a cut-purse,
-taken in the Chapel Royal, will be executed’ (Brotanek, 347; cf.
-<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxvii. 117, and <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>
-(1614), <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v. 132). This was one John Selman, executed
-on 7 Jan. 1612 for picking the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span> pocket of Leonard Barry, servant to
-Lord Harington, on Christmas Day (Rye, 269). I may add that Robin
-Goodfellow, when pretending to be concerned with the motions, was asked
-if he were ‘the fighting bear of last year’, and that the chariot of
-Oberon on 1 Jan. 1611 was drawn by white bears. There is, of course,
-nothing inconsistent in a Prince’s mask being performed by King’s
-servants, and the ‘High[ness]’ of the Revels Account may mean James,
-just as well as Henry. Simpson (<i>E. M.</i> 1. xxxiv) puts <i>Love
-Restored</i> in 1613–14, as connected with the tilt (cf. p. 393), but
-there is no room for it (cf. p. 246).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Irish Mask. 29 Dec. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. The Irish Masque at Court, by Gentlemen the Kings Servants. <i>W.
-Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers were twelve Irish Gentlemen, first in mantles, then
-without; the antimaskers their twelve Footmen; the presenters a Citizen
-and a Gentleman; one of the musicians an Irish bard. The Footmen dance
-‘to the bag-pipe and other rude music’, after which the Gentlemen
-‘dance forth’ twice.</p>
-
-<p>The antimaskers say that their lords have come to the bridal of ‘ty
-man Robyne’ to the daughter of ‘Toumaish o’ Shuffolke’, who has
-knocked them on the pate with his ‘phoyt stick’, as they came by.
-There are also compliments to ‘King Yamish’, ‘my Mistresh tere’, ‘my
-little Maishter’, and ‘te vfrow, ty daughter, tat is in Tuchland’. It
-is therefore easy to supply the date which Jonson omits, as the mask
-clearly belongs to the series presented in honour of the wedding of
-Robert Earl of Somerset with the Earl of Suffolk’s daughter during
-the Christmas of 1613–14. The list in Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 928 (cf.
-s.v. Campion), includes one on 29 Dec. by ‘the Prince’s Gentlemen,
-which pleased the King so well that hee caused them to performe it
-againe uppon the Monday following’. This was 3 Jan.; the 10 Jan. in
-Nichols, ii. 718, is a misreading of the evidence in Chamberlain’s
-letters, which identify the mask as Jonson’s by a notice of the Irish
-element. On 30 Dec. Chamberlain wrote to Alice Carleton (Birch, i.
-285), ‘yesternight there was a medley mask of five English and five
-Scots, which are called the high dancers, amongst whom Sergeant Boyd,
-one Abercrombie, and Auchternouty, that was at Padua and Venice, are
-esteemed the most principal and lofty, but how it succeeded I know
-not’. Later in the letter he added, probably in reference to this and
-not Campion’s mask, ‘Sir William Bowyer hath lost his eldest son, Sir
-Henry. He was a fine dancer, and should have been of the masque, but
-overheating himself with practising, he fell into the smallpox and
-died.’ On 5 Jan. he wrote to Dudley Carleton (Birch, i. 287), ‘The&mdash;&mdash;
-maskers were so well liked at court the last week that they were
-appointed to perform again on Monday: yet their device, which was a
-mimical imitation of the Irish, was not pleasing to many, who think it
-no time, as the case stands, to exasperate that nation, by making it
-ridiculous’. On the finance cf. s.v. Campion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mercury Vindicated from the Alchemists. 6 Jan. 1615</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. Mercury Vindicated from the Alchemists at Court by Gentlemen the
-Kings Seruants. <i>W. Stansby, sold by Richard Meighen.</i> [Part of
-F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers were twelve Sons of Nature; the first antimaskers
-Alchemists, the second Imperfect Creatures, in helms of limbecs; the
-presenters Vulcan, Cyclops, Mercury, Nature, and Prometheus, with a
-chorus of musicians.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was doubtless Whitehall. The scene first discovered was
-a laboratory. After the antimasks it changed to a bower, whence the
-maskers descended for ‘the first dance’, ‘the main dance’, and, after
-dancing with the ladies, ‘their last dance’. Donne (<i>Letters</i>,
-ii. 65) wrote to Sir Henry Goodyere on 13 Dec. [1614], ‘They are
-preparing for a masque of gentlemen, in which M<sup>r</sup>. Villiers is and M<sup>r</sup>.
-Karre whom I told you before my Lord Chamberlain had brought into the
-bedchamber’. On 18 Dec. [1614] (ii. 66) he adds, ‘M<sup>r</sup>. Villiers ...
-is here, practising for the masque’. The year-dates can be supplied
-by comparison with Chamberlain’s letters to Carleton. On 1 Dec. 1614
-(<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxviii. 65) Chamberlain wrote, ‘And yet for
-all this penurious world we speake of a maske this Christmas toward
-which the King gives 1500£ the principall motiue wherof is thought to
-be the gracing of younge Villers and to bring him on the stage’. It
-should be borne in mind that there was at this time an intrigue amongst
-the Court party opposed to Somerset and the Howards, including Donne’s
-patroness Lady Bedford, to put forward George Villiers, afterwards Duke
-of Buckingham, as a rival to the Earl of Somerset in the good graces
-of James I. On 5 Jan. Chamberlain wrote again (<i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-lxxx. 1; Birch, i. 290, but there misdated), ‘Tomorrow night there
-is a mask at court, but the common voice and preparations promise so
-little, that it breeds no great expectation’; and on 12 Jan. (<i>S. P.
-D.</i> lxxx. 4; Birch, i. 356), ‘The only matter I can advertise ...
-is the success of the mask on Twelfth Night, which was so well liked
-and applauded, that the King had it represented again the Sunday night
-after [8 Jan.] in the very same manner, though neither in device nor
-show was there anything extraordinary, but only excellent dancing;
-the choice being made of the best, both English and Scots’. He then
-describes an ambassadorial incident, which is also detailed in a report
-by Foscarini (<i>V. P.</i> xiii. 317) and by Finett, 19 (cf. Sullivan,
-95). The Spanish ambassador refused to appear in public with the Dutch
-ambassador, although it was shown that his predecessor had already done
-so, and in the end both withdrew. The Venetian ambassador and Tuscan
-agent were alone present. An invitation to the French ambassador does
-not appear to have been in question.</p>
-
-<p>Financial documents (Reyher, 523; <i>S. P. D.</i> lxxx, Mar.) show that
-one Walter James received Exchequer funds for the mask.</p>
-
-<p>I am not quite sure that Brotanek, 351, is right in identifying
-<i>Mercury Vindicated</i> with the mask of January 1615 and <i>The
-Golden Age Restored</i> with that of January 1616, but the evidence is
-so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span> inconclusive that it is not worth while to disturb his chronology.
-<i>Mercury Vindicated</i> is not dated in the Folio, but it is printed
-next before <i>The Golden Age Restored</i>, which is dated ‘1615’.
-Now it is true that the order of the Folio, as Brotanek points out,
-appears to be chronological; but it is also true that, at any rate for
-the masks, the year-dates, by a practice characteristic of Jonson,
-follow Circumcision and not Annunciation style. One or other principle
-seems to have been disregarded at the end of the Folio, and who shall
-say which? Brotanek attempts to support his arrangement by tracing
-topical allusions (<i>a</i>) in <i>Mercury Vindicated</i> to Court
-‘brabbles’ of 1614–15, (<i>b</i>) in <i>The Golden Age Restored</i>
-to the Somerset <i>esclandre</i>. But there are always ‘brabbles’ in
-courts, and I can find no references to Somerset at all. Nor is it in
-the least likely that there would be any. <i>Per contra</i>, I may
-note that Chamberlain’s description of the ‘device’ in 1615 as not
-‘extraordinary’ applies better to <i>The Golden Age Restored</i> than
-to <i>Mercury Vindicated</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Golden Age Restored. 1 Jan. 1616</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. The Golden Age Restor’d. In a Maske at Court, 1615. by the Lords,
-and Gentlemen, the Kings Seruants. <i>W. Stansby, sold by Richard
-Meighen.</i> [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>The maskers were Sons of Phoebus, Chaucer, Gower, Lydgate, Spenser, and
-presumably others; the antimaskers twelve Evils; the presenters Pallas,
-Astraea, the Iron Age, and the Golden Age, with a chorus of musicians.</p>
-
-<p>The locality was doubtless Whitehall. Pallas descended, and the Evils
-came from a cave, danced to ‘two drums, trumpets, and a confusion of
-martial music’, and were turned to statues. The scene changed, and
-later the scene of light was discovered. After ‘the first dance’ and
-‘the main dance’, the maskers danced with the ladies, and then danced
-‘the galliards and corantos’.</p>
-
-<p>Finett, 31 (cf. Sullivan, 237), tells us that ‘The King being desirous
-that the French, Venetian, and Savoyard ambassadors should all be
-invited to a maske at court prepared for New-years night, an exception
-comming from the French, was a cause of deferring their invitation
-till Twelfe night, when the Maske was to be re-acted, ... [They] were
-received at eight of the clock, the houre assigned (no supper being
-prepared for them, as at other times, to avoid the trouble incident)
-and were conducted to the privy gallery by the Lord Chamberlaine and
-the Lord Danvers appointed (an honour more than had been formerly
-done to Ambassadors Ordinary) to accompany them, the Master of the
-Ceremonies being also present. They were all there placed at the maske
-on the Kings right hand (not right out, but byas forward) first and
-next to the King the French, next him the Venetian, and next him the
-Savoyard. At his Majesties left hand sate the Queen, and next her the
-Prince. The maske being ended, they followed his Majesty to a banquet
-in the presence, and returned by the way they entered: the followers
-of the French were placed in a seate reserved for them above over
-the Kings right hand; the others in one on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span> left. The Spanish
-ambassadors son, and the agent of the Arch-Duke (who invited himselfe)
-were bestowed on the forme where the Lords sit, next beneath the
-Barons, English, Scotish, and Irish as the sonns of the Ambassador of
-Venice, and of Savoy had been placed the maske night before, but were
-this night placed with their countreymen in the gallery mentioned.’</p>
-
-<p>Financial documents (Reyher, 523; <i>S. P. D.</i> lxxxix. 104) show
-Exchequer payments for the mask to Edmund Sadler and perhaps Meredith
-Morgan.</p>
-
-<p>On the identification of the mask of 1 and 6 Jan. 1616 with <i>The
-Golden Age Restored</i>, s.v. <i>Mercury Vindicated</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Althorp Entertainment</i> [<i>The Satyr</i>]. <i>1603</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, March 19. [See <i>Coronation Entertainment</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1604. A particular Entertainment of the Queene and Prince their
-Highnesse to Althrope, at the Right Honourable the Lord Spencers,
-on Saterday being the 25. of Iune 1603. as they come first into
-the Kingdome; being written by the same Author [B. Jon:], and not
-before published. <i>V.S. for Edward Blount.</i> [Appended to the
-<i>Coronation Entertainment</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> and by Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), i.
-176.</p>
-
-<p>The host, Sir Robert Spencer, of Althorp, Northants, was created Lord
-Spencer of Wormleighton on 21 July 1603. On arrival (25 June) the Queen
-and Prince were met in the park by a Satyr, Queen Mab, and a bevy of
-Fairies, who after a dialogue and song, introduced Spencer’s son John,
-as a huntsman, to Henry; and a hunt followed. On Monday afternoon (27
-June) came Nobody with a speech to introduce ‘a morris of the clowns
-thereabout’, but this and a parting speech by a youth could not be
-heard for the throng.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Coronation Entertainment. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, March 19 (Pasfield). ‘A Parte of the Kinges
-Maiesties ... Entertainement ... done by Beniamin Johnson.’ <i>Edward
-Blunt</i> (Arber, iii. 254).</p>
-
-<p>1604. B. Jon: his part of King James his Royall and Magnificent
-Entertainement through his Honorable Cittie of London, Thurseday
-the 15. of March, 1603. So much as was presented in the first and
-last of their Triumphall Arch’s. With his speach made to the last
-Presentation, in the Strand, erected by the inhabitants of the Dutchy,
-and Westminster. Also, a briefe Panegyre of his Maiesties first and
-well auspicated entrance to his high Court of Parliament, on Monday,
-the 19. of the same Moneth. With other Additions. <i>V.S. for Edward
-Blount.</i> [This also includes the <i>Althorp Entertainment</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> of Jonson, and by Nichols, <i>James</i>
-(1828), i. 377.</p>
-
-<p>For other descriptions of the triumph and Jonson’s speeches cf. ch.
-xxiv, C.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Highgate Entertainment</i> [<i>The Penates</i>]. <i>1604</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. [Head-title] A Priuate Entertainment of the King and Queene,
-on May Day in the Morning, At Sir William Cornwalleis his house, at
-Highgate. 1604. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> and by Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), i.
-431.</p>
-
-<p>The host was Sir William Cornwallis, son of Sir Thomas, of Brome Hall,
-Suffolk. On arrival, in the morning (1 May), the King and Queen were
-received by the Penates, and led through the house into the garden,
-for speeches by Mercury and Maia, and a song by Aurora, Zephyrus, and
-Flora. In the afternoon was a dialogue in the garden by Mercury and
-Pan, who served wine from a fountain.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Entertainment of King of Denmark. 1606</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. [Head-title] The entertainment of the two Kings of Great
-Brittaine and Denmarke at Theobalds, Iuly 24, 1606. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> and by Nichols, <i>James</i>, ii. 70.</p>
-
-<p>This consists only of short speeches by the three Hours to James
-(in English) and Christian (in Latin) on their entry into the Inner
-Court at Lord Salisbury’s house of Theobalds, Herts. (24 July), and
-some Latin inscriptions and epigrams hung on the walls. But the visit
-lasted until 28 July, and further details are given, not only in the
-well-known letter of Sir John Harington (cf. ch. vi) but also in <i>The
-King of Denmarkes Welcome</i> (1606; cf. ch. xxiv), whose author, while
-omitting to describe ‘manie verie learned, delicate and significant
-showes and deuises’, because ‘there is no doubt but the author thereof
-who hath his place equall with the best in those Artes, will himselfe
-at his leasurable howers publish it in the best perfection’, gives a
-Song of Welcome, sung under an artificial oak of silk at the gates.
-Probably this was not Jonson’s, as he did not print it. Bond, i. 505,
-is hardly justified in reprinting it as Lyly’s.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Theobalds Entertainment. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. An Entertainment of King Iames and Queene Anne, at Theobalds,
-When the House was deliuered vp, with the posession, to the Queene, by
-the Earle of Salisburie, 22. of May, 1607. The Prince Ianvile, brother
-to the Duke of Guise, being then present. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> and by Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828),
-ii. 128.</p>
-
-<p>The Genius of the house mourns the departure of his master, but is
-consoled by Mercury, Good Event, and the three Parcae, and yields the
-keys to Anne. The performance took place in a gallery, known later as
-the green gallery, 109 feet long by 12 wide. Boderie, ii. 253, notes
-the ‘espéce de comedie’, and the presence of Prince de Joinville.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Prince Henry’s Barriers. 6 Jan. 1610</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. The Speeches at Prince Henries Barriers. [Part of F<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> and by Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828),
-ii. 271.</p>
-
-<p>The barriers had a spectacular setting. The Lady of the Lake is
-‘discovered’ and points to her lake and Merlin’s tomb. Arthur is
-‘discovered as a star above’. Merlin rises from his tomb. Their
-speeches lament the decay of chivalry, and foretell its restoration,
-now that James ‘claims Arthur’s seat’, through a knight, for whom
-Arthur gives the Lady a shield. The Knight, ‘Meliadus, lord of the
-isles’, is then ‘discovered’ with his six assistants in a place
-inscribed ‘St. George’s Portico’. Merlin tells the tale of English
-history. Chivalry comes forth from a cave, and the barriers take place,
-after which Merlin pays final compliments to the King and Queen, Henry,
-Charles, and Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>Jonson does not date the piece, but it stands in F<sub>1</sub> between the
-<i>Masque of Queens</i> (2 Feb. 1609) and <i>Oberon</i> (1 Jan. 1611),
-and this, with the use of the name Meliadus, enables us to attach
-it to the barriers of 6 Jan. 1610, of which there is ample record
-(Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 574; Cornwallis, <i>Life of Henry</i>, 12;
-Birch, i. 102; Winwood, iii. 117; <i>V. P.</i> xi. 400, 403, 406, 410,
-414). It was Henry’s first public appearance in arms, and he had some
-difficulty in obtaining the King’s consent, but His Majesty did not
-wish to cross him. The challenge, speeches for which are summarized by
-Cornwallis, was on 31 Dec. in the presence-chamber, and until 6 Jan.
-Henry kept open table at St. James’s at a cost of £100 a day. With
-him as challengers were the Duke of Lennox, the Earls of Arundel and
-Southampton, Lord Hay, Sir Thomas Somerset, and Sir Richard Preston.
-There were fifty-eight defendants, of whom prizes were adjudged to the
-Earl of Montgomery, Thomas Darcy, and Sir Robert Gordon. Each bout
-consisted of two pushes with the pike and twelve sword-strokes, and
-the young prince gave or received that night thirty-two pushes and
-about 360 strokes. Drummond of Hawthornden, who called his elegy on
-Henry <i>Tears on the Death of Moeliades</i>, explains the name as an
-anagram, <i>Miles a Deo</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Challenge at Tilt. 1 Jan. 1614</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. A Challenge at Tilt, at a Marriage. [Part of F<sub>1</sub> where it
-follows upon the mask <i>Love Restored</i> (q.v.), and the type is
-perhaps arranged so as to suggest a connexion, which can hardly have
-existed.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Works</i> and by Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828),
-ii. 716.</p>
-
-<p>On the day after the marriage, two Cupids, as pages of the bride and
-bridegroom, quarrelled and announced the tilt. On 1 Jan. each came in
-a chariot, with a company of ten knights, of whom the Bride’s were
-challengers, and introduced and followed the tilting with speeches.
-Finally, Hymen resolved the dispute.</p>
-
-<p>This tilt was on 1 Jan. 1614, after the wedding of the Earl of Somerset
-on 26 Dec. 1613, as is clearly shown by a letter of Chamberlain (Birch,
-i. 287). The bride’s colours were murrey and white, the bridegroom’s
-green and yellow. The tilters included the Duke of Lennox, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span>
-Earls of Rutland, Pembroke, Montgomery, and Dorset, Lords Chandos,
-Scrope, Compton, North, Hay, Norris, and Dingwall, Lord Walden and his
-brothers, and Sir Henry Cary.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Entertainment</i></p>
-
-<p>When James dined with the Merchant Taylors on 16 July 1607 (cf. ch.
-iv), Jonson wrote a speech of eighteen verses, for recitation by an
-Angel of Gladness. This ‘pleased his Majesty marvelously well’, but
-does not seem to have been preserved (Nichols, <i>James</i>, ii. 136;
-Clode, i. 276).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS KINWELMERSHE (&gt;1577–?1580).</p>
-
-<p>A Gray’s Inn lawyer, probably of Charlton, Shropshire, verses by whom
-are in <i>The Paradise of Dainty Devices</i> (1576).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Jocasta. 1566</i></p>
-
-<p>Translated with George Gascoigne (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS KYD (1558–94).</p>
-
-<p>Kyd was baptized on 6 Nov. 1558. His father, Francis Kyd, was a
-London citizen and a scrivener. John Kyd, a stationer, may have been
-a relative. Thomas entered the Merchant Taylors School in 1565, but
-there is no evidence that he proceeded to a university. It is possible
-that he followed his father’s profession before he drifted into
-literature. He seems to be criticized as translator and playwright in
-Nashe’s Epistle to Greene’s <i>Menaphon</i> in 1589 (cf. App. C), and
-a reference there has been rather rashly interpreted as implying that
-he was the author of an early play on Hamlet. About the same time his
-reputation was made by <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, which came, with
-<i>Titus Andronicus</i>, to be regarded as the typical drama of its
-age. Ben Jonson couples ‘sporting Kyd’ with ‘Marlowe’s mighty line’
-in recording the early dramatists outshone by Shakespeare. Towards
-the end of his life Kyd’s relations with Marlowe brought him into
-trouble. During the years 1590–3 he was in the service of a certain
-noble lord for whose players Marlowe was in the habit of writing. The
-two sat in the same room and certain ‘atheistic’ papers of Marlowe’s
-got mixed up with Kyd’s. On 12 May 1593 Kyd was arrested on a suspicion
-of being concerned in certain ‘lewd and mutinous libels’ set up on
-the wall of the Dutch churchyard; the papers were discovered and led
-to Marlowe (q.v.) being arrested also. Kyd, after his release, wrote
-to the Lord Keeper, Sir John Puckering, to repudiate the charge of
-atheism and to explain away his apparent intimacy with Marlowe. It is
-not certain who the ‘lord’ with whom the two writers were connected may
-have been; possibly Lord Pembroke or Lord Strange, for whose players
-Marlowe certainly wrote; possibly also Henry Radcliffe, fourth Earl
-of Sussex, to whose daughter-in-law Kyd dedicated his translation of
-<i>Cornelia</i>, after his disgrace, in 1594. Before the end of 1594
-Kyd had died intestate in the parish of St. Mary Colchurch, and his
-parents renounced the administration of his goods.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collection</i></p>
-
-<p>1901. F. S. Boas, <i>The Works of T. K.</i> [Includes <i>1 Jeronimo</i>
-and <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: K. Markscheffel, <i>T. K.’s Tragödien</i>
-(1886–7, <i>Jahresbericht des Realgymnasiums zu Weimar</i>); A.
-Doleschal, <i>Eigenthümlichkeiten der Sprache in T. K.’s Dramen</i>
-(1888), <i>Der Versbau in T. K.’s Dramen</i> (1891); E. Ritzenfeldt,
-<i>Der Gebrauch des Pronomens, Artikels und Verbs bei T. K.</i>; G.
-Sarrazin, <i>T. K. und sein Kreis</i> (1892, incorporating papers in
-<i>Anglia</i> and <i>E. S.</i>); J. Schick, <i>T. K.’s Todesjahr</i>
-(1899, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxv. 277); O. Michael, <i>Der Stil in T.
-K.’s Originaldramen</i> (1905, <i>Berlin diss.</i>); C. Crawford,
-<i>Concordance to the Works of T. K.</i> (1906–10, <i>Materialien</i>,
-xv); F. C. Danchin, <i>Études critiques sur C. Marlowe</i> (1913,
-<i>Revue Germanique</i>, ix. 566); <i>T. L. S.</i> (June, 1921).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Spanish Tragedy, c. 1589</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1592, Oct. 6 (Hartwell). ‘A booke whiche is called the
-<i>Spanishe tragedie</i> of Don Horatio and Bellmipeia.’ <i>Abel
-Jeffes</i> (Arber, ii. 621). [Against the fee is a note ‘Debitum hoc’.
-Herbert-Ames, <i>Typographical Antiquities</i>, ii. 1160, quotes from
-a record in Dec. 1592 of the Stationers’ Company, not given by Arber:
-‘Whereas Edw. White and Abell Jeffes have each of them offended, viz.
-E. W. in having printed the Spanish tragedie belonging to A. J. And A.
-J. in having printed the Tragedie of Arden of Kent, belonginge to E. W.
-It is agreed that all the bookes of each impression shalbe confiscated
-and forfayted according to thordonances to thuse of the poore of the
-company ... either of them shall pay for a fine 10<i>s.</i> a pece.’]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Spanish Tragedie, Containing the lamentable end
-of Don Horatio, and Bel-Imperia: with the pittiful death of olde
-Hieronimo. Newly corrected, and amended of such grosse faults as
-passed in the first impression. <i>Edward Allde for Edward White.</i>
-[Induction. Greg, <i>Plays</i>, 61, and Boas, xxvii, agree in regarding
-this as the earliest extant edition. Boas suggests that either it may
-be White’s illicit print, or, if that print was the ‘first impression’,
-a later one printed for him by arrangement with Jeffes.]</p>
-
-<p>1594. <i>Abell Jeffes, sold by Edward White.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1599, Aug. 13. Transfer ‘salvo iure cuiuscunque’ from
-Jeffes to W. White (Arber, iii. 146).</p>
-
-<p>1599. <i>William White.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Aug. 14. Transfer to Thomas Pavier (Arber, iii. 169).</p>
-
-<p>1602.... Newly corrected, amended, and enlarged with new additions of
-the Painters part, and others, as it hath of late been diuers times
-acted. <i>W. White for Thomas Pavier.</i></p>
-
-<p>1602 (colophon 1603); 1610 (colophon 1611); 1615 (two issues); 1618;
-1623 (two issues); 1633.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1874, v), and by T. Hawkins
-(1773, <i>O. E. D.</i> ii), W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i),
-J. M. Manly (1897, <i>Specimens</i>, ii), J. Schick (1898, <i>T.
-D.</i>; 1901, <i>Litterarhistorische Forschungen</i>, xix).
-<i>Dissertations</i>: J. A. Worp, <i>Die Fabel der Sp. T.</i> (1894,
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span> xxix, 183); G. O. Fleischer, <i>Bemerkungen über
-Thomas Kyd’s Spanish Tragedy</i> (1896).</p>
-
-<p>Kyd’s authorship of the play is recorded by Heywood, <i>Apology</i>, 45
-(cf. App. C, No. lvii). The only direct evidence as to the date is Ben
-Jonson’s statement in the Induction to <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (1614),
-‘He that will swear <i>Ieronimo</i> or <i>Andronicus</i> are the best
-plays yet, shall pass unexcepted at here as a man whose judgment shows
-it is constant, and hath stood still these five and twenty or thirty
-years’. This yields 1584–9. Boas, xxx, argues for 1585–7; W. Bang in
-<i>Englische Studien</i>, xxviii. 229, for 1589. The grounds for a
-decision are slight, but the latter date seems to me the more plausible
-in the absence of any clear allusion to the play in Nashe’s (q.v.)
-<i>Menaphon</i> epistle of that year.</p>
-
-<p>Strange’s men revived <i>Jeronymo</i> on 14 March 1592 and played it
-sixteen times between that date and 22 Jan. 1593. I agree with Greg
-(<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 150, 153) that by <i>Jeronymo</i> Henslowe
-meant <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, and that the performances of it are
-distinguishable from those which the company was concurrently giving of
-a related piece called <i>Don Horatio</i> or ‘the comedy of Jeronimo’,
-which is probably not to be identified with the extant anonymous
-<i>1 Jeronimo</i> (q.v.). On 7 Jan. 1597 the play was revived by the
-Admiral’s and given twelve times between that date and 19 July. Another
-performance, jointly with Pembroke’s, took place on 11 Oct. Finally, on
-25 Sept. 1601 and 22 June 1602, Henslowe made payments to Jonson, on
-behalf of the Admiral’s, for ‘adicyons’ to the play. At first sight, it
-would seem natural to suppose that these ‘adicyons’ are the passages
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v. 46–133; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 65–129; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> xii<sup>a</sup>.
-1–157; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 168–217) which appear for the first time in
-the print of 1602. But many critics have found it difficult to see
-Jonson’s hand in these, notably Castelain, 886, who would assign them
-to Webster. And as Henslowe marked the play as ‘n. e.’ in 1597, it is
-probable that there was some substantial revision at that date. There
-is a confirmation of this view in Jonson’s own mention of ‘the old
-Hieronimo (as it was first acted)’ in the induction to <i>Cynthia’s
-Revels</i> (1600). Perhaps the 1597 revival motived Jonson’s quotation
-of the play by the mouth of Matheo in <i>E. M. I.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iv, and in <i>Satiromastix</i>, 1522, Dekker suggests that Jonson
-himself ‘took’st mad Ieronimoes part, to get service among the
-Mimickes’. Lines from the play are also recited by the page in
-<i>Poetaster</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 231. In the Induction, 84, to
-Marston’s <i>Malcontent</i> (1604) Condell explains the appropriation
-of that play by the King’s from the Chapel with this retort, ‘Why not
-Malevole in folio with us, as well as Jeronimo in decimo sexto with
-them’. Perhaps <i>1 Jeronimo</i> is meant; in view of the stage history
-of <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, as disclosed by Henslowe’s diary, the
-King’s could hardly have laid claim to it.</p>
-
-<p>The play was carried by English actors to Germany (Boas, xcix;
-Creizenach, xxxiii; Herz, 66, 76), and a German adaptation by Jacob
-Ayrer is printed by Boas, 348, and with others in German and Dutch, in
-R. Schönwerth, <i>Die niederländischen und deutschen Bearbeitungen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span> von
-T. K.’s Sp. T.</i> (1903, <i>Litterarhistorische Forschungen</i>, xxvi).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cornelia. 1593</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, Jan. 26 (Dickins). ‘A booke called Cornelia, Thomas
-Kydd beinge the Authour.’ <i>Nicholas Ling and John Busbye</i> (Arber,
-ii. 644).</p>
-
-<p>1594. Cornelia. <i>James Roberts for N. L. and John Busby.</i> [‘Tho.
-Kyd’ at end of play.]</p>
-
-<p>1595. Pompey the Great, his fair Corneliaes Tragedie. Effected by her
-Father and Husbandes downe-cast, death, and fortune. Written in French,
-by that excellent Poet Ro: Garnier; and translated into English by
-Thomas Kid. <i>For Nicholas Ling.</i> [A reissue of the 1594 sheets
-with a new title-page.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, iv. 5 (1874) and by H. Gassner (1894).</p>
-
-<p>A translation of the <i>Cornélie</i> (1574) of Robert Garnier,
-reissued in his <i>Huit Tragédies</i> (1580). In a dedication to the
-Countess of Sussex Kyd expressed his intention of also translating
-the <i>Porcie</i> (1568) of the same writer, but this he did not live
-to do. He speaks of ‘bitter times and privy broken passions’ endured
-during the writing of <i>Cornelia</i> which suggests a date after his
-arrest on 12 May 1593.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost and Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>The ‘Ur-Hamlet’</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: J. Corbin, <i>The German H. and Earlier
-English Versions</i> (1896, <i>Harvard Studies</i>, v); J. Schick,
-<i>Die Entstehung des H.</i> (1902, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxviii.
-xiii); M. B. Evans, <i>Der bestrafte Brudermord, sein Verhältniss
-zu Shakespeare’s H.</i> (1902); K. Meier (1904, <i>Dresdner
-Anzeiger</i>); W. Creizenach, <i>Der bestrafte Brudermord and its
-Relation to Shakespeare’s H.</i> (1904, <i>M. P.</i> ii. 249), <i>Die
-vorshakespearesche Hamlettragödie</i> (1906, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlii.
-76); A. E. Jack, <i>Thomas Kyd and the Ur-Hamlet</i> (1905, <i>M. L.
-A.</i> xx. 729); J. W. Cunliffe, <i>Nash and the Earlier Hamlet</i>
-(1906, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxi. 193); J. Allen, <i>The Lost H. of K.</i>
-(1908, <i>Westminster Review</i>); J. Fitzgerald, <i>The Sources of the
-H. Tragedy</i> (1909); M. J. Wolff, <i>Zum Ur-Hamlet</i> (1912, <i>E.
-S.</i> xlv. 9); J. M. Robertson, <i>The Problem of Hamlet</i> (1919).</p>
-
-<p>The existence of a play on Hamlet a decade or more before the end
-of the sixteenth century is established by Henslowe’s note of its
-revival by the Admiral’s and Chamberlain’s on 11 June 1594 (cf. Greg,
-<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 164), and some corroborative allusions, but its
-relationship to Shakespeare’s play is wholly conjectural. The possible
-coupling of ‘Kidde’ and ‘Hamlet’ in Nashe’s epistle to <i>Menaphon</i>
-has led to many speculations as to Kyd’s authorship and as to the lines
-on which the speculators think he would have treated the theme. Any
-discussion of these is matter for an account of <i>Hamlet</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Kyd’s hand has also been sought in <i>Arden of Feversham</i>,
-<i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i>, <i>Edward III</i>, <i>1
-Jeronimo</i>, <i>Leire</i>, <i>Rare Triumphs of Love and Fortune</i>,
-<i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, and <i>True
-Tragedy of Richard III</i> (cf. ch. xxiv), and in Shakespeare’s
-<i>Titus Andronicus</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">MAURICE KYFFIN (?-1599).</p>
-
-<p>A Welshman by birth, he left the service of John Dee, with whom he
-afterwards kept up friendly relations, on 25 Oct. 1580 (<i>Diary</i>,
-10, 15, 48). His epistles suggest that in 1587 he was tutor to Lord
-Buckhurst’s sons. In 1592 he was vice-treasurer in Normandy. His
-writings, other than the translation, are unimportant.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Andria of Terence &gt; 1587</i></p>
-
-<p>1588. Andria The first Comoedie of Terence, in English. A furtherance
-for the attainment vnto the right knowledge, &amp; true proprietie, of
-the Latin Tong. And also a commodious meane of help, to such as
-haue forgotten Latin, for their speedy recouering of habilitie, to
-vnderstand, write, and speake the same. Carefully translated out of
-Latin, by Maurice Kyffin. <i>T. E. for Thomas Woodcocke.</i> [Epistle
-by Kyffin to Henry and Thomas Sackville; commendatory verses by ‘W.
-Morgan’, ‘Th. Lloid’, ‘G. Camdenus’, ‘Petrus Bizarus’, ‘R. Cooke’;
-Epistle to William Sackville, dated ‘London, Decemb. 3, 1587’, signed
-‘Maurice Kyffin’; Preface to the Reader; Preface by Kyffin to all young
-Students of the Latin Tongue, signed ‘M. K.’; Argument.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1596, Feb. 9. Transfer of Woodcock’s copies to Paul Linley
-(Arber, iii. 58).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1597, Apr. 21 (Murgetrode). ‘The second Comedy of Terence
-called Eunuchus.’ <i>Paul Lynley</i> (Arber, iii. 83).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, June 26. Transfer of ‘The first and second commedie
-of Terence in Inglishe’ from Paul Linley to John Flasket (Arber, iii.
-165).</p>
-
-<p>Presumably the <i>Andria</i> is the ‘first’ comedy of the 1600
-transfer, and if so the lost <i>Eunuchus</i> may also have been by
-Kyffin. The <i>Andria</i> is in prose; Kyffin says he had begun seven
-years before, nearly finished, and abandoned a version in verse.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN LANCASTER (<i>c.</i> 1588).</p>
-
-<p>A Gray’s Inn lawyer, one of the devisers of dumb-shows and director for
-the <i>Misfortunes of Arthur</i> of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SIR HENRY LEE (1531–1611).</p>
-
-<p>[The accounts of Lee in <i>D. N. B.</i> and by Viscount Dillon in
-<i>Bucks., Berks. and Oxon. Arch. Journ.</i>, xii (1906) 65, may be
-supplemented from Aubrey, ii. 30, J. H. Lea, <i>Genealogical Notes
-on the Family of Lee of Quarrendon</i> (<i>Genealogist</i>, n.s.
-viii-xiv), and F. G. Lee in <i>Bucks. Records</i>, iii. 203, 241; iv.
-189, <i>The Lees of Quarrendon</i> (<i>Herald and Genealogist</i>, iii.
-113, 289, 481), and <i>Genealogy of the Family of Lee</i> (1884).]</p>
-
-<p>Lee belonged to a family claiming a Cheshire origin, which had long
-been settled in Bucks. From 1441 they were constables and farmers of
-Quarrendon in the same county, and the manor was granted by Henry
-VIII to Sir Robert Lee, who was Gentleman Usher of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span> Chamber and
-afterwards Knight of the Body. His son Sir Anthony married Margaret,
-sister of Sir Thomas Wyatt, the poet. Their son Henry was born in
-1531, and Aubrey reports the scandal that he was ‘supposed brother
-to Elizabeth’. He was page of honour to the King, and by 1550 Clerk
-of the Armoury. He was knighted in 1553. By Sept. 1575 he was Master
-of the Game at Woodstock (Dasent, ix. 23), and by 1577 Lieutenant of
-the manor and park (Marshall, <i>Woodstock</i>, 160), holding ‘le
-highe lodge’ and other royal houses in the locality. Probably he was
-concerned with the foundation of Queen’s Day (cf. ch. i) in 1570,
-which certainly originated near Oxford, and when the annual tilting on
-this day at Whitehall was instituted, Lee acted as Knight of the Crown
-until his retirement in 1590. He used as his favourite device a crowned
-pillar. He took some part in the military enterprises of the reign,
-and in 1578 became Master of the Armoury. In 1597 he was thought of as
-Vice-Chamberlain, and on 23 April was installed as K.G. He was a great
-sheep-farmer and encloser of land, and a great builder or enlarger of
-houses, including Ditchley Hall, four or five miles from Woodstock, in
-the parish of Spelsbury, where he died on 12 Feb. 1611. By his wife,
-Anne, daughter of William Lord Paget, who died in 1590, he had two
-sons and a daughter, who all predeceased him. His will of 6 Oct. 1609
-provides for the erection of a tomb in Quarrendon Chapel near his own
-for ‘M<sup>rs</sup>. Ann Vavasor alias Finch’. There are no tombs now, but the
-inscriptions on Lee’s tomb and on a tablet in the chancel, also not
-preserved, are recorded. The former says:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>‘In courtly justs his Soveraignes knight he was’,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and the latter adds:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘He shone in all those fayer partes that became his profession
-and vowes, honoring his highly gracious Mistris with reysing
-those later Olympiads of her Courte, justs and tournaments ...
-wherein still himself lead and triumphed.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The writer is William Scott, who also, with Richard Lee,
-witnessed the will. Anne Vavasour does not in fact appear to have been
-buried at Quarrendon. Aubrey describes her as ‘his dearest deare’, and
-says that her effigy was placed at the foot of his on the tomb, and
-that the bishop threatened to have it removed. Anne’s tomb was in fact
-defaced as early as 1611. Anne was daughter of Sir Henry and sister
-of Sir Thomas Vavasour of Copmanthorpe, Yorks. She was a new maid of
-honour who ‘flourished like the lily and the rose’ in 1590 (Lodge, ii.
-423). Another Anne Vavasour came to Court as ‘newly of the beddchamber’
-after being Lady Bedford’s ‘woman’, about July 1601 (Gawdy, 112,
-conjecturally dated; cf. vol. iv, p. 67). Anne Clifford tells us that
-‘my cousin Anne Vavisour’ was going with her mother Lady Cumberland and
-Lady Warwick and herself to meet Queen Anne in 1603, and married Sir
-Richard Warburton the same year (Wiffen, ii. 69, 72). The Queen is said
-to have visited Sir Henry and his mistress at a lodge near Woodstock
-called ‘Little Rest’, now ‘Lee’s Rest’, in 1608. After Lee’s death his
-successor brought an action against Anne and her brother for illegal
-detention of his effects (<i>5 N. Q.</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span> iii. 294), and the feud was
-still alive and Anne had added other sins to her score in 1618, when
-Chamberlain wrote (Birch, ii. 86):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘M^{rs}. Vavasour, old Sir Henry Lee’s woman, is like to be
-called in question for having two husbands now alive. Young
-Sir Henry Lee, the wild oats of Ireland, hath obtained the
-confiscation of her, if he can prove it without touching her
-life.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Aubrey’s story that Lee’s nephew was disinherited in favour of ‘a
-keeper’s sonne of Whitchwood-forest of his owne name, a one-eied young
-man, no kinne to him’, is exaggerated gossip. Lee entailed his estate
-on a second cousin.</p>
-
-<p>I have brought together under Lee’s name two entertainments and
-fragments of at least one other, which ought strictly to be classed
-as anonymous, but with which he was certainly concerned, and to which
-he may have contributed some of the ‘conceiptes, Himmes, Songes &amp;
-Emblemes’, of which one of the fragments speaks.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Woodstock Entertainment. Sept. 1575</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Royal MS.</i> 18 A. xlviii (27). ‘The Tale of Hemetes
-the Heremyte.’ [The tale is given in four languages, English, Latin,
-Italian, and French. It is accompanied by pen-and-ink drawings, and
-preceded by verses and an epistle to Elizabeth. The latter is dated
-‘first of January, 1576’ and signed ‘G. Gascoigne’. The English text
-is, with minor variations, that of the tale as printed in 1585. Its
-authorship is not claimed by Gascoigne, who says that he has ‘turned
-the eloquent tale of <i>Hemetes the Heremyte</i> (wherw<sup>th</sup> I saw yo<sup>r</sup>
-lerned judgment greatly pleased at Woodstock) into latyne, Italyan and
-frenche’, and contrasts his own ignorance with ‘thaucto<sup>rs</sup> skyll’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1579, Sept. 22. ‘A paradox provinge by Reason and Example
-that Baldnes is muche better than bushie heare.’ <i>H. Denham</i>
-(Arber, ii. 360).</p>
-
-<p>1579. A Paradoxe, Proving by reason and example, that Baldnesse is much
-better than bushie haire.... Englished by Abraham Fleming. Hereunto is
-annexed the pleasant tale of Hemetes the Heremite, pronounced before
-the Queenes Majestie. Newly recognized both in Latine and Englishe, by
-the said A. F. <i>H. Denham.</i> [Contains the English text of the Tale
-and Gascoigne’s Latin version.]</p>
-
-<p>1585. <i>Colophon</i>: ‘Imprinted at London for Thomas Cadman, 1585.’
-[Originally contained a complete description of an entertainment,
-of which the tale of Hemetes only formed part; but sig. A, with the
-title-page, is missing. The unique copy, formerly in the Rowfant
-library, is now in the B.M. The t.p. is a modern type-facsimile, based
-on the head-line and colophon (McKerrow, <i>Bibl. Evidence</i>, 306).]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> (<i>a</i>) from 1579, by J. Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i>
-i. 553 (1823), and W. C. Hazlitt, <i>Gascoigne</i>, ii. 135 (1870);
-(<i>b</i>) from <i>MS.</i> by J. W. Cunliffe, <i>Gascoigne</i>, ii. 473
-(1910); (<i>c</i>) from 1585, by A. W. Pollard (1910, partly printed
-1903) and J. W. Cunliffe (1911, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxvi. 92).</p>
-
-<p>Gascoigne’s manuscript is chiefly of value as fixing the locality of
-the entertainment, which is not mentioned in the mutilated print of
-1585. The date can hardly be doubtful. Elizabeth spent considerable
-periods at Woodstock in 1572, 1574, and 1575, but it so happens
-that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span> only in 1575 was she there on the 20th of a month (<i>vide
-infra</i> and App. B). Moreover, Laurence Humphrey’s <i>Oratio</i>
-delivered at Woodstock on 11 Sept. 1575 (Nichols, i. 590) refers
-to the entertainment in the phrase ‘an ... Gandina spectacula ...
-dabit’. The description takes the form of a letter from an eyewitness,
-evidently not the deviser, and professing ignorance of Italian; not,
-therefore, Gascoigne, as pointed out by Mr. Pollard. At the beginning
-of sig. B, Hemetes, a hermit, has evidently just interrupted a fight
-between Loricus and Contarenus. He brings them, with the Lady Caudina,
-to a bower, where Elizabeth is placed, and tells his Tale, of which
-the writer says, ‘hee shewed a great proofe of his audacity, in
-which tale if you marke the woords with this present world, or were
-acquainted with the state of the deuises, you should finde no lesse
-hidden then vttered, and no lesse vttered then shoulde deserue a
-double reading ouer, euen of those (with whom I finde you a companion)
-that haue disposed their houres to the study of great matters’. The
-Tale explains how the personages have come together. Contarenus loved
-Caudina, daughter of Occanon Duke of Cambia. At Occanon’s request,
-an enchantress bore him away, and put him in charge of the blind
-hermit, until after seven years he should fight the hardiest knight
-and see the worthiest lady in the world. Caudina, setting out with
-two damsels to seek him, met at the grate of Sibilla with Loricus, a
-knight seeking renown as a means to his mistress’s favour. Sibilla
-bade them wander, till they found a land in all things best, and with
-a Princess most worthy. Hemetes himself has been blinded by Venus for
-loving books as well as a lady, and promised by Apollo the recovery
-of his sight, where most valiant knights fight, most constant lovers
-meet, and the worthiest lady looks on. Obviously it is all a compliment
-to the worthiest lady. Thus the Tale ends. The Queen is now led to
-the hermit’s abode, an elaborate sylvan banqueting-house, built on
-a mound forty feet high, roofed by an oak, and hung with pictures
-and posies of ‘the noble or men of great credite’, some of which
-the French ambassador made great suit to have. Here Elizabeth was
-visited by ‘the Queen of the Fayry drawen with 6 children in a waggon
-of state’, who presented her with an embroidered gown. Couplets or
-‘posies’ set in garlands were also given to the Queen, to the Ladies
-Derby, Warwick, Hunsdon, Howard, Susan and Mary Vere, and to Mistresses
-Skidmore, Parry, Abbington, Sidney, Hopton, Katherine Howard, Garret,
-Bridges, Burrough, Knowles, and Frances Howard. After a speech from
-Caudina, Elizabeth departed, as it was now dark, well pleased with her
-afternoon, and listening to a song from an oak tree as she went by.
-A somewhat cryptic passage follows. Elizabeth is said to have left
-‘earnest command that the whole in order as it fell, should be brought
-her in writing, which being done, as I heare, she vsed, besides her
-owne skill, the helpe of the deuisors, &amp; how thinges were made I know
-not, but sure I am her Maiesty hath often in speech some part hereof
-with mirth at the remembrance.’ Then follows a comedy acted on ‘the 20
-day of the same moneth’, which ‘was as well thought of, as anye thing
-ever done before her Maiestie, not onely of her, but of the rest:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span> in
-such sort that her Graces passions and other the Ladies could not [?
-but] shew it selfe in open place more than euer hath beene seene’. The
-comedy, in 991 lines of verse, is in fact a sequel to the Tale. In it
-Occanon comes to seek Caudina, who is persuaded by his arguments and
-the mediation of Eambia, the Fairy Queen, to give up her lover for her
-country’s sake.</p>
-
-<p>Pollard suggests Gascoigne as the author of the comedy, but of this
-there is no external evidence. He also regards the intention of the
-whole entertainment as being the advancement of Leicester’s suit.
-Leicester was no doubt at Woodstock, even before the Queen, for he
-wrote her a letter from there on 4 Sept. (<i>S. P. D. Eliz</i>. cv.
-36); but the undated letter which Pollard cites (cv. 38), and in which
-Leicester describes himself as ‘in his survey to prepare for her
-coming’, probably precedes the Kenilworth visit. Pollard dates it 6
-Sept., but Elizabeth herself seems to have reached Woodstock by that
-date. Professor Cunliffe, on the other hand, thinks that the intention
-was unfavourable to Leicester’s suit, and thus explains the stress
-laid on Caudina’s renunciation of her lover for political reasons. I
-doubt if there is any reference to the matter at all; it would have
-been dangerous matter for a courtly pen. Doubtless the writer of the
-description talks of ‘audacity’, in the Tale, not the comedy. But has
-he anything more in mind than Sir Henry Lee, whom we are bound to find,
-here as elsewhere, in Loricus, and his purely conventional worship of
-Elizabeth?</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Tilt Yard Entertainment. 17 Nov. 1590</i></p>
-
-<p>There are two contemporary descriptions, viz.:</p>
-
-<p>1590. Polyhymnia Describing, the Honourable Triumph at Tylt, before her
-Maiestie, on the 17 of Nouember last past, being the first day of the
-three and thirtith yeare of her Highnesse raigne. With Sir Henrie Lea,
-his resignation of honour at Tylt, to her Maiestie, and receiued by the
-right honorable, the Earle of Cumberland. <i>R. Jones.</i> [Dedication
-by George Peele to Lord Compton on verso of t.p.]</p>
-
-<p>1602. W. Segar, Honor, Military and Ciuill, Book iii, ch. 54, ‘The
-Originall occasions of the yeerely Triumphs in England’.</p>
-
-<p>Segar’s account is reproduced by Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> iii. 41, and
-both in the editions of Peele (q.v.) by Dyce and Bullen. A manuscript
-copy with variants from the Q. is at St. John’s College, Oxford (F. S.
-Boas in <i>M. L. R.</i> xi. 300). <i>Polyhymnia</i> mainly consists
-of a blank verse description and eulogy of the twenty-six tilters, in
-couples according to the order of the first running of six courses
-each, viz. Sir Henry Lee and the Earl of Cumberland, Lord Strange and
-Thomas Gerrard, Lord Compton and Henry Nowell, Lord Burke and Sir
-Edward Denny, the Earl of Essex and Fulk Greville, Sir Charles Blount
-and Thomas Vavasor, Robert Carey and William Gresham, Sir William
-Knowles and Anthony Cooke, Sir Thomas Knowles and Sir Philip Butler,
-Robert Knowles and Ralph Bowes, Thomas Sidney and Robert Alexander,
-John Nedham and Richard Acton, Charles Danvers and Everard Digby. The
-colours and in some cases the ‘device’ or ‘show’ are indicated. Lee is
-described as</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Knight of the crown, in rich embroidery,</div>
- <div>And costly fair caparison charged with crowns,</div>
- <div>O’ershadowed with a withered running vine,</div>
- <div>As who would say, ‘My spring of youth is past’,</div>
- <div>In corselet gilt of curious workmanship.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Strange entered ‘in costly ship’, with the eagle for his device; Essex</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In stately chariot full of deep device,</div>
- <div>Where gloomy Time sat whipping on the team,</div>
- <div>Just back to back with this great champion.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Blount’s badge was the sun, Carey’s a burning heart, Cooke’s a hand and
-heart,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And Life and Death he portray’d in his show.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The three Knowles brothers bore golden boughs. A final section of the
-poem describes how, after the running, Sir Henry Lee, ‘knight of the
-Crown’, unarmed himself in a pavilion of Vesta, and petitioned the
-Queen to allow him to yield his ‘honourable place’ to Cumberland, to
-whom he gave his armour and lance, vowing to betake himself to orisons.</p>
-
-<p>Segar gives a fuller account of Lee’s fantasy. He had vowed, ‘in the
-beginning of her happy reigne’, to present himself yearly in arms
-on the day of Elizabeth’s accession. The courtiers, incited by his
-example, had yearly assembled, ‘not vnlike to the antient Knighthood
-della Banda in Spaine’, but in 1590, ‘being now by age ouertaken’,
-Lee resigned his office to Cumberland. The ceremony took place ‘at
-the foot of the staires vnder her gallery-window in the Tilt-yard at
-Westminster’, where Elizabeth sat with the French ambassador, Viscount
-Turenne. A pavilion, representing the Temple of the Vestal Virgins,
-arose out of the earth. Within was an altar, with gifts for the queen;
-before the door a crowned pillar, embraced by an eglantine, and bearing
-a complimentary inscription. As the knights approached, ‘M. Hales her
-maiesties seruant’ sang verses beginning:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>My golden locks time hath to siluer turned.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The vestals then gave the Queen a veil and a cloak and safeguard,
-the buttons of which bore the ‘emprezes’ or ‘badges’ of many nobles,
-friends of Lee, each fixed to an embroidered pillar, the last being
-‘like the character of <i>&amp;c.</i>’ Finally Lee doffed his armour,
-presented Cumberland, armed and horsed him, and himself donned a
-side-coat of black velvet and a buttoned cap of the country fashion.
-‘After all these ceremonies, for diuers dayes hee ware vpon his cloake
-a crowne embrodered, with a certaine motto or deuice, but what his
-intention therein was, himselfe best knoweth.’</p>
-
-<p>The Queen appointed Lee to appear yearly at the exercises, ‘to see,
-suruey, and as one most carefull and skilfull to direct them’. Segar
-dwells on Lee’s virtues and valour, and concludes by stating that the
-annual actions had been performed by 1 Duke, 19 Earls, 27 Barons, 4
-Knights of the Garter, and above 150 other Knights and Esquires.</p>
-
-<p>On 20 Nov. 1590 Richard Brakinbury wrote to Lord Talbot (Lodge,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span>
-ii. 419): ‘These sports were great, and done in costly sort, to her
-Majesty’s liking, and their great cost. To express every part, with
-sundry devices, is more fit for them that delight in them, than for me,
-who esteemeth little such vanities, I thank God.’</p>
-
-<p>P. A. Daniel (<i>Athenaeum</i> for 8 Feb. 1890) notes that a suit
-of armour in Lord Hothfield’s collection, which once belonged to
-Cumberland and is represented in certain portraits of him, is probably
-the identical suit given him by Lee, as it bears a monogram of Lee’s
-name.</p>
-
-<p>There has been some controversy about the authorship of the verses sung
-by ‘M. Hales’, who was Robert Hales, a lutenist. They appear, headed
-‘A Sonnet’, and unsigned, on a page at the end of <i>Polyhymnia</i>,
-and have therefore been ascribed to Peele. The evidence, though
-inconclusive, is better than the wanton conjecture which led Mr. Bond
-to transfer them to Lyly (<i>Works</i>, i. 410). But a different
-version in <i>Rawl. Poet. MS.</i> 148, f. 19, is subscribed ‘q<sup>d</sup> S<sup>r</sup>
-Henry Leigh’, and some resemblances of expression are to be found in
-other verses assigned to Lee in R. Dowland, <i>Musicall Banquet</i>
-(1610), No. 8 (Bond, i. 517; Fellowes, 459). It is not impossible
-that Lee himself may have been the author. One of the pieces in the
-<i>Ferrers MS.</i> (<i>vide</i> p. 406 <i>infra</i>) refers to his
-‘himmes &amp; songes’. If the verses, which also appear anonymously in J.
-Dowland, <i>First Booke of Songs or Ayres</i> (1597, Fellowes, 418),
-are really Lee’s, Wyatt’s nephew was no contemptible poet. Finally,
-there are echoes of the same theme in yet another set of anonymous
-verses in J. Dowland, <i>Second Book of Airs</i> (1600, Fellowes, 422),
-which are evidently addressed to Lee.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Second Woodstock Entertainment, 20 Sept. 1592,
-and Other Fragments</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] (<i>a</i>) <i>Ferrers MS.</i>, a collection made by Henry
-Ferrers of Baddesley Clinton, Warwickshire (1549–1633).</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Inner Temple Petyt MS.</i> 538, 43, ff. 284–363.</p>
-
-<p>[A collection of verses by Lady Pembroke, Sir John Harington, Francis
-Bacon (q.v.) and others, bound as part of a composite MS.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) Viscount Dillon kindly informs me that a part of the
-entertainment, dated ‘20 Sept.’, is in his possession.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> (<i>Ferrers MS.</i> only) by W. Hamper, <i>Masques:
-Performed before Queen Elizabeth</i> (1820), and in <i>Kenilworth
-Illustrated</i> (1821), Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i><sup>2</sup> iii. 193 (1828), and R.
-W. Bond, <i>Lyly</i>, i. 412, 453 (1902).</p>
-
-<p>The Ferrers MS. seems to contain ten distinct pieces, separated from
-each other only by headings, to which I have prefixed the numbers.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) ‘A Cartell for a Challeng.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Three ‘strange forsaken knightes’ offer to maintain ‘that Loue is worse
-than hate, his Subiectes worse than slaues, and his Rewarde worse than
-naught: And that there is a Ladie that scornes Loue and his power, of
-more vertue and greater bewtie than all the Amorouse Dames that be
-at this day in the worlde’. This cannot be dated.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span> Sir Robert Carey
-(<i>Memoirs</i>, 33) tilted as a ‘forsaken knight’ on 17 Nov. 1593 (not
-1592, as stated by Brotanek, 60), but he was not a challenger, and was
-alone. The tone resembles that of Sir Henry Lee, and if he took part,
-the date must be earlier than 1590.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) ‘Sir Henry Lee’s challenge before the Shampanie.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">A ‘strange knight that warres against hope and fortune’ will maintain
-the cause of Despair in a green suit.</p>
-
-<p>Hamper explained ‘Shampanie’ as ‘the lists or field of contention,
-from the French <i>campagne</i>’; but Segar, <i>Honor, Military and
-Ciuill</i>, 197, records, from an intercepted letter of ‘Monsieur
-de Champany ... being ambassador in England for causes of the Low
-Countreys’, an occasion on which Sir Henry Lee, ‘the most accomplished
-cavaliero I had euer seene’, broke lances with other gentlemen in his
-honour at Greenwich. M. de Champagny was an agent of the native Flemish
-Catholics, and visited England in 1575 and 1585 (Froude, x. 360; xii.
-39). As his letter named ‘Sir’ C. Hatton, who was knighted in 1578,
-the visit of 1585 must be in question. The Court was at Greenwich from
-March to July of that year.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) ‘The Supplication of the Owld Knight.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">A speech to the ‘serveres of this English Holiday, or rather Englandes
-Happie Daye’, in which a knight disabled by age, ‘yet once (thowe
-unwoorthie) your fellowe in armes, and first celebrator, in this kinde,
-of this sacred memorie of that blessed reigne’, begs them to ‘accepte
-to your fellowshippe this oneley sonne of mine’.</p>
-
-<p>This is evidently a speech by Lee, on some 17 Nov. later than 1590.
-Lee’s own sons died in childhood; probably the ‘son’ introduced was a
-relative, but possibly only a ‘son’ in chivalry.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) ‘The Message of the Damsell of the Queene of Fayries.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">An ‘inchanted knight’ sends the Queen an image of Cupid. She is
-reminded how ‘at the celebrating the joyfull remembraunce of the most
-happie daye of your Highnes entrance into Gouerment of this most
-noble Islande, howe manie knightes determined, not far hence, with
-boulde hartes and broken launces, to paye there vowes and shewe theire
-prowes’. The ‘inchanted knight’ could not ‘chardge staffe, nor strike
-blowe’, but entered the jousts, and bore the blows of others.</p>
-
-<p>If this has reference to the first celebration of 17 Nov., it may
-be of near date to the Woodstock Entertainment of 1575 in which the
-fairy queen appeared. The knight, ‘full hardie and full haples’, is
-enchanted, but is not said to be old.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) ‘The Olde Knightes Tale.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">‘Not far from hence, nor verie long agoe,’ clearly in 1575, ‘the fayrie
-Queene the fayrest Queene saluted’, and the pleasures included ‘justes
-and feates of armed knightes’, and ‘enchaunted pictures’ in a bower.
-The knight was bidden by the fairy queen to guard the pictures and keep
-his eyes on the crowned pillar. He became ‘a stranger ladies thrall’,
-neglected this duty, and was cast into a deadly sleep. Now he is freed,
-apparently through the intervention of Elizabeth, to whom the verses
-are addressed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) ‘The Songe after Dinner at the two Ladies entrance.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Celebrates the setting free by a prince’s grace, of captive knights and
-ladies, and bids farewell to inconstancy.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) ‘The Ladies Thankesgeuing for theire Deliuerie from
-Unconstancie.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">A speech to the Queen, in the same vein as (vi), followed by a dialogue
-between Li[berty], or Inconstancy, and Constancy. This is datable in
-1592 from another copy printed in <i>The Phoenix Nest</i> (1593), with
-the title ‘An Excellent Dialogue betweene Constancie and Inconstancie:
-as it was by speech presented to her maiestie, in the last Progresse
-at Sir Henrie Leighes house’. Yet another copy, in <i>Inner Temple
-Petyt MS.</i> 538, 43, f. 299. ‘A Dialogue betweene Constancie and
-Inconstancie spoken before the Queenes Majestie at Woodstock’ is
-ascribed to ‘Doctor Edes’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) ‘The last Songe.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">A rejoicing on the coming of Eliza, with references to constancy and
-inconstancy, the aged knight, and the pillar and crown.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) ‘The second daies woorke where the Chaplayne maketh this
-Relation.’</p>
-
-<p>An Oration to the Queen by the chaplain of Loricus, ‘an owlde Knight,
-now a newe religiouse Hermite’. The story of Loricus was once told [in
-1575] ‘by a good father of his owne coate, not farr from this coppies’.
-Once he ‘rann the restles race of desire.... Sometymes he consorted
-with couragious gentelmen, manifesting inward joyes by open justes, the
-yearly tribute of his dearest Loue. Somtimes he summoned the witnesse
-of depest conceiptes, Himmes &amp; Songes &amp; Emblemes, dedicating them to
-the honor of his heauenlye mistres’. Retiring, through envy and age,
-to the country, he found the speaker at a homely cell, made him his
-chaplain, and built for their lodging and that of a page ‘the Crowne
-Oratory’, with a ‘Piller of perpetual remembraunce’ as his device
-on the entrance. Here he lies, at point of death, and has addressed
-his last testament to the Queen. This is in verse, signed ‘Loricus,
-columnae coronatae custos fidelissimus’, and witnessed by ‘Stellatus,
-rectoriae coronatae capellanus’, and ‘Renatus, equitis coronatae servus
-obseruantissimus’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) ‘The Page bringeth tydings of his Maister’s Recouerie &amp;
-presenteth his Legacie.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">A further address to the Queen, with a legacy in verse of the whole
-Mannor of Loue, signed by Loricus and witnessed by Stellatus and
-Renatus.</p>
-
-<p>This exhausts the <i>Ferrers MS.</i>, but I can add from the <i>Petyt
-MS.</i> f. 300<sup>v</sup>&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) ‘The melancholie Knights complaint in the wood.’</p>
-
-<p class="p0">This, like (vii), is ascribed in the MS. to ‘Doctor Edes’. It consists
-of 35 lines in 6 stanzas of 6 lines each (with one line missing) and
-begins:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What troupes are theis, which ill aduised, presse</div>
- <div>Into this more than most vnhappie place.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span></p>
-
-<p>Allusions to the freeing of enchanted knights and ladies and to
-constancy and inconstancy connect it closely with (vi)-(viii).</p>
-
-<p>Obviously most of these documents, and therefore probably all, belong
-to devices presented by Sir Henry Lee. But they are of different dates,
-and not demonstrably in chronological order. A single occasion accounts
-for (vi)-(viii) and (xi), and a single occasion, which the mention of
-‘the second daie’ suggests may have been the same, for (ix) and (x);
-and probably Mr. Bond is justified in regarding all these as forming
-part with (vii) of the entertainment at Lee’s house in the progress of
-1592. But I do not see his justification for attaching (iv) and (v) to
-them, and I think that these are probably fragments of the Woodstock
-Entertainment of 1575, or not far removed from that in time. Nor has
-he any evidence for locating the entertainment of 1592 at Quarrendon,
-which was only one of several houses belonging to Sir Henry Lee, and
-could not be meant by the ‘coppies’ near Woodstock of (ix). It was
-doubtless, as the Petyt MS. version of (vii) tells us, at Woodstock,
-either at one of Lee’s lodges, or at Ditchley, during the royal visit
-to Woodstock of 18–23 Sept. 1592. I learn from Viscount Dillon that
-a MS. of part of this entertainment, dated 20 Sept., is still at
-Ditchley. Finally, Bond’s attribution of all the pieces (i)-(x) to Lyly
-is merely guesswork. Hamper assigned them to George Ferrers, probably
-because the owner of his MS. was a Ferrers. George Ferrers did in fact
-help in the Kenilworth Entertainment of 1575, and might therefore
-have helped in that at Woodstock; but he died in 1579, too early for
-(vi)-(xi). No doubt (vii) and (xi) are by Richard Edes (q.v.). He may
-have written the whole of this Woodstock Entertainment. On the other
-hand, a phrase in (ix) suggests that Lee may have penned some of his
-own conceits. Brotanek, 62, suggests that the two ladies of (vi) are
-Lee’s wife and his mistress Anne Vavasour, and that Elizabeth came
-to Lee’s irregular household to set it in order. This hardly needs
-refuting, but in fact Lee’s wife died in 1590 and his connexion with
-Anne Vavasour was probably of later date.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT LEE.</p>
-
-<p>For his career as an actor, see ch. xv.</p>
-
-<p>He may have been, but was not necessarily, the author of <i>The
-Miller</i> which the Admiral’s bought from him for £1 on 22 Feb. 1598
-(Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 191).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS LEGGE (1535–1607).</p>
-
-<p>Of Norwich origin, Legge entered Corpus Christi, Cambridge, in 1552,
-and took his B.A. in 1557, his M.A. in 1560, and his LL.D. in 1575.
-After migration to Trinity and Jesus, he had become Master of Caius
-in 1573. In 1593 he was Vice-Chancellor, and in that capacity took
-part in the negotiations of the University with the Privy Council for
-a restraint of common plays in Cambridge (<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 200).
-His own reputation as a dramatist is acknowledged by Meres, who in
-1598 placed him among ‘our best for Tragedie’, and added that, ‘as M.
-Anneus Lucanus writ two excellent Tragedies, one called <i>Medea</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span>
-the other <i>de Incendio Troiae cum Priami calamitate</i>: so Doctor
-<i>Leg</i> hath penned two famous tragedies, y<sup>e</sup> one of <i>Richard the
-3</i>, the other of <i>The destruction of Ierusalem</i>’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Richardus Tertius. March 1580</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>Cambridge Univ. Libr. MS.</i> M<sup>m</sup> iv. 40, ‘Thome Legge
-legum doctoris Collegij Caiogonevilensis in Academia Cantabrigiensi
-magistri ac Rectoris Richardus tertius Tragedia trivespera habita
-Collegij divi Johannis Evangeliste Comitiis Bacchelaureorum Anno Domini
-1579 Tragedia in tres acciones diuisa.’ [<i>Argumentum</i> to each
-<i>Actio</i>; Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Emmanuel, Cambridge, MS.</i> 1. 3. 19, with date ‘1579’ and
-actor-list.</p>
-
-<p><i>Clare, Cambridge, MS.</i> Kk, 3, 12, with date ‘1579’.</p>
-
-<p><i>Caius, Cambridge, MS.</i> 62, ‘tragoedia trium vesperum habita in
-collegio Divi Johannis Evangelistae, Comitiis Bacchalaureorum Anno
-1573.’</p>
-
-<p><i>Bodl. Tanner MS.</i> 306, including first <i>Actio</i> only, with
-actor-list and note, ‘Acted in St. John’s Hall before the Earle of
-Essex’, to which has been apparently added later, ‘17 March, 1582’.</p>
-
-<p><i>Bodl. MS.</i> 29448, dated α, φ, π, γ (= 1583).</p>
-
-<p><i>Harl. MS.</i> 6926, a transcript by Henry Lacy, dated 1586.</p>
-
-<p><i>Harl. MS.</i> 2412, a transcript dated 1588.</p>
-
-<p><i>Hatton MS.</i> (cf. <i>Hist. MSS.</i> i. 32).</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by B. Field (1844, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>) and W. C. Hazlitt
-(1875, <i>Sh. L.</i> ii. 1).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: G. B. Churchill,
-<i>Richard III bis Shakespeare</i> (1897, 1900).</p>
-
-<p>The names in the actor-lists, which agree, confirm those MSS. which
-date a production in March 1580 (Boas, 394), and as Essex left
-Cambridge in 1581, the date in the <i>Tanner MS.</i>, in so far as it
-relates to a performance before him, is probably an error. It does
-not seem so clear to me that the <i>Caius MS.</i> may not point to an
-earlier production in 1573. And it is quite possible that there may
-have been revivals in some or all of the later years named in the MSS.
-The reputation of the play is indicated, not only by the notice of it
-by Meres (<i>vide supra</i>), but also by allusions in Harington’s
-<i>Apologie of Poetrie</i> (1591); cf. App. C, No. xlv. and Nashe’s
-<i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (1596, <i>Works</i>, iii.
-13). It may even, directly or indirectly, have influenced <i>Richard
-III</i>. The argument to the first <i>Actio</i> is headed ‘Chapman,
-Argumentum primae actionis’, but it seems difficult to connect George
-Chapman with the play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Destruction of Jerusalem</i></p>
-
-<p>Meres calls this tragedy ‘famous’. Fuller, <i>Worthies</i> (1662), ii.
-156, says that ‘Having at last refined it to the purity of the publique
-standard, some Plageary filched it from him, just as it was to be
-acted’. Apparently it was in English and was printed, as it appears<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span>
-in the lists of Archer and Kirkman (Greg, <i>Masques</i>, lxii). It
-can hardly have been the <i>Jerusalem</i> revived by Strange’s in 1592
-(Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 155). Can any light be thrown on Fuller’s
-story by the fact that in 1584 a ‘new Play of the Destruction of
-Jerusalem’ was adopted by the city of Coventry as a craft play in place
-of the old Corpus Christi cycle, and a sum of £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-paid to John Smythe of St. John’s, Oxford, ‘for hys paynes for
-writing of the tragedye’ (<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 361; H. Craig,
-<i>Coventry Corpus Christi Plays</i> (<i>E. E. T. S.</i>), 90, 92, 93,
-102, 103, 109)?</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS LODGE (<i>c.</i> 1557–1625).</p>
-
-<p>Lodge, who uses the description ‘gentleman’, was son of Sir Thomas
-Lodge, a Lord Mayor of London. His elder brother, William, married
-Mary, daughter of Thomas Blagrave, Clerk of the Revels (cf. ch. iii).
-He entered Merchant Taylors in 1571, Trinity College, Oxford, in 1573,
-whence he took his B.A. in 1577, and Lincoln’s Inn in 1578. In 1579
-(cf. App. C, No. xxiii) he plunged into controversy with a defence of
-the stage in reply to Stephen Gosson’s <i>Schoole of Abuse</i>. Gosson
-speaks slightingly of his opponent as ‘hunted by the heavy hand of
-God, and become little better than a vagrant, looser than liberty,
-lighter than vanity itself’, and although Lodge took occasion to defend
-his moral character from aspersion, it is upon record that he was
-called before the Privy Council ‘to aunswere certen maters to be by
-them objected against him’, and was ordered on 27 June 1581 to give
-continued attendance (Dasent, xiii. 110). By 1583 he had married. His
-literary work largely took the form of romances in the manner of Lyly
-and Greene. <i>Rosalynde: Euphues’ Golden Legacy</i>, published (S. R.
-6 Oct. 1590) on his return from a voyage to Terceras and the Canaries
-with Captain Clarke, is typical and was Shakespeare’s source for <i>As
-You Like It</i>. His acknowledged connexion with the stage is slight;
-and the attempt of Fleay, ii. 43, to assign to him a considerable
-share in the anonymous play-writing of his time must be received with
-caution, although he was still controverting Gosson in 1583 (cf. App.
-C, No. xxxv), and too much importance need not be attached to his
-intention expressed in <i>Scylla’s Metamorphosis</i> (S. R. 22 Sept.
-1589):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>To write no more of that whence shame doth grow,</div>
- <div>Or tie my pen to penny knaves’ delight,</div>
- <div>But live with fame, and so for fame to write.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">He is less likely than Nashe to be the ‘young Juvenal,
-that biting satirist, that lastly with me together writ a Comedy’ of
-Greene’s <i>Groats-worth of Wit</i> epistle in 1592 (cf. App. C, No.
-xlviii). I should not cavil at the loose description of <i>A Looking
-Glass for London and England</i> as a comedy; but ‘biting satirist’
-hardly suits Lodge; and at the time of Greene’s last illness he was out
-of England on an expedition led by Thomas Cavendish to South America
-and the Pacific, which started on 26 Aug. 1591 and returned on 11 June
-1593. After his return Lodge essayed lyric in <i>Phillis</i> (1593)
-and satire in <i>A Fig for Momus</i> (1595); but he cannot be shown
-to have resumed writing for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span> the stage, although the Dulwich records
-make it clear that he had relations with Henslowe, who had in Jan.
-1598 to satisfy the claims which Richard Topping, a tailor, had made
-against him before three successive Lord Chamberlains, as Lodge’s
-security for a long-standing debt (Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 44,
-172). Lodge himself was then once more beyond the seas. One of the
-documents was printed by Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>, 45, with
-forged interpolations intended to represent Lodge as an actor, for
-which there is no other evidence. Subsequently Lodge took a medical
-degree at Avignon, was incorporated at Oxford in 1602, and obtained
-some reputation as a physician. He also became a Catholic, and had
-again to leave the country for recusancy, but was allowed to return
-in Jan. 1610 (cf. F. P. Wilson in <i>M. L. R.</i> ix. 99). About
-1619 he was engaged in legal proceedings with Alleyn, and for a time
-practised in the Low Countries, returning to London before his death in
-1625. Small, 50, refutes the attempts of Fleay, i. 363, and Penniman,
-<i>War</i>, 55, 85, to identify him with Fungoso in <i>E. M. O.</i> and
-Asotus in <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>. Fleay, ii. 158, 352, adds Churms and
-Philomusus in the anonymous <i>Wily Beguiled</i> and <i>Return from
-Parnassus</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collection</i></p>
-
-<p>1878–82. E. Gosse, <i>The Works of Thomas Lodge</i> (<i>Hunterian
-Club</i>). [Introduction reprinted in E. Gosse, <i>Seventeenth Century
-Studies</i> (1883).]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: D. Laing, <i>L.’s Defence of Poetry, Music, and
-Stage Plays</i> (1853, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>); C. M. Ingleby, <i>Was T. L. an
-Actor?</i> (1868) and <i>T. L. and the Stage</i> (1885, <i>6 N. Q.</i>
-xi, 107, 415); R. Carl, <i>Ueber T. L.’s Leben und Werke</i> (1887,
-<i>Anglia</i>, x. 235); E. C. Richard, <i>Ueber T. L.’s Leben und
-Werke</i> (1887, <i>Leipzig diss.</i>).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Wounds of Civil War. c. 1588</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, May 24. ‘A booke intituled the woundes of Civill
-warre lively sett forthe in the true Tragedies of Marius and Scilla.’
-<i>John Danter</i> (Arber, ii. 650).</p>
-
-<p>1594. The Wounds of Ciuill War. Liuely set forth in the true Tragedies
-of Marius and Scilla. As it hath beene publiquely plaide in London, by
-the Right Honourable the Lord high Admirall his Seruants. Written by
-Thomas Lodge Gent. <i>John Danter.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>3, 4</sup> (1825–75) and by J. D. Wilson (1910,
-<i>M. S. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The play contains a clear imitation of Marlowe’s <i>Tamburlaine</i> in
-the chariot drawn by four Moors of Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, and both Fleay,
-ii. 49, and Ward, i. 416, think that it was written shortly after its
-model, although not on very convincing grounds. No performance of it is
-recorded in Henslowe’s diary, which suggests a date well before 1592.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Looking Glass for London and England, c. 1590</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Robert Greene (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Lodge’s hand has been sought in <i>An Alarum for London</i>,
-<i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i>, <i>George a Greene</i>,
-<i>Leire</i>, <i>Mucedorus</i>, <i>Selimus</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[411]</span> <i>Sir Thomas
-More</i>, <i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i>, and <i>Warning for
-Fair Women</i> (cf. ch. xxiv), and in Greene’s <i>James IV</i> and
-Shakespeare’s <i>Henry VI</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JANE, LADY LUMLEY (<i>c.</i> 1537–77).</p>
-
-<p>Jane, daughter of Henry Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel, married John,
-Lord Lumley, <i>c.</i> 1549.</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Iphigenia</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Brit. Mus. MS. Reg.</i> 15 A. ix, ‘The doinge of my
-Lady Lumley dowghter to my L. Therle of Arundell ... [f. 63] The
-Tragedie of Euripides called Iphigeneia translated out of Greake into
-Englisshe.’</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by H. H. Child (1909, <i>M. S. R.</i>) and G. Becker
-(1910, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi. 28).</p>
-
-<p>The translation is from the <i>Iphigenia in Aulis</i>. It is likely
-to be pre-Elizabethan, but I include it here, as it is not noticed in
-<i>The Mediaeval Stage</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS LUPTON (?-?).</p>
-
-<p>Several miscellaneous works by Lupton appeared during 1572–84. He may
-be the ‘Mr. Lupton’ whom the Corporation of Worcester paid during the
-progress of 1575 (Nichols, i. 549) ‘for his paynes for and in devising
-[and] instructing the children in their speeches on the too Stages’.</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>All For Money. 1558 &lt; &gt; 77</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1577, Nov. 25. ‘An Enterlude intituled all for money.’
-<i>Roger Ward</i> (Arber, ii. 321).</p>
-
-<p>1578. A Moral and Pitieful Comedie, Intituled, All for Money. Plainly
-representing the manners of men, and fashion of the world noweadayes.
-Compiled by T. Lupton. <i>Roger Ward and Richard Mundee.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. O. Halliwell (1851, <i>Literature of Sixteenth
-and Seventeenth Centuries</i>), E. Vogel (1904, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xl.
-129), J. S. Farmer (1910, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A final prayer for the Queen who ‘hath begon godly’ suggests an
-earlier date than that of Lupton’s other recorded work. Fleay, ii. 56,
-would identify the play with <i>The Devil and Dives</i> named in the
-anonymous <i>Histriomastix</i>, but Dives only appears once, and not
-with Satan.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN LYLY (1554?-1606).</p>
-
-<p>Lyly was of a gentle Hampshire family, the grandson of William, high
-master of St. Paul’s grammar school, and son of Peter, a diocesan
-official at Canterbury, where he was probably born some seventeen years
-before 8 Oct. 1571, when he matriculated from Magdalen College, Oxford.
-He took his B.A. in 1573 and his M.A. in 1575, after a vain attempt
-in 1574 to secure a fellowship through the influence of Burghley. He
-went to London and dwelt in the Savoy. By 1578, when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[412]</span> published
-<i>Euphues</i>, <i>The Anatomy of Wit</i>, he was apparently in the
-service of Lord Delawarr, and by 1580 in that of Burghley’s son-in-law,
-Edward, Earl of Oxford. It is a pleasing conjecture that he may have
-been the author of ‘the two prose books played at the Belsavage, where
-you shall find never a word without wit, never a line without pith,
-never a letter placed in vain’, thus praised in <i>The Schoole of
-Abuse</i> (1579) of his fellow euphuist, Stephen Gosson. He incurred
-the enmity of Gabriel Harvey by suggesting to Oxford that he was aimed
-at in the <i>Speculum Tuscanismi</i> of Harvey’s <i>Three Letters</i>
-(1580). In 1582 he had himself incurred Oxford’s displeasure, but
-the trouble was surmounted, and about 1584 he held leases in the
-Blackfriars (cf. ch. xvii), one at least of which he obtained through
-Oxford, for the purposes of a theatrical speculation, in the course
-of which he took to Court a company which bore Oxford’s name, but
-was probably made up of boys from the Chapel and St. Paul’s choirs.
-Presumably the speculation failed, for in June 1584 Lyly, who on 22
-Nov. 1583 had married Beatrice Browne of Mexborough, Yorks., was in
-prison for debt, whence he was probably relieved by a gift from Oxford,
-in reward for his service, of a rent-charge which he sold for £250.
-His connexion with the stage was not, however, over, for he continued
-to write for the Paul’s boys until they stopped playing about 1591.
-Harvey calls Lyly the ‘Vicemaster of Paules and the Foolemaster of the
-Theatre’. From this it has been inferred that he held an ushership at
-the Paul’s choir school. But ‘vice’ is a common synonym for ‘fool’ and
-‘vicemaster’, like ‘foolemaster’, probably only means ‘playwright’.
-Nothing written by Lyly for the Theater in particular or for any
-adult stage is known to exist, but he seems to have taken part with
-Nashe in the retorts of orthodoxy during 1589 and 1590 to the Martin
-Marprelate pamphleteers, probably writing the tract called <i>Pappe
-with a Hatchett</i> (1589), and he may have been responsible for some
-of the plays which certainly formed an element in that retort. Lyly’s
-ambitions were in the direction of courtly rather than of academic
-preferment. He seems to have had some promise of favour from Elizabeth
-about 1585 and to have been more definitely ‘entertained her servant’
-as Esquire of the Body, probably ‘extraordinary’, in or about 1588,
-with a hint to ‘aim his courses at the Revels’, doubtless at the
-reversion of the Mastership, then held by Edmund Tilney. Mr. R. W. Bond
-bases many conjectures about Lyly’s career on a theory that he actually
-held the post of Clerk Comptroller in the Revels Office, but the known
-history of the post (cf. ch. iii) makes this impossible. From 1596 he
-is found living in the parish of St. Bartholomew the Less. He seems
-to have ceased writing plays for some while in 1590, and may be the
-‘pleasant Willy’ spoken of as ‘dead of late’ and sitting ‘in idle Cell’
-in Spenser’s <i>Tears of the Muses</i> (1591), although it is possible
-that Tarlton (q.v.) is intended. But <i>The Woman in the Moon</i> at
-least is of later date, and it is possible that both the Chapel and the
-Paul’s boys were again acting his old plays by the end of the century.
-In 1595 he was lamenting the overthrow of his fortunes, and by about
-1597 the reversion of the Mastership of the Revels had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[413]</span> been definitely
-promised to George Buck. There exist several letters written by Lyly
-to the Queen and to Sir Robert Cecil between 1597 and 1601, in which
-he complains bitterly of the wrong done him. Later letters of 1603
-and 1605 suggest that at last he had obtained his reward, possibly
-something out of the Essex forfeitures for which he was asking in 1601.
-In any case, he did not live to enjoy it long, as the register of St.
-Bartholomew’s the Less records his burial on 30 Nov. 1606.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1628, Jan. 9 (by order of a full court). ‘Sixe playes of
-Peter Lillyes to be printed in one volume ... viz<sup>t</sup>. Campaste, Sapho,
-and Phao. Galathea: Endimion Midas and Mother Bomby.’ <i>Blount</i>
-(Arber, iv. 192). [‘Peter’ is due to a confusion with Lyly’s brother, a
-chaplain of the Savoy, who had acted as licenser for the press.]</p>
-
-<p>1632. Sixe Court Comedies. Often Presented and Acted before Queene
-Elizabeth, by the Children of her Maiesties Chappell, and the Children
-of Paules. Written by the onely Rare Poet of that Time. The Witie,
-Comicall, Facetiously-Quicke and vnparalelld: Iohn Lilly, Master of
-Arts. <i>William Stansby for Edward Blount.</i> [Epistles to Viscount
-Lumley and to the Reader, both signed ‘Ed. Blount’. This edition adds
-many songs not in the Qq, and W. W. Greg (<i>M. L. R.</i> i. 43)
-argues that they are not by Lyly, but mid-seventeenth-century work and
-possibly by Dekker.]</p>
-
-<p>1858. F. W. Fairholt, <i>The Dramatic Works of J. L.</i> 2 vols.
-(<i>Library of Old Authors</i>).</p>
-
-<p>1902. R. W. Bond, <i>The Complete Works of J. L.</i> 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: H. Morley, <i>Euphuism</i> (1861, <i>Quarterly
-Review</i>, cix); W. L. Rushton, <i>Shakespeare’s Euphuism</i> (1871);
-R. F. Weymouth, <i>On Euphuism</i> (1870–2, <i>Phil. Soc. Trans.</i>);
-C. C. Hense, <i>J. L. und Shakespeare</i> (1872–3, <i>Jahrbuch</i>,
-vii. 238; viii. 224); F. Landmann, <i>Der Euphuismus, sein Wesen, seine
-Quelle, seine Geschichte</i> (1881), <i>Shakespeare and Euphuism</i>
-(1880–5, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 241); J. Goodlet, <i>Shakespeare’s Debt
-to J. L.</i> (1882, <i>E. S.</i> v. 356); K. Steinhäuser, <i>J. L.
-als Dramatiker</i> (1884); J. M. Hart, <i>Euphuism</i> (1889, <i>Ohio
-College Trans.</i>); C. G. Child, <i>J. L. and Euphuism</i> (1894); J.
-D. Wilson, <i>J. L.</i> (1905); W. W. Greg, <i>The Authorship of the
-Songs in L.’s Plays</i> (1905, <i>M. L. R.</i> i. 43); A. Feuillerat,
-<i>J. L.</i> (1910); F. Brie, <i>L. und Greene</i> (1910, <i>E. S.</i>
-xlii. 217).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Campaspe. 1584</i></p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) 1584. A moste excellent Comedie of Alexander, Campaspe, and
-Diogenes. Played before the Queenes Maiestie on twelfe day at night
-by her Maiesties Children and the Children of Poules. <i>For Thomas
-Cadman.</i> [Huth Collection. Prologue and Epilogue at the Blackfriars;
-Prologue and Epilogue at Court. Running title, ‘A tragical Comedie of
-Alexander and Campaspe’.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) 1584. Campaspe, Played ... on newyeares day at night, by her
-Maiesties Children.... <i>For Thomas Cadman.</i> [Dyce Collection.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) 1584. Campaspe, Played ... on newyeares day at night, by her
-Maiesties Childrẽ.... <i>For Thomas Cadman.</i> [B.M.; Bodleian.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[414]</span></p>
-
-<p>1591. Campaspe, Played ... on twelfe day.... <i>Thomas Orwin for
-William Broome.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1597, Apr. 12 (in full court). ‘Sapho and Phao and
-Campaspe ... the which copies were Thomas Cadmans.’ <i>Joan Broome</i>
-(Arber, iii. 82).</p>
-
-<p>1601, Aug. 23 (in full court). ‘Copies ... which belonged to Mystres
-Brome ... viz. Sapho and Phao, Campaspe, Endimion, Mydas, Galathea.’
-<i>George Potter</i> (Arber, iii. 191).</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–3</sup> (1825, ii), and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> i), J. M. Manly (1897, <i>Specimens</i>, ii. 273), G.
-P. Baker (1903, <i>R. E. C.</i>)&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: R. Sprenger,
-<i>Zu J. L.’s C.</i> (1892, <i>E. S.</i> xvi. 156); E. Koeppel, <i>Zu
-J. L.’s A. und C.</i> (1903, <i>Archiv</i>, cx).</p>
-
-<p>The order of the 1584 prints is not quite clear; (<i>c</i>) follows
-(<i>b</i>), but the absence of any collation of (<i>a</i>) leaves its
-place conjectural. I conjecture that it came first, partly because a
-correction in the date of Court performance is more likely to have been
-made after one inaccurate issue than after two, partly because its
-abandoned t.p. title serves as running title in all three issues. I do
-not think the reversion to ‘twelfe day’ in 1591, when the facts may
-have been forgotten, carries much weight. If so, the Court production
-was on a 1 Jan., and although the wording of the t.p. suggests,
-rather than proves, that it was 1 Jan. in the year of publication,
-this date fits in with the known facts of Lyly’s connexion with the
-Blackfriars (cf. ch. xvii). The <i>Chamber Accounts</i> (App. B) give
-the performers on this day as Lord Oxford’s servants, but I take this
-company to have been a combination of Chapel and Paul’s children (cf.
-chh. xii, xiii). Fleay, ii. 39, and Bond, ii. 310, with imperfect
-lists of Court performances before them, suggest 31 Dec. 1581, taking
-‘newyeares day at night’, rather lamely, for New Year’s Eve. So does
-Feuillerat, 574, but I am not sure that his view will have survived
-his Blackfriars investigations. In any case, the play must have been
-written later than Jan. 1580, as Lyly uses Sir T. North’s English
-translation of Plutarch, of which the preface is dated in that month.
-In a prefatory note by N. W. to S. Daniel, <i>The Worthy Tract of
-Paulus Jovius</i> (1585), that work is commended above ‘Tarlton’s toys
-or the silly enterlude of Diogenes’ (Grosart, <i>Daniel</i>, iv. 8).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sapho and Phao. 3 Mar. 1584</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1584, Apr. 6. ‘Yt is graunted vnto him yat yf he gett
-ye comedie of Sappho laufully alowed vnto him, then none of this
-cumpanie shall interrupt him to enjoye yt’ (<i>in margin</i> ‘Lyllye’).
-<i>Thomas Cadman</i> (Arber, ii. 430).</p>
-
-<p>1584. Sapho and Phao, Played beefore the Queenes Maiestie on
-Shrouetewsday, by her Maiesties Children, and the Boyes of Paules.
-<i>Thomas Dawson for Thomas Cadman.</i> [Prologues ‘at the Black
-fryers’ and ‘at the Court’, and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1591. <i>Thomas Orwin for William Broome.</i></p>
-
-<table summary="orwin">
- <tr>
- <td class="cht"><i>S. R.</i> 1597, Apr. 12</td>
- <td class="brckt" rowspan="2"><img src="images/big_right_bracket.png" alt="big right bracket"
- style="height:2.5em;padding:0 0em 0 0em;" /></td>
- <td class="ctr"><i>vide supra</i> s.v. <i>Campaspe</i>.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht3">1601, Aug. 23</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[415]</span></p>
-
-<p>I date the Court production on the Shrove-Tuesday before the S. R.
-entry, on which day Oxford’s boys, whom I regard as made up of Chapel
-and Paul’s boys, played under Lyly (cf. App. B). Fleay, ii. 40, Bond,
-ii. 367, and Feuillerat, 573, prefer Shrove-Tuesday (27 Feb.) 1582.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Galathea. 1584 &lt; &gt; 88</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1585, Apr. 1. ‘A Commoedie of Titirus and Galathea’ (no
-fee recorded). <i>Gabriel Cawood</i> (Arber, ii. 440).</p>
-
-<p>1591, Oct. 4 (Bp. of London). ‘Three Comedies plaied before her
-maiestie by the Children of Paules thone called Endimion, thother
-Galathea and thother Midas.’ <i>Widow Broome</i> (Arber, ii. 596).</p>
-
-<p>1592. Gallathea. As it was playde before the Queenes Maiestie at
-Greenewiche, on Newyeeres day at Night. By the Chyldren of Paules.
-<i>John Charlwood for Joan Broome.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>The only performance by Paul’s, on a 1 Jan. at Greenwich, which
-can be referred to in the t.p. is that of 1588 (cf. App. B), and
-in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 41 is an allusion to the approaching year
-<i>octogesimus octavus</i>, which would of course begin on 25 March
-1588. Fleay, ii. 40, and Feuillerat, 575, accept this date. Bond, ii.
-425, prefers 1586 or 1587, regardless of the fact that the New Year
-plays in these years were by the Queen’s men. A phrase in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii. 86 proves it later than <i>Sapho and Phao</i>. But if, as seems
-probable, the 1585 entry in the Stationers’ Register was of this play,
-the original production must have been at least as early as 1584–5, and
-that of 1588 a revival.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Endymion. 1588</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1591, Oct. 4. <i>Vide supra</i> s.v. <i>Galathea</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1591. Endimion, The Man in the Moone. Playd before the Queenes Maiestie
-at Greenewich on Candlemas Day at night, by the Chyldren of Paules.
-<i>John Charlwood for Joan Broome.</i> [Epistle by the Printer to the
-Reader; Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i>
-ii), G. P. Baker (1894) and W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: N. J. Halpin, <i>Oberon’s Vision
-in M. N. D. Illustrated by a Comparison with L.’s E.</i> (1843,
-<i>Sh. Soc.</i>); J. E. Spingarn, <i>The Date of L.’s E.</i> (1894,
-<i>Athenaeum</i>, ii. 172, 204); P. W. Long, <i>The Purport of L.’s
-E.</i> (1909, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxiv. 1), <i>L.’s E., an Addendum</i>
-(1911, <i>M. P.</i> viii. 599).</p>
-
-<p>The prologue and epilogue were evidently for the Court. The epistle
-describes this as the first of certain comedies which had come into
-the printer’s hands ‘since the plays in Pauls were dissolved’. Baker,
-lxxxiii, suggested a date of composition in the autumn of 1579, while
-Spingarn, Bond, iii. 11, and Feuillerat, 577, take the Candlemas of the
-t.p. to be that of 1586, but the only available Candlemas performance
-by the Paul’s boys is that of 1588 (cf. App. B). With Long I find no
-conviction in the attempts of Halpin, Baker, Bond, and Feuillerat to
-trace Elizabeth’s politics and amours in the play. If Lyly had meant
-half of what they suggest, he would have ruined his career in her
-service at the outset.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[416]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Midas. 1589–90</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1591, Oct. 4. <i>Vide supra</i>, s.v. <i>Galathea</i>.</p>
-
-<p>1592. Midas. Plaied before the Queenes Maiestie upon Twelfe day at
-night. By the Children of Paules. <i>Thomas Scarlet for J. B.</i>
-[Prologue ‘in Paules’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> i).</p>
-
-<p>Internal allusions suggest a date as late as 1589, and the Twelfth
-Night of the t.p. must therefore be 6 Jan. 1590. Fleay, ii. 42, and
-Bond, iii. 111, accept this date. Feuillerat, 578, prefers 6 Jan. 1589,
-because Gabriel Harvey alludes to the play in his <i>Advertisement to
-Pap-Hatchet</i>, dated 5 Nov. 1589. But there was no Court performance
-on that day, and Harvey may have seen the play ‘in Paules’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mother Bombie. 1587 &lt; &gt; 90</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, June 18. ‘A booke intituled mother Bumbye beinge an
-enterlude.’ <i>Cuthbert Burby</i> (Arber, ii. 654).</p>
-
-<p>1594. Mother Bombie. As it was sundrie times plaied by the Children of
-Powles. <i>Thomas Scarlet for Cuthbert Burby.</i></p>
-
-<p>1598. <i>Thomas Creede for Cuthbert Burby.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> i).</p>
-
-<p>The play doubtless belongs to the Paul’s series of 1587–90. It seems
-hardly possible to date it more closely. Feuillerat, 578, thinks it
-later in style than <i>Midas</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Love’s Metamorphosis. 1589–90</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Nov. 25 (Pasfield). ‘A booke Called Loves
-metamorphesis wrytten by master John Lylly and playd by the Children of
-Paules.’ <i>William Wood</i> (Arber, iii. 176).</p>
-
-<p>1601. Loves Metamorphosis. A Wittie and Courtly Pastorall. Written by
-M<sup>r</sup> Iohn Lyllie. First playd by the Children of Paules, and now by the
-Children of the Chapell. <i>For William Wood.</i></p>
-
-<p>F. Brie (<i>E. S.</i> xlii. 222) suggests that the play borrowed from
-Greene’s <i>Greenes Metamorphosis</i> (S. R. 9 Dec. 1588). Probably the
-Paul’s boys produced it <i>c.</i> 1589–90, and the Chapel revived it in
-1600–1.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Woman in the Moon. 1590 &lt; &gt; 5</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1595, Sept. 22. ‘A booke intituled a woman in the moone.’
-<i>Robert Fynche</i> (Arber, iii. 48).</p>
-
-<p>1597. The Woman in the Moone. As it was presented before her Highnesse.
-By Iohn Lyllie Maister of Arts. <i>William Jones.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>The prologue says:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Remember all is but a poet’s dream,</div>
- <div>The first he had in Phoebus holy bower,</div>
- <div>But not the last, unless the first displease.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This has been taken as indicating that the play was
-Lyly’s first; but it need only mean that it was his first in verse.
-All the others are in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[417]</span> prose. The blank verse is that of the nineties,
-rather than that of the early eighties. There is nothing to show who
-were the actors, but it is not unlikely that, after the plays in Paul’s
-were dissolved, Lyly tried his hand in a new manner for a new company.
-Feuillerat, 232, 580, suggests that Elizabeth may have taken the satire
-of women amiss and that the ‘overthwartes’ of Lyly’s fortunes of which
-he complained in Jan. 1595 may have been the result. He puts the date,
-therefore, in 1593–4.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Work</i></p>
-
-<p>Lyly has been suggested as the author of <i>Maid’s Metamorphosis</i>
-and <i>A Warning for Fair Women</i> (cf. ch. xxiv) and of several
-anonymous entertainments and fragments of entertainments (ibid., and
-<i>supra</i>, s.vv. Cecil, Clifford, Lee).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">LEWIS MACHIN (<i>fl. c.</i> 1608).</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is known of Machin’s personality. He is probably the L. M.
-who contributed ‘eglogs’ to the <i>Mirrha</i> (1607) of the King’s
-Revels actor William Barksted (q.v.). A Richard Machin was an actor in
-Germany, 1600–6. There is no traceable connexion between either Richard
-or Lewis and Henry Machyn the diarist.</p>
-
-<p>Machin collaborated with Gervase Markham in <i>The Dumb Knight</i>
-(q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>The anonymous <i>Every Woman in Her Humour</i> and <i>Fair Maid of the
-Exchange</i> have also been ascribed to him (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GERVASE MARKHAM (<i>c.</i> 1568–1637).</p>
-
-<p>There were two Gervase Markhams, as to both of whom full details
-are given in C. R. Markham, <i>Markham Memorials</i> (1913). The
-dramatist was probably the third son of Robert Markham of Cotham,
-Notts., a soldier and noted horseman, whose later life was devoted
-to an industrious output of books, verses, romance, translations,
-and treatises on horsemanship, farming, and sport. He was, said
-Jonson to Drummond in 1619, ‘not of the number of the faithfull, i.e.
-Poets, and but a base fellow’ (Laing, 11). Fleay, ii. 58, suggested,
-on the basis of certain phrases in his <i>Tragedy of Sir Richard
-Grenville</i> (1595), which has a dedication, amongst others, to the
-Earl of Southampton, that he might be the ‘rival poet’ of Shakespeare’s
-<i>Sonnets</i>. The other Gervase Markham was of Sedgebrook and later
-of Dunham, Notts., and is not known to have been a writer. C. W.
-Wallace thinks he has found a third in an ‘adventurer’ whose wagers
-with actors and others on the success of an intended walk to Berwick
-in 1618 led to a suit in the Court of Requests (<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi.
-345). But as he, like Markham of Cotham, had served in Ireland, the
-two may conceivably be identical, although the adventurer had a large
-family, and it is not known that Markham of Cotham had any. Markham
-of Dunham, who had also served in Ireland, had but two bastards.
-Conceivably Markham wrote for the Admiral’s in 1596–7 (cf. vol. ii,
-p. 145). Beyond the period dealt with, he collaborated with William
-Sampson in <i>Herod and Antipater</i> (1622) acted by the Revels
-company at the Red Bull.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Dumb Knight. 1607–8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, Oct. 6 (Buck). ‘A playe of the Dumbe Knight.’
-<i>John Bache</i> (Arber, iii. 392).</p>
-
-<p>1610. Nov. 19. Transfer from Bache to Robert Wilson (Arber, iii. 449).</p>
-
-<p>1608. The dumbe Knight. A pleasant Comedy, acted sundry times by the
-children of his Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iaruis Markham. <i>N. Okes
-for J. Bache.</i> [Epistle to Reader, signed ‘Lewes Machin’. There
-were two reissues of 1608 with altered t.ps. Both omit the ascription
-to Markham. One has ‘A historicall comedy’; the other omits the
-description.]</p>
-
-<p>1633. <i>A. M. for William Sheares.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> ii).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: J. Q. Adams, <i>Every Woman
-in Her Humour and The Dumb Knight</i> (1913, <i>M. P.</i> x. 413).</p>
-
-<p>The Epistle says that ‘Rumour ... hath made strange constructions
-on this Dumb Knight’, and that ‘having a partner in the wrong whose
-worth hath been often approved ... I now in his absence make this
-apology, both for him and me’. Presumably these ‘constructions’ led to
-the withdrawal of Markham’s name from the title-page. Fleay, ii. 58,
-assigned him the satirical comedy of the underplot, but Adams points
-out that Markham’s books reveal no humour, and that the badly linked
-underplot was probably inserted by Machin. It borrows passages from
-the anonymous unprinted <i>Every Woman in Her Humour</i> (q.v.). The
-production of a King’s Revels play is not likely to be before 1607, but
-Herz, 102, thinks that an earlier version underlies the <i>Vom König
-in Cypern</i> of Jacob Ayrer, who died 1605. A later German version
-also exists, and was perhaps the <i>Philole und Mariana</i> played at
-Nuremberg in 1613.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564–93).</p>
-
-<p>Marlowe, whose name was also spelt Marley and Marlin, was the son of
-John and Catherine Marlowe of Canterbury. He was born 6 Feb. 1564. John
-Marlowe was a shoemaker and subsequently became parish clerk of St.
-Mary’s. He entered the King’s School, Canterbury, in 1579 and in March
-1581 matriculated with a pension on Abp. Parker’s foundation at Corpus
-Christi or Benet’s College, Cambridge. He took his B.A. in 1584 and his
-M.A. in 1587. In this year he probably began his literary career in
-London, with <i>Tamburlaine</i>. A ballad, printed by Collier, which
-represents him as a player and breaking his leg in a lewd scene on the
-stage of the Curtain, is now discredited. There are satirical allusions
-to him in the preface to the <i>Perimedes</i> (S. R. 29 March 1588) and
-in the <i>Menaphon</i> (23 Aug. 1589) of Robert Greene, but it is very
-doubtful whether, as usually assumed, Nashe had him especially in mind
-when he criticized certain tragic poets of the day in his epistle to
-the latter pamphlet (cf. App. C, No. xlii). On 1 Oct. 1588 ‘Christofer
-Marley, of London, gentleman,’ had to give bail to appear at the next
-Middlesex Sessions. The exact nature of the charge is unknown;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[419]</span> but it
-cannot be doubted that his personal reputation, even in the free-living
-Elizabethan London, did not stand high. He is clearly the ‘famous
-gracer of tragedians’ reproved for atheism in Greene’s <i>Groats-worth
-of Wit</i> (1592) and it is probably to him that Chettle alludes in
-his apology when he says, ‘With neither of them that take offence was
-I acquainted and with one of them I care not if I never be’ (cf. App.
-C, Nos. xlviii, xlix). The charge of atheism doubtless arose from
-Marlowe’s association with the group of freethinkers which centred
-round Sir Walter Raleigh. In 1593 these speculative tendencies brought
-him into trouble. About 1591, while writing for the players of a
-certain lord, as yet unidentified, he had shared a room with Thomas
-Kyd (q.v.), who was then in the service of the same lord. Certain
-theological notes of his got amongst Kyd’s papers and were found there
-when Kyd was arrested on a charge of libel on 12 May 1593. On 18 May
-the Privy Council sent a messenger to the house of Thomas Walsingham,
-at Scadbury in Kent, to arrest Marlowe, and on 20 May he was ordered to
-remain in attendance on the Council. There exists a ‘Note’ drawn up at
-this time by one Richard Baines or Bame, containing a report of some
-loose conversation of Marlowe’s which their Lordships could hardly be
-expected to regard as anything but blasphemous. But, so far as Marlowe
-was concerned, the proceedings were put a stop to by his sudden death.
-The register of St. Nicholas, Deptford, records that he was ‘slain
-by Francis Archer’ and buried there on 1 June 1593. Francis Meres’s
-<i>Palladis Tamia</i> (1598) tells us that he was ‘stabbed to death
-by a bawdy servingman, a rival of his in his lewde love’. Somewhat
-different versions of the story are given by Thomas Beard, <i>The
-Theater of God’s Judgments</i> (1597), and William Vaughan, <i>The
-Golden Grove</i> (1600), both of whom use Marlowe’s fate to point the
-moral against atheism. There are some rather incoherent allusions to
-the event in verses affixed by Gabriel Harvey to his <i>A New Letter of
-Notable Contents</i>, which is dated 16 Sept. 1593:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
-<p class="center">Sonet</p>
-<p class="center">Gorgon, or the Wonderfull yeare</p>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>... The fatall yeare of yeares is Ninety Three:</div>
- <div>... Weepe Powles, thy Tamberlaine voutsafes to dye.</div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="center">L’envoy</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The hugest miracle remaines behinde,</div>
- <div>The second Shakerley Rash-swash to binde.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing">*****</div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="center">The Writer’s Postscript; or a friendly Caveat to the Second
-Shakerley of Powles.</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Slumbring I lay in melancholy bed</div>
- <div>Before the dawning of the sanguin light:</div>
- <div>When Eccho shrill, or some Familiar Spright,</div>
- <div>Buzzed an Epitaph into my hed.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Magnifique Mindes, bred of Gargantuas race.</div>
- <div>In grisly weedes His Obsequies waiment</div>
- <div>Whose Corps on Powles, whose mind triumph’d on Kent,</div>
- <div>Scorning to bate Sir Rodomont an ace.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[420]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I mus’d awhile: and having mus’d awhile,</div>
- <div>Iesu, (quoth I) is that Gargantua minde</div>
- <div>Conquerd, and left no Scanderbeg behinde?</div>
- <div>Vowed he not to Powles A Second bile?</div>
- <div>What bile or kibe (quoth that same early Spright)</div>
- <div>Have you forgot the Scanderbegging wight?</div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="center">Glosse</p>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Is it a Dreame? or is it the Highest Minde</div>
- <div>That ever haunted Powles, or hunted winde,</div>
- <div>Bereaft of that same sky-surmounting breath,</div>
- <div>That breath, that taught the Tempany to swell?</div>
- <div>He, and the Plague contested for the game:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The grand Dissease disdain’d his toade Conceit,</div>
- <div>And smiling at his tamberlaine contempt,</div>
- <div>Sternely struck-home the peremptory stroke....</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Harvey seems to have thought in error that Marlowe died
-of the plague. I do not infer from the allusions to ‘Powles’ that
-Marlowe wrote for the Paul’s boys; but rather that <i>Tamburlaine</i>,
-like Nashe’s pamphlets, was sold by the booksellers in St. Paul’s
-Churchyard. The ‘second Shakerley’ is certainly Nashe. Surely
-‘Scanderbeg’, who is ‘left behinde’, must also be Nashe, and I do
-not see how Fleay, ii. 65, draws the inference that Marlowe was the
-author of the lost play entered on the Stationers’ Register by Edward
-Allde on 3 July 1601 as ‘the true historye of George Scanderbarge, as
-yt was lately playd by the right honorable the Earle of Oxenford his
-servantes’ (Arber, iii. 187). There is much satire both of Marlowe and
-of Nashe in the body of <i>A New Letter</i> (Grosart, <i>Harvey</i>, i.
-255).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1826. [G. Robinson] <i>The Works of C. M.</i> 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1850. A. Dyce, <i>The Works of C. M.</i> 3 vols. [Revised 1858, and in
-1 vol. 1865, &amp;c.]</p>
-
-<p>1870. F. Cunningham, <i>The Works of C. M.</i></p>
-
-<p>1885. A. H. Bullen, <i>The Works of C. M.</i> 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1885–9. H. Breymann and A. Wagner, <i>C. M. Historisch-kritische
-Ausgabe.</i> 3 parts. [<i>Tamburlaine</i>, <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, <i>Jew
-of Malta</i> only issued.]</p>
-
-<p>1887. H. Ellis, <i>The Best Plays of C. M.</i> (<i>Mermaid Series</i>).
-[<i>Tamburlaine</i>, <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, <i>Jew of Malta</i>, <i>Edward
-II</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1910. C. F. Tucker Brooke, <i>The Works of C. M.</i> [Larger edition in
-progress.]</p>
-
-<p>1912. W. L. Phelps. <i>Marlowe</i> [<i>M. E. D.</i>].
-[<i>Tamburlaine</i>, <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, <i>Jew of Malta</i>, <i>Edward
-II</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: H. Ulrici, <i>C. M. und Shakespeare’s Verhältniss
-zu ihm</i> (1865, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, i. 57); J. Schipper, <i>De versu
-Marlowii</i> (1867); T. Mommsen, <i>M. und Shakespeare</i> (1886); A.
-W. Verity, <i>M.’s Influence on Shakespeare</i> (1886); E. Faligan,
-<i>De Marlovianis Fabulis</i> (1887); O. Fischer, <i>Zur Charakteristik
-der Dramen M.’s</i> (1889); J. G. Lewis,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[421]</span> <i>C. M.: Outlines of
-his Life and Works</i> (1891); F. S. Boas, <i>New Light on M.</i>
-(1899, <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, lxxi, 212); J. H. Ingram, <i>C. M.
-and his Associates</i> (1904); H. Jung, <i>Das Verhältniss M.’s zu
-Shakespeare</i> (1904); W. L. Courtney, <i>C. M.</i> (<i>Fortnightly
-Review</i>, 1905, ii. 467, 678); A. Marquardsen, <i>C. M.’s
-Kosmologie</i> (1905, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xli. 54); J. Le G. Brereton,
-<i>The Case of Francis Ingram</i> (<i>Sydney Univ. Publ.</i> v); G.
-C. Moore Smith, <i>Marlowe at Cambridge</i> (1909, <i>M. L. R.</i>
-iv. 167); F. C. Danchin, <i>Études critiques sur C. M.</i> (1912–13,
-<i>Revue Germanique</i>, viii. 23; ix. 566); C. Crawford, <i>The
-Marlowe Concordance</i> (1911, <i>Materialien</i>, xxxiv, pt. i only);
-F. K. Brown, <i>M. and Kyd</i> (<i>T. L. S.</i>, 2 June, 1921).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Tamburlaine. c. 1587</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1590, Aug. 14 (Hartwell). ‘The twooe commicall discourses
-of Tomberlein the Cithian shepparde.’ <i>Richard Jones</i> (Arber, ii.
-558).</p>
-
-<p>1590. Tamburlaine the Great. Who, from a Scythian Shephearde by his
-rare and wonderfull Conquests became a most puissant and mightye
-Monarque. And (for his tyranny, and terrour in Warre) was tearmed, The
-Scourge of God. Deuided into two Tragicall Discourses, as they were
-sundrie times shewed vpon Stages in the Citie of London, By the right
-honorable the Lord Admyrall, his seruantes. Now first, and newlie
-published. <i>Richard Jones</i> [8vo]. [Epistle to the Readers, signed
-‘R. I. Printer’; Prologues to both Parts. See Greg, <i>Plays</i>, 66;
-<i>Masques</i>, cxxv. Ingram, 281, speaks of two 4tos and one 8vo of
-1590, probably through some confusion.]</p>
-
-<p>1592. <i>R. Jones.</i> [Greg, <i>Masques</i>, cxxv, thinks that the
-date may have been altered in the B.M. copy from 1593. Langbaine
-mentions an edition of 1593.]</p>
-
-<p>1597. [An edition apparently known to Collier; cf. Greg,
-<i>Masques</i>, cxxv.]</p>
-
-<p>1605. <i>For Edward White.</i> [Part i.]</p>
-
-<p>1606. <i>E. A. for E. White.</i> [Part ii.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by A. Wagner (1885) and K. Vollmöller (1885) and of
-Part i by W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>:
-C. H. Herford, <i>The Sources of M.’s T.</i> (<i>Academy</i>, 20 Oct.
-1883); L. Frankel, <i>Zum Stoffe von M.’s T.</i> (1892, <i>E. S.</i>
-xvi. 459); E. Köppel in <i>Englische Studien</i>, xvi. 357; E. Hübner,
-<i>Der Einfluss von M.’s Tamburlaine auf die zeitgenössischen und
-folgenden Dramatiker</i> (<i>Halle diss.</i> 1901); F. G. Hubbard,
-<i>Possible Evidence for the Date of T.</i> (1918, <i>M. L. A.</i>
-xxxiii. 436).</p>
-
-<p>There is no real doubt as to Marlowe’s authorship of
-<i>Tamburlaine</i>, but the direct evidence is very slight, consisting
-chiefly of Greene’s (q.v.) <i>Perimedes</i> coupling of ‘that atheist
-Tamburlan’ with ‘spirits as bred of Merlin’s race’, and Harvey’s
-allusion to its author as dying in 1593. Thomas Heywood, in his
-prologue to <i>The Jew of Malta</i>, speaks of Alleyn’s performance in
-the play. The entry printed by Collier in Henslowe’s <i>Diary</i> of
-a payment to Dekker in 1597 ‘for a prolog to Marloes tambelan’ is a
-forgery (Warner, 159; Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, i. xxxix). The Admiral’s
-produced ‘Tamberlan’ on 30 Aug. 1594. Henslowe marks the entry ‘j’,
-which has been taken as equivalent to ‘n. e.’, Henslowe’s symbol for
-a new play, and as pointing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[422]</span> to a revision of the play. I feel sure,
-however (cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 408), that ‘j’ only means ‘First
-Part’. ‘Tamberlen’ was given fifteen times from 30 Aug. 1594 to 12 Nov.
-1595, and the ‘2 pt. of tamberlen’ seven times from 19 Dec. 1594 to 13
-Nov. 1595 (Henslowe, ii. 167). Tamburlaine’s cage, bridle, coat, and
-breeches are included in the inventories of the Admiral’s men in 1598
-(<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116).</p>
-
-<p>Greene’s <i>Perimedes</i> reference suggests 1587 or early 1588 as
-the probable date of <i>Tamburlaine</i>. In his preface to the 1590
-edition Richard Jones says that he has omitted ‘some fond and frivolous
-gestures’, but does not say whether these were by the author of the
-tragic stuff. The numerous references to the play in contemporary
-literature often indicate its boisterous character; e.g. T. M. <i>The
-Black Book</i> (Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>, viii. 25), ‘The spindle-shank
-spiders ... went stalking over his head as if they had been conning of
-Tamburlaine’; T. M. <i>Father Hubburd’s Tales</i> (ibid. viii. 93),
-‘The ordnance playing like so many Tamburlaines’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Dr. Faustus, c. 1588</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1592, Dec. 18. Herbert-Ames, <i>Typographical
-Antiquities</i>, ii. 1160, records the following decision of the
-Stationers’ Company not printed by Arber, ‘If the book of D<sup>r</sup>. Faustus
-shall not be found in the Hall Book entered to R<sup>d</sup>. Oliff before Abell
-Jeffes claymed the same, which was about May last, That then the said
-copie shall remayne to the said Abell his proper copie from the tyme of
-his first clayme’. [This can hardly refer to the prose <i>History of
-Faustus</i>, of which the earliest extant, but probably not the first,
-edition was printed by T. Orwin for Edward White in 1592.]</p>
-
-<p>1601, Jan. 7 (Barlowe). ‘A booke called the plaie of Doctor Faustus.’
-<i>Thomas Bushell</i> (Arber, iii. 178).</p>
-
-<p>1610, Sept. 13. Transfer from Bushell to John Wright of ‘The tragicall
-history of the horrible life and Death of Doctor Faustus, written by C.
-M.’ (Arber, iii. 442).</p>
-
-<p>1604. The tragicall History of D. Faustus. As it hath bene Acted by the
-Right Honorable the Earle of Nottingham his seruants. Written by Ch.
-Marl. <i>V. S. for Thomas Bushell.</i></p>
-
-<p>1609. <i>G. E. for John Wright.</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. <i>For John Wright.</i> [An enlarged and altered text.]</p>
-
-<p>1619.... With new Additions. <i>For John Wright.</i></p>
-
-<p>1620; 1624; 1631.</p>
-
-<p>1663.... Printed with New Additions as it is now Acted. With several
-New Scenes, together with the Actors names. <i>For W. Gilbertson.</i>
-[A corrupt text.]</p>
-
-<p>Breymann mentions an edition of 1611 not now known, and Heinemann
-quotes from foreign writers mentions of editions of 1622, 1626, 1636,
-1651, 1690 (1884, <i>Bibliographer</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> i), A. Reidl
-(<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1874]), W. Wagner (1877), A. W. Ward (1878, 1887, 1891,
-1901), Anon. (1881, Zurich), H. Morley (1883), H. Breymann (1889),
-I. Gollancz<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[423]</span> (1897, <i>T. D.</i>), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>), J. S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>:
-G. Herzfeld, <i>Zu M.’s Dr. F.</i> (1905, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xli. 206);
-H. R. O. De Vries, <i>Die Überlieferung und Entstehungsgeschichte
-von M.’s Dr. F.</i> (1909); K. R. Schröder, <i>Textverhältnisse und
-Entstehungsgeschichte von M.’s F.</i> (1909); R. Rohde, <i>Zu M.’s D.
-F.</i> (1913, <i>Morsbach-Festschrift</i>); P. Simpson, <i>The 1604
-Text of M.’s D. F.</i> (1921, <i>Essays and Studies</i>, vii); with
-much earlier literature summarized in Ward’s edition, to which also
-(1887, ed. 2) Fleay’s excursus on <i>The Date and Authorship of Dr.
-F.</i> was contributed.</p>
-
-<p>The Admiral’s men played ‘Docter ffostose’ for Henslowe twenty-four
-times from 2 Oct. 1594 to Oct. 1597 (Henslowe, ii. 168). Their 1598
-inventories include ‘j dragon in fostes’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 118).
-Alleyn (q.v.) played the title-rôle. The entry printed by Collier from
-Henslowe’s <i>Diary</i> of a payment to Dekker on 20 Dec. 1597 ‘for
-adycyons to ffostus’ is a forgery (Warner, 159; Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>,
-i. xxxix), but Henslowe did pay £4 to William Bird and Samuel Rowley
-‘for ther adicyones in doctor fostes’ on 22 Nov. 1602 (Henslowe, i.
-172). Probably, therefore, the Admiral’s revived the play about 1602–3.
-These additions are doubtless the comic passages which appear for the
-first time in the 1616 text, although that may also contain fragments
-of the original text omitted from the 1,485 lines of 1604. The source
-of the play seems to be the German <i>Faustbuch</i> (1587) through
-the English <i>History of Dr. Johann Faustus</i>, of which an edition
-earlier than the extant 1592 one is conjectured. A probable date is
-1588–9. On 28 Feb. 1589 ‘a ballad of the life and deathe of Doctor
-Faustus the great Cungerer’ was entered on S. R. (Arber, ii. 516).
-There are apparent imitations of the play in <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>
-(q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>The reference in <i>The Black Book</i> (<i>vide infra</i>) can hardly
-be taken as evidence that the original production was at the Theatre.</p>
-
-<p>Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 168) gives some support to the view of Fleay
-(Ward, clxvii) that Marlowe is only responsible for part even of the
-1604 text, and that the rest, including the comic matter, may have been
-contributed by Dekker. But he doubts whether Dekker worked upon the
-play before the date of a revision in 1594, for which there is some
-evidence, such as an allusion in xi. 46 to Dr. Lopez. Fleay thought
-Dekker to have been also an original collaborator, which his age hardly
-permits.</p>
-
-<p>The play seems to have formed part of the English repertories in
-Germany in 1608 and 1626 (Herz, 66, 74).</p>
-
-<p>It became the centre of a curious <i>mythos</i>, which was used to
-point a moral against the stage (cf. ch. viii). Of this there are
-several versions:</p>
-
-<p>(<i>a</i>) 1604. T. M. <i>The Black Book</i> (Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>,
-viii. 13), ‘Hee had a head of hayre like one of my Diuells in Dr.
-Faustus when the old Theater crackt and frighted the audience.’</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) 1633. Prynne, <i>Histriomastix</i>, f. 556, ‘The visible
-apparition of the Devill on the stage at the Belsavage Play-house, in
-Queen Elizabeths dayes (to the great amazement both of the actors and
-spectators) while they were there prophanely playing the History of
-Faustus (the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[424]</span> truth of which I have heard from many now alive, who well
-remember it) there being some distracted with that feareful sight.’</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> ‘J. G. R.’ from manuscript note on ‘the last
-page of a book in my possession, printed by Vautrollier’ (1850, <i>2
-Gent. Mag.</i> xxxiv. 234), ‘Certaine Players at Exeter, acting upon
-the stage the tragical storie of Dr. Faustus the Conjurer; as a certain
-nomber of Devels kept everie one his circle there, and as Faustus was
-busie in his magicall invocations, on a sudden they were all dasht,
-every one harkning other in the eare, for they were all perswaded,
-there was one devell too many amongst them; and so after a little
-pause desired the people to pardon them, they could go no further with
-this matter; the people also understanding the thing as it was, every
-man hastened to be first out of dores. The players (as I heard it)
-contrarye to their custome spending the night in reading and in prayer
-got them out of the town the next morning.’</p>
-
-<p>(<i>d</i>) <i>c.</i> 1673. John Aubrey, <i>Natural History and
-Antiquities of Surrey</i> (1718–19), i. 190, ‘The tradition concerning
-the occasion of the foundation [of Dulwich College] runs thus: that Mr.
-Alleyne, being a Tragedian and one of the original actors in many of
-the celebrated Shakespear’s plays, in one of which he played a Demon,
-with six others, and was in the midst of the play surpriz’d by an
-apparition of the Devil, which so work’d on his Fancy, that he made a
-Vow, which he perform’d at this Place’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Jew of Malta, c. 1589</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, May 17. ‘The famouse tragedie of the Riche Jewe of
-Malta.’ <i>Nicholas Ling and Thomas Millington</i> (Arber, ii. 650).
-[On 16 May ‘a ballad intituled the murtherous life and terrible death
-of the riche Jew of Malta’ had been entered to John Danter.]</p>
-
-<p>1632, Nov. 20 (Herbert). ‘A Tragedy called the Jew of Malta.’
-<i>Nicholas Vavasour</i> (Arber, iv. 288).</p>
-
-<p>1633. The Famous Tragedy of the Rich Iew of Malta. As it was played
-before the King and Queene, in his Majesties Theatre at White-Hall, by
-her Majesties Servants at the Cockpit. Written by Christopher Marlo.
-<i>I. B. for Nicholas Vavasour.</i> [Epistle to Thomas Hammon of Gray’s
-Inn, signed ‘Tho. Heywood’; Prologues and Epilogues at Court and at
-Cockpit by Heywood; Prologue by Machiavel as presenter.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>2, 3</sup>, viii (1780–1827), and by W.
-Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i), Reynell and Son (publ. 1810), S.
-Penley (1813), A. Wagner (1889), and W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: J. Kellner, <i>Die Quelle von M.’s J.
-of M.</i> (1887, <i>E. S.</i> x. 80); M. Thimme, <i>M.’s J. of M.</i>
-(1921).</p>
-
-<p>An allusion in Marlowe’s prologue to the death of the Duc de Guise
-gives a date of performance later than 23 Dec. 1588. Strange’s men
-gave the play for Henslowe seventeen times from 26 Feb. 1592 to 1 Feb.
-1593. Probably it belonged to Henslowe, as it was also played for him
-by Sussex’s men on 4 Feb. 1594, by Sussex and the Queen’s together on
-3 and 8 April 1594, by the Admiral’s on 14 May 1594, by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[425]</span> either the
-Admiral’s or the Chamberlain’s on 6 and 15 June 1594, and thirteen
-times by the Admiral’s from 25 June 1594 to 23 June 1596 (Henslowe,
-ii. 151). The 1598 inventories of the latter company include ‘j
-cauderm for the Jewe’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 118). On 19 May 1601
-Henslowe advanced them money to buy ‘things’ for a revival of the play
-(Henslowe, i. 137). Heywood’s epistle and Cockpit prologue name Marlowe
-and Alleyn as writer and actor of the play. Fleay, i. 298, suggests
-that Heywood wrote the Bellamira scenes (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-iv, v; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i), the motive of which he used for the plot of his
-<i>Captives</i>, and Greg agrees that the play shows traces of two
-hands, one of which may be Heywood’s. The Dresden repertory of 1626
-included a ‘Tragödie von Barabas, Juden von Malta’, but this was not
-necessarily the play ‘von dem Juden’ given by English actors at Passau
-in 1607 and Graz in 1608 (Herz, 66, 75).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Edward the Second. c. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1593, July 6 (Judson). ‘A booke, Intituled The troublesom
-Reign and Lamentable Death of Edward the Second, king of England, with
-the tragicall fall of proud Mortymer.’ <i>William Jones</i> (Arber, ii.
-634).</p>
-
-<p>1593? [C. F. Tucker Brooke (1909, <i>M. L. N.</i> xxiv. 71) suggests
-that a manuscript t.p. dated 1593 and sig. A inserted in Dyce’s copy of
-1598 may be from a lost edition, as they contain textual variants.]</p>
-
-<p>1594. The troublesome raigne and lamentable death of Edward the second,
-King of England: with the tragicall fall of proud Mortimer. As it was
-sundrie times publiquely acted in the honourable citie of London, by
-the right honourable the Earl of Pembroke his servants. Written by
-Chri. Marlow. Gent. <i>For William Jones.</i></p>
-
-<p>1598. <i>Richard Bradocke for William Jones.</i> [With an additional
-scene.]</p>
-
-<p>1612. <i>For Roger Barnes.</i></p>
-
-<p>1622.... As it was publikely Acted by the late Queenes Maiesties
-Servants at the Red Bull in S. Iohns streete.... <i>For Henry Bell.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–3</sup>, ii (1744–1825), and by W. Scott
-(1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i), W. Wagner (1871), F. G. Fleay (1873,
-1877), O. W. Tancock (1877, etc.), E. T. McLaughlin (1894), A. W.
-Verity (1896, <i>T. D.</i>), and W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: C. Tzschaschel, <i>M.’s Edward II und
-seine Quellen</i> (1902, <i>Halle diss.</i>); M. Dahmetz, <i>M.’s Ed.
-II und Shakespeares Rich. II</i> (1904).</p>
-
-<p>Pembroke’s men seem only to have had a footing at Court in the
-winter of 1592–3, and this is probably the date of the play. Greg
-(<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 224) suggests that it may have had some ‘distant
-connexion’ with Chettle and Porter’s <i>The Spencers</i> and an
-anonymous <i>Mortimer</i> of the Admiral’s men in 1599 and 1602
-respectively. But I think <i>Mortimer</i> is a slip of Henslowe’s for
-<i>Vortigern</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Massacre at Paris. 1593</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] Collier, ii. 511, prints a fragment of a fuller text than
-that of the edition, but it is suspect (cf. Tucker Brooke, 483).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[426]</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Massacre at Paris: With the Death of the Duke of
-Guise. As it was plaide by the right honourable the Lord high Admirall
-his Seruants. Written by Christopher Marlow. <i>E. A. for Edward
-White.</i></p>
-
-<p>Strange’s men produced ‘the tragedey of the gvyes’ as ‘n.e.’ on 26 Jan.
-1593. The Admiral’s men also played it for Henslowe as ‘the Gwies’ or
-‘the masacer’ ten times from 21 June to 27 Sept. 1594. Possibly in Nov.
-1598 and certainly in Nov. 1601 Henslowe advanced sums for costumes
-for a revival of the play by the Admiral’s. The insertion by Collier
-of Webster’s name in one of these entries is a forgery and whether the
-lost <i>Guise</i> of this writer (q.v.) bore any relation to Marlowe’s
-play is wholly unknown. On 18 Jan. 1602 Henslowe paid Alleyn £2 for
-the ‘boocke’ of ‘the massaker of france’ on behalf of the company
-(Henslowe, i. xlii; ii. 157). For the offence given in France by this
-play, cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Dido Queen of Carthage &gt; 1593</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Thomas Nashe.</p>
-
-<p>1594. The Tragedie of Dido Queene of Carthage: Played by the Children
-of her Maiesties Chappell. Written by Christopher Marlowe, and Thomas
-Nash. Gent. <i>Widow Orwin for Thomas Woodcock.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, June 26. Transfer from Paul Lynley to John Flasket,
-‘Cupydes Journey to hell with the tragedie of Dido’ (Arber, iii. 165).
-[Perhaps another book.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Old English Drama</i> (1825, ii), by J.
-S. Farmer (1914, <i>S. F. T.</i>), and with <i>Works</i> of
-Nashe.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: J. Friedrich, <i>Didodramen des Dolce,
-Jodelle, und M.</i> (1888); B. Knutowski, <i>Das Dido-Drama von M. und
-Nash</i> (1905, <i>Breslau diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Tanner, <i>Bibl. Britanniae</i> (1748), says, ‘Petowius in praefatione
-ad secundam partem Herois et Leandri multa in Marlovii commendationem
-adfert; hoc etiam facit Tho. Nash in <i>Carmine Elegiaco tragediae
-Didonis praefixo in obitum Christoph. Marlovii</i>, ubi quatuor eius
-tragediarum mentionem facit, necnon et alterius <i>de duce Guisio</i>’.
-The existence of this elegy is confirmed by Warton, who saw it either
-in 1734 or 1754 (<i>Hist. Eng. Poet.</i> iv. 311; cf. McKerrow, ii.
-335). It was ‘inserted immediately after the title-page’, presumably
-not of all copies, as it is not in the three now known. Whether
-Nashe’s own share in the work was as collaborator, continuator, or
-merely editor, remains uncertain. Fleay, ii. 147, gives him only
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 122 to end, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ii, iv; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i,
-ii, v; Knutowski regards him as responsible for only a few trifling
-passages. As, moreover, the play has affinities both to early and to
-late work by Marlowe, it cannot be dated. Beyond its title-page and
-that of the anonymous <i>Wars of Cyrus</i> there is nothing to point
-to any performances by the Chapel between 1584 and 1600. It is true
-that Tucker Brooke, 389, says, ‘The one ascertained fact concerning
-the history of this company during the ten years previous to 1594
-seems to be that they acted before the Queen at Croydon in 1591,
-under the direction of N. Giles, and Mr. Fleay assumes, apparently
-with no further evidence, that <i>Dido</i> was presented on this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">[427]</span>
-‘occasion’. But this only shows what some literary historians mean
-by an ‘ascertained fact’. A company played <i>Summers Last Will and
-Testament</i> (q.v.) at Croydon in 1592 and said that they had not
-played for a twelvemonth. But the Queen was not present, and they are
-not known to have been the Chapel, whose master was not then Nathaniel
-Giles. Nor did they necessarily play twelve months before at Croydon;
-and if they did, there is nothing to show that they played <i>Dido</i>.
-There is nothing to connect the play with the Admiral’s <i>Dido and
-Aeneas</i> of 1598 (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 189).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lust’s Dominion. c. 1600</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1657. Lusts Dominion; Or, The Lascivious Queen. A Tragedie. Written by
-Christopher Marlowe, Gent. <i>For F. K., sold by Robert Pollard.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> i) and in
-Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, xiv (1875).</p>
-
-<p>The attribution of the play, as it stands, to Marlowe is generally
-rejected. Fleay, i. 272, supported by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 211),
-suggests an identification with <i>The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy</i>,
-which Day, Dekker, and Haughton were writing for the Admiral’s in
-Feb. 1600, although the recorded payment does not show that this was
-finished. They think that a play in which Marlowe had a hand may
-perhaps underlie it, and attempt, not wholly in agreement with each
-other, to distribute the existing scenes amongst the collaborators.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Maiden’s Holiday</i></p>
-
-<p>Entered on the Stationers’ Register on 8 April 1654 (Eyre, i. 445) by
-Moseley as ‘A comedie called The Maidens Holiday by Christopher Marlow
-&amp; John Day’, and included in Warburton’s list of burnt plays (<i>3
-Library</i>, ii. 231) as ‘The Mayden Holaday by Chri[~s]. Marlowe’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Marlowe’s hand has been sought in <i>An Alarum for London</i>,
-<i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i>, <i>Edward III</i>,
-<i>Locrine</i>, <i>Selimus</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, and
-<i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i> (cf. ch. xxiv), and in
-Shakespeare’s <i>Titus Andronicus</i>, <i>Henry VI</i>, and <i>Richard
-III</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN MARSTON (<i>c.</i> 1575–1634).</p>
-
-<p>Marston was son of John Marston, a lawyer of Shropshire origin,
-who had settled at Coventry, and his Italian wife Maria Guarsi. He
-matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford, aged 16, on 4 Feb. 1592,
-and took his degree on 6 Feb. 1594. He joined the Middle Temple, and
-in 1599 his father left law-books to him, ‘whom I hoped would have
-profited by them in the study of the law but man proposeth and God
-disposeth’. He had already begun his literary career, as a satirist
-with <i>The Metamorphosis of Pygmalion’s Image and Certain Satires</i>
-(1598) and <i>The Scourge of Villainy</i> (1598). For these he took
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[428]</span> pseudonym of W. Kinsayder. Small, 64, has refuted the attempts
-to find in them attacks on Jonson, and H. C. Hart (<i>9 N. Q.</i> xi.
-282, 342) has made it plausible that by ‘Torquatus’ was meant, not
-Jonson, but Gabriel Harvey. This view is now accepted by Penniman
-(<i>Poetaster</i>, xxiii). On 28 Sept. 1599 Henslowe paid £2, on behalf
-of the Admiral’s, for ‘M<sup>r</sup> Maxton the new poete’. The interlineated
-correction ‘M<sup>r</sup> Mastone’ is a forgery (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, i. xlii;
-ii. 206), but probably Marston was the poet. The title of the play
-was left blank, and there was no further payment. It seems clearer
-to me than it does to Dr. Greg that the £2 was meant to make up a
-complete sum of £6 10<i>s.</i> for <i>The King of Scots</i>, and that
-Marston was the ‘other Jentellman’ who collaborated with Chettle,
-Dekker, and Jonson on that lost play. The setting up of the Paul’s
-boys in 1599 saved Marston from Henslowe. For them he successively
-revised the anonymous <i>Histriomastix</i> (q.v.), wrote the two parts
-of <i>Antonio and Mellida</i> and <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>,
-helped Dekker with <i>Satiromastix</i>, and finally wrote <i>What You
-Will</i>. This probably accounts for all his dramatic work during
-Elizabeth’s reign. In the course of it he came into conflict with
-Jonson, who told Drummond in 1619 (according to the revision of the
-text of Laing, 20, suggested by Penniman, <i>War</i>, 40, and Small, 3)
-that ‘He had many quarrells with Marston, beat him, and took his pistol
-from him, wrote his Poetaster on him; the beginning of them were,
-that Marston represented him in the stage’. Marston’s representation
-of Jonson as Chrysoganus in <i>Histriomastix</i> was complimentary,
-that as Brabant senior in <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i> offensive;
-and it was doubtless the latter that stirred Jonson to retaliate on
-Marston, perhaps as Hedon in <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, certainly as
-Crispinus in <i>The Poetaster</i>. Marston’s final blow was with
-Lampatho Doria in <i>What You Will</i>. When the theatres reopened in
-1604 Marston seems to have left the Paul’s boys and taken a share in
-the syndicate formed to exploit the Queen’s Revels, for whom the rest
-of his plays were written. He was now on friendly terms with Jonson, to
-whom he dedicated his <i>Malcontent</i> and for whose <i>Sejanus</i>
-he wrote congratulatory verses. Possibly further friction arose
-over the unfortunate collaboration of Jonson, Marston, and Chapman
-in <i>Eastward Ho!</i>, for the chief indiscretion in which Marston
-seems to have been responsible, and may have stimulated a sarcasm on
-Jonson in the Epistle to <i>Sophonisba</i>. In 1608 Marston’s career
-as a dramatist abruptly terminated. An abstract of the Privy Council
-Register has the brief note on 8 June, ‘John Marston committed to
-Newgate’ (F. P. Wilson from <i>Addl. MS.</i> 11402, f. 141, in <i>M. L.
-R.</i> ix. 99). I conjecture that he was the author of the Blackfriars
-play (cf. ch. xii, s.v. Chapel) which hit at James’s explorations
-after Scottish silver. He disappeared, selling his interest in the
-Blackfriars company, then or in 1605, to Robert Keysar, and leaving
-<i>The Insatiate Countess</i> unfinished. He had taken orders by 10
-Oct. 1616 when he obtained the living of Christchurch, Hampshire. This
-he resigned on 13 Sept. 1631. In 1633 he was distant from London, but
-died on 25 June 1634 in Aldermanbury parish. He had married Mary,
-probably the daughter of William Wilkes, one of James’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">[429]</span> chaplains,
-of whom Jonson said in 1619 (Laing, 16) that ‘Marston wrott his
-Father-in-lawes preachings, and his Father-in-law his Commedies’. If
-we trust the portrait of Crispinus in <i>The Poetaster</i>, he had red
-hair and little legs. A letter from Marston to Sir Gervase Clifton,
-endorsed ‘Poet Marston’, is calendared in <i>Hist. MSS. Various
-Coll.</i> vii. 389; it is undated, but must, from the names used, be of
-1603–8.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1633. Tragedies and Comedies collected into one volume. Viz. 1. Antonio
-and Mellida. 2. Antonio’s Revenge. 3. The Tragedie of Sophonisba. 4.
-What You Will. 5. The Fawne. 6. The Dutch Courtezan. <i>A. M. for
-William Sheares.</i> [Epistle to Viscountess Falkland, signed ‘William
-Sheares’.]</p>
-
-<p>1633. The Workes of Mr. Iohn Marston, Being Tragedies and Comedies,
-Collected into one Volume. <i>For William Sheares.</i> [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>1856. J. O. Halliwell, <i>The Works of John Marston</i>. 3 vols.
-[Contains all the works, except <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1879. A. B. Grosart, <i>The Poems of John Marston</i>. [Contains
-<i>Pygmalion’s Image</i> and the satires.]</p>
-
-<p>1887. A. H. Bullen, <i>The Works of John Marston</i>. 3 vols. [Contains
-all the works, except <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: W. von Scholten, <i>Metrische Untersuchungen zu
-Marston’s Trauerspielen</i> (1886, <i>Halle diss.</i>); P. Aronstein,
-<i>John Marston als Dramatiker</i> (<i>E. S.</i> xx. 377; xxi. 28);
-W. v. Wurzbach, <i>John Marston</i> (1897, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxiii.
-85); C. Winckler, <i>John Marston’s litterarische Anfänge</i> (1903,
-<i>Breslau diss.</i>) and <i>Marston’s Erstlingswerke und ihre
-Beziehungen zu Shakespeare</i> (1904, <i>E. S.</i> xxxiii. 216).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Antonio and Mellida. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1601, Oct. 24. ‘A booke called The ffyrst and second
-partes of the play called Anthonio and Melida provided that he gett
-laufull licence for yt.’ <i>Matthew Lownes and Thomas Fisher</i>
-(Arber, iii. 193).</p>
-
-<p>1602. The History of Antonio and Mellida. The first part. As it hath
-beene sundry times acted, by the Children of Paules. Written by I. M.
-<i>For Mathew Lownes and Thomas Fisher.</i> [Epistle to Nobody, signed
-‘J. M.’, Induction, Prologue, and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1602. Antonio’s Reuenge. The second part. As it hath beene sundry
-times acted, by the children of Paules. Written by I. M. <i>For Thomas
-Fisher.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> ii) and W. W.
-Greg (1921, <i>M. S. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>In <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i of Part i a painter brings in two pictures, one dated
-‘Anno Domini, 1599’, the other ‘Aetatis suae 24’. I agree with Small,
-92, that these are probably real dates and that the second indicates
-Marston’s own age. As he must have completed his twenty-fourth year
-by 3 Feb. 1600 at latest, Part i was probably produced in 1599. The
-prologue of Part ii speaks of winter as replacing summer, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">[430]</span> probably
-therefore Part i is to be dated in the summer, and Part ii in the early
-winter of 1599. Clearly the painter scene cannot, as Fleay, ii. 75,
-suggests, be motived by a casual allusion to a painter in <i>Cynthia’s
-Revels</i> (F<sub>1</sub>) 2673 or the painter scene added on revision to Kyd’s
-<i>Spanish Tragedy</i>, since both are later. The ‘armed Epilogue’
-of Part i seems to me clearly a criticism of the armed prologue of
-Jonson’s <i>Poetaster</i> (1601); it may have been an addition of 1601.
-Part ii, prol. 13, 23, calls the theatre ‘round’ and ‘ring’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>What You Will. 1601</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Aug. 6 (Buck). ‘A commedie called What you will.’
-<i>Thomas Thorp</i> (Arber, iii. 358).</p>
-
-<p>1607. What You Will. By Iohn Marston. <i>G. Eld for Thomas Thorpe.</i>
-[Induction and Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i>
-ii).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: F. Holthausen, <i>Die Quelle von Marston’s
-W. Y. W.</i> (1905, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xli. 186).</p>
-
-<p>Bullen, Fleay, ii. 76, Small, 101, and Aronstein agree in regarding the
-play as written in 1601 by way of answer to <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>,
-and they are probably right. Small shows that, in spite of the fact
-that Quadratus calls Lampatho Doria a ‘Don Kynsader’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i.
-134), Lampatho must stand for Jonson, and Quadratus to some extent for
-Marston himself. Perhaps Simplicius Faber is the unidentified Asinius
-Bubo of <i>Satiromastix</i>. Both Fleay and Small think that the play
-has been revised before publication, partly because of confusion in the
-names of the characters, and partly because of the absence of the kind
-of Marstonian language which Jonson satirized. Small goes so far as to
-suggest that the seventeen untraceable words vomited by Crispinus in
-<i>The Poetaster</i> came from <i>What You Will</i>, and that Marston
-rewrote the play and eliminated them. The rest of Fleay’s conjectures
-about the play seem to me irresponsible. If the play dates from 1601,
-it may reasonably be assigned to the Paul’s boys. The induction, with
-its allusions to the small size of the stage and the use of candles,
-excludes the possibility of an adult theatre.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Dutch Courtesan. 1603–4</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, June 26. ‘A booke called the Dutche Curtizan, as
-yt was latelie presented at the Blackeffryers Provyded that he gett
-sufficient Aucthoritie before yt be prynted.’ <i>John Hodgettes</i>
-(Arber, iii. 293). [A further note, ‘This is alowed to be printed by
-Aucthoritie from Master Hartwell’.]</p>
-
-<p>1605. The Dutch Courtezan. As it was played in the Blacke-Friars. by
-the Children of her Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iohn Marston, <i>T. P.
-for John Hodgets</i>. [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, April 19. Transfer to Hodgettes of Eleazer Edgar’s
-interest in the play (Arber, iii. 520).</p>
-
-<p>As a Queen’s Revels play, this must have been on the stage at least
-as late as 1603, and the clear proof of Crawford, ii. 1, that several
-passages are verbal imitations of Florio’s translation of Montaigne,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">[431]</span>
-published in that year, make it difficult to put it earlier, although
-Wallace, ii. 75, says that he has evidence, which he does not give,
-for production in 1602. On the other hand, C. R. Baskervill (<i>M. L.
-A.</i> xxiv. 718) argues that the plot influenced that of <i>The Fair
-Maid of Bristow</i>, which was performed at Court during the winter
-of 1603–4. The play is referred to with <i>Eastward Ho!</i> (q.v.) as
-bringing trouble on Marston by A. Nixon, <i>The Black Year</i> (1606).
-It was revived for the Court by the Lady Elizabeth’s on 25 Feb. 1613,
-under the name of <i>Cockle de Moye</i> from one of the characters, and
-repeated on 12 Dec. 1613 (cf. App. B).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Malcontent. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1604, July 5 (Pasfield). ‘An Enterlude called the
-Malecontent, Tragicomoedia.’ <i>William Aspley and Thomas Thorpe</i>
-(Arber, iii. 266, 268). [Entry made on the wrong page and re-entered.]</p>
-
-<p>1604. The Malcontent. By Iohn Marston. <i>V. S. for William Aspley.</i>
-[Two editions. Inscription ‘Beniamino Jonsonio, poetae elegantissimo,
-gravissimo, amico suo, candido et cordato, Iohannes Marston, Musarum
-alumnus, asperam hanc suam Thaliam D.D.’ and Epistle to Reader.]</p>
-
-<p>1604. The Malcontent. Augmented by Marston. With the Additions played
-by the Kings Maiesties servants. Written by Ihon Webster. <i>V. S. for
-William Aspley.</i> [A third edition, with the Induction, which is
-headed ‘The Induction to the Malcontent, and the additions acted by the
-Kings Maiesties servants. Written by Iohn Webster’, and the insertions
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 146–88, 195–212, 256–303; <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii. 34, 57–71; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 33–156; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 123–37;
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 10–39, 164–94, 212–26; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii.
-180–202.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> ii) and W. A.
-Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>); and with <i>Works</i> of Webster
-(q.v.).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: E. E. Stoll, <i>John Webster</i> (1905),
-55, and <i>Shakspere, Marston, and the Malcontent Type</i> (1906, <i>M.
-P.</i> iii. 281).</p>
-
-<p>The induction, in which parts are taken by Sly, Sinklo, Burbadge,
-Condell, and Lowin, explains the genesis of the enlarged edition.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Sly.</i> ... I would know how you came by this play?</p>
-
-<p><i>Condell.</i> Faith, sir, the book was lost; and because ’twas
-pity so good a play should be lost, we found it and play it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sly.</i> I wonder you would play it, another company having
-interest in it.</p>
-
-<p><i>Condell.</i> Why not Malevole in folio with us, as Jeronimo
-in decimosexto with them? They taught us a name for our play; we
-call it <i>One for Another</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sly.</i> What are your additions?</p>
-
-<p><i>Burbadge.</i> Sooth, not greatly needful; only as your salad
-to your great feast, to entertain a little more time, and to
-abridge the not-received custom of music in our theatre.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Stoll, 57, rightly argues that Small, 115, is not justified in ignoring
-the evidence of the title-page and assigning the insertions, as well
-as the induction, to Webster rather than Marston. On the other hand,
-I think he himself ignores the evidence of Burbadge’s speech in the
-induction, when he takes the undramatic quality of the insertions as
-proof that Marston did not write them first in 1604, but revived them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">[432]</span>
-from his original text, which the boy actors had shortened. He puts
-this original text in 1600, because of the allusion in one of the
-insertions (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 20) to a ‘horn growing in the woman’s
-forehead twelve years since’. This horn was described in a pamphlet of
-1588. I do not share his view that ‘twelve’ must be a precise and not a
-round number. Sly says in the induction:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘This play hath beaten all your gallants out of the feathers:
-Blackfriars hath almost spoiled Blackfriars for feathers.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It is clear therefore that the original actors were the
-Blackfriars boys, and there is nothing else to suggest a connexion
-between Marston and these boys during Elizabeth’s reign. Small, 115,
-points out a reference to the Scots in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 24 which should
-be Jacobean. I think that this is Marston’s first play for the Queen’s
-Revels after the formation of the syndicate early in 1604, and that
-the revision followed later in the same year. It is not necessary to
-assume that the play was literally ‘lost’ or that Marston was not privy
-to the adoption of it by the King’s. Importance is attached to the
-date by parallels to certain plays of Shakespeare, where Stoll thinks
-that Shakespeare was the borrower. I do not see how it can be so. The
-epilogue speaks of the author’s ‘reformed Muse’ and pays a compliment
-to ‘another’s happier Muse’ and forthcoming ‘Thalia’, perhaps Jonson’s
-<i>Volpone</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Fawn. 1604 &lt; &gt; 6</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1606, March 12. ‘A playe called the ffaune provided that
-he shall not put the same in prynte before he gett alowed lawfull
-aucthoritie.’ <i>William Cotton</i> (Arber, iii. 316).</p>
-
-<p>1606. Parasitaster, Or The Fawne, As it hath bene diuers times
-presented at the blacke Friars, by the Children of the Queenes
-Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iohn Marston. <i>T. P. for W. C.</i>
-[Epistle to the Equal Reader, signed ‘Jo. Marston’, Prologue, and
-Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1606.... and since at Paules.... And now corrected of many faults,
-which by reason of the Author’s absence were let slip in the first
-edition. <i>T. P. for W. C.</i> [A further Epistle to the Reader states
-that the writer has ‘perused this copy’ and is about to ‘present ... to
-you’ the tragedy of <i>Sophonisba</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>Modern edition by C. W. Dilke (1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> ii).</p>
-
-<p>As a Queen’s Revels play, this must date from 1604 or 1605; presumably
-it was transferred to Paul’s by Edward Kirkham, when he took charge
-of them for the Christmas of 1605–6. Small, 116, refutes Aronstein’s
-suggested allusion to Jonson’s <i>Volpone</i> of 1605 or 1606. Bolte,
-<i>Danziger Theater</i>, 177, prints from a seventeenth-century
-Dantzig MS. a German play, <i>Tiberius von Ferrara und Annabella von
-Mömpelgart</i>, which is in part derived from <i>The Fawn</i> (Herz,
-99). If, as the titles suggest, the performances of <i>Annabella,
-eines Hertzogen Tochter von Ferrara</i> at Nördlingen in 1604,
-of <i>Annabella, eines Markgraffen Tochter von Montferrat</i> at
-Rothenburg in 1604, and of <i>Herzog von Ferrara</i> at Dresden in
-1626 (Herz, 65, 66), indicate intermediate links, <i>The Fawn</i>
-cannot be later than 1604. Yet I find it impossible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">[433]</span> not to attach
-some value to the argument of Stoll, <i>Webster</i>, 17, for a date
-later than the execution of Sir Everard Digby on 30 Jan. 1606 (Stowe,
-<i>Annales</i>, 881), which appears to be alluded to in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i. 310, ‘Nay, heed me, a woman that will thrust in crowds,&mdash;a lady,
-that, being with child, ventures the hope of her womb,&mdash;nay, gives
-two crowns for a room to behold a goodly man three parts alive,
-quartered, his privities hackled off, his belly lanched up’. It is true
-that there were also quarterings for treason on 29 Nov. 1603 (Stowe,
-<i>Annales</i>, ed. Howes, 831), but these were in Winchester; also
-that contemporary notices, such as that in Stowe and the narratives
-in J. Morris, <i>Catholics under James I</i>, 216, and in <i>Somers
-Tracts</i> (1809), ii. 111, which describes the victims as ‘proper men,
-in shape’, afford no confirmation of indecent crowds in 1606, but the
-cumulative effect of the quadruple allusions here, in Day’s <i>Isle of
-Gulls</i> (q.v.), in Sharpham’s <i>Fleir</i> (q.v.), and in Middleton’s
-<i>Michaelmas Term</i> (q.v.) is pretty strong. The passage quoted by
-Crawford, ii. 40, from Montaigne is hardly particular enough to explain
-that in the <i>Fawn</i>. I do not like explaining discrepancies by the
-hypothesis of a revision, but if Kirkham revived the <i>Fawn</i> at
-Paul’s in 1606, he is not unlikely to have had it written up a bit.
-The epistle refers to ‘the factious malice and studied detractions’ of
-fellow-dramatists, perhaps an echo of Marston’s relations with Jonson
-and Chapman over <i>Eastward Ho!</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Wonder of Women</i>, or <i>Sophonisba</i>. <i>1606</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1606, March 17 (Wilson). ‘A booke called the wonder of
-woemen, or the Tragedie of Sophonisba, &amp;c.’ <i>Eleazar Edgar</i>
-(Arber, iii. 316).</p>
-
-<p>1606. The Wonder of Women Or the Tragedie of Sophonisba, as it hath
-beene sundry times Acted at the Blacke-Friers. Written by Iohn Marston.
-<i>John Windet.</i> [Epistle to the General Reader by the author, but
-unsigned, Argumentum, Prologue, and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, April 19. Transfer from Edgar to John Hodgettes
-(Arber, iii. 521).</p>
-
-<p>The mention of Blackfriars without the name of a company points to a
-performance after Anne’s patronage had been withdrawn from the Revels
-boys, late in 1605 or early in 1606, not, as Fleay, ii. 79, suggests,
-to one by the Chapel in 1602–3. Some features of staging (cf. ch. xxi)
-raise a suspicion that the play may have been taken over from Paul’s.
-The resemblance of the title to that of <i>Wonder of a Woman</i>
-produced by the Admiral’s in 1595 is probably accidental. The epistle
-glances at Jonson’s translations in <i>Sejanus</i> (1603).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Insatiate Countess. c. 1610</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. The Insatiate Countesse. A Tragedie: Acted at White-Fryers.
-Written by Iohn Marston. <i>T. S. for Thomas Archer.</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. <i>N. O. for Thomas Archer.</i></p>
-
-<p>1631.... Written by William Barksteed. <i>For Hugh Perrie.</i></p>
-
-<p>1631.... Written by Iohn Marston. <i>I. N. for Hugh Perrie.</i> [A
-reissue.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">[434]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: R. A. Small, <i>The Authorship and Date of the
-Insatiate Countess</i> in <i>Harvard Studies and Notes in Philology and
-Literature</i>, v (<i>Child Memorial Volume</i>), 277.</p>
-
-<p>It is generally supposed that Marston began the play and that Barksted
-(q.v.) finished it. Two lines (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 244–5) appear verbatim
-in Barksted’s <i>Mirrha</i> (1607). Small traces several other clear
-parallels with both <i>Mirrha</i> and <i>Hiren</i>, as well as
-stylistic qualities pointing to Barksted rather than to Marston, and
-concludes that the play is Barksted’s on a plot drafted by Marston.
-It may be conjectured that Marston left the fragment when he got into
-trouble for the second time in 1608, and that the revision was more
-probably for the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars in 1609–11 than for the
-conjoint Queen’s Revels and Lady Elizabeth’s in 1613. Hardly any of the
-suggestions on the play in Fleay, ii. 80, bear analysis.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>On <i>The King of Scots</i>, <i>vide supra</i>. Rogers and Ley’s
-list of 1656 (Greg, <i>Masques</i>, lxxii) ascribes to Marston a
-<i>Guise</i>, which other publishers’ lists transfer to Webster
-(q.v.). Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>, 154, assigns to Marston a
-<i>Columbus</i>, on the basis of a forgery.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Marston doubtless had a hand in revising the anonymous
-<i>Histriomastix</i> and in <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>, and
-attempts have been made to find him in <i>An Alarum for London</i>,
-<i>Charlemagne</i>, <i>London Prodigal</i>, <i>Puritan</i> (cf. ch.
-xxiv), and as a collaborator in Dekker’s <i>Satiromastix</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">MASKS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ashby Entertainment. Aug. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] (<i>a</i>) <i>Bridgewater House</i>, with title, ‘The
-honorable Lorde &amp; Lady of Huntingdons Entertainment of their right
-Noble Mother Alice: Countesse Dowager of Darby the first night of her
-honors arrivall att the house of Ashby’. [Verses to Lady Derby signed
-‘John Marston’; includes a mask of Cynthia and Ariadne.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>B.M. Sloane</i> 848, f. 9. [Speech of Enchantress only,
-with date Aug. 1607.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Extracts</i> in H. J. Todd, <i>Works of Milton</i>, v. 149 (1801),
-and Nichols, <i>James</i>, ii. 145 (1828).</p>
-
-<p>On arrival, in the park, at an ‘antique gate’ with complimentary
-inscriptions, were speeches by Merimna an enchantress, and Saturn; at
-the top of the stairs to the great chamber another speech by Merimna
-and a gift of a waistcoat.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the great chamber was a mask by four knights and four
-gentlemen, in carnation and white, and vizards like stars, representing
-sons of Mercury, with pages in blue, and Cynthia and Ariadne as
-presenters. A traverse ‘slided away’, and disclosed the presenters
-on clouds. Later a second traverse ‘sank down’, and the maskers
-appeared throned at the top of a wood. They danced ‘a new measure’,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">[435]</span>
-then ‘presented their shields’, and took out the ladies for measures,
-galliards, corantos and lavoltas. ‘The night being much spent’, came
-their ‘departing measure’.</p>
-
-<p>At departure were an eclogue by a shepherd and a nymph, and a gift of a
-cabinet by Niobe in the little park.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mountebank’s Mask. 1618</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>The ascription to Marston of this Gray’s Inn mask rests on an
-unverifiable assertion by Collier (cf. Bullen, <i>Marston</i>, iii.
-418; Brotanek, 356), and the known dates of Marston’s career render it
-extremely improbable.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN MASON (1581–2&mdash;?).</p>
-
-<p>The degree boasted on his title-page leads to the identification of
-Mason as a son of Richard Mason, priest, of Cavendish, Suffolk, and
-pupil of Bury St. Edmunds school, who matriculated from Caius College,
-Cambridge, as a sizar at the age of fourteen on 6 July 1596, and took
-the degree of B.A. in 1601 and M.A. in 1606 from St. Catharine’s Hall.
-He was a member of the King’s Revels syndicate in 1608, and nothing
-further is known of him, since the combination of names is too common
-to justify his identification with the schoolmaster of Camberwell,
-Surrey, whose school-play is described in <i>Princeps Rhetoricus</i>
-(1648; cf. C. S. Northup in <i>E. S.</i> xlv. 154).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Turk. 1607–8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1609, March 10 (Segar). ‘A booke called The tragedy of the
-Turke with the death of Borgias by John Mason gent.’ <i>John Busby</i>
-(Arber, iii. 403).</p>
-
-<p>1610. The Turke. A Worthie Tragedie. As it hath bene diuers times acted
-by the Children of his Maiesties Reuels. Written by Iohn Mason Maister
-of Artes. <i>E. A. for John Busbie.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>1632. An excellent Tragedy of Mulleasses the Turke, and Borgias
-Governour of Florence. Full of Interchangeable variety; beyond
-expectation.... <i>T. P. for Francis Falkner.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by J. Q. Adams (1913, <i>Materialien</i>,
-xxxvii).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: G. C. Moore Smith, <i>John Mason and
-Edward Sharpham</i> (1913, <i>M. L. R.</i> viii. 371).</p>
-
-<p>As a King’s Revels play this may be put in 1607–8. An earlier date
-has been thought to be indicated by <i>Eastward Ho!</i> (1605),
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 41, ‘<i>Via</i>, the curtaine that shaddowed Borgia’,
-but if the reference is to a play, Borgia may well have figured in
-other plays. A play ‘Vom Turcken’ was taken by Spencer to Nuremberg in
-1613 (Herz, 66).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CHARLES MASSEY.</p>
-
-<p>For his career as an actor, cf. ch. xv.</p>
-
-<p>He apparently wrote <i>Malcolm King of Scots</i> for the Admiral’s, to
-which he belonged, in April 1602, and began <i>The Siege of Dunkirk,
-with Alleyn the Pirate</i> in March 1603. Neither play survives.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">[436]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">PHILIP MASSINGER (1583–1640).</p>
-
-<p>Massinger, baptized at Salisbury on 24 Nov. 1583, was son of Arthur
-Massinger, a confidential servant of Henry, 2nd Earl of Pembroke. He
-entered at St. Alban Hall, Oxford, and left without a degree in 1606.
-Little is known of him for some years thereafter. He is conjectured to
-have become a Catholic and thus to have imperilled his relations with
-the Herbert family, at any rate until the time of Philip, the 4th earl,
-who was certainly his patron. He was buried at St. Saviour’s on 18
-March 1640 and left a widow. The greater part of his dramatic career,
-to which all his independent plays belong, falls outside the scope of
-this notice, but on 4 July 1615 he gave a joint bond with Daborne for
-£3 to Henslowe, and some undated correspondence probably of 1613 shows
-that he was collaborating in one or more plays with Daborne, Field, and
-Fletcher.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>T. Coxeter (1759), J. M. Mason (1779), W. Gifford (1805), H. Coleridge
-(1840, 1848, 1851), F. Cunningham (1871, 3 vols.). [These include
-<i>The Old Law</i>, <i>The Fatal Dowry</i>, and <i>The Virgin
-Martyr</i>, but not any plays from the Beaumont and Fletcher Ff.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Selections</i></p>
-
-<p>1887–9. A. Symons, <i>The Best Plays of P. M.</i> 2 vols. (<i>Mermaid
-Series</i>). [Includes <i>The Fatal Dowry</i> and <i>The Virgin
-Martyr</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1912. L. A. Sherman, <i>P. M.</i> (<i>M. E. D.</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: S. R. Gardiner, <i>The Political Element
-in M.</i> (1876, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 314); J. Phelan, <i>P.
-M.</i> (1879–80, <i>Anglia</i>, ii. 1, 504; iii. 361); E. Koeppel,
-<i>Quellenstudien zu den Dramen G. Chapman’s, P. M.’s und J. Ford’s</i>
-(1897, <i>Q. F.</i> lxxxii); W. von Wurzbach, <i>P. M.</i> (1899–1900,
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxv. 214, xxxvi. 128); C. Beck, <i>P. M. The Fatal
-Dowry</i> (1906); A. H. Cruickshank, <i>Philip Massinger</i> (1920).</p>
-
-<p>It is doubtful how far Massinger’s dramatic activity began before 1616.
-For ascriptions to him, s.v. Beaumont and Fletcher (<i>Captain</i>,
-<i>Cupid’s Revenge</i>, <i>Coxcomb</i>, <i>Scornful Lady</i>,
-<i>Honest Man’s Fortune</i>, <i>Faithful Friends</i>, <i>Thierry and
-Theodoret</i>, <i>T. N. K.</i>, <i>Love’s Cure</i>), Anthony Brewer
-(<i>The Lovesick King</i>), and <i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> (ch.
-xxiv). It has also been suggested that a <i>Philenzo and Hypollita</i>
-and an <i>Antonio and Vallia</i>, ascribed to him in late records, but
-not extant, may represent revisions of early work by Dekker (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS MERBURY (<i>c.</i> 1579).</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the epilogue to the following play is written ‘Amen,
-quoth fra: Merbury’. The formula may denote only a scribe, but a
-precisely similar one denotes the author in the case of Preston’s
-<i>Cambyses</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">[437]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Marriage between Wit and Wisdom. c. 1579</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Brit. Mus. Addl. MS.</i> 26782, formerly <i>penes</i>
-Sir Edward Dering.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. O. Halliwell (1846, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>), J. S.
-Farmer (1909, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The MS. has a title-page, with the date 1579, an arrangement of the
-parts for six actors and the title ‘The &mdash;&mdash; of a Marige betweene wit
-and wisdome very frutefull and mixed full of pleasant mirth as well
-for The beholders as the Readers or hearers neuer before imprinted’.
-There are nine Scenes in two Acts, with a Prologue and Epilogus. The
-characters are almost wholly allegorical. Idleness is ‘the vice’. The
-stage-directions mention a ‘stage’. Halliwell prints the mutilated
-word left blank in the title above as ‘Contract’, no doubt rightly.
-Conceivably the play was in fact printed in 1579, as ‘Mariage of
-wit and wisdome’ is in Rogers and Ley’s play-list of 1656 (Greg,
-<i>Masques</i>, lxxxvii).</p>
-
-<p>The play might be identical with the lost Paul’s moral of <i>The
-Marriage of Mind and Measure</i> (cf. App. B), which also belongs to
-1579. Fleay, ii. 287, 294, infers from a not very conclusive reference
-to a ‘King’ in sc. iv that it dates from the time of Edward VI. He also
-identifies it with the <i>Hit Nail o’ th’ Head</i> named in <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i> (q.v.) because that phrase is quoted in the Epilogus,
-curiously disregarding the fact that the <i>Sir Thomas More</i> list
-names the play under its existing title as distinct from <i>Hit Nail o’
-th’ Head</i>. Most of the plays in the <i>Sir Thomas More</i> list seem
-to be pre-Elizabethan; cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 200.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS MIDDLETON (<i>c.</i> 1570–1627).</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Middleton was a Londoner and of a gentle family. The date of
-his birth can only be roughly conjectured from the probability that
-he was one of two Thomas Middletons who entered Gray’s Inn in 1593
-and 1596, and of his earlier education nothing is known. His first
-work was <i>The Wisdom of Solomon Paraphrased</i> (1597), and he may
-be the T. M. of <i>The Black Book</i> (1604) and other pamphlets in
-prose and verse. He appears as a dramatist, possibly as early as 1599
-in <i>The Old Law</i> and certainly in Henslowe’s diary during 1602,
-writing an unnamed play for Worcester’s men, and for the Admiral’s
-<i>Caesar’s Fall or The Two Shapes</i> with Dekker (q.v), Drayton,
-Munday, and Webster, and by himself, <i>Randal Earl of Chester</i>, and
-a prologue and epilogue to Greene’s <i>Friar Bacon</i> (q.v.). This
-work is all lost, but by 1604 he had also collaborated with Dekker for
-the Admiral’s in the extant <i>Honest Whore</i>. From 1602, if not from
-1599, to the end of their career in 1606 or 1607, he was also writing
-diligently for the Paul’s boys. I think he is referred to with their
-other ‘apes and guls’, Marston and Dekker, in Marston’s <i>Jack Drum’s
-Entertainment</i> (1600), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 40:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>How like you <i>Musus</i> fashion in his carriage?</div>
- <div>O filthilie, he is as blunt as <i>Paules</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Brabant, the speaker, represents Jonson, who told
-Drummond in 1619<span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">[438]</span> that he was ‘not of the number of the Faithfull,
-i. e. <i>Poets</i>, and but a base fellow’ (Laing, 12). Occasional
-plays for several companies and the beginnings of employment in city
-pageantry occupied 1607–16, and to later periods belong a fruitful
-partnership with William Rowley for Prince Charles’s men, and some
-slight share in the heterogeneous mass of work that passes under the
-names of Beaumont and Fletcher. He also wrote a few independent plays,
-of which <i>A Game at Chess</i> (1624) got him into political trouble.
-At some time before 1623 a few lines of his got interpolated into the
-text of <i>Macbeth</i> (cf. <i>Warwick</i> edition, p. 164). In 1620 he
-obtained a post as Chronologer to the City. He married Maria Morbeck,
-had a son Edward, and dwelt at Newington Butts, where he was buried on
-4 July 1627.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1840. A Dyce, <i>Works of T. M.</i> 5 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1885–6. A. H. Bullen, <i>Works of T. M.</i> 8 vols. [Omits <i>The
-Honest Whore</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1887–90. H. Ellis, <i>The Best Plays of T. M.</i> 2 vols. (Mermaid
-Series). [Includes <i>Trick to Catch the Old One</i>, <i>Chaste Maid
-in Cheapside</i>, <i>Widow</i>, <i>Roaring Girl</i>, <i>Mayor of
-Queenborough</i>, and later plays.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: J. Arnheim, <i>T. M.</i> (1887, <i>Archiv</i>,
-lxxviii. 1, 129, 369); P. G. Wiggin, <i>An Inquiry into the
-Authorship of the Middleton-Rowley Plays</i> (1897, <i>Radcliffe
-College Monographs</i>, ix); H. Jung, <i>Das Verhältniss T. M.’s zu
-Shakspere</i> (1904, <i>Münchener Beiträge</i>, xxix).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Old Law. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p>1656. The Excellent Comedy, called The Old Law; Or A new way to please
-you. By Phil. Massenger. Tho. Middleton. William Rowley. Acted before
-the King and Queene at Salisbury House, and at severall other places,
-with great Applause. Together with an exact and perfect Catalogue
-of all the Playes, with the Authors Names, and what are Comedies,
-Tragedies, Histories, Pastoralls, Masks, Interludes, more exactly
-Printed than ever before. <i>For Edward Archer.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> with Massinger’s <i>Works</i>
-(q.v.).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: E. E. Morris, <i>On the Date and
-Composition of T. O. L.</i> (<i>M. L. A.</i> xvii. 1).</p>
-
-<p>It is generally supposed that in some form the play dates from 1599, as
-in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 34 a woman was ‘born in an. 1540, and now ’tis 99’.
-Of the three authors only Middleton can then have been writing. Morris,
-after elaborate study of the early work and the versification of all
-three, concludes that Rowley (<i>c.</i> 1615) and Massinger (<i>c.</i>
-1625) successively revised an original by Middleton. The Paul’s plays
-began in 1599, but it cannot be assumed that this was one of them.
-Stork, 48, doubts the 1599 date and is inclined to assume collaboration
-between the three writers <i>c.</i> 1615.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">[439]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Blurt Master Constable. 1601–2</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1602, June 7. ‘A Booke called Blurt Master Constable.
-<i>Edward Aldee</i> (Arber, iii. 207).</p>
-
-<p>1602. Blurt Master Constable. Or The Spaniards Night-walke. As it hath
-bin sundry times priuately acted by the Children of Paules. <i>For
-Henry Rocket.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> [by W. R. Chetwood] in <i>A Select Collection of Old
-Plays</i> (1750).</p>
-
-<p>Bullen suggests that <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 179, ‘There be many of your
-countrymen in Ireland, signior’, said to a Spaniard, reflects the raid
-of Spaniards in Sept. 1601. They were taken at Kinsale in June 1602. A
-parallel in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 104 with <i>Macbeth</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii.
-3, cannot be taken with Fleay, ii. 90, as proof of posteriority.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Phoenix. 1603–4</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, May 9 (Buck). ‘A Booke called The Phenix.’ <i>Arthur
-Johnson</i> (Arber, iii. 348).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Phoenix, As It hath beene sundry times Acted by the Children
-of Paules. And presented before his Maiestie. <i>E. A. for A. I.</i></p>
-
-<p>1630. <i>T. H. for R. Meighen.</i></p>
-
-<p>The only available performance before James was on 20 Feb. 1604, and
-the imitation of <i>Volpone</i> (1605) suggested by Fleay, ii. 92, is
-not clear enough to cause any difficulty. Knights are satirized in
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> vi. 150, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 4, and there is an allusion to
-the unsettled state of Ireland in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v. 6.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Trick to Catch the Old One. 1604 &lt; &gt; 6</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Oct. 7 (Buck). ‘Twoo plaies ... thother A trick to
-catche the old one.’ <i>George Eld</i> (Arber, iii. 360).</p>
-
-<p>1608. A Trick to Catch the Old One. As it hath beene lately Acted, by
-the Children of Paules. <i>George Eld.</i></p>
-
-<p>1608.... As it hath beene often in Action, both at Paules, and the
-Black Fryers. Presented before his Maiestie on New yeares night last.
-Composed by T. M. <i>G. E. sold by Henry Rockett.</i> [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>1616.... By T. Middleton. <i>George Eld for Thomas Langley.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>O. E. D.</i> (1830, iii) and by C. W. Dilke
-(1814, <i>O. E. P.</i> v) and W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The date of Q<sub>1</sub> is doubtless 1608/9 and the Court performance that by
-the Children of Blackfriars on 1 Jan. 1609. They must have taken the
-play over from Paul’s when these went under in 1606 or 1607. The title
-is probably proverbial, and therefore the phrase ‘We are in the way
-to catch the old one’ in <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v, hardly
-enables us to date the play with Fleay, ii. 92, before Day’s, which was
-in Feb. 1606.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Mad World, my Masters. 1604 &lt; &gt; 6</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, Oct. 4. ‘A Booke called A Mad World (my Maysters).’
-<i>Walter Burre and Eleazar Edgar</i> (Arber, iii. 391). [The licenser
-is Segar, ‘Deputy of Sir George Bucke’.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">[440]</span></p>
-
-<p>1608. A Mad World, My Masters. As it hath bin lately in Action by the
-Children of Paules. Composed by T. M. <i>H. B. for Walter Burre.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, April 19. Transfer to John Hodgettes of Edgar’s
-share (Arber, iii. 520).</p>
-
-<p>1640.... A Comedy. As it hath bin often Acted at the Private House in
-Salisbury Court, by her Majesties Servants.... <i>For J. S., sold by
-James Becket.</i> [Epistle to Reader, signed ‘J. S.’]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> ii).</p>
-
-<p>The epistle says ‘it is full twenty years since it was written’, which
-is absurd. A pamphlet of the same title by Breton in 1603, hits at
-the Jacobean knightings in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 64, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v. 41,
-and the Family of Love in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 73, and the disappearance
-of Paul’s in 1606 or 1607 are the only indications of date. In Acts
-<span class="allsmcap">IV</span> and <span class="allsmcap">V</span> the duplicate names Once-Ill-Brothel,
-Hargrave-Harebrain, Shortrod-Harebrain suggest revision.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Michaelmas Term. 1606</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, May 15 (Buck). ‘A Comedy called Mychaelmas terme.’
-<i>Arthur Johnson</i> (Arber, iii. 349).</p>
-
-<p>1607. Michaelmas Terme. As it hath been sundry times acted by the
-Children of Paules. <i>For A. I.</i> [Induction.]</p>
-
-<p>1630.... Newly corrected. <i>T. H. for R. Meighen.</i></p>
-
-<p>Allusions in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 226, 376 to the presence of women at
-a quartering for treason may suggest, as in the case of Marston’s
-<i>Fawn</i> (q.v.), a date after that of 30 Jan. 1606. There is no
-reference in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 63 to the leap-year of 1604, as suggested
-by Fleay, ii. 91. Knightings are satirized in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 191;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 46.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Your Five Gallants. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, March 22 (Buck). ‘A Plaie called the ffyve Wittie
-Gallantes as it hath ben acted by the Children of the Chappell.’
-<i>Richard Bonyon</i> (Arber, iii. 372).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> Your fiue Gallants. As it hath beene often in Action at
-the Blacke-friers. Written by T. Middleton. <i>For Richard Bonian.</i>
-[Induction with ‘Presenter or Prologue’ in dumb-show.]</p>
-
-<p>This may have been in preparation for Paul’s when they ceased playing
-and taken over by Blackfriars. In any case a reference to closure for
-plague in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 29 and to fighting with a windmill (like Don
-Quixote) in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> viii. 7 fit in with a date in 1607.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Family of Love. 1604 &lt; &gt; 7</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Oct. 12 (Buck). ‘A playe called the family of
-Loue as yt hath bene Lately acted by the Children of his Maiesties
-Reuelles.’ <i>John Browne and John Helme</i> (Arber, iii. 360).</p>
-
-<p>1608. The Famelie of Love. Acted by the Children of his Maiesties
-Reuells. <i>For John Helmes.</i> [Epistle to Reader, Prologue,
-Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>The prologue apologizes that ‘expectation’ hath not ‘filled the general
-round’. The King’s Revels can hardly have existed before 1607. Fleay,
-ii. 94, thinks that they inherited the play from Paul’s and assigns
-it to 1604 ‘when the Family of Love were such objects<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">[441]</span> of public
-attention’. His chief reason is that the epistle regrets that the play
-was ‘not published when the general voice of the people had sealed
-it for good, and the newness of it made it much more desired than at
-this time’. It had ‘passed the censure of the stage with a general
-applause’. This epistle is clearly by the author, who says ‘it was
-in the press before I had notice of it, by which means some faults
-may escape in the printing’. I agree that there must have been some
-interval between production and publication. But there is no special
-virtue in the date 1604. References to the Family of Love are to be
-found in <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i> (<i>1601–3</i>), <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i.
-263; <i>Dutch Courtesan</i> (<i>1603–4</i>), <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 156,
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 18; <i>Mad World, My Masters</i> (<i>1604–6</i>),
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 73; <i>Isle of Gulls</i> (<i>1606</i>), p. 26; <i>Every
-Woman in Her Humour</i> (?), p. 316. The sect was well known in England
-as early as 1574–81, when an act was passed for its suppression. It
-petitioned James <i>c.</i> 1604 and was answered in <i>A Supplication
-of the Family of Love</i>, printed at Cambridge in 1606. On its
-history, cf. Fuller, <i>Church History</i> (1868), iii. 239; F.
-Nippold, <i>Heinrich Niclaes und das Haus der Liebe</i> (1862, <i>Z. f.
-Hist. Theol.</i>); R. Barclay, <i>Inner Life of the Religious Societies
-of the Commonwealth</i> (1876), 25; A. C. Thomas, <i>The Family of
-Love</i> (1893); R. M. Jones, <i>Studies in Mystical Religion</i>
-(1909), 428; E. B. Daw, <i>Love Feigned and Unfeigned</i> (1917, <i>M.
-L. A.</i> xxxii. 267).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Roaring Girl. c. 1610.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Dekker (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Chaste Maid in Cheapside. 1611.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, April 8 (Herbert). ‘A play called The Chast Mayd of
-Chepeside.’ <i>Constable</i> (Arber, iv. 232).</p>
-
-<p>1630. A Chast Mayd in Cheape-side. A Pleasant conceited Comedy neuer
-before printed. As it hath beene often acted at the Swan on the
-Banke-side by the Lady Elizabeth her Seruants By Thomas Midelton Gent.
-<i>For Francis Constable.</i></p>
-
-<p>It is not known where the Lady Elizabeth’s played during 1611–13,
-and it may very well have been at the Swan. Nor is there anything
-improbable in the suggestion of Fleay, 186, that this is the <i>Proud
-Maid’s Tragedy</i> acted by them at Court on 25 Feb. 1612 (App. B).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>No Wit, no Help, like a Woman’s. 1613</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1653, Sept. 9. ‘No witt, no helpe like a Woman. Mr. Tho.
-Midleton.’ <i>H. Moseley.</i> (Eyre, i. 428).</p>
-
-<table summary="wit">
- <tr>
- <td class="ctr" rowspan="2">1657. No</td>
- <td class="brckt" rowspan="2"><img src="images/big_left_bracket.png" alt="big left bracket"
- style="height:2.5em;padding:0 0em 0 0em;" /></td>
- <td>Wit</td>
- <td class="brckt" rowspan="2"><img src="images/big_right_bracket.png" alt="big right bracket"
- style="height:2.5em;padding:0 0em 0 0em;" /></td>
- <td class="ctr" rowspan="2">like a Womans. A Comedy. By Tho. Middleton,</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td>Help</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p0">Gent. <i>For Humphrey Moseley.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>The text represents a revival by Shirley in 1638, but Fleay, ii. 96,
-refers the original to 1613 as in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 286 a character,
-after referring to the almanac for 1638, says he has ‘proceeded in
-five and twenty such books of astronomy’. Bullen accepts the date, but
-I feel no confidence in the argument. Stork, 47, attempts to trace
-Rowley’s hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">[442]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Widow</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1652, Apr. 12 (Brent). ‘A play called The Widdow, written
-by John Fletcher &amp; Tho: Middleton gent.’ <i>Moseley</i> (Eyre, i. 394).</p>
-
-<p>1652. The Widdow A Comedie. As it was Acted at the private House in
-Black Fryers, with great Applause, by His late Majesties Servants.
-Written by Ben: Jonson John Fletcher. Tho: Middleton. Gent. Printed by
-the Originall Copy. <i>For Humphrey Moseley.</i> [Epistle to Reader by
-Alexander Gough. Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>Bullen places this ‘from internal evidence’ <i>c.</i> 1608–9, but
-thinks it revised at a later date, not improbably by Fletcher, although
-he cannot discover either Jonson’s hand or, ‘unless the songs be his’,
-Fletcher’s. Allusions to ‘a scornful woman’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 104) and
-to ‘yellow bands’ as ‘hateful’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 52) are consistent with
-a date <i>c.</i> 1615–16.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Mayor of Quinborough</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] A copy of the play, said to be ‘of no great antiquity’, is
-described in an appendix to <i>Wit and Wisdom</i> (<i>Sh. Soc.</i>), 85.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1646, Sept. 4 (Langley). ‘Maior of Quinborough.’
-<i>Robinson and Moseley</i> (Eyre, i. 244).</p>
-
-<p>1661, Feb. 13. ‘A Comedie called the Maior of Quinborough, By Tho:
-Middleton. <i>Henry Herringham</i> (Eyre, ii. 288).</p>
-
-<p>1661. The Mayor of Quinborough: A Comedy. As it hath been often Acted
-with much Applause at Black Fryars, By His Majesties Servants. Written
-by Tho. Middleton. <i>For Henry Herringham.</i> [Epistle to Gentlemen.]</p>
-
-<p>There is a mention (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 112) of Fletcher’s <i>Wild-Goose
-Chase</i> (1621), and the introduction of a ‘rebel Oliver’ suggests
-a much later date. But Bullen thinks this an old play revised, and
-Fleay, ii. 104, attempts to identify it with an anonymous play called
-both <i>Vortigern</i> and <i>Hengist</i> (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii.
-181) which was produced by the Admiral’s on 4 Dec. 1596 and bought by
-the same company from Alleyn in 1601. There is not, however, much to
-support a theory that Middleton was writing for the stage so early as
-1596. Stork, 46, thinks that Middleton and Rowley revised the older
-play <i>c.</i> 1606, ‘at a time when plays of ancient Britain were in
-vogue’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Middleton’s hand has been sought in <i>Birth of Merlin</i>,
-<i>Puritan</i>, and <i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> (cf. ch. xxiv) and
-in <i>Wit at Several Weapons</i> of the Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher
-series.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Mask</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Mask of Cupid. 4 Jan. 1614</i></p>
-
-<p>Writing to Carleton on 5 Jan. 1614 of the festivities at the Earl
-of Somerset’s wedding (Birch, i. 288; cf. s.v. Campion, <i>Mask of
-Squires</i>), Chamberlain notes that the King had called on the City
-to entertain the bridal pair, which they had done, though reluctantly,
-on 4 Jan. in Merchant Taylors’ hall, with a supper, a play and a mask,
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">[443]</span> a banquet. Howes in Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 1005, says there were
-‘2 seuerall pleasant maskes &amp; a play’. Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>, i.
-xxxix, gives from the City <i>Repertory</i>, xxxi. 2, f. 239<sup>v</sup>, an
-order of 18 Jan. 1614 for payment to Thomas Middleton in respect of
-the ‘late solemnities at Merchant Tailors’ Hall’ for ‘the last Mask of
-Cupid and other shows lately made’ by him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Running Stream Entertainment. 29 Sept. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. The Manner of his Lordships [Sir Thomas Middleton’s]
-Entertainment on Michaelmas day last, being the day of his Honorable
-Election, together with the worthy Sir Iohn Swinarton, Knight, then
-Lord Maior, the Learned and Iuditious, Sir Henry Montague, Maister
-Recorder, and many of the Right Worshipfull the Aldermen of the Citty
-of London. At that most Famous and Admired Worke of the Running Streame
-from Amwell Head, into the Cesterne neere Islington, being the sole
-Inuention, Cost, and Industry of that Worthy Maister Hugh Middleton,
-of London Goldsmith, for the generall good of the Citty. By T. M.
-<i>Nicholas Okes.</i> [Appended to reissue of <i>The Triumphs of
-Truth</i>.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Triumphs of Truth. 29 Oct. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1613, Nov. 3. ‘A booke called the tryumphs of truth of all
-the showes pagiantes Chariots &amp;c. on the Lord Maiours Day octobris 29,
-1613.’ <i>Nicholas Okes</i> (Arber, iii. 536).</p>
-
-<p>1613. The Triumphs of Truth. A Solemnity vnparalleld for Cost, Art,
-and Magnificence, at the Confirmation and Establishment of that Worthy
-and true Nobly-minded Gentleman, Sir Thomas Middleton, Knight; in the
-Honorable Office of his Maiesties Lieuetenant, the Lord Maior of the
-thrice Famous Citty of London. Taking Beginning at his Lordships going,
-and proceeding after his Returne from receiuing the Oath of Maioralty
-at Westminster, on the Morrow next after Simon and Iudes day, October
-29. 1613. All the Showes, Pageants, Chariots; Morning, Noone, and
-Night-Triumphes. Directed, Written, and redeem’d into Forme, from the
-Ignorance of some former times, and their Common Writer, by Thomas
-Middleton. <i>Nicholas Okes.</i></p>
-
-<p>1613.... Shewing also his Lordships Entertainment on Michaelmas day
-last, ... [etc.]. <i>Nicholas Okes.</i> [Reissue, with <i>Running
-Stream Entertainment</i> added.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), ii. 679, with
-<i>Running Stream</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Civitatis Amor. 4 Nov. 1616</i></p>
-
-<p>1616. Ciuitatis Amor. The Cities Loue. An entertainement by water, at
-Chelsey, and Whitehall. At the ioyfull receiuing of that Illustrious
-Hope of Great Britaine, the High and Mighty Charles, To bee created
-Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornewall, Earle of Chester, &amp;c. Together
-with the Ample Order and Solemnity of his Highnesse creation, as it
-was celebrated in his Maiesties Palace of Whitehall on Monday, the
-fourth of Nouember, 1616. As also the Ceremonies of that Ancient
-and Honourable Order of the Knights of the Bath; And<span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">[444]</span> all the
-Triumphs showne in honour of his Royall Creation. <i>Nicholas Okes
-for Thomas Archer.</i> [Middleton’s name follows the account of the
-‘entertainment’.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ALEXANDER MONTGOMERY (<i>c.</i> 1556–<i>c.</i> 1610).</p>
-
-<p>A Scottish poet (cf. <i>D. N. B.</i>) who has been suggested as the
-author of <i>Philotus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROGER MORRELL (<i>c.</i> 1597).</p>
-
-<p>Possibly the author of the academic <i>Hispanus</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD MULCASTER (<i>c.</i> 1530–1611).</p>
-
-<p>A contributor to the Kenilworth entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C). For
-his successive masterships of Merchant Taylors and St. Paul’s, see ch.
-xii.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ANTHONY MUNDAY (<i>c.</i> 1553–1633).</p>
-
-<p>Anthony was son of Christopher Munday, a London Draper. He ‘first was
-a stage player’ (<i>A True Report of ... M. Campion</i>, 1582), but in
-Oct. 1576 was apprenticed for eight years to John Allde, stationer.
-Allde went out of business about 1582, and Munday never completed his
-apprenticeship, probably because his ready pen found better profit in
-the purveyance of copy for the trade. He began by a journey to Rome
-in 1578–9, and brought back material for a series of attacks upon the
-Jesuits, to one of which <i>A True Report of ... M. Campion</i> is an
-answer. According to the anonymous author, Munday on his return to
-England ‘did play extempore, those gentlemen and others whiche were
-present, can best giue witnes of his dexterity, who being wery of his
-folly, hissed him from his stage. Then being thereby discouraged, he
-set forth a balet against playes, but yet (o constant youth) he now
-beginnes againe to ruffle upon the stage’. For the ballad there is
-some corroborative evidence in a S. R. entry of 10 Nov. 1580 (cf.
-App. C, No. xxvi), which, however, does not name Munday, and it is a
-possible conjecture that he also wrote the <i>Third Blast of Retrait
-from Plaies</i> issued in the same year (cf. App. C, No. xxvii). If
-so, he was already, before 1580, doing work as a playwright; but of
-this, with the doubtful exception of the anonymous <i>Two Italian
-Gentlemen</i> (q.v.), there is no other evidence for another fifteen
-years. His experiences as an actor may have been with the company of
-the Earl of Oxford, whose ‘servant’ he calls himself in his <i>View of
-Sundry Examples</i> (1580). From 1581 he was employed by Topcliffe and
-others against recusants, and as a result became, possibly by 1584 and
-certainly by 1588, a Messenger of the Chamber. He still held this post
-in 1593, and was employed as a pursuivant to execute the Archbishop of
-Canterbury’s warrants against Martin Marprelate in 1588. J. D. Wilson
-(<i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 489) suggests that he may also have taken a hand
-in the literary and dramatic controversy, as ‘Mar-Martin, John a Cant:
-his hobbie-horse’, who ‘was to his reproche, newly put out of the
-morris, take it how he will; with a flat discharge for euer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">[445]</span> shaking
-his shins about a maypole againe while he liued’ (<i>Protestation
-of Martin Marprelate</i>, <i>c.</i> Aug. 1589). Certainly Munday’s
-official duties did not interfere with his literary productiveness, as
-translator of romances, maker of ballads, lyrist, and miscellaneous
-writer generally. He is traceable, chiefly in Henslowe’s diary, as a
-busy dramatist for the Admiral’s men during various periods between
-1594 and 1602, and there is no reason to suppose that his activities
-were limited to these years. Meres in 1598 includes him amongst
-‘the best for comedy’, with the additional compliment of ‘our best
-plotter’. But he was evidently a favourite mark for the satire of
-more literary writers, who depreciated his style and jested at his
-functions as a messenger. Small, 172, has disposed of attempts to
-identify him with the Deliro or the Puntarvolo of <i>E. M. O.</i>,
-the Amorphus of <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, the In-and-In Medley of the
-<i>Tale of a Tub</i>, and the Timothy Tweedle of the anonymous <i>Jack
-Drum’s Entertainment</i>. But he may reasonably be taken for the Poet
-Nuntius of <i>E. M. I.</i> and the Antonio Balladino of <i>The Case
-is Altered</i> (q.v.); and long before Jonson took up the game, an
-earlier writer had introduced him as the Posthaste of the anonymous
-<i>Histriomastix</i> (c. 1589). Posthaste suggests the formation of
-Sir Oliver Owlet’s men, and acts as their poet (i. 124). He writes a
-<i>Prodigal Child</i> at 1<i>s.</i> a sheet (ii. 94). He will teach the
-actors to play ‘true Politicians’ (i. 128) and ‘should be employd in
-matters of state’ (ii. 130). He is always ready to drink (i. 162; ii.
-103, 115, 319; vi. 222), and claims to be a gentleman, because ‘he hath
-a clean shirt on, with some learning’ (ii. 214). He has written ballads
-(v. 91; vi. 235). The players jeer at ‘your extempore’ (i. 127), and he
-offers to do a prologue extempore (ii. 121), and does extemporize on a
-theme (ii. 293). He writes with</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4h">no new luxury or blandishment</div>
- <div>But plenty of Old Englands mothers words (ii. 128).</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The players call him, when he is late for rehearsal,
-a ‘peaking pageanter’, and say ‘It is as dangerous to read his name
-at a play door, as a printed bill on a plague door’ (iv. 165). The
-whole portrait seems to be by the earlier author; Marston only adds
-a characteristic epithet in ‘goosequillian Posthast’ (iii. 187).
-But it agrees closely with the later portraits by Jonson, and with
-the facts of Munday’s career. I do not think that ‘pageanter’ means
-anything more than play-maker. But from 1605 onwards Munday was often
-employed by city companies to devise Lord Mayor’s pageants, and it has
-been supposed that he had been similarly engaged since 1592 on the
-strength of a claim in the 1618 edition of John Stowe’s <i>Survey of
-London</i>, which he edited, that he had been ‘six and twenty years
-in sundry employments for the City’s service’. But there were other
-civic employments, and it is doubtful (cf. ch. iv) how far there were
-pageants during the last decade of Elizabeth’s reign for Munday to
-devise. On the title-pages of his pageants he describes himself as
-a ‘Cittizen and Draper of London’. The Corporation’s welcome at the
-creation of Henry as Prince of Wales in 1610 (cf. ch. iv) also fell to
-him to devise. How<span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">[446]</span> long he continued to write plays is unknown. He had
-several children in St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, between 1584 and 1589,
-and was buried on 10 Aug. 1633 at St. Stephen’s, Coleman Street.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: J. D. Wilson, <i>A. M., Pamphleteer and
-Pursuivant</i> (1909, <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 484); W. W. Greg,
-<i>Autograph Plays by A. M.</i> (1913, <i>M. L. R.</i> viii. 89); M.
-St. C. Byrne, <i>The Date of A. M.’s Journey to Rome</i> (1918, <i>3
-Library</i>, ix. 106), <i>The Shepherd Tony&mdash;a Recapitulation</i>
-(1920, <i>M. L. R.</i> xv. 364), <i>A. M. and his Books</i> (1921,
-<i>4 Library</i>, i. 225); E. M. Thompson, <i>The Autograph MSS. of A.
-M.</i> (1919, <i>Bibl. Soc. Trans.</i> xiv. 325).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>John a Kent and John a Cumber. 1594</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] Autograph MS. in possession of Lord Mostyn, with title
-‘The Booke of John a Kent and John a Cumber’, and at end the signature
-‘Anthony Mundy’, and in another hand the date ‘&mdash;&mdash; Decembris 1596’. A
-mutilation of the paper has removed the day of the month and possibly
-some memorandum to which the date was appended. The wrapper is in part
-formed of a vellum leaf of which another part was used for <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1851, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>) and J. S.
-Farmer (1912, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The date has been misread ‘1595’. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 172)
-agrees with Fleay, ii. 114, that the play, of which the scene is at
-West Chester, must be <i>The Wise Man of West Chester</i>, produced
-by the Admiral’s on 3 Dec. 1594 and played to 18 July 1597. Their
-inventory of 1598 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 117) includes ‘Kentes woden
-leage’. This is not required by the extant text, but two or three
-leaves of the MS. appear to be missing. If the identification is
-correct, it is not easy to see how the MS. can be earlier than 1594,
-although Sir E. M. Thompson’s warning that the date of 1596 may be a
-later addition is justified. On 19 Sept. 1601 the Admiral’s bought
-the book from Alleyn. Greg further suggests that <i>Randal Earl of
-Chester</i>, written by Middleton for the same company in Oct. and Nov.
-1602, may have been a ‘refashioning’ of the earlier play, in which
-Randal is a character.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Dec. 1. ‘The Downe falle of Robert Erle of
-Huntingdone after Called Robin Hood.’ <i>Leake</i> (Arber, iii. 176).</p>
-
-<p>1601. The Downfall of Robert, Earle of Huntington, Afterward called
-Robin Hood of merrie Sherwodde: with his loue to chaste Matilda, the
-Lord Fitzwaters daughter, afterwardes his faire Maide Marian. Acted by
-the Right Honourable, the Earle of Notingham, Lord high Admirall of
-England, his seruants. <i>For William Leake.</i> [Induction.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1833, <i>Five Old Plays</i>),
-in Dodsley<sup>4</sup> viii (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: A. Ruckdeschel, <i>Die Quellen des
-Dramas ‘The Downfall and Death of Robert, Earle of Huntington,
-otherwise called Robin Hood’</i> (1897).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe paid Munday £5 on behalf of the Admiral’s for ‘the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">[447]</span> firste
-parte of Robyne Hoode’ on 15 Feb. 1598. From 20 Feb. to 8 March he paid
-Munday and Chettle sums amounting to £5 in all for a ‘seconde parte’,
-called in the fullest entry ‘seconde parte of the downefall of earlle
-Huntyngton surnamed Roben Hoode’. The books and apparel and properties
-are in the Admiral’s inventories of March 1598 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-114, 115, 120, 121). Both parts were licensed for performance on 28
-March. On 18 Nov. he paid Chettle 10<i>s.</i> for ‘the mendynge of’
-the first part, and on 25 Nov., apparently, another 10<i>s.</i> ‘for
-mendinge of Roben Hood for the corte’. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii.
-190) suggests that the last payment was for the second part, and that
-the two Court performances by the Admiral’s at Christmas 1598 are of
-these plays. However this may be, Henslowe’s <i>1, 2 Robin Hood</i>
-are doubtless the extant <i>Downfall</i> and <i>Death</i>. There is an
-allusion in <i>The Downfall</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, to the ‘merry jests’
-of an earlier play, which may be <i>The Pastoral Comedy of Robin Hood
-and Little John</i>, entered in S. R. on 14 May 1594, but not now
-known. Fleay, ii. 114, thinks that Chettle, besides revising some of
-Munday’s scenes, added the Induction and the Skeltonic rhymes.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Death of Robert Earl of Huntingdon. 1598</i></p>
-
-<p><i>With</i> Chettle.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Dec. 1. ‘The Death of Robert Earle of Huntingdon
-with the lamentable trogidye of Chaste Mathilda.’ <i>Leake</i> (Arber,
-iii. 176).</p>
-
-<p>1601. The Death of Robert, Earle of Huntington. Otherwise called Robin
-Hood of merrie Sherwodde: with the lamentable Tragedie of chaste
-Matilda, his faire maid Marian, poysoned at Dunmowe by King Iohn. Acted
-by the Right Honourable, the Earle of Notingham, Lord high Admirall of
-England, his seruants. <i>For William Leake.</i> [<i>Epilogue.</i>]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> and <i>Dissertation</i> with <i>The Downfall</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>This is a sequel to <i>The Downfall</i> (q.v.). Fleay, ii. 115, gives
-Munday the scenes dealing with Robin Hood’s death and Chettle those
-dealing with Maid Marian’s. The play contains discrepancies, but
-Henslowe’s entries afford no evidence that Munday revised Chettle’s
-work, as Fleay thinks. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 191) points out that
-Davenport borrowed much of his <i>King John and Matilda</i> (1655) from
-<i>The Death</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>1 Sir John Oldcastle. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Drayton (q.v.), Hathway, and Wilson.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>The following is a complete list of the plays in which Henslowe’s diary
-shows Munday to have written between 1597 and 1602. All were for the
-Admiral’s:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>Mother Redcap.</i></p>
-
-<p>With Drayton, Dec. 1597–Jan. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii), (iii) <i>1, 2 Robin Hood.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0"><i>Vide supra.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">[448]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>The Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-Lion.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Drayton, and Wilson, June 1598, probably as a sequel to
-<i>Robin Hood</i> (cf. Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 190).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Valentine and Orson.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway (q.v.), July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) A ‘comodey for the corte’, for the completion of which Drayton was
-surety, Aug. 1598, but the entry is cancelled, and presumably the play
-was not finished, unless it is identical with (vii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>Chance Medley.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii), (ix) <i>1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton (q.v.), Hathway, and Wilson, Oct.–Dec. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>Owen Tudor.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton, Hathway, and Wilson, Jan. 1600, but apparently not
-finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>1 Fair Constance of Rome.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Drayton, Hathway, and Wilson, June 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xii) <i>1 Cardinal Wolsey.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Drayton, and Smith, Aug.–Nov. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiii) <i>Jephthah.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, May 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiv) <i>Caesar’s Fall, or The Two Shapes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker, Drayton, Middleton, and Webster, May 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xv) <i>The Set at Tennis.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Dec. 1602. The payment, though in full, was only £3; it was probably,
-therefore, a short play, and conceivably identical with the ‘[sec]ond
-part of fortun[es Tenn?]is’ of which a ‘plot’ exists (cf. ch. xxiv)
-and intended to piece out to the length of a normal performance
-the original <i>Fortune’s Tennis</i> written by Dekker (q.v.) as a
-‘curtain-raiser’ for the Fortune on its opening in 1600. [This is
-highly conjectural.]</p>
-
-<p>Munday must clearly have had a hand in <i>Sir Thomas More</i>, which is
-in his writing, and has been suggested as the author of <i>Fedele and
-Fortunio</i> and <i>The Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Triumphs of Reunited Britannia. 29 Oct. 1605</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Triumphes of re-vnited Britania. Performed at the
-cost and charges of the Right Worship: Company of the Merchant Taylors,
-in honor of Sir Leonard Holliday kni: to solemnize his entrance as
-Lorde Mayor of the Citty of London, on Tuesday the 29. of October.
-1605. Deuised and Written by A. Mundy, Cittizen and Draper of London.
-<i>W. Jaggard.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Nichols, <i>James</i> (1828), i. 564.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">[449]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>London’s Love to Prince Henry. 31 May 1610</i></p>
-
-<p>See ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Chryso-Thriambos. 29 Oct. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>1611. Chruso-thriambos. The Triumphes of Golde. At the Inauguration of
-Sir Iames Pemberton, Knight, in the Dignity of Lord Maior of London:
-On Tuesday, the 29. of October. 1611. Performed in the harty loue, and
-at the charges of the Right Worshipfull, Worthy, and Ancient Company
-of Gold-Smithes. Deuised and Written by A. M. Cittizen and Draper of
-London. <i>William Jaggard.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Himatia Poleos. 29 Oct. 1614</i></p>
-
-<p>1614. Himatia-Poleos. The Triumphs of olde Draperie, or the rich
-Cloathing of England. Performed in affection, and at the charges of the
-right Worthie and first honoured Companie of Drapers: at the enstalment
-of Sr. Thomas Hayes Knight, in the high office of Lord Maior of London,
-on Satturday, being the 29. day of October. 1614. Deuised and written
-by A. M. Citizen and Draper of London. <i>Edward Allde.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Metropolis Coronata. 30 Oct. 1615</i></p>
-
-<p>1615. Metropolis Coronata, The Triumphes of Ancient Drapery: or, Rich
-Cloathing of England, in a second Yeeres performance. In Honour of
-the aduancement of Sir Iohn Iolles, Knight, to the high Office of
-Lord Maior of London, and taking his Oath for the same Authoritie,
-on Monday, being the 30. day of October. 1615. Performed in heartie
-affection to him, and at the bountifull charges of his worthy Brethren
-the truely Honourable Society of Drapers, the first that receiued such
-Dignitie in this Citie. Deuised, and written, by A. M. Citizen, and
-Draper of London. <i>George Purslowe.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Nichols, <i>James</i>, iii. 107.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Chrysanaleia. 29 Oct. 1616</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1616, Oct. 29. ‘A booke called the golden Fishing of the
-showes of Sir John Leman Lord Maiour.’ <i>George Purslowe</i> (Arber
-iii. 597).</p>
-
-<p>1616. Chrysanaleia: The Golden Fishing: Or, Honour of Fishmongers.
-Applauding the aduancement of Mr. Iohn Leman, Alderman, to the dignitie
-of Lord Maior of London. Taking his Oath in the same authority at
-Westminster, on Tuesday, being the 29. day of October. 1616. Performed
-in hearty loue to him, and at the charges of his worthy Brethren, the
-ancient, and right Worshipfull Company of Fishmongers. Deuised and
-written by A. M. Citizen and Draper of London. <i>George Purslowe.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Nichols, iii. 195, and by J. G. Nichols (1844, 1869)
-with reproductions of drawings for the pageant in the possession of the
-Fishmongers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">[450]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Entertainment</i></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Campbell</i> mayoral pageant of 1609 (q.v.) has been ascribed to
-Munday.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT NAILE (<i>c.</i> 1613).</p>
-
-<p>Probable describer of the Bristol entertainment of Queen Anne in 1613
-(cf. ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS NASHE (1507–&gt;1601).</p>
-
-<p>Nashe was baptized at Lowestoft, Suffolk, in Nov. 1567, the son of
-William Nashe, minister, of a Herefordshire family. He matriculated
-from St. John’s, Cambridge, on 13 Oct. 1582, took his B.A. in 1586, and
-left the University probably in 1588. According to the <i>Trimming</i>
-(Harvey, iii. 67), he ‘had a hand in a Show called Terminus &amp; non
-terminus, for which his partener in it was expelled the Colledge: but
-this foresaid Nashe played in it (as I suppose) the Varlet of Clubs;
-which he acted with such naturall affection, that all the spectators
-tooke him to be the verie same’. He went to London, and his first book,
-<i>The Anatomie of Absurditie</i>, was entered in S. R. on 19 Sept.
-1588. In actual publication it was anticipated by an epistle ‘To the
-Gentlemen Students of Both Universities’, which he prefixed to the
-<i>Menaphon</i> (1589) of Robert Greene (cf. App. C, No. xlii). This
-contains some pungent criticism of actors, with incidental depreciation
-of certain illiterate dramatists, among whom is apparently included
-Kyd, coupled with praise of Peele, and of other ‘sweete gentlemen’,
-who have ‘tricked vp a company of taffata fooles with their feathers’.
-Evidently Nashe had joined the London circle of University wits, and
-henceforth lived, partly by his pen, as dramatist and pamphleteer, and
-partly by services rendered to various patrons, amongst whom were Lord
-Strange, Sir George Carey, afterwards Lord Hunsdon, and Archbishop
-Whitgift. His connexion with this last was either the cause or the
-result of his employment, with other literary men, notably Lyly, in
-opposition to the anti-episcopalian tracts of Martin Marprelate and his
-fellows. His precise share in the controversy is uncertain. He has been
-credited with <i>An Almond for a Parrot</i>, with a series of writings
-under the name of Pasquil, and with other contributions, but in all
-cases the careful analysis of McKerrow, v. 49, finds the evidence quite
-inconclusive.</p>
-
-<p>McKerrow, too, has given the best account (v. 65) of Nashe’s quarrel
-with Gabriel and Richard Harvey. This arose out of his association
-as an anti-Martinist with Lyly, between whom and Gabriel there was
-an ancient feud. It was carried on, in a vein of scurrilous personal
-raillery on both sides, from 1590 until it was suppressed as a public
-scandal in 1599. One of the charges against Nashe was his friendship
-with, and in the Harveian view aping of, Robert Greene, with whom,
-according to Gabriel’s <i>Four Letters</i> (<i>Works</i>, i. 170),
-Nashe took part in the fatal banquet of pickled herrings and Rhenish
-which brought him to his end. Nashe repudiated the charge of imitation,
-and spoke of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">[451]</span> Greene in <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (iii.
-132), as ‘subscribing to mee in anything but plotting Plaies, wherein
-he was his crafts master’. Unless <i>Dido</i> is early work, no play
-written by Nashe before Greene’s death on 3 Sept. 1592 is known to us.
-But he is pretty clearly the ‘young Iuuenall, that byting Satyrist,
-that lastly with mee together writ a Comedie’ of Greene’s posthumous
-<i>Groats-worth</i> (cf. App. C, No. xlviii), and the tone of his own
-Defence of Plays in <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> of 1592 (cf. App. C, No.
-xlvi) as compared with that of the <i>Menaphon</i> epistle suggests
-that he had made his peace with the ‘taffata fooles’. His one extant
-unaided play belongs to the autumn of 1592, and was apparently for a
-private performance at Croydon. Internal evidence enables us to date
-in Aug.–Oct. 1596, and to ascribe to Nashe, in spite of the fact that
-his name at the foot is in a nineteenth-century writing, a letter to
-William Cotton (McKerrow, v. 192, from <i>Cott. MS. Julius C.</i> iii,
-f. 280) which shows that he was still writing for the stage and gives
-valuable evidence upon the theatrical crisis of that year (App. D, No.
-cv). To 1597 belongs the misadventure of <i>The Isle of Dogs</i>, which
-sent Nashe in flight to Great Yarmouth, and probably ended his dramatic
-career. He is mentioned as dead in C. Fitzgeffrey, <i>Affaniae</i>
-(1601).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1883–5. A. B. Grosart, <i>The Complete Works of T. N.</i> 6 vols.
-(<i>Huth Library</i>).</p>
-
-<p>1904–10. R. B. McKerrow, <i>The Works of T. N.</i> 5 vols.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Summer’s Last Will and Testament. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Oct. 28 (Harsnett). ‘A booke called Sommers last
-Will and testament presented by William Sommers.’ <i>Burby and Walter
-Burre</i> (Arber, iii. 175).</p>
-
-<p>1600. A Pleasant Comedie, called Summers last will and Testament.
-Written by Thomas Nash. <i>Simon Stafford for Walter Burre.</i>
-[Induction, with Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in Dodsley<sup>3–4</sup> (1825–74).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: B.
-Nicholson, <i>The Date of S. L. W. and T.</i> (<i>Athenaeum</i>, 10
-Jan. 1891); F. G. Fleay <i>Queen Elizabeth, Croydon and the Drama</i>
-(1898).</p>
-
-<p>The play was intended for performance on the ‘tyle-stones’ and in the
-presence of a ‘Lord’, to whom there are several other references, in
-one of which he is ‘your Grace’ (ll. 17, 205, 208, 587, 795, 1897,
-1925). There are also local references to ‘betweene this and Stretham’
-(l. 202), to ‘Dubbers hill’ near Croydon (l. 621), to Croydon itself
-(ll. 1830, 1873), and to ‘forlorne’ Lambeth (l. 1879). The conclusion
-seems justified that ‘this lowe built house’ (l. 1884) was the palace
-of Archbishop Whitgift at Croydon.</p>
-
-<p>There was a plague ‘in this latter end of summer’ (l. 80); which had
-been ‘brought in’ by the dog-days (l. 656), and had led to ‘want of
-terme’ and consequent ‘Cities harm’ in London (l. 1881). Summer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">[452]</span>
-accuses Sol of spiting Thames with a ‘naked channell’ (l. 545) and Sol
-lays it on the moon (l. 562):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i12h">in the yeare</div>
- <div>Shee was eclipst, when that the Thames was bare.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Two passages refer to the Queen as on progress. Summer
-says (l. 125):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Haruest and age haue whit’ned my greene head:</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This month haue I layne languishing a bed,</div>
- <div>Looking eche hour to yeeld my life and throne;</div>
- <div>And dyde I had in deed vnto the earth,</div>
- <div>But that <i>Eliza</i>, Englands beauteous Queene,</div>
- <div>On whom all seasons prosperously attend,</div>
- <div>Forbad the execution of my fate,</div>
- <div>Vntill her ioyfull progresse was expir’d.</div>
- <div>For her doth Summer liue, and linger here.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">And again, at the end of the play (l. 1841):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Vnto <i>Eliza</i>, that most sacred Dame,</div>
- <div>Whom none but Saints and Angels ought to name,</div>
- <div>All my faire dayes remaining I bequeath,</div>
- <div>To waite vpon her till she be returnd.</div>
- <div>Autumne, I charge thee, when that I am dead,</div>
- <div>Be prest and seruiceable at her beck,</div>
- <div>Present her with thy goodliest ripened fruites.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The plague and absence of term from London might fit
-either 1592 or 1593 (cf. App. E), but I agree with McKerrow, iv. 418,
-that the earlier year is indicated. In 1593 the plague did not begin
-in the dog-days, nor did Elizabeth go on progress. And it is on 6
-Sept. 1592 that Stowe (1615), 764, records the emptying of Thames. I
-may add a small confirmatory point. Are not ‘the horses lately sworne
-to be stolne’ (l. 250) those stolen by Germans in the train of Count
-Mompelgard between Reading and Windsor and referred to in <i>Merry
-Wives</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 78. The Count came to Windsor on 19 Aug.
-1592 (Rye, xcix). Now I part company with Mr. McKerrow, who thinks
-that, although the play was written in 1592, it may have been revised
-for performance before Elizabeth in a later year, perhaps at her visit
-to Whitgift on 14 Aug. 1600. His reasons are three: (<i>a</i>) Sol’s
-reference to the Thames seems to date it in a year earlier than that
-in which he speaks; (<i>b</i>) the seasonal references suggest August,
-while Stowe’s date necessitates September at earliest, and the want of
-term points to October; (<i>c</i>) the references to Elizabeth imply
-her presence. I think there is something in (<i>a</i>), but not much,
-if the distinction between actual and dramatic time is kept in mind.
-As to (<i>b</i>), the tone of the references is surely to a summer
-prolonged beyond its natural expiration for Eliza’s benefit, well
-into autumn, and in such a year the fruits of autumn, which in this
-country are chiefly apples, will be on the trees until October. As to
-(<i>c</i>), I cannot find any evidence of the Queen’s presence at all.
-Surely she is on progress elsewhere, and due to ‘return’ in the future.
-I may add that Elizabeth was at Croydon in the spring of 1593, and that
-it would, therefore, have been odd to defer a revival for her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">[453]</span> benefit
-until another seven years had elapsed. The 1592 progress came to an
-end upon 9 Oct. and I should put the performance not long before. When
-Q<sub>1</sub> of <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (S. R. 8 Aug. 1592) was issued, Nashe
-was kept by fear of infection ‘with my Lord in the Countrey’, and the
-misinterpretations of the pamphlet which he deprecates in the epistle
-to Q<sub>2</sub> (McKerrow, i. 154) are hinted at in a very similar protest (l.
-65) in the play.</p>
-
-<p>The prologue is spoken by ‘the greate foole <i>Toy</i>’ (ll. 10, 1945),
-who would borrow a chain and fiddle from ‘my cousin Ned’ (l. 7), also
-called ‘Ned foole’ (l. 783). The epilogue is spoken (l. 1194) and
-the songs sung (ll. 117, 1871) by boys. Will Summer (l. 792) gives
-good advice to certain ‘deminitiue urchins’, who wait ‘on my Lords
-trencher’; but he might be speaking either to actors or to boys in the
-audience. The morris (l. 201) dances ‘for the credit of Wostershire’,
-where Whitgift had been bishop. The prompter was Dick Huntley (l. 14),
-and Vertumnus was acted by Harry Baker (l. 1567). There is a good deal
-of Latin in the text. On the whole, I think that the play was given
-by members of Whitgift’s household, which his biographer describes
-as ‘a little academy’. The prologue (l. 33) has ‘So fares it with vs
-nouices, that here betray our imperfections: we, afraid to looke on
-the imaginary serpent of Enuy, paynted in mens affections, haue ceased
-to tune any musike of mirth to your eares this twelue-month, thinking
-that, as it is the nature of the serpent to hisse, so childhood and
-ignorance would play the goslings, contemning and condemning what they
-vnderstood not’. This agrees curiously in date with the termination
-of the Paul’s plays. Whitgift might have entertained the Paul’s boys
-during the plague and strengthened them for a performance with members
-of his own household. But would they call themselves ‘nouices’?</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Dido, Queen of Carthage &gt; 1593</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p0 sm"><i>With</i> Marlowe (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Terminus et non Terminus. 1586 &lt; &gt; 8</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Vide supra.</i> McKerrow, v. 10, thinks that the name of Nashe’s
-alleged part may be a jest, and points out that the identification
-by Fleay, ii. 124, of the play, of which nothing more is known, with
-the ‘London Comedie’ of the <i>Cards</i> referred to in Harington’s
-<i>Apology</i> (cf. App. C, No. xlv) is improbable.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Isle of Dogs. 1597</i></p>
-
-<p>Meres, <i>Palladis Tamia</i> (S. R. 7 Sept. 1598), writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘As <i>Actaeon</i> was wooried of his owne hounds: so is <i>Tom
-Nash</i> of his <i>Isle of Dogs</i>. Dogges were the death
-of <i>Euripedes</i>, but bee not disconsolate gallant young
-<i>Iuuenall</i>, <i>Linus</i>, the sonne of <i>Apollo</i> died
-the same death. Yet God forbid that so braue a witte should
-so basely perish, thine are but paper dogges, neither is thy
-banishment like <i>Ouids</i>, eternally to conuerse<span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">[454]</span> with the
-barbarous <i>Getes</i>. Therefore comfort thy selfe sweete
-<i>Tom</i>, with <i>Ciceros</i> glorious return to Rome, &amp; with
-the counsel <i>Aeneas</i> giues to his seabeaten soldiors.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left p1">We learn something more from <i>Nashes Lenten Stuffe</i>
-(S. R. 11 Jan. 1599), where he tells us that he is sequestered from
-the wonted means of his maintenance and exposed to attacks on his
-fame, through ‘the straunge turning of the Ile of Dogs from a commedie
-to a tragedie two summers past, with the troublesome stir which
-hapned aboute it’, and goes on to explain the ‘infortunate imperfit
-Embrion of my idle houres, the Ile of Dogs before mentioned ... was
-no sooner borne but I was glad to run from it’; which is what brought
-him to Yarmouth. In a marginal note he adds ‘An imperfit Embrion I
-may well call it, for I hauing begun but the induction and first act
-of it, the other foure acts without my consent, or the least guesse
-of my drift or scope, by the players were supplied, which bred both
-their trouble and mine to’ (McKerrow, iii. 153). Of this there is
-perhaps some confirmation in the list of writings on the cover of
-the <i>Northumberland MS.</i> which records the item, not now extant
-in the MS., ‘Ile of doges frmn<sup>t</sup> by Thomas Nashe inferior plaiers’.
-This MS. contains work by Bacon (q.v.), and if the entry is not
-itself based on <i>Lenten Stuffe</i>, it may indicate that Bacon was
-professionally concerned in the proceedings to which the play gave
-rise. McKerrow, v. 31, points out that the evidence is against the
-suggestion in the <i>Trimming of Thomas Nashe</i> (S. R. 11 Oct. 1597)
-that Nashe suffered imprisonment for the play. The Privy Council letter
-of 15 Aug. 1597 (cf. App. D, No. cxi) was no doubt intended to direct
-his apprehension, but, as I pointed out in <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 410,
-511, the actor and maker of plays referred to therein as actually in
-prison must have been Ben Jonson, who was released by the Council on
-3 Oct. 1597 (cf. App. D, No. cxii). The connexion of Jonson (q.v.)
-with the <i>Isle of Dogs</i> is noted in <i>Satiromastix</i>. With
-him the Council released Gabriel Spencer and Robert Shaw, and the
-inference is that the peccant company was Pembroke’s (q.v.) at the
-Swan on Bankside. The belief that it was the Admiral’s at the Rose
-only rests on certain forged interpolations by Collier in Henslowe’s
-diary. These are set out by Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, i. xl). The only
-genuine mention of the affair in the diary is the provision noted in
-the memorandum of Borne’s agreement of 10 Aug. 1597 that his service is
-to begin ‘imediatly after this restraynt is recaled by the lordes of
-the counsell which restraynt is by the meanes of playinge the Ieylle
-of Dooges’ (<i>Henslowe</i>, i. 203). The restraint was ordered by
-the Privy Council on 28 July 1597 (App. D, No. cx), presumably soon
-after the offence, the nature of which is only vaguely described as
-the handling of ‘lewd matters’. Perhaps it is possible, at any rate
-in conjecture, to be more specific. By dogs we may take it that Nashe
-meant men. The idea was not new to him. In <i>Summer’s Last Will and
-Testament</i> he makes Orion draw an elaborate parallel between dogs
-and men, at the end of which Will Summer says that he had not thought
-‘the ship of fooles would haue stayde to take in fresh water at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">[455]</span> the
-Ile of dogges’ (l. 779). But there is nothing offensive to authority
-here. Nashe returns to the question of his indiscretion in more than
-one passage of <i>Lenten Stuffe</i>, and in particular has a diatribe
-(McKerrow, iii. 213) against lawyers who try to fish ‘a deepe politique
-state meaning’ out of what contains no such thing. ‘Talke I of a beare,
-O, it is such a man that emblazons him in his armes, or of a woolfe,
-a fox, or a camelion, any lording whom they do not affect it is meant
-by.’ Apparently Nashe was accused of satirizing some nobleman. But
-this was not the only point of attack. ‘Out steps me an infant squib
-of the Innes of Court ... and he, to approue hymselfe an extrauagant
-statesman, catcheth hold of a rush, and absolutely concludeth, it is
-meant of the Emperor of Ruscia, and that it will vtterly marre the
-traffike into that country if all the Pamphlets bee not called in and
-suppressed, wherein that libelling word is mentioned.’ I do not suppose
-that Nashe had literally called the Emperor of Russia a rush in <i>The
-Isle of Dogs</i>, but it is quite possible that he, or Ben Jonson,
-had called the King of Poland a pole. On 23 July 1597, just five days
-before the trouble, a Polish ambassador had made representations in
-an audience with Elizabeth, apparently about the question, vexed in
-the sixteenth as in the twentieth century, of contraband in neutral
-vessels, and she, scouring up her rusty old Latin for the purpose,
-had answered him in very round terms. The matter, to which there are
-several allusions in the Cecilian correspondence (Wright, <i>Eliz.</i>
-ii. 478, 481, 485), gave some trouble, and any mention of it on the
-public stage might well have been resented. A letter of Robert Beale in
-1592 (McKerrow, v. 142) shows that the criticisms of Nashe’s <i>Pierce
-Penilesse</i> had similarly been due to his attack upon the Danes, with
-which country the diplomatic issues were much the same as with Poland.
-In <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> vii. 343 is a letter of 10 Aug. 1597 to Robert
-Cecil from Richard (misdescribed in the Calendar as Robert) Topcliffe,
-recommending an unnamed bearer as ‘the first man that discovered to me
-that seditious play called The Isle of Dogs’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Nashe has been suggested as a contributor to <i>A Knack to Know a
-Knave</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS NELSON.</p>
-
-<p>The pageant-writer is probably identical with the stationer of the same
-name, who is traceable in London during 1580–92 (McKerrow, 198).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Allot Pageant. 29 Oct. 1590</i></p>
-
-<p>1590. The Deuice of the Pageant: Set forth by the Worshipfull Companie
-of the Fishmongers, for the right honourable Iohn Allot: established
-Lord Maior of London, and Maior of the Staple for this present Yeere of
-our Lord 1590. By T. Nelson. <i>No imprint.</i></p>
-
-<p>Speeches by the riders on the Merman and the Unicorn, and by Fame,
-the Peace of England, Wisdom, Policy, God’s Truth, Plenty,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_456">[456]</span> Loyalty
-and Concord, Ambition, Commonwealth, Science and Labour, Richard the
-Second, Jack Straw, and Commonwealth again, representing Sir William
-Walworth, who was evidently the chief subject of the pageant.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. C. Hazlitt (1886, <i>Antiquary</i>, xiii.
-54).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: R. Withington, <i>The Lord Mayor’s Show for
-1590</i> (1918, <i>M.L.N.</i> xxxiii. 8).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ALEXANDER NEVILLE (1544–1614).</p>
-
-<p>Translator of Seneca (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS NEWTON (<i>c.</i> 1542–1607).</p>
-
-<p>Translator of Seneca (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p>RICHARD NICCOLS (1584–1616?).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left p2">This writer of various poetical works and reviser in 1610 of <i>The
-Mirror for Magistrates</i> may have been the writer intended by the S.
-R. entry to Edward Blount on 15 Feb. 1612 of ‘A tragedye called, The
-Twynnes tragedye, written by Niccolls’ (Arber, iii. 478). No copy is
-known, and it is arbitrary of Fleay, ii. 170, to ‘suspect’ a revival of
-it in William Rider’s <i>The Twins</i> (1655), which had been played at
-Salisbury Court.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY NOEL (<i>ob.</i> 1597).</p>
-
-<p>A younger son of Andrew Noel of Dalby on the Wolds, Leicestershire,
-whose personal gifts and extravagance enabled him to make a
-considerable figure as a Gentleman Pensioner at Court. He may have been
-a fellow author with Robert Wilmot (q.v.) of <i>Gismond of Salerne</i>,
-although he has not been definitely traced as a member of the Inner
-Temple, by whom the play was produced.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS NORTON (1532–84).</p>
-
-<p>Norton was born in London and educated at Cambridge and the Inner
-Temple. In 1571 he became Remembrancer of the City of London, and also
-sat in Parliament for London. Apparently he is distinct from the Thomas
-Norton who acted from 1560 as counsel to the Stationers’ Company. He
-took part in theological controversy as a Calvinist, and was opposed
-to the public stage (cf. App. D, No. xxxi). In 1583 he escaped with
-some difficulty from a charge of treason. His first wife, Margaret, was
-daughter, and his second, Alice, niece of Cranmer.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ferrex and Porrex</i>, or <i>Gorboduc</i>. <i>28 Jan. 1562</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1565–6. ‘A Tragdie of Gorboduc where iij actes were
-Wretten by Thomas Norton and the laste by Thomas Sackvyle, &amp;c.’
-<i>William Greffeth</i> (Arber, i. 296).</p>
-
-<p>1565, Sept. 22. The Tragedie of Gorboduc, Where of three Actes were
-wrytten by Thomas Nortone, and the two laste by Thomas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_457">[457]</span> Sackuyle.
-Sett forthe as the same was shewed before the Quenes most excellent
-Maiestie, in her highnes Court of Whitehall, the .xviij. day of Ianuary,
-Anno Domini .1561. By the Gentlemen of Thynner Temple in London.
-<i>William Griffith.</i> [Argument; Dumb-Shows.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [<i>c.</i> 1571] The Tragidie of Ferrex and Porrex, set
-forth without addition or alteration but altogether as the same was
-shewed on stage before the Queenes Maiestie, about nine yeares past,
-<i>viz.</i>, the xviij day of Ianuarie 1561, by the gentlemen of the
-Inner Temple. Seen and allowed, &amp;c. <i>John Day.</i> [Epistle by ‘The
-P. to the Reader’.]</p>
-
-<p>1590. <i>Edward Allde for John Perrin.</i> [Part of <i>The Serpent of
-Division</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–3</sup> (1744–1825), and by Hawkins
-(1773, <i>O. E. D.</i> ii), W. Scott (1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> i),
-W. D. Cooper (1847, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>), R. W. Sackville-West,
-<i>Works of Sackville</i> (1859), L. T. Smith (1883), J. M.
-Manly (1897, <i>Spec.</i> ii. 211), J. S. Farmer (1908, <i>T.
-F. T.</i>), J. W. Cunliffe and H. A. Watt (1912, <i>E. E. C.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: E. Köppel (<i>E. S.</i> xvi. 357);
-Koch, <i>F. und P.</i> (1881, <i>Halle diss.</i>); H. A. Watt, <i>G.;
-or F. and P.</i> (1910, <i>Wisconsin Univ. Bulletin</i>, 351).</p>
-
-<p>Day’s epistle says that the play was ‘furniture of part of the grand
-Christmasse in the Inner Temple first written about nine yeares agoe
-by the right honourable Thomas now Lorde Buckherst, and by T. Norton,
-and after shewed before her Maiestie, and neuer intended by the authors
-therof to be published’. But one W. G. printed it in their absence,
-‘getting a copie therof at some yongmans hand that lacked a litle money
-and much discretion’. Machyn, 275, records on 18 Jan. 1561 ‘a play in
-the quen hall at Westmynster by the gentyll-men of the Tempull, and
-after a grett maske, for ther was a grett skaffold in the hall, with
-grett tryhumpe as has bene sene; and the morow after the skaffold was
-taken done’. Fleay, ii. 174, doubts Norton’s participation&mdash;Heaven
-knows why.</p>
-
-<p>Malone (<i>Var.</i> iii. 32) cites the unreliable Chetwood for a
-performance of <i>Gorboduc</i> at Dublin Castle in 1601.</p>
-
-<p>For the Inner Temple Christmas of 1561, at which Robert Dudley was
-constable-marshal and Christopher Hatton master of the game, cf.
-<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 415. It was presumably at the mask of 18
-Jan. that Hatton danced his way into Elizabeth’s heart.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS NUCE (<i>ob.</i> 1617).</p>
-
-<p>Translator of Seneca (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">OWEN AP JOHN (<i>c.</i> 1600).</p>
-
-<p>A late sixteenth-century MS. (<i>Peniarth MS.</i> 65 = <i>Hengwrt
-MS.</i> 358) of <i>The Oration of Gwgan and Poetry</i> is calendared as
-his in <i>Welsh MSS.</i> (<i>Hist. MSS. Comm.</i>), i. 2. 454, and said
-to be ‘in the form of interludes’. He may be merely the scribe.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">PHILIP PARSONS (1594–1653).</p>
-
-<p>Fellow of St. John’s, Oxford, and later Principal of Hart Hall (<i>D.
-N. B.</i>), and author of the academic <i>Atalanta</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_458">[458]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">MERCURIUS (?) PATEN (<i>c.</i> 1575).</p>
-
-<p>Gascoigne names a ‘M. [Mr.] Paten’ as a contributor to the Kenilworth
-entertainment (cf. ch. xxiv, C.). He might be the Patten described in
-<i>D. N. B.</i> as rector of Stoke Newington (but not traceable in
-Hennessy) and author of an anonymous <i>Calendars of Scripture</i>
-(1575). But I think he is more likely to have been Mercurius, son of
-William Patten, teller of the exchequer and lord of the manor of Stoke
-Newington, who matriculated at Trinity, Cambridge, in 1567 and was Blue
-Mantle pursuivant in 1603 (<i>Hist. of Stoke Newington</i> in <i>Bibl.
-Top. Brit.</i> ii; <i>Admissions to T. C. C.</i> ii. 70).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE PEELE (<i>c.</i> 1557–96).</p>
-
-<p>As the son of James Peele, clerk of Christ’s Hospital and himself
-a maker of pageants (vol. i, p. 136; <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii.
-166), George entered the grammar school in 1565, proceeded thence
-to Broadgates Hall, Oxford, in 1571, and became a student of Christ
-Church in 1574, taking his B.A. in 1577 and his M.A. in 1579. In
-Sept. 1579 the court of Christ’s Hospital required James Peele ‘to
-discharge His howse of his sonne George Peele and all other his howsold
-which have bene chargable to him’. This perhaps explains why George
-prolonged his residence at Oxford until 1581. In that year he came to
-London, and about the same time married. His wife’s business affairs
-brought him back to Oxford in 1583 and in a deposition of 29 March he
-describes himself as aged 25. During this visit he superintended the
-performance before Alasco at Christ Church on 11 and 12 June of the
-<i>Rivales</i> and <i>Dido</i> of William Gager, who bears testimony
-to Peele’s reputation as wit and poet in two sets of Latin verses
-<i>In Iphigeniam Georgii Peeli Anglicanis versibus redditam</i> (Boas,
-166,180). Presumably the rest of his life was spent in London, and its
-wit and accompanying riot find some record in <i>The Merry Conceited
-Jests of George Peele</i> (S. R. 14 Dec. 1605: text in Bullen and in
-Hazlitt, <i>Jest Books</i>, ii. 261, and Hindley, i), although this is
-much contaminated with traditional matter from earlier jest books. It
-provided material for the anonymous play of <i>The Puritan</i> (1607),
-in which Peele appeared as George Pyeboard. His fame as a dramatist is
-thus acknowledged in Nashe’s epistle to Greene’s <i>Menaphon</i> (1589):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘For the last, though not the least of them all, I dare commend
-him to all that know him, as the chief supporter of pleasance
-now living, the Atlas of poetry, and <i>primus verborum
-artifex</i>; whose first increase, the Arraignment of Paris,
-might plead to your opinions his pregnant dexterity of wit and
-manifold variety of invention, wherein (<i>me iudice</i>) he
-goeth a step beyond all that write.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Some have thought that Peele is the</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4">Palin, worthy of great praise,</div>
- <div>Albe he envy at my rustic quill,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">of Spenser’s <i>Colin Clout’s Come Home Again</i> (1591).
-It seems difficult to accept the suggestions of Sarrazin that he was
-the original both of Falstaff and of Yorick. An allusion in a letter
-to Edward Alleyn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_459">[459]</span> (cf. ch. xv) has unjustifiably been interpreted
-as implying that Peele was actor as well as playwright, and Collier
-accordingly included his name in a forged list of housekeepers at an
-imaginary Blackfriars theatre of 1589 (cf. vol. ii, p. 108). He was,
-however, clearly one of the three of his ‘quondam acquaintance’ to whom
-Greene (q.v.) addressed the attack upon players in his <i>Groats-worth
-of Wit</i> (1592). In 1596 Peele after ‘long sickness’ sent a begging
-letter by his daughter to Lord Burghley, with a copy of his <i>Tale of
-Troy</i>. He was buried as a ‘householder’ at St. James’s, Clerkenwell,
-on 9 Nov. 1596 (<i>Harl. Soc. Registers</i>, xvii. 58), having died,
-according to Meres’s <i>Palladis Tamia</i>, ‘by the pox’. He can,
-therefore, hardly be the Peleus of <i>Birth of Hercules</i> (1597 &lt;).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1828–39. A. Dyce. 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1861, 1879. A. Dyce. 1 vol. [With Greene.]</p>
-
-<p>1888. A. H. Bullen. 2 vols.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: R. Lämmerhirt, <i>G. P. Untersuchungen über
-sein Leben und seine Werke</i> (1882); L. Kellner, <i>Sir Clyomon
-and Sir Clamides</i> (1889, <i>E. S.</i> xiii. 187); E. Penner,
-<i>Metrische Untersuchungen zu P.</i> (1890, <i>Archiv</i>, lxxxv.
-269); A. R. Bayley, <i>P. as a Dramatic Artist</i> (<i>Oxford Point of
-View</i>, 15 Feb. 1903); G. C. Odell, <i>P. as a Dramatist</i> (1903,
-<i>Bibliographer</i>, ii); E. Landsberg, <i>Der Stil in P.’s sicheren
-und zweifelhaften dramatischen Werken</i> (1910, <i>Breslau diss.</i>);
-G. Sarrazin, <i>Zur Biographie und Charakteristik von G. P.</i> (1910,
-<i>Archiv</i>, cxxiv. 65); P. H. Cheffaud, <i>G. P.</i> (1913).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Arraignment of Paris, c. 1584</i></p>
-
-<p>1584. The Araygnement of Paris A Pastorall. Presented before the
-Queenes Maiestie, by the Children of her Chappell. <i>Henry Marsh.</i>
-[Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by O. Smeaton (1905, <i>T. D.</i>) and H. H. Child
-(1910, <i>M. S. R.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: F. E. Schelling, <i>The
-Source of P.’s A. of P.</i> (1893, <i>M. L. N.</i> viii. 206).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii. 152, assigns the play to 1581 on the assumption that the
-Chapel stopped playing in 1582. But they went on to 1584. Nashe’s
-allusion (<i>vide supra</i>) and the ascription of passages from
-the play to ‘Geo. Peele’ in <i>England’s Helicon</i> (1600) fix the
-authorship.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Battle of Alcazar, c. 1589</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Addl. MS.</i> 10449, ‘The Plott of the Battell of
-Alcazar’. [Probably from Dulwich. The fragmentary text is given by
-Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 138, and a facsimile by Halliwell, <i>The
-Theatre Plats of Three Old English Dramas</i> (1860).]</p>
-
-<p>1594. The Battell of Alcazar, fought in Barbarie, betweene Sebastian
-king of Portugall, and Abdelmelec king of Marocco. With the death of
-Captaine Stukeley. As it was sundrie times plaid by the Lord high<span class="pagenum" id="Page_460">[460]</span>
-Admirall his seruants. <i>Edward Allde for Richard Bankworth</i>.
-[Prologue by ‘the Presenter’ and dumb-shows.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. W. Greg (1907, <i>M. S. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Interest in Sebastian was aroused in 1589 by the expedition of Norris
-and Drake to set Don Antonio on the throne of Portugal. This started on
-18 April, and Peele wrote <i>A Farewell</i>, in which is a reference to
-this amongst other plays (l. 20, ed. Bullen, ii. 238):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bid theatres and proud tragedians,</div>
- <div>Bid Mahomet’s Poo and mighty Tamburlaine,</div>
- <div>King Charlemagne, Tom Stukeley and the rest,</div>
- <div>Adieu.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">There are some possible but not very clear allusions to
-the Armada in the play. From 21 Feb. 1592 to 20 Jan. 1593 Strange’s men
-played fourteen times for Henslowe <i>Muly Mollocco</i>, by which this
-play, in which Abdelmelec is also called Muly Mollocco, is probably
-meant (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 149). The ‘plot’ must belong to a
-later revival by the Admiral’s, datable, since both Alleyn and Shaw
-acted in it, either in Dec. 1597 or in 1600–2 (cf. ch. xiii).</p>
-
-<p>The authorship has been assigned to Peele, both on stylistic evidence
-and because ll. 467–72 appear over his name in R. A.’s <i>England’s
-Parnassus</i> (1600), but R. A. has an error in at least one of his
-ascriptions to Peele, and he ascribes l. 49 of this play to Dekker
-(Crawford, <i>E. P.</i> xxxv. 398, 474; <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 101).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Edward I &gt; 1593</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1593, Oct. 8. ‘An enterlude entituled the Chronicle of
-Kinge Edward the firste surnamed Longeshank with his Retourne out of
-the Holye Lande, with the lyfe of Leublen Rebell in Wales with the
-sinkinge of Quene Elinour.’ <i>Abel Jeffes</i> (Arber, ii. 637).</p>
-
-<p>1593. The Famous Chronicle of king Edwarde the first, sirnamed Edwarde
-Longshankes, with his returne from the holy land. Also the life of
-Lleuellen, rebell in Wales. Lastly, the sinking of Queene Elinor, who
-sunck at Charingcrosse, and rose againe at Potters-hith now named
-Queenehith. <i>Abel Jeffes, sold by William Barley.</i> [At end,
-‘Yours. By George Peele, Maister of Artes in Oxenford’.]</p>
-
-<p>1599. <i>W. White.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by W. W. Greg (1911, <i>M. S.
-R.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: W. Thieme, <i>P.’s Ed. I und seine
-Quellen</i> (1903, <i>Halle diss.</i>); E. Kronenberg, <i>G. P.’s Ed.
-I</i> (1903, <i>Jena diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii. 157, makes the date 1590–1, on the ground that lines are
-quoted from <i>Polyhymnia</i> (1590). A theory that Shakespeare acted
-in the play is founded on ll. 759–62, where after Baliol’s coronation
-Elinor says:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now, brave John Baliol, Lord of Galloway</div>
- <div>And King of Scots, shine with thy golden head!</div>
- <div>Shake thy spears, in honour of his [i.e. Edward’s] name,</div>
- <div>Under whose royalty thou wearest the same.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This is not very convincing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_461">[461]</span></p>
-
-<p>A play called <i>Longshank, Longshanks</i>, and <i>Prince Longshank</i>
-was played fourteen times by the Admiral’s, from 29 Aug. 1595 to 14
-July 1596. It is marked ‘ne’, and unless there had been substantial
-revision, can hardly be Peele’s play. ‘Longe-shanckes sewte’ is in
-the Admiral’s inventory of 10 March 1598. On 8 Aug. 1602 Alleyn sold
-the book of the play to the Admiral’s with another for £4. (Greg,
-<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 176; <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 113.)</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>David and Bethsabe &gt; 1594</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, May 14. ‘A booke called the book of David and
-Bethsaba.’ <i>Adam Islip</i> (Arber, ii. 649). [Islip’s name is
-cancelled and Edward White’s substituted.]</p>
-
-<p>1599. The Love of King David and Fair Bethsabe. With the Tragedie of
-Absalon. As it hath ben divers times plaied on the stage. Written by
-George Peele. <i>Adam Islip.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by T. Hawkins (1773, <i>O. E. D.</i> ii), J. M. Manly
-(1897, <i>Specimens</i>, ii. 419), and W. W. Greg (1912, <i>M. S.
-R.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: B. Neitzel (1904, <i>Halle diss.</i>);
-M. Dannenberg, <i>Die Verwendung des biblischen Stoffes von David und
-Bathseba im englischen Drama</i> (1905, <i>Königsberg diss.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii. 153, dates the play <i>c.</i> 1588 on the ground of some
-not very plausible political allusions. The text as it stands looks
-like a boildown of a piece, perhaps of a neo-miracle type, written in
-three ‘discourses’. It had choruses, of which two only are preserved.
-One is ll. 572–95 (at end of sc. iv of <i>M. S. R.</i> ed.). The other
-(ll. 1646–58; <i>M. S. R.</i> sc. xv) headed ‘Chorus 5’, contains the
-statement:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4">this storie lends vs other store,</div>
- <div>To make a third discourse of Dauids life,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and is followed by a misplaced fragment of a speech by
-Absalon.</p>
-
-<p>In Oct. 1602 Henslowe (ii. 232) laid out money for Worcester’s on poles
-and workmanship ‘for to hange Absolome’; but we need not assume a
-revival of Peele’s play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Old Wive’s Tale. 1591 &lt; &gt; 4</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1595, Apr. 16. ‘A booke or interlude intituled a pleasant
-Conceipte called the owlde wifes tale.’ <i>Ralph Hancock</i> (Arber,
-ii. 296).</p>
-
-<p>1595. The Old Wiues Tale. A pleasant conceited Comedie, played by the
-Queenes Maiesties players. Written by G. P. <i>John Danter, sold by
-Ralph Hancock and John Hardie.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by F. B. Gummere (1903, <i>R. E. C.</i>), W. W. Greg
-(1908, <i>M. S. R.</i>), W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E. D.</i>), F. R.
-Cady (1916).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: H. Dutz, <i>Der Dank des Tödten in
-der englischen Literatur</i> (1894).</p>
-
-<p>The Queen’s men had presumably produced the play by 1594, when they
-left London. Peele borrowed some lines and the name Sacrapant from
-Greene’s <i>Orlando Furioso</i> (1591). The hexameters of Huanebango
-are a burlesque of Gabriel Harvey.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_462">[462]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Iphigenia. c. 1579</i></p>
-
-<p>A translation of one of the two plays of Euripides, probably written at
-Oxford, is only known by some laudatory verses of William Gager, <i>In
-Iphigeniam Georgii Peeli Anglicanis versibus redditam</i>, printed by
-Bullen, i. xvii.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hunting of Cupid &gt; 1591</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1591, July 26 (Bp. of London). ‘A booke intituled the
-Huntinge of Cupid wrytten by George Peele, Master of Artes of Oxeford.
-Provyded alwayes that yf yt be hurtfull to any other Copye before
-lycenced, then this to be voyde.’ <i>Richard Jones</i> (Arber, ii. 591).</p>
-
-<p>Probably the play&mdash;I suppose it was a play&mdash;was printed, as Drummond
-of Hawthornden includes jottings from ‘The Huntinge of Cupid by George
-Peele of Oxford. Pastoral’ amongst others from ‘Bookes red anno 1609 be
-me’, and thereby enables us to identify extracts assigned to Peele in
-<i>England’s Parnassus</i> (1600) and <i>England’s Helicon</i> (1600)
-as from the same source. The fragments are all carefully collected by
-W. W. Greg in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 307.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek &gt; 1594</i></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Merry Conceited Jests</i> (Bullen, ii. 394) gives this as the
-title of a ‘famous play’ of Peele’s. Conceivably it, rather than
-Greene’s <i>Alphonsus</i> (q.v.), may be the ‘Mahomet’s Poo’ of
-Peele’s <i>Farewell</i> of 1589 (<i>vide supra</i>, s.v. <i>Battle of
-Alcazar</i>). An Admiral’s inventory of 10 March 1598 includes ‘owld
-Mahemetes head’. The Admiral’s had played <i>Mahomet</i> for Henslowe
-from 16 Aug. 1594 to 5 Feb. 1595, and a play called <i>The Love of a
-Grecian Lady</i> or <i>The Grecian Comedy</i> from 5 Oct. 1594 to 10
-Oct. 1595. In Aug. 1601 Henslowe bought <i>Mahemett</i> from Alleyn,
-and incurred other expenses on the play for the Admiral’s (Henslowe,
-ii. 167; <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116). Possibly all the three titles of
-1594–5 stand for Peele’s play. Jacob Ayrer wrote a play on the siege of
-Constantinople and the loves of Mahomet and Irene. This may have had
-some relation on the one hand to Peele’s, and on the other to a play of
-the siege of Constantinople used by Spencer (cf. ch. xiv) in Germany
-during 1612–14 (Herz, 73). Pistol’s ‘Have we not Hiren here?’ (<i>2
-Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv. 173) is doubtless from the play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Knight of Rhodes</i></p>
-
-<p>This also is described in the <i>Merry Jests</i> (cf. ch. xxiv, s.v.
-<i>Soliman and Perseda</i>).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Peele’s hand has been sought in nearly every masterless play of his
-epoch: <i>Alphonsus of Germany</i>, <i>Captain Thomas Stukeley</i>,
-<i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>, <i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i>,
-<i>George a Greene</i>, <i>Henry VI</i>, <i>Histriomastix</i>, <i>Jack
-Straw</i>, <i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_463">[463]</span> <i>Knack to Know a
-Knave</i>, <i>Leire</i>, <i>Locrine</i>, <i>Mucedorus</i>, <i>Soliman
-and Perseda</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, <i>True Tragedy of Richard
-III</i>, <i>Wily Beguiled</i>, <i>Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll</i> (cf. ch.
-xxiv).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">ENTERTAINMENTS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Dixie Pageant. 29 Oct. 1585</i></p>
-
-<p>1585. The Device of the Pageant borne before Woolstone Dixi Lord Maior
-of the Citie of London. An. 1585. October 29. <i>Edward Allde.</i> [At
-end, ‘Done by George Peele, Master of Arts in Oxford’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> (1823), ii. 446, and F.
-W. Fairholt, <i>Lord Mayor’s Pageants</i> (1843, <i>Percy Soc.</i>
-xxxviii).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Polyhymnia. 17 Nov. 1590</i></p>
-
-<p>See s.v. Lee.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Descensus Astreae. 29 Oct. 1591</i></p>
-
-<p>1591. Descensus Astreae. The Deuice of a Pageant, borne before M.
-William Web, Lord Maior of the Citie of London on the day he tooke his
-oath; beeing the 29. of October. 1591. Wherevnto is annexed A Speech
-deliuered by one clad like a Sea Nymph, who presented a Pinesse on the
-water brauely rigd and mand, to the Lord Maior, at the time he tooke
-Barge to go to Westminster. Done by G. Peele Maister of Arts in Oxford.
-<i>For William Wright.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in F. W. Fairholt, <i>Lord Mayor’s Pageants</i> (1843,
-<i>Percy Soc.</i> xxxviii).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Anglorum Feriae. 1595</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Brit. Mus. Addl. MS.</i> 21432 (autograph). ‘Anglorum
-Feriae, Englandes Hollydayes, celebrated the 17th of Novemb. last,
-1595, beginninge happyly the 38 yeare of the raigne of our soveraigne
-ladie Queene Elizabeth. By George Peele M<sup>r</sup> of Arte in Oxforde.’</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1595, Nov. 18. ‘A newe Ballad of the honorable order of
-the Runnynge at Tilt at Whitehall the 17. of November in the 38 yere of
-her maiesties Reign.’ <i>John Danter</i> (Arber, iii. 53). [This is not
-necessarily Peele’s poem.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by R. Fitch (n.d. <i>c.</i> 1830).</p>
-
-<p>This is a blank-verse description of tilting, like <i>Polyhymnia</i>;
-on the occasion, cf. s.v. Bacon.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Entertainment. 1588</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1588, Oct. 28. ‘Entred for his copie vppon Condicon that
-it maye be lycenced, ye device of the Pageant borne before the Righte
-honorable Martyn Calthrop lorde maiour of the Cytie of London the 29th
-daie of October 1588 George Peele the Authour.’ <i>Richard Jones</i>
-(Arber, ii. 504).</p>
-
-<p>In the <i>Merry Conceited Jests</i> it is said that Peele had ‘all the
-oversight of the pageants’ (Bullen, ii. 381).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_464">[464]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Entertainment</i></p>
-
-<p>For the ascription to Peele of a Theobalds entertainment in 1591, see
-s.v. Cecil.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN PENRUDDOCK (<i>c.</i> 1588).</p>
-
-<p>The Master ‘Penroodocke’, who was one of the directors for the
-<i>Misfortunes of Arthur</i> of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588, was
-presumably John Penruddock, one of the readers of Gray’s Inn in
-1590, and the John who was admitted to the inn in 1562 (J. Foster,
-<i>Admissions to Gray’s Inn</i>).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM PERCY (1575–1648).</p>
-
-<p>Percy was third son of Henry Percy, eighth Earl of Northumberland, and
-educated at Gloucester Hall, Oxford. He was a friend of Barnabe Barnes,
-and himself published <i>Sonnets to the Fairest Coelia</i> (1594). His
-life is obscure, but in 1638 he was living in Oxford and ‘drinking
-nothing but ale’ (<i>Strafford Letters</i>, ii. 166), and here he died
-in 1648.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">PLAYS</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] Autograph formerly in collection of the Duke of
-Devonshire, with t.p. ‘Comædyes and Pastoralls ... By W. P. Esq....
-Exscriptum Anno Salutis 1647’. [Contains, in addition to the two plays
-printed in 1824, the following:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Arabia Sitiens, or A Dream of a Dry Year</i> (1601).</p>
-
-<p><i>The Aphrodysial, or Sea Feast</i> (1602).</p>
-
-<p><i>Cupid’s Sacrifice, or a Country’s Tragedy in Vacuniam</i> (1602).</p>
-
-<p><i>Necromantes, or The Two Supposed Heads</i> (1602).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>[<i>Edition</i>] 1824. The Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants or The
-Bearing down the Inne. A Comædye. The Faery Pastorall, or Forrest of
-Elves. By W. P. Esq. (<i>Roxburghe Club</i>). [Preface by [Joseph]
-H[aslewood].]&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: C. Grabau, <i>Zur englischen Bühne
-um 1600</i> (1902, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxviii. 230); V. Albright, <i>P.’s
-Plays as Proof of the Elizabethan Stage</i> (1913, <i>M. P.</i> xi.
-237); G. F. Reynolds, <i>W. P. and his Plays</i> (1914, <i>M. P.</i>
-xii. 241).</p>
-
-<p>Percy’s authorship appears to be fixed by a correspondence between an
-epigram in the MS. to Charles Fitzgeffrey with one <i>Ad Gulielmum
-Percium</i> in <i>Fitzgeoffridi Affaniae</i> (1601), sig. D 2. 6.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants</i> is dated 1601 and
-<i>The Faery Pastorall</i> 1603. The other plays are unprinted and
-practically unknown, although Reynolds gives some account of <i>The
-Aphrodysial.</i> There are elaborate stage-directions, which contain
-several references to Paul’s, for which the plays, whether in fact
-acted or not, were evidently intended, as is shown by an author’s note
-appended to the manuscript (cf. ch. xii, s.v. Paul’s).</p>
-
-<p>I feel some doubt as to the original date of these plays. It seems
-to me just conceivable that they were originally produced by the
-Paul’s boys before 1590, and revised by Percy after 1599 in hopes of a
-revival. Some of the s.ds. are descriptive in the past tense (cf.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">[465]</span> ch.
-xxii), which suggests actual production. The action of <i>C. and C.
-Errant</i> is during the time of the Armada, but the composition must
-be later than the death of Tarlton, as his ghost prologizes. Here the
-author notes, ‘Rather to be omitted if for Powles, and another Prologue
-for him to be brought in Place’. <i>Faery Pastoral</i> uses (p. 97) the
-date ‘1647’; it is in fairy time, but points to some revision when the
-MS. was written. There are alternative final scenes, with the note, ‘Be
-this the foresayd for Powles, For Actors see the Direction at later end
-of this Pastorall, which is separate by itself, Extra Olens, as they
-say’. Similarly in <i>Aphrodysial</i> a direction for beards is noted
-‘Thus for Actors; for Powles without’, and another s.d. is ‘Chambers
-(noise supposd for Powles) For Actors’. A reference to ‘a showre of
-Rose-water and confits, as was acted in Christ Church in Oxford, in
-Dido and Aeneas’ is a reminiscence of Gager’s play of 12 June 1583, and
-again makes a seventeenth-century date seem odd.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">PETER (?) PETT (<i>c.</i> 1600).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe’s diary records a payment of £6 on 17 May 1600 for the
-Admiral’s ‘to pay Will: Haulton [Haughton] and Mr. Pett in full payment
-of a play called straunge newes out of Poland’. Fleay, i. 273, says:
-‘Pett is not heard of elsewhere. Should it not be Chett., <i>i.e.</i>
-Chettle? The only Pett I know of as a writer is Peter Pett, who
-published <i>Time’s journey to seek his daughter Truth</i>, in verse,
-1599.’ To which Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 213, replies: ‘Henslowe
-often has Cett for Chettle, which is even nearer, but only where he is
-crowded for room and he never applies to him the title of Mr.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN PHILLIP (&gt; 1570–&gt; 1626).</p>
-
-<p>John Phillip or Phillips was a member of Queens’ College, Cambridge,
-and author of various ballads, tracts, and elegies, published between
-1566 and 1591. I do not know whether he may be the ‘Phelypes’, who was
-apparently concerned with John Heywood and a play by Paul’s (q.v.)
-in 1559. A John Phillipps, this or another, is mentioned (1619) as a
-brother-in-law in the will of Samuel Daniel (<i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>,
-iv. 157).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: W. W. Greg, <i>J. P.</i>&mdash;<i>Notes for a
-Bibliography</i> (1910–13, <i>3 Library</i>, i. 302, 395; iv. 432).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Patient Grissell. 1558–61</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1565–6. ‘An history of meke and pacyent gresell.’
-<i>Thomas Colwell</i> (Arber, i. 309).</p>
-
-<p>1568–9. ‘The history of payciente gresell &amp;c.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i>
-(Arber, i. 385).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The Commodye of pacient and meeke Grissill, Whearin is
-declared, the good example, of her patience towardes her husband:
-and lykewise, the due obedience of Children, toward their Parentes.
-Newly. Compiled by Iohn Phillip. Eight persons maye easely play<span class="pagenum" id="Page_466">[466]</span> this
-Commody.... <i>Thomas Colwell.</i> [Preface; Epilogue, followed by
-‘Finis, qd. Iohn Phillipp’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by R. B. McKerrow and W. W. Greg (1909, <i>M. S. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The characters include Politic Persuasion, the ‘Vice’. Elizabeth
-is mentioned as Queen in the epilogue, and a reference (51) to the
-‘wethercocke of Paules’ perhaps dates before its destruction in 1561.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN PICKERING (<i>c.</i> 1567–8).</p>
-
-<p>Brie records several contemporary John Pickerings, but there is nothing
-to connect any one of them with the play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Horestes. 1567–8</i></p>
-
-<p>1567. A Newe Enterlude of Vice Conteyninge, the Historye of Horestes,
-with the cruell reuengment of his Father’s death, vpon his one naturtll
-Mother. By John Pikeryng.... The names deuided for VI to playe....
-<i>William Griffith.</i> [On the back of the t.p. is a coat of arms
-which appears to be a slight variant of that assigned by Papworth
-and Morant, <i>Ordinary of British Armorials</i>, 536, to the family
-of Marshall. Oddly enough, there was a family of this name settled
-at Pickering in Yorkshire, but they, according to G. W. Marshall,
-<i>Miscellanea Marescalliana</i>, i. 1; ii. 2, 139, had quite a
-different coat.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1866, <i>Illustrations of Old English
-Literature</i>), A. Brandl (1898, <i>Q. W. D.</i>), J. S. Farmer (1910,
-<i>T. F. T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: F. Brie, <i>Horestes von J.
-P.</i> (1912, <i>E. S.</i> xlvi. 66).</p>
-
-<p>The play has a Vice, and ends with prayer for Queen Elizabeth and
-the Lord Mayor of ‘this noble Cytie’. Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 449,
-thinks it too crude to be the Court <i>Orestes</i> of 1567–8, but the
-coincidence of date strongly suggests that it was.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN POOLE (?).</p>
-
-<p>Possible author of <i>Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY PORTER (<i>c.</i> 1596–9).</p>
-
-<p>Porter first appears in Henslowe’s diary as recipient of a payment of
-£5 on 16 Dec. 1596 and a loan of £4 on 7 March 1597, both on account of
-the Admiral’s. It may be assumed that he was already writing for the
-company, who purchased five plays, wholly or partly by him, between
-May 1598 and March 1599. Meres, in his <i>Palladis Tamia</i> of 1598,
-counts him as one of ‘the best for Comedy amongst vs’. He appears to
-have been in needy circumstances, and borrowed several small sums
-from the company or from Henslowe personally (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 304). On 28 Feb. 1599, when he obtained £2 on account of <i>Two
-Merry Women of Abingdon</i>, ‘he gaue me his faythfulle promysse that
-I shold haue alle the boockes w<sup>ch</sup> he writte ether him sellfe or
-w<sup>th</sup> any other’. On 16 April 1599, in consideration of 1<i>s.</i>
-he bound himself in £10 to pay Henslowe a debt of 25<i>s.</i> on
-the following day, but could not meet his obligation. Porter is not
-traceable as a dramatist after 1599. His extant play, on the title-page
-of which he is described as ‘Gent.’, suggests a familiarity with the
-neighbourhood of Oxford, and I see no <i>a priori</i> reason why
-he should not be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">[467]</span> the Henry Porter, son of a London gentleman, who
-matriculated from Brasenose on 19 June 1589 (Boase and Clark, ii. 2,
-170), or the Henricus Porter, apparently a musician, of John Weever’s
-<i>Epigrammes</i> (1599), v. 24, or the Henry Porter of Christ Church
-who became B.Mus. in July 1600 (Wood, <i>Fasti Oxon.</i> i. 284), or
-the Henry Porter who was a royal sackbut on 21 June 1603 (Nagel, 36),
-or the Henry Porter whose son Walter became Gentleman of the Chapel
-Royal on 5 Jan. 1616 and has left musical works (<i>D. N. B.</i>).
-Gayley’s argument to the contrary rests on the unfounded assumption
-that the musician could not have been writing Bankside plays during the
-progress of his studies for his musical degree.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Two Angry Women of Abingdon &gt; 1598</i></p>
-
-<p>1599. The Pleasant Historie of the two angrie women of Abington.
-With the humorous mirthe of Dicke Coomes and Nicholas Prouerbes, two
-Seruingmen. As it was lately playde by the right Honorable the Earle
-of Nottingham, Lord High Admirall, his seruants. By Henry Porter Gent.
-<i>For Joseph Hunt and William Ferbrand.</i> [Prologue. Greg shows this
-to be Q<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>1599. <i>For William Ferbrand.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>4</sup> (1874), and by G. M. Gayley (1903, <i>R.
-E. C.</i> i), J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F. T.</i>), W. W. Greg (1912,
-<i>M. S. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The play shows no signs of being a sequel, and is presumably the
-First Part, to which Porter wrote a Second Part (<i>vide infra</i>)
-in the winter of 1598–9. It was an Admiral’s play, and therefore one
-would expect to find it in Henslowe’s very full, if not absolutely
-exhaustive, chronicle of the company’s repertory. Of the plays named as
-his by Henslowe, <i>Love Prevented</i> seems the only likely title. But
-he was in the pay of the company before the diary began to record the
-authorship of plays, and Part i may therefore be among the anonymous
-plays of 1596–7 or an earlier season. Gayley suggests <i>The Comedy
-of Humours</i>, produced 11 May 1597, but that is more plausibly
-identified with Chapman’s <i>Humorous Day’s Mirth</i> (q.v.). Another
-possibility is <i>Woman Hard to Please</i>, produced 27 Jan. 1597.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Henslowe’s diary records the following plays for the Admiral’s men, in
-which Porter had a hand in 1598 and 1599:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>Love Prevented.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">May 1598. <i>Vide Two Angry Women of Abingdon, supra.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>Hot Anger Soon Cold.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle and Jonson, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>2 Two Angry Women of Abingdon.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Dec. 1598–Feb. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>Two Merry Women of Abingdon.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Feb. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>The Spencers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, March 1599.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">[468]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS POUND (1538?-1616?).</p>
-
-<p>Pound was of Beaumonds in Farlington, Hants, the son of William Pound
-and Anne Wriothesley, daughter of Thomas, first Earl of Southampton.
-William Pound had a brother Anthony, whose daughter Honora married
-Henry, fourth Earl of Sussex (<i>V. H. Hants</i>, iii. 149; <i>Harl.
-Soc.</i> lxiv. 138; Berry, <i>Hants Genealogies</i>, 194; <i>Recusant
-Rolls</i> in <i>Catholic Record Soc.</i> xviii. 278, 279, 330, 334).
-Thomas was in youth a Winchester boy, a Lincoln’s Inn lawyer, and a
-courtier of repute. About 1570 he left the world and became a fervent
-Catholic, and the record of his recusancy, of his relations with the
-Jesuit order, which he probably joined, of the help he gave to Edmund
-Campion, and of his long life of imprisonment and domiciliary restraint
-is written in H. Morus, <i>Historia Missionis Anglicanae Societatis
-Jesu</i> (1660); D. Bartoli, <i>Dell’ Istoria della Compagnia di
-Gesu: L’Inghilterra</i> (1667); N. Sanders and E. Rishton, <i>De
-Origine Schismatis Anglicani</i> (1586); M. Tanner, <i>Societas Jesu
-Apostolorum Imitatrix</i> (1694); R. Simpson in <i>2 Rambler</i>
-(1857), viii. 29, 94; H. Foley, <i>Records of the English Province of
-the Society of Jesus</i>, iii (1878), 567; J. H. Pollen, <i>English
-Catholics in the Reign of Elizabeth</i> (1920), 333 <i>sqq.</i> I am
-only concerned with his worldly life and his quitting of it. As a
-Winchester <i>alumnus</i>, he is said to have delivered a Latin speech
-of welcome to Elizabeth (Bartoli, 51), presumably at her visit of 1560
-(App. A), but he can hardly still have been a schoolboy; perhaps he
-was at New College. He had already been entered at Lincoln’s Inn on 16
-Feb. 1560 (<i>Adm. Reg.</i> i. 66), and it was on behalf of Lincoln’s
-Inn that he wrote and pronounced two mask orations which are preserved
-in <i>Bodl. Rawl. Poet. MS.</i> 108, ff. 24, 29, whence they are
-described in E. Brydges, <i>British Bibliographer</i>, ii. 612. Both
-seem to have been before Elizabeth (cf. vol. i, p. 162, and App. A).
-The first, at the wedding of his cousin Henry, Earl of Southampton,
-in Feb. 1566, is headed in the manuscript ‘The copye of an oration
-made and pronounced by Mr. Pownde of Lyncolnes Inne, with a brave
-maske out of the same howse, all one greatte horses att the mariage
-off the yonge erle of South hampton to the Lord Mountagues dawghter
-abowt Shrouetyde 1565’. The second, at the wedding on 1 July 1566 of
-another cousin, Frances Radcliffe, is similarly headed ‘The copye of
-an oration made and pronounced by Mr. Pownd of Lincolnes Inne, with a
-maske att y<sup>e</sup> marriage of y<sup>e</sup> Earl of Sussex syster to Mr. Myldmaye
-off Lyncolnes Inne 1566’. From this, which is in rhyming quatrains,
-Brydges quotes 119 lines; they are of no merit. In 1580 Pound wrote
-from his prison at Bishop’s Stortford to Sir Christopher Hatton (<i>S.
-P. D. Eliz.</i> cxlii. 20) commending a petition to the Queen, ‘for her
-poeticall presents sake, which her Majesty disdayned not to take at
-poore Mercuries hands, if you remember it, at Killiegeworth Castle’.
-The reference must be to the Kenilworth visit of 1568, rather than 1573
-or 1575, for soon after Thomas Pound’s days of courtly masking came to
-an abrupt end. The story is told in Morus, 46:</p>
-
-<p>‘Natales Christi dies, ut semper solemnes, ita anno sexagesimo quarto
-fuere celeberrimi; dabantur in Curia ludi apparatissimi Thoma<span class="pagenum" id="Page_469">[469]</span> Pondo
-instructore. Inter saltandum, nudam eius manum manu nuda prensat
-Regina, tum ei caput, abrepto Leicestrie Comitis pileo, ipsa tegit, ne
-ex vehementi motu accensus subito refrigeraretur. Imposita ei videbatur
-laurea: cum (secundo eandem saltationis formam flagitante Regina)
-celerrime de more uno in pede circumuolitans, pronus concidit; Plausu
-in risum mutato, surge, inquit Regina, Domine Taure; ea voce commotus,
-surrexit quidem; at flexo ad terram poplite, vulgatum illud latine
-prolocutus, <i>sic transit gloria mundi</i>, proripuit se, et non longo
-interuallo Aulam spesque fallaces deseruit, consumptarum facultatum et
-violatae Religionis praemium ludibrium consecutus.’</p>
-
-<p>There is a little difficulty as to the date. Morus puts it in 1564,
-but goes on to add that Pound was in his thirtieth year, and he was
-certainly born in 1538 or 1539. And Bartoli, 51, followed by Tanner,
-480, gives 1569, citing, probably from Jesuit archives, a letter
-written by Pound himself on 3 June 1609. No doubt 1569, which may mean
-either 1568–9 or 1569–70, is right.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS PRESTON (&gt; 1569–1589 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>A Thomas Preston entered King’s, Cambridge, from Eton in 1553, and
-became Fellow in 1556, taking his B.A. in 1557 and his M.A. in 1561.
-At Elizabeth’s visit in 1564 he disputed with Thomas Cartwright before
-her in the Philosophy Act, and also played in <i>Dido</i>, winning such
-favour that she called him her ‘scholar’ and gave him a pension of £20
-a year from the privy purse (Cunningham, xx; Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i>
-i. 270; Fuller, <i>Cambridge</i>, 137; Wordsworth, <i>Ecclesiastical
-Memorials</i>, iv. 322). He held his fellowship at King’s until 1581.
-In 1583 a newswriter reported him to be ‘withdrawen into Scotland as a
-malcontent and there made much of by the King’ (Wright, <i>Eliz.</i>
-ii. 215). In 1584 he became Master of Trinity Hall, and in 1589 was
-Vice-Chancellor. In 1592, with other Heads of Houses, he signed a
-memorial to Burghley in favour of the stay of plays at Cambridge (<i>M.
-S. C.</i> i. 192). It seems to me incredible that he should, as is
-usually taken for granted, have been the author of <i>Cambyses</i>,
-about which there is nothing academic, and I think that there must
-have been a popular writer of the same name, responsible for the
-play, and also for certain ballads of the broadside type, of which
-<i>A Lamentation from Rome</i> (Collier, <i>Old Ballads</i>, <i>Percy
-Soc.</i>) was printed in 1570, and <i>A Ballad from the Countrie,
-sent to showe how we should Fast this Lent</i> (<i>Archiv</i>, cxiv.
-329, from <i>Bodl. Rawl. Poet. MS.</i> 185) is dated 1589. Both are
-subscribed, like <i>Cambyses</i>, ‘Finis Quod Thomas Preston’. A third
-was entered on S. R. in 1569–70 as ‘A geliflower of swete marygolde,
-wherein the frutes of tyranny you may beholde’.</p>
-
-<p>A Thomas Preston is traceable as a quarterly waiter at Court under
-Edward VI (<i>Trevelyan Papers</i>, i. 195, 200, 204; ii. 19, 26, 33),
-and a choirmaster of the same name was ejected from Windsor Chapel as a
-recusant about 1561 (cf. ch. xii).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_470">[470]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cambyses &gt; 1570</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1569–70. ‘An enterlude a lamentable Tragedy full of
-pleasaunt myrth.’ <i>John Allde</i> (Arber, i. 400).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1569–84]. A Lamentable Tragedie, mixed full of pleasant
-mirth, containing the life of Cambises King of Percia ... By Thomas
-Preston. <i>John Allde.</i> [Arrangement of parts for eight actors;
-Prologue; Epilogue, with prayer for Queen and Council. At end, ‘Amen,
-quod Thomas Preston’.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [1584–1628]. <i>Edward Allde.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by T. Hawkins (1773, <i>O. E. D.</i> i), in Dodsley<sup>4</sup>,
-iv (1874), and by J. M. Manly (1897, <i>Specimens</i>, ii), and J. S.
-Farmer (1910, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Line 1148 mentions Bishop Bonner whose ‘delight was to shed blood’, and
-Fleay, 64, therefore dates the play 1569–70, as Bonner died 5 Sept.
-1569. But he may merely be put in the past as an ex-bishop. Three comic
-villains, Huf, Ruf, and Snuf, are among the characters, and chronology
-makes it possible that the play was the <i>Huff, Suff, and Ruff</i>
-(cf. App. A) played at Court during Christmas 1560–1. Preston may,
-however, have borrowed these characters, as Ulpian Fulwell borrowed
-Ralph Roister, from an earlier play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Preston has been suggested as the author of <i>Sir Clyomon and
-Clamydes</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">DANIEL PRICE (1581–1631).</p>
-
-<p>A student of Exeter College, Oxford, who became chaplain to Prince
-Henry (<i>D. N. B.</i>), and described his <i>Creation</i> in 1610 (cf.
-ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD (?) PUTTENHAM (<i>c.</i> 1520–1601).</p>
-
-<p>The author of <i>The Arte of English Poesie</i> (1589; cf. App. C,
-No. xli) claims to have written three plays, no one of which is
-extant. He analyses at length the plot of his ‘Comedie entituled
-<i>Ginecocratia</i>’ (Arber, 146), in which were a King, Polemon,
-Polemon’s daughter, and Philino. He twice cites his ‘enterlude’,
-<i>Lustie London</i> (Arber, 183, 208), in which were a Serjeant, his
-Yeoman, a Carrier, and a Buffoon. And he twice cites his ‘enterlude’,
-<i>The Woer</i> (Arber, 212, 233), in which were a Country Clown, a
-Young Maid of the City, and a Nurse.</p>
-
-<p>The author of <i>The Arte</i> is referred to by Camden in 1614 (cf.
-Gregory Smith, ii. 444) as ‘Maister Puttenham’, and by E. Bolton,
-<i>Hypercritica</i> (<i>c.</i> 1618), with the qualification ‘as the
-Fame is’, as ‘one of her Gentlemen Pensioners, Puttenham’. H. Crofts,
-in his edition (1880) of Sir Thomas Elyot’s <i>The Governour</i>, has
-shown that this is more likely to have been Richard, the elder, than
-George, the younger, son of Robert Puttenham and nephew of Sir Thomas
-Elyot. Neither brother, however, can be shown to have been a Gentleman
-Pensioner, and Collier gives no authority for his statement that
-Richard was a Yeoman of the Guard. Richard was writing as far back as
-the reign of Henry VIII, and the dates of his plays are unknown.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_471">[471]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM RANKINS (&gt; 1587–1601 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>The moralist who published <i>A Mirrour of Monsters</i> (1587), <i>The
-English Ape</i> (1588), and <i>Seven Satires</i> (1598) is, in spite
-of the attack on plays (cf. App. C, No. xxxviii) in the first of
-these, probably identical with the dramatist who received payment from
-Henslowe on behalf of the Admiral’s for the following plays during
-1598–1601:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>Mulmutius Dunwallow.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Oct. 1598, £3, ‘to by a boocke’, probably an old one.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>Hannibal and Scipio.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway, Jan. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>Scogan and Skelton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway, Jan.–Mar. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>The Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway, Mar.–Apr. 1601, but never finished, as shown by a letter
-to Henslowe from S. Rowley, bidding him let Hathway ‘haue his papars
-agayne’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56).</p>
-
-<p>Rankins has also been suggested as the author of <i>Leire</i> (cf. ch.
-xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS RICHARDS (<i>c.</i> 1577).</p>
-
-<p>A possible author of <i>Misogonus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY ROBERTS (<i>c.</i> 1606).</p>
-
-<p>A miscellaneous writer (<i>D. N. B.</i>) who described the visit of the
-King of Denmark to England (cf. ch. xxiv, C). The stationer of the same
-name, who printed the descriptions, may be either the author or his son
-(McKerrow, 229).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN ROBERTS (<i>c.</i> 1574).</p>
-
-<p>A contributor to the Bristol Entertainment of Elizabeth (cf. ch. xxiv,
-C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBINSON.</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe paid £3 on behalf of the Admiral’s men on 9 Sept. 1602 ‘vnto
-M<sup>r</sup>. Robensone for a tragedie called Felmelanco’. Later in the month he
-paid two sums amounting to another £3 to Chettle, for ‘his tragedie’ of
-the same name. The natural interpretation is that Chettle and Robinson
-co-operated, but Fleay, i. 70, rather wantonly says, ‘Robinson was,
-I think, to Chettle what Mrs. Harris was to Mrs. Gamp’, and Greg,
-<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 224, while not agreeing with Fleay, ‘It is,
-however, unlikely that he had any hand in the play. Probably Chettle
-had again pawned his MS.’</p>
-
-<p>Dates make it improbable that this Robinson was the poet Richard
-Robinson whose lost ‘tragedy’ <i>Hemidos and Thelay</i> is not likely
-to have been a play (cf. App. M).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_472">[472]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SAMUEL ROWLEY (?-1624).</p>
-
-<p>For Rowley’s career as an Admiral’s and Prince’s man, cf. ch. xv.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Dr. Faustus</i></p>
-
-<p>For the additions by Rowley and Bird in 1602, cf. s.v. Marlowe.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>When You See Me, You Know Me. 1603 &lt; &gt; 5</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1605, Feb. 12, ‘Yf he gett good alowance for the enterlude
-of King Henry the 8th before he begyn to print it. And then procure the
-wardens handes to yt for the entrance of yt: He is to haue the same
-for his copy.’ <i>Nathanaell Butter</i> (Arber, iii. 283). [No fee
-recorded.]</p>
-
-<p>1605. When you see me, You know me. Or the famous Chronicle Historie of
-King Henry the eight, with the birth and vertuous life of Edward Prince
-of Wales. As it was playd by the high and mightie Prince of Wales his
-seruants. By Samuell Rowly, seruant to the Prince. <i>For Nathaniel
-Butter.</i></p>
-
-<p>1613; 1621; 1632.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by K. Elze (1874) and J. S. Farmer (1912, <i>S. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: W. Zeitlin, <i>Shakespeare’s King Henry
-the Eighth and R.’s When You See Me</i> (1881, <i>Anglia</i>, iv. 73).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Noble Soldier</i></p>
-
-<p>Probably with Day and Dekker (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>(a) <i>Plays for the Admiral’s, noted in Henslowe’s diary.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Judas.</i> With W. Bird, Dec. 1601, possibly a completion of the
-play of the same name left unfinished by Haughton (q.v.) in 1600.</p>
-
-<p><i>Joshua.</i> Sept. 1602.</p>
-
-<p>(b) <i>Plays for the Palsgrave’s, licensed by Sir Henry Herbert</i></p>
-
-<p>(Chalmers, <i>S. A.</i> 214–17; Herbert, 24, 26, 27).</p>
-
-<p>27 July 1623, <i>Richard III</i>.</p>
-
-<p>29 Oct. 1623, <i>Hardshifte for Husbands</i>.</p>
-
-<p>6 Apr. 1624, <i>A Match or No Match</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>H. D. Sykes, <i>The Authorship of The Taming of A Shrew, etc.</i>
-(1920, <i>Sh. Association</i>), argues, on the basis of a comparison of
-phraseology with <i>When You See Me, You Know Me</i> and some of the
-additions to <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, for Rowley’s authorship of (<i>a</i>)
-<i>The Famous Victories</i>, (<i>b</i>) the prose scenes of <i>A
-Shrew</i>, (<i>c</i>) the clowning passages in Greene’s <i>Orlando
-Furioso</i>, (<i>d</i>) the prose scenes of <i>Wily Beguiled</i>. He
-suggests that the same collaborator, borrowing first from Marlowe
-and then from Kyd, may have supplied the verse scenes both of <i>A
-Shrew</i> and of <i>Wily Beguiled</i>. There is no external evidence to
-connect Rowley with the Queen’s, and he only becomes clearly traceable
-with the Admiral’s in 1598, but Mr. Sykes has certainly made out a
-stylistic case which deserves consideration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_473">[473]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM ROWLEY (?-1625 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>Of Rowley’s origin and birth nothing is known. He first appears as
-collaborator in a play of Queen Anne’s men in 1607, and, although
-he may have also acted with this company, there is no evidence of
-the fact. His name is in the patent of 30 March 1610 for the Duke
-of York’s men with that of Thomas Hobbes, to whom his pamphlet <i>A
-Search for Money</i> (1609, <i>Percy Soc. ii</i>.) is dedicated. He
-acted as their payee from 1610 to 1615, and they played his <i>Hymen’s
-Holiday or Cupid’s Vagaries</i>, now lost, in 1612. <i>A Knave in
-Print</i> and <i>The Fool without Book</i>, entered as his on 9 Sept.
-1653 (Eyre, i. 428), might be their anonymous two-part <i>Knaves</i>
-of 1613. He contributed an epitaph on Thomas Greene of the Queen’s to
-Cooke’s <i>Greene’s Tu Quoque</i> (1614). From 1615 to March 1616 the
-Prince’s men seem to have been merged in the Princess Elizabeth’s.
-They then resumed their identity at the Hope, and with them Rowley is
-traceable as an actor to 1619 and as a writer, in collaboration with
-Thomas Middleton (q.v.), Thomas Ford, and Thomas Heywood, until 1621.
-In 1621 he wrote an epitaph upon one of their members, Hugh Attwell,
-apparently as his ‘fellow’. It was still as a Prince’s man that he
-received mourning for James on 17 March 1625. But in 1621 and 1622 he
-was writing, with Middleton and alone, for the Lady Elizabeth’s at
-the Cockpit, and in 1623 both writing and acting in <i>The Maid of
-the Mill</i> for the King’s men, and prefixing verses to Webster’s
-<i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, which belonged to the same company. He had
-definitely joined the King’s by 24 June 1625 when his name appears in
-their new patent, and for them his latest play-writing was done. In
-addition to what was published under his name, he is generally credited
-with some share in the miscellaneous collection of the Beaumont and
-Fletcher Ff. His name is not in an official list of King’s men in
-1629, but the date of his death is unknown. A William Rowley married
-Isabel Tooley at Cripplegate in 1637, but the date hardly justifies the
-assumption that it was the dramatist.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: P. G. Wiggin, <i>An Inquiry into the Authorship
-of the Middleton-Rowley Plays</i> (1897, <i>Radcliffe College
-Monographs</i>, ix); C. W. Stork, <i>William Rowley</i> (1910,
-<i>Pennsylvania Univ. Publ.</i> xiii, with texts of <i>All’s Lost for
-Lust</i> and <i>A Shoemaker a Gentleman</i>).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Shoemaker a Gentleman, c. 1608</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1637, Nov. 28 (Weekes). ‘A Comedie called A Shoomaker is a
-gentleman with the life and death of the Criple that stole the weather
-cocke of Pauls, by William Rowley.’ <i>John Okes</i> (Arber, iv. 400).</p>
-
-<p>1638. A Merrie and Pleasant Comedy: Never before Printed, called A
-Shoomaker a Gentleman. As it hath beene sundry Times Acted at the Red
-Bull and other Theatres, with a general and good Applause. Written
-by W. R. Gentleman. <i>I. Okes, sold by Iohn Cooper.</i> [Epistle by
-Printer to Gentlemen of the Gentle Craft.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_474">[474]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Stork (1910).</p>
-
-<p>The epistle says that the play was still often acted, and ‘as Plaies
-were then, some twenty yeares agone, it was in the fashion’. This
-dating and the mention of the Red Bull justify us in regarding it as an
-early play for Queen Anne’s men.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A New Wonder, A Woman Never Vexed</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1631, Nov. 24 (Herbert). ‘A booke called A new wonder or
-a woman neuer vext (a Comedy) by William Rowley.’ <i>Constable</i>
-(Arber, iv. 266).</p>
-
-<p>1632. A new Wonder, A Woman never vext. A pleasant conceited Comedy:
-sundry times Acted: never before printed. Written by William Rowley,
-one of his Maiesties Servants. <i>G. P. for Francis Constable.</i></p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii, 102, and Greg (<i>H.</i> ii. 177) suggest revision by Rowley
-of the Admiral’s <i>Wonder of a Woman</i> (1595), perhaps by Heywood
-(q.v.); Stork, 26, early work for Queen Anne’s men, under Heywood’s
-influence.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Match at Midnight</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1633, Jan. 15 (Herbert). ‘A Play called A Match at
-midnight.’ <i>William Sheares</i> (Arber, iv. 291).</p>
-
-<p>1633. A Match at Midnight A Pleasant Comœdie: As it hath been Acted
-by the Children of the Revells. Written by W. R. <i>Aug. Mathewes for
-William Sheares.</i></p>
-
-<p>Fleay, 203 and ii. 95, treats the play, without discussion, as written
-by Middleton and Rowley for the Queen’s Revels <i>c.</i> 1607.
-Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>, i. lxxxix, and Stork, 17, concur as to the
-date, the former regarding it as Middleton’s revised <i>c.</i> 1622
-by Rowley, the latter as practically all Rowley’s. These views are
-evidently influenced by the mention of the Children of the Revels on
-the title-page. Wiggin, 7, noting allusions to the battle of Prague
-in 1620 and <i>Reynard the Fox</i> (1621), thinks it alternatively
-possible that Rowley wrote it under Middletonian influence for one of
-the later Revels companies <i>c.</i> 1622. There was no doubt a company
-of Children of the Revels in 1622–3 (Murray, i. 198), but the name on
-a t.p. of 1633 would naturally refer to the still later company of
-1629–37 (Murray, i. 279).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Birth of Merlin</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1662. The Birth of Merlin: Or, The Childe hath found his Father. As it
-hath been several times Acted with great Applause. Written by William
-Shakespear, and William Rowley. <i>Tho. Johnson for Francis Kirkman and
-Henry Marsh.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by T. E. Jacob (1889), J. S. Farmer (1910, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>), and with <i>Sh. Apocrypha</i>.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: F. A.
-Howe, <i>The Authorship of the B. of M.</i> (1906, <i>M. P.</i> iv.
-193); W. Wells, <i>The B. of M.</i> (1921, <i>M. L. R.</i> xvi. 129).</p>
-
-<p>Kirkman’s attribution to Shakespeare and Rowley was first made
-in his play-list of 1661 (Greg, <i>Masques</i>, liii). It is
-generally accepted for Rowley, but not for Shakespeare. But Fleay,
-<i>Shakespeare</i>, 289,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_475">[475]</span> on a hint of P. A. Daniel, gave Rowley a
-collaborator in Middleton, and later (ii. 105) treated the play as
-a revision by Rowley of the <i>Uther Pendragon</i> produced by the
-Admiral’s on 29 April 1597. This view seems to rest in part upon
-the analogous character of <i>The Mayor of Quinborough</i>. Howe
-thinks that Rowley worked up a sketch by Middleton later than 1621,
-and attempts a division of the play on this hypothesis. But Stork,
-<i>Rowley</i>, 58, thinks that Rowley revised <i>Uther Pendragon</i>
-or some other old play about 1608. F. W. Moorman (<i>C. H.</i> v. 249)
-suggests Dekker, and Wells Beaumont and Fletcher.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>The ascription to Rowley on the t.p. of <i>The Thracian Wonder</i> is
-not generally accepted. His hand has been sought in <i>The Captain</i>,
-<i>The Coxcomb</i>, and <i>Wit at Several Weapons</i> (cf. s.v.
-Beaumont) and in <i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i> (cf. ch. xxiv)
-and <i>Pericles</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">MATTHEW ROYDON (&gt; 1580–1622 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>The reference to his ‘comike inuentions’ in Nashe’s <i>Menaphon</i>
-epistle of 1589 (App. C, No. xlii) suggests that he wrote plays.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE RUGGLE (1575–1622).</p>
-
-<p>Ruggle entered St. John’s, Cambridge, from Lavenham grammar school,
-Suffolk, in 1589, migrated to Trinity, where he took his B.A. in 1593
-and his M.A. in 1597, and became Fellow of Clare Hall in 1598. He
-remained at Cambridge until 1620, shortly before his death.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ignoramus. 8 March 1615</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] <i>Bodl. Tanner MS.</i> 306, with actor-list; <i>Harl.
-MSS.</i> 6869 (fragmentary); and others.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1615, April 18 (Nidd). ‘Ignoramus Comœdia provt
-Cantabrigie acta coram Jacobo serenissimo potentissimo magnae
-Britanniae rege.’ <i>Walter Burre</i> (Arber, iii. 566).</p>
-
-<p>1630. Ignoramus. Comœdia coram Regia Majestate Jacobi Regis Angliae,
-&amp;c. <i>Impensis I. S.</i> [Colophon] <i>Excudebat T. P.</i> [Prologus
-Prior. Martii 8. Anno 1614; Prologus Posterior. Ad secundum Regis
-adventum habitus, Maii 6, 1615; Epilogus.]</p>
-
-<p>1630.... Secunda editio auctior &amp; emendatior. <i>Typis T. H. Sumptibus
-G. E. &amp; J. S.</i> [Macaronic lines, headed ‘Dulman in laudem Ignorami’.]</p>
-
-<p>1658.... Autore M<sup>ro</sup> Ruggle, Aulae Clarensis A.M.</p>
-
-<p>1659, 1668, 1707, 1731, 1736, 1737.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by J. S. Hawkins (1787).</p>
-
-<p>Chamberlain, describing to Carleton James’s visit to Cambridge in
-March 1615, wrote (Birch, i. 304): ‘The second night [8 March] was a
-comedy of Clare Hall, with the help of two or three good actors from
-other houses, wherein David Drummond, on a hobby-horse, and Brakin, the
-recorder of the town, under the name of Ignoramus, a common lawyer,
-bore great parts. The thing was full of mirth and variety, with many
-excellent actors; among whom the Lord Compton’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_476">[476]</span> son, though least,
-yet was not worst, but more than half marred by extreme length.’
-On 31 March he told Carleton (Birch, i. 360) of the Oxford satires
-on the play, and of a possible second visit by the King, unless he
-could persuade the actors to visit London. And on 20 May he wrote to
-him (Birch, i. 363): ‘On Saturday last [13 May], the King went again
-to Cambridge, to see the play “Ignoramus”, which has so nettled the
-lawyers, that they are almost out of all patience.’ He adds that rhymes
-and ballads had been written by the lawyers, and answered. Specimens
-of the ‘flytings’ to which the play gave rise are in Hawkins, xxxvii,
-xlii, cvii, 259. Fuller, <i>Church History</i> (1655), x. 70, reports
-a story that the irritation caused to the lawyers also led to John
-Selden’s demonstration of the secular origin of tithes. The authorship
-of <i>Ignoramus</i> is indicated by the entry in a notice of the royal
-visit printed (Hawkins, xxx) from a manuscript in the library of Sir
-Edward Dering:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘On Wednesday night, 2, <i>Ignoramus</i>, the lawyer,
-<i>Latine</i>, and part <i>English</i>, composed by M<sup>r</sup>.
-<i>Ruggle</i>, <i>Clarensis</i>.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Ignoramus</i> was largely based on the
-<i>Trappolaria</i> (1596) of Giambattista Porta, into which Ruggle
-introduced his satire of the Cambridge recorder, Francis Brackyn, who
-had already been the butt of <i>3 Parnassus</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful and Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>There is no justification for ascribing to Ruggle <i>Loiola</i> (1648),
-which is by John Hacket, but Hawkins, lxxii, cites from a note made in
-a copy of <i>Ignoramus</i> by John Hayward of Clare Hall, <i>c.</i>
-1741:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘N.B. M^r. Geo. Ruggle wrote besides two other comedies, <i>Re
-vera</i> or <i>Verily</i>, and <i>Club Law</i>, to expose the
-puritans, not yet printed. MS.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Club Law</i> (cf. ch. xxiv) has since been recovered.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS SACKVILLE (1536–1608).</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Sackville became Lord Buckhurst in 1567 and Earl of Dorset in
-1604. He is famous in literature for his contributions to ed. 2 (1559)
-of <i>A Mirror for Magistrates</i>, and in statesmanship as Lord
-Treasurer under Elizabeth and James I.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Ferrex and Porrex</i>, or <i>Gorboduc</i>. <i>1562</i></p>
-
-<p><i>With</i> Thomas Norton (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE SALTERNE (&gt; 1603).</p>
-
-<p>Author of the academic <i>Tomumbeius</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN SAVILE (<i>c.</i> 1603).</p>
-
-<p>Describer of the coming of James I to England (cf. ch. xxiv, C).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT SEMPILL (<i>c.</i> 1530–95).</p>
-
-<p>A Scottish ballad writer (<i>D. N. B.</i>) and a suggested author of
-<i>Philotus</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_477">[477]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SENECAN TRANSLATIONS (1559–81).</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Troas</i> (Jasper Heywood)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1558–9. ‘A treates of Senaca.’ <i>Richard Tottel</i>
-(Arber, i. 96).</p>
-
-<p>1559. The Sixt Tragedie of the most graue and prudent author Lucius,
-Anneus, Seneca, entituled Troas, with diuers and sundrye addicions to
-the same. Newly set forth in Englishe by Iasper Heywood studient in
-Oxenforde. <i>Richard Tottel. Cum priuilegio ad imprimendum solum.</i>
-[Epistle to Elizabeth by Heywood; Preface to the Readers; Preface to
-the Tragedy.]</p>
-
-<p>1559. <i>Richard Tottel.</i> [Another edition (B. M. G. 9440).]</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [<i>c.</i> 1560]. <i>Thomas Powell for George Bucke.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Thyestes</i> (Jasper Heywood)</p>
-
-<p>1560, March 26. The seconde Tragedie of Seneca entituled Thyestes
-faithfully Englished by Iasper Heywood, fellow of Alsolne College
-in Oxforde. [<i>Thomas Powell</i>?] ‘<i>in the hous late Thomas
-Berthelettes</i>’. [Verse Epistle to Sir John Mason by Heywood; The
-Translator to the Book; Preface.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hercules Furens</i> (Jasper Heywood)</p>
-
-<p>1561. Lucii Annei Senecae Tragedia prima quae inscribitur Hercules
-furens.... The first Tragedie of Lucius Anneus Seneca, intituled
-Hercules furens, newly pervsed and of all faultes whereof it did before
-abound diligently corrected, and for the profit of young schollers so
-faithfully translated into English metre, that ye may se verse for
-verse tourned as farre as the phrase of the english permitteth By
-Iasper Heywood studient in Oxford. <i>Henry Sutton.</i> [Epistle to
-William, Earl of Pembroke, by Heywood; Argument; Latin and English
-texts.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Oedipus</i> (Alexander Neville)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1562–3. ‘A boke intituled the lamentable history of the
-prynnce Oedypus &amp;c.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i> (Arber, i. 209).</p>
-
-<p>1563, April 28. The Lamentable Tragedie of Oedipus the Sonne of
-Laius Kyng of Thebes out of Seneca. By Alexander Neuyle. <i>Thomas
-Colwell.</i> [Epistles to Nicholas Wotton by Neville, and to the
-Reader.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Agamemnon</i> (John Studley)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1565–6. ‘A boke intituled the eighte Tragide of Senyca.’
-<i>Thomas Colwell</i> (Arber, i. 304).</p>
-
-<p>1566. The Eyght Tragedie of Seneca. Entituled Agamemnon. Translated out
-of Latin into English, by Iohn Studley, Student in Trinitie Colledge in
-Cambridge. <i>Thomas Colwell.</i> [Commendatory Verses by Thomas Nuce,
-William R., H. C., Thomas Delapeend, W. Parkar, T. B.; Epistle to Sir
-William Cecil, signed ‘Iohn Studley’; Preface to the Reader.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_478">[478]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Medea</i> (John Studley)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1565–6. ‘A boke intituled the tragedy of Seneca Media by
-John Studley of Trenety Colledge in Cambryge.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i>
-(Arber, i. 312).</p>
-
-<p>1566. The seuenth Tragedie of Seneca, Entituled Medea: Translated out
-of Latin into English, by Iohn Studley, Student in Trinitie Colledge in
-Cambridge. <i>Thomas Colwell.</i> [Epistle to Francis, Earl of Bedford,
-signed ‘Iohn Studley’; Preface to Reader; Commendatory Verses by W. P.;
-Argument.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Octavia</i> (Thomas Nuce)</p>
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hercules Oetaeus</i> (John Studley)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1566–7. ‘A boke intituled the ix<sup>th</sup> and x<sup>th</sup> tragide
-of Lucious Anneas oute of the laten into englesshe by T. W. fellowe of
-Pembrek Hall, in Chambryge.’ <i>Henry Denham</i> (Arber, i. 327).</p>
-
-<p>1570–1. ‘iij<sup>de</sup> part of Herculus Oote.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i> (Arber,
-i. 443).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> The ninth Tragedie of Lucius Anneus Seneca called
-Octavia. Translated out of Latine into English, by T. N. Student in
-Cambridge. <i>Henry Denham.</i> [Epistles to Robert Earl of Leicester,
-signed ‘T. N.’, and to the Reader.]</p>
-
-<p>This is B.M. C. 34, e. 48. C. Grabau in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xliii.
-310, says that a copy in the Irish sale of 1906 was of an unknown
-edition, possibly of 1566.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hippolytus</i> (John Studley)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1566–7. ‘The iiij<sup>th</sup> parte Seneca Workes.’ <i>Henry
-Denham</i> (Arber, i. 336).</p>
-
-<p>31 Aug. 1579. Transfer from Denham to Richard Jones and John Charlwood
-(Arber, ii. 359).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Ten Tragedies. 1581</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1580–1. ‘Senecas Tragedies in Englishe.’ <i>Thomas
-Marsh</i> (Arber, ii. 396).</p>
-
-<p>1581. Seneca his Tenne Tragedies, Translated into Englysh. <i>Thomas
-Marsh.</i> [Epistle to Sir Thomas Heneage by Thomas Newton. Adds
-<i>Thebais</i>, by Thomas Newton, and, if not already printed, as S.
-R. entries in 1566–7 and 1570–1 suggest, <i>Hercules Oetaeus</i> and
-<i>Hippolytus</i>, by John Studley. The <i>Oedipus</i> of Neville is a
-revised text.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Reprint</i> of 1581 collection (1887, <i>Spenser Soc.</i>), and
-editions of Studley’s <i>Agamemnon</i> and <i>Medea</i>, by E. M.
-Spearing (1913, <i>Materialien</i>, xxxviii), and of Heywood’s
-<i>Troas</i>, <i>Thyestes</i>, and <i>Hercules Furens</i>, by H. de
-Vocht (1913, <i>Materialien</i>, xli).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: J. W.
-Cunliffe, <i>The Influence of S. on Elizabethan Tragedy</i> (1893);
-E. Jockers, <i>Die englischen S.-Übersetzer des 16. Jahrhunderts</i>
-(1909, <i>Strassburg diss.</i>); E. M. Spearing, <i>The Elizabethan
-‘Tenne Tragedies of S.’</i> (1909, <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 437), <i>The
-Elizabethan Translation of S.’s Tragedies</i> (1912), <i>A. N.’s
-Oedipus</i> (1920, <i>M. L. R.</i> xv. 359); F. L. Lucas, <i>S. and
-Elizabethan Tragedy</i> (1922).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_479">[479]</span></p>
-
-<p>Of the translators, Jasper Heywood (1535–98) became Fellow of All
-Souls, Oxford, in 1558. He was son of John Heywood the dramatist, and
-uncle of John Donne. In 1562 he became a Jesuit, and left England,
-to return as a missionary in 1581. He was imprisoned during 1583–5
-and then expelled. John Studley (<i>c.</i> 1547–?) entered Trinity,
-Cambridge, in 1563 and became Fellow in 1567. Alexander Neville
-(1544–1614) took his B.A. in 1560 at Cambridge. He became secretary
-successively to Parker, Grindal, and Whitgift, archbishops of
-Canterbury, and produced other literary work, chiefly in Latin. Thomas
-Nuce (<i>ob.</i> 1617) was Fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge, in 1562,
-and became Canon of Ely in 1585. Thomas Newton (<i>c.</i> 1542–1607)
-migrated in 1562 from Trinity, Oxford, to Queens’, Cambridge, but
-apparently returned to his original college later. About 1583 he became
-Rector of Little Ilford, Essex. He produced much unimportant verse and
-prose, in Latin and English, and was a friend of William Hunnis (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>For a fragment of another translation of <i>Hercules Oetaeus</i>, cf.
-s.v. Elizabeth. Archer’s play-list of 1656 contains the curious entry
-‘Baggs Seneca’, described as a tragedy. Of this Greg, <i>Masques</i>,
-li, can make nothing.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE (1564–1616).</p>
-
-<p>No adequate treatment of Shakespeare’s life and plays is possible
-within the limits of this chapter. I have therefore contented myself
-with giving the main bibliographical data, in illustration of the
-chapters on the companies (Strange’s, Pembroke’s, Chamberlain’s, and
-King’s) and the theatres (Rose, Newington Butts, Theatre, Curtain,
-Globe, Blackfriars) with which he was or may have been concerned. I
-follow the conjectural chronological order adopted in my article on
-Shakespeare in the 11th ed. of the <i>Encyclopaedia Britannica</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>[1619]. It is probable that the 1619 editions of <i>Merry Wives of
-Windsor</i> (Q<sub>2</sub>), <i>Pericles</i> (Q<sub>4</sub>), and the apocryphal
-<i>Yorkshire Tragedy</i> were intended to form part of a collection
-of plays ascribed to Shakespeare, and that the ‘1600’ editions of
-<i>Midsummer Night’s Dream</i> (Q<sub>2</sub>) and <i>Merchant of Venice</i>
-(Q<sub>2</sub>) bearing the name of the printer Roberts, the ‘1600’ edition
-of the apocryphal <i>Sir John Oldcastle</i> bearing the initials
-T. P., the ‘1608’ edition of <i>Henry V</i> (Q<sub>3</sub>), the ‘1608’
-edition of <i>King Lear</i> (Q<sub>2</sub>) lacking the name of the ‘Pide
-Bull’ shop, and the undated edition of <i>The Whole Contention of
-York and Lancaster</i> were all also printed in 1619 for the same
-purpose. The printer seems to have been William Jaggard, with whom was
-associated Thomas Pavier, who held the copyright of several of the
-plays. Presumably an intention to prefix a general title-page is the
-explanation of the shortened imprints characteristic of these editions.
-The sheets of <i>The Whole Contention</i> and <i>Pericles</i> have in
-fact continuous signatures; but the plan seems to have been modified,
-and the other plays issued separately. The bibliographical evidence
-bearing on this theory is discussed by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_480">[480]</span> W. W. Greg, W. Jaggard, A. W.
-Pollard, and A. H. Huth in <i>2 Library</i>, ix. 113, 381; x. 208; and
-<i>3 Library</i>, i. 36, 46; ii. 101; and summed up by A. W. Pollard,
-<i>Shakespeare Folios and Quartos</i>, 81. Confirmatory evidence is
-adduced by W. J. Niedig, <i>The Shakespeare Quartos of 1619</i> (<i>M.
-P.</i> viii. 145) and <i>False Dates on Shakespeare Quartos</i> (1910,
-<i>Century</i>, 912).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1623, Nov. 8 (Worrall). ‘Master William Shakspeers
-Comedyes Histories, and Tragedyes soe manie of the said Copies as
-are not formerly entred to other men. viz<sup>t</sup> Comedyes The Tempest The
-two gentlemen of Verona Measure for Measure The Comedy of Errors As
-you like it All’s well that ends well Twelfe Night The winters tale
-Histories The thirde parte of Henry ye Sixt Henry the eight Tragedies
-Coriolanus Timon of Athens Julius Caesar Mackbeth Anthonie and
-Cleopatra Cymbeline’ <i>Blounte and Isaak Jaggard</i> (Arber, iv. 107).
-[This entry covers all the plays in F<sub>1</sub> not already printed, except
-<i>Taming of the Shrew</i>, <i>King John</i>, and <i>2, 3 Henry VI</i>,
-which were doubtless regarded from the stationer’s point of view as
-identical with the <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, <i>Troublesome Reign of
-King John</i>, and <i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i>, on which
-they were based. The ‘thirde parte of Henry ye Sixt’ is of course the
-hitherto unprinted <i>1 Henry VI</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>[F_{1}] 1623. M<sup>r</sup>. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, &amp;
-Tragedies Published according to the True Originall Copies. By <i>Isaac
-Iaggard and Ed. Blount</i>. [Colophon] <i>Printed</i> [by W. Jaggard]
-<i>at the charges of W. Jaggard, Ed. Blount, I. Smethweeke, and W.
-Aspley</i>. [Verses to the Reader, signed B[en] I[onson]; Portrait
-signed ‘Martin Droeshout sculpsit London’; Epistles to the Earls of
-Pembroke and Montgomery and to the great Variety of Readers, both
-signed ‘Iohn Heminge, Henry Condell’; Commendatory Verses signed ‘Ben:
-Ionson’, ‘Hugh Holland’, ‘L. Digges’, ‘I. M.’; ‘The Names of the
-Principall Actors in all these Playes’; ‘A Catalogue of the seuerall
-Comedies, Histories, and Tragedies contained in this Volume’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1627, June 19 [on or after]. Transfer from Dorothy
-widow of Isaac Jaggard to Thomas and Richard Cotes of ‘her parte in
-Schackspheere playes’ (Arber, iv. 182).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, Nov. 16. Transfer from Blount to Robert Allot by
-note dated 26 June 1630 of his ‘estate and right’ in the sixteen plays
-of the 1623 entry (Arber, iv. 243).</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>2</sub>] 1632. <i>Thomas Cotes, for John Smethwick, William Aspley,
-Richard Hawkins, Richard Meighen and Robert Allot.</i> [So colophon:
-there are t.ps. with separate imprints by Cotes for each of the five
-booksellers.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>3</sub>] 1663. <i>For Philip Chetwinde.</i> [For the second issue of
-1664, with <i>Pericles</i> and six apocryphal plays added, cf. p. 203.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>4</sub>] 1685. <i>For H. Herringman</i> (and others).</p>
-
-<p>Of later editions the most valuable for literary history are those
-by E. Malone, revised by J. Boswell (1821, the <i>Third Variorum
-Shakespeare</i>, 21 vols.); W. A. Wright (1891–3, the <i>Cambridge
-Shakespeare</i>, 9 vols.); F. J. Furnivall and others (1885–91, the
-<i>Shakespeare Quarto<span class="pagenum" id="Page_481">[481]</span> Facsimiles</i>, 43 vols.); H. H. Furness
-(1871–1919, the <i>New Variorum Shakespeare</i>, 18 plays in 19
-vols. issued); E. Dowden and others (1899–1922, the <i>Arden
-Shakespeare</i>); A. T. Q. Couch and J. D. Wilson (1921–2, the <i>New
-Shakespeare</i>, 5 vols. issued). Of dissertations I can only note,
-for biography, J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps, <i>Outlines of the Life
-of Shakespeare</i> (1890, ed. 9), and S. Lee, <i>A Life of William
-Shakespeare</i> (1922, new ed.), and for bibliography, S. Lee,
-<i>Facsimile of F<sub>1</sub> from the Chatsworth copy</i> (1902, with census
-of copies, added to in <i>2 Library</i>, vii. 113), W. W. Greg, <i>The
-Bibliographical History of the First Folio</i> (1903, <i>2 Library</i>,
-iv. 258), A. W. Pollard, <i>Shakespeare Folios and Quartos</i> (1909)
-and <i>Shakespeare’s Fight with the Pirates</i> (1920), A. W. Pollard
-and H. C. Bartlett, <i>A Census of Shakespeare’s Plays in Quarto</i>
-(1916), and H. C. Bartlett, <i>Mr. William Shakespeare</i> (1922).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>1 Henry VI. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The first Part of Henry the Sixt.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>2, 3 Henry VI. 1592</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> No original entry. [Probably these plays were regarded
-from a stationer’s point of view as identical with the anonymous
-<i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i> (q.v.), on which they were
-based. Pavier had acquired rights over these from Millington in 1602.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Second Part of Henry the Sixt, with the death of the
-Good Duke Humfrey. The Third Part of Henry the Sixt, with the death of
-the Duke of Yorke.</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1626, Aug. 4. Transfer from Mrs. Pavier to Edward Brewster
-and Robert Birde of ‘Master Paviers right in Shakesperes plaies or any
-of them’ (Arber, iv. 164).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, Nov. 8. Transfer from Bird to Richard Cotes of
-‘Yorke and Lancaster’ (Arber, iv. 242).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Richard III. 1592–3</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1597, Oct. 20 (Barlowe). ‘The tragedie of Kinge Richard
-the Third with the death of the Duke of Clarence.’ <i>Andrew Wise</i>
-(Arber, iii. 93).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1597. The Tragedy of King Richard the third. Containing, His
-treacherous Plots against his brother Clarence: the pittiefull murther
-of his iunocent nephewes: his tyrannical vsurpation: with the whole
-course of his detested life, and most deserued death. As it hath
-beene lately Acted by the Right honourable the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. <i>Valentine Sims for Andrew Wise.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1598.... By William Shakespeare. <i>Thomas Creede for Andrew
-Wise.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1602.... Newly augmented.... <i>Thomas Creede for Andrew
-Wise.</i> [There is no augmentation.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1603, June 25. Transfer from Andrew Wise to Mathew Lawe
-(Arber, iii. 239).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_482">[482]</span></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>4</sub>] 1605. <i>Thomas Creede, sold by Mathew Lawe.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>5</sub>] 1612.... As it hath beene lately Acted by the Kings Maiesties
-seruants.... <i>Thomas Creede, sold by Mathew Lawe.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>6</sub>] 1622. <i>Thomas Purfoot, sold by Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedy of Richard the Third: with the Landing
-of Earle Richmond, and the Battell at Bosworth Field. [<i>Running
-Title</i>, The Life and Death of Richard the Third. From
-Q<sub>1</sub>-Q<sub>2</sub>-Q<sub>3</sub>-Q<sub>4</sub> (+ Q<sub>3</sub>)-Q<sub>5</sub>-Q<sub>6</sub>, with corrections.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>7</sub>] 1629. <i>John Norton, sold by Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>8</sub>] 1634. <i>John Norton.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Comedy of Errors. 1593</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Comedie of Errors.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Titus Andronicus. 1594</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, Feb. 6. ‘A Noble Roman historye of Tytus
-Andronicus.’ <i>John Danter</i> (Arber, ii. 644).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1594. The most Lamentable Romaine Tragedie of Titus Andronicus:
-As it was Plaide by the Right Honourable the Earle of Darbie, Earle of
-Pembrooke and Earle of Sussex their Seruants. <i>John Danter, sold by
-Edward White and Thomas Millington.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1600.... As it hath sundry times beene playde by the Right
-Honourable the Earle of Pembrooke, the Earle of Darbie, the Earle of
-Sussex, and the Lorde Chamberlaine theyr Seruants. <i>I[ames] R[oberts]
-for Edward White.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1602, April 19. Transfer ‘saluo iure cuiuscunque’ from
-Thomas Millington to Thomas Pavier (Arber, iii. 204).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1611. <i>For Edward White.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Lamentable Tragedy of Titus Andronicus. [From
-Q<sub>1</sub>-Q<sub>2</sub>-Q<sub>3</sub>, with addition of <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1626, Aug. 4. Transfer from Mrs. Pavier of interest to
-Edward Brewster and Robert Bird (Arber, iv. 164).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Taming of The Shrew. 1594</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> No entry. [Probably the play was regarded from the point
-of view of copyright as identical with the anonymous <i>Taming of A
-Shrew</i> (q.v.), on which it was based.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Taming of the Shrew.</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1631. A wittie and pleasant comedie called The Taming of
-the Shrew. As it was acted by his Maiesties Seruants at the Blacke
-Friers and the Globe. Written by Will. Shakespeare. <i>W. S. for Iohn
-Smethwicke.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Love’s Labour’s Lost. 1594</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> No original entry.</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1598. A Pleasant Conceited Comedie Called, Loues labors lost.
-As it was presented before her Highnes this last Christmas. Newly
-corrected and augmented By W. Shakespere. <i>W[illiam] W[hite] for
-Cutbert Burby.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_483">[483]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607. Jan. 22. Transfer from Burby to Nicholas Ling
-(Arber, iii. 337).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Nov. 19. Transfer from Ling to John Smethwick
-(Arber, iii. 365).</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. Loues Labour’s lost. [From Q<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1631.... As it was Acted by his Maiesties Seruants at the
-Blacke-Friers and the Globe.... <i>W[illiam] S[tansby] for John
-Smethwicke.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Romeo and Juliet. 1594–5</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> No original entry.</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1597. An Excellent conceited Tragedie of Romeo and Iuliet, As
-it hath been often (with great applause) plaid publiquely, by the right
-Honourable the L. of Hunsdon his Seruants. <i>John Danter.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1599.... Newly corrected, augmented, and amended: ... <i>Thomas
-Creede for Cuthbert Burby.</i> [Revised and enlarged text.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Jan. 22. Transfer by direction of a court from Burby
-to Nicholas Ling (Arber, iii. 337).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Nov. 19. Transfer from Ling to John Smethwick
-(Arber, iii. 365).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1609.... by the King’s Maiesties Seruants at the Globe....
-<i>For Iohn Smethwick.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Romeo and Iuliet. [From Q<sub>2</sub>-Q<sub>3</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>4</sub>] <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> <i>For Iohn Smethwicke.</i> [Two issues.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>5</sub>] 1637. <i>R. Young for John Smethwicke.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>A Midsummer Night’s Dream. 1595</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Oct. 8 (Rodes). ‘A booke called A mydsommer nightes
-Dreame.’ <i>Thomas Fisher</i> (Arber, iii. 174).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1600. A Midsommer nights dreame. As it hath beene sundry times
-publickely acted, by the Right honourable, the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. <i>For Thomas Fisher.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] [1619]. ‘<i>Printed by Iames Roberts, 1600.</i>’ [On the
-evidence for printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard,
-81.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. A Midsommer Nights Dreame. [From Q<sub>2</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>On the possible date and occasion of performance, cf. my paper in
-<i>Shakespeare Homage</i> (1916).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Two Gentlemen of Verona. 1595</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Two Gentlemen of Verona.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>King John. 1595</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> No entry. [Probably the play was regarded, from
-a stationer’s point of view, as identical with the anonymous
-<i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i> (q.v.), on which it was based.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_484">[484]</span></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The life and Death of King John.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Richard II. 1595–6</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1597, Aug. 29. ‘The Tragedye of Richard the Second.’
-<i>Andrew Wise</i> (Arber, iii. 89).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1597. The Tragedie of King Richard the second. As it hath beene
-publikely acted by the right Honourable the Lorde Chamberlaine his
-Seruants. <i>Valentine Simmes for Andrew Wise.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1598.... By William Shakespeare. <i>Valentine Simmes for Andrew
-Wise.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1598. <i>Valentine Simmes, for Andrew Wise.</i> [White coll.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1603, June 25. Transfer from Andrew Wise to Mathew Lawe
-(Arber, iii. 239).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>4</sub>] 1608.... With new additions of the Parliament Sceane, and the
-deposing of King Richard. As it hath been lately acted by the Kinges
-Maiesties seruantes, at the Globe. <i>W[illiam] W[hite] for Mathew
-Law.</i> [Two issues with distinct t.ps., of which one only has the
-altered title. Both include the added passage <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 154–318.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>5</sub>] 1615. <i>For Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The life and death of King Richard the Second. [From
-Q<sub>1</sub>-Q<sub>2</sub>-Q<sub>3</sub>-Q<sub>4</sub>-Q<sub>5</sub>, with corrections.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>6</sub>] 1634. <i>Iohn Norton.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Merchant of Venice. 1596</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1598, July 22. ‘A booke of the Marchaunt of Venyce or
-otherwise called the Jewe of Venyce, Prouided that yt bee not prynted
-by the said James Robertes or anye other whatsoeuer without lycence
-first had from the Right honorable the lord Chamberlen.’ <i>James
-Robertes</i> (Arber, iii. 122).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Oct. 28. Transfer from Roberts to Thomas Heyes
-(Arber, iii. 175).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1600. The most excellent Historie of the Merchant of Venice.
-With the extreame crueltie of Shylocke the Iewe towards the sayd
-Merchant, in cutting a iust pound of his flesh: and the obtayning of
-Portia by the choyse of three chests. As it hath been diuers times
-acted by the Lord Chamberlaine his Seruants. Written by William
-Shakespeare. <i>I[ames] R[oberts] for Thomas Heyes.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] [1619]. ‘<i>Printed by J. Roberts, 1600.</i>’ [On the evidence
-for printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard, 81.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1619, July 8. Transfer from Thomas to Laurence Heyes
-(Arber, iii. 651).</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Merchant of Venice. [From Q<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1637. <i>M. P[arsons?] for Laurence Hayes.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1652. <i>For William Leake.</i> [Reissue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1657, Oct. 17. Transfer from Bridget Hayes and Jane
-Graisby to William Leake (Eyre, ii. 150).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>1 Henry IV. 1596–7</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1598, Feb. 25 (Dix). ‘A booke intituled The historye of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_485">[485]</span>Henry the iiij<sup>th</sup> with his battaile of Shrewsburye against Henry
-Hottspurre of the Northe with the conceipted mirthe of Sir John
-ffalstoff.’ <i>Andrew Wise</i> (Arber, iii. 105).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1598. The History of Henrie the Fourth; With the battell
-at Shrewsburie, betweene the King and Lord Henry Percy, surnamed
-Henrie Hotspur of the North. With the humorous conceits of Sir Iohn
-Falstalffe. <i>P[eter] S[hort] for Andrew Wise.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1599.... Newly corrected by W. Shakespeare. <i>S[imon]
-S[tafford] for Andrew Wise.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1603, June 25. Transfer from Wise to Mathew Law (Arber,
-iii. 239).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1604. <i>Valentine Simmes for Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>4</sub>] 1608. <i>For Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>5</sub>] 1613. <i>W[illiam] W[hite] for Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>6</sub>] 1622. <i>T[homas] P[urfoot], sold by Mathew Law.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The First Part of Henry the Fourth, with
-the Life and Death of Henry Sirnamed Hot-spurre. [From
-Q<sub>1</sub>-Q<sub>2</sub>-Q<sub>3</sub>-Q<sub>4</sub>-Q<sub>5</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>7</sub>] 1632. <i>John Norton, sold by William Sheares.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>8</sub>] 1639. <i>John Norton, sold by Hugh Perry.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>2 Henry IV. 1597–8</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Aug. 23. ‘The second parte of the history of Kinge
-Henry the iiij<sup>th</sup> with the humours of Sir John ffalstaff; wrytten by
-master Shakespere.’ <i>Andrew Wise and William Aspley</i> (Arber, iii.
-170).</p>
-
-<p>[Q] 1600. The Second part of Henrie the fourth, continuing to his
-death, and coronation of Henrie the fift. With the humours of sir
-Iohn Falstaffe, and swaggering Pistoll. As it hath been sundrie times
-publikely acted by the right honourable, the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. <i>V[alentine] S[immes] for
-Andrew Wise and William Aspley.</i> [Two issues, the first of which
-omits <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Second Part of Henry the Fourth, Containing his
-Death: and the Coronation of King Henry the Fift. [Distinct text from
-Q.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Much Ado About Nothing. 1598</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> [1600], Aug. 4. ‘The commedie of muche A doo about nothing
-a booke ... to be staied’ (Arber, iii. 37).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Aug. 23. ‘Muche a Doo about nothinge.’ <i>Andrew
-Wise and William Aspley</i> (Arber, iii. 170).</p>
-
-<p>[Q] 1600. Much adoe about Nothing. As it hath been sundrie times
-publikely acted by the right honourable, the Lord Chamberlaine his
-seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. <i>V[alentine] S[immes] for
-Andrew Wise and William Aspley.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. Much adoe about Nothing. [From Q, with corrections.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Henry V. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> No original entry. [Possibly the play was regarded from
-a stationer’s point of view as identical with the anonymous <i>Famous
-Victories of Henry V</i> (q.v.) entered by Creede on 14 May 1594.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_486">[486]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> [1600], Aug. 4. ‘Henry the ffift, a booke ... to be
-staied’ (Arber, iii. 37).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1600. The Chronicle History of Henry the fift, With his battell
-fought at Agin Court in France. Togither with Auntient Pistoll. As
-it hath bene sundry times playd by the Right honorable the Lord
-Chamberlaine his seruants. <i>Thomas Creede for Tho. Millington and
-Iohn Busby.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1600, Aug. 14. Transfer to Thomas Pavier, with other
-‘thinges formerlye printed and sett over to’ him (Arber, iii. 169).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1602. <i>Thomas Creede for Thomas Pauier.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] [1619]. ‘<i>Printed for T. P. 1608.</i>’ [On the evidence for
-printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard, <i>F. and
-Q.</i> 81.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Life of Henry the Fift. [Distinct text from Qq.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1626, Aug. 4. Transfer from Mrs. Pavier to Edward Brewster
-and Robert Birde of interest in ‘The history of Henry the fift and the
-play of the same’ (Arber, iv. 164).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, Nov. 8. Transfer from Bird to Richard Cotes of
-‘Henrye the Fift’ and ‘Agincourt’ (Arber, iv. 242).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Julius Caesar. 1599</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Iulius Cæsar.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Merry Wives of Windsor. 1599–1600</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1602, Jan. 18 (Seton). ‘A booke called An excellent and
-pleasant conceited commedie of Sir John ffaulstof and the merry wyves
-of Windesor.’ <i>John Busby.</i> Transfer the same day from Busby to
-Arthur Johnson (Arber, iii. 199).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1602. A most pleasaunt and excellent conceited Comedie, of
-Syr Iohn Falstaffe, and the merrie Wiues of Windsor. Entermixed with
-sundrie variable and pleasing humors, of Syr Hugh the Welch Knight,
-Iustice Shallow, and his wise Cousin M. Slender. With the swaggering
-vaine of Auncient Pistoll, and Corporall Nym. By William Shakespeare.
-As it hath bene diuers times Acted by the right Honorable my Lord
-Chamberlaines seruants. Both before her Maiestie, and elsewhere.
-<i>T[homas] C[reede] for Arthur Iohnson.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1619. <i>[William Jaggard] for Arthur Johnson.</i> [On its
-relation to other plays printed by Jaggard in 1619, cf. Pollard <i>F.
-and Q.</i> 81.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Merry Wiues of Windsor. [Distinct text from Qq.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1630, Jan. 29. Transfer from Johnson to Meighen (Arber,
-iv. 227).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1630. <i>T. H[arper] for R. Meighen.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>As You Like It. 1600</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. As you Like it.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hamlet. 1601</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1602, July 26 (Pasfield). ‘A booke called the Revenge
-of Hamlett Prince Denmarke as yt was latelie Acted by the Lord
-Chamberleyne his servantes.’ <i>James Robertes</i> (Arber, iii. 212).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_487">[487]</span></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1603, The Tragicall Historie of Hamlet Prince of Denmarke.
-By William Shakespeare. As it hath beene diuerse times acted by
-his Highnesse seruants in the Cittie of London: as also in the two
-Vniuersities of Cambridge and Oxford, and elsewhere. <i>[Valentine
-Simmes] for N[icholas] L[ing] and Iohn Trundell.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1604.... Newly imprinted and enlarged to almost as much againe
-as it was, according to the true and perfect Coppie.... <i>I[ames]
-R[oberts] for N[icholas] L[ing].</i> [Some copies are dated 1605.
-Distinct text from Q<sub>1</sub>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Nov. 19. Transfer from Ling to John Smethwick
-(Arber, iii. 365).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1611. <i>For Iohn Smethwicke.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke. [Distinct
-text from Qq.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>4</sub>] <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> [after 1611]. <i>W[illiam] S[tansby] for Iohn
-Smethwicke.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>5</sub>] 1637. <i>R. Young for John Smethwicke.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Twelfth Night. 1601–2</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. Twelfe Night, Or what you will.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Troilus and Cressida. 1602</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1603, Feb. 7. ‘Master Robertes, Entred for his copie in
-full Court holden this day to print when he hath gotten sufficient
-aucthority for yt, The booke of Troilus and Cresseda as yt is acted by
-my lord Chamberlens Men’ (Arber, iii. 226).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1609, Jan. 28 (Segar, ‘deputye to Sir George Bucke’). ‘A
-booke called the history of Troylus and Cressida.’ <i>Richard Bonion
-and Henry Walleys</i> (Arber, iii. 400).</p>
-
-<p>[Q] 1609. The Historie of Troylus and Cresseida. As it was acted by the
-Kings Maiesties seruants at the Globe. Written by William Shakespeare.
-<i>G. Eld for R. Bonian and H. Walley.</i> [In a second issue the
-title became ‘The Famous Historie of Troylus and Cresseid. Excellently
-expressing the beginning of their loues, with the conceited wooing of
-Pandarus Prince of Licia’; and an Epistle headed ‘A neuer writer, to an
-euer reader. Newes’ was inserted.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Troylus and Cressida. [A distinct text
-from Q.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>All’s Well That Ends Well. 1602</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. All’s Well, that Ends Well.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Measure for Measure. 1604</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. Measure, For Measure.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Othello 1604</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1621, Oct. 6 (Buck). ‘The Tragedie of Othello, the moore
-of Venice.’ <i>Thomas Walkley</i> (Arber, iv. 59).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1622. The Tragœdy of Othello, The Moore of Venice. As it hath
-beene diuerse times acted at the Globe, and at the Black-Friers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_488">[488]</span> by
-his Maiesties Seruants. Written by William Shakespeare. <i>N[icholas]
-O[kes] for Thomas Walkley.</i> [Epistle by the Stationer to the Reader,
-signed ‘Thomas Walkley’.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Othello, the Moore of Venice. [Distinct
-text from Q<sub>1</sub>]</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1628, March 1. Transfer from Walkley to Richard Hawkins
-(Arber, iv. 194).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1630. <i>A. M[athewes] for Richard Hawkins.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1655.... The fourth Edition. <i>For William Leak.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Macbeth. 1605–6</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Macbeth.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>King Lear. 1605–6</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Nov. 26 (Buck). ‘A booke called Master William
-Shakespeare his historye of Kinge Lear, as yt was played before the
-kinges maiestie at Whitehall vppon Sainct Stephens night at Christmas
-Last by his maiesties servantes playinge vsually at the Globe on the
-Banksyde.’ <i>Nathanael Butter and John Busby</i> (Arber, iii. 366).</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1608. M. William Shakspeare: His True Chronicle Historie of
-the life and death of King Lear and his three Daughters. With the
-vnfortunate life of Edgar, sonne and heire to the Earle of Gloster, and
-his sullen and assumed humour of Tom of Bedlam: As it was played before
-the Kings Maiestie at Whitehall vpon S. Stephans night in Christmas
-Hollidayes. By his Maiesties seruants playing vsually at the Gloabe on
-the Banckeside. <i>[Nicholas Okes?] for Nathaniel Butter and are to
-be sold at ... the Pide Bull....</i> [Sheets freely corrected during
-printing.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] [1619]. ‘<i>Printed for Nathaniel Butter, 1608.</i>’ [On the
-evidence for printing with false date by William Jaggard, cf. Pollard,
-81.]</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of King Lear. [From Q<sub>1</sub> with corrections.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1655. <i>By Jane Bell.</i></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Antony and Cleopatra. 1606</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, May 20 (Buck). ‘A booke Called Anthony and
-Cleopatra.’ <i>Edward Blount</i> (Arber, iii. 378).</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1623, Nov. 8. ‘Anthonie and Cleopatra’, with other playes
-for F<sub>1</sub> [<i>vide supra</i>]. <i>Edward Blount and Isaac Jaggard</i>
-(Arber, iv. 107).</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Anthonie, and Cleopatra.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Coriolanus. 1606</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedy of Coriolanus.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Timon of Athens. 1607</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Lyfe of Tymon of Athens.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Pericles. 1608</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1608, May 20 (Buck). ‘A booke called The booke of Pericles
-prynce of Tyre.’ <i>Edward Blount</i> (Arber, iii. 378).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_489">[489]</span></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>1</sub>] 1609. The Late, And much admired Play, Called Pericles, Prince
-of Tyre. With the true Relation of the whole Historie, aduentures, and
-fortunes of the said Prince: As also, The no lesse strange, and worthy
-accidents, in the Birth and Life, of his Daughter Mariana. As it hath
-been diuers and sundry times acted by his Maiesties Seruants, at the
-Globe on the Banck-side. By William Shakespeare. <i>[William White] for
-Henry Gosson.</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>2</sub>] 1609. <i>[William White] for Henry Gosson.</i> [‘Eneer’ for
-‘Enter’ on A<sub>2</sub>].</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>3</sub>] 1611. <i>By S[imon] S[tafford].</i></p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>4</sub>] ‘<i>Printed for T[homas] P[avier] 1619.</i>’ [The signatures
-are continuous with those of <i>The Whole Contention</i> printed n.d.
-in 1619. Probably the printer was William Jaggard; cf. Pollard, 81.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>5</sub>] 1630. <i>I. N[orton]for R. B[ird].</i> [Two issues.]</p>
-
-<p>[Q<sub>6</sub>] 1635. <i>By Thomas Cotes.</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>3</sub>] 1664. Pericles Prince of Tyre. [Distinct text from Qq.]</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cymbeline. 1609</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tragedie of Cymbeline.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Winter’s Tale. 1610</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Winters Tale.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Tempest. 1611</i></p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Tempest.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Henry VIII. 1613</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>[F<sub>1</sub>] 1623. The Famous History of the Life of King Henry the Eight.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Besides the seven plays printed in F<sub>3</sub> (<i>vide supra</i>)
-Shakespeare has been credited (cf. ch. xxiv) with the authorship
-of or contributions to <i>An Alarum for London</i>, <i>Arden of
-Feversham</i>, <i>Fair Em</i>, <i>Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>,
-<i>Troublesome Reign of King John</i>, <i>Mucedorus</i>, <i>Second
-Maiden’s Tragedy</i>, <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, and perhaps more
-plausibly, <i>Contention of York and Lancaster</i>, <i>Edward III</i>,
-<i>Sir Thomas More</i>, and <i>T. N. K.</i> (cf. s.v. Beaumont).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Meres includes ‘Loue Labours Wonne’ in his list of 1598 (App. C, No.
-lii).</p>
-
-<p>On 9 Sept. 1653 Humphrey Mosely entered in the Stationers’ Register
-(Eyre, i. 428), in addition to <i>The Merry Devil of Edmonton</i> with
-an ascription to Shakespeare (cf. ch. xxiv):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The History of Cardenio, by M^r Fletcher &amp; Shakespeare.’
-‘Henry y^e first, &amp; Hen: the 2^d. by Shakespeare, &amp; Davenport.’</p></div>
-
-<p>On 29 June 1660 he entered (Eyre, ii. 271):</p>
-
-<table summary="history">
- <tr>
- <td class="cht4">‘The History of King Stephen.<br />
- Duke Humphrey, a Tragedy.<br />
- Iphis &amp; Iantha or a marriage without a man, a Comedy.</td>
- <td class="brckt"><img src="images/big_right_bracket.png" alt="big right bracket"
- style="height:4em; padding:0 0em 0 0em;" /></td>
- <td class="ctr">by Will: Shakspeare.’</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_490">[490]</span></p>
-
-<p>Warburton’s list of burnt plays (<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 230) contains:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left hangingindent">‘Henry y^e 1^{st}. by Will. Shakespear &amp; Rob. Davenport’,</p>
-
-<p class="p-left p0">‘Duke Humphery Will. Shakespear’,</p></div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and in a supplementary list:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘A Play by Will. Shakespear.’</p></div>
-
-<p>Of <i>Henry II</i>, <i>Stephen</i>, <i>Duke Humphrey</i>, and <i>Iphis
-and Iantha</i> nothing more is known.</p>
-
-<p><i>Cardenio</i> is presumably the play given as ‘Cardenno’ and
-‘Cardenna’ by the King’s men at Court in 1612–13 and again on 8 June
-1613 (App. B). Its theme, from <i>Don Quixote</i>, Part I, chh.
-xxiii-xxxvii, is that of <i>Double Falsehood, or the Distressed
-Lovers</i>, published in 1728 by Lewis Theobald as ‘written originally
-by W. Shakespeare, and now revised and adapted to the stage by M<sup>r</sup>.
-Theobald’. In 1727 it had been produced at Drury Lane. Theobald claimed
-to have three manuscripts, no one of which is now known. One had
-formerly, he said, belonged to Betterton, and was in the handwriting
-of ‘M<sup>r</sup>. <i>Downes</i>, the famous Old Prompter’ (cf. App. I). Another
-came from a ‘Noble Person’, with a tradition ‘that it was given by
-our Author, as a Present of Value, to a Natural Daughter of his,
-for whose Sake he wrote it, in the Time of his Retirement from the
-Stage’. Theobald is much under suspicion of having written <i>Double
-Falsehood</i> himself (cf. T. R. Lounsbury, <i>The First Editors of
-Shakespeare</i>, 145).</p>
-
-<p>‘The Historye of Henry the First, written by Damport’ was licensed for
-the King’s men on 10 Apr. 1624 (<i>Var.</i> iii. 229, 319; Herbert, 27).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">EDWARD SHARPHAM (1576–1608).</p>
-
-<p>Edward was the third son of Richard Sharpham of Colehanger in East
-Allington, Devonshire, where he was baptized on 22 July 1576. He
-entered the Middle Temple on 9 Oct. 1594. He made his will on 22
-Apr. 1608, and was buried on the following day at St. Margaret’s,
-Westminster. It may be inferred that he died of plague. Unless he is
-the E. S. who wrote <i>The Discoveries of the Knights of the Post</i>
-(1597), he is only known by his two plays. There is no justification
-for identifying him with the Ed. Sharphell who prefixed a sonnet to
-the <i>Humours Heav’n on Earth</i> (1605) of John Davies of Hereford,
-calling Davies his ‘beloued Master’, or, consequently, for assuming
-that he had been a pupil of Davies as writing-master at Magdalen,
-Oxford.</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: G. C. Moore Smith, <i>E. S.</i> (1908, <i>10 N.
-Q.</i> x. 21), <i>John Mason and E. S.</i> (1913, <i>M. L. R.</i> viii.
-371); M. W. Sampson, <i>The Plays of E. S.</i> (1910, <i>Studies in
-Language and Literature in Celebration of the 70th Birthday of J. M.
-Hart</i>, 440).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Fleir. 1606</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1606, May 13. ‘A Comedie called The fleare. Provided that
-they are not to printe yt tell they bringe good aucthoritie and licence
-for the Doinge thereof.’ <i>John Trundell and John Busby</i> (Arber,
-iii. 321).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_491">[491]</span></p>
-
-<p>1606, Nov. 21. Transfer from Trundell to Busby and Arthur Johnson, with
-note ‘This booke is aucthorised by Sir George Bucke Master Hartwell and
-the wardens’ (Arber, iii. 333).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Fleire. As it hath beene often played in the Blacke-Fryers by
-the Children of the Reuells. Written by Edward Sharpham of the Middle
-Temple, Gentleman. <i>F. B.</i> [Epistle to the Reader, by the printer.]</p>
-
-<p>1610; 1615; 1631.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by H. Nibbe (1912, <i>Materialien</i>, xxxvi).</p>
-
-<p>The epistle says that the book has been ‘long lookt for’, that the
-author is ‘ith’ Country’ and that further ‘Comicall discourses’ from
-him are forthcoming. A date after the executions for treason on 30 Jan.
-1606 is suggested, as in the case of Marston’s <i>Fawn</i>, by ii. 364,
-‘I have heard say, they will rise sooner, and goe with more deuotion to
-see an extraordinarie execution, then to heare a Sermon’, and with this
-indication allusions to the Union (ii. 258) and <i>Northward Ho!</i>
-(ii. 397) and resemblances to the <i>Fawn</i> are consistent.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cupid’s Whirligig. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, June 29 (Tylney). ‘A Comedie called Cupids
-Whirley-gigge.’ <i>John Busby and Arthur Johnson</i> (Arber, iii. 354).</p>
-
-<p>1607. Cupid’s Whirligig, As it hath bene sundry times Acted by the
-Children of the Kings Majesties Reuels. <i>E. Allde, sold by A.
-Johnson.</i> [Epistle to Robert Hayman, signed ‘E. S.’]</p>
-
-<p>1611; 1616; 1630.</p>
-
-<p>Baker, <i>Biographia Dramatica</i>, ii. 146, cites Coxeter as authority
-for a false ascription of the play to Shakespeare. But nobody could
-well have supposed Shakespeare to be indicated by the initials E.
-S., for which there is really no other candidate than Sharpham. The
-play must be the further ‘Comicall discourses’ promised by the same
-publishers in the epistle to <i>The Fleir</i>, and it may be added that
-Hayman (cf. <i>D. N. B.</i>), like Sharpham, was a Devonshire man. The
-date may be taken to be 1607, as the King’s Revels are not traceable
-earlier.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SAMUEL SHEPPARD (&gt; 1606–1652 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>The known work of this miscellaneous writer belongs to 1646–52, and
-although it includes a political tract in dramatic form, it is only
-his vague claim of a share, possibly as amanuensis, in Jonson’s
-<i>Sejanus</i> (q.v.), which suggests that he might be the unknown S.
-S. whose initials are on the title-page of <i>The Honest Lawyer</i>
-(1616).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">SIR PHILIP SIDNEY (1554–86).</p>
-
-<p>Both his entertainments were printed for the first time with the third
-(1598) edition of the <i>Arcadia</i>.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Lady of May. 1579</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>1598. The Countesse of Pembrokes Arcadia. Written by Sir Philip Sidney
-Knight. Now the third time published, with sundry new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_492">[492]</span> additions of
-the same Author. <i>For William Ponsonby.</i> [The description of
-the entertainment follows <i>Astrophel and Stella</i> among the ‘new
-additions’, beginning at the head of sig. 3 B3<sup>v</sup>, without title or
-date.]</p>
-
-<p>Reprints in 1599, 1605, 1613, 1621, 1622, 1623, 1627, 1629, 1633, 1638,
-1655, 1662, 1674 editions of the <i>Arcadia</i>.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Nichols, <i>Elizabeth<sup>1, 2</sup></i>, ii. 94
-(1788–1823), and Collections of Sidney’s <i>Works</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The entertainment was in the Garden. As the Queen entered the grove,
-An Honest Man’s Wife of the Country delivered a speech and a written
-supplication in verse, for decision of the case of her daughter. Then
-came the daughter, chosen May Lady, and haled this way by six Shepherds
-on behalf of her lover Espilus and six Foresters on behalf of her
-lover Therion. The case was put to the Queen by Laius an old Shepherd,
-Rombus a Schoolmaster, and finally the May Lady herself. Espilus,
-accompanied by the Shepherds with recorders, and Therion, accompanied
-by the Foresters with cornets, sang in rivalry. A ‘contention’ followed
-between Dorcas, an old Shepherd, and Rixus, a young Forester, ‘whether
-of their fellows had sung better, and whether the estate of shepherds
-or foresters were the more worshipful’. Rombus tried to intervene. The
-May Lady appealed to the Queen, who decided for Espilus. Shepherds and
-Foresters made a consort together, Espilus sang a song, and the May
-Lady took her leave.</p>
-
-<p>Nichols assigns the entertainment to Elizabeth’s Wanstead visit of
-1578. But it might also belong to that of 1579, and possibly to that
-of 1582. In 1579, but not in 1578, the visit covered May Day. The
-references in the text are, however, to the month of May, rather than
-to May Day.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Pastoral Dialogue, c. 1580</i></p>
-
-<p>1598. A Dialogue between two Shepherds, Vttered in a Pastorall Show at
-Wilton. [Appended to <i>Arcadia</i>; cf. <i>supra</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> in A. B. Grosart, <i>Poems of Sidney</i> (1877), ii. 50.</p>
-
-<p>This dialogue between Dick and Will appears to belong to the series of
-poems motived by Sidney’s love for Penelope Devereux. It must therefore
-date between August 1577, when Sidney first visited his sister, Lady
-Pembroke, at Wilton, and his own marriage on 20 Sept. 1583. There is no
-indication that the Queen was present; not improbably the ‘Show’ took
-place while Sidney was out of favour at Court, and was living at Wilton
-from March to August 1580.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN SINGER (?-1603 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>On Singer’s career as an actor, see ch. xv.</p>
-
-<p>On 13 Jan. 1603, about which date he apparently retired from the
-Admiral’s, Henslowe paid him £5 ‘for his playe called Syngers
-vallentarey’ (Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, i. 173; ii. 226). I think the term
-‘vallentarey’ must be used by Henslowe, rightly or wrongly, in the
-sense of ‘valedictory’. <i>Quips on Questions</i> (1600), a book of
-‘themes’, is not his, but Armin’s (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_493">[493]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM SLY (?-1608).</p>
-
-<p>On Sly’s career as an actor, see ch. xv.</p>
-
-<p>He has been guessed at as the author of <i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i>
-(cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">W. SMITH.</p>
-
-<p>There are traceable (<i>a</i>) Wentworth Smith, who wrote plays for
-Henslowe’s companies, the Admiral’s, and Worcester’s during 1601–3
-(<i>vide infra</i>) and witnessed the will of W. Haughton in 1605;
-(<i>b</i>) a W. Smith, who wrote <i>Hector of Germany</i> and <i>The
-Freeman’s Honour</i> (<i>vide infra</i>); (<i>c</i>) a ‘Smith’, whose
-<i>Fair Foul One</i> Herbert licensed on 28 Nov. 1623 (Chalmers, <i>S.
-A.</i> 216; Herbert, 26); (<i>d</i>) if Warburton can be trusted, a
-‘Will. Smithe’, whose <i>S<sup>t</sup> George for England</i> his cook burnt
-(<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 231). It is possible that (<i>a</i>) and
-(<i>b</i>) may be identical. A long space of time separates (<i>b</i>)
-and (<i>c</i>), and if (<i>d</i>) is to be identified with any other,
-it may most plausibly be with (<i>c</i>). There is nothing to connect
-any one of them with the William Smith who published sonnets under
-the title of <i>Chloris</i> (1596), or with any other member of this
-infernal family, and the ‘W. S.’ of the anonymous <i>Locrine</i>
-(1595), <i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i> (1602), <i>The Puritan</i> (1607)
-is more probably, in each case, aimed at Shakespeare.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Hector of Germany, c. 1615</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1615, April 24 (Buck). ‘A play called The Hector of
-Germany, or the Palsgraue is a harmeles thinge.’ <i>Josias Harrison</i>
-(Arber, iii. 566). [The four last words of the title are scored
-through.]</p>
-
-<p>1615. The Hector of Germaine, or the Palsgrave, Prime Elector. A
-New Play, an Honourable Hystorie. As it hath beene publikely Acted
-at the Red Bull, and at the Curtaine, by a Companie of Young Men of
-this Citie. Made by W. Smith, with new Additions. <i>Thomas Creede
-for Josias Harrison.</i> [Epistle to Sir John Swinnerton, signed ‘W.
-Smith’; Prologue; after text, ‘Finis. W. Smyth.’ Some copies have a
-variant t.p.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by L. W. Payne (1906, <i>Pennsylvania Univ. Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The epistle says ‘I have begun in a former Play, called the Freemans
-Honour, acted by the Now-Seruants of the Kings Maiestie, to
-dignifie the worthy Companie of the Marchantaylors’. If the phrase
-‘Now-Seruants’ implies production before 1603, the identification of W.
-Smith and Wentworth Smith becomes very probable. The prologue explains
-that the Palsgrave is not Frederick, since ‘Authorities sterne brow’
-would not permit ‘To bring him while he lives upon the stage’, and
-apologizes for the performance by ‘men of trade’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Henslowe assigns to Wentworth Smith a share in the following plays:</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1 smaller"><i>Plays for the Admiral’s, 1601–2</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i) <i>The Conquest of the West Indies.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Haughton, Apr.–Sept. 1601.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_494">[494]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ii) <i>1 Cardinal Wolsey.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Drayton, and Munday, Aug.–Nov. 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii), (iv) <i>1, 2 The Six Clothiers.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Hathway and Haughton, Oct.–Nov. 1601. Apparently Part 2 was not
-finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>Too Good to be True.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle and Hathway, Nov. 1601–Jan. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>Love Parts Friendship.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, May 1602, conjectured to be the anonymous <i>Trial of
-Chivalry</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>Merry as May be.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Hathway, Nov. 1602.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1 smaller"><i>Plays for Worcester’s, 1602–3</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>Albere Galles.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Heywood, Sept. 1602, possibly identical with the anonymous
-<i>Nobody and Somebody</i> (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Marshal Osric.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Heywood, Sept. 1602, conceivably identical with <i>The Royal King
-and the Loyal Subject</i>, printed (1637) as by Heywood (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>The Three</i> (or <i>Two</i>) <i>Brothers</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Oct. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>1 Lady Jane.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dekker, Heywood, and Webster, Oct. 1602. It is not
-certain that Smith, or any one but Dekker, had a hand in Part 2, which
-was apparently not finished. Part 1 is doubtless represented by the
-extant <i>Sir Thomas Wyatt</i> of Dekker (q.v.) and Webster, in which
-nothing is at all obviously traceable to Smith.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xii), (xiii) <i>1, 2 The Black Dog of Newgate.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day, Hathway, and another, Nov. 1602–Feb. 1603.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiv) <i>The Unfortunate General.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Day and Hathway, Jan. 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xv) <i>The Italian Tragedy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">March 1603.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">EDMUND SPENSER (1552–99).</p>
-
-<p>The only record of Spenser’s dramatic experiments, unless they are
-buried amongst the anonymous plays of the Revels Accounts, is to be
-found in his correspondence of April 1580 with Gabriel Harvey, who
-wrote, ‘I imagine your Magnificenza will hold us in suspense ... for
-your nine English Commedies’, and again, ‘I am void of all judgment if
-your Nine Comedies, whereunto in imitation of Herodotus, you give the
-names of the Nine Muses (and in one mans fancy not unworthily) come
-not nearer Ariosto’s Comedies, either for the fineness of plausible
-elocution, or the rareness of Poetical Invention, than that Elvish
-Queen doth to his Orlando Furioso’ (<i>Two other Very Commendable
-Letters</i>, in Harvey’s <i>Works</i>, i. 67, 95). I can hardly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_495">[495]</span>
-suppose that the manuscript play of ‘Farry Queen’ in Warburton’s list
-(<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 232) had any connexion with Spenser’s comedies.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROD. STAFFORD.</p>
-
-<p>Probably the ‘Rod. Staff.’ who collaborated with Robert Wilmot (q.v.)
-in the Inner Temple play of <i>Gismond of Salerne</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM STANLEY, EARL OF DERBY (1561–1642).</p>
-
-<p>Derby seems to have had players from 1594 to 1618, who presumably
-acted the comedies which he was said to be ‘penning’ in June 1599
-(cf. ch. xiii), but none of these can be identified, although the
-company’s anonymous <i>Trial of Chivalry</i> (1605) needs an author. A
-fantastic theory that his plays were for the Chamberlain’s, and that
-he wrote them under the name of William Shakespeare, was promulgated
-by J. Greenstreet in <i>The Genealogist</i>, n.s. vii. 205; viii. 8,
-137, and has been elaborately developed by A. Lefranc in <i>Sous le
-Masque de ‘William Shakespeare’</i> (1919) and later papers in <i>Le
-Flambeau</i> and elsewhere. <i>A Midsummer Night’s Dream</i> was not
-impossibly written for his wedding on 26 Jan. 1595 (cf. App. A and
-<i>Shakespeare Homage</i>, 154).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN STEPHENS (&gt; 1611–1617 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>A Gloucester man, who entered Lincoln’s Inn in 1611, but is only known
-by his slight literary performances, of which the most important are
-his <i>Essayes</i> of 1615 (cf. App. C, No. lx).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Cynthia’s Revenge &gt; 1613</i></p>
-
-<p>1613. Cinthias Revenge: or Maenanders Extasie. Written by John
-Stephens, Gent. <i>For Roger Barnes.</i> [There are two variant t.ps.
-of which one omits the author’s name. Epistle to Io. Dickinson, signed
-‘I. S.’; Epistle to the Reader; Argument; Commendatory Verses, signed
-‘F. C.’, ‘B. I.’, ‘G. Rogers’, ‘Tho. Danet’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertation</i>: P. Simpson, <i>The Authorship and Original Issue
-of C. R.</i> (1907, <i>M. L. R.</i> ii. 348).</p>
-
-<p>The epistle to the reader says that the author’s name is ‘purposly
-concealed ... from the impression’, which accounts for the change of
-title-page. Stephens claims the authorship in the second edition of his
-<i>Essayes</i> (1615). Kirkman (Greg, <i>Masques</i>, lxii) was misled
-into assigning it to ‘John Swallow’, by a too literal interpretation of
-F. C.’s lines:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One Swallow makes no Summer, most men say,</div>
- <div>But who disproues that Prouerbe, made this Play.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN STUDLEY (<i>c.</i> 1545–<i>c.</i> 1590).</p>
-
-<p>Translator of Seneca (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT TAILOR (<i>c.</i> 1613).</p>
-
-<p>Tailor also published settings to <i>Sacred Hymns</i> (1615) and wrote
-commendatory verses to John Taylor’s <i>The Nipping or Snipping of
-Abuses</i> (1614).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_496">[496]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Hog Hath Lost His Pearl. 1613</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1614, May 23, 1614 (Taverner and Buck). ‘A play booke
-called Hogge hath lost his pearle.’ <i>Richard Redmer</i> (Arber, iii.
-547).</p>
-
-<p>1614. The Hogge hath lost his Pearle. A Comedy. Divers times Publikely
-acted, by certaine London Prentices. By Robert Tailor. <i>For Richard
-Redmer.</i> [Prologue and Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> iii).</p>
-
-<p>Sir H. Wotton wrote to Sir Edmund Bacon (Wotton, ii. 13): ‘On Sunday
-last at night, and no longer, some sixteen apprentices (of what sort
-you shall guess by the rest of the story) having secretly learnt a
-new play without book, intituled <i>The Hog hath lost his Pearl</i>,
-took up the White-Fryers for their theatre: and having invited thither
-(as it should seem) rather their mistresses than their masters; who
-were all to enter <i>per bullettini</i> for a note of distinction from
-ordinary comedians, towards the end of the play the sheriffs (who by
-chance had heard of it) came in (as they say) and carried some six or
-seven of them to perform the last act at Bridewel; the rest are fled.
-Now it is strange to hear how sharp-witted the City is, for they will
-needs have Sir John Swinerton, the Lord Mayor, be meant by the Hog,
-and the late Lord Treasurer [Lord Salisbury] by the Pearl.’ Swinnerton
-was Lord Mayor in 1612–13. The letter is only dated ‘Tuesday’, but
-refers to the departure of the King, which was 22 Feb. 1613, as on the
-previous day. This would give the first Sunday in Lent (21 Feb.) for
-the date of production. The phrase (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i) ‘Shrove-Tuesday
-is at hand’ suggests 14 Feb., but the date originally intended was
-very likely altered. The Prologue refers to the difficulties of the
-producers. The play had been ‘toss’d from one house to another’. It
-does not grunt at ‘state-affairs’ or ‘city vices’. There had been
-attempts to ‘prevent’ it, but it ‘hath a Knight’s license’, doubtless
-Sir George Buck’s. In <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i is some chaff, apparently directed
-at Garlic and the Fortune, and an interview between a player and one
-Haddit, who writes a jig called <i>Who Buys my Four Ropes of Hard
-Onions</i> for four angels, and a promise of a box for a new play.
-Fleay, ii. 256, identifies Haddit with Dekker, but his reasons do
-not bear analysis, and Haddit is no professional playwright, but a
-gallant who has run through his fortune. A passage in Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span>
-(Dodsley, p. 465) bears out the suggestion of satire on the house of
-Cecil.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD TARLTON (?-1588).</p>
-
-<p>On his career as an actor, cf. ch. xv.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Seven Deadly Sins. 1585</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Dulwich MS.</i> xix, ‘The platt of The secound parte
-of the Seuen Deadlie sinns.’ [This was found pasted inside the boards
-forming the cover to a manuscript play of the seventeenth century,
-<i>The Tell Tale</i> (<i>Dulwich MS.</i> xx).]</p>
-
-<p>The text is given by Malone, <i>Supplement</i> (1780), i. 60;
-Steevens,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_497">[497]</span> <i>Variorum</i> (1803), iii. 404; Boswell, <i>Variorum</i>
-(1821), iii. 348; Collier, iii. 197; Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 129;
-and a photographic facsimile by W. Young, <i>History of Dulwich</i>
-(1889), ii. 5.</p>
-
-<p>The ‘platt’ names a number of actors and may thereby be assigned
-to a revival by the Admiral’s or Strange’s men about 1590 (cf. ch.
-xiii). The play consisted of three episodes illustrating Envy, Sloth,
-and Lechery, together with an Induction. This renders plausible the
-conjecture of Fleay, 83, supported by Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 153,
-that it is the <i>Four Plays in One</i> revived by Strange’s for
-Henslowe on 6 March 1592. And if so, the original two parts may be
-traceable in the <i>Five Plays in One</i> and the <i>Three Plays in
-One</i> of the Queen’s men in 1585. Tarlton was of course a Queen’s
-man, and evidence of his authorship is furnished by Gabriel Harvey,
-who in his <i>Four Letters</i> (1592, <i>Works</i>, i. 194) attacks
-Nashe’s <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (1592) as ‘not Dunsically botched-vp,
-but right-formally conueied, according to the stile, and tenour of
-Tarletons president, his famous play of the seauen Deadly sinnes;
-which most deadly, but most liuely playe, I might haue seene in
-London; and was verie gently inuited thereunto at Oxford by Tarleton
-himselfe’. Nashe defends himself against the charge of plagiarism in
-his <i>Strange News</i> (1592, <i>Works</i>, i. 304, 318), and confirms
-the indication of authorship.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Tarlton has been suggested as the author of the anonymous <i>Famous
-Victories of Henry V</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN TAYLOR (1580–1653).</p>
-
-<p>Known as the Water Poet. His description of the festivities at the
-wedding of Princess Elizabeth in 1613 (cf. ch. xxiv, C) is only one
-of innumerable pamphlets in verse and prose, several of which throw
-light on stage history. Many of these were collected in his folio
-<i>Workes</i> of 1630, reprinted with others of his writings by the
-Spenser Society during 1868–78. There is also a collection by C.
-Hindley (1872).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CHARLES TILNEY (<i>ob.</i> 1586).</p>
-
-<p>Said, on manuscript authority alleged by Collier, to be the author of
-<i>Locrine</i> (cf. ch. xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS TOMKIS (&gt; 1597–1614 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>Tomkis entered Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1597, took his B.A. in
-1600 and his M.A. in 1604, and became Fellow of Trinity in the same
-year. He has been confused by Fleay, ii. 260, and others with various
-members of a musical family of Tomkins.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lingua. 1602 &lt; &gt; 7</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, Feb. 23 (Wilson). ‘A Commedie called Lingua.’
-<i>Simon Waterson</i> (Arber, iii. 340).</p>
-
-<p>1607. Lingua: Or The Combat of the Tongue, And the fiue Senses. For
-Superiority. <i>G. Eld for Simon Waterson.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>1617; 1622; n.d.; 1632; 1657.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_498">[498]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1874) and by W. Scott
-(1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: F. S. Boas, <i>Macbeth and L.</i> (1909,
-<i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 517).</p>
-
-<p>Winstanley (1687) assigned the play to Antony Brewer, but Sir J.
-Harington, in a memorandum printed by F. J. Furnivall from <i>Addl.
-MS.</i> 27632 in <i>7 N. Q.</i> ix. 382, notes ‘The combat of Lingua
-made by Thom. Tomkis of Trinity colledge in Cambridge’, and this is
-rendered plausible by the resemblance of the play to <i>Albumazar</i>.
-It is clearly of an academic type. As to the date there is less
-certainty. G. C. Moore Smith (<i>M. L. R.</i> iii. 146) supports 1602
-by a theory that a compliment (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> vii) to Queen Psyche is
-really meant for Elizabeth, and contains allusions to notable events of
-her reign. I do not find his interpretations very convincing, although
-I should not like to say that they are impossible. Fleay, ii. 261,
-starting from a tradition handed down by the publisher of 1657 that
-Oliver Cromwell acted in the play, conjectures that the play formed
-part of Sir Oliver Cromwell’s entertainment of James at Hinchinbrook on
-27–9 April 1603, and that his four-year-old nephew took the four-line
-part of Small Beer (<i>IV.</i> v). Either date would fit in with the
-remark in <i>III.</i> v, ‘About the year 1602 many used this skew kind
-of language’. Boas, however, prefers a date near that of publication,
-on account of similarities to passages in <i>Macbeth</i>. The play was
-translated as <i>Speculum Aestheticum</i> for Maurice of Hesse-Cassel
-in 1613 by Johannes Rhenanus, who probably accompanied Prince Otto to
-England in 1611; cf. P. Losch, <i>Johannes Rhenanus</i> (1895).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Albumazar. 1615</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1615, April 28 (Nidd). ‘Albumazar a comedie acted before
-his Maiestie at Cambridg 10<sup>o</sup> Martii 1614.’ <i>Nicholas Okes</i>
-(Arber, iii. 566).</p>
-
-<p>1615. Albumazar. A Comedy presented before the Kings Maiestie at
-Cambridge, the ninth of March, 1614. By the Gentlemen of Trinitie
-Colledge. <i>Nicholas Okes for Walter Burre.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>1615. <i>Nicholas Okes for Walter Burre.</i> [Another edition with the
-same t.p.]</p>
-
-<p>1634.... Newly revised and corrected by a speciall Hand. <i>Nicholas
-Okes.</i></p>
-
-<p>1634. <i>Nicholas Okes.</i></p>
-
-<p>1668.... As it is now Acted at His Highness the Duke of York’s Theatre.
-<i>For Thomas Dring.</i> [Prologue by Dryden.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1875) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> ii).</p>
-
-<p>The play is assigned to ‘M<sup>r</sup> Tomkis, Trinit.’ in an account of the
-royal visit given by S. Pegge from Sir Edward Dering’s MS. in <i>Gent.
-Mag.</i> xxvi. 224, and a bursar’s account-book for 1615 has the
-entry, ‘Given M<sup>r</sup>. Tomkis for his paines in penning and ordering the
-Englishe Commedie at our Masters appoyntment, xx<sup>ll</sup>’ (<i>3 N. Q.</i>
-xii. 155). Chamberlain wrote to Carleton (Birch, i. 304) that ‘there
-was no great matter in it more than one good clown’s part’. It is an
-adaptation of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_499">[499]</span> Giambattista Porta’s <i>L’Astrologo</i> (1606). No
-importance is to be attached to the suggestion of H. I. in <i>3 N.
-Q.</i> ix. 178, 259, 302, that Shakespeare was the author and wrote
-manuscript notes in a copy possessed by H. I. Dryden regards the play
-as the model of Jonson’s <i>Alchemist</i> (1610):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Subtle was got by our Albumazar,</div>
- <div>That Alchymist by our Astrologer.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Unless Dryden was mistaken, the performance in 1615 was
-only a revival, but the payment for ‘penning’ makes this improbable.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Later Play</i></p>
-
-<p>G. C. Moore Smith (<i>M. L. R.</i> iii. 149) supports the attribution
-by Winstanley to Tomkis of <i>Pathomachia or the Battle of
-Affections</i> (1630), also called in a running title and in <i>Bodl.
-MS. Eng. Misc.</i> e. 5 <i>Love’s Load-stone</i>, a University play of
-<i>c.</i> 1616, in which there are two references to ‘Madame Lingua’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CYRIL TOURNEUR (?-1626).</p>
-
-<p>Tourneur, or Turnor, first appears as the author of a satire, <i>The
-Transformed Metamorphosis</i> (1600), but his history and relationships
-to the Cecils and to Sir Francis Vere suggest that he was connected
-with a Richard Turnor who served in the Low Countries as water-bailiff
-and afterwards Lieutenant of Brill during 1585–96. His career as a
-dramatist was over by 1613, and from December of that year to his death
-on 28 Feb. 1626 he seems himself to have been employed on foreign
-service, mainly in the Low Countries but finally at Cadiz, where he was
-secretary to the council of war under Sir Edward Cecil in 1625. He died
-in Ireland and left a widow Mary.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1878. J. C. Collins, <i>The Plays and Poems of C. T.</i> 2 vols.</p>
-
-<p>1888. J. A. Symonds, <i>Webster and Tourneur</i> (<i>Mermaid
-Series</i>).</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: G. Goodwin in <i>Academy</i> (9 May 1891); T.
-Seccombe in <i>D. N. B.</i> (1899).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Atheist’s Tragedy. 1607 &lt; &gt; 11</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1611, Sept. 14 (Buck). ‘A booke called, The tragedy of the
-Atheist.’ <i>John Stepneth</i> (Arber, iii. 467).</p>
-
-<p>1611. The Atheist’s Tragedie: Or The honest Man’s Reuenge, As in diuers
-places it hath often beene Acted. Written by Cyril Tourneur. <i>For
-John Stepneth and Richard Redmer.</i></p>
-
-<p>1612. <i>For John Stepneth and Richard Redmer.</i> [Another issue.]</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii. 263, attempts to date the play before the close of the siege
-of Ostend in 1604, but, as E. E. Stoll, <i>John Webster</i>, 210,
-points out, this merely dates the historic action and proves nothing
-as to composition. Stoll himself finds some plausible reminiscences of
-<i>King Lear</i> (1606) and suggests a date near that of publication.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_500">[500]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">LOST PLAYS</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Nobleman. c. 1612</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1612, Feb. 15 (Buck). ‘A play booke beinge a Trage-comedye
-called, The Noble man written by Cyril Tourneur.’ <i>Edward Blount</i>
-(Arber, iii. 478).</p>
-
-<p>1653, Sept. 9. ‘The Nobleman, or Great Man, by Cyrill Tourneur.’
-<i>Humphrey Moseley</i> (Eyre, i. 428).</p>
-
-<p>The play was acted by the King’s at Court on 23 Feb. 1612 and again
-during the winter of 1612–13. Warburton’s list of plays burnt by
-his cook (<i>3 Library</i>, ii. 232) contains distinct entries of
-‘The Great Man T.’ and ‘The Nobleman T. C. Cyrill Turñuer’. Hazlitt,
-<i>Manual</i>, 167, says (1892): ‘Dr. Furnivall told me many years ago
-that the MS. was in the hands of a gentleman at Oxford, who was editing
-Tourneur’s Works; but I have heard nothing further of it. Music to a
-piece called The Nobleman is in <i>Addl. MS. B.M.</i> 10444.’</p>
-
-<p>For <i>The Arraignment of London</i> (1613) v.s. Daborne.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Tourneur’s hand has been sought in the <i>Honest Man’s Fortune</i> of
-the Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher series, and in <i>Charlemagne</i>,
-<i>Revenger’s Tragedy</i>, and <i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> (cf. ch.
-xxiv).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">NICHOLAS TROTTE (<i>c.</i> 1588).</p>
-
-<p>A Gray’s Inn lawyer, who wrote an ‘Introduction’ for the <i>Misfortunes
-of Arthur</i> of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) in 1588.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">RICHARD VENNAR (<i>c.</i> 1555–1615?).</p>
-
-<p>Vennar (Vennard), who has often been confused with William Fennor, a
-popular rhymer, was of Balliol and Lincoln’s Inn, and lived a shifty
-life, which ended about 1615 in a debtor’s prison. Its outstanding
-feature was the affair of <i>England’s Joy</i>, but in 1606 he is said
-(<i>D. N. B.</i>) to have been in trouble for an attempt to defraud Sir
-John Spencer of £500 towards the preparation of an imaginary mask under
-the patronage of Sir John Watts, the Lord Mayor.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>England’s Joy. 1602</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>Broadsheet</i>] The Plot of the Play, called England’s Joy. To be
-Played at the Swan this 6 of Nouember, 1602. [No. 98 in collection of
-Society of Antiquaries.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Reprints</i> by W. Park in <i>Harleian Miscellany</i>
-(1813), x. 198; S. Lee (1887, <i>vide infra</i>); W. Martin
-(1913, <i>vide infra</i>); W. J. Lawrence (1913, <i>vide
-infra</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: S. Lee, <i>The Topical Side of
-the Elizabethan Drama</i> (<i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 1887–92, 1); T. S.
-Graves, <i>A Note on the Swan Theatre</i> (1912, <i>M. P.</i> ix. 431),
-<i>Tricks of Elizabethan Showmen</i> (<i>South Atlantic Quarterly</i>,
-April 1915); W. Martin, <i>An Elizabethan Theatre Programme</i> (1913,
-<i>Selborne Magazine</i>, xxiv. 16); W. J. Lawrence (ii. 57), <i>The
-Origin of the Theatre Programme</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_501">[501]</span></p>
-
-<p>The document appears to be a ‘bill’. It is 12¾ by 7¾ inches, and
-contains a synopsis under nine heads, beginning with the civil wars
-from Edward III to Mary ‘induct by shew and in Action’, and continuing
-with episodes from the reign of Elizabeth, who is England’s Joy. In
-sc. viii ‘a great triumph is made with fighting of twelue Gentlemen
-at Barriers’, and in sc. ix Elizabeth ‘is taken vp into Heauen, when
-presently appeares, a Throne of blessed Soules, and beneath vnder the
-Stage set forth with strange fireworkes, diuers blacke and damned
-Soules, wonderfully discribed in their seuerall torments’. Apart from
-the bill, Vennar must have given it out that the performers were to be
-amateurs. Chamberlain, 163, writes to Carleton on 19 Nov. 1602:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘And, now we are in mirth, I must not forget to tell you of
-a cousening prancke of one Venner, of Lincolns Inne, that
-gave out bills of a famous play on Satterday was sevenight
-on the Banckeside, to be acted only by certain gentlemen
-and gentlewomen of account. The price at cumming in was two
-shillings or eighteen pence at least; and when he had gotten
-most part of the mony into his hands, he wold have shewed them
-a faire paire of heeles, but he was not so nimble to get up on
-horse-backe, but that he was faine to forsake that course, and
-betake himselfe to the water, where he was pursued and taken,
-and brought before the Lord Chiefe Justice, who wold make
-nothing of it but a jest and a merriment, and bounde him over
-in five pound to appeare at the sessions. In the meane time
-the common people, when they saw themselves deluded, revenged
-themselves upon the hangings, curtains, chairs, stooles, walles,
-and whatsoever came in theire way, very outragiously, and made
-great spoile; there was great store of good companie, and many
-noblemen.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Similarly John Manningham in his <i>Diary</i>, 82, 93,
-notes in Nov. 1602, how</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘Vennar, a gent. of Lincolnes, who had lately playd a notable
-cunni-catching tricke, and gulled many under couller of a play
-to be of gent. and reuerens, comming to the court since in a
-blacke suit, bootes and golden spurres without a rapier, one
-told him he was not well suited; the golden spurres and his
-brazen face uns[uited].’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">On 27 Nov. he adds, ‘When one said that Vennar the graund
-connicatcher had golden spurres and a brazen face, “It seemes”, said R.
-R. “he hath some mettall in him.”’ Vennar’s own account of ‘my publique
-default of the Swan, where not a collier but cals his deere 12 pense to
-witnesse the disaster of the day’ was given many years later in ‘<i>An
-Apology</i>: Written by Richard Vennar, of Lincolnes Inne, abusively
-called Englands Joy. 1614’, printed by Collier in <i>Illustrations</i>
-(1866), iii. It vies in impudence with the original offence. He had
-been in prison and was in debt, and ‘saw daily offering to the God of
-pleasure, resident at the Globe on the Banke-side’. This suggested
-his show, ‘for which they should give double payment, to the intent
-onely, men of ability might make the purchase without repentance’. He
-continues:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘My devise was all sorts of musique, beginning with chambers,
-the harpe of war, and ending with hounds, the cry of peace, of
-which I was doubly provided for Fox and Hare. The report of
-gentlemen and gentlewomens<span class="pagenum" id="Page_502">[502]</span> actions, being indeed the flagge
-to our theater, was not meerely falcification, for I had
-divers Chorus to bee spoken by men of good birth, schollers by
-profession, protesting that the businesse was meerely abused
-by the comming of some beagles upon mee that were none of the
-intended kennell: I meane baylifes, who, siezing mee before the
-first entrance, spoke an Epilogue instead of a Prologue. This
-changed the play into the hunting of the fox, which, that the
-world may know for a verity, I heere promise the next tearme,
-with the true history of my life, to bee publiquely presented,
-to insert, in place of musicke for the actes, all those
-intendments prepared for that daies enterteinment.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Later on he says, ‘I presented you with a dumbe show’,
-and jests on getting ‘so much mony for six verses’, which, I suppose,
-means that the performance was intended to be a spoken one, but was
-broken off during the prologue. Apparently the new entertainment
-contemplated by Vennar in 1614 was in fact given, not by him but by
-William Fennor, to whom John Taylor writes in his <i>A Cast Over
-Water</i> (1615):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thou brag’st what fame thou got’st upon the stage.</div>
- <div>Indeed, thou set’st the people in a rage</div>
- <div>In playing England’s Joy, that every man</div>
- <div>Did judge it worse than that was done at Swan.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="spacing">*****</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Upon S. George’s day last, sir, you gave</div>
- <div>To eight Knights of the Garter (like a knave),</div>
- <div>Eight manuscripts (or Books) all fairelie writ,</div>
- <div>Informing them, they were your mother wit:</div>
- <div>And you compil’d them; then were you regarded,</div>
- <div>And for another’s wit was well rewarded.</div>
- <div>All this is true, and this I dare maintaine,</div>
- <div>The matter came from out a learned braine:</div>
- <div>And poor old <i>Vennor</i> that plaine dealing man,</div>
- <div>Who acted England’s Joy first at the Swan,</div>
- <div>Paid eight crowns for the writing of these things.</div>
- <div>Besides the covers, and the silken strings.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Robin Goodfellow, in Jonson’s <i>Love Restored</i> (<i>1612</i>), calls
-the absence of a mask ‘a fine trick, a piece of England’s Joy’, and
-three characters in the <i>Masque of Augurs</i> (<i>1622</i>) are said
-to be ‘three of those gentlewomen that should have acted in that famous
-matter of England’s Joy in six hundred and three’&mdash;apparently a slip
-of Jonson’s as to the exact date. Other allusions to the ‘gullery’ are
-in Saville, <i>Entertainment of King James at Theobalds</i> (1603); R.
-Brathwaite, <i>The Poet’s Palfrey</i> (<i>Strappado for the Devil</i>,
-ed. J. W. Ebsworth, 160); J. Suckling, <i>The Goblins</i> (ed. Hazlitt,
-ii. 52); W. Davenant, <i>Siege of Rhodes</i>, Pt. ii, prol. It may
-be added that Vennar’s cozenage was perhaps suggested by traditional
-stories of similar tricks. One is ascribed to one Qualitees in <i>Merry
-Tales, Wittie Questions and Quick Answeres</i>, cxxxiii (1567, Hazlitt,
-<i>Jest Books</i>, i. 145). In this bills were set up ‘vpon postes
-aboute London’ for ‘an antycke plaie’ at Northumberland Place and
-‘all they that shoulde playe therin were gentilmen’. Another is the
-subject of one of the <i>Jests</i> of George Peele (Bullen, ii. 389).
-W. Fennor, <i>The Compters Commonwealth</i> (1617),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_503">[503]</span> 64, tells of an
-adventure of ‘one M<sup>r</sup>. Venard (that went by the name of Englands Joy)’
-in jail, where he afterwards died.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">EDWARD DE VERE, EARL OF OXFORD (1550–1604).</p>
-
-<p>Meres (1598) includes the earl in his list of ‘the best for Comedy
-amongst vs’ but although Oxford had theatrical servants at intervals
-from 1580 to 1602 (cf. ch. xiii), little is known of their plays, and
-none can be assigned to him, although the anonymous <i>The Weakest
-Goeth to the Wall</i> (1600) calls for an author. J. T. Looney,
-<i>Shakespeare Identified</i> (1920), gives him Shakespeare’s plays,
-many of which were written after his death.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">FRANCIS VERNEY (1584–1615).</p>
-
-<p>Francis, the eldest son of Sir Edmund Verney of Penley, Herts., and
-Claydon, Bucks., entered Trinity College, Oxford, in 1600, and was
-knighted on 14 March 1604. As a result of family disputes, he left
-England about 1608, and became a pirate in the Mediterranean, dying at
-Messina on 6 Sept. 1615 (<i>Verney Memoirs<sup>2</sup></i>, i. 47). G. C. Moore
-Smith (<i>M. L. R.</i> iii. 151) gives him the following play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Antipoe. 1603 &lt; &gt; 8</i></p>
-
-<p>[<i>MS.</i>] <i>Bodl. MS.</i> 31041, ‘The tragedye of Antipoe with
-other poetical verses written by mee Nic<sup>o</sup>. Leatt Jun. in Allicant In
-June 1622’, with Epistles to James and the Reader by ‘Francis Verney’.
-Presumably Verney was the author, and Nicolas only a scribe.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ANTONY WADESON (<i>c.</i> 1601).</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe made payments to him on behalf of the Admiral’s in June and
-July 1601 for a play called <i>The Honourable Life of the Humorous
-Earl of Gloucester, with his Conquest of Portugal</i>, but these only
-amounted to 30<i>s.</i>, so that possibly the play was not finished.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>The anonymous <i>Look About You</i> (cf. ch. xxiv) has been ascribed to
-Wadeson.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">LEWIS WAGER (<i>c.</i> 1560).</p>
-
-<p>Wager became Rector of St. James Garlickhithe on 28 March 1560. Some
-resemblance of his style to that of W. Wager has led to an assumption
-that they were related. He was a corrector of books.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Life and Repentance of Mary Magdalene &gt; 1566</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1566–7. ‘An interlude of the Repentaunce of Mary
-Magdalen.’ <i>John Charlwood</i> (Arber, i. 335).</p>
-
-<p>1566. A new Enterlude, neuer before this tyme imprinted, entreating
-of the Life and Repentaunce of Marie Magdalene: not only godlie,
-learned and fruitefull, but also well furnished with pleasaunt myrth
-and pastime, very delectable for those which shall heare or reade the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_504">[504]</span>
-same. Made by the learned clarke Lewis Wager. <i>John Charlwood.</i>
-[Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p>1567. <i>John Charlwood.</i> [Probably a reissue. Two manuscript copies
-in the Dyce collection seem to be made from this edition.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by F. I. Carpenter (1902, 1904, <i>Chicago Decennial
-Publications</i>, ii. 1) and J. S. Farmer (1908, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A play of Protestant tone, with biblical and allegorical characters,
-including ‘Infidelitie the Vice’, intended for four [five] actors.
-There is a Prologue, intended for actors who have ‘vsed this feate at
-the vniuersitie’ and will take ‘half-pence or pence’ from the audience.
-Carpenter dates the play <i>c.</i> 1550; but his chief argument that
-the prologue recommends obedience ‘to the kyng’ is not very convincing.</p>
-
-<p>See also W. Wager, s.v. <i>The Cruel Debtor.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">W. WAGER (<i>c.</i> 1559).</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is known of him beyond his plays and the similarity of his name
-to that of Lewis Wager (q.v.). Joseph Hunter, <i>Chorus Vatum</i>, v.
-90, attempts to identify him with William Gager (q.v.), but this is not
-plausible. On the illegitimate extension of W. into William and other
-bibliographical confusions about the two Wagers, <i>vide</i> W. W.
-Greg, <i>Notes on Dramatic Bibliographers</i> (<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 324).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Longer Thou Livest, the More Fool Thou Art. c. 1559</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1568–9. ‘A ballett the lenger thou leveste the more ffoole
-thow.’ <i>Richard Jones</i> (Arber, i. 386).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> A very mery and Pythie Commedie, called The longer thou
-liuest, the more foole thou art. A Myrrour very necessarie for youth,
-and specially for such as are like to come to dignitie and promotion:
-As it maye well appeare in the Matter folowynge. Newly compiled by W.
-Wager. <i>William Howe for Richard Jones.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by Brandl (1900, <i>Jahrbuch</i> xxxvi. 1) and J. S.
-Farmer (1910, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A Protestant moral of 1,977 lines, with allegorical characters,
-arranged for four actors. Moros enters ‘synging the foote of many
-Songes, as fooles were wont’. Elizabeth is prayed for as queen, but the
-Catholic domination is still recent.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Enough is as Good as a Feast. c. 1560</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> A Comedy or Enterlude intituled, Inough is as good as
-a feast, very fruteful, godly and ful of pleasant mirth. Compiled
-by W. Wager. <i>By John Allde.</i> [The t.p. has also ‘Seuen may
-easely play this Enterlude’, with an arrangement of parts. The play
-was unknown until it appeared in Lord Mostyn’s sale of 1919. The
-seventeenth-century publishers’ lists record the title, but without
-ascription to Wager (Greg, <i>Masques</i>, lxvi).]</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by S. de Ricci (1920, <i>Huntingdon Reprints</i>, ii).</p>
-
-<p>F. S. Boas (<i>T. L. S.</i> 20 Feb. 1919) describes the play as ‘a
-morality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_505">[505]</span> with a controversial Protestant flavour’; at the end Satan
-carries off the Vice, Covetouse, on his back. Elizabeth is prayed for.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Cruel Debtor. c. 1565</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1565–6. ‘A ballet intituled an interlude the Cruell Detter
-by Wager.’ <i>Thomas Colwell</i> (Arber, i. 307).</p>
-
-<p><span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span> Fragments. C. iii in Bagford Collection (<i>Harl. MS.</i>
-5919); D and D 4(?) formerly in collection of W. B. Scott, now in B.M.
-(C. 40, e. 48).</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by F. J. Furnivall (1878, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i>
-1877–9, 2*) and W. W. Greg (1911, <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 314).</p>
-
-<p>The speakers are Rigour, Flattery, Simulation, Ophiletis, Basileus, and
-Proniticus.</p>
-
-<p>R. Imelmann in <i>Herrig’s Archiv</i>, cxi. 209, would assign these
-fragments to Lewis Wager, rather than W. Wager, but the stylistic
-evidence is hardly conclusive either way, and there is no other.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Warburton’s list of manuscripts burnt by his cook (<i>3 Library</i>,
-ii. 232) includes ’Tis Good Sleeping in A Whole Skin W. Wager’.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE WAPULL (<i>c.</i> 1576).</p>
-
-<p>A George Wapull was clerk of the Stationers’ Company from 29 Sept. 1571
-to 30 May 1575. In 1584–5 the company assisted him with 10<i>s.</i>
-‘towards his voyage unto Norembegue’ in America (Arber, i. xliv, 509).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Tide Tarrieth No Man &gt; 1576</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1576, Oct. 22. ‘An Enterlude intituled The tide tariethe
-noe man.’ <i>Hugh Jackson</i> (Arber, ii. 303).</p>
-
-<p>1576. The Tyde taryeth no Man. A Moste Pleasant and merry Commody,
-right pythie and full of delight. Compiled by George Wapull. <i>Hugh
-Jackson.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1864, <i>Illustrations of Early
-English Literature</i>, ii), E. Ruhl (1907, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xliii. 1),
-J. S. Farmer (1910, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A non-controversial moral, with allegorical and typical characters,
-including ‘Courage, the vice’, arranged for four actors.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">WILLIAM WARNER (<i>c.</i> 1558–1609).</p>
-
-<p>Warner was educated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford, and became an attorney.
-His chief work, <i>Albion’s England</i> (1586), was dedicated to
-Henry Lord Hunsdon, and his <i>Syrinx</i> (1585) to Sir George Carey,
-afterwards Lord Hunsdon.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Menaechmi &gt; c. 1592</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, June 10. ‘A booke entituled Menachmi beinge A
-pleasant and fine Conceyted Comedye taken out of the moste excellent
-wittie Poett Plautus chosen purposely from out the reste as leaste
-harmefull and yet moste delightfull.’ <i>Thomas Creede</i> (Arber, ii.
-653).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_506">[506]</span></p>
-
-<p>1595. Menaecmi, A pleasant and fine Conceited Comædie, taken out of
-the most excellent wittie Poet Plautus: Chosen purposely from out the
-rest, as least harmefull, and yet most delightfull. Written in English,
-by W. W. <i>Thomas Creede, sold by William Barley.</i> [Epistle by the
-Printer to the Readers; Argument.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. Nichols (1779, <i>Six Old Plays</i>, i), W. C.
-Hazlitt (1875, <i>Sh. L.</i> ii. 1), and W. H. D. Rouse (1912, <i>Sh.
-Classics</i>).</p>
-
-<p>This translation is generally supposed to have influenced the <i>Comedy
-of Errors</i>. If so, Shakespeare must have had access to it in
-manuscript, and it must have been available before <i>c.</i> 1592. The
-epistle speaks of Warner as ‘having diverse of this Poetes Comedies
-Englished, for the use and delight of his private friends, who in
-Plautus owne words are not able to understand them’. No others are
-known.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">THOMAS WATSON (<i>c.</i> 1557–92).</p>
-
-<p>An Oxford man, who took no degree, and a lawyer, who did not practise,
-Watson became an elegant writer of English and Latin verse. He won the
-patronage of Walsingham at Paris in 1581, and became a member of the
-literary circle of Lyly and Peele. His most important volume of verse
-is the <i>Hekatompathia</i> (1582) dedicated to the Earl of Oxford. At
-the time of his death in Sept. 1592 he was in the service of William
-Cornwallis, who afterwards wrote to Heneage that he ‘could devise
-twenty fictions and knaveryes in a play which was his daily practyse
-and his living’ (<i>Athenaeum</i>, 23 Aug. 1890). This suggests that
-the poet, and not the episcopal author of <i>Absalon</i> (<i>Mediaeval
-Stage</i>, ii. 458), is the Watson included by Meres in 1598 amongst
-our ‘best for Tragedie’. But his plays, other than translations, must,
-if they exist, be sought amongst the anonymous work of 1581–92, where
-it would be an interesting task to reconstruct his individuality. In
-<i>Ulysses upon Ajax</i> (1596) Harington’s anonymous critic says of
-his etymologies of Ajax, ‘Faith, they are trivial, the froth of witty
-Tom Watson’s jests, I heard them in Paris fourteen years ago: besides
-what balductum [trashy] play is not full of them’. In the meantime
-Oliphant (<i>M. P.</i> viii. 437) has suggested that he may be the
-author of <i>Thorny Abbey, or, The London Maid</i>, printed by one R.
-D. with Haughton’s <i>Grim, the Collier of Croydon</i> in <i>Gratiae
-Theatrales</i> (1662) and there assigned to T. W. Oliphant regards
-<i>Thorny Abbey</i> as clearly a late revision of an Elizabethan play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1">TRANSLATION</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Antigone &gt; 1581</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1581, July 31 (Bp. of London). ‘Aphoclis Antigone, Thoma
-Watsono interprete.’ <i>John Wolfe</i> (Arber, ii. 398).</p>
-
-<p>1581. Sophoclis Antigone. Interprete Thoma Watsono I. V. studioso.
-Huic adduntur pompae quaedam, ex singulis Tragoediae actis deriuatae;
-&amp; post eas, totidem themata sententiis refertissima; eodem Thoma
-Watsono Authore. <i>John Wolf.</i> [Latin translation. Verses to Philip
-Earl of Arundel, signed ‘Thomas Watsonus’. Commendatory<span class="pagenum" id="Page_507">[507]</span> Verses by
-Stephanus Broelmannus, Ἰωαννης Κωκος, Philip Harrison, Francis Yomans,
-Christopher Atkinson, C. Downhale, G. Camden.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">JOHN WEBSTER (?-> 1634).</p>
-
-<p>There is little clue to the personal history of John Webster beyond
-the description of him on the title-page of his mayoral pageant
-<i>Monuments of Honour</i> (1624) as ‘Merchant Taylor’, and his claim
-in the epistle to have been born free of the company. The records of
-the Merchant Taylors show that freemen of this name were admitted in
-1571, 1576, and 1617, and that one of them was assessed towards the
-coronation expenses in 1604. A John Webster, Merchant Taylor, also
-received an acknowledgement of a 15<i>s.</i> debt from John and Edward
-Alleyn on 25 July 1591 (Collier, <i>Alleyn Papers</i>, 14). A John
-Webster married Isabel Sutton at St. Leonard’s Shoreditch on 25 July
-1590, and had a daughter Alice baptized there on 9 May 1606. It has
-been taken for granted that none of the sixteenth-century records
-can relate to the dramatist, although they may to his father. This
-presumably rests on the assumption that he must have been a young man
-when he began to write for Henslowe in 1602. It should, however, be
-pointed out that a John Webster, as well as a George Webster, appears
-amongst the Anglo-German actors of Browne’s group in 1596 (cf. ch. xiv)
-and that the financial record in the <i>Alleyn Papers</i> probably
-belongs to a series of transactions concerning the winding up of a
-theatrical company in which Browne and the Alleyns had been interested
-(cf. ch. xiii, s.v. Admiral’s). It is conceivable therefore that
-Webster was an older man than has been suspected and had had a career
-as a player before he became a playwright.</p>
-
-<p>Gildon, <i>Lives of the Poets</i> (1698), reports that Webster was
-parish clerk of St Andrew’s, Holborn. This cannot be confirmed from
-parish books, but may be true.</p>
-
-<p>As a dramatist, Webster generally appears in collaboration, chiefly
-with Dekker, and at rather infrequent intervals from 1602 up to 1624
-or later. In 1602 he wrote commendatory verses for a translation by
-Munday, and in 1612 for Heywood’s <i>Apology for Actors</i>. In 1613 he
-published his elegy <i>A Monumental Column</i> on the death of Prince
-Henry, and recorded his friendship with Chapman. His marked tendency to
-borrow phrases from other writers helps to date his work. He can hardly
-be identified with the illiterate clothworker of the same name, who
-acknowledged his will with a mark on 5 Aug. 1625. But he is referred to
-in the past in Heywood’s <i>Hierarchie of the Angels</i> (1635), Bk.
-iv, p. 206, ‘Fletcher and Webster ... neither was but Iacke’, and was
-probably therefore dead.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Collections</i></p>
-
-<p>1830. A. Dyce. 4 vols. 1857, 1 vol. [Includes <i>Malcontent</i>,
-<i>Appius and Virginia</i>, and <i>Thracian Wonder</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1857. W. C. Hazlitt. 4 vols. (<i>Library of Old Authors</i>).
-[Includes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_508">[508]</span> <i>Appius and Virginia</i>, <i>Thracian Wonder</i>, and
-<i>The Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1888. J. A. Symonds, <i>W. and Tourneur</i> (<i>Mermaid Series</i>).
-[<i>The White Devil</i> and <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>.]</p>
-
-<p>1912. A. H. Thorndike, <i>Webster and Tourneur</i>. (<i>N. E.
-D.</i>) [<i>White Devil</i>, <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, <i>Appius and
-Virginia</i>.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Dissertations</i>: E. Gosse, <i>J. W.</i> (1883,
-<i>Seventeenth-Century Studies</i>); A. C. Swinburne, <i>J. W.</i>
-(1886, <i>Studies in Prose and Poetry</i>, 1894); C. Vopel, <i>J.
-W.</i> (1888, <i>Bremen diss.</i>); M. Meiners, <i>Metrische
-Untersuchungen über den Dramatiker J. W.</i> (1893, <i>Halle
-diss.</i>); W. Archer, <i>Webster, Lamb, and Swinburne</i> (1893,
-<i>New Review</i>, viii. 96); W. von Wurzbach, <i>J. W.</i> (1898,
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxi. 9); J. Morris, <i>J. W.</i> (<i>Fortnightly
-Review</i>, June 1902); E. E. Stoll, <i>J. W.</i> (1905); L. J.
-Sturge, <i>W. and the Law; a Parallel</i> (1906, <i>Jahrbuch</i>,
-xlii, 148); C. Crawford, <i>J. W. and Sir Philip Sidney</i> (1906,
-<i>Collectanea</i>, i. 20), <i>Montaigne, W., and Marston: Donne
-and W.</i> (1907, <i>Collectanea</i>, ii. 1); F. E. Pierce, <i>The
-Collaboration of W. and Dekker</i> (1909, <i>Yale Studies</i>, xxxvii);
-H. D. Sykes, <i>W. and Sir Thomas Overbury</i> (1613, <i>11 N. Q.</i>
-viii. 221, 244, 263, 282, 304); A. F. Bourgeois, <i>W. and the N. E.
-D.</i> (1914, <i>11 N. Q.</i> ix. 302, 324, 343); R. Brooke, <i>J. W.
-and the Elizabethan Drama</i> (1916).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Sir Thomas Wyatt. 1602</i></p>
-
-<p><i>With</i> Chettle, Dekker (q.v.), Heywood, and Smith, for Worcester’s.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Malcontent. 1604</i></p>
-
-<p>Additions to the play of Marston (q.v.) for the King’s.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Westward Ho! 1604</i></p>
-
-<p><i>With</i> Dekker (q.v.) for Paul’s.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Northward Ho! 1605</i></p>
-
-<p><i>With</i> Dekker (q.v.) for Paul’s.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Appius and Virginia. c. 1608.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1654, May 13. ‘A play called Appeus and Virginia Tragedy
-written by John Webster.’ <i>Richard Marriott</i> (Eyre, i. 448).</p>
-
-<p>1654. Appius and Virginia. A Tragedy. By Iohn Webster. [<i>No
-imprint.</i>]</p>
-
-<p>1659. <i>For Humphrey Moseley.</i> [A reissue.]</p>
-
-<p>1679.</p>
-
-<p><i>Edition</i> by C. W. Dilke (1814–15, <i>O. E. P.</i>
-v).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: J. Lauschke, <i>John Webster’s Tragödie
-A. und V. Eine Quellenstudie</i> (1899, <i>Leipzig diss.</i>); H. D.
-Sykes, <i>An Attempt to determine the Date of Webster’s A. and V.</i>
-(1913, <i>11 N. Q.</i> vii. 401, 422, 466; viii. 63); R. Brooke, <i>The
-Authorship of the Later A. and V.</i> (1913, <i>M. L. R.</i> viii.
-433), more fully in <i>John Webster</i> (1916); A. M. Clark, <i>A. and
-V.</i> (1921, <i>M. L. R.</i> xvi. 1).</p>
-
-<p>The play is in Beeston’s list of Cockpit plays in 1639 (<i>Var.</i>
-iii. 159),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_509">[509]</span> Webster’s authorship has generally been accepted, but
-Stoll, 197, who put the play 1623–39, because of resemblances to
-<i>Julius Caesar</i> and <i>Coriolanus</i> which he thought implied
-a knowledge of F<sub>1</sub>, traced a dependence upon the comic manner of
-Heywood. Similarly, Sykes is puzzled by words which he thinks borrowed
-from Heywood and first used by Heywood in works written after Webster’s
-death. He comes to the conclusion that Heywood may have revised a late
-work by Webster. There is much to be said for the view taken by Brooke
-and Clark, after a thorough-going analysis of the problem, that the
-play is Heywood’s own, possibly with a few touches from Webster’s hand,
-and may have been written, at any date not long after the production of
-<i>Coriolanus</i> on the stage (<i>c.</i> 1608), for Queen Anne’s men,
-from whom it would naturally pass into the Cockpit repertory.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The White Devil. 1609 &lt; &gt; 12</i></p>
-
-<p>1612. The White Divel; Or, The Tragedy of Paulo Giordano Ursini, Duke
-of Brachiano, With The Life and Death of Vittoria Corombona the famous
-Venetian Curtizan. Acted by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by
-Iohn Webster. <i>N. O. for Thomas Archer.</i> (Epistle to the Reader;
-after text, a note.)</p>
-
-<p>1631.... Acted, by the Queenes Maiesties seruants, at the Phœnix, in
-Drury Lane. <i>I. N. for Hugh Perry.</i></p>
-
-<p>1665; 1672.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–3</sup> (1744–1825) and by W. Scott
-(1810, <i>A. B. D.</i> iii) and M. W. Sampson (1904, <i>B.
-L.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: B. Nicholson, <i>Thomas Adams’
-Sermon on The W. D.</i> (1881, <i>6 N. Q.</i> iii. 166); W. W. Greg,
-<i>W.’s W. D.</i> (1900, <i>M. L. Q.</i> iii. 112); M. Landau,
-<i>Vittoria Accorambona in der Dichtung im Verhältniss zu ihrer wahren
-Geschichte</i> (1902, <i>Euphorion</i>, ix. 310); E. M. Cesaresco,
-<i>Vittoria Accoramboni</i> (1902, <i>Lombard Studies</i>, 131); P.
-Simpson, <i>An Allusion in W.</i> (1907, <i>M. L. R.</i> ii. 162); L.
-MacCracken, <i>A Page of Forgotten History</i> (1911); H. D. Sykes,
-<i>The Date of W.’s Play, the W. D.</i> (1913, <i>11 N. Q.</i> vii.
-342).</p>
-
-<p>The epistle apologizes for the ill success of the play, on the ground
-that ‘it was acted in so dull a time of winter, presented in so open
-and blacke a theater, that it wanted ... a full and understanding
-auditory’, and complains that the spectators at ‘that play-house’
-care more for new plays than for good plays. Fleay, ii. 271, dates
-the production in the winter of 1607–8, taking the French ambassador
-described in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 73 as a performer ‘at last tilting’ to be
-M. Goterant who tilted on 24 March 1607, since ‘no other Frenchman’s
-name occurs in the tilt-lists. It is nothing to Fleay that Goterant
-was not an ambassador, or that the lists of Jacobean tilters are
-fragmentary, or that the scene of the play is not England but Italy.
-Simpson found an inferior limit in a borrowing from Jonson’s <i>Mask
-of Queens</i> on 2 Feb. 1609. I do not find much conviction in the
-other indications of a date in 1610 cited by Sampson, xl, or in the
-parallel with Jonson’s epistle to <i>Catiline</i> (1611), with which
-Stoll, 21, supports a date in 1612. The Irish notes which Stoll regards
-as taken from B. Rich,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_510">[510]</span> <i>A New Description of Ireland</i> (1610),
-in fact go back to Stanyhurst’s account of 1577, and though there is
-a pretty clear borrowing from Tourneur’s <i>Atheist’s Tragedy</i>,
-that may have been produced some time before its publication in 1611.
-Nor was Dekker necessarily referring to Webster, when he wrote to the
-Queen’s men in his epistle before <i>If this be not a Good Play</i>
-(1612): ‘I wish a <i>Faire</i> and <i>Fortunate Day</i> to your
-<i>Next New-Play</i> for the <i>Makers-sake</i> and your <i>Owne</i>,
-because such <i>Brave Triumphes</i> of <i>Poesie</i> and <i>Elaborate
-Industry</i>, which my <i>Worthy Friends Muse</i> hath there set forth,
-deserue a <i>Theater</i> full of very <i>Muses</i> themselves to be
-<i>Spectators</i>. To that <i>Faire Day</i> I wish a <i>Full</i>,
-<i>Free</i> and <i>Knowing Auditor</i>.’</p>
-
-<p>Webster’s own epistle contains his appreciation ‘of other mens worthy
-labours; especially of that full and haightned stile of Maister
-<i>Chapman</i>, the labor’d and understanding workes of Maister
-<i>Johnson</i>, the no lesse worthy composures of the both worthily
-excellent Maister <i>Beamont</i>, &amp; Maister <i>Fletcher</i>, and lastly
-(without wrong last to be named) the right happy and copious industry
-of M. <i>Shakespeare</i>, M. <i>Decker</i>, &amp; M. <i>Heywood</i>’. In
-the final note he commends the actors, and in particular ‘the well
-approved industry of my friend Maister Perkins’.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Duchess of Malfi. 1613–14</i></p>
-
-<p>1623. The Tragedy of the Dutchesse of Malfy. As it was Presented
-priuately, at the Black-Friers; and publiquely at the Globe, By the
-Kings Maiesties Seruants. The perfect and exact Coppy, with diuerse
-things Printed, that the length of the Play would not beare in the
-Presentment. Written by John Webster. <i>Nicholas Okes for Iohn
-Waterson.</i> [Epistle to George Lord Berkeley, signed ‘John Webster’;
-Commendatory Verses, signed ‘Thomas Middletonus Poëta et Chron:
-Londinensis’, ‘Wil: Rowley’, ‘John Ford’; ‘The Actors Names. Bosola,
-<i>J. Lowin</i>. Ferdinand, <i>1 R. Burbidge</i>, <i>2 J. Taylor</i>.
-Cardinall, <i>1 H. Cundaile</i>, <i>2 R. Robinson</i>. Antonio, <i>1
-W. Ostler</i>, <i>2 R. Benfeild</i>. Delio, <i>J. Underwood</i>.
-Forobosco, <i>N. Towley</i>. Pescara, <i>J. Rice</i>. Silvio,
-<i>T. Pollard</i>. Mad-men, <i>N. Towley</i>, <i>J. Underwood</i>,
-<i>etc.</i> Cardinals M<sup>is</sup>, <i>J. Tomson</i>. The Doctor, etc., <i>R.
-Pallant</i>. Duchess, <i>R. Sharpe</i>.’]</p>
-
-<p>1640; 1678; <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by C. E. Vaughan (1896, <i>T. D.</i>), M. W.
-Sampson (1904, <i>B. L.</i>), and W. A. Neilson (1911, <i>C. E.
-D.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: K. Kiesow, <i>Die verschiedenen
-Bearbeitungen der Novelle von der Herzogin von Amalfi des Bandello
-in den Literaturen des xvi. und xvii. Jahrhunderts</i> (1895,
-<i>Anglia</i>, xvii. 199); J. T. Murray, <i>The D. of M. List of the
-King’s Company</i> (1910, <i>E. D. C.</i> ii. 146); W. J. Lawrence,
-<i>The Date of the D. of M.</i> (<i>Athenaeum</i> for 21 Nov. 1919); W.
-Archer, <i>The D. of M.</i> (<i>Nineteenth Century</i> for Jan. 1920).</p>
-
-<p>The actor-list records two distinct casts, one before Ostler’s
-death on 16 Dec. 1614, the other after Burbadge’s death on 13 March
-1619, and before that of Tooley in June 1623. Stoll, 29, quotes the
-<i>Anglopotrida</i> of Orazio Busino (cf. the abstract in <i>V. P.</i>
-xv. 134), which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_511">[511]</span> appears to show that the play was on the stage at some
-date not very long before Busino wrote on 7 Feb. 1618:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Prendono giuoco gli Inglesi della nostra religione come di
-cosa detestabile, et superstitiosa, ne mai rappresentano
-qualsivoglia attione pubblica, sia pura Tragisatiricomica,
-che non inserischino dentro uitij, et scelleragini di qualche
-religioso catolico, facendone risate, et molti scherni, con lor
-gusto, et ramarico de’ buoni, fu appunto veduto dai nostri, in
-una Commedia introdur’un frate franciscano, astuto, et ripieno
-di varie impietà, cosi d’avaritia come di libidine: et il tutto
-poi ruiscì in una Tragedia, facendoli mozzar la vista in scena.
-Un altra volta rappresentarono la grandezza d’un cardinale,
-con li habiti formali, et proprij molti belli, et ricchi, con
-la sua Corte, facendo in scena erger un Altare, dove finse di
-far oratione, ordinando una processione: et poi lo ridussero in
-pubblico con una Meretrice in seno. Dimostrò di dar il Velleno
-ad una sua sorella, per interesse d’honore: et d’ andar in
-oltre alla guerra, con depponer prima l’habito cardinalitio
-sopra l’altare col mezzo de’ suoi Cappellani, con gravità, et
-finalmente si fece cingere la spada, metter la serpa, con tanto
-garbo, che niente più: et tutto ciò fanno in sprezzo, delle
-grandezze ecclesiastice vilipese, et odiate a morte in questo
-Regno.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p0">Di Londra a’ 7 febaio 1618.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The date of first production may reasonably be put in 1613–14. Crawford
-has pointed out the resemblances between the play and <i>A Monumental
-Column</i> (1613) and definite borrowings from Donne’s <i>Anatomy
-of the World</i> (1612), Chapman’s <i>Petrarch’s Seven Penitentiall
-Psalms</i> (1612), and Chapman’s Middle Temple mask of 15 Feb. 1613.
-Lawrence thinks that Campion’s mask of 14 Feb. 1613 is also drawn upon.
-But it is not impossible that the extant text has undergone revision,
-in view of borrowings from the 6th edition (1615) of Sir Thomas
-Overbury’s <i>Characters</i>, to which Sykes calls attention, and of
-the apparent allusion pointed out by Vaughan in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 5 to the
-purging of the French Court by Louis XIII after the assassination of
-Marshall d’Ancre on 14 April 1617. It need not be inferred that this is
-the ‘enterlude concerninge the late Marquesse d’Ancre’, which the Privy
-Council ordered the Master of Revels to stay on 22 June 1617 (<i>M. S.
-C.</i> i. 376).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Later Plays</i></p>
-
-<p><i>The Devil’s Law Case</i> (1623).</p>
-
-<p><i>A Cure for a Cuckold</i> (1661), with W. Rowley.</p>
-
-<p>On the authorship and dates of these, cf. Brooke, 250, 255, and H. D.
-Sykes in <i>11 N. Q.</i> vii. 106; ix. 382, 404, 443, 463.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>The following are recorded in Henslowe’s diary:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>For the Admiral’s:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Caesar’s Fall or The Two Shapes.</i></p>
-
-<p>With Dekker, Drayton, Middleton, and Munday, May 1602.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>For Worcester’s:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Christmas Comes but Once a Year.</i></p>
-
-<p>With Chettle, Dekker, and Heywood, Nov. 1602.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_512">[512]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the epistle to <i>The Devil’s Law Case</i>, Webster says to Sir T.
-Finch, ‘Some of my other works, as The White Devil, The Duchess of
-Malfi, Guise and others, you have formerly seen’, and a <i>Guise</i> is
-ascribed to him as a comedy in Archer’s play-list of 1656 and included
-without ascription as a tragedy in Kirkman’s of 1661 and 1671 (Greg,
-<i>Masques</i>, lxxii). Rogers and Ley’s list of 1656 had given it to
-Marston (q.v.). Collier forged an entry in Henslowe’s diary meant to
-suggest that this was the <i>Massacre at Paris</i> (cf. s.v. Marlowe).</p>
-
-<p>In Sept. 1624 Herbert licensed ‘a new Tragedy called <i>A Late Murther
-of the Sonn upon the Mother</i>: Written by Forde, and Webster’
-(Herbert, 29).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>The ascription to Webster on the t.p. of <i>The Thracian Wonder</i> is
-not generally accepted. His hand has been suggested in <i>Revenger’s
-Tragedy</i> and <i>The Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE WHETSTONE (1544?-87?).</p>
-
-<p>Whetstone was a Londoner by origin. After a riotous youth, he turned to
-literature interspersed with adventure, possibly acting at Canterbury
-<i>c.</i> 1571 (cf. ch. xv), serving in the Low Countries in 1572–4,
-the Newfoundland voyage in 1578–9, and the Low Countries again in
-1585–6. His chief literary associates were Thomas Churchyard and George
-Gascoigne.</p>
-
-<p>After writing his one play, <i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, he translated
-its source, the 5th Novel of the 8th Decade of Giraldi Cinthio’s
-<i>Hecatomithi</i> (1565) in his <i>Heptameron of Civil Discourses</i>
-(1582). Both Italian and English are in Hazlitt, <i>Shakespeare’s
-Library</i> (1875, iii). Like some other dramatists, Whetstone turned
-upon the stage, and attacked it in his <i>Touchstone for the Time</i>
-(1584; cf. App. C, No. xxxvi).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Promos and Cassandra. 1578</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1578, July 31. ‘The famous historie of Promos and Casandra
-Devided into twoe Comicall Discourses Compiled by George Whetstone
-gent.’ <i>Richard Jones</i> (Arber, ii. 334).</p>
-
-<p>1578. The Right Excellent and famous Historye, of Promos and Cassandra;
-Deuided into two Commicall Discourses.... The worke of George
-Whetstones Gent. <i>Richard Jones.</i> [Epistles to his ‘kinsman’
-William Fleetwood, dated 29 July 1578, and signed ‘George Whetstone’,
-and from the Printer to the Reader, signed ‘R.I.’; Argument; Text
-signed ‘G. Whetstone’; Colophon with imprint and date ‘August 20,
-1578’.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in <i>Six Old Plays</i>, i. 1 (1779), and by W. C.
-Hazlitt, <i>Shakespeare’s Library</i>, vi. 201 (1875), and J. S. Farmer
-(1910, <i>T. F. T.</i>). There are two parts, arranged in acts and
-scenes. Whetstone’s epistle is of some critical interest (cf. App. C,
-No. xix). In the <i>Heptameron</i> he says the play was ‘yet never
-presented upon stage’. The character of the s.ds. suggests, however,
-that it was written for presentation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_513">[513]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">NATHANIEL WIBURNE (<i>c.</i> 1597).</p>
-
-<p>Possible author of the academic <i>Machiavellus</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">GEORGE WILKINS (<i>fl.</i> 1604–8).</p>
-
-<p>Lee (<i>D. N. B.</i>) after personally consulting the register of
-St. Leonard’s Shoreditch, confirms the extract in Collier, iii. 348,
-of the burial on 19 Aug. 1603 of ‘George Wilkins, the poet’. It must
-therefore be assumed that the date of 9 Aug. 1613 given for the entry
-by T. E. Tomlins in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, i. 34, from Ellis’s
-<i>History of Shoreditch</i> (1798) is an error, and that the ‘poet’
-was distinct from the dramatist. Nothing is known of Wilkins except
-that he wrote pamphlets from <i>c.</i> 1604 to 1608, and towards the
-end of that period was also engaged in play-writing both for the King’s
-and the Queen’s men. A George Wilkins of St. Sepulchre’s, described
-as a victualler and aged 36, was a fellow witness with Shakespeare in
-<i>Belott v. Mountjoy</i> on 19 June 1612 (C. W. Wallace, <i>N. U.
-S.</i> x. 289).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Miseries of Enforced Marriage. 1607</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1607, July 31 (Buck). ‘A tragedie called the Miserye of
-inforced Marriage.’ <i>George Vyncent</i> (Arber, iii. 357).</p>
-
-<p>1607. The Miseries of Inforst Manage. As it is now playd by his
-Maiesties Seruants. By George Wilkins. <i>For George Vincent.</i></p>
-
-<p>1611; 1629; 1637.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>2–4</sup> (1780–1874) and by W. Scott (1810,
-<i>A. B. D.</i> ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The play, which was based on the life of Walter Calverley, as given
-in pamphlets of 1605, appears to have been still on the stage when
-it was printed. An allusion in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii to fighting with a
-windmill implies some knowledge of Don Quixote, but of this there are
-other traces by 1607. The Clown is called Robin in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, and
-Fleay, ii. 276, suggests that Armin took the part. He comes in singing:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>From London am I come,</div>
- <div>Though not with pipe and drum,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">in reference to Kempe’s morris.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Wilkins probably wrote Acts <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span> of <i>Pericles</i>,
-and it has been suggested that he also wrote certain scenes of <i>Timon
-of Athens</i>; but the relation of his work to Shakespeare’s cannot be
-gone into here.</p>
-
-<p>The anonymous <i>Yorkshire Tragedy</i> has also been ascribed to him.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT WILMOT (&gt; 1566–91 &lt;).</p>
-
-<p>A student of the Inner Temple, and afterwards Rector of North Ockendon,
-Essex, from 28 Nov. 1582 and of Horndon-on-the-Hill, Essex, from 2 Dec.
-1585. William Webbe, <i>A Discourse of English Poetry</i> (ed. Arber,
-35), commends his writing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_514">[514]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Tancred and Gismund. 1566</i> (?)</p>
-
-<p>Written with Rod. Staff[ord], Hen[ry] No[el], G. Al. and Chr[istopher]
-Hat[ton].</p>
-
-<p>[<i>MSS.</i>] (<i>a</i>) <i>Lansdowne MS.</i> 786, f. 1, ‘Gismond of
-Salern in Loue’.</p>
-
-<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Brit. Mus. Hargrave MS.</i> 205, f. 9, ‘The Tragedie of
-Gismond of Salerne’.</p>
-
-<p>[Both MSS. have three sonnets ‘of the Quenes maydes’, and Prologue and
-Epilogue.]</p>
-
-<p>(<i>c</i>) A fragment, now unknown, formerly belonging to Milton’s
-father-in-law, Richard Powell.</p>
-
-<p>1591. The Tragedie of Tancred and Gismund. Compiled by the Gentlemen
-of the Inner Temple, and by them presented before her Maiestie. Newly
-reuiued and polished according to the decorum of these daies. By R.
-W. <i>Thomas Scarlet, sold by R. Robinson.</i> [Epistles to Lady Mary
-Peter and Lady Anne Gray, signed ‘Robert Wilmot’; to R. W. signed
-‘Guil. Webbe’ and dated ‘Pyrgo in Essex August the eighth 1591’; to
-the Inner and Middle Temple and other Readers, signed ‘R. Wilmot’; two
-Sonnets (2 and 3 of MSS.); Arguments; Prologue; Epilogue signed ‘R.
-W.’; Introductiones (dumb-shows). Some copies are dated 1592.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> in Dodsley<sup>1–4</sup> (1744–1874) and by J. S. Farmer (1912,
-<i>S. F. T.</i>) from 1591, and by A. Brandl (1898, <i>Q. W. D.</i>)
-and J. W. Cunliffe (1912, <i>E. E. C. T.</i>) and J. S. Farmer (<i>S.
-F. T.</i>) from MS.&mdash;<i>Dissertations</i>: J. W. Cunliffe, <i>Gismond
-of Salerne</i> (1906, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxi. 435); A. Klein, <i>The
-Decorum of These Days</i> (1918, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxxiii. 244).</p>
-
-<p>The MSS. represent the play as originally produced, probably, from an
-allusion in one of the sonnets, at Greenwich. The print represents a
-later revision by Wilmot, involving much re-writing and the insertion
-of new scenes and the dumb-shows. Webbe’s epistle is an encouragement
-to Wilmot to publish his ‘waste papers’, and refers to <i>Tancred</i>
-as ‘framed’ by the Inner Temple, and to Wilmot as ‘disrobing him of
-his antique curiosity and adorning him with the approved guise of
-our stateliest English terms’. Wilmot’s own Epistle to the Readers
-apologizes for the indecorum of publishing a play, excuses it by the
-example of Beza’s <i>Abraham</i> and Buchanan’s <i>Jephthes</i>, and
-refers to ‘the love that hath been these twenty-four years betwixt’
-himself and Gismund. This seems to date the original production in
-1567. But I find no evidence that Elizabeth was at Greenwich in
-1567. Shrovetide 1566 seems the nearest date at which a play is
-likely to have been given there. Wilmot was clearly not the sole
-author of the original play; to Act <span class="allsmcap">I</span> he affixes ‘<i>Exegit
-Rod. Staff.</i>’; to Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘<i>Per Hen. No.</i>’; to Act
-<span class="allsmcap">III</span>, ‘<i>G. Al.</i>’; to Act <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, ‘<i>Composuit Chr.
-Hat.</i>’; to the Epilogue, ‘<i>R. W.</i>’ Probably Act <span class="allsmcap">V</span>,
-which has no indication of authorship, was also his own.</p>
-
-<p>W. H. Cooke, <i>Students Admitted to the Inner Temple, 1547–1660</i>
-(1878), gives the admission of Christopher Hatton in 1559–60, but
-Wilmot is not traceable in the list; nor are Hen. No., G. Al., or Rod.
-Staff. But the first may be Elizabeth’s Gentleman Pensioner,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_515">[515]</span> Henry
-Noel (q.v.), and Cunliffe, lxxxvi, notes that a ‘Master Stafford’ was
-fined £5 for refusing to act as Marshal at the Inner Temple in 1556–7.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Play</i></p>
-
-<p>Hazlitt assigns to Wilmot <i>The Three Ladies of London</i>, but the R.
-W. of the title-page is almost certainly Robert Wilson (q.v.).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT WILSON (&gt; 1572–1600).</p>
-
-<p>For Wilson’s career as an actor and a discussion as to whether there
-was more than one dramatist of the name, cf. ch. xv.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Three Ladies of London. c. 1581</i></p>
-
-<p>1584. A right excellent and famous Comœdy called the three Ladies of
-London. Wherein is notably declared and set foorth, how by the meanes
-of Lucar, Love and Conscience is so corrupted, that the one is married
-to Dissimulation, the other fraught with all abhomination. A perfect
-patterne for all Estates to looke into, and a worke right worthie to be
-marked. Written by R. W. as it hath been publiquely played. <i>Roger
-Warde.</i> [Prologue. At end of play ‘Paule Bucke’ (an actor; cf. ch.
-xv).]</p>
-
-<p>1592. <i>John Danter.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier, <i>Five Old Plays</i> (1851, <i>Roxb.
-Club</i>), in Dodsley<sup>4</sup> (1874), vi, and by J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The stylistic resemblance of this to the next two plays justifies
-the attribution to Wilson, although Hazlitt suggests Wilmot. Gosson
-describes the play in 1582 (<i>P. C.</i> 185) together with a play in
-answer called <i>London Against the Three Ladies</i>, but does not
-indicate whether either play was then in print. In B ii Peter’s pence
-are dated as ‘not muche more than 26 yeares, it was in Queen Maries
-time’. As the Act reviving Peter’s pence was passed in the winter of
-1554–5, the play was probably written in 1581.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Three Lords and Three Ladies of London. c. 1589</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1590, July 31 (Wood). ‘A comodie of the plesant and
-statelie morrall of the Three lordes of London.’ <i>Richard Jones</i>
-(Arber, ii. 556).</p>
-
-<p>1590. The Pleasant and Stately Morall, of the three Lordes and three
-Ladies of London. With the great Joy and Pompe, Solempnized at their
-Mariages: Commically interlaced with much honest Mirth, for pleasure
-and recreation, among many Morall obseruations and other important
-matters of due regard. By R. W. <i>R. Jones.</i> [Woodcut, on which cf.
-<i>Bibl. Note</i> to ch. xviii; ‘Preface’, i.e. prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1851, <i>Five Old Plays</i>),
-in Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, vi. 371 (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1912, <i>T. F.
-T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: H. Fernow, <i>The 3 L. and 3 L. By R.
-W.</i> (1885, <i>Hamburg programme</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Fleay, ii. 280, fixes the date by the allusions (C, C<sup>v</sup>) to the recent
-death of Tarlton (q.v.) in Sept. 1588.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_516">[516]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Cobbler’s Prophecy &gt; 1594</i></p>
-
-<p><i>S. R.</i> 1594, June 8. ‘A booke intituled the Coblers prophesie.’
-<i>Cuthbert Burby</i> (Arber, ii. 653).</p>
-
-<p>1594. The Coblers Prophesie. Written by Robert Wilson, Gent. <i>John
-Danter for Cuthbert Burby.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by W. Dibelius (1897, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxiii. 3),
-J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F. T.</i>), and A. C. Wood (1914, <i>M. S.
-R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The general character of this play, with its reference (i. 36) to an
-audience who ‘sit and see’ and its comfits cast, suggests the Court
-rather than the popular stage.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Doubtful Plays</i></p>
-
-<p>Wilson’s hand has been sought in <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>, <i>Fair
-Em</i>, <i>Knack to Know a Knave</i>, <i>Pedlar’s Prophecy</i> (cf. ch.
-xxiv).</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Lost Plays</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Short and Sweet</i> (<i>c.</i> 1579). <i>Vide Catiline’s
-Conspiracy</i> (<i>infra</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The following is a complete list of plays for the Admiral’s men in
-which a share is assigned to Wilson by Henslowe:</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(i, ii) <i>1, 2, Earl Godwin and his Three Sons.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton, March-June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iii) <i>Pierce of Exton.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton, April, 1598; but apparently
-unfinished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(iv) <i>1 Black Bateman of the North.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton, May 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(v) <i>2 Black Bateman of the North.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vi) <i>Funeral of Richard Cœur-de-Lion.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Drayton, and Munday, June 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(vii) <i>The Madman’s Morris.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker and Drayton, July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(viii) <i>Hannibal and Hermes.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker and Drayton, July 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(ix) <i>Pierce of Winchester.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Dekker and Drayton, July–Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(x) <i>Chance Medley.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, and Munday, Aug. 1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xi) <i>Catiline’s Conspiracy.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Chettle, Aug. 1598; but apparently not finished; unless the fact
-that the authors only received one ‘earnest’ of £1 5<i>s.</i> was due
-to the play being no more than a revision of Wilson’s old <i>Short and
-Sweet</i>, which Lodge (cf. App. C, No. xxiii) contrasts about 1579
-with Gosson’s play on Catiline.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_517">[517]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xii, xiii) <i>1, 2 Sir John Oldcastle.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton (q.v.), Hathaway, and Munday, Oct.–Dec. 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xiv) <i>2 Henry Richmond.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">Nov. 1599, apparently with others, as shown by Robert Shaw’s order for
-payment (Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 49), on which a scenario of one
-act is endorsed.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xv) <i>Owen Tudor.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">With Drayton, Hathaway, and Munday, Jan. 1600; but apparently not
-finished.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left ph">(xvi) <i>1 Fair Constance of Rome.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p0">June 1600. The Diary gives the payments as made to Dekker, Drayton,
-Hathaway, and Munday, but a letter of 14 June from Robert Shaw (Greg,
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 55) indicates that Wilson had a fifth share.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ANTHONY WINGFIELD (<i>c.</i> 1550–1615).</p>
-
-<p>Possible author of the academic <i>Pedantius</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">NATHANIEL WOODES (?).</p>
-
-<p>A minister of Norwich, only known as author of the following play.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>The Conflict of Conscience. &gt; 1581</i></p>
-
-<p>1581. An excellent new Commedie Intituled: The Conflict of Conscience.
-Contayninge, A most lamentable example, of the dolefull desperation of
-a miserable worldlinge, termed, by the name of Philologus, who forsooke
-the trueth of God’s Gospel, for feare of the losse of lyfe, &amp; worldly
-goods. Compiled, by Nathaniell Woodes, Minister, in Norwich. <i>Richard
-Bradocke.</i> [Prologue.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by J. P. Collier (1851, <i>Five Old Plays</i>), in
-Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, vi. 29 (1874), and by J. S. Farmer (1911, <i>T. F. T.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The characters are allegorical, typical and personal and arranged for
-six actors ‘most convenient for such as be disposed either to shew this
-Comedie in private houses or otherwise’. Philologus is Francis Spiera,
-a pervert to Rome about the middle of the sixteenth century. The play
-is strongly Protestant, and is probably much earlier than 1581. It
-is divided into a prologue and acts and scenes. Act <span class="allsmcap">VI</span> is
-practically an epilogue.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">HENRY WOTTON (1568–1639).</p>
-
-<p>Izaak Walton (<i>Reliquiae Wottonianae</i>, 1651) tells us that, while
-a student at Queen’s College, Oxford, in 1586, Wotton ‘was by the
-chief of that College, persuasively enjoined to write a play for their
-private use;&mdash;it was the Tragedy of Tancredo&mdash;which was so interwoven
-with sentences, and for the method and exact personating those
-humours, passions, and dispositions, which he proposed to represent,
-so performed, that the gravest of that society declared, he had, in a
-slight employment, given an early and a solid testimony of his future
-abilities’.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_518">[518]</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CHRISTOPHER WREN (1591–1658).</p>
-
-<p>Author of the academic <i>Physiponomachia</i> (cf. App. K).</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">ROBERT YARINGTON (<i>c.</i> 1601?).</p>
-
-<p>Nothing is known of Yarington, but this is hardly sufficient reason for
-denying him the ascription of the title-page.</p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center p1"><i>Two Lamentable Tragedies. 1594 &lt; &gt; 1601</i></p>
-
-<p>1601. Two Lamentable Tragedies. The one, of the murder of Maister Beech
-a Chaundler in Thames-streete, and his boye, done by Thomas Merry.
-The other of a young childe murthered in a Wood by two Ruffins, with
-the consent of his Vnckle. By Rob. Yarington. <i>For Mathew Lawe.</i>
-[Running title, ‘Two Tragedies in One.’ Induction.]</p>
-
-<p><i>Editions</i> by A. H. Bullen (1885, <i>O. E. P.</i> iv) and J.
-S. Farmer (1913, <i>S. F. T.</i>).&mdash;<i>Dissertation</i>: R. A. Law,
-<i>Y.’s T. L. T.</i> (1910, <i>M. L. R.</i> v. 167).</p>
-
-<p>This deals in alternate scenes with (<i>a</i>) the murder of Beech
-by Merry on 23 Aug. 1594, and (<i>b</i>) a version, with an Italian
-setting, of the Babes in the Wood, on which a ballad, with a Norfolk
-setting, was licensed in 1595. Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 208,
-following a hint of Fleay, ii. 285, connects the play with Henslowe’s
-entries of payments, on behalf of the Admiral’s, (i) of £5 in Nov. and
-Dec. 1599 to Day and Haughton for <i>Thomas Merry</i> or <i>Beech’s
-Tragedy</i>, (ii) of 10<i>s.</i> in Nov. 1599 and 10<i>s.</i> in Sept.
-1601 to Chettle for <i>The Orphan’s Tragedy</i>, and (iii) of £2 to Day
-in Jan. 1600 for an Italian tragedy. He supposes that (ii) and (iii)
-were the same play, that it was finished, and that in 1601 Chettle
-combined it with (i), possibly dropping out Day’s contributions to both
-pieces. Yarington he dismisses as a scribe. In the alternate scenes
-of the extant version he discerns distinct hands, presumably those of
-Haughton and Chettle respectively. Law does not think that there are
-necessarily two hands at all, finds imitation of <i>Leire</i> (1594)
-in scenes belonging to both plots, and reinstates Yarington. Oliphant
-(<i>M. P.</i> viii. 435) boldly conjectures that ‘Rob. Yarington’ might
-be a misreading of ‘W<sup>m</sup> Haughton’. Bullen thought that this play,
-<i>Arden of Feversham</i>, and <i>A Warning for Fair Women</i> might
-all be by the same hand.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p-left p2">CHRISTOPHER YELVERTON (<i>c.</i> 1535–1612).</p>
-
-<p>Yelverton entered Gray’s Inn in 1552. He is mentioned as a poet in
-Jasper Heywood’s verses before Thomas Newton’s translation (1560) of
-Seneca’s <i>Thyestes</i>, and wrote an epilogue to the Gray’s Inn
-<i>Jocasta</i> of Gascoigne (q.v.) and Kinwelmershe in 1566. He also
-helped to devise the dumb-shows for the Gray’s Inn <i>Misfortunes of
-Arthur</i> of Thomas Hughes (q.v.) on 28 Feb. 1588. He became a Justice
-of the Queen’s Bench on 2 Feb. 1602 and was knighted on 23 July 1603.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="center sm p4">PRINTED IN ENGLAND<br />
-AT THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> <i>Quarterly Review</i> (April 1908), 446.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> A copy at Berlin of the Strassburg <i>Terence</i> of 1496
-has the manuscript note to the engraving of the <i>Theatrum</i>, ‘ein
-offen stat der weltlichkeit da man zu sicht, ubi fiunt chorei, ludi et
-de alijs leutitatibus, sicut nos facimus oster spill’ (Herrmann, 300).
-Leo Battista Alberti’s <i>De Re Edificatoria</i> was written about
-1451 and printed in 1485. Vitruvius, <i>De Architectura</i>, v. 3–9,
-deals with the theatre. The essential passage on the scene is v. 6, 8–9
-‘Ipsae autem scenae suas habent rationes explicitas ita, uti mediae
-valvae ornatus habeant aulae regiae, dextra ac sinistra hospitalia,
-secundum autem spatia ad ornatus comparata, quae loca Graeci περιάκτους
-dicunt ab eo, quod machinae sunt in his locis versatiles trigonoe
-habentes singulares species ornationis, quae, cum aut fabularum
-mutationes sunt futurae seu deorum adventus, cum tonitribus repentinis
-[ea] versentur mutentque speciem ornationis in frontes. secundum ea
-loca versurae sunt procurrentes, quae efficiunt una a foro, altera
-a peregre aditus in scaenam. genera autem sunt scaenarum tria: unum
-quod dicitur tragicum, alterum comicum, tertium satyricum. horum autem
-ornatus sunt inter se dissimili disparique ratione, quod tragicae
-deformantur columnis et fastigiis et signis reliquisque regalibus
-rebus; comicae autem aedificiorum privatorum et maenianorum habent
-speciem prospectusque fenestris dispositos imitatione, communium
-aedificiorum rationibus; satyricae vero ornantur arboribus, speluncis,
-montibus reliquisque agrestibus rebus in topeodis speciem deformati’;
-cf. G. Lanson, in <i>Revue de la Renaissance</i> (1904), 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> ‘Tu enim primus Tragoediae ... in medio foro pulpitum ad
-quinque pedum altitudinem erectum pulcherrime exornasti: eamdemque,
-postquam in Hadriani mole ... est acta, rursus intra tuos penates,
-tamquam in media Circi cavea, toto consessu umbraculis tecto, admisso
-populo et pluribus tui ordinis spectatoribus honorifice excepisti.
-Tu etiam primus picturatae scenae faciem, quum Pomponiani comoediam
-agerent, nostro saeculo ostendisti’; cf. Marcantonius Sabellicus,
-<i>Vita Pomponii</i> (<i>Op.</i> 1502, f. 55), ‘Pari studio veterum
-spectandi consuetudinem desuetae civitati restituit, primorum
-Antistitum atriis suo theatro usus, in quibus Plauti, Terentii,
-recentiorum etiam quaedam agerentur fabulae, quas ipse honestos
-adolescentes et docuit, et agentibus praefuit’; cf. also D’Ancona, ii.
-65; Creizenach, ii. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 74.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 84; Herrmann, 353; Flechsig, 51. The scenic
-wall is described in the contemporary narrative of P. Palliolo, <i>Le
-Feste pel Conferimento del Patriziato Romano a Giuliano e Lorenzo de’
-Medici</i> (ed. O. Guerrini, 1885), 45, 63, ‘Guardando avanti, se
-appresenta la fronte della scena, in v compassi distinta per mezzo
-di colonne quadre, con basi e capitelli coperti de oro. In ciascuno
-compasso è uno uscio di grandezza conveniente a private case.... La
-parte inferiore di questa fronte di quattro frigi è ornata.... A gli
-usci delle scene furono poste portiere di panno de oro. El proscenio fu
-coperto tutto di tapeti con uno ornatissimo altare in mezzo.’ The side-doors
-were in ‘le teste del proscenio’ (Palliolo, 98). I have not seen
-M. A. Altieri, <i>Giuliano de’ Medici, eletto cittadino Romano</i> (ed.
-L. Pasqualucci, 1881), or N. Napolitano, <i>Triumphi de gli mirandi
-Spettaculi</i> (1519). Altieri names an untraceable Piero Possello as
-the architect; Guerrini suggests Pietro Rossello.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 128, from <i>Diario Ferrarese</i>, ‘in lo
-suo cortile ... fu fato suso uno tribunale di legname, con case v
-merlade, con una finestra e uscio per ciascuna: poi venne una fusta
-di verso le caneve e cusine, e traversò il cortile con dieci persone
-dentro con remi e vela, del naturale’; Bapt. Guarinus, <i>Carm.</i> iv:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Et remis puppim et velo sine fluctibus actam</div>
- <div>Vidimus in portus nare, Epidamne, tuos,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Vidimus effictam celsis cum moenibus urbem,</div>
- <div>Structaque per latas tecta superba vias.</div>
- <div>Ardua creverunt gradibus spectacula multis,</div>
- <div>Velaruntque omnes stragula picta foros.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 129.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> Ibid. 130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> Ibid. 132, 135. The two Marsigli, with Il Bianchino
-and Nicoletto Segna, appear to have painted scenes and ships for the
-earlier Ferrarese productions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> Ibid. 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> Ibid. 381, from G. Campori, <i>Lettere artistiche
-inedite</i>, 5, ‘Era la sua forma quadrangula, protensa alquanto
-in longitudine: li doi lati l’uno al altro de rimpecto, havevano
-per ciaschuno octo architravi con colonne ben conrespondenti et
-proportionate alla larghezza et alteza de dicti archi: le base et
-capitelli pomposissimamente con finissimi colori penti, et de fogliami
-ornati, representavano alla mente un edificio eterne ed antiquo, pieno
-de delectatione: li archi con relevo di fiori rendevano prospectiva
-mirabile: la largheza di ciascheuno era braza quactro vel cerca: la
-alteza proporzionata ad quella. Dentro nel prospecto eran panni d’oro
-et alcune verdure, si come le recitationi recerchavano: una delle bande
-era ornata delli sei quadri del Cesareo triumpho per man del singulare
-Mantengha: li doi altri lati discontro erano con simili archi, ma de
-numero inferiore, che chiascheuno ne haveva sei. Doj bande era scena
-data ad actorj et recitatorj: le doe altre erano ad scalini, deputati
-per le donne et daltro, per todeschi, trombecti et musici. Al jongere
-del’ angulo de un de’ grandi et minorj lati, se vedevano quactro
-altissime colonne colle basi orbiculate, le quali sustentavano quactro
-venti principali: fra loro era una grocta, benchè facta ad arte,
-tamen naturalissima: sopra quella era un ciel grande fulgentissimo de
-varij lumi, in modo de lucidissime stelle, con una artificiata rota
-de segni, al moto de’ quali girava mo il sole, mo la luna nelle case
-proprie: dentro era la rota de Fortuna con sei tempi: <i>regno</i>,
-<i>regnavj</i>, <i>regnabo</i>: in mezo resideva la dea aurea con un
-sceptro con un delphin. Dintorno alla scena al frontespitio da basso
-era li triumphi del Petrarcha, ancor loro penti per man del p<sup>o</sup>.
-Mantengha: sopra eran candelierj vistosissimi deaurati tucti: nel mezo
-era un scudo colle arme per tucto della C<sup>a</sup>. M<sup>g</sup>.; sopra la aquila
-aurea bicapitata col regno et diadema imperiale: ciascheuno teneva tre
-doppieri; ad ogni lato era le insegne. Alli doi maiorj, quelle della
-S<sup>ta</sup>. de N. S. et quelle della Cesarea Maestà: alli minorj lati
-quelle del C<sup>o</sup>. Sig. Re, et quelle della Ill<sup>ma</sup>. Sig<sup>a</sup>. da Venetia;
-tra li archi pendevano poi quelle de V. Ex., quelle del Sig. duca
-Alberto Alemano: imprese de Sig. Marchese et Sig<sup>a</sup>. Marchesana: sopre
-erano più alte statue argentate, aurate et de più colorj metallici,
-parte tronche, parte integre, che assai ornavano quel loco: poi ultimo
-era il cielo de panno torchino, stellato con quelli segni che quella
-sera correvano nel nostro hemisperio.’ Flechsig, 26, thinks that the
-architect was Ercole Albergati (Il Zafarano).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> D’Ancona, i. 485; <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 79, 83,
-135.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Ferrari, 50; D’Ancona, ii. 1, give examples of these at
-Ferrara and elsewhere. The <i>Favola d’Orfeo</i>, originally produced
-about 1471, seems to have been recast as <i>Orphei tragedia</i> for
-Ferrara in 1486. It had five acts, <i>Pastorale</i>, <i>Ninfale</i>,
-<i>Eroico</i>, <i>Negromantico</i>, <i>Baccanale</i>; in the fourth,
-the way to hell and hell itself were shown&mdash;‘duplici actu haec scena
-utitur’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> J. W. Cunliffe, <i>Early English Classical Tragedies</i>,
-xl; F. A. Foster, in <i>E. S.</i> xliv. 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> Herrmann, 280, 284; cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 208.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> Translation by Hans Nithart, printed by C. Dinckmut (Ulm,
-1486); cf. Herrmann, 292, who reproduces specimen cuts from this and
-the other sources described.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> Edition printed by Johannes Trechsel (Lyons, 1493); cf.
-Herrmann, 300. The editor claims for the woodcuts that ‘effecimus, ut
-etiam illitteratus ex imaginibus, quas cuilibet scenae praeposuimus,
-legere atque accipere comica argumenta valeat’. Badius also edited
-a Paris <i>Terence</i> of 1502, with <i>Praenotamenta</i> based on
-Vitruvius and other classical writers, in which he suggests the use in
-antiquity of ‘tapeta ... qualia nunc fiunt in Flandria’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> Edition printed by Johannes Grüninger (Strassburg, 1496);
-cf. Herrmann, 318.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> Editions printed by Lazarus Soardus (Venice, 1497 and
-1499); cf. Herrmann, 346. The <i>Theatrum</i> and other cuts are also
-reproduced in <i>The Mask</i> for July 1909.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> Flechsig, 84, citing as possibly a stage design an
-example of idealized architecture inscribed ‘Bramanti Architecti
-Opus’ and reproduced by E. Müntz, <i>Hist. de l’Art pendant la
-Renaissance</i>, ii. 299. Bramante was at Rome about 1505, and was
-helped on St. Peter’s by Baldassarre Peruzzi. But there is nothing
-obviously scenic in the drawing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 394, ‘Ma quello che è stato il meglio in
-tutte queste feste e representationi, è stato tute le sene, dove si
-sono representate, quale ha facto uno M<sup>o</sup>. Peregrino depintore, che sta
-con il Sig<sup>re</sup>.; ch’ è una contracta et prospettiva di una terra cum
-case, chiesie, campanili et zardini, che la persona non si può satiare
-a guardarla per le diverse cose che ge sono, tute de inzegno et bene
-intese, quale non credo se guasti, ma che la salvaràno per usarla de le
-altre fiate’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> Ibid., ‘il caso accadete a Ferrara’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> Ibid. 102, ‘La scena poi era finta una città bellissima
-con le strade, palazzi, chiese, torri, strade vere, e ogni cosa di
-rilevo, ma ajutata ancora da bonissima pintura e prospettiva bene
-intesa’; the description has further details. Genga is not named, but
-Serlio (cf. App. G) speaks of his theatrical work for Duke Francesco
-Maria of Urbino (succ. 1508). Vasari, vi. 316, says that he had also
-done stage designs for Francesco’s predecessor Guidobaldo.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> Vasari, iv. 600. Some of Peruzzi’s designs for
-<i>Calandra</i> are in the Uffizi; Ferrari (tav. vi) reproduces one.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 89, ‘Sonandosi li pifari si lasciò cascare
-la tela; dove era pinto Fra Mariano con alcuni Diavoli che giocavano
-con esso da ogni lato della tela; et poi a mezzo della tela vi era
-un breve che dicea: <i>Questi sono li capricci di Fra Mariano</i>;
-et sonandosi tuttavia, et il Papa mirando con il suo occhiale la
-scena, che era molto bella, di mano di Raffaele, et rappresentava si
-bene per mia fè forami di prospective, et molto furono laudate, et
-mirando ancora il cielo, che molto si rappresentava bello, et poi li
-candelieri, che erano formati in lettere, che ogni lettera substenìa
-cinque torcie, et diceano: <i>Leo Pon. Maximus</i>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> Ariosto, <i>Orlando Furioso</i>, xxxii. 80:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Quale al cader de le cortine suole</div>
- <div>Parer, fra mille lampade, la scena,</div>
- <div>D’archi, et di più d’una superba mole</div>
- <div>D’oro, e di statue e di pitture piena.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>This passage was added in the edition of 1532, but a more brief
-allusion in that of 1516 (xliii. 10, ‘Vo’ levarti dalla scena i panni’)
-points to the use of a curtain, rising rather than falling, before
-1519; cf. p. 31; vol. i, p. 181; Creizenach, ii. 299; Lawrence (i.
-111), <i>The Story of a Peculiar Stage Curtain</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> Ferrari (tav. xii) reproduces from <i>Uffizi</i>, 5282,
-an idealization by Serlio of the <i>piazzetta</i> of S. Marco at Venice
-as a <i>scenario</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> Cf. App. G. Book ii first appeared in French (1545).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> De Sommi, <i>Dial.</i> iv (<i>c.</i> 1565, D’Ancona, ii.
-419), ‘Ben che paia di certa vaghezza il vedersi in scena una camera
-aperta, ben parata, dentro a la quale, dirò così per esempio, uno
-amante si consulti con una ruffiana, et che paia aver del verisimile, è
-però tanto fuor del naturale esser la stanza senza il muro dinanzi, il
-che necessariamente far bisogna, che a me ne pare non molto convenirsi:
-oltre che non so se il recitare in quel loco, si potrà dire che sia in
-scena. Ben si potrà per fuggir questi due inconvenienti, aprire come
-una loggia od un verone dove rimanesse alcuno a ragionare’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> Creizenach, ii. 271.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> Ferrari, 105, with engravings; A. Magrini, <i>Il teatro
-Olympico</i> (1847). This is noticed by the English travellers, Fynes
-Morison, <i>Itinerary</i>, i. 2. 4 (ed. 1907, i. 376), ‘a Theater
-for Playes, which was little, but very faire and pleasant’, and T.
-Coryat, <i>Crudities</i>, ii. 7, ‘The scene also is a very faire and
-beautifull place to behold’. He says the house would hold 3,000.
-In <i>Histriomastix</i>, ii. 322, the ‘base trash’ of Sir Oliver
-Owlet’s players is compared unfavourably with the splendour of Italian
-theatres. A permanent theatre had been set up in the <i>Sala grande</i>
-of the Corte Vecchia at Ferrara in 1529, with scenery by Dosso Dossi
-representing Ferrara, for a revival of the <i>Cassaria</i> and the
-production of Ariosto’s <i>Lena</i>; it was burnt down, just before
-Ariosto’s death, in 1532 (Flechsig, 23; Gardner, <i>King of Court
-Poets</i>, 203, 239, 258).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> Probably some temporary additions to the permanent
-decoration of the <i>scena</i> was possible, as Ferrari (tav. xv) gives
-a design for a <i>scenario</i> by Scamozzi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> Ferrari, 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> Engravings, by Jean de Gourmont and another, of this
-type of stage are reproduced by Bapst, 145, 153, and by Rigal in Petit
-de Julleville, iii. 264, 296; cf. M. B. Evans, <i>An Early Type of
-Stage</i> (<i>M. P.</i> ix. 421).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> Cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 217.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> Baschet, 6; D’Ancona, ii. 456; H. Prunières, <i>L’Opéra
-Italien en France</i> (1913), xx; A. Solerti, <i>La rappresentazione
-della Calandra a Lione nel 1548</i> (1901, <i>Raccolta di Studii
-Critici ded. ad A. d’ Ancona</i>), from <i>La Magnifica et Triumphale
-Entrata del Christianissimo Re di Francia Henrico Secundo</i> (1549).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> Cf. ch. xiv (Italians).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> D’Ancona, ii. 457.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> Brantôme, <i>Recueil des Dames</i>, i. 2
-(<i>[OE]uvres</i>, ed. 1890, x. 47), ‘Elle eut opinion qu’elle avoit
-porté malheur aux affaires du royaume, ainsi qu’il succéda; elle n’en
-fit plus jouer’. Ingegneri says of tragedies, ‘Alcuni oltra dicio le
-stimano di triste augurio’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> E. Rigal in <i>Rev. d’Hist. Litt.</i> xii. 1, 203; cf.
-the opposite view of J. Haraszti in xi. 680 and xvi. 285.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> Sainte-Marthe, <i>Elogia</i> (1606), 175.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> G. Lanson in <i>Rev. d’Hist. Litt.</i> x. 432. In
-<i>Northward Hoe</i>, iv. 1, Bellamont is writing a tragedy of
-Astyanax, which he will have produced ‘in the French court by French
-gallants’, with ‘the stage hung all with black velvet’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> Lanson, <i>loc. cit.</i> 422. A description of a
-tragi-comedy called <i>Genièvre</i>, based on Ariosto, at Fontainebleau
-in 1564 neglects the staging, but gives a picture of the audience as</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5h">une jeune presse</div>
- <div>De tous costez sur les tapis tendus,</div>
- <div>Honnestement aux girons espandus</div>
- <div>De leur maîtresse.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>B. Rossi’s <i>Fiammella</i> was given at Paris in 1584 with a setting
-of ‘boschi’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> Lanson, <i>loc. cit.</i> 424.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> The plan is in J. A. Du Cerceau, <i>Les Plus Excellens
-Bastimens de France</i> (1576–9), and is reproduced in W. H. Ward,
-<i>French Châteaux and Gardens in the Sixteenth Century</i>, 14; cf. R.
-Blomfield, <i>Hist. of French Architecture</i>, i. 81, who, however,
-thinks that Du Cerceau’s ‘bastiment en manière de théâtre’ was not the
-long room, but the open courtyard, in the form of a square with concave
-angles and semicircular projections on each side, which occupies the
-middle of the block.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> Prunières, <i>Ballet de Cour</i>, 72, 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> Bapst, 147, reproduces an example. This is apparently
-the type of French stage described by J. C. Scaliger, <i>Poetice</i>
-(1561), i. 21, ‘Nunc in Gallia ita agunt fabulas, ut omnia in conspectu
-sint; universus apparatus dispositis sublimibus sedibus. Personae ipsae
-nunquam discedunt: qui silent pro absentibus habentur’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> Rigal, 36, 46, 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a> The full text is printed by E. Dacier from <i>B. N. f.
-fr.</i> 24330 in <i>Mémoires de la Soc. de l’Hist. de Paris</i> (1901),
-xxviii. 105, and is analysed by Rigal, 247. The designs have recently
-(1920) been published in H. C. Lancaster’s edition; reproductions,
-from the originals or from models made for the Exposition of 1878,
-will be found of Durval’s <i>Agarite</i> in Rigal, f.p., Lawrence, i.
-241, Thorndike, 154; of Hardy’s <i>Cornélie</i> in Rigal, <i>Alexandre
-Hardy</i> (1890), f.p., Bapst, 185; of <i>Pandoste</i> in Jusserand,
-<i>Shakespeare in France</i>, 71, 75; of Mairet’s <i>Sylvanire</i>
-in E. Faguet, <i>Hist. de la Litt. Fr.</i> ii. 31; and of <i>Pyrame
-et Thisbé</i>, Corneille’s <i>L’Illusion Comique</i>, and Du Ryer’s
-<i>Lisandre et Caliste</i> in Petit de Julleville, <i>Hist.</i> iv.
-220, 270, 354.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">[51]</a> ‘Il faut un antre ... d’où sort un hermite’ (Dacier,
-116), ‘une fenestre qui soit vis à vis d’une autre fenestre grillée
-pour la prison, où Lisandre puisse parler à Caliste’ (116), ‘un beau
-palais eslevé de trois ou quatre marches’ (117), ‘un palais ou sénat
-fort riche’ (117), ‘une case où il y ayt pour enseigne L’Ormeau’
-(117), ‘une mer’ (117), ‘une tente’ (121), ‘un hermitage où l’on monte
-et descend’ (123), ‘une fenestre où se donne une lettre’ (124), ‘une
-tour, une corde nouée pour descendre de la tour, un pont-levis qui se
-lâche quand il est nécessaire’ (125), ‘une sortie d’un roy en forme de
-palais’ (127).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">[52]</a> ‘Il faut aussy une belle chambre, une table, deux
-tabourets, une écritoire’ (117), ‘une belle chambre, où il y ayt un
-beau lict, des sièges pour s’asseoir; la dicte chambre s’ouvre et se
-ferme plusieurs fois’ (121), ‘forme de salle garnie de sièges où l’on
-peint une dame’ (126).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">[53]</a> Dacier, 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">[54]</a> Ibid. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">[55]</a> ‘Forme de fontaine en grotte coulante ou de peinture’
-(Dacier, 127); ‘Au milieu du théâtre, dit la persepective, doit avoir
-une grande boutique d’orfèvre, fort superbe d’orfèvrerie et autre
-joyaux’ (136); ‘Il faut deux superbes maisons ornées de peinture; au
-milieu du théâtre, une persepective où il y ait deux passages entre les
-deux maisons’ (137).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">[56]</a> ‘Il faut que le théâtre soit tout en pastoralle, antres,
-verdures, et fleurs’ (116), ‘Il faut ... le petit Chastellet de la rue
-Saint Jacques, et faire paroistre une rue où sont les bouchers’ (116),
-‘en pastoralle à la discrétion du feinteur’ (124), ‘Il faut le théâtre
-en rues et maisons’ (129, for Rotrou’s <i>Les Ménechmes</i>), ‘La
-décoration du théâtre doit estre en boutique’ (136), ‘le feinteur doit
-faire paraitre sur le théâtre la place Royalle ou l’imiter à peu près’
-(133).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">[57]</a> ‘Il faut que cela soit caché durant le premier acte,
-et l’on ne faict paroistre cela qu’au second acte, et se referme au
-mesme acte’ (116), ‘un eschaffaut qui soit caché’ (117), ‘le vaisseau
-paraist au quatriesme acte’ (120). For the use of curtains to effect
-these discoveries, cf. Rigal, 243, 253, who, however, traces to a guess
-of Lemazurier, <i>Galerie Historique</i>, i. 4, the often repeated
-statement that to represent a change of scene ‘on levait ou on tirait
-une tapisserie, et cela se faisait jusqu’à dix ou douze fois dans la
-même pièce’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">[58]</a> It is so, e.g., in the design for <i>Agarite</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">[59]</a> ‘Non sic tolerari potest, ut longe lateque dissita loca
-in unum subito proscenium cogantur; qua in re per se absurdissima et
-nullo veterum exemplo comprobata nimium sibi hodie quidam indulserunt’;
-cf. Creizenach, ii. 102. Spingarn, <i>Literary Criticism in the
-Renaissance</i>, 89, 206, 290, discusses the origin of the unities, and
-cites Castelvetro, Poetica (1570), 534, ‘La mutatione tragica non può
-tirar con esso seco se non una giornata e un luogo’, and Jean de la
-Taille, <i>Art de Tragédie</i> (1572), ‘Il faut toujours représenter
-l’histoire ou le jeu en un même jour, en un même temps, et en un même
-lieu’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">[60]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 257; Lawrence (i. 123),
-<i>Early French Players in England</i>. It is only a guess of Mr.
-Lawrence’s that these visitors played <i>Maistre Pierre Patelin</i>, a
-farce which requires a background with more than one <i>domus</i>. Karl
-Young, in <i>M. P.</i> ii. 97, traces some influence of French farces
-on the work of John Heywood. There had been ‘Fransche-men that playt’
-at Dundee in 1490, and ‘mynstrells of Fraunce’, not necessarily actors,
-played before Henry VII at Abingdon in 1507.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">[61]</a> Halle, i. 176.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">[62]</a> Halle, ii. 86.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">[63]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 196; cf. ch. xii (Paul’s).
-Spinelli’s letter is preserved in Marino Sanuto, <i>Diarii</i>, xlvi.
-595, ‘La sala dove disnamo et si rapresentò la comedia haveva nella
-fronte una grande zoglia di bosso, che di mezzo conteneva in lettere
-d’oro: <i>Terentii Formio</i>. Da l’un di canti poi vi era in lettere
-antique in carta: <i>cedant arma togae</i>. Da l’altro: <i>Foedus pacis
-non movebitur</i>. Sotto poi la zoglia si vide: <i>honori et laudi
-pacifici</i>.... Per li altri canti de la sala vi erano sparsi de li
-altri moti pertinenti alla pace’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">[64]</a> <i>V. P.</i> iv. 115 translates ‘zoglia di bosso’ as ‘a
-garland of box’, but Florio gives ‘soglia’ as ‘the threshold or hanse
-of a doore; also the transome or lintle over a dore’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">[65]</a> Murray, ii. 168; cf. ch. xii (Westminster).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">[66]</a> Halle, ii. 109.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">[67]</a> Cf. ch. viii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">[68]</a> The memorandum on the reform of the Revels office
-in 1573, which I attribute to Edward Buggin, tells us (<i>Tudor
-Revels</i>, 37; cf. ch. iii) that ‘The connynge of the office resteth
-in skill of devise, in vnderstandinge of historyes, in iudgement
-of comedies tragedyes and showes, in sight of perspective and
-architecture, some smacke of geometrye and other thynges’. If Sir
-George Buck, however, in 1612, thought that a knowledge of perspective
-was required by the Art of Revels, he veiled it under the expression
-‘other arts’ (cf. ch. iii).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">[69]</a> <i>Mundus et Infans</i>, <i>Hickscorner</i>,
-<i>Youth</i>, <i>Johan Evangelist</i>, <i>Magnificence</i>, <i>Four
-Elements</i>, <i>Calisto and Melibaea</i>, <i>Nature</i>, <i>Love</i>,
-<i>Weather</i>, <i>Johan Johan</i>, <i>Pardoner and Friar</i>, <i>Four
-PP.</i>, <i>Gentleness and Nobility</i>, <i>Witty and Witless</i>,
-<i>Kinge Johan</i>, <i>Godly Queen Hester</i>, <i>Wit and Science</i>,
-<i>Thersites</i>, with the fragmentary <i>Albion Knight</i>. To
-these must now be added Henry Medwall’s <i>Fulgens and Lucres</i>
-(<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>, but 1500 &lt;), formerly only known by a fragment (cf.
-<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 458), but recently found in the Mostyn
-collection, described by F. S. Boas and A. W. Reed in <i>T. L. S.</i>
-(20 Feb. and 3 April 1919), and reprinted by S. de Ricci (1920).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">[70]</a> <i>Wealth and Health</i>, <i>Nice Wanton</i>, <i>Lusty
-Juventus</i>, <i>Impatient Poverty</i>, <i>Respublica</i>, <i>Jacob and
-Esau</i>, and perhaps <i>Enough is as Good as a Feast</i>, with the
-fragmentary <i>Love Feigned and Unfeigned</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">[71]</a> <i>Trial of Treasure</i>, <i>Like Will to Like</i>,
-<i>The Longer Thou Livest, The More Fool Thou Art</i>, <i>Marriage of
-Wit and Science</i>, <i>Marriage between Wit and Wisdom</i>, <i>New
-Custom</i>, <i>The Tide Tarrieth no Man</i>, <i>All for Money</i>,
-<i>Disobedient Child</i>, <i>Conflict of Conscience</i>, <i>Pedlar’s
-Prophecy</i>, <i>Misogonus</i>, <i>Glass of Government</i>, <i>Three
-Ladies of London</i>, <i>King Darius</i>, <i>Mary Magdalene</i>,
-<i>Apius and Virginia</i>, with the fragmentary <i>Cruel Debtor</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">[72]</a> For details of date and authorship cf. chh. xxiii, xxiv,
-and <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 439, 443. Albright, 29, attempts
-a classification on the basis of staging, but not, I think, very
-successfully.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">[73]</a> Cf. e.g. <i>Hickscorner</i>, 544; <i>Youth</i>, 84, 201,
-590, 633; <i>Johan Johan</i>, 667; <i>Godly Queen Hester</i>, 201, 635,
-886; <i>Wit and Science</i>, 969; <i>Wit and Wisdom</i>, 3, p. 60;
-<i>Nice Wanton</i>, 416; <i>Impatient Poverty</i>, 164, 726, 746, 861,
-988; <i>Respublica</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 38; <i>Longer Thou Livest</i>,
-628, 1234; <i>Conflict of Conscience</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 2; <i>et ad
-infinitum</i>. Characters in action are said to be in place. For the
-<i>platea</i> cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 80, 135, but <i>Kinge
-Johan</i>, 1377, has a direction for an alarm ‘<i>extra locum</i>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">[74]</a> Cf. e.g. <i>Wit and Science</i>, 193, ‘Wyt speketh at the
-doore’; <i>Longer Thou Livest</i>, 523, ‘Betweene whiles let Moros put
-in his head’, 583, ‘Crie without the doore’, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">[75]</a> Cf. ch. vii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">[76]</a> Cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 216, and for the making of
-‘room’ or ‘a hall’ for a mask, ch. v.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">[77]</a> Cf. M. L. Spencer, <i>Corpus Christi Pageants in
-England</i>, 184; Creizenach, ii. 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">[78]</a> Wallace, ii. 48, ‘The Blackfriars stage was elastic in
-depth as well as width, and could according to the demands of the given
-play be varied by curtains or traverses of any required number placed
-at any required distance between the balcony and the front of the
-stage’; Prölss, 89; Albright, 58; cf. p. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">[79]</a> <i>Volpone</i>, v. 2801 (cf. p. 111); <i>White Devil</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 70:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>‘<i>Flamineo.</i><span style="margin-left: 5em">I will see them,</span></div>
- <div>They are behind the travers.&emsp;Ile discover</div>
- <div>Their superstitious howling.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Cornelia, the Moore and 3 other Ladies discovered, winding
-Marcello’s coarse</i>’;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 54:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘<i>Here is discover’d, behind a travers, the artificiall
-figures of Antonio and his children, appearing as if they were
-dead.</i>’</p>
-</div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">[80]</a> <i>Duke of Guise</i>, v. 3 (quoted by Albright, 58), ‘The
-scene draws, behind it a Traverse’, and later, ‘The Traverse is drawn.
-The King rises from his Chair, comes forward’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">[81]</a> The Revels Accounts for 1511 (Brewer, ii. 1497) include
-10<i>d.</i> for a rope used for a ‘travas’ in the hall at Greenwich and
-stolen during a disguising. Puttenham (1589), i. 17, in an attempt to
-reconstruct the methods of classical tragedy, says that the ‘floore or
-place where the players vttered ... had in it sundrie little diuisions
-by curteins as trauerses to serue for seueral roomes where they might
-repaire vnto and change their garments and come in againe, as their
-speaches and parts were to be renewed’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">[82]</a> There was a traverse in the nursery of Edward V in 1474;
-cf. <i>H. O.</i> *28, ‘Item, we will that our sayd sonne in his chamber
-and for all nighte lyverye to be sette, the traverse drawne anone upon
-eight of the clocke’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">[83]</a> Rimbault, 150, 167. There is an elaborate description of
-‘a fayer traverse of black taffata’ set up in the chapel at Whitehall
-for the funeral of James in 1625 and afterwards borrowed for the
-ceremony in Westminster Abbey.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">[84]</a> The chapel of Ahasuerus come in and sing (860). On
-the possibility that plays may have been acted in the chapel under
-Elizabeth, cf. ch. xii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">[85]</a> <i>G. G. Needle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 34; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-iv. 20, ‘here, euen by this poste, Ich sat’; <i>Jack Juggler</i>, 908,
-‘Joll his hed to a post’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">[86]</a> The manuscript of <i>Misogonus</i> was written at
-Kettering. The prologue of <i>Mary Magdalene</i> is for travelling
-actors, who had given it at a university. <i>Thersites</i> contains
-local references (cf. Boas, 20) suggesting Oxford. Both this and <i>The
-Disobedient Child</i> are adaptations of dialogues of Ravisius Textor,
-but the adapters seem to be responsible for the staging.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">[87]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">[88]</a> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. ‘Fowre women bravelie apparelled,
-sitting singing in Lamiaes windowe, with wrought Smockes, and
-Cawles, in their hands, as if they were a working’. <i>Supposes</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, is a dialogue between Dalio the cook, at Erostrato’s
-window, and visitors outside. At the beginning, ‘Dalio commeth to the
-wyndowe, and there maketh them answere’; at the end, ‘Dalio draweth his
-hed in at the wyndowe, the Scenese commeth out’. The dialogue of sc. v
-proceeds at the door, and finally ‘Dalio pulleth the Scenese in at the
-dores’. In <i>Two Ital. Gent.</i> 435, ‘Victoria comes to the windowe,
-and throwes out a letter’. It must not be assumed on the analogy of
-later plays, and is in fact unlikely, that the windows of these early
-‘houses’, or those of the ‘case’ at Ferrara in 1486, were upper floor
-windows.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">[89]</a> There is a reference to a falling curtain, not
-necessarily a stage one, in <i>Alchemist</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 6, ‘O,
-for a suite, To fall now, like a cortine: flap’. Such curtains were
-certainly used in masks; cf. ch. vi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="label">[90]</a> Donne, <i>Poems</i> (ed. Grierson), i. 441; J. Hannah,
-<i>Courtly Poets</i>, 29. Graves, 20, quotes with this epigram
-Drummond, <i>Cypress Grove</i>, ‘Every one cometh there to act his part
-of this tragi-comedy, called life, which done, the courtaine is drawn,
-and he removing is said to dy’. But of course many stage deaths are
-followed by the drawing of curtains which are not front curtains.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="label">[91]</a> Inns of Court and University plays naturally run on
-analogous lines. For the ‘houses’ at Cambridge in 1564 and at Oxford in
-1566, cf. ch. vii. The three Cambridge Latin comedies, <i>Hymenaeus</i>
-(1579), <i>Victoria</i> (<i>c.</i> 1580–3), <i>Pedantius</i> (<i>c.</i>
-1581), follow the Italian tradition. For <i>Victoria</i>, which has
-the same plot as <i>Two Ital. Gent.</i>, Fraunce directs, ‘Quatuor
-extruendae sunt domus, nimirum Fidelis, 1<sup>a</sup>, Fortunij, 2<sup>a</sup>, Cornelij,
-3<sup>a</sup> Octauiani, 4<sup>a</sup>. Quin et sacellum quoddam erigendum est, in quo
-constituendum est Cardinalis cuiusdam Sepulchrum, ita efformatum, vt
-claudi aperirique possit. In Sacello autem Lampas ardens ponenda est’.
-The earliest extant tragedies, Grimald’s <i>Christus Redivivus</i>
-(<i>c.</i> 1540) and <i>Archipropheta</i> (<i>c.</i> 1547), antedate
-the pseudo-Senecan influence. Practical convenience, rather than
-dramatic theory, imposed upon the former a unity of action before the
-tomb. Grimald says, ‘Loca item, haud usque eò discriminari censebat;
-quin unum in proscenium, facilè &amp; citra negocium conduci queant’. The
-latter was mainly before Herod’s palace, but seems to have showed
-also John’s prison at Macherus. There is an opening scene, as in
-<i>Promos and Cassandra</i>, of approach to the palace (Boas, 28, 35).
-Christopherson’s <i>Jephthah</i>, Watson’s (?) <i>Absalon</i>, and
-Gager’s <i>Meleager</i> (1582) observe classical unity. The latter has
-two houses, in one of which an altar may have been ‘discovered’. Boas,
-170, quotes two s.ds., ‘Transeunt venatores e Regia ad fanum Dianae’
-and ‘Accendit ligna in ara, in remotiore scenae parte extructa’.
-Gager’s later plays (Boas, 179) seem to be under the influence of
-theatrical staging. On Legge’s <i>Richardus Tertius vide</i> p.
-43, <i>infra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="label">[92]</a> I do not suggest that the actual ‘templum’ in Serlio’s
-design, which is painted on the back-cloth, was practicable. The
-<i>ruffiana’s</i> house was. About the shop or tavern, half-way
-up the rake of the stage, I am not sure. There is an echo of the
-<i>ruffiana</i>, quite late, in <i>London Prodigal</i> (1605),
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 44, ‘Enter Ruffyn’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="label">[93]</a> The early editions have few s.ds. Mr. Bond supplies many,
-which are based on a profound misunderstanding of Lyly’s methods of
-staging, to some of the features of which Reynolds in <i>M. P.</i> i.
-581, ii. 69, and Lawrence, i. 237, have called attention.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="label">[94]</a> Possibly <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i might be an approach scene outside
-the city, as prisoners are sent (76) ‘into the citie’, but this may
-only mean to the interior of the city from the market-place.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="label">[95]</a> Action is continuous between <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, at the cave,
-and <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, in which Sapho will ‘crosse the Ferrie’. Phao told
-Sibylla (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 14) that he was out of his way and benighted,
-but this was a mere excuse for addressing her.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="label">[96]</a> The palace itself was not necessarily staged. If it was,
-it was used with the lunary bank, after visiting which Cynthia goes
-‘in’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 171). She comes ‘out’ and goes ‘in’ again
-(<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 17, 285), but these terms may only refer to a stage-door.
-Nor do I think that the ‘solitarie cell’ spoken of by Endymion
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 41) was staged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="label">[97]</a> Yet Eumenides, who was sent to Thessaly in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-i, has only reached the fountain twenty years later (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii.
-17), although he is believed at Court to be dead (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii.
-54). The time of the play cannot be reduced to consistency; cf. Bond,
-iii. 14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="label">[98]</a> In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 96 Protea, in a scene before the
-rock, says to Petulius, ‘Follow me at this doore, and out at the
-other’. During the transit she is metamorphosed, but the device
-is rather clumsy. The doors do not prove that a <i>domus</i> of
-Erisichthon was visible; they may be merely stage-doors.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="label">[99]</a> Possibly <i>The Cobler’s Prophecy</i> is also a Chapel
-or Paul’s play; it was given before an audience who ‘sit and see’, and
-to whom the presenters ‘cast comfets’ (39). The <i>domus</i> required
-for a background are (<i>a</i>) Ralph’s, (<i>b</i>) Mars’s court,
-(<i>c</i>) Venus’s court, (<i>d</i>) the Duke’s court, (<i>e</i>) the
-cabin of Contempt. From (<i>a</i>) to (<i>b</i>) is ‘not farre hence’
-(138) and ‘a flight shoot vp the hill’ (578); between are a wood and a
-spot near Charon’s ferry. From (<i>b</i>) to (<i>c</i>) leads ‘Adowne
-the hill’ (776). At the end (<i>e</i>) is burnt, and foreshortening
-of space is suggested by the s.d. (1564), ‘Enter the Duke ... then
-compasse the stage, from one part let a smoke arise: at which place
-they all stay’. At the beginning (3) ‘on the stage Mercurie from one
-end Ceres from another meete’. <i>Summer’s Last Will and Testament</i>,
-which cannot be definitely assigned either to the Chapel or to Paul’s,
-continues the manner of the old interlude; it has a stage (1570), but
-the abstract action requires no setting beyond the tiled hall (205,
-359, 932, 974) in which the performance was given. <i>The Wars of
-Cyrus</i> is a Chapel play, but must be classed, from the point of view
-of staging, with the plays given in public theatres (cf. p. 48).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_100" href="#FNanchor_100" class="label">[100]</a> Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span> has the s.d., ‘<i>The storme. Enter
-Æneas and Dido in the Caue at seuerall times</i>’ (996).... ‘<i>Exeunt
-to the Caue</i>’ (1059). They are supposed to remain in the cave during
-the interval between Acts <span class="allsmcap">III</span> and <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, after which,
-‘<i>Anna.</i> Behold where both of them come forth the Caue’ (1075).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_101" href="#FNanchor_101" class="label">[101]</a> ‘<i>Here the Curtaines draw, there is discouered Iupiter
-dandling Ganimed vpon his knee</i>’ (1).... ‘<i>Exeunt Iupiter cum
-Ganimed</i>’ (120). But as Jupiter first says, ‘Come Ganimed, we must
-about this gear’, it may be that they walk off. If so, perhaps they are
-merely ‘discouered’ in the wood, and the curtains are front curtains.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_102" href="#FNanchor_102" class="label">[102]</a> So too (897),</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This day they both a hunting forth will ride</div>
- <div>Into these woods, adioyning to these walles.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_103" href="#FNanchor_103" class="label">[103]</a> At the end of the banquet scene (598), ‘<i>Exeunt
-omnes</i>’ towards the interior of the palace, when ‘<i>Enter Venus
-at another doore, and takes Ascanius by the sleeue</i>’. She carries
-him to the grove, and here he presumably remains until the next Act
-(<span class="allsmcap">III</span>), when ‘<i>Enter Iuno to Ascanius asleepe</i>’ (811). He
-is then removed again, perhaps to make room for the hunting party. I
-suppose the ‘<i>another doore</i>’ of 598 to mean a stage-door.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_104" href="#FNanchor_104" class="label">[104]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_105" href="#FNanchor_105" class="label">[105]</a> Direct evidence pointing to performance at Court is only
-available for two of the five, <i>Cambyses</i> and <i>Orestes</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_106" href="#FNanchor_106" class="label">[106]</a> <i>Cambyses</i>, 75, 303, 380, 968, 1041, 1055;
-<i>Patient Grissell</i>, 212, 338, 966, 1048, 1185, 1291, 1972, 1984,
-2069; <i>Orestes</i>, 221, 1108; <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>, 1421,
-1717, 1776, 1901, 1907, 1931, 1951, 2008, 2058, 2078; <i>Common
-Conditions</i>, 2, 110, 544, 838, 1397, 1570; &amp;c. Of course, the
-technical meaning of ‘place’ shades into the ordinary one.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_107" href="#FNanchor_107" class="label">[107]</a> A similar instruction clears the stage at the end (1197)
-of a corpse, as in many later plays; cf. p. 80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_108" href="#FNanchor_108" class="label">[108]</a> The s.d. ‘one of their wives come out’ (813) does not
-necessarily imply a clown’s <i>domus</i>. <i>Cambyses</i> fluctuates
-between the actor’s notion that personages come ‘out’ from the
-tiring-house, and the earlier notion of play-makers and audience that
-they go ‘out’ from the stage. Thus ‘Enter Venus leading out her son’
-(843), but ‘goe out Venus and Cupid’ at the end of the same episode
-(880).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_109" href="#FNanchor_109" class="label">[109]</a> ‘Come, let us run his arse against the poste’ (186); cf.
-pp. 27, 75.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_110" href="#FNanchor_110" class="label">[110]</a> For later examples cf. p. 99.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_111" href="#FNanchor_111" class="label">[111]</a> Lawrence (i. 41), <i>Title and Locality Boards on the
-Pre-Restoration Stage</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_112" href="#FNanchor_112" class="label">[112]</a> Lawrence, i. 55. No English example of an inscribed
-miracle-play <i>domus</i> has come to light.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_113" href="#FNanchor_113" class="label">[113]</a> Gregory Smith, <i>Elizabethan Critical Essays</i>,
-i. 185, 197 (cf. App. C, No. xxxiv). Sidney’s main argument is
-foreshadowed in Whetstone’s Epistle to <i>Promos and Cassandra</i>
-(1578; cf. App. C, No. xix), ‘The Englishman in this quallitie, is
-most vaine, indiscreete, and out of order; he fyrst groundes his worke
-on impossibilities: then in three howers ronnes he throwe the worlde:
-marryes, gets children, makes children men, men to conquer kingdomes,
-murder monsters, and bringeth Gods from Heaven, and fetcheth Divels
-from Hel’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_114" href="#FNanchor_114" class="label">[114]</a> Cf. p. 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_115" href="#FNanchor_115" class="label">[115]</a> Gibson had used written titles to name his pageant
-buildings; cf. Brewer, ii. 1501; Halle, i. 40, 54. The Westminster
-accounts <i>c.</i> 1566 (cf. ch. xii) include an item for ‘drawing the
-tytle of the comedee’. The Revels officers paid ‘for the garnyshinge
-of xiiij titles’ in 1579–80, and for the ‘painting of ix. titles
-with copartmentes’ in 1580–1 (Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 328, 338).
-The latter number agrees with that of the plays and tilt challenges
-for the year; the former is above that of the nine plays recorded,
-and Lawrence thinks that the balance was for locality-titles. But
-titles were also sometimes used in the course of action. Thus <i>Tide
-Tarrieth for No Man</i> has the s.d. (1439), ‘Christianity must
-enter with a sword, with a title of pollicy, but on the other syde of
-the tytle, must be written gods word, also a shield, wheron must be
-written riches, but on the other syde of the shield must be Fayth’.
-Later on (1501) Faithful ‘turneth the titles’. Prologues, such as
-those of <i>Damon and Pythias</i>, <i>Respublica</i>, and <i>Conflict
-of Conscience</i>, which announce the names of the plays, tell rather
-against the use of title-boards for those plays. For the possible use
-of both title- and scene-boards at a later date, cf. pp. 126, 154.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_116" href="#FNanchor_116" class="label">[116]</a> Cf. pp. 60, 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_117" href="#FNanchor_117" class="label">[117]</a> In the Latin academic drama the transition between
-classical and romantic staging is represented by Legge’s <i>Richardus
-Tertius</i> (1580). This is Senecan in general character, but unity
-of place is not strictly observed. A s.d. to the first <i>Actio</i>
-(iii. 64) is explicit for the use of a curtain to discover a recessed
-interior, ’ A curtaine being drawne, let the queene appeare in y<sup>e</sup>
-sanctuary, her 5 daughters and maydes about her, sittinge on packs,
-fardells, chests, cofers. The queene sitting on y<sup>e</sup> ground with
-fardells about her’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_118" href="#FNanchor_118" class="label">[118]</a> Cf. p. 21.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_119" href="#FNanchor_119" class="label">[119]</a> Cf. ch. vii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_120" href="#FNanchor_120" class="label">[120]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 365.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_121" href="#FNanchor_121" class="label">[121]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_122" href="#FNanchor_122" class="label">[122]</a> There are four presenters, but, in order to avoid
-crowding the stage, they are reduced to two by the sending of the
-others to bed within the hut (128).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_123" href="#FNanchor_123" class="label">[123]</a> Albright, 66; Reynolds, i. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_124" href="#FNanchor_124" class="label">[124]</a> Queen’s, <i>Three Lords and Three Ladies of London</i>,
-<i>1, 2 Troublesome Reign of King John</i>, <i>Selimus</i>,
-<i>Looking-Glass for London and England</i>, <i>Famous Victories
-of Henry V</i>, <i>James IV</i>, <i>King Leir</i>, <i>True Tragedy
-of Richard III</i>; Sussex’s, <i>George a Greene</i>, <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>; Pembroke’s, <i>Edward II</i>, <i>Taming of a Shrew</i>,
-<i>2, 3 Henry VI</i>, <i>Richard III</i>; Strange’s or Admiral’s, <i>1,
-2 Tamburlaine</i>, <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>, <i>Orlando Furioso</i>,
-<i>Fair Em</i>, <i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, <i>Knack to Know a Knave</i>,
-<i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>, <i>1 Henry VI</i>, <i>Comedy of
-Errors</i>, <i>Jew of Malta</i>, <i>Wounds of Civil War</i>, <i>Dr.
-Faustus</i>, <i>Four Prentices of London</i>; Admiral’s, <i>Knack to
-Know an Honest Man</i>, <i>Blind Beggar of Alexandria</i>, <i>Humorous
-Day’s Mirth</i>, <i>Two Angry Women of Abingdon</i>, <i>Look About
-You</i>, <i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, <i>Patient
-Grissell</i>, <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i>, <i>Captain Thomas
-Stukeley</i>, <i>1, 2 Robert Earl of Huntingdon</i>, <i>Englishmen for
-my Money</i>; Chamberlain’s, <i>Edward III</i>, <i>1 Richard II</i>,
-<i>Sir Thomas More</i>, <i>Taming of the Shrew</i>, <i>Two Gentlemen
-of Verona</i>, <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i>, <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>,
-<i>Midsummer Night’s Dream</i>, <i>Richard II</i>, <i>King John</i>,
-<i>Merchant of Venice</i>, <i>1, 2 Henry IV</i>, <i>Every Man in his
-Humour</i>, <i>Warning for Fair Women</i>, <i>A Larum for London</i>,
-<i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i> (the last two possibly Globe plays);
-Derby’s, <i>1, 2 Edward IV</i>, <i>Trial of Chivalry</i>; Oxford’s,
-<i>Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i>; Chapel, <i>Wars of Cyrus</i>;
-Unknown, <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>,
-<i>Edward I</i>, <i>Jack Straw</i>, <i>Locrine</i>, <i>Mucedorus</i>,
-<i>Alphonsus</i>, <i>1, 2 Contention of York and Lancaster</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_125" href="#FNanchor_125" class="label">[125]</a> <i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 446.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_126" href="#FNanchor_126" class="label">[126]</a> I here use ‘scene’ in the sense of a continuous section
-of action in an unchanged locality, and do not follow either the usage
-of the playwrights, which tends to be based upon the neo-classical
-principle that the entrance or exit of a speaker of importance
-constitutes a fresh scene, or the divisions of the editors, who often
-assume a change of locality where none has taken place; cf. ch. xxii.
-I do not regard a scene as broken by a momentary clearance of the
-stage, or by the opening of a recess in the background while speakers
-remain on the stage, or by the transference of action from one point
-to another of the background if this transference merely represents a
-journey over a foreshortened distance between neighbouring houses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_127" href="#FNanchor_127" class="label">[127]</a> Albright, 114; Thorndike, 102.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_128" href="#FNanchor_128" class="label">[128]</a> <i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_129" href="#FNanchor_129" class="label">[129]</a> <i>Alphonsus</i>, 163; <i>K. to K. Honest Man</i>, 71.
-The friar’s cell of <i>T. G.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i may be in an urban
-setting, as Silvia bids Eglamour go ‘out at the postern by the abbey
-wall’; that of <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii, vi; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-iii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 2 seems to be in rural environs.
-How far there is interior action is not clear. None is suggested by
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> or <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> In <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii (Q<sub>2</sub>) the Friar
-bids Romeo ‘come forth’ (1), and Romeo falls ‘upon the ground’ (69).
-Then ‘Enter Nurse and knocke’ (71). After discussing the knock, which
-is twice repeated, the Friar bids Romeo ‘Run to my study’ and calls ‘I
-come’. Then ‘Enter Nurse’ (79) with ‘Let me come in’. Romeo has not
-gone, but is still ‘There on the ground’ (83). Q<sub>1</sub> is in the main
-consistent with this, but the first s.d. is merely ‘Nurse knockes’,
-and after talking to Romeo, ‘Nurse offers to goe in and turnes againe’
-(163). In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i (Q<sub>1</sub>, and Q<sub>2</sub>) the Friar observes Juliet
-coming ‘towards my Cell’ (17), and later Juliet says ‘Shut the door’
-(44); cf. p. 83.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_130" href="#FNanchor_130" class="label">[130]</a> <i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ‘Curtaines
-open, Robin Hoode sleepes on a greene banke and Marian strewing flowers
-on him’ ... ‘yonder is the bower’; <i>Death of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-v; cf. <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv, ‘Let us to thy bower’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_131" href="#FNanchor_131" class="label">[131]</a> <i>B. B. of Alexandria</i>, scc. i, iv; <i>Battle of
-Alcazar</i>, ii. 325, where the presenter describes Nemesis as awaking
-the Furies, ‘In caue as dark as hell, and beds of steele’, and the
-corresponding s.d. in the plot (<i>H. P.</i> 139) is ‘Enter aboue
-Nemesis ... to them lying behinde the Curtaines 3 Furies’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_132" href="#FNanchor_132" class="label">[132]</a> <i>K. Leir</i>, scc. xxvii-xxxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_133" href="#FNanchor_133" class="label">[133]</a> <i>K. Leir</i>, sc. xxiv, ‘Enter the Gallian King and
-Queene, and Mumford, with a basket, disguised like Countrey folke’.
-Leir meets them, complaining of ‘this vnfruitfull soyle’, and (2178)
-‘She bringeth him to the table’; <i>B. B. of Alexandria</i>, sc. iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_134" href="#FNanchor_134" class="label">[134]</a> <i>B. B. of Alexandria</i>, sc. iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_135" href="#FNanchor_135" class="label">[135]</a> <i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i (d.s.), ‘A Crocadile
-sitting on a riuers banke, and a little snake stinging it. Then let
-both of them fall into the water’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 1756 (a desert
-scene), ‘Fling himselfe into the riuer’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi. 2248 (a
-battle-field scene), ‘She drowneth her selfe’; <i>Weakest Goeth to
-the Wall</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i (d.s.), ‘The Dutches of Burgundie ...
-leaps into a Riuer, leauing the child vpon the banke’; <i>Trial of
-Chivalry</i>, C_{4}<sup>v</sup>, ‘yon fayre Riuer side, which parts our Camps’;
-E<sub>2</sub>, ‘This is our meeting place; here runs the streame That parts
-our camps’; cf. p. 90. <i>A. of Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii and iii
-are, like part of <i>Sapho and Phao</i> (cf. p. 33), near a ferry, and
-‘Shakebag falles into a ditch’, but the river is not necessarily shown.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_136" href="#FNanchor_136" class="label">[136]</a> Two late testimonies may be held to support the
-theory. In <i>T. N. K.</i> (King’s, <i>c. 1613</i>), <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i.
-31, ‘Enter Palamon as out of a Bush’, but cf. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vi. 1,
-‘Enter Palamon from the Bush’. The Prologue to <i>Woman Killed with
-Kindness</i> (Worcester’s, <i>1603</i>) says:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I come but like a harbinger, being sent</div>
- <div class="i1">To tell you what these preparations mean:</div>
- <div>Look for no glorious state; our Muse is bent</div>
- <div class="i1">Upon a barren subject, a bare scene.</div>
- <div>We could afford this twig a timber tree.</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Whose strength might boldly on your favours build;</div>
- <div>Our russet, tissue; drone, a honey bee;</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Our barren plot, a large and spacious field.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>These rhetorical antitheses are an apology for meanness of theme,
-rather than, like the prologues to <i>Henry V</i>, for scenic
-imperfections, and I hesitate to believe that, when the actor said
-‘twig’, he pointed to a branch which served as sole symbol on the stage
-for a woodland.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_137" href="#FNanchor_137" class="label">[137]</a> <i>Looking-Glass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 2059, 2075, ‘Lo,
-a pleasant shade, a spreading vine ... <i>A Serpent deuoureth the
-vine</i>’; <i>O. Furioso</i>, 572, ‘Sacrepant hangs vp the Roundelayes
-on the trees’ (cf. <i>A. Y. L.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 1, ‘Hang there,
-my verse, in witness of my love’); <i>B. B. of Alexandria</i>, sc. vi,
-‘Here’s a branch, forsooth, of your little son turned to a mandrake
-tree’; <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 1–357, where Fortunatus dreams under a
-tree, 1861–2128, where there are apple-and nut-trees in a wilderness;
-&amp;c., &amp;c. Simon Forman in 1611 saw Macbeth and Banquo ‘ridinge thorowe
-a wod’ (<i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 1875–6, 417), although from the extant
-text we could have inferred no trees in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_138" href="#FNanchor_138" class="label">[138]</a> <i>M. N. D.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II-IV.</span> i; <i>Mucedorus</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii-v; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii,
-iii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i; <i>T. A. Women of Abingdon</i>, scc. vii, ix-xii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_139" href="#FNanchor_139" class="label">[139]</a> <i>Edw. I</i>, 2391, ‘I must hang vp my weapon vppon
-this tree’; <i>Alphonsus</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 417, ‘this wood; where in
-ambushment lie’. For a river cf. p. 51, n. 8 (<i>Locrine</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_140" href="#FNanchor_140" class="label">[140]</a> <i>Hen. V</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, prol. 49.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_141" href="#FNanchor_141" class="label">[141]</a> <i>1 Tamb.</i> 705, ‘Sound trumpets to the battell,
-and he runs in’; 1286, ‘They sound the battell within, and stay’;
-<i>2 Tamb.</i> 2922, ‘Sound to the battell, and Sigismond comes out
-wounded’; <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xii. 1, ‘Alarmes within, and the
-Chambers be discharged, like as it were a fight at sea’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_142" href="#FNanchor_142" class="label">[142]</a> <i>Alphonsus</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ii; <i>1 Hen.
-IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i-iv. The whole of <i>Edw. III</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III</span>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, is spread over Creçy and other vaguely located
-battle-fields in France.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_143" href="#FNanchor_143" class="label">[143]</a> <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xxii. 1, ‘Alarmes to the
-battaile, and then enter the Duke of <i>Somerset</i> and <i>Richard</i>
-fighting, and <i>Richard</i> kils him vnder the signe of the Castle in
-saint <i>Albones</i>’. The s.d. of <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii.
-66, is only ‘Enter Richard, and Somerset to fight’, but the dialogue
-shows that the ‘alehouse paltry sign’ was represented.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_144" href="#FNanchor_144" class="label">[144]</a> <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xxii, 62 (with the alehouse),
-‘Alarmes againe, and then enter three or foure, bearing the Duke of
-<i>Buckingham</i> wounded to his Tent’; <i>2 Tamb.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i.
-3674, ‘Amyras and Celebinus issues from the tent where Caliphas sits a
-sleepe’ ... 3764 (after Caliphas has spoken from within the tent), ‘He
-goes in and brings him out’; <i>Locrine</i>, 1423, ‘mee thinkes I heare
-some shriking noise. That draweth near to our pauillion’; <i>James
-IV</i>, 2272, ‘Lords, troop about my tent’; <i>Edw. I</i>, 1595, ‘King
-Edward ... goes into the Queenes Chamber, the Queenes Tent opens, shee
-is discouered in her bed’ ... 1674, ‘They close the Tent’ ... 1750,
-‘The Queenes Tent opens’ ... 1867, ‘The Nurse closeth the Tent’ ...
-1898, ‘Enter ... to giue the Queene Musicke at her Tent’, and in a
-later scene, 2141, ‘They all passe ... to the Kings pavilion, the King
-sits in his Tent with his pages about him’ ... 2152, ‘they all march
-to the Chamber. Bishop speakes to her [the Queen] in her bed’; <i>1
-Troilus and Cressida</i>, plot (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 142),
-‘Enter ... to them Achillis in his Tent’; <i>Trial of Chivalry</i>,
-C_{4}<sup>v</sup>, ‘this is the Pauilion of the Princesse .... Here is the key
-that opens to the Tent’ ... D, ‘Discouer her sitting in a chayre
-asleepe’ and a dialogue in the tent follows. The presence of a tent,
-not mentioned in dialogue or s.ds., can often be inferred in camp
-scenes, in which personages sit, or in those which end with a ‘Come,
-let us in’; e.g. <i>Locrine</i>, 564, 1147.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_145" href="#FNanchor_145" class="label">[145]</a> <i>Richard III</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, iv, v (a continuous
-scene); <i>1 Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii, iii, iv (probably
-similar); cf. p. 51, n. 8 (<i>Trial of Chivalry</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_146" href="#FNanchor_146" class="label">[146]</a> <i>Edw. I</i>, 900, 1082, 2303 (after a battle), ‘Then
-make the proclamation vpon the walles’ (s.d.); <i>James IV</i>, 2003
-(after parley), ‘They descend downe, open the gates, and humble them’;
-<i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 16,
-‘The Drum sounds a parle. <i>Perseda</i> comes vpon the walls in mans
-apparell. <i>Basilisco</i> and <i>Piston</i>, vpon the walles.... Then
-<i>Perseda</i> comes down to <i>Soliman</i>, and <i>Basilisco</i> and
-<i>Piston</i>’; <i>2 Contention</i>, sc. xviii, ‘Enter the Lord Maire
-of <i>Yorke</i> vpon the wals’ ... (after parley) ‘Exit Maire’ ...
-‘The Maire opens the dore, and brings the keies in his hand’; <i>K.
-John</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 201, ‘Enter a Citizen vpon the walles’ ...
-‘Heere after excursions, Enter the Herald of France with Trumpets to
-the gates’ ... ‘Enter the two kings with their powers at seuerall
-doores’ ... (after parley) ‘Now, citizens of Angiers, ope your gates’;
-cf. <i>1 Troublesome Raigne</i>, scc. ii-x; <i>2 Contention</i>, sc.
-xxi; <i>George a Greene</i>, sc. v; <i>Orlando Furioso</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-ii; <i>2 Tamburlaine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii; <i>Selimus</i>, scc. xii,
-xxvii-xxxi; <i>Wounds of Civil War</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii-iv; <i>Edw.
-III</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <i>Death of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii;
-<i>Stukeley</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>; <i>Frederick and Basilea</i> and <i>1
-Troilus and Cressida</i> plots (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 137, 142),
-&amp;c. Wall scenes are not always siege scenes. Thus in <i>2 Troub.
-Raigne</i>, sc. i, ‘Enter yong Arthur on the walls.... He leapes’ (cf.
-<i>K. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii); in <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xvi, ‘Enter
-the Lord Skayles vpon the Tower walles walking. Enter three or four
-Citizens below’ (cf. <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v). Analogous is
-<i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ix (Kenilworth), ‘Enter King, Queene,
-and Somerset on the Tarras.... Enter Multitudes with Halters about
-their neckes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_147" href="#FNanchor_147" class="label">[147]</a> In <i>Alarum for London</i>, 203, a gun is fired at
-Antwerp from the walls of the castle; cf. <i>1 Hen. VI</i> below.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_148" href="#FNanchor_148" class="label">[148]</a> <i>2 Tamburlaine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ‘Enter the
-Gouernour of Babylon vpon the walles’ ... (after parley) ‘Alarme, and
-they scale the walles’, after which the governor is hung in chains
-from the walls and shot at; <i>Selimus</i>, 1200, ‘Alarum, Scale the
-walles’, 2391, ‘Allarum, beats them off the walles; cf. <i>1 Hen.
-VI</i> below. <i>Hen. V</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i-iii (a continuous scene)
-opens with ‘Alarum: Scaling Ladders at Harflew’. Henry says ‘Once more
-vnto the breach’, but later a parley is sounded from the town, and
-‘Enter the King and all his Traine before the Gates’, where submission
-is made, and they ‘enter the Towne’. Sometimes an assault appears to be
-on the gates rather than the walls; e.g. <i>1 Edw. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iv-vi; <i>1 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_149" href="#FNanchor_149" class="label">[149]</a> Cf. p. 106, n. 6. The fullest use of walls is made in
-<i>1 Hen. VI</i>, a sixteenth-century play, although the extant text
-was first printed in 1623. An analysis is necessary. The walls are
-those of Orleans in <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, of Rouen in <span class="allsmcap">III</span>,
-of Bordeaux in <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, of Angiers in <span class="allsmcap">V</span>. In <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iv, ‘Enter the Master Gunner of Orleance, and his Boy’. They tell how</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2 hangingindent">the English, in the suburbs close entrencht,</div>
- <div>Wont through a secret grate of iron barres,</div>
- <div>In yonder tower, to ouer-peere the citie.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Gunner bids the Boy watch, and tell him if he sees
-any English. Then ‘Enter Salisbury and Talbot on the turrets, with
-others’, and later ‘Enter the Boy with a Linstock’. The English talk
-of attacking ‘heere, at the bulwarke of the bridge’, and ‘Here they
-shot, and Salisbury falls downe’. After an <i>Exeunt</i> which clears
-the stage, there is fighting in the open, during which a French
-relieving party ‘enter the Towne with souldiers’, and later ‘Enter
-on the Walls, Puzel, Dolphin, Reigneir, Alanson, and Souldiers’. In
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, which follows, a French watch is set, lest English
-come ‘neere to the walles’. Then ‘Enter Talbot, Bedford, and Burgundy,
-with scaling Ladders’; Bedford will go ‘to yond corner’, Burgundy ‘to
-this’, and Talbot mount ‘heere’. They assault, and ‘The French leape
-ore the walles in their shirts. Enter seuerall wayes, Bastard, Alanson,
-Reignier, halfe ready, and halfe unready’. They discourse and are
-pursued by the English, who then ‘retreat’, and in turn discourse ‘here
-... in the market-place’, rejoicing at how the French did ‘Leape o’re
-the Walls for refuge in the field’. Then, after a clearance, comes a
-scene at the Countess of Auvergne’s castle. In <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii the
-Pucell enters before the gates of Rouen, obtains access by a trick, and
-then ‘Enter Pucell on the top, thrusting out a torch burning’. Other
-French watch without for the signal from ‘yonder tower’ or ‘turret’,
-and then follow into the town and expel the English, after which,
-‘Enter Talbot and Burgonie without: within, Pucell, Charles, Bastard,
-and Reigneir on the walls’. After parley, ‘Exeunt from the walls’, and
-fighting in front leaves the English victorious, and again able to
-enter the town. In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii ‘Enter Talbot ... before Burdeaux’,
-summons the French general ‘vnto the Wall’, and ‘Enter Generall aloft’.
-In <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii the English are victorious before Angiers, sound for
-a parley before the castle, and ‘Enter Reignier on the walles’. After
-parley, Reignier says ‘I descend’, and then ‘Enter Reignier’ to welcome
-the English.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_150" href="#FNanchor_150" class="label">[150]</a> In <i>Looking-Glass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ‘Enters
-Remilia’ and after discourse bids her ladies ‘Shut close these
-curtaines straight and shadow me’; whereupon ‘They draw the Curtaines
-and Musicke plaies’. Then enter the Magi, and ‘The Magi with their rods
-beate the ground, and from vnder the same riseth a braue Arbour’. Rasni
-enters and will ‘drawe neare Remilias royall tent’. Then ‘He drawes the
-Curtaines, and findes her stroken with thunder, blacke.’ She is borne
-out. Presumably the same arbour is used in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, where
-Alvida’s ladies ‘enter the bowers’. Both scenes are apparently near
-the palace at Nineveh and not in a camp. The earlier action of <i>L.
-L. L.</i> is in a park, near a manor house, which is not necessarily
-represented. But at <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 373 the King wishes to devise
-entertainment ‘in their tents’ for the ‘girls of France’, and Biron
-says, ‘First, from the park let us conduct them thither’. Presumably
-therefore <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii passes near the tents.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_151" href="#FNanchor_151" class="label">[151]</a> <i>Looking-Glass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii
-(<i>supra</i>); <i>Edw. III</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 61, at Roxborough
-Castle, ‘Then in the sommer arber sit by me’; <i>2 Hen. IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii (<i>infra</i>). In <i>Sp. Trag.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii.
-42, Horatio and Belimperia agree to meet in ‘thy father’s pleasant
-bower’. In <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv they enter with ‘let us to the bower’ and
-set an attendant to ‘watch without the gate’. While they sit ‘within
-these leauy bowers’ they are betrayed, and (s.d.) ‘They hang him in the
-Arbor’. In <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v (not really a new scene) Hieronimo emerges
-from his house, where a woman’s cry ‘within this garden’ has plucked
-him from his ‘naked bed’, finds Horatio hanging ‘in my bower’, and
-(s.d.) ‘He cuts him downe’. In <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> xii (an addition of the
-1602 text) Hieronimo ranges ‘this hidious orchard’, where Horatio was
-murdered before ‘this the very tree’. Finally, in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii
-Isabella enters ‘this garden plot’, and (s.d.) ‘She cuts downe the
-Arbour’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_152" href="#FNanchor_152" class="label">[152]</a> <i>Sp. Trag.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> xii<sup>a</sup> (<i>supra</i>);
-<i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, sc. ii, ‘this flowry banke’, sc. iv, ‘these
-meddowes’; <i>1 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv, ‘From off this brier
-pluck a white rose with me’, &amp;c. In <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i (Q<sub>1</sub>,
-but Q<sub>2</sub> has apparently the same setting) Romeo enters, followed by
-friends, who say, ‘He came this way, and leapt this orchard wall’, and
-refer to ‘those trees’. They go, and in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii (presumably
-the same scene) Romeo speaks under Juliet’s window ‘ouer my head’.
-She says ‘The Orchard walles are high and hard to climb’, and he, ‘By
-loues light winges did I oreperch these wals’, and later swears by the
-blessed moon, ‘That tips with siluer all these fruit trees tops’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_153" href="#FNanchor_153" class="label">[153]</a> <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii (<i>supra</i>); <i>Sp.
-Trag.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v (<i>supra</i>); <i>Look About You</i>, sc.
-v (a bowling green under Gloucester’s chamber in the Fleet); <i>1
-Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i (a grove before Cobham’s
-gate and an inn); &amp;c. In <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. ii. 64, Elinor sends
-for a conjurer to do a spell ‘on the backside of my orchard heere’. In
-sc. iv she enters with the conjurer, says ‘I will stand upon this Tower
-here’, and (s.d.) ‘She goes vp to the Tower’. Then the conjurer will
-‘frame a cirkle here vpon the earth’. A spirit ascends; spies enter;
-and ‘Exet Elnor aboue’. York calls ‘Who’s within there?’ The setting
-of <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii, is much the same, except that
-the references to the tower are replaced by the s.d. ‘Enter Elianor
-aloft’. In <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, the scene is ‘this close
-walke’ at the Duke of York’s. Similarly, scc. i, iv of <i>Humourous
-Day’s Mirth</i> are before Labervele’s house in a ‘green’, which is his
-wife’s ‘close walk’, which is kept locked, and into which a visitor
-intrudes. But in sc. vii, also before Labervele’s, the ‘close walk’ is
-referred to as distinct from the place of the scene.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_154" href="#FNanchor_154" class="label">[154]</a> <i>2 Troublesome Raigne</i>, sc. viii, ‘Enter two Friars
-laying a Cloth’. One says, ‘I meruaile why they dine heere in the
-Orchard’. We need not marvel; it was to avoid interior action. In <i>2
-Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, the scene is Shallow’s orchard, ‘where,
-in an arbour, we will eat a last year’s pippin of mine own graffing,
-with a dish of caraways, and so forth’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_155" href="#FNanchor_155" class="label">[155]</a> <i>Famous Victories</i>, sc. ii, 5, ‘we will watch here
-at Billingsgate ward’; <i>Jack Straw</i>, iii (Smithfield); <i>W. for
-Fair Women</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 115, ‘here at a friends of mine in Lumberd
-Street’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 1511, ‘Enter two Carpenters vnder Newgate’;
-<i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, sc. xi (Tower Street, <i>vide infra</i>);
-<i>Cromwell</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, iii (Westminster and Lambeth, <i>vide
-infra</i>); <i>Arden of F.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii (Paul’s Churchyard,
-<i>vide infra</i>); <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> vi, ‘Enter Iacke
-Cade and the rest, and strikes his staffe on London stone’; &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_156" href="#FNanchor_156" class="label">[156]</a> <i>Span. Tragedy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vi. 104, ‘He turnes
-him off’ (s.d.); <i>Sir T. More</i>, sc. xvii. More is brought in by
-the Lieutenant of the Tower and delivered to the sheriff. He says
-(1911), ‘Oh, is this the place? I promise ye it is a goodly scaffolde’,
-and ‘your stayre is somewhat weake’. Lords enter ‘As he is going vp
-the stayres’ (s.d.), and he jests with ‘this straunge woodden horsse’
-and ‘Truely heers a moste sweet Gallerie’ (where the marginal s.d. is
-‘walking’). Apparently the block is not visible; he is told it is ‘to
-the Easte side’ and ‘exit’ in that direction.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_157" href="#FNanchor_157" class="label">[157]</a> <i>Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii, ‘The trumpets sound
-and the King enters with his nobles; when they are set, enter the Duke
-of Norfolke in armes defendent’. No one is ‘to touch the listes’ (43),
-and when the duel is stopped the combatants’ returne backe to their
-chaires againe’ (120).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_158" href="#FNanchor_158" class="label">[158]</a> <i>S. and P.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. There is an open
-place in Rhodes which a mule and ass can enter. Knights and ladies are
-welcomed and go ‘forwards to the tilt’ with an ‘Exeunt’ (126). Action
-continues in the same place. Piston bids Basilisco ‘stay with me and
-looke vpon the tilters’, and ‘Will you vp the ladder, sir, and see the
-tilting?’ The s.d. follows (180), ‘Then they go vp the ladders and they
-sound within to the first course’. Piston and Basilisco then describe
-the courses as these proceed, evidently out of sight of the audience.
-The tiltyard may be supposed to run like that at Westminster, parallel
-to the public road and divided from it by a wall, up which ladders
-can be placed for the commoner spectators. In <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii Erastus
-is arrested in public and tried on the spot before the Marshal. He
-is bound to ‘that post’ (83) and strangled. The witnesses are to be
-killed. Soliman says (118),</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Lord Marshall, hale them to the towers top.</div>
- <div>And throw them headlong downe into the valley;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>and we get the s.ds. ‘Then the Marshall beares them to the tower top’
-(122), and ‘Then they are both tumbled downe’ (130). Presumably they
-disappear behind.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_159" href="#FNanchor_159" class="label">[159]</a> <i>James IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter
-<i>Slipper</i>, <i>Nano</i>, and <i>Andrew</i>, with their billes,
-readie written, in their hands’. They dispute as to whose bill shall
-stand highest, and then post the bills.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_160" href="#FNanchor_160" class="label">[160]</a> <i>Lord Cromwell</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 41 (in Italy):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Content thee, man; here set vp these two billes,</div>
- <div>And let us keep our standing on the bridge,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>followed by s.ds., ‘One standes at one end, and one at tother’, and
-‘Enter Friskiball, the Marchant, and reades the billes’. In <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii. 1 (Westminster) Cromwell says, ‘Is the Barge readie?’ and (12) ‘Set
-on before there, and away to Lambeth’. After an ‘Exeunt’, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii begins ‘Halberts, stand close vnto the water-side’, and (16) ‘Enter
-Cromwell’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_161" href="#FNanchor_161" class="label">[161]</a> Cf. ch. xix, p. 44. <i>Wounds of Civil War</i> has
-several such scenes. In <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 1, ‘Enter on the Capitoll
-Sulpitius Tribune ... whom placed, and their Lictors before them
-with their Rods and Axes, Sulpitius beginneth’ ... (146) ‘Here enter
-Scilla with Captaines and Souldiers’. Scilla’s party are not in the
-Capitol; they ‘braue the Capitoll’ (149), are ‘before the Capitoll’
-(218), but Scilla talks to the senators, and Marius trusts to see
-Scilla’s head ‘on highest top of all this Capitoll’. Presently Scilla
-bids (249) ‘all that loue Scilla come downe to him’, and (258) ‘Here
-let them goe downe’. In <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i the action is in the open,
-but (417) ‘yond Capitoll’ is named; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i seems to be in
-‘this Capitoll’ (841). In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i Marius and his troops enter
-before the seated Senate. Octavius, the consul, ‘sits commanding in
-his throne’ (1390). From Marius’ company, ‘Cynna presseth vp’ (s.d.)
-to ‘yonder emptie seate’ (1408), and presently Marius is called up and
-(1484) ‘He takes his seate’. In <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> v. 2231 ‘Scilla seated in
-his roabes of state is saluted by the Citizens’. Similarly in <i>T.
-A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ‘Enter the Tribunes and Senatours aloft: and then
-enter Saturninus and his followers at one doore, and Bassianus and his
-followers’. Saturninus bids the tribunes ‘open the gates and let me in’
-(63) and ‘They goe vp into the Senate house’. Titus enters and buries
-his sons in his family tomb, and (299) ‘Enter aloft the Emperour’ and
-speaks to Titus. There is a Venetian senate house in <i>K. to K. an
-Honest Man</i>, scc. iii, xvii, but I do not find a similar interplay
-with the outside citizens here.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_162" href="#FNanchor_162" class="label">[162]</a> <i>W. for Fair Women</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 93 (Lombard
-Street), ‘While Master Sanders and he are in busy talk one to the
-other, Browne steps to a corner.... Enter a Gentleman with a man with a
-torch before. Browne draws to strike’; <i>Arden of F.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii. 41, ‘Stand close, and take you fittest standing, And at his comming
-foorth speed him’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_163" href="#FNanchor_163" class="label">[163]</a> <i>T. G.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii (cf. <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii.
-16, ‘Now must we to her window’, and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 35, 114, where
-Valentine has a rope-ladder to scale Silvia’s window ‘in an upper
-tower’ and ‘aloft, far from the ground’); <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 91,
-‘That’s her chamber’; <i>R. J.</i> (orchard scenes), <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v, ‘Enter Romeo and Juliet at the window’ (Q<sub>1</sub> where
-Q<sub>2</sub> has ‘aloft’; on the difficulty presented by Juliet’s chamber,
-cf. p. 94); <i>M. V.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vi. 1, ‘This is the penthouse
-vnder which Lorenzo Desired us to make a stand’ ... ‘Jessica aboue’
-(s.d.) ... ‘Descend, for you must be my torch-bearer’ ... ‘Enter
-Jessica’ (having come down within from the casement forbidden her by
-Shylock and advised by Lancelot in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v); <i>Englishmen for
-my Money</i>, sc. ix (where Vandalle, come to woo Pisaro’s daughter in
-the dark, is drawn up in a basket and left dangling in mid-air, while
-later (1999) Pisaro is heard ‘at the window’ and ‘Enter Pisaro aboue’);
-<i>Two A. Women</i>, 1495, ‘Enter Mall in the window’; <i>Sp. Trag.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, where spies ‘in secret’ and ‘aboue’ overhear the loves
-of Horatio and Belimperia below. Lovers are not concerned in <i>Sp.
-Trag.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ‘Enter Hieronimo ... A Letter falleth’;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ix, ‘Belimperia, at a window’; <i>The Shrew</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 17, ‘Pedant lookes out of the window’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_164" href="#FNanchor_164" class="label">[164]</a> In <i>T. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i a coffin is brought in,
-apparently in the market-place, while the Senators are visible in
-the Capitol (cf. p. 58, n. 2), and (90) ‘They open the Tombe’ and
-(150) ‘Sound trumpets, and lay the coffin in the Tombe’. <i>R. J.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii is in a churchyard with ‘yond yew trees’ (3). A torch
-‘burneth in the Capels monument’ (127), also called a ‘vault’ (86,
-&amp;c.) and ‘the tomb’ (262). Romeo will ‘descend into this bed of death’
-(28), and Q<sub>1</sub> adds the s.d. ‘Romeo opens the tombe’ (45). He kills
-Paris, whose blood ‘stains The stony entrance of this sepulchre’ (141).
-Juliet awakes and speaks, and must of course be visible. The Admiral’s
-inventories of 1598 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116) include ‘j tombe’, ‘j
-tome of Guido, j tome of Dido’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_165" href="#FNanchor_165" class="label">[165]</a> <i>George a Greene</i>, sc. xi, ‘Enter a Shoemaker
-sitting vpon the Stage at worke’, where a shop is not essential;
-but may be implied by ‘Stay till I lay in my tooles’ (1005);
-<i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, ‘Enter Strumbo, Dorothy, Trompart
-cobling shooes and singing’ (569) ... ‘Come sirrha shut vp’ (660);
-<i>R. and J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 55, ‘This should be the house. Being
-holiday, the beggar’s shop is shut. What, ho! apothecary!’ where the
-elaborate description of the shop which precedes leaves some doubt how
-far it was represented; <i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, scc. iii, ‘Open my
-shop windows’; v, ‘Ile goe in’; viii, ‘Shut vp the shop’; xi, ‘Enter
-Hodge at his shop-board, Rafe, Friske, Hans, and a boy at worke’ (all
-before or in Eyre’s shop); x, ‘Enter Iane in a Semsters shop working,
-and Hammon muffled at another doore, he stands aloofe’ (another shop);
-<i>1 Edw. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, ‘Enter two prentizes, preparing the
-Goldsmiths shop with plate.... Enter mistris Shoare, with her worke in
-her hand.... The boy departs, and she sits sowing in her shop. Enter
-the King disguised’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_166" href="#FNanchor_166" class="label">[166]</a> <i>Arden of F.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 52,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4">‘<i>Here enters</i> a prentise.</div>
- <div>Tis very late; I were best shute vp my stall,</div>
- <div>For heere will be ould filching, when the presse</div>
- <div>Comes foorth of Paules.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Then lettes he downe his window, and it breaks</i> Black Wils <i>head</i>’.</p>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_167" href="#FNanchor_167" class="label">[167]</a> <i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, sc. xi, ‘the signe of
-the Last in Tower-street, mas yonders the house’; <i>1 Edw. IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, ‘Heres Lombard Streete, and heres the Pelican’. The
-Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 117) include ‘j
-syne for Mother Redcap’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_168" href="#FNanchor_168" class="label">[168]</a> Cf. ch. xix, p. 11. The introduction of a meal
-goes rather beyond the neo-classic analogy, but presents no great
-difficulty. If a banquet can be brought into a garden or orchard, it
-can be brought into a porch or courtyard. It is not always possible to
-determine whether a meal is in a threshold scene or a hall scene (cf.
-p. 64), but in <i>1 Edw. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ‘Enter Nell and
-Dudgeon, with a table couered’ is pretty clearly at the door of the
-Tanner’s cottage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_169" href="#FNanchor_169" class="label">[169]</a> In the theatre usage personages go ‘in’, even where they
-merely go ‘off’ without entering a house (cf. e.g. p. 53, n. 2). The
-interlude usage is less regular, and sometimes personages go ‘out’, as
-they would appear to the audience to do.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_170" href="#FNanchor_170" class="label">[170]</a> <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 227, ‘Sound
-vp the Drum to Lucinaes doore’ (s.d.). Doors are conspicuous in <i>K.
-to K. Honest Man</i>; thus sc. ii. 82, ‘Enter Lelio with his sword
-drawen, hee knockes at his doore’; sc. v. 395, ’tis time to knocke vp
-Lelios householde traine. <i>He knockes</i>’ ... ‘What mean this troup
-of armed men about my dore?’; sc. v. 519 (Bristeo’s), ‘Come breake
-vp the doore’; sc. vii. 662, ‘<i>Enter Annetta and Lucida with their
-worke in their handes....</i> Here let vs sit awhile’ ... (738) ‘Get
-you in ... <i>Here put them in at doore</i>’; sc. vii. 894 (Lelio’s),
-‘Underneath this wall, watch all this night: If any man shall attempt
-to breake your sisters doore, Be stout, assaile him’; sc. vii. 828 (a
-Senator’s), ‘What make you lingering here about my doores?’; sc. ix.
-1034 (Lelio’s), ‘Heaue me the doores from of the hinges straight’; sc.
-xv. 1385 (Lelio’s), ‘my door doth ope’ (cf. p. 62, on the courtyard
-scene in the same play).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_171" href="#FNanchor_171" class="label">[171]</a> Thus <i>Humorous Day’s Mirth</i>, sc. v (Moren’s), 111,
-‘We’ll draw thee out of the house by the heels’ ... 143, ‘Thrust this
-ass out of the doors’ ... 188, ‘Get you out of my house!’, but 190,
-‘Well, come in, sweet bird’; <i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, sc. xii (Lord
-Mayor’s), ‘Get you in’, but ‘The Earl of Lincoln at the gate is newly
-lighted’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_172" href="#FNanchor_172" class="label">[172]</a> <i>James IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ‘<i>Enter the
-Countesse of Arrain, with Ida, her daughter, in theyr porch, sitting
-at worke</i>’ ... (753) ‘Come, will it please you enter, gentle sir?
-<i>Offer to Exeunt</i>’; cf. <i>Arden of F.</i> (<i>vide infra</i>) and
-the penthouse in <i>M. V.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vi. 1 (p. 58).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_173" href="#FNanchor_173" class="label">[173]</a> Perhaps the best example is in <i>Arden of
-Feversham</i>. Arden’s house at Aldersgate is described by Michael to
-the murderers in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 189:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The dores Ile leaue unlockt against you come,</div>
- <div>No sooner shall ye enter through the latch,</div>
- <div>Ouer the thresholde to the inner court,</div>
- <div>But on your left hand shall you see the staires</div>
- <div>That leads directly to my M. Chamber.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Here, then, is <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. Arden and Francklin talk and go to bed.
-Michael, in remorse, alarms them with an outcry, and when they appear,
-explains that he ‘fell asleepe, Vpon the thresholde leaning to the
-staires’ and had a bad dream. Arden then finds that ‘the dores were all
-unlockt’. Later (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 8) Michael lies about this to the
-murderers:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5h">Francklin and my master</div>
- <div>Were very late conferring in the porch,</div>
- <div>And Francklin left his napkin where he sat</div>
- <div>With certain gold knit in it, as he said.</div>
- <div>Being in bed, he did bethinke himselfe,</div>
- <div>And comming down he found the dores vnshut:</div>
- <div>He lockt the gates, and brought away the keyes.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>When the murderers come in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, Will bids Shakebag ‘show
-me to this house’, and Shakebag says ‘This is the doore; but soft,
-me thinks tis shut’. They are therefore at the outer door of the
-courtyard; cf. p. 69, n. 2. Similarly <i>1 Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-ii, which begins with ‘Enter Woodstock, Lancaster, and Yorke, at
-Plashey’, and ‘heere at Plasshy house I’le bid you wellcome’, is
-clearly in a courtyard. A servant says (114), ‘Ther’s a horseman at the
-gate.... He will not off an’s horse-backe till the inner gate be open’.
-Gloucester bids ‘open the inner gate ... lett hime in’, and (s.d.)
-‘Enter a spruce Courtier a horse-backe’. It is also before the house,
-for the Courtier says, ‘Is he within’, and ‘I’le in and speake with the
-duke’. Rather more difficult is <i>Englishmen for my Money</i>, sc.
-iv, ‘Enter Pisaro’ with others, and says, ‘Proud am I that my roofe
-containes such friends’ (748), also ‘I would not haue you fall out in
-my house’ (895). He sends his daughters ‘in’ (827, 851), so must be in
-the porch, and a ‘knock within’ (s.d.) and ‘Stirre and see who knocks!’
-(796) suggest a courtyard gate. But later in the play (cf. p. 58, n. 4)
-the street seems to be directly before the same house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_174" href="#FNanchor_174" class="label">[174]</a> In <i>K. to K. Honest Man</i>, scc. x-xii (continuous
-scene at Servio’s), Phillida is called ‘forth’ (1058) and bidden keep
-certain prisoners ‘in the vpper loft’. Presently she enters ‘with the
-keyes’ and after the s.d. ‘Here open the doore’ calls them out and
-gives them a signet to pass ‘the Porter of the gates’, which Servio
-(1143) calls ‘my castell gates’. In <i>1 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-iii, the Countess of Auvergne, to entrap Talbot, bids her porter
-‘bring the keyes to me’; presumably Talbot’s men are supposed to break
-in the gates at the s.d. ‘a Peale of Ordnance’. <i>Rich. III</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vii, is at Baynard’s Castle. Buckingham bids Gloucester
-(55) ‘get you vp to the leads’ to receive the Mayor, who enters with
-citizens, and (95) ‘Enter Richard with two bishops a lofte’. Similarly
-in <i>Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 62, ‘Richard appeareth on
-the walls’ of Flint Castle, and then comes down (178) to the ‘base
-court’. <i>B. Beggar of Alexandria</i>, sc. ii, is before the house of
-Elimine’s father and ‘Enter Elimine above on the walls’. She is in a
-‘tower’ and comes down, but there is nothing to suggest a courtyard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_175" href="#FNanchor_175" class="label">[175]</a> <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, v (a
-continuous scene), is partly ‘neare vnto the entrance of the Tower’,
-beyond the porter’s lodge, partly in Oldcastle’s chamber there, with a
-‘window that goes out into the leads’; cf. p. 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_176" href="#FNanchor_176" class="label">[176]</a> <i>Famous Victories</i>, sc. vi, 60, ‘What a rapping
-keep you at the Kings Court gate!’; <i>Jack Straw</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii
-(a City gate).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_177" href="#FNanchor_177" class="label">[177]</a> <i>A Shrew</i>, ind. 1, ‘Enter a Tapster, beating out of
-his doores Slie Droonken’; <i>1 Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii-vii (inn
-and barn); <i>True Tragedy of Rich. III</i>, sc. viii, ‘Earle Riuers
-speakes out of his chamber’ in an inn-yard, where he has been locked
-up; <i>James IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii (stable); <i>Looking Glass</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 2037, ‘Enter the temple Omnes’. <i>Selimus</i>, sc.
-xxi. 2019, has</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Thy bodie in this auntient monument,</div>
- <div>Where our great predecessours sleep in rest:</div>
- <div class="i5">Suppose the Temple of <i>Mahomet</i>,</div>
- <div>Thy wofull son <i>Selimus</i> thus doth place.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Is the third line really a s.d., in which case it does not suggest
-realistic staging, or a misunderstood line of the speech, really meant
-to run, ‘Supposed the Temple of great Mahomet’?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_178" href="#FNanchor_178" class="label">[178]</a> <i>Patient Grissell</i>, 755–1652, reads like a
-threshold scene, and ‘Get you in!’ is repeated (848, 1065, 1481),
-but Grissell’s russet gown and pitcher are hung up and several times
-referred to (817, 828, 1018, 1582). <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 733–855,
-at the palace of Babylon, must be a threshold scene as the Soldan
-points to ‘yon towre’ (769), but this is not inconsistent with the
-revealing of a casket, with the s.d. (799) ‘Draw a Curtaine’. We need
-not therefore assume that <i>M. V.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii, ix, in which
-Portia bids ‘Draw aside the Curtaines’ and ‘Draw the Curtain’, or
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii are hall scenes, and all the Belmont scenes may be,
-like <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, in a garden backed by a portico; or rather the hall
-referred to in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 89, ‘That light we see is burning in my
-hall’, may take the form of a portico.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_179" href="#FNanchor_179" class="label">[179]</a> Cf. p. 58, n. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_180" href="#FNanchor_180" class="label">[180]</a> Thus in <i>Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, iv (a
-continuous scene), Aumerle has leave to ‘turne the key’ (36). Then
-‘<i>The Duke of Yorke knokes at the doore and crieth</i>, My leige
-... Thou hast a traitor in thy presence there’. Cf. <i>1 Troublesome
-Raigne</i>, sc. xiii. 81:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>He stayes my Lord but at the Presence door:</div>
- <div>Pleaseth your Highnes, I will call him in.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_181" href="#FNanchor_181" class="label">[181]</a> <i>Famous Victories</i>, scc. iv, v (a continuous
-scene), ‘Jayler, bring the prisoner to the barre’ (iv. 1).... ‘Thou
-shalt be my Lord chiefe Justice, and thou shalt sit in the chaire’ (v.
-10); <i>Sir T. More</i>, sc. ii. 104, ‘An Arras is drawne, and behinde
-it (as in sessions) sit the L. Maior.... Lifter the prisoner at the
-barre’; <i>Warning for Fair Women</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 1180, ‘Enter some
-to prepare the judgement seat to the Lord Mayor....(1193) Browne is
-brought in and the Clerk says, ‘To the barre, George Browne’; <i>M.
-V.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> x; &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_182" href="#FNanchor_182" class="label">[182]</a> <i>Bacon and Bungay</i>, scc. vii, ix (Regent House),
-where visitors ‘sit to heare and see this strange dispute’ (1207),
-and later, ‘Enter Miles, with a cloth and trenchers and salt’ (1295);
-<i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, sc. xv (Leadenhall); <i>Englishmen for my
-Money</i>, sc. iii (Exchange).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_183" href="#FNanchor_183" class="label">[183]</a> <i>1 Troublesome Raigne</i>, sc. xi, in a convent,
-entails the opening of a coffer large enough to hold a nun and a press
-large enough to hold a priest; <i>2 Troublesome Raigne</i>, sc. iii,
-before St. Edmund’s shrine, has a numerous company who swear on an
-altar. <i>Alphonsus</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, begins ‘Let there be a brazen
-Head set in the middle of the place behind the Stage, out of the which
-cast flames of fire’. It is in the ‘sacred seate’ of Mahomet, who
-speaks from the head, and bids the priests ‘call in’ visitors ‘which
-now are drawing to my Temple ward’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_184" href="#FNanchor_184" class="label">[184]</a> <i>T. of a Shrew</i>, scc. ix, xi, xiii; <i>Sir T.
-More</i>, scc. ix, ‘Enter S<sup>r</sup> <i>Thomas Moore</i>, M<sup>r</sup> <i>Roper</i>,
-and Seruing men setting stooles’; xiii, ‘Enter ... Moore ... as in
-his house at Chelsey’ ... (1413) ‘Sit good Madame [<i>in margin</i>,
-‘lowe stooles’] ... (1521) ‘Entreate their Lordships come into the
-hall’. <i>E. M. I.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ii (a continuous scene), is at
-Thorello’s house, and in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 1592 it is described with
-‘I saw no body to be kist, vnlesse they would haue kist the post, in
-the middle of the warehouse; for there I left them all ... How? were
-they not gone in then?’ But <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 570, also at Thorello’s,
-has ‘Within sir, in the warehouse’. Probably the warehouse was
-represented as an open portico.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_185" href="#FNanchor_185" class="label">[185]</a> Cf. p. 63, nn. 3, 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_186" href="#FNanchor_186" class="label">[186]</a> <i>Sir T. More</i>, scc. ix, xiii (stools, <i>vide
-supra</i>); x, where the Council ‘sit’ to ‘this little borde’
-(1176); <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v (stools, <i>vide supra</i>);
-<i>James IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 141, ‘Enstall and crowne her’; <i>Sp.
-Tragedy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 8, ‘Wherefore sit I in a regall throne’;
-<i>1 Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 81, ‘Please you, assend your
-throne’; <i>1 Tamburlaine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 1474, ‘He [Tamburlaine]
-gets vp vpon him [Bajazet] to his chaire’; <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, 1010
-(addition of 1616 text), ‘His Maiesty is comming to the Hall; Go
-backe, and see the State in readinesse’; <i>Look About You</i>, sc.
-xix, ‘Enter young Henry Crowned ... Henry the elder places his Sonne,
-the two Queenes on eyther hand, himselfe at his feete, Leyster and
-Lancaster below him’; this must have involved an elaborate ‘state’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_187" href="#FNanchor_187" class="label">[187]</a> <i>Bacon and Bungay</i>, sc. ix. (<i>vide supra</i>);
-<i>T. of a Shrew</i>, sc. ix. 32, ‘They couer the bord and fetch in
-the meate’; <i>1 Edw. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, ‘They bring forth a
-table and serue in the banquet’; <i>Patient Grissell</i>, 1899, ‘A
-Table is set’; <i>Humorous Day’s Mirth</i>, scc. viii, x-xii (Verone’s
-ordinary), on which cf. p. 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_188" href="#FNanchor_188" class="label">[188]</a> <i>1 Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii; <i>Death of R.
-Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v, where a servant
-says, ‘Away with the joint-stools, remove the court-cupboard’, and
-Capulet ‘turn the tables up’; cf. ch. vi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_189" href="#FNanchor_189" class="label">[189]</a> <i>M. N. D.</i> v (cf. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 58); <i>Sir
-T. More</i>, sc. ix; <i>Sp. Tragedy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, iv (a
-continuous scene), on which cf. p. 93, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_190" href="#FNanchor_190" class="label">[190]</a> <i>2 Tamburlaine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 2969, ‘The
-Arras is drawen, and Zenocrate lies in her bed of state, Tamburlaine
-sitting by her: three Phisitians about her bed, tempering potions.
-Theridamas, Techelles, Vsumcasane, and the three sonnes’.... (3110,
-at end of sc.) ‘The Arras is drawen’; <i>Selimus</i>, sc. x. 861,
-‘I needs must sleepe. <i>Bassaes</i> withdraw your selues from me
-awhile’.... ‘They stand aside while the curtins are drawne’
-(s.d.) ... (952) ‘A Messenger enters, <i>Baiazet</i> awaketh’;
-<i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, d.s. 24, ‘Enter Muly Mahamet and his sonne,
-and his two young brethren, the Moore sheweth them the bed, and then
-takes his leaue of them, and they betake them to their rest’ ... (36)
-‘Enter the Moore and two murdrers bringing in his unkle Abdelmunen,
-then they draw the curtains and smoother the yong princes in the bed.
-Which done in sight of the vnkle they strangle him in his Chaire,
-and then goe forth’; <i>Edw. I</i>, sc. xxv. 2668, ‘Elinor in
-child-bed with her daughter Ione, and other Ladies’; <i>True Tragedy
-of Rich. III</i>, sc. i, ‘Now Nobles, draw the Curtaines and depart
-... (s.d.) The King dies in his bed’; sc. xiii, where murderers are
-called ‘vp’, and murder of princes in bed is visible; <i>Famous
-Victories</i>, sc. viii. 1, ‘Enter the King with his Lords’ ...
-(10), ‘Draw the Curtaines and depart my chamber a while’ ... ‘He
-sleepeth ... Enter the Prince’ (s.d.) ... ‘I wil goe, nay but why
-doo I not go to the Chamber of my sick father?’ ... (23) ‘Exit’
-[having presumably taken the crown] ... (25) ‘<i>King.</i> Now my
-Lords ... Remoue my chaire a little backe, and set me right’ ... (47)
-‘<i>Prince</i> [who has re-entered]. I came into your Chamber ...
-And after that, seeing the Crowne, I tooke it’ ... (87) ‘Draw the
-Curtaines, depart my Chamber, ... Exeunt omnes, The King dieth’. In
-the analogous <i>2 Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, v (a continuous scene
-divided, with unanimity in ill-doing, by modern editors in the middle
-of a speech), the King says (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 131), ‘Beare me hence
-Into some other chamber’, Warwick (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 4), ‘Call for
-the Musick in the other Roome’, and the King ‘Set me the Crowne
-vpon my Pillow here’. The Prince enters and the Lords go to ‘the
-other roome’; he takes the crown and ‘Exit’. Later (56) the
-Lords say, ‘This doore is open, he is gone this way’, and ‘He
-came not through the chamber where we staide’. The Prince returns
-and the Lords are bidden ‘Depart the chamber’. Later (233) the
-King asks the name of ‘the lodging where I first did swound’, and bids
-‘beare me to that Chamber’. Then the scene, and in F<sub>1</sub> the act, ends.
-In <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. x. 1, ‘Then the Curtaines being drawne,
-Duke <i>Humphrey</i> is discouered in his bed, and two men lying on
-his brest and smothering him in his bed. And then enter the Duke of
-<i>Suffolke</i> to them’. He bids ‘draw the Curtaines againe and get
-you gone’. The King enters and bids him call Gloucester. He goes out,
-and returns to say that Gloucester is dead. Warwick says, ‘Enter his
-priuie chamber my Lord and view the bodie’, and (50), ‘<i>Warwicke</i>
-drawes the curtaines and showes Duke <i>Humphrey</i> in his bed’. The
-analogous <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, omits the murder <i>coram
-populo</i> and begins ‘Enter two or three running ouer the Stage, from
-the Murther of Duke Humfrey’. It then follows the earlier model until
-(132) the King bids Warwick ‘Enter his Chamber’ and we get the brief
-s.d. (146) ‘Bed put forth’, and Warwick speaks again. The next scene
-is another death scene, which begins in <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xi,
-‘Enter King and <i>Salsbury</i>, and then the Curtaines be drawne,
-and the Cardinal is discouered in his bed, rauing and staring as if
-he were madde’, and in <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii, ‘Enter
-the King ... to the Cardinal in bed’, ending (32) ‘Close vp his eyes,
-and draw the Curtaine close’. In <i>1 Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i,
-Lapoole enters ‘with a light’ and murderers, whom he bids ‘stay in the
-next with-draweing chamber ther’. Then (48), ‘He drawes the curtayne’,
-says of Gloucester ‘He sleepes vppon his bed’, and Exit. Gloucester,
-awaked by ghosts, says (110), ‘The doores are all made fast ... and
-nothing heere appeeres, But the vast circute of this emptie roome’.
-Lapoole, returning, says, ‘Hee’s ryssen from his bed’. Gloucester bids
-him ‘shutt to the doores’ and ‘sits to wright’. The murderers enter
-and kill him. Lapoole bids ‘lay hime in his bed’ and ‘shutt the doore,
-as if he ther had dyd’, and they (247) ‘Exeunt with the bodye’. In
-<i>Death of R. Hood</i>, ii, ind., the presenter says ‘Draw but that
-vaile, And there King John sits sleeping in his chaire’, and the s.d.
-follows, ‘Drawe the curten: the King sits sleeping ... Enter Queene
-... She ascends, and seeing no motion, she fetcheth her children one
-by one; but seeing yet no motion, she descendeth, wringing her hands,
-and departeth’. In <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, iv, v (continuous
-action), Juliet drinks her potion and Q<sub>1</sub>, has the s.d. (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-iii. 58) ‘She fals vpon her bed within the Curtaines’. Action follows
-before the house, until the Nurse, bidden to call Juliet, finds her
-dead. Then successively ‘Enter’ Lady Capulet, Capulet, the Friar, and
-Paris, to all of whom Juliet is visible. After lament, the Friar, in
-Q<sub>2</sub> (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 91), bids them all ‘go you in’, but in Q<sub>1</sub>,
-‘They all but the Nurse goe foorth, casting Rosemary on her and
-shutting the Curtens’. The Nurse, then, in both texts, addresses the
-musicians, who came with Paris. On the difficulty of this scene, in
-relation to <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v, cf. p. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_191" href="#FNanchor_191" class="label">[191]</a> <i>Wounds of Civil War</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, 913,
-‘Enter old <i>Marius</i> with his keeper, and two souldiers’. There is
-(965) ‘this homely bed’, on which (972) ‘He lies downe’ (s.d.), and
-when freed (1066) ‘from walls to woods I wend’. In <i>Edw. II</i>,
-2448–2568 (at Kenilworth), keepers say that the King is ‘in a vault
-vp to the knees in water’, of which (2455) ‘I opened but the doore’.
-Then (2474) ‘Heere is the keyes, this is the lake’ and (2486), ‘Heeres
-a light to go into the dungeon’. Then (2490) Edward speaks and,
-presumably having been brought out, is bid (2520) ‘lie on this bed’.
-He is murdered with a table and featherbed brought from ‘the next
-roome’ (2478), and the body borne out. In <i>1 Tr. Raigne</i>, sc.
-xii, Hubert enters, bids his men (8) ‘stay within that entry’ and when
-called set Arthur ‘in this chayre’. He then bids Arthur (13) ‘take
-the benefice of the faire evening’, and ‘Enter Arthur’ who is later
-(131) bid ‘Goe in with me’. <i>K. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i has precisely
-analogous indications, except that the attendants stand (2) ‘within
-the arras’, until Hubert stamps ‘Vpon the bosome of the ground’. In
-<i>Rich. III</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv, Clarence talks with his keeper, and
-sleeps. Murderers enter, to whom the keeper says (97), ‘Here are the
-keies, there sits the Duke a sleepe’. They stab him, threaten to ‘chop
-him in the malmsey but in the next roome’ (161, 277), and bear the
-body out. In <i>Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> v (at Pontefract) Richard
-muses on ‘this prison where I liue’. He is visited by a groom of his
-stable (70), ‘where no man neuer comes, but that sad dog, That brings
-me foode’. Then (95) ‘Enter one to Richard with meate’ and (105) ‘The
-murderers rush in’, and (119) the bodies are cleared away. <i>Sir T.
-More</i>, sc. xvi, ‘Enter <i>Sir Thomas Moore</i>, the Lieutenant,
-and a seruant attending as in his chamber in the Tower’; <i>Lord
-Cromwell</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> v, ‘Enter Cromwell in the Tower.... Enter the
-Lieutenant of the Tower and officers.... Enter all the Nobles’; <i>Dead
-Man’s Fortune</i>, plot (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 134), ‘Here the laydes
-speakes in prysoun’; <i>Death of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Brand.</i> Come, come, here is the door.</div>
- <div><i>Lady Bruce.</i> O God, how dark it is.</div>
- <div><i>Brand.</i> Go in, go in; it’s higher up the stairs....</div>
- <div class="i10"><i>He seems to lock a door.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">In <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 2572, Montrose says of Ampedo, ‘Drag him to
-yonder towre, there shackle him’. Later (2608) Andelocia is brought to
-join him in ‘this prison’ and the attendants bid ‘lift in his legs’.
-The brothers converse in ‘fetters’. In <i>1 Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-iv, v (a continuous scene), ‘Enter the Bishop of Rochester with his
-men, in liuerie coates’. They have brought him ‘heere into the Tower’
-(1965) and may ‘go backe vnto the Porters Lodge’ or attend him ‘here
-without’. But they slip away. The Bishop calls the Lieutenant and
-demands to see Oldcastle. A message is sent to Oldcastle by Harpoole.
-Then (1995), ‘Enter sir Iohn Oldcastle’, and while the Bishop dismisses
-the Lieutenant, Harpoole communicates a plot ‘aside’ to Oldcastle.
-Then the Bishop addresses Oldcastle, and as they talk Oldcastle and
-Harpoole lay hands upon him. They take his upper garments, which
-Oldcastle puts on. Harpoole says (2016) ‘the window that goes out into
-the leads is sure enough’ and he will ‘conuay him after, and bind him
-surely in the inner room’. Then (2023) ‘Enter seruing men againe’.
-Oldcastle, disguised as the Bishop, comes towards them, saying, ‘The
-inner roomes be very hot and close’. Harpoole tells him that he will
-‘downe vpon them’. He then pretends to attack him. The serving-men
-join in, and (2049) ‘Sir John escapes’. The Lieutenant enters and asks
-who is brawling ‘so neare vnto the entrance of the Tower’. Then (2057)
-‘Rochester calls within’, and as they go in and bring him out bound,
-Harpoole gets away; cf. p. 62, n. 2. <i>Look About You</i>, sc. v, is a
-similar scene in the Fleet, partly in Gloucester’s chamber (811), the
-door of which can be shut, partly (865) on a bowling green. Analogous
-to some of the prison scenes is <i>Alarum for London</i>, sc. xii, in
-which a Burgher’s Wife shows Van End a vault where her wealth is hid,
-and (1310) ‘She pushes him downe’, and he is stoned there.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_192" href="#FNanchor_192" class="label">[192]</a> <i>Bacon and Bungay</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 172, ‘Enter
-frier <i>Bacon</i>’, with others, says ‘Why flocke you thus to Bacon’s
-secret cell?’, and conjures; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii is in a street, but Bacon
-says (603) ‘weele to my studie straight’, and <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii begins
-(616), ‘<i>Bacon</i> and <i>Edward</i> goes into the study’, where
-Edward *sits and looks in ‘this glasse prospectiue’ (620), but his
-vision is represented on some part of the stage; in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i.
-1530, ‘Enter Frier <i>Bacon</i> drawing the courtaines, with a white
-sticke, a booke in his hand, and a lampe lighted by him, and the brazen
-head and <i>Miles</i>, with weapons by him’. Miles is bid watch the
-head, and ‘Draw closse the courtaines’ and ‘Here he [Bacon] falleth
-asleepe’ (1568). Miles ‘will set me downe by a post’ (1577). Presently
-(1604), ‘Heere the Head speakes and a lightning flasheth forth, and a
-hand appeares that breaketh down the Head with a hammer’. Miles calls
-to Bacon (1607) ‘Out of your bed’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 1744 begins ‘Enter
-frier <i>Bacon</i> with frier <i>Bungay</i> to his cell’. A woodcut
-in Q<sub>2</sub> of 1630, after the revival by the Palsgrave’s men, seems to
-illustrate <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii; the back wall has a window to the left and
-the head on a bracket in the centre; before it is the glass on a table,
-with Edward gazing in it; Bacon sits to the right. Miles stands to the
-left; no side-walls are visible. In <i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii.
-309, ‘Enter Strumbo aboue in a gowne, with inke and paper in his hand’;
-<i>Dr. Faustus</i>, ind. 28, ‘And this the man that in his study sits’,
-followed by s.d. ‘Enter Faustus in his Study’, 433, ‘Enter Faustus
-in his Study ... (514) Enter [Mephastophilis] with diuels, giuing
-crownes and rich apparell to Faustus, and daunce, and then depart’,
-with probably other scenes. In <i>T. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter
-Tamora, and her two sonnes disguised’ ... (9) ‘They knocke and Titus
-opens his studie doore’. Tamora twice (33, 43) bids him ‘come downe’,
-and (80) says, ‘See heere he comes’. The killing of Tamora’s sons
-follows, after which Titus bids (205) ‘bring them in’. In <i>Sir T.
-More</i>, sc. viii. 735, ‘A table beeing couered with a greene Carpet,
-a state Cushion on it, and the Pursse and Mace lying thereon Enter Sir
-Thomas Moore’.... (765) ‘Enter Surrey, Erasmus and attendants’. Erasmus
-says (779), ‘Is yond Sir Thomas?’ and Surrey (784), ‘That Studie is the
-generall watche of England’. The original text is imperfect, but in the
-revision Erasmus is bid ‘sitt’, and later More bids him ‘in’ (ed. Greg,
-pp. 84, 86). <i>Lord Cromwell</i> has three studies; in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-i, ii (continuous action at Antwerp), ‘Cromwell in his study with
-bagges of money before him casting of account’, while Bagot enters in
-front, soliloquizes, and then (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 23) with ‘See where
-he is’ addresses Cromwell; in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii (Bologna), the action
-begins as a hall scene, for (15) ‘They haue begirt you round about
-the house’ and (47) ‘Cromwell shuts the dore’ (s.d.), but there is an
-inner room, for (115) ‘Hodge [disguised as the Earl of Bedford] sits in
-the study, and Cromwell calls in the States’, and (126) ‘Goe draw the
-curtaines, let vs see the Earle’; in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v (London), ‘Enter
-Gardiner in his studie, and his man’. <i>E. M. I.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iii, is before Cob’s house, and Tib is bid show Matheo ‘vp to Signior
-Bobadilla’ (Q<sub>1</sub> 392). In <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv ‘Bobadilla discouers himselfe
-on a bench; to him, Tib’. She announces ‘a gentleman below’; Matheo
-is bid ‘come vp’, enters from ‘within’, and admires the ‘lodging’. In
-<i>1 Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 2086, ‘Enter Cambridge, Scroope,
-and Gray, as in a chamber, and set downe at a table, consulting about
-their treason: King Harry and Suffolke listning at the doore’ ...
-(2114) ‘They rise from the table, and the King steps in to them, with
-his Lordes’. <i>Stukeley</i>, i. 121, begins with Old Stukeley leaving
-his host’s door to visit his son. He says (149), ‘I’ll to the Temple
-to see my son’, and presumably crosses the stage during his speech of
-171–86, which ends ‘But soft this is his chamber as I take it’. Then
-‘He knocks’, and after parley with a page, says, ‘Give me the key of
-his study’ and ‘methinks the door stands open’, enters, criticizes the
-contents of the study, emerges, and (237) *‘Old Stukeley goes again to
-the study’. Then (244) ‘Enter <i>Stukeley</i> at the further end of
-the stage’ and joins his father. Finally the boy is bid (335) ‘lock
-the door’. In <i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, ind., ‘Enter Sir John Eltham
-and knocke at Skeltons doore’. He says, ‘Howe, maister Skelton, what
-at studie hard?’ and (s.d.) ‘Opens the doore’. In <i>2 Edw. IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, ‘Enter D. Shaw, pensiuely reading on his booke’. He is
-visited by a Ghost, who gives him a task, and adds, ‘That done, return;
-and in thy study end Thy loathed life’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_193" href="#FNanchor_193" class="label">[193]</a> <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 1315–1860, is before or in the
-hall of a court; at 1701, ‘A curtaine being drawne, where Andelocia
-lies sleeping in Agripines lap’. In <i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, ind.,
-is a s.d. of a court scene, presumably in a hall, and ‘presently Ely
-ascends the chaire ... Enter Robert Earl of Huntingdon, leading Marian:
-... they infolde each other, and sit downe within the curteines ...
-drawing the curteins, all (but the Prior) enter, and are kindely
-receiued by Robin Hood. The curteins are again shut’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_194" href="#FNanchor_194" class="label">[194]</a> <i>Jew of Malta</i>, i. 36, ‘Enter Barabas in his
-Counting-house, with heapes of gold before him’. Later his house is
-taken for a nunnery; he has hid treasure (536) ‘underneath the plancke
-That runs along the vpper chamber floore’, and Abigail becomes a nun,
-and (658) throws the treasure from ‘aboue’. He gets another house, and
-Pilia-Borza describes (iii. 1167) how ‘I chanc’d to cast mine eye vp
-to the Iewes counting-house’, saw money-bags, and climbed up and stole
-by night. <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i are at Arden’s house at Feversham. From
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> I should assume a porch before the house, where Arden and
-his wife breakfast and (369) ‘Then she throwes down the broth on the
-grounde’; cf. 55, ‘Call her foorth’, and 637, ‘Lets in’. It can hardly
-be a hall scene, as part of the continuous action is ‘neare’ the house
-(318) and at 245 we get ‘This is the painters [Clarke’s] house’, who is
-called out. There is no difficulty in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v or <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i; cf. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v. 164, ‘let vs in’. But <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, taken by
-itself, reads like a hall scene with a counting-house behind. Black
-Will and Shakebag are hidden in a ‘counting-house’, which has a ‘door’
-and a ‘key’ (113, 145, 153). A chair and stool are to be ready for
-Mosbie and Arden (130). Alice bids Michael (169) ‘Fetch in the tables,
-And when thou hast done, stand before the counting-house doore’, and
-(179) ‘When my husband is come in, lock the streete doore’. When Arden
-comes with Mosbie, they are (229) ‘in my house’. They play at tables
-and the murderers creep out and kill Arden, and (261), ‘Then they
-lay the body in the Counting-house’. Susan says (267), ‘The blood
-cleaueth to the ground’, and Mosbie bids (275) ‘strew rushes on it’.
-Presently, when guests have come and gone, (342) ‘Then they open the
-counting-house doore and looke vppon Arden’, and (363) ‘Then they beare
-the body into the fields’. Francklin enters, having found the body,
-with rushes in its shoe, ‘Which argueth he was murthred in this roome’,
-and looking about ‘this chamber’, they find blood ‘in the place where
-he was wont to sit’ (411–15).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_195" href="#FNanchor_195" class="label">[195]</a> In <i>1 Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv, Henry calls Poins
-(1) ‘out of that fat roome’ and bids him (32) ‘Stand in some by-roome’
-while the Prince talks to the Drawer. The Vintner (91) bids the Drawer
-look to guests ‘within’, and says Falstaff is ‘at the doore’. He enters
-and later goes out to dismiss a court messenger who is (317) ‘at doore’
-and returns. He has a chair and cushion (416). When the Sheriff comes,
-Henry bids Falstaff (549) ‘hide thee behind the Arras, the rest walke
-vp aboue’. Later (578) Falstaff is found ‘a sleepe behind the Arras’.
-This looks like a hall scene, and with it <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii, where
-Mrs. Quickly is miscalled (72) ‘in mine owne house’ and Falstaff says
-(112) ‘I fell a sleepe here, behind the Arras’, is consistent. But in
-<i>2 Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv, Falstaff and Doll come out of their
-supper room. The Drawer announces (75) ‘Antient Pistol’s belowe’, and
-is bid (109) ‘call him vp’ and (202) ‘thrust him downe staires’. Later
-(381) ‘Peyto knockes at doore’; so does Bardolph (397), to announce
-that ‘a dozen captaines stay at doore’. This is clearly an upper
-parlour. In <i>Look About You</i>, scc. ix, x (continuous action),
-Gloucester, disguised as Faukenbridge, and a Pursuivant have stepped
-into the Salutation tavern (1470), and are in ‘the Bel, our roome next
-the Barre’ (1639), with a stool (1504) and fire (1520). But at 1525 the
-action shifts. Skink enters, apparently in a room called the Crown, and
-asks whether Faukenbridge was ‘below’ (1533). Presumably he descends,
-for (1578) he sends the sheriff’s party ‘vp them stayres’ to the Crown.
-This part of the action is before the inn, rather than in the Bell.
-<i>Humorous Day’s Mirth</i>, scc. viii, x-xii, in Verone’s ordinary,
-with tables and a court cupboard, seems to be a hall scene; at viii.
-254 ‘convey them into the inward parlour by the inward room’ does not
-entail any action within the supposed inward room.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_196" href="#FNanchor_196" class="label">[196]</a> <i>W. for Fair Women</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 601. The scene
-does not itself prove interior action, but cf. the later reference
-(800), ‘Was he so suted when you dranke with him, Here in the buttery’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_197" href="#FNanchor_197" class="label">[197]</a> In <i>Jew of Malta</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 2316, Barabas has
-‘made a dainty Gallery, The floore whereof, this Cable being cut, Doth
-fall asunder; so that it doth sinke Into a deepe pit past recouery’,
-and at 2345 is s.d. ‘A charge, the cable cut, A Caldron discouered’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_198" href="#FNanchor_198" class="label">[198]</a> Cf. pp. 51, 53, 55–6, 58–9, 62.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_199" href="#FNanchor_199" class="label">[199]</a> A. E. Richards, <i>Studies in English Faust Literature:
-i. The English Wagner Book of 1594</i> (1907). The book was entered
-in S. R. on 16 Nov. 1593 (Arber, ii. 640). A later edition of 1680 is
-reprinted as <i>The Second Report of Dr. John Faustus</i> by W. J.
-Thoms, <i>Early Prose Romances</i> (1828), iii. Richards gives the
-date of the first edition of the German book by Fridericus Schotus of
-Toledo as 1593. An edition of 1714 is reprinted by J. Scheible, <i>Das
-Kloster</i>, iii. 1. This has nothing corresponding to the stage-play
-of the English version.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_200" href="#FNanchor_200" class="label">[200]</a> <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. i. 1 (court scene), sc. xx. 1
-(garden scene); <i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vi. 1278 (battle scene);
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_201" href="#FNanchor_201" class="label">[201]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 130, ‘To them Pride, Gluttony
-Wrath and Couetousness at one dore, at an other dore Enuie, Sloth and
-Lechery’ (l. 6) ... ‘Enter Ferrex ... with ... soldiers one way ... to
-them At a nother dore, Porrex ... and soldiers’ (26) ... ‘Enter Queene,
-with 2 Counsailors ... to them Ferrex and Porrex seuerall waies ...
-Gorboduk entreing in The midst between’ (30) ... ‘Enter Ferrex and
-Porrex seuerally’ (36). I suppose that, strictly, ‘seuerally’ might
-also mean successively by the same door, and perhaps does mean this
-in <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, ind. 1 (Blackfriars), ‘Enter seuerally 3
-Gentlemen as to see a play’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_202" href="#FNanchor_202" class="label">[202]</a> e. g. <i>Alphonsus</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 1 (battle
-scene); <i>Selimus</i>, 2430 (battle scene); <i>Locrine</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> v. 2022, 2061 (battle scene); <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 2675
-(threshold scene); &amp;c., &amp;c. Archer, 469, calculates that of 43 examples
-(sixteenth and seventeenth century) taken at random, 11 use ‘one ...
-the other’, 21 ‘one ... an other’, and 11 ‘several’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_203" href="#FNanchor_203" class="label">[203]</a> <i>Selimus</i>, 658, ‘at diuerse doores’; <i>Fair
-Em</i>, sc. ix, ‘at two sundry doors’; <i>James IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii. 1, ‘one way ... another way’; <i>Look About You</i>, 464, ‘two
-waies’; <i>Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i>, 3, ‘one way ... another way’;
-<i>Jew of Malta</i>, 230, ‘Enter Gouernor ... met by’. Further variants
-are the seventeenth-century <i>Lear</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 1,
-‘meeting’, and <i>Custom of Country</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, ‘at both
-doors’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_204" href="#FNanchor_204" class="label">[204]</a> <i>1 Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ‘at seuerall doores’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_205" href="#FNanchor_205" class="label">[205]</a> <i>Fair Em</i>, sc. iv, ‘Enter Manvile ... Enter
-Valingford at another door ... Enter Mountney at another door’;
-<i>Patient Grissell</i>, 1105, ‘Enter Vrcenze and Onophrio at seuerall
-doores, and Farneze in the mid’st’; <i>Trial of Chivalry</i>, sign.
-I_{3}<sup>v</sup>, ‘Enter at one dore ... at the other dore ... Enter in the
-middest’. Examples from seventeenth-century public theatres are <i>Four
-Prentices of London</i>, prol., ‘Enter three in blacke clokes, at
-three doores’; <i>Travels of 3 English Brothers</i>, p. 90, ‘Enter
-three seuerall waies the three Brothers’; <i>Nobody and Somebody</i>,
-1322, ‘Enter at one doore ... at another doore ... at another doore’;
-<i>Silver Age</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, ‘Exeunt three wayes’. It may be
-accident that these are all plays of Queen Anne’s men, at the Curtain
-or Red Bull. For the middle entrance in private theatres, cf. p. 132.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_206" href="#FNanchor_206" class="label">[206]</a> <i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i (ind.), after
-Eltham has knocked at Skelton’s study door (cf. p. 69), ‘At euery
-doore all the players runne out’; <i>Englishmen for my Money</i>,
-393, ‘Enter Pisaro, Delion the Frenchman, Vandalle the Dutchman,
-Aluaro the Italian, and other Marchants, at seuerall doores’; cf. the
-seventeenth-century <i>1 Honest Whore</i>, sc. xiii (Fortune), ‘Enter
-... the Duke, Castruchio, Pioratto, and Sinezi from severall doores
-muffled’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_207" href="#FNanchor_207" class="label">[207]</a> <i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 1460 (not an entry),
-‘Locrine at one side of the stage’; <i>Sir T. More</i>, sc. i. 1,
-‘Enter at one end John Lincolne ... at the other end enters Fraunces’;
-<i>Stukeley</i>, 245, ‘Enter Stukeley at the further end of the stage’,
-2382, ‘Two trumpets sound at either end’; <i>Look About You</i>,
-sc. ii. 76, ‘Enter ... on the one side ... on the other part’. Very
-elaborate are the s.ds. of <i>John a Kent</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. The
-scene is before a Castle. A speaker says, ‘See, he [John a Cumber]
-sets the Castell gate wide ope’. Then follows dialogue, interspersed
-with the s.ds. ‘Musique whyle he opens the door’.... ‘From one end of
-the Stage enter an antique ... Into the Castell ... Exit’.... ‘From
-the other end of the Stage enter another Antique ... Exit into the
-Castell’.... ‘From under the Stage the third antique ... Exit into
-the Castell’.... ‘The fourth out of a tree, if possible it may be ...
-Exit into the Castell’. Then John a Cumber ‘Exit into the Castell, and
-makes fast the dore’. John a Kent enters, and ‘He tryes the dore’. John
-a Cumber and others enter ‘on the walles’ and later ‘They discend’.
-For an earlier example of ‘end’, cf. <i>Cobler’s Prophecy</i> (p. 35,
-n. 1), and for a later <i>The Dumb Knight</i> (Whitefriars), i, iv.
-In <i>2 Return from Parnassus</i> (Univ. play), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i begins
-‘Sir <i>Radericke</i> and <i>Prodigo</i>, at one corner of the Stage,
-Recorder and <i>Amoretto</i> at the other’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_208" href="#FNanchor_208" class="label">[208]</a> Cf. p. 98.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_209" href="#FNanchor_209" class="label">[209]</a> <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 47, ‘Enter
-<i>Basilisco</i> riding of a mule’ ... (71) ‘<i>Piston</i> getteth
-vp on his Asse, and rideth with him to the doore’; cf. <i>1 Rich.
-II</i> (quoted p. 61, n. 3), and for the private stage, <i>Liberality
-and Prodigality</i>, <i>passim</i>, and <i>Summer’s Last Will and
-Testament</i>, 968. W. J. Lawrence, <i>Horses upon the Elizabethan
-Stage</i> (<i>T. L. S.</i> 5 June 1919), deprecates a literal
-acceptance of Forman’s notice of Macbeth and Banquo ‘riding through
-a wood’, attempts to explain away the third example here given, and
-neglects the rest. I think some kind of ‘hobby’ more likely than a
-trained animal. In the <i>Mask of Flowers</i>, Silenus is ‘mounted
-upon an artificiall asse, which sometimes being taken with strains
-of musicke, did bow down his eares and listen with great attention’;
-cf. T. S. Graves, <i>The Ass as Actor</i> (1916, <i>South Atlantic
-Quarterly</i>, <span class="allsmcap">XV.</span> 175).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_210" href="#FNanchor_210" class="label">[210]</a> <i>Knack to Know an Honest Man</i>, sc. ix. 1034 (cf. p.
-60, n. 3).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_211" href="#FNanchor_211" class="label">[211]</a> <i>Leir</i>, 2625 (open country scene near a beacon),
-‘Mumford followes him to the dore’; cf. p. 60, <i>supra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_212" href="#FNanchor_212" class="label">[212]</a> Cf. ch. xviii, p. 544.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_213" href="#FNanchor_213" class="label">[213]</a> <i>2 Angry Women</i>, sc. x. 2250, ‘A plague on this
-poast, I would the Carpenter had bin hangd that set it vp for me. Where
-are yee now?’; <i>Englishmen for my Money</i>, scc. vii-ix (continuous
-scene), 1406, ‘Take heede, sir! hers a post’ ... (1654) ‘Watt be dis
-Post?... This Post; why tis the May-pole on Iuie-bridge going to
-Westminster.... Soft, heere’s an other: Oh now I know in deede where
-I am; wee are now at the fardest end of Shoredich, for this is the
-May-pole’.... (1701) ‘Ic weit neit waer dat ic be, ic goe and hit my
-nose op dit post, and ic goe and hit my nose op danden post’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_214" href="#FNanchor_214" class="label">[214]</a> <i>3 Lords and 3 Ladies</i>, sign. I_{3}<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_215" href="#FNanchor_215" class="label">[215]</a> Cf. p. 57, n. 4, and for Kempe, ch. xviii, p. 545.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_216" href="#FNanchor_216" class="label">[216]</a> Cf. p. 57, n. 5; p. 58, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_217" href="#FNanchor_217" class="label">[217]</a> Cf. p. 64, n. 3; p. 67, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_218" href="#FNanchor_218" class="label">[218]</a> Graves, 88.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_219" href="#FNanchor_219" class="label">[219]</a> Cf. ch. xix, p. 42; <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 86,
-142. Heywood, <i>Apology</i> (<i>1608</i>), thinks that the theatre of
-Julius Caesar at Rome had ‘the covering of the stage, which we call the
-heavens (where upon any occasion their gods descended)’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_220" href="#FNanchor_220" class="label">[220]</a> <i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, 1263 (s.d.), ‘Lightning and
-thunder ... Heere the blazing Starre ... Fire workes’; <i>Looking
-Glass</i>, 1556 (s.d.), ‘A hand from out a cloud, threatneth a burning
-sword’; <i>2 Contention</i>, sc. v. 9 (s.d.), ‘Three sunnes appeare in
-the aire’ (cf. <i>3 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 25); <i>Stukeley</i>,
-2272 (s.d.), ‘With a sudden thunderclap the sky is on fire and the
-blazing star appears’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_221" href="#FNanchor_221" class="label">[221]</a> <i>1 Troublesome Raign</i>, sc. xiii. 131 (s.d.), ‘There
-the fiue Moones appeare’. The Bastard casts up his eyes ‘to heauen’
-(130) at the sight, and the moons are in ‘the skie’ (163), but the
-episode follows immediately after the coronation which is certainly in
-‘the presence’ (81). Perhaps this is why in <i>K. J.</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-ii. 181, the appearance of the moons is only narrated.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_222" href="#FNanchor_222" class="label">[222]</a> The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (<i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 117) include ‘the clothe of the Sone and Moone’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_223" href="#FNanchor_223" class="label">[223]</a> <i>Alphonsus</i>, prol. (1), ‘After you haue sounded
-thrise, let <i>Venus</i> be let downe from the top of the stage’;
-epil. (1916), ‘Enter <i>Venus</i> with the Muses’ ... (1937), ‘Exit
-<i>Venus</i>; or if you can conueniently, let a chaire come down from
-the top of the Stage and draw her vp’. In <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 840,
-Fortunatus, at the Soldan’s court, gets a magic hat, wishes he were in
-Cyprus, and ‘Exit’. The bystanders speak of him as going ‘through the
-ayre’ and ‘through the clouds’. Angels descend from heaven to a tower
-in the <i>Wagner Book</i> play (cf. p. 72).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_224" href="#FNanchor_224" class="label">[224]</a> One of the 1616 additions to the text of <i>Dr.
-Faustus</i> (sc. xiv) has the s.d. ‘Musicke while the Throne descends’
-before the vision of heaven, and ‘Hell is discouered’ before that of
-hell. On the other hand, in <i>Death of R. Hood</i>, ii, ind. (cf.
-p. 66), the king is in a chair behind a curtain, and the fact that
-the queen ‘ascends’ and ‘descends’ may suggest that this chair is
-the ‘state’. However this may be, I do not see how any space behind
-the curtain can have been high enough to allow any dignity to the
-elaborate states required by some court scenes; cf. p. 64, n. 5. The
-throne imagined in the <i>Wagner Book</i> (cf. p. 72) had 22 steps.
-Out-of-door scenes, in which the ‘state’ appears to be used, are
-<i>Alphonsus</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 461 (battle scene), ‘Alphonsus sit
-in the Chaire’ (s.d.); <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i (a crowning on the field);
-<i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 1490 (camp scene), ‘Let him go into
-his chaire’ (s.d.); <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, sc. i. 72 (dream scene in
-wood), ‘Fortune takes her Chaire, the Kings lying at her feete, shee
-treading on them as shee goes vp’ ... (148), ‘She comes downe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_225" href="#FNanchor_225" class="label">[225]</a> Henslowe, i. 4, ‘Itm pd for carpenters worke &amp; mackinge
-the throne in the heuenes the 4 of Iune 1595 ... vij<sup>li</sup> ij<sup>s</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_226" href="#FNanchor_226" class="label">[226]</a> <i>E. M. I.</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), prol. 14,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>One such to-day, as other plays should be;</div>
- <div>Where neither chorus wafts you o’er the seas,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Nor creaking throne comes down the boys to please.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_227" href="#FNanchor_227" class="label">[227]</a> Cf. p. 89.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_228" href="#FNanchor_228" class="label">[228]</a> Cf. vol. ii, p. 546.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_229" href="#FNanchor_229" class="label">[229]</a> Mettenleiter, <i>Musikgeschichte von Regensburg</i>,
-256; Herz, 46, ‘ein Theater darinnen er mit allerley musikalischen
-Instrumenten auf mehr denn zehnerley Weise gespielt, und über der
-Theaterbühne noch eine Bühne 30 Schuh hoch auf 6 grosse Säulen, über
-welche ein Dach gemacht worden, darunter ein viereckiger Spund, wodurch
-die sie schöne Actiones verrichtet haben’; cf. ch. xiv and C. H.
-Kaulfuss-Diesch, <i>Die Inszenierung des deutschen Dramas an der Wende
-des sechzehnten und siebzehnten Jahrhunderts</i> (1905).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_230" href="#FNanchor_230" class="label">[230]</a> Prölss, 73; Brodmeier, 5, 43, 57; cf. Reynolds, i. 7,
-and in <i>M. P.</i> ix. 59; Albright, 151; Lawrence, i. 40.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_231" href="#FNanchor_231" class="label">[231]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Vennor. The only extant Swan play
-is Middleton’s <i>Chaste Maid in Cheapside</i> of 1611. Chamber scenes
-are <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ii, iii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. Some of
-these would probably have been treated in a sixteenth-century play as
-threshold scenes. But <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, a child-bed scene, would have
-called for curtains. In <i>Chaste Maid</i>, however, the opening s.d.
-is ‘A bed thrust out upon the stage; Allwit’s wife in it’. We cannot
-therefore assume curtains; cf. p. 113. The room is above (ll. 102,
-124) and is set with stools and rushes. In <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv, two funeral
-processions meet in the street, and ‘while all the company seem to weep
-and mourn, there is a sad song in the music-room’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_232" href="#FNanchor_232" class="label">[232]</a> Florio, <i>Dictionary</i>, ‘<i>Scena</i> ... forepart of
-a theatre where players make them readie, being trimmed with hangings’
-(cf. vol. ii, p. 539); Jonson, <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, ind. 151, ‘I
-am none of your fresh Pictures, that use to beautifie the decay’d dead
-Arras, in a publique Theater’; Heywood, <i>Apology</i>, 18 (Melpomene
-<i>loq.</i>), ‘Then did I tread on arras; cloth of tissue Hung round
-the fore-front of my stage’; Flecknoe (cf. App. I), ‘Theaters ... of
-former times ... were but plain and simple, with no other scenes, nor
-decorations of the stage, but onely old tapestry, and the stage strew’d
-with rushes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_233" href="#FNanchor_233" class="label">[233]</a> <i>1 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 1, ‘Hung be the heavens
-with black, yield day to night!’; <i>Lucr.</i> 766 (of night), ‘Black
-stage for tragedies and murders fell’; <i>Warning for Fair Women</i>,
-ind. 74, ‘The stage is hung with blacke, and I perceive The auditors
-prepar’d for tragedie’; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 6, ‘But now we come unto the
-dismal act, And in these sable curtains shut we up The comic entrance
-to our direful play’; Daniel, <i>Civil Wars</i> (<i>Works</i>, ii.
-231), ‘Let her be made the sable stage, whereon Shall first be acted
-bloody tragedies’; <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i> (Paul’s, 1599), prol.
-20, ‘Hurry amain from our black-visaged shows’; <i>Northward Hoe</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i (of court play), ‘the stage hung all with black velvet’;
-Dekker (iii. 296), <i>Lanthorne and Candlelight</i> (1608), ‘But
-now, when the stage of the world was hung with blacke, they jetted
-vppe and downe like proud tragedians’; <i>Insatiate Countess</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 4 ‘The stage of heaven is hung with solemn black, A
-time best fitting to act tragedies’; Anon., <i>Elegy on Burbage</i>
-(Collier, <i>Actors</i>, 53), ‘Since thou art gone, dear Dick, a tragic
-night Will wrap our black-hung stage’; cf. Malone in <i>Variorum</i>,
-iii. 103; Graves, <i>Night Scenes in the Elizabethan Theatres</i>
-(<i>E. S.</i> xlvii. 63); Lawrence, <i>Night Performances in the
-Elizabethan Theatres</i> (<i>E. S.</i> xlviii. 213). In several
-of the passages quoted above, the black-hung stage is a metaphor for
-night, but I agree with Lawrence that black hangings cannot well have
-been used in the theatre to indicate night scenes as well as tragedy.
-I do not know why he suggests that a ‘prevalent idea that the stage
-was hung with blue for comedies’, for which, if it exists, there is
-certainly no evidence, is ‘due to a curious surmise of Malone’s’.
-Malone (<i>Var.</i> iii. 108) only suggests that ‘pieces of drapery
-tinged with blue’ may have been ‘suspended across the stage to
-represent the heavens’&mdash;quite a different thing. But, of course, there
-is no evidence for that either. According to Reich, <i>Der Mimus</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 705, the colour of the <i>siparium</i> in the Indian
-theatre is varied according to the character of the play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_234" href="#FNanchor_234" class="label">[234]</a> Cf. p. 30; vol. i, p. 231. On the removal of bodies W.
-Archer (<i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 454) says, ‘In over a hundred
-plays which we have minutely examined (including all Shakespeare’s
-tragedies) there is only a small minority of cases in which explicit
-provision is not made, either by stage-direction or by a line in the
-text, for the removal of bodies. The few exceptions to this rule are
-clearly mere inadvertences, or else are due to the fact that there is
-a crowd of people on the stage in whose exit a body can be dragged or
-carried off almost unobserved’. In <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 1206, after
-his sons have lamented over their dead father, ‘They both fall asleepe:
-Fortune and a companie of Satyres enter with Musicke, and playing about
-Fortunatus body, take him away’. Of course, a body left dead in the
-alcove need not be removed; the closing curtains cover it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_235" href="#FNanchor_235" class="label">[235]</a> Cf. p. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_236" href="#FNanchor_236" class="label">[236]</a> Cf. p. 51, n. 3 (<i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, ‘curtaines’
-of bower ‘open’); p. 51, n. 4 (<i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, cave behind
-‘curtaines’); p. 53, n. 5 (<i>Edw. I</i>, tent ‘opens’ and is closed,
-and Queen is ‘discouered’); p. 55, n. 1 (<i>Looking-Glass</i>,
-‘curtaines’ of tent drawn to shut and open); p. 63, n. 1 (<i>Old
-Fortunatus</i>, <i>M. V.</i>, ‘curtaines’ drawn to reveal caskets);
-p. 63, n. 4 (<i>Sir T. More</i>, ‘arras’ drawn); p. 65, n. 3 (<i>2
-Tamburlaine</i>, ‘arras’ drawn; <i>Selimus</i>, ‘curtins’ drawn;
-<i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, ‘curtains’ drawn; <i>Famous Victories</i>,
-‘curtains’ drawn; <i>1 Contention</i>, ‘curtains’ drawn and bodies
-‘discouered’; <i>1 Rich. II</i>, ‘curtayne’ drawn; <i>Death of R.
-Hood</i>, ‘vaile’ or ‘curten’ drawn; <i>R. J.</i>, ‘curtens’ shut);
-p. 67, n. 1 (<i>Friar Bacon</i>, ‘courtaines’ drawn by actor with
-stick; <i>Lord Cromwell</i>, ‘curtaines’ drawn); p. 68, n. 1 (<i>Old
-Fortunatus</i>, ‘curtaine’ drawn; <i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>,
-‘curteines’ drawn and ‘shut’).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_237" href="#FNanchor_237" class="label">[237]</a> <i>M. W.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 97; cf. p. 66, n. 1
-(<i>K. J.</i>), p. 68, n. 3 (<i>1 Hen. IV</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_238" href="#FNanchor_238" class="label">[238]</a> So probably in <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, 28, where the prol.
-ends ‘And this the man that in his study sits’, and the s.d. follows,
-‘Enter Faustus in his study’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_239" href="#FNanchor_239" class="label">[239]</a> The ‘groom’ of the seventeenth-century <i>Devil’s
-Charter</i> (cf. p. 110) might be a servitor.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_240" href="#FNanchor_240" class="label">[240]</a> Cf. p. 53, n. 5 (<i>Edw. I</i>; <i>Trial of
-Chivalry</i>); p. 65, n. 3 (<i>1 Contention</i>); p. 67, n. 1 (<i>E. M.
-I.</i>). In <i>James IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi. 2346, ‘He discouereth her’
-only describes the removal of a disguise.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_241" href="#FNanchor_241" class="label">[241]</a> Prölss, 85; Albright, 140; Reynolds, i. 26; cf. p. 65,
-n. 3 (<i>Battle of Alcazar</i>); p. 67, n. 1 (<i>Dr. Faustus</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_242" href="#FNanchor_242" class="label">[242]</a> W. Archer in <i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 470;
-Reynolds, i. 9; Graves, 88; cf. Brereton in <i>Sh. Homage</i>, 204.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_243" href="#FNanchor_243" class="label">[243]</a> Cf. p. 65, n. 3 (<i>2 Tamburlaine</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_244" href="#FNanchor_244" class="label">[244]</a> Cf. p. 64, n. 2 (<i>Alphonsus</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_245" href="#FNanchor_245" class="label">[245]</a> Cf. p. 85.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_246" href="#FNanchor_246" class="label">[246]</a> Cf. vol. ii, p. 539.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_247" href="#FNanchor_247" class="label">[247]</a> W. Archer in <i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 470;
-Graves, 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_248" href="#FNanchor_248" class="label">[248]</a> Cf. p. 73. T. Holyoke, <i>Latin Dict.</i> (1677), has
-‘<i>Scena</i>&mdash;the middle door of the stage’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_249" href="#FNanchor_249" class="label">[249]</a> Lawrence, ii. 50. A window could also be shown in front,
-if needed, but I know of no clear example; cf. Wegener, 82, 95.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_250" href="#FNanchor_250" class="label">[250]</a> Cf. p. 51, n. 2 (<i>R. J.</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_251" href="#FNanchor_251" class="label">[251]</a> Cf. p. 67, n. 1 (<i>Stukeley</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_252" href="#FNanchor_252" class="label">[252]</a> <i>Stratford Town Shakespeare</i>, x. 360; cf. Wegener,
-56, 73; Neuendorff, 124; Reynolds, i. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_253" href="#FNanchor_253" class="label">[253]</a> Cf. p. 65, n. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_254" href="#FNanchor_254" class="label">[254]</a> Cf. vol. ii, p. 520.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_255" href="#FNanchor_255" class="label">[255]</a> Of the examples cited on p. 80, n. 3, bed-curtains could
-only suffice for <i>Selimus</i>, <i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, <i>1 Rich.
-II</i>, and possibly <i>R. J.</i> and <i>Bacon and Bungay</i>; in the
-others either there is no bed, or there is a clear indication of a
-discovered chamber. The curtains in <i>Sp. Trag.</i> need separate
-consideration; cf. p. 93, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_256" href="#FNanchor_256" class="label">[256]</a> The s.ds. of <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, in so far as they vary
-from <i>1 Contention</i>, may date from the seventeenth century; cf.
-ch. xxi, p. 113.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_257" href="#FNanchor_257" class="label">[257]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 130.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_258" href="#FNanchor_258" class="label">[258]</a> Prölss, 96; Reynolds, i. 24, 31; Albright, 111.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_259" href="#FNanchor_259" class="label">[259]</a> Cf. p. 63, n. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_260" href="#FNanchor_260" class="label">[260]</a> <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, 1007 sqq., is apparently a hall
-scene, but in 1030 (an addition of 1616 text), ‘Enter Benuolio aboue at
-a window’, whence he views the scene with a state. On the play scene,
-with a gallery for the court, in <i>Sp. Trag.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, cf.
-p. 93.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_261" href="#FNanchor_261" class="label">[261]</a> <i>Famous Victories</i>, sc. viii; <i>2 Hen. IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, v; <i>1 Contention</i>, scc. x, xi; <i>2 Hen. VI</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, iii (cf. p. 65, n. 3); <i>Edw. II</i>, 2448–2565;
-<i>1 Tr. Raigne</i>, xii; <i>K. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i (cf. p. 66,
-n. 1); <i>Lord Cromwell</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii (cf. p. 67, n. 1);
-<i>Downfall of R. Hood</i>, ind. (cf. p. 68, n. 1); <i>Arden of
-Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i (cf. p. 68, n. 2); <i>1 Hen. IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv; <i>Humorous Day’s Mirth</i>, viii (cf. p. 68, n. 3).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_262" href="#FNanchor_262" class="label">[262]</a> Cf. p. 64, n. 6. W. Archer (<i>Quarterly Review</i>,
-ccviii. 457) suggests that convention allowed properties, but not dead
-or drunken men, to be moved in the sight of the audience by servitors.
-But as a rule the moving could be treated as part of the action, and
-need not take place between scenes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_263" href="#FNanchor_263" class="label">[263]</a> <i>Rich. II</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii; <i>2 Edw. IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv, ‘This while the hangman prepares, Shore at this speech
-mounts vp the ladder ... Shoare comes downe’. The Admiral’s inventories
-of 1598 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116) include ‘j payer of stayers for
-Fayeton’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_264" href="#FNanchor_264" class="label">[264]</a> The dissertations of Reynolds (cf. <i>Bibl. Note</i> to
-ch. xviii) are largely devoted to the exposition of this theory.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_265" href="#FNanchor_265" class="label">[265]</a> Cf. p. 52, n. 2. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598
-(<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116) include ‘j baye tree’, ‘j tree of gowlden
-apelles’, ‘Tantelouse tre’, as well as ‘ij mose banckes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_266" href="#FNanchor_266" class="label">[266]</a> Cf. p. 51, n. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_267" href="#FNanchor_267" class="label">[267]</a> <i>Looking Glass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 495, ‘The Magi
-with their rods beate the ground, and from vnder the same riseth a
-braue Arbour’; <i>Bacon and Bungay</i>, sc. ix. 1171, ‘Heere Bungay
-coniures and the tree appeares with the dragon shooting fire’; <i>W.
-for Fair Women</i>, ii. 411, ‘Suddenly riseth vp a great tree betweene
-them’. On the other hand, in <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 609 (ind.), the
-presenters bring trees on and ‘set the trees into the earth’. The t.p.
-of the 1615 <i>Spanish Tragedy</i> shows the arbour of the play as a
-small trellissed pergola with an arched top, not too large, I should
-say, to come up and down through a commodious trap.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_268" href="#FNanchor_268" class="label">[268]</a> <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. ii (cf. p. 56, n. 3); <i>John a
-Kent</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i (cf. p. 74, n. 3); &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_269" href="#FNanchor_269" class="label">[269]</a> <i>Looking Glass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, s.d. ‘Jonas the
-Prophet cast out of the Whales belly vpon the Stage’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_270" href="#FNanchor_270" class="label">[270]</a> <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, 1450, s.d. (addition of 1616 text),
-‘Hell is discouered’; cf. p. 72 for the description of the imaginary
-stage in the <i>Wagner Book</i>. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598
-(<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116) include ‘j Hell mought’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_271" href="#FNanchor_271" class="label">[271]</a> <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_272" href="#FNanchor_272" class="label">[272]</a> Cf. p. 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_273" href="#FNanchor_273" class="label">[273]</a> Cf. p. 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_274" href="#FNanchor_274" class="label">[274]</a> Cf. p. 76.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_275" href="#FNanchor_275" class="label">[275]</a> Of the late woodcuts, <i>Roxana</i> shows ‘above’ two
-compartments, clearly with spectators; <i>Messalina</i> one, closed
-by curtains; <i>The Wits</i> a central one closed by curtains, and
-three on each side, with female spectators. In view of their dates and
-doubtful provenances (cf. <i>Bibl. Note</i> to ch. xviii), these are no
-evidence for the sixteenth-century public theatre, but they show that
-at some plays, public or private, the audience continued to sit ‘over
-the stage’ well in to the seventeenth century.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_276" href="#FNanchor_276" class="label">[276]</a> Cf. vol. ii, p. 542.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_277" href="#FNanchor_277" class="label">[277]</a> Cf. p. 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_278" href="#FNanchor_278" class="label">[278]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_279" href="#FNanchor_279" class="label">[279]</a> <i>James IV</i>, 106, 605, 618, 1115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_280" href="#FNanchor_280" class="label">[280]</a> <i>Looking Glass</i>, 152, 1756.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_281" href="#FNanchor_281" class="label">[281]</a> <i>T. of a Shrew</i>, scc. ii, xvi. In <i>T. of the
-Shrew</i>, sc. ii of the Induction is ‘aloft’ (1), and the presenters
-‘sit’ to watch the play (147), but they only comment once (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i. 254) with the s.d. ‘The Presenters aboue speakes’, and Sly is not
-carried down at the end.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_282" href="#FNanchor_282" class="label">[282]</a> Cf. p. 57, n. 4. The main induction ends (38) with, ‘Why
-stay we then? Lets giue the Actors leaue, And, as occasion serues, make
-our returne’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_283" href="#FNanchor_283" class="label">[283]</a> Revenge says (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 90), ‘Here sit we downe
-to see the misterie, And serue for Chorus in this Tragedie’, and
-the Ghost (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> xv. 38), ‘I will sit to see the rest’. In
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i Hieronimo discusses with his friends a tragedy which he
-has promised to give before the Court, and alludes (184) to ‘a wondrous
-shew besides. That I will haue there behinde a curtaine’. The actual
-performance occupies part of <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, iv (a continuous scene).
-In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 1, ‘Enter Hieronimo; he knocks up the curtaine’.
-We must not be misled by the modern French practice of knocking for the
-rise of the front curtain. The tragedy has not yet begun, and this is
-no front curtain, but the curtain already referred to in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i, which Hieronimo is now hammering up to conceal the dead body of
-Horatio, as part of the setting which he is arranging at one end of the
-main stage. The Duke of Castile now enters, and it is clear that the
-Court audience are to sit ‘above’, for Hieronimo begs the Duke (12)
-that ‘when the traine are past into the gallerie, You would vouchsafe
-to throw me downe the key’. He then bids (16) a Servant ‘Bring a
-chaire and a cushion for the King’ and ‘hang up the Title: Our scene
-is Rhodes’. We are still concerned with Court customs, and no light is
-thrown on the possible use of title-boards on the public stage (cf. p.
-126). The royal train take their places, and the performance is given.
-Hieronimo epilogizes and suddenly (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 88) ‘Shewes his
-dead sonne’. Now it is clear why he wanted the key of the gallery, for
-(152) ‘He runs to hange himselfe’, and (157) ‘They breake in, and hold
-Hieronimo’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_284" href="#FNanchor_284" class="label">[284]</a> Cf. p. 87, n. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_285" href="#FNanchor_285" class="label">[285]</a> <i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii; <i>Sp. Trag.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ix; <i>T. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii;
-<i>T. G.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iv; <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v; <i>M. V.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vi; <i>Englishmen for my
-Money</i>, sc. ix; <i>Two Angry Women</i>, 1495; cf. p. 56, n. 3, p.
-58, n. 4, p. 67, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_286" href="#FNanchor_286" class="label">[286]</a> Cf. p. 66, n. 1, p. 67, n. 1, p. 68, n. 2, p. 68, n. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_287" href="#FNanchor_287" class="label">[287]</a> In <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii Romeo is in the orchard,
-and (2) ‘But soft, what light through yonder window breaks?’ The
-lovers discourse, he below, she ‘o’er my head’ (27). Presently (F<sub>1</sub>;
-Q<sub>1</sub>, is summary here) Juliet says ‘I hear some noise within’ (136),
-followed by s.d. ‘Cals within’ and a little later ‘Within: Madam’,
-twice. Juliet then ‘Exit’ (155), and (159) ‘Enter Juliet again’.
-Modern editors have reshuffled the s.ds. In <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v, Q<sub>2</sub>
-(reproduced in F<sub>1</sub>), in addition to textual differences from Q<sub>1</sub>,
-may represent a revised handling of the scene. Q<sub>1</sub> begins ‘Enter
-Romeo and Juliet at the window’. They discuss the dawn. Then ‘He goeth
-downe’, speaks from below, and ‘Exit’. Then ‘Enter Nurse hastely’ and
-says ‘Your Mother’s comming to your Chamber’. Then ‘She goeth downe
-from the Window’. I take this to refer to Juliet, and to close the
-action above, at a point represented by <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v. 64 of the
-modern text. Then follow ‘Enter Juliets Mother, Nurse’ and a dialogue
-below. Q<sub>2</sub> begins ‘Enter Romeo and Juliet aloft’. Presently (36)
-‘Enter Madame [? an error] and Nurse’, and the warning is given while
-Romeo is still above. Juliet says (41) ‘Then, window, let day in, and
-let life out’, and Romeo, ‘I’ll descend’. After his ‘Exit’ comes ‘Enter
-Mother’ (64), and pretty clearly discourses with Juliet, not below, but
-in her chamber. Otherwise there would be no meaning in Juliet’s ‘Is she
-not downe so late or vp so early? What vnaccustomd cause procures her
-hither?’ Probably, although there is no s.d., they descend (125) to
-meet Capulet, for at the end of the scene Juliet bids the Nurse (231)
-‘Go in’, and herself ‘Exit’ to visit Friar Laurence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_288" href="#FNanchor_288" class="label">[288]</a> Cf. p. 65, n. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_289" href="#FNanchor_289" class="label">[289]</a> Cf. p. 58, n. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_290" href="#FNanchor_290" class="label">[290]</a> Cf. p. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_291" href="#FNanchor_291" class="label">[291]</a> <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i (p. 61, n.
-3), and <i>Death of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i (p. 66, n. 1), require
-stairs of which the foot or ‘threshold’ is visible. For the execution
-scene in <i>Sir T. More</i>, sc. xvii (p. 57, n. 2), the whole stairs
-should be visible, but perhaps here, as elsewhere, the scaffold,
-although More likens it to a ‘gallerie’, was to be at least in part a
-supplementary structure. The Admiral’s inventory of 1598 (<i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 116; cf. ch. ii, p. 168) included ‘j payer of stayers for
-Fayeton’. In <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii (p. 57, n. 4),
-where the back wall represents the outer wall of a tiltyard, ladders
-are put up against it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_292" href="#FNanchor_292" class="label">[292]</a> Albright, 66; Lawrence, ii. 45. I am not prepared to
-accept the theory that in <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v Romeo descends
-his ladder from behind; cf. p. 94, n. 2. The other examples cited are
-late, but I should add the ‘window that goes out into the leads’ of
-<i>1 Oldcastle</i>, 2016 (p. 66, n. 1).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_293" href="#FNanchor_293" class="label">[293]</a> <i>Jew of Malta</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 2316; cf. p. 68, n. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_294" href="#FNanchor_294" class="label">[294]</a> <i>E. M. I.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v, ‘Bobadilla discouers
-himselfe: on a bench’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_295" href="#FNanchor_295" class="label">[295]</a> Cf. p. 54, nn. 2–5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_296" href="#FNanchor_296" class="label">[296]</a> See the conjectural reconstruction in Albright, 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_297" href="#FNanchor_297" class="label">[297]</a> <i>Jonsonus Virbius</i> (1638).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_298" href="#FNanchor_298" class="label">[298]</a> Cf. p. 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_299" href="#FNanchor_299" class="label">[299]</a> <i>1 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i (p. 54, n. 5). This
-arrangement would also fit <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii, in which a shot is fired
-from the walls at ‘the turrets’, which could then be represented by the
-back wall. On a possible similar wall in the Court play of <i>Dido</i>,
-cf. p. 36.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_300" href="#FNanchor_300" class="label">[300]</a> W. Archer (<i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 466)
-suggests the possible use of a machine corresponding to the Greek
-ἐκκύκλημα (on which cf. A. E. Haigh, <i>Attic Theatre</i><sup>3</sup>, 201),
-although he is thinking of it as a device for ‘thrusting’ out a set
-interior from the alcove, which does not seem to me necessary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_301" href="#FNanchor_301" class="label">[301]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 118. The ‘j payer of stayers for
-Fayeton’ may have been a similar structure; cf. p. 95, n. 4. Otway,
-<i>Venice Preserved</i> (<i>1682</i>), <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, has ‘Scene opening
-discovers a scaffold and a wheel prepared for the executing of Pierre’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_302" href="#FNanchor_302" class="label">[302]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_303" href="#FNanchor_303" class="label">[303]</a> Cf. p. 56, nn. 2, 3. The courtyard in <i>Arden of
-Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ii, might have been similarly staged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_304" href="#FNanchor_304" class="label">[304]</a> <i>1 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii (a tower with a ‘grate’
-in it), <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii (p. 55); <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. iii (p.
-56); <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 118 (p. 57); <i>Blind
-Beggar of Alexandria</i>, sc. ii (p. 62); <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, 769
-(p. 63).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_305" href="#FNanchor_305" class="label">[305]</a> Cf. p. 54.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_306" href="#FNanchor_306" class="label">[306]</a> <i>Arden of Feversham</i>, sc. i, begins before Arden’s
-house whence Alice is called forth (55); but, without any break in
-the dialogue, we get (245) ‘This is the painter’s house’, although we
-are still (318) ‘neare’ Arden’s, where the speakers presently (362)
-breakfast.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_307" href="#FNanchor_307" class="label">[307]</a> <i>T. of A Shrew</i>, sc. xvi (cf. p. 92), see. iii, iv,
-v (a continuous scene). <i>T. of The Shrew</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ii, is
-similarly before the houses both of Baptista and Hortensio.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_308" href="#FNanchor_308" class="label">[308]</a> <i>Blind Beggar</i>, scc. v, vii. The use of the houses
-seems natural, but not perhaps essential.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_309" href="#FNanchor_309" class="label">[309]</a> <i>1 Oldcastle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 522, 632.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_310" href="#FNanchor_310" class="label">[310]</a> Cf. p. 67, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_311" href="#FNanchor_311" class="label">[311]</a> <i>K. to K. Honest Man</i>, sc. v. 396, 408, 519, 559;
-sc. vii. 662, 738, 828, 894; sc. xv. 1385, 1425, 1428; cf. Graves, 65.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_312" href="#FNanchor_312" class="label">[312]</a> Cf. pp. 25, 33.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_313" href="#FNanchor_313" class="label">[313]</a> <i>George a Greene</i>, sc. xi. 1009, ‘Wil you go to the
-townes end.... Now we are at the townes end’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_314" href="#FNanchor_314" class="label">[314]</a> <i>A. of Feversham</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vi. 55, ‘See Ye
-ouertake vs ere we come to Raynum down’.... (91) ‘Come, we are almost
-now at Raynum downe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_315" href="#FNanchor_315" class="label">[315]</a> <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, 1110, ‘let vs Make haste to
-Wertenberge ... til I am past this faire and pleasant greene, ile walke
-on foote’, followed immediately by ‘Enter a Horse-courser’ to Faustus,
-evidently in his ‘chaire’ (1149) at Wittenberg.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_316" href="#FNanchor_316" class="label">[316]</a> <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 113, where, in Q<sub>1</sub>,
-Romeo’s ‘on lustie Gentlemen’ to the maskers is followed by ‘Enter old
-Capulet with the Ladies’, while in Q<sub>2</sub>, Benvolio responds ‘Strike
-drum’, and then ‘They march about the Stage, and Seruingmen come forth
-with Napkins’, prepare the hall, and ‘Exeunt’, when ‘Enter all the
-guests and gentlewomen to the Maskers’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_317" href="#FNanchor_317" class="label">[317]</a> In <i>T. of The Shrew</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 17, ‘Pedant
-lookes out of the window’, while the presenters are presumably
-occupying the gallery, but even if this is a sixteenth-century s.d.,
-the window need not be an upper one.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_318" href="#FNanchor_318" class="label">[318]</a> The s.d. to <i>Sp. Trag.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> xi. 8, where
-‘He goeth in at one doore and comes out at another’, is rather obscure,
-but the doors are probably those of a house which has just been under
-discussion, and if so, more than one door was sometimes supposed to
-belong to the same house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_319" href="#FNanchor_319" class="label">[319]</a> Cf. pp. 3, 4, 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_320" href="#FNanchor_320" class="label">[320]</a> See my diagrams on <a href="#i_084">pp. 84–5.</a></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_321" href="#FNanchor_321" class="label">[321]</a> W. Archer in <i>Universal Review</i> (1888), 281; J. Le
-G. Brereton, <i>De Witt at the Swan</i> (<i>Sh. Homage</i>, 204); cf.
-p. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_322" href="#FNanchor_322" class="label">[322]</a> Serlio’s ‘comic’ and ‘tragic’ scenes (cf. App. G) show
-steps to the auditorium from the front of the stage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_323" href="#FNanchor_323" class="label">[323]</a> Creizenach, iii. 446; iv. 424 (Eng. tr. 370), with
-engravings from printed descriptions of 1539 and 1562.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_324" href="#FNanchor_324" class="label">[324]</a> The contest of 1561 is described in a long letter to
-Sir Thomas Gresham (Burgon, i. 377) by his agent at Antwerp, Richard
-Clough. It might be possible to trace a line of affiliation from
-another of Gresham’s servants, Thomas Dutton, who was his post from
-Antwerp <i>temp.</i> Edw. VI, and his agent at Hamburg <i>c.</i> 1571
-(Burgon, i. 109; ii. 421). The actor Duttons, John and Laurence, seem
-also to have served as posts from Antwerp and elsewhere (cf. ch. xv).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_325" href="#FNanchor_325" class="label">[325]</a> <i>Thomas Lord Cromwell</i> and <i>A Larum for
-London</i>, dealt with in the last chapter, might also be Globe plays.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_326" href="#FNanchor_326" class="label">[326]</a> <i>Henry V</i>, <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>, <i>Merry
-Wives of Windsor</i>, <i>Hamlet</i>, <i>King Lear</i>, <i>Troilus and
-Cressida</i>, <i>Pericles</i>, <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>,
-<i>Sejanus</i>, <i>Volpone</i>, <i>Yorkshire Tragedy</i>, <i>London
-Prodigal</i>, <i>Fair Maid of Bristow</i>, <i>Devil’s Charter</i>,
-<i>Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>, <i>Revenger’s Tragedy</i>, <i>Miseries
-of Enforced Marriage</i>, and perhaps <i>1 Jeronimo</i>; with the
-second version of <i>Malcontent</i>, originally a Queen’s Revels play,
-and <i>Satiromastix</i>, the s.ds. of which perhaps belong rather to
-Paul’s, where it was also played.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_327" href="#FNanchor_327" class="label">[327]</a> <i>Catiline</i>, <i>Alchemist</i>; <i>Second Maid’s
-Tragedy</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_328" href="#FNanchor_328" class="label">[328]</a> <i>Julius Caesar</i>, <i>Twelfth Night</i>, <i>As
-You Like It</i>, <i>All’s Well that Ends Well</i>, <i>Measure for
-Measure</i>, <i>Othello</i>, <i>Macbeth</i>, <i>Coriolanus</i>,
-<i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>, <i>Timon of Athens</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_329" href="#FNanchor_329" class="label">[329]</a> <i>Cymbeline</i>, <i>Winter’s Tale</i>, <i>Tempest</i>,
-<i>Henry VIII</i>, <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, <i>Two Noble Kinsmen</i>,
-<i>Maid’s Tragedy</i>, <i>King and no King</i>, <i>Philaster</i>, and
-perhaps <i>Thierry and Theodoret</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_330" href="#FNanchor_330" class="label">[330]</a> I have only occasionally drawn upon plays such as
-<i>Bonduca</i>, whose ascription in whole or part to 1599–1613 is
-doubtful; these will be found in the list in App. L.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_331" href="#FNanchor_331" class="label">[331]</a> <i>1 Honest Whore</i>, <i>When You See Me You Know
-Me</i>, <i>Whore of Babylon</i>, <i>Roaring Girl</i>, and possibly
-<i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i>. The extant text of <i>Massacre at
-Paris</i> may also represent a revival at the Fortune.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_332" href="#FNanchor_332" class="label">[332]</a> <i>Nobody and Somebody</i>, <i>Travels of Three English
-Brothers</i>, <i>Woman Killed With Kindness</i>, <i>Sir Thomas
-Wyat</i>, <i>Rape of Lucrece</i>, <i>Golden Age</i>, <i>If It Be
-Not Good the Devil is in It</i>, <i>White Devil</i>, <i>Greene’s Tu
-Quoque</i>, <i>Honest Lawyer</i>, and probably <i>1, 2 If You Know Not
-Me You Know Nobody</i>, <i>Fair Maid of the Exchange</i>, <i>Silver
-Age</i>, <i>Brazen Age</i>. <i>How to Choose a Good Wife from a Bad</i>
-is probably a Rose or Boar’s Head play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_333" href="#FNanchor_333" class="label">[333]</a> <i>Hen. V</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv-viii; <i>T. C.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv-x; <i>J. C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i-v; <i>Lear</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, iv, vii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i-iii; <i>A. C.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vii-x, xii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, iii, v-xiv; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_334" href="#FNanchor_334" class="label">[334]</a> <i>Hen. V</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> viii; <i>J. C.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iii; <i>T. C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i,
-iii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii, apparently
-with tents in one or other scene of Agamemnon (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 213),
-Ulysses (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 305), Ajax (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i), Achilles
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 84; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 38; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 95), and
-Calchas (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 92; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii); <i>Devil’s Charter</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 2385, ‘He discouereth his Tent where her two sonnes
-were at Cardes’; and in s.d. of Prol. 29 (not a battle scene) ‘Enter,
-at one doore betwixt two other Cardinals, Roderigo ... one of which hee
-guideth to a Tent, where a table is furnished ... and to another Tent
-the other’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_335" href="#FNanchor_335" class="label">[335]</a> <i>Hen. V</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vi, vii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i-iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_336" href="#FNanchor_336" class="label">[336]</a> <i>Hen. V</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1, ‘Scaling Ladders at
-Harflew’; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 1, ‘Enter the King and all his Traine
-before the Gates’.... (58) ‘Flourish, and enter the Towne’; <i>Cor.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 13, ‘Enter two Senators with others on the Walles of
-Corialus’.... (29) ‘The Romans are beat back to their Trenches’....
-(42) ‘Martius followes them to their gates, and is shut in’.... (62)
-‘Enter Martius bleeding, assaulted by the enemy’.... ‘They fight and
-all enter the City’, and so on to end of sc. x; <i>Tim.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iv. 1, ‘Enter Alcibiades with his Powers before Athens.... The Senators
-appeare vpon the wals’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <i>Devil’s Charter</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv; <i>Maid’s Tragedy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_337" href="#FNanchor_337" class="label">[337]</a> <i>A. Y. L.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 1; <i>Philaster</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 83, ‘Philaster creeps out of a bush’ (as shown in the
-woodcut on the t.p. of the Q.); <i>T. N. K.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 37,
-‘Enter Palamon as out of a bush’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 169, ‘Here the Hynde
-vanishes under the Altar: and in the place ascends a Rose Tree, having
-one Rose upon it’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_338" href="#FNanchor_338" class="label">[338]</a> <i>Ham.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 146 (Q<sub>1</sub>) ‘Enter in a
-Dumb Show, the King and the Queene, he sits downe in an Arbor’, (Q<sub>2</sub>,
-F<sub>2</sub>) ‘he lyes him downe vpon a bancke of flowers’; <i>M. Ado</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 10; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 7, 30; <i>J. C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-ii. 1, ‘Enter Brutus and goes into the Pulpit’; <i>Tim.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii. 5; <i>E. M. O.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_339" href="#FNanchor_339" class="label">[339]</a> <i>Ham.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i; <i>Macb.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i;
-<i>Devil’s Charter</i>, prol.; <i>Catiline</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, &amp;c.;
-I do not know whether hell-mouth remained in use; there is nothing
-to point to it in the hell scene of <i>The Devil is an Ass</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_340" href="#FNanchor_340" class="label">[340]</a> <i>Pericles</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 121, ‘Enter the two
-Fisher-men, drawing vp a Net’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_341" href="#FNanchor_341" class="label">[341]</a> <i>Devil’s Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v. Caesar Borgia
-and Frescobaldi murder the Duke of Candie (<i>vide infra</i>). Caesar
-says ‘let vs heaue him ouer, That he may fall into the riuer Tiber,
-Come to the bridge with him’; he bids Frescobaldi ‘stretch out their
-armes [for] feare that he Fall not vpon the arches’, and ‘Caesar
-casteth Frescobaldi after’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_342" href="#FNanchor_342" class="label">[342]</a> <i>Rape of Lucrece</i> (ed. Pearson), p. 240. It is
-before ‘yon walles’ of Rome. Horatius has his foot ‘fixt vpon the
-bridge’ and bids his friends break it behind him, while he keeps
-Tarquin’s party off. Then ‘a noise of knocking downe the bridge,
-within’ and ‘Enter ... Valerius aboue’, who encourages Horatius. After
-‘Alarum, and the falling of the Bridge’, Horatius ‘exit’, and Porsenna
-says ‘Hee’s leapt off from the bridge’. Presently ‘the shout of all the
-multitude Now welcomes him a land’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_343" href="#FNanchor_343" class="label">[343]</a> <i>Devil’s Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v, Frescobaldi is
-to waylay the Duke of Candie. ‘He fenceth’ (s.d.) with ‘this conduct
-here’ (1482), and as the victim arrives, ‘Here will I stand close’
-(1612) and ‘He stands behind the post’ (s.d.); cf. <i>Satiromastix</i>
-(p. 141, n. 4).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_344" href="#FNanchor_344" class="label">[344]</a> <i>Tp.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_345" href="#FNanchor_345" class="label">[345]</a> <i>Tp.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 17, ‘Solemne and strange
-Musicke: and Prosper on the top (invisible:) Enter severall strange
-shapes, bringing in a Banket; and dance about it with gentle actions of
-salutations, and inuiting the King, &amp;c. to eate, they depart’.... (52)
-‘Thunder and lightning. Enter Ariell (like a Harpey) claps his wings
-upon the Table, and with a queint device the Banquet vanishes’....
-(82) ‘He vanishes in Thunder: then (to soft Musicke) Enter the shapes
-againe, and daunce (with mockes and mowes) and carrying out the Table’;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 134, ‘Enter Certaine Nimphes.... Enter certaine Reapers
-(properly habited:) they ioyne with the Nimphes, in a gracefull
-dance, towards the end whereof, <i>Prospero</i> starts sodainly and
-speakes, after which to a strange hollow and confused noyse, they
-heauily vanish’.... (256) ‘A noyse of Hunters heard. Enter divers
-Spirits in shape of Dogs and Hounds, hunting them about: Prospero
-and Ariel setting them on’. Was the ‘top’ merely the gallery, or the
-third tiring-house floor (cf. p. 98) above? Ariel, like Prospero,
-enters ‘invisible’ (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 48). Is this merely the touch of
-an editor (cf. ch. xxii) or does it reflect a stage convention? The
-Admiral’s tiring-house contained in 1598 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 123)
-‘a robe for to goo invisibell’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_346" href="#FNanchor_346" class="label">[346]</a> <i>G. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Iris descends ... Iupiter
-first ascends upon the Eagle, and after him Ganimed’.... ‘Enter at 4
-severall corners the 4 winds’; <i>S. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘Thunder and
-lightning. Iupiter discends in a cloude’.... ‘Iuno and Iris descend
-from the heavens’; <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, ‘Enter Iuno and Iris above in a
-cloud’.... ‘Enter Pluto, his Chariot drawne in by Divels’.... ‘Mercury
-flies from above’.... ‘Earth riseth from under the stage’.... ‘Earth
-sinkes’.... ‘The river Arethusa riseth from the stage’; <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>,
-‘Iupiter taking up the Infant speakes as he ascends in his cloud’;
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Hercules sinkes himselfe: Flashes of fire; the Diuels
-appeare at every corner of the stage with severall fireworkes’....
-‘Exeunt three wayes Ceres, Theseus, Philoctetes, and Hercules dragging
-Cerberus one way: Pluto, hels Iudges, the Fates and Furies downe to
-hell: Iupiter, the Gods and Planets ascend to heaven’; <i>B. A.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">I</span>, ‘When the Fury sinkes, a Buls head appeares’; <span class="allsmcap">V</span>,
-‘Enter Hercules from a rocke above, tearing down trees’.... ‘Iupiter
-above strikes him with a thunderbolt, his body sinkes, and from the
-heavens discends a hand in a cloud, that from the place where Hercules
-was burnt, brings up a starre, and fixeth it in the firmament’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_347" href="#FNanchor_347" class="label">[347]</a> <i>G. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘Enter Iupiter like a Nimph,
-or a Virago’; <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, ‘Enter Iupiter like a Pedler’; <i>S. A.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘Enter ... Iupiter shapt like Amphitrio’; <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>,
-‘Enter Iuno in the shape of old Beroe’.... ‘Enter Iupiter like a
-woodman’; <i>B. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Enter ... Hercules attired like a
-woman, with a distaffe and a spindle’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_348" href="#FNanchor_348" class="label">[348]</a> <i>S. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, ‘The Nurses bring yong
-Hercules in his Cradle, and leave him. Enter Iuno and Iris with two
-snakes, put them to the childe and depart: Hercules strangles them:
-to them Amphitrio, admiring the accident’; <i>B. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>,
-‘Enter Vulcan and Pyragmon with his net of wire.... Vulcan catcheth
-them fast in his net.... All the Gods appeare above and laugh, Iupiter,
-Iuno, Phoebus, Mercury, Neptune’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_349" href="#FNanchor_349" class="label">[349]</a> <i>G. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘A confused fray, an
-alarme.... Lycaon makes head againe, and is beat off by Iupiter and the
-Epirians, Iupiter ceazeth the roome of Lycaon’; <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘Enter
-with musicke (before Diana) sixe Satires, after them all their Nimphs,
-garlands on their heads, and iavelings in their hands, their Bowes
-and Quivers: the Satyrs sing’.... ‘Hornes winded, a great noise of
-hunting. Enter Diana, all her Nimphes in the chase, Iupiter pulling
-Calisto back’; <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, ‘Alarm. They combat with iavelings first,
-after with swords and targets’; <i>S. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III</span>, ‘Enter Ceres
-and Proserpine attired like the Moone, with a company of Swaines, and
-country Wenches: They sing’.... ‘A confused fray with stooles, cups
-and bowles, the Centaurs are beaten.... Enter with victory, Hercules’;
-<i>B. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, ‘Enter Aurora, attended with Seasons, Daies,
-and Howers’; <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Hercules swings Lychas about his head, and
-kils him’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_350" href="#FNanchor_350" class="label">[350]</a> <i>G. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, ‘Enter Saturn with wedges
-of gold and silver, models of ships and buildings, bow and arrowes,
-&amp;c.’; <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘Vesta and the Nurse, who with counterfeit passion
-present the King a bleeding heart upon a knives point, and a bowle
-of bloud’.... ‘A banquet brought in, with the limbes of a man in the
-service’; <i>B. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Enter to the sacrifice two Priests
-to the Altar, sixe Princes with sixe of his labours, in the midst
-Hercules bearing his two brazen pillars, six other Princes, with the
-other six labours’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_351" href="#FNanchor_351" class="label">[351]</a> <i>G. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Pluto drawes hell: the
-Fates put upon him a burning Roabe, and present him with a Mace, and
-burning crowne’; <i>S. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘Jupiter appeares in his
-glory under a Raine-bow’; <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, ‘Thunder, lightnings, Jupiter
-descends in his maiesty, his Thunderbolt burning’.... ‘As he toucheth
-the bed it fires, and all flyes up’; <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘Fire-workes all over
-the house’.... ‘Enter Pluto with a club of fire, a burning crowne,
-Proserpine, the Judges, the Fates, and a guard of Divels, all with
-burning weapons’; <i>B. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II</span>, ‘There fals a shower of
-raine’. Perhaps one should remember the sarcasm of <i>Warning for Fair
-Women</i>, ind. 51, ‘With that a little rosin flasheth forth, Like
-smoke out of a tobacco pipe, or a boys squib’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_352" href="#FNanchor_352" class="label">[352]</a> <i>Revenger’s Tragedy</i> (Dodsley<sup>4</sup>), p. 99; it recurs
-in <i>2 If You Know Not Me</i> (ed. Pearson), p. 292.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_353" href="#FNanchor_353" class="label">[353]</a> <i>T. N.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii; <i>M. for M.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii; <i>Fair Maid of Bristow</i>, sig. E 3;
-<i>Philaster</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_354" href="#FNanchor_354" class="label">[354]</a> <i>Tp.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 172, ‘Here Prospero discouers
-Ferdinand and Miranda, playing at Chesse’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_355" href="#FNanchor_355" class="label">[355]</a> <i>Tim.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii.; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 133.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_356" href="#FNanchor_356" class="label">[356]</a> <i>M. Wives</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 40, ‘He steps into the
-Counting-house’ (Q<sub>1</sub>); <i>2 Maid’s Tragedy</i>, 1995, 2030, ‘Locks
-him self in’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_357" href="#FNanchor_357" class="label">[357]</a> <i>M. D. of Edmonton</i>, prol. 34, ‘Draw the Curtaines’
-(s.d.), which disclose Fabel on a couch, with a ‘necromanticke chaire’
-by him; <i>Devil’s Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 325, ‘Alexander in
-his study’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 1704, 1847; v. 2421, 2437; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iv. 2965; vi. 3016, ‘Alexander vnbraced betwixt two Cardinalls in his
-study looking vpon a booke, whilst a groome draweth the Curtaine....
-They place him in a chayre vpon the stage, a groome setteth a Table
-before him’.... (3068), ‘Alexander draweth the Curtaine of his studie
-where hee discouereth the diuill sitting in his pontificals’; <i>Hen.
-VIII</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 63, after action in anteroom, ‘Exit Lord
-Chamberlaine, and the King drawes the Curtaine and sits reading
-pensiuely’; <i>Catiline</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 15, ‘Discouers Catiline in
-his study’; <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 221 (a ‘cabinet’);
-cf. <i>Massacre at Paris</i> (Fortune), 434, ‘He knocketh, and enter
-the King of Nauarre and Prince of Condy, with their scholmaisters’
-(clearly a discovery, rather than an entry).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_358" href="#FNanchor_358" class="label">[358]</a> <i>2 Maid’s Tragedy</i>, 1725, ‘Enter the Tirant agen at
-a farder dore, which opened, bringes hym to the Toombe wher the Lady
-lies buried; the Toombe here discovered ritchly set forthe’; (1891)
-‘Gouianus kneeles at the Toomb wondrous passionatly’.... (1926), ‘On
-a sodayne in a kinde of Noyse like a Wynde, the dores clattering, the
-Toombstone flies open, and a great light appeares in the midst of the
-Toombe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_359" href="#FNanchor_359" class="label">[359]</a> <i>W. T.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii; <i>D. of Malfi</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 1, ‘Two Pilgrimes to the Shrine of our Lady of
-Loretto’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_360" href="#FNanchor_360" class="label">[360]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii-v; cf. <i>Roaring
-Girl</i> (Fortune) (ed. Pearson, p. 50), ‘The three shops open in
-a ranke: the first a Poticaries shop, the next a Fether shop; the
-third a Sempsters shop’; <i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i> (? Fortune),
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ‘Sit in his shop’ (Merry’s); <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii, ‘Then
-Merry must passe to Beeches shoppe, who must sit in his shop, and
-Winchester his boy stand by: Beech reading’; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ‘The boy
-sitting at his maisters dore’.... ‘When the boy goeth into the shoppe
-Merrie striketh six blowes on his head and with the seaventh leaues the
-hammer sticking in his head’.... ‘Enter one in his shirt and a maide,
-and comming to Beeches shop findes the boy murthered’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv,
-‘Rachell sits in the shop’ (Merry’s); <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (Hope),
-<span class="allsmcap">II-V</span>, which need booths for the pig-woman, gingerbread woman,
-and hobby-horse man.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_361" href="#FNanchor_361" class="label">[361]</a> <i>Revenger’s Tragedy</i> (Dodsley<sup>4</sup>), i, p. 26, ‘Enter
-... Antonio ... discovering the body of her dead to certain Lords and
-Hippolito; pp. 58, 90 (scenes of assignation and murder in a room with
-‘yon silver ceiling’, a ‘darken’d blushless angle’, ‘this unsunned
-lodge’, ‘that sad room’); <i>D. of Malfi</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 55, ‘Here
-is discover’d, behind a travers, the artificiall figures of Antonio
-and his children, appearing as if they were dead’; ii. 262, ‘Shewes
-the children strangled’; cf. <i>White Devil</i> (Queen’s), <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iv. 71, ‘They are behind the travers. Ile discover Their superstitious
-howling’, with s.d. ‘Cornelia, the Moore and 3 other Ladies discovered,
-winding Marcello’s coarse’; <i>Brazen Age</i> (Queen’s), <span class="allsmcap">III</span>,
-‘Two fiery Buls are discouered, the Fleece hanging over them, and the
-Dragon sleeping beneath them: Medea with strange fiery-workes, hangs
-above in the Aire in the strange habite of a Coniuresse’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_362" href="#FNanchor_362" class="label">[362]</a> Cf. p. 25. I am not clear whether <i>Volpone</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 2801, ‘Volpone peepes from behinde a trauerse’ is below or
-above, but in either event the traverse in this case must have been
-a comparatively low screen and free from attachment at the top, as
-Volpone says (2761), ‘I’le get up, Behind the cortine, on a stoole, and
-harken; Sometime, peepe ouer’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_363" href="#FNanchor_363" class="label">[363]</a> <i>M. Ado</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 63; <i>M. Wives</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 97, ‘Falstaffe stands behind the aras’ (Q<sub>1</sub>);
-<i>Ham.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 163; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 22; <i>D. of
-Malfi</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 65; <i>Philaster</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 61,
-‘Exit behind the hangings’ ... (148), ‘Enter Galatea from behind the
-hangings’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_364" href="#FNanchor_364" class="label">[364]</a> <i>Cy.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter Imogen, in her
-Bed, and a Lady’ ... (11) ‘Iachimo from the Trunke’, who says (47)
-‘To th’ Truncke againe, and shut the spring of it’ and (51) ‘Exit’;
-cf. <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 42, ‘Attend you here the doore of our stern
-daughter?’; cf. <i>Rape of Lucrece</i> (Red Bull), p. 222 (ed.
-Pearson), ‘Lucrece discovered in her bed’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_365" href="#FNanchor_365" class="label">[365]</a> <i>Ham.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv; cf. p. 116. Most of
-the scenes are in some indefinite place in the castle, called in
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 161 ‘here in the lobby’ (Q<sub>2</sub>, F<sub>1</sub>) or ‘here
-in the gallery’ (Q<sub>1</sub>). Possibly the audience for the play scene
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii) were in the alcove, as there is nothing to suggest
-that they were above; or they may have been to right and left, and the
-players in the alcove; it is guesswork.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_366" href="#FNanchor_366" class="label">[366]</a> <i>Oth.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter Othello with a
-light’ (Q<sub>1</sub>), ‘Enter Othello and Desdemona in her bed’ (F<sub>1</sub>).
-It is difficult to say whether <i>Maid’s Tragedy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-i. 2 (continuous scene), where Evadne’s entry and colloquy with a
-gentleman of the bedchamber is followed by s.d. ‘King abed’, implies a
-‘discovery’ or not.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_367" href="#FNanchor_367" class="label">[367]</a> <i>D. Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v. 547, ‘Enter
-<i>Lucretia</i> alone in her night gowne untired, bringing in a chaire,
-which she planteth upon the Stage’ ... (579) ‘Enter Gismond di Viselli
-untrussed in his Night-cap, tying his points’ ... (625) ‘Gismond
-sitteth downe in a Chaire, Lucretia on a stoole [ready on the stage
-for a spectator?] beside him’ ... (673) ‘She ... convaieth away the
-chaire’. Barbarossa comes into ‘this parler here’ (700), finds the
-murdered body, and they ‘locke up the dores there’ and ‘bring in the
-body’ (777), which is therefore evidently not behind a curtain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_368" href="#FNanchor_368" class="label">[368]</a> <i>D. Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 2005, ‘Enter
-Lucretia richly attired with a Phyal in her hand’ ... ‘Enter two Pages
-with a Table, two looking glasses, a box with Combes and instruments, a
-rich bowle’. She paints and is poisoned, and a Physician bids ‘beare in
-her body’ (2146).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_369" href="#FNanchor_369" class="label">[369]</a> <i>D. Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 2441, ‘Exit
-<i>Alexander</i> into his study’ ... ‘Enter <i>Astor</i> and
-<i>Philippo</i> in their wast-cotes with rackets’ ... ‘Enter two
-Barbers with linen’ ... ‘After the barbers had trimmed and rubbed
-their bodies a little, <i>Astor</i> caleth’ ... ‘They lay them selves
-upon a bed and the barbers depart’ ... ‘<i>Bernardo</i> knocketh at
-the study’. They are murdered and Bernardo bidden to ‘beare them in’
-(2589).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_370" href="#FNanchor_370" class="label">[370]</a> Cf. p. 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_371" href="#FNanchor_371" class="label">[371]</a> Albright, 142; Graves, 17; Reynolds (1911), 55;
-Thorndike, 81.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_372" href="#FNanchor_372" class="label">[372]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_373" href="#FNanchor_373" class="label">[373]</a> In <i>The Faithful Friends</i> (possibly a Jacobean
-King’s play), iv. 282, Rufinus says, ‘Lead to the chamber called
-Elysium’; then comes s.d. ‘Exit Young Tullius, Phyladelphia and
-Rufinus. Then a rich Bed is thrust out and they enter again’, and
-Tullius says ‘This is the lodging called Elysium’. Later examples are
-Sir W. Berkeley, <i>The Lost Lady</i> (1638), <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ‘Enter the
-Moor on her bed, Hermione, Phillida, and Irene. The bed thrust out’;
-Suckling, <i>Aglaura</i> (1646), <span class="allsmcap">V</span>, ‘A bed put out. Thersames
-and Aglaura in it.... Draw in the Bed’; Davenport, <i>City Night
-Cap</i> (1661, Cockpit), <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ‘A bed thrust out. Lodovico
-sleeping in his clothes; Dorothea in bed’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_374" href="#FNanchor_374" class="label">[374]</a> <i>Silver Age</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, ‘Enter Semele drawne out
-in her bed’; <i>Hector of Germany</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ‘a bed thrust
-out, the Palsgrave lying sick on it, the King of Bohemia, the Duke of
-Savoy, the Marquis Brandenburg entering with him’; <i>Chaste Maid in
-Cheapside</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 1, ‘A bed thrust out upon the stage;
-Allwit’s wife in it’. This appears from ‘call him up’ (102) to be on
-the upper stage. <i>Golden Age</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, ‘Enter Sibilla lying
-in child-bed, with her child lying by her, and her Nurse, &amp;c.’ has the
-Cymbeline formula, but presumably the staging was as for Danae.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_375" href="#FNanchor_375" class="label">[375]</a> <i>Golden Age</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, ‘Enter foure old
-Beldams’, and say ‘The ‘larme bell rings’; it is Acrisius; they will
-‘clap close to the gate and let him in’. He bids them watch ‘your
-percullist entrance’, says ‘Danae is descended’, speaks of ‘the walkes
-within this barricadoed mure’. She returns ‘unto her chamber’ and
-he ‘Exit’. The beldams will ‘take our lodgings before the Princesse
-chamber’ and ‘Exit’. Then ‘Enter Iupiter like a Pedler, the Clowne
-his man, with packs at their backes’. They are evidently outside the
-gate. ‘He rings the bell’ and persuades the beldams to let him ‘into
-the Porters lodge’. They will ‘shut the gate for feare the King come
-and if he ring clap the Pedlers into some of yon old rotten corners’.
-Then ‘Enter Danae’, whom Jupiter courts. She says ‘Yon is my doore’ and
-‘Exit’. The beldams will ‘see the Pedlers pack’t out of the gate’, but
-in the end let them ‘take a nap upon some bench or other’, and bid them
-good-night. Jupiter ‘puts off his disguise’ and ‘Exit’. Then ‘Enter
-the foure old Beldams, drawing out Danae’s bed: she in it. They place
-foure tapers at the foure corners’. Jupiter returns ‘crown’d with his
-imperiall robes’, says ‘Yon is the doore’, calls Danae by name, ‘lyes
-upon her bed’ and ‘puts out the lights and makes unready’. Presently
-‘The bed is drawne in, and enter the Clowne new wak’t’, followed by
-‘Enter Iupiter and Danae in her night-gowne’. He puts on his cloak, and
-‘Enter the foure Beldams in hast’, say ‘the gate is open’, and dismiss
-the pedlars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_376" href="#FNanchor_376" class="label">[376]</a> <i>M. Ado</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. Presumably the action
-is at the window, as there is a ‘new tire within’ (13) and Hero
-withdraws when guests arrive (95). It is of course the same window
-which is required by Don John’s plot, although it is not again in
-action (cf. <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 43; iii. 89; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 116, iii.
-156; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 85, 311).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_377" href="#FNanchor_377" class="label">[377]</a> <i>Volpone</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> v-vii. In the piazza, under
-the same window, is <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i-iii, where ‘Celia at the windo’
-throws downe her handkerchiefe’ (1149).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_378" href="#FNanchor_378" class="label">[378]</a> <i>M. W.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v, in both
-of which persons ‘below’ are bidden ‘come up’; possibly <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-i; cf. <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v, 13, 22, 131, where persons below speak of the
-chamber as above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_379" href="#FNanchor_379" class="label">[379]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv-vi, at the Mitre;
-<i>M. Devil of Edmonton</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <i>Miseries of Enforced
-Marriage</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; and for other theatres, <i>Massacre at
-Paris</i> (Fortune), 257 ‘Enter the Admirall in his bed’, 301 ‘Enter
-into the Admirals house, and he in his bed’, with 310 ‘Throw him
-downe’; <i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i> (Fortune), parts of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iii, ‘Then being in the upper Rome Merry strickes him in the head
-fifteene times’, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, iii; <i>1 If You Know Not Me</i> (?
-Queen’s), p. 240 (ed. Pearson), ‘Enter Elizabeth, Gage, and Clarencia
-aboue’. Elizabeth bids Gage ‘Looke to the pathway that doth come from
-the court’, perhaps from a window at the back (cf. p. 96), and he
-describes a coming horseman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_380" href="#FNanchor_380" class="label">[380]</a> <i>Yorkshire Tragedy</i>, scc. iii, v, vii, while the
-intermediate episodes, scc. iv, vi, are below. It is all really one
-scene.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_381" href="#FNanchor_381" class="label">[381]</a> <i>Sejanus</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), i. 355–469 (cf. 287), an episode
-breaking the flow of the main action, a hall scene, of the act; it must
-be apart from the hall, not perhaps necessarily above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_382" href="#FNanchor_382" class="label">[382]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, preceded and followed by
-scene near the court gate at the foot of stairs leading to the great
-chamber; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i has ‘Is this the way? good truth here be fine
-hangings’ and ‘courtiers drop out’, presumably through the arras and up
-the stairs. Then a presenter says, ‘Here they come’, and the courtiers
-enter, presumably above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_383" href="#FNanchor_383" class="label">[383]</a> <i>A. and C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> xv. 1, ‘Enter Cleopatra,
-and her Maides aloft’, with (8) ‘Look out o’ the other side your
-monument’ ... (37) ‘They heave Anthony aloft to Cleopatra’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii; cf. 360, ‘bear her women from the monument’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_384" href="#FNanchor_384" class="label">[384]</a> <i>Pericles</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i (prol. 58, ‘In your
-imagination hold This stage the ship’); <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i (prol. 21, ‘In
-your supposing once more put your sight Of heavy Pericles; think this
-his bark’). The other scenes (<i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xii; <i>A.
-and C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii; <i>Tp.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i) have nothing
-directly indicating action ‘above’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_385" href="#FNanchor_385" class="label">[385]</a> <i>Ham.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, iv, v; cf. <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii.
-213, ‘upon the platform where we watch’d’. There would be hardly
-room ‘above’ for the Ghost to waft Hamlet to ‘a more removed ground’
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 61), and the effect of <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v. 148, where
-‘Ghost cries under the Stage’, would be less. On the other hand, in
-<i>White Devil</i> (Queen’s), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv. 39 the s.d. ‘A Cardinal
-on the Tarras’ is explained by Flamineo’s words, ‘Behold! my lord of
-Arragon appeares, On the church battlements’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_386" href="#FNanchor_386" class="label">[386]</a> <i>J. C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <i>Cor.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii, ‘Enter two Officers, to lay Cushions, as it were, in the Capitol’;
-<i>Sejanus</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), iii. 1–6; v. 19–22; <i>Catiline</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv, vi; also <i>Rape of Lucrece</i>
-(Red Bull), pp. 168–73 (ed. Pearson). There is a complete absence of
-s.ds. for ‘above’; cf. p. 58. But in <i>J. C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i and
-<i>Catiline</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi, at least, action in the senate house
-is continuous with action in the street or forum without, and both
-places must have been shown, and somehow differentiated.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_387" href="#FNanchor_387" class="label">[387]</a> <i>Bonduca</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ‘Enter Caratach upon a
-rock, and Hengo by him, sleeping’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, ‘Enter Caratach and
-Hengo on the Rock’. Hengo is let down by a belt to fetch up food. It
-is ‘a steep rock i th’ woods’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii); cf. the rock scene in
-<i>Brazen Age</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span> (cf. p. 109).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_388" href="#FNanchor_388" class="label">[388]</a> Cf. p. 153. <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii,
-with (173) ‘call up our officers’ is a possible exception.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_389" href="#FNanchor_389" class="label">[389]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i (where personages
-standing ‘under this Tarras’ watch action under a window); <i>Devil’s
-Charter</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ‘Alexander out of a Casement’; <i>M.
-Devil of Edmonton</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 59, ‘D’yee see yon bay
-window?’ <i>Miseries of Enforced Marriage</i> (Dodsley<sup>4</sup>), iv, p. 540
-(‘Here’s the sign of the Wolf, and the bay-window’); <i>T. N. K.</i>
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ii; <i>Catiline</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v; <i>Philaster</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv; <i>Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 2004,
-‘Leonella above in a gallery with her love Bellarius’ ... (2021)
-‘Descendet Leonela’; <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> v; <i>Hen.
-VIII</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 19, ‘Enter the King, and Buts, at a Windowe
-above’, with ‘Let ’em alone, and draw the curtaine close’ (34);
-<i>Pericles</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii (where Simonides and Thaisa ‘withdraw
-into the gallerie’, to watch a tilting supposed behind, as in the
-sixteenth-century <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>; cf. p. 96). So, too, in
-<i>T. N. K.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii, the fight between Palamon and Arcite
-takes place within; Emilia will not see it, and it is reported to her
-on the main stage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_390" href="#FNanchor_390" class="label">[390]</a> <i>D. an Ass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vi. 37, ‘This Scene is
-acted at two windo’s as out of two contiguous buildings’ ... (77)
-‘Playes with her paps, kisseth her hands, &amp;c.’ ... vii. 1 ‘Her husband
-appeares at her back’ ... (8) ‘Hee speaks out of his wives window’ ...
-(23) ‘The Divell speakes below’ ... (28) ‘Fitz-dottrel enters with his
-wife as come downe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_391" href="#FNanchor_391" class="label">[391]</a> <i>M. Devil of Edmonton</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii;
-<i>Catiline</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi (where apparently three houses are
-visited after leaving the senate house); cf. the cases of shops on p.
-110, n. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_392" href="#FNanchor_392" class="label">[392]</a> <i>Ham.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 60.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_393" href="#FNanchor_393" class="label">[393]</a> <i>Bonduca</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_394" href="#FNanchor_394" class="label">[394]</a> <i>Three English Brothers</i>, ad fin. A court scene in
-<i>Sir T. Wyatt</i> ends (ed. Hazlitt, p. 10) with s.d. ‘pass round
-the stage’, which takes the personages to the Tower. Similarly in <i>1
-If You Know Not Me</i> (ed. Pearson, p. 246) a scene at Hatfield ends
-‘And now to London, lords, lead on the way’, with s.d. ‘Sennet about
-the Stage in order. The Maior of London meets them’, and in <i>2 If You
-Know Not Me</i> (p. 342) troops start from Tilbury, and ‘As they march
-about the stage, Sir Francis Drake and Sir Martin Furbisher meet them’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_395" href="#FNanchor_395" class="label">[395]</a> W. Archer in <i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 471;
-Albright, 77; Lawrence, i. 19; cf. my analogous conjecture of ‘wings’
-on p. 100.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_396" href="#FNanchor_396" class="label">[396]</a> <i>David and Bethsabe</i>, 25, ‘He [Prologus] drawes a
-curtaine, and discouers Bethsabe with her maid bathing ouer a spring:
-she sings, and David sits aboue vewing her’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_397" href="#FNanchor_397" class="label">[397]</a> Lawrence, i. 159 (<i>Proscenium Doors: an Elizabethan
-Heritage</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_398" href="#FNanchor_398" class="label">[398]</a> Cf. vol. ii, p. 534.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_399" href="#FNanchor_399" class="label">[399]</a> At the Globe the windows appear to have been bay
-windows; cf. p. 116, n. 7. Lawrence, ii. 25 (<i>Windows on the
-Pre-Restoration Stage</i>), cites T. M. <i>Black Book</i> (1604),
-‘And marching forward to the third garden-house, there we knocked up
-the ghost of mistress Silverpin, who suddenly risse out of two white
-sheets, and acted out of her tiring-house window’. It appears from
-Tate Wilkinson’s <i>Memoirs</i> (Lawrence, i. 177) that the proscenium
-balconies were common ground to actors and audience in the eighteenth
-century.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_400" href="#FNanchor_400" class="label">[400]</a> <i>Family of Love</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_401" href="#FNanchor_401" class="label">[401]</a> The theory is best represented by C. Brodmeier, <i>Die
-Shakespeare-Bühne nach den alten Bühnenanweisungen</i> (1904); V.
-Albright, <i>The Shakespearian Stage</i> (1909).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_402" href="#FNanchor_402" class="label">[402]</a> Thorndike, 106.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_403" href="#FNanchor_403" class="label">[403]</a> Cf. pp. 41, 126, 154.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_404" href="#FNanchor_404" class="label">[404]</a> Palace of Tiberius (Acts <span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III</span>), Senate house (<span class="allsmcap">III</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span>), Gardens of
-Eudemus (<span class="allsmcap">II</span>), Houses of Agrippina (<span class="allsmcap">II</span>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>),
-Sejanus (<span class="allsmcap">V</span>), Regulus (<span class="allsmcap">V</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_405" href="#FNanchor_405" class="label">[405]</a> Houses of Volpone (<span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">II</span>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span>), Corvino (<span class="allsmcap">II</span>), Would Be
-(<span class="allsmcap">V</span>), Law court (<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_406" href="#FNanchor_406" class="label">[406]</a> Houses of Catiline (<span class="allsmcap">I</span>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>), Fulvia
-(<span class="allsmcap">II</span>), Cicero (<span class="allsmcap">III</span>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span>), Lecca
-(<span class="allsmcap">III</span>), Brutus (<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>), Spinther (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi),
-Cornificius (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi), Caesar (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vi), Senate house
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, <span class="allsmcap">V</span>), Milvian Bridge (<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_407" href="#FNanchor_407" class="label">[407]</a> <i>Alchemist</i>, <i>III.</i> v. 58, ‘He speakes through
-the keyhole, the other knocking’. <i>Hen. VIII</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, iii
-(continuous scene) also requires a council-chamber door upon the stage,
-at which Cranmer is stopped after he has entered through the stage
-door.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_408" href="#FNanchor_408" class="label">[408]</a> Daborne gave Tourneur ‘an act of y<sup>e</sup> Arreignment of
-London to write’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 72).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_409" href="#FNanchor_409" class="label">[409]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_410" href="#FNanchor_410" class="label">[410]</a> <i>M. N. D.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 463 (F<sub>1</sub>), ‘They
-sleep all the Act’; i. e. all the act-interval (cf. p. 131). So in
-<i>Catiline</i> the storm with which Act <span class="allsmcap">III</span> ends is still on
-at the beginning of Act <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>, and in <i>Alchemist</i> Mammon
-and Lovewit are seen approaching at the ends of Acts <span class="allsmcap">I</span> and
-<span class="allsmcap">IV</span> respectively, but in both cases the actual arrival is at
-the beginning of the next act.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_411" href="#FNanchor_411" class="label">[411]</a> F. A. Foster, <i>Dumb Show in Elizabethan Drama before
-1620</i> (<i>E. S.</i> xliv. 8).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_412" href="#FNanchor_412" class="label">[412]</a> Jonson has a ‘Chorus&mdash;of musicians’ between the acts of
-<i>Sejanus</i>, and the presenter of <i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i>
-bids the audience ‘Delight your eares with pleasing harmonie’ after
-the harrowing end of Act <span class="allsmcap">II</span>. Some other examples given in
-Lawrence, i. 75 (<i>Music and Song in the Elizabethan Drama</i>), seem
-to me no more than incidental music such as may occur at any point of
-a play. Malone (<i>Var.</i> iii. 111) describes a copy of the Q<sub>2</sub>
-of <i>R. J.</i> in which the act endings and directions for inter-act
-music had been marked in manuscript; but this might be of late date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_413" href="#FNanchor_413" class="label">[413]</a> <i>Malcontent</i>, ind. 89.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_414" href="#FNanchor_414" class="label">[414]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 127.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_415" href="#FNanchor_415" class="label">[415]</a> <i>Catiline</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_416" href="#FNanchor_416" class="label">[416]</a> <i>Second Maidens Tragedy</i>, 1719, ‘Exit’ the Tyrant,
-four lines from the end of a court scene, and 1724 ‘Enter the Tirant
-agen at a farder dore, which opened, bringes hym to the Toombe’ (cf.
-p. 110, n. 8). So in <i>Woman Killed with Kindness</i> (Queen’s),
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iii (continuous scene), Mrs. Frankford and her lover
-retire from a hall scene to sup in her chamber, and the servants are
-bidden to lock the house doors. In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv Frankford enters
-with a friend, and says (8) ‘This is the key that opes my outward gate;
-This the hall-door; this the withdrawing chamber; But this ... It leads
-to my polluted bedchamber’. Then (17) ‘now to my gate’, where they
-light a lanthorn, and (23) ‘this is the last door’, and in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-v Frankford emerges as from the bedchamber. Probably sc. iv is supposed
-to begin before the house. They go behind at (17), emerge through
-another door, and the scene is then in the hall, whence Frankford
-passes at (23) through the central aperture behind again.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_417" href="#FNanchor_417" class="label">[417]</a> <i>Wily Beguiled</i>, prol. The Prologus asks a player
-the name of the play, and is told ‘Sir you may look vpon the Title’.
-He complains that it is ‘<i>Spectrum</i> once again’. Then a Juggler
-enters, will show him a trick, and says ‘With a cast of cleane
-conveyance, come aloft <i>Jack</i> for thy masters advantage (hees gone
-I warrant ye)’ and there is the s.d. ‘<i>Spectrum</i> is conveied away:
-and <i>Wily beguiled</i>, stands in the place of it’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_418" href="#FNanchor_418" class="label">[418]</a> Most of the examples in Lawrence, i. 43 (<i>Title and
-Locality Boards on the Pre-Restoration Stage</i>) belong to Court or
-to private theatres; on the latter cf. p. 154, <i>infra</i>. But the
-prologue to <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i> begins ‘The doubtful Title
-(Gentlemen) prefixt Upon the Argument we have in hand May breede
-suspence’. The lost Frankfort engraving of English comedians (cf. vol.
-ii, p. 520) is said to have shown boards.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_419" href="#FNanchor_419" class="label">[419]</a> Cunningham, <i>Jonson</i>, iii. 509; Dekker, <i>G. H.
-B.</i> (ed. McKerrow), 40, ‘And first observe your doors of entrance,
-and your exit; not much unlike the players at the theatres; keeping
-your decorums, even in fantasticality. As for example: if you prove to
-be a northern gentleman, I would wish you to pass through the north
-door, more often especially than any of the other; and so, according to
-your countries, take note of your entrances’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_420" href="#FNanchor_420" class="label">[420]</a> <i>1 Contention</i>, sc. xxii, ‘Richard kils him under
-the signe of the Castle in St. Albones’; <i>Comedy of Errors</i> (the
-Phoenix, the Porpentine), <i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i> (the Last),
-<i>Edw. IV</i> (the Pelican), <i>E. M. O.</i> (the Mitre), <i>Miseries
-of Enforced Marriage</i> (the Mitre, the Wolf); <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>
-(the Pig’s Head); &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_421" href="#FNanchor_421" class="label">[421]</a> <i>Wounds of Civil War</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv, ‘Enter
-Marius solus from the Numidian mountaines, feeding on rootes’; <i>3
-Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, ‘Enter Warwick and Oxford in England’,
-&amp;c.; cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_422" href="#FNanchor_422" class="label">[422]</a> <i>Warning for Fair Women</i>, ind. 86, ‘My scene is
-London, native and your own’; <i>Alchemist</i>, prol. 5, ‘Our scene is
-London’; cf. the Gower speeches in <i>Pericles</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_423" href="#FNanchor_423" class="label">[423]</a> <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, 13, 799, 918, 1111.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_424" href="#FNanchor_424" class="label">[424]</a> I cite Greg’s Q<sub>2</sub>, but Q<sub>1</sub> agrees. Jonson’s own
-scene-division is of course determined by the introduction of new
-speakers (cf. p. 200) and does not precisely follow the textual
-indications.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_425" href="#FNanchor_425" class="label">[425]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 116.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_426" href="#FNanchor_426" class="label">[426]</a> <i>2 If You Know Not Me</i> (ed. Pearson), p. 295.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_427" href="#FNanchor_427" class="label">[427]</a> Cf. App. I, and Neuendorff, 149, who quotes J. Corey,
-<i>Generous Enemies</i> (1672), prol.:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Coarse hangings then, instead of scenes, were worn.</div>
- <div>And Kidderminster did the stage adorn.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Graves, 78, suggests pictorial ‘painted cloths’ for
-backgrounds.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_428" href="#FNanchor_428" class="label">[428]</a> ‘Scenes’ were used in the public performances of
-Nabbes’s <i>Microcosmus</i> (1637), Suckling’s <i>Aglaura</i>
-(<i>1637</i>), and Habington’s <i>Queen of Arragon</i> (<i>1640</i>);
-cf. Lawrence, ii. 121 (<i>The Origin of the English Picture-Stage</i>);
-W. G. Keith, <i>The Designs for the First Movable Scenery on the
-English Stage</i> (<i>Burlington Magazine</i>, xxv. 29, 85).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_429" href="#FNanchor_429" class="label">[429]</a> For Paul’s, <i>C. and C. Errant</i> (after each
-act), ‘Here they knockt up the Consort’; <i>Faery Pastorall</i>;
-<i>Trick to Catch the Old One</i> (after <span class="allsmcap">I</span> and <span class="allsmcap">II</span>),
-‘music’; <i>What You Will</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 235 ‘So ends our
-chat;&mdash;sound music for the act’; for Blackfriars, <i>Gentleman
-Usher</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1, ‘after the song’; <i>Sophonisba</i>
-(after <span class="allsmcap">I</span>), ‘the cornets and organs playing loud full music
-for the act’, (<span class="allsmcap">II</span>) ‘Organ mixt with recorders, for this
-act’, (<span class="allsmcap">III</span>) ‘Organs, viols and voices play for this act’,
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>) ‘A base lute and a treble violl play for the act’, with
-which should be read the note at the end of Q<sub>1</sub>, ‘let me intreat my
-reader not to taxe me for the fashion of the entrances and musique of
-this tragedy, for know it is printed only as it was presented by youths
-and after the fashion of the private stage’; <i>K. B. P.</i> (after
-<span class="allsmcap">I</span>), ‘Boy danceth. Musicke. Finis Actus primi’, (<span class="allsmcap">II</span>)
-‘Musicke. Finis Actus secundi’, (<span class="allsmcap">III</span>) ‘Finis Actus tertii.
-Musicke. Actus quartus, scoena prima. Boy daunceth’, (<span class="allsmcap">IV</span>)
-Ralph’s May Day speech; cf. <i>infra</i> and vol. ii, p. 557. I do not
-find any similar recognition of the scene as a structural element in
-the play to be introduced by music; in <i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 120, the s.d. ‘and so the Scene begins’ only
-introduces a new scene in the sense of a regrouping of speakers (cf. p.
-200).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_430" href="#FNanchor_430" class="label">[430]</a> For Paul’s, <i>Histriomastix</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i.
-1, ‘Enter Pride, Vaine-Glory, Hypocrisie, and Contempt: Pride casts
-a mist, wherein Mavortius and his company [who ended <span class="allsmcap">II</span>]
-vanish off the Stage, and Pride and her attendants remaine’, (after
-<span class="allsmcap">III</span>) ‘They all awake, and begin the following Acte’, (after
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>) ‘Allarmes in severall places, that brake him off thus:
-after a retreat sounded, the Musicke playes and Poverty enters’; <span class="smcap">2
-Antonio and Mellida</span>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1, ‘A dumb show. The cornets
-sounding for the Act’, (after <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>) ‘The cornets sound for the
-act. The dumb show’; <i>What You Will</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1, ‘Enter
-Francisco ... They clothe Francisco whilst Bidet creeps in and observes
-them. Much of this done whilst the Act is playing’; <i>Phoenix</i>
-(after <span class="allsmcap">II</span>), ‘Towards the close of the musick the justices
-three men prepare for a robberie’; for Blackfriars, <i>Malcontent</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 1, ‘Enter Mendoza with a sconce, to observe Ferneze’s
-entrance, who, whilst the act is playing, enters unbraced, two Pages
-before him with lights; is met by Maquerelle and conveyed in; the
-Pages are sent away’; <i>Fawn</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 1, ‘Whilst the Act
-is a-playing, Hercules and Tiberio enters; Tiberio climbs the tree,
-and is received above by Dulcimel, Philocalia, and a Priest; Hercules
-stays beneath’. The phrase ‘whilst the act is playing’ is a natural
-development from ‘for the act’, i. e. ‘in preparation for the act’,
-used also for the elaborate music which at private houses replaced the
-three preliminary trumpet ‘soundings’ of the public houses; cf. <i>What
-You Will</i>, ind. 1 (s.d.), ‘Before the music sounds for the Act’, and
-<i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i>, ind. 1, ‘The music will sound straight
-for entrance’. But it leads to a vagueness of thought in which the
-interval itself is regarded as the ‘act’; cf. the <i>M. N. D.</i> s.d.
-of F<sub>1</sub>, quoted p. 124, n. 3, with Middleton, <i>The Changeling</i>
-(1653), <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1, ‘In the act-time De Flores hides a naked
-rapier behind a door’, and Cotgrave, <i>Dict.</i> (1611), ‘Acte ...
-also, an Act, or Pause in a Comedie, or Tragedie’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_431" href="#FNanchor_431" class="label">[431]</a> For Paul’s, <i>Histriomastix</i>, i. 163, ‘Enter
-Fourcher, Voucher, Velure, Lyon-Rash ... two and two at severall
-doores’; v. 103, ‘Enter ... on one side ... on the other’; v. 192,
-‘Enter ... at one end of the stage: at the other end enter ...’; vi.
-41, ‘Enter Mavortius and Philarchus at severall doores’; vi. 241,
-‘Enter ... at the one doore. At the other ...’; <i>1 Antonio and
-Mellida</i>, iv. 220 (marsh scene), ‘Enter ... at one door; ... at
-another door’; <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i>, v. 1, ‘Enter at one door
-... at the other door’; <i>Maid’s Metamorphosis</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii.
-1 (wood scene), ‘Enter at one door ... at the other doore, ... in the
-midst’; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 1 (wood scene), ‘Enter ... at three severall
-doores’; <i>Faery Pastoral</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> vi, ‘Mercury entering
-by the midde doore wafted them back by the doore they came in’;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> viii, ‘They enterd at severall doores, Learchus at the
-midde doore’; <i>Puritan</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 1 (prison scene), ‘Enter
-... at one dore, and ... at the other’, &amp;c.; for Blackfriars, <i>Sir
-G. Goosecap</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 140, ‘Enter Jack and Will on the
-other side’; <i>Malcontent</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter from opposite
-sides’; <i>E. Ho!</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 1, ‘Enter ... at severall dores
-... At the middle dore, enter ...’; <i>Sophonisba</i>, prol., ‘Enter
-at one door ... at the other door’; <i>May Day</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 1,
-‘Enter ... several ways’; <i>Your Five Gallants</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii.
-27, ‘Enter ... at the farther door’, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_432" href="#FNanchor_432" class="label">[432]</a> For Paul’s, <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-ii. 87, ‘They strike the stage with their daggers, and the grave
-openeth’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 1, ‘Balurdo from under the Stage’;
-<i>Aphrodysial</i> (quoted Reynolds, i. 26), ‘A Trap door in the middle
-of the stage’; <i>Bussy d’Ambois</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 177, ‘The
-Vault opens’ ... ‘ascendit Frier and D’Ambois’ ... ‘Descendit Fryar’
-(cf. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, iii, iv); for
-Blackfriars, <i>Poetaster</i> (F<sub>1</sub>) prol. 1, ‘Envie. Arising in the
-midst of the stage’; <i>Case is Altered</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ‘Digs
-a hole in the ground’; <i>Sophonisba</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 201, ‘She
-descends after Sophonisba’ ... (207) ‘Descends through the vault’;
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 41, ‘Out of the altar the ghost of Asdrubal ariseth’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_433" href="#FNanchor_433" class="label">[433]</a> <i>Widow’s Tears</i> (Blackfriars), <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii.
-82, ‘Hymen descends, and six Sylvans enter beneath, with torches’;
-this is in a mask, and Cupid may have descended from a pageant. When
-a ‘state’ or throne is used (e.g. <i>Satiromastix</i>, 2309, ‘Soft
-musicke, Chaire is set under a Canopie’), there is no indication that
-it descends. In <i>Satiromastix</i>, 2147, we get ‘O thou standst
-well, thou lean’st against a poast’, but this is obviously inadequate
-evidence for a heavens supported by posts at Paul’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_434" href="#FNanchor_434" class="label">[434]</a> <i>C. and C. Errant</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ix, ‘He tooke
-the Bolle from behind the Arras’; <i>Faery Pastoral</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iv (wood scene), ‘He tooke from behind the Arras a Peck of goodly
-Acornes pilld’; <i>What You Will</i>, ind. 97, ‘Let’s place ourselves
-within the curtains, for good faith the stage is so very little, we
-shall wrong the general eye else very much’; <i>Northward Ho!</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ‘Lie you in ambush, behind the hangings, and perhaps
-you shall hear the piece of a comedy’. In <i>C. and C. Errant</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> viii. 1, the two actors left on the stage at the end of
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> vii were joined by a troop from the inn, and yet others
-coming ‘easily after them and stealingly, so as the whole Scene was
-insensibly and suddenly brought about in Catastrophe of the Comoedy.
-And the whole face of the Scene suddenly altered’. I think that Percy
-is only trying to describe the change from a nearly empty to a crowded
-stage, not a piece of scene-shifting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_435" href="#FNanchor_435" class="label">[435]</a> <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> (Q), ind. 149, ‘Slid the Boy
-takes me for a peice of Prospective (I holde my life) or some silke
-Curtine, come to hang the Stage here: Sir Cracke I am none of your
-fresh Pictures, that use to beautifie the decay’d dead Arras, in a
-publique Theater’; <i>K. B. P.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 580, ‘<i>Wife.</i>
-What story is that painted upon the cloth? the confutation of Saint
-Paul? <i>Citizen.</i> No lambe, that Ralph and Lucrece’. In <i>Law
-Tricks</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, Emilia bids Lurdo ‘Behind the Arras; scape
-behind the Arras’. Polymetes enters, praises the ‘verie faire hangings’
-representing Venus and Adonis, makes a pass at Vulcan, and notices how
-the arras trembles and groans. Then comes the s.d. (which has got in
-error into Bullen’s text, p. 42) ‘Discouer Lurdo behind the Arras’, and
-Emilia carries it off by pretending that it is only Lurdo’s picture.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_436" href="#FNanchor_436" class="label">[436]</a> I think it is possible that <i>Sophonisba</i>, with its
-‘canopy’ (cf. p. 149) was also originally written for Paul’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_437" href="#FNanchor_437" class="label">[437]</a> <i>1, 2 Antonio and Mellida</i>, <i>Maid’s
-Metamorphosis</i>, <i>Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll</i>, <i>Jack Drum’s
-Entertainment</i>, <i>Satiromastix</i>, <i>Blurt Master Constable</i>,
-<i>Bussy D’Ambois</i>, <i>Westward Ho!</i>, <i>Northward Ho!</i>,
-<i>Fawn</i>, <i>Michaelmas Term</i>, <i>Phoenix</i>, <i>Mad World,
-My Masters</i>, <i>Trick to Catch the Old One</i>, <i>Puritan</i>,
-<i>Woman Hater</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_438" href="#FNanchor_438" class="label">[438]</a> <i>Jack Drum’s Ent.</i> v. 112.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_439" href="#FNanchor_439" class="label">[439]</a> <i>Histriomastix</i>, i. 6, ‘now sit wee high
-(tryumphant in our sway)’; ii. 1, ‘Enter Plenty upon a Throne’; iii.
-11, ‘If you will sit in throne of State with Pride’; v. 1, ‘Rule,
-fier-eied Warre!... Envy ... Hath now resigned her spightfull throne to
-us’; vi. 7, ‘I [Poverty] scorne a scoffing foole about my Throne’; vi.
-271 (s.d.), ‘Astraea’ [in margin, ‘Q. Eliza’] ‘mounts unto the throne’;
-vi. 296 (original ending), ‘In the end of the play. Plenty Pride Envy
-Warre and Poverty To enter and resigne their severall Scepters to
-Peace, sitting in Maiestie’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_440" href="#FNanchor_440" class="label">[440]</a> <i>Histriomastix</i>, i. 163, ‘Enter ... Chrisoganus in
-his study’ ... (181) ‘So all goe to Chrisoganus study, where they find
-him reading’; ii. 70, ‘Enter Contrimen, to them, Clarke of the Market:
-hee wrings a bell, and drawes a curtaine; whereunder is a market set
-about a Crosse’ ... (80) ‘Enter Gulch, Belch, Clowt and Gut. One of
-them steppes on the Crosse, and cryes, A Play’ ... (105) ‘Enter Vintner
-with a quart of Wine’; v. 192, ‘Enter Lyon-rash to Fourchier sitting in
-his study at one end of the stage: At the other end enter Vourcher to
-Velure in his shop’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_441" href="#FNanchor_441" class="label">[441]</a> <i>Dr. Dodipoll</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 1, ‘A Curtaine
-drawne, Earl Lassingbergh is discovered (like a Painter) painting
-Lucilia, who sits working on a piece of cushion worke’. In
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii a character is spoken of after his ‘Exit’ as ‘going
-down the staires’, which suggests action ‘above’. But other indications
-place the scene before Cassimere’s house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_442" href="#FNanchor_442" class="label">[442]</a> <i>C. and C. Errant</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ‘They entered
-from Maldon’; <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv, ‘They entered from Harwich all’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_443" href="#FNanchor_443" class="label">[443]</a> <i>C. and C. Errant</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii, ‘They met from
-Maldon and from Harwich’, for a scene in Colchester; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i,
-‘They crossd: Denham to Harwich, Lacy to Maldon’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_444" href="#FNanchor_444" class="label">[444]</a> Reynolds (<i>M. P.</i> xii. 248) gives the note as
-‘In the middle and alofte Oceanus Pallace The Scene being. Next
-Proteus-Hall’. This seems barely grammatical and I am not sure that it
-is complete. A limitation of Paul’s is suggested by the s.d. (ibid.
-258) ‘Chambers (noise supposd for Powles) For actors’, but apparently
-‘a showre of Rose-water and confits’ was feasible.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_445" href="#FNanchor_445" class="label">[445]</a> <i>Faery Pastoral</i>, p. 162, ‘A Scrolle fell into her
-lap from above’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_446" href="#FNanchor_446" class="label">[446]</a> <i>Jack Drum</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 27, ‘The Casement opens,
-and Katherine appeares’; 270, ‘Winifride lookes from aboue’; 286,
-‘Camelia, from her window’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_447" href="#FNanchor_447" class="label">[447]</a> I give s.ds. with slight corrections from Bullen, who
-substantially follows 1633. But he has re-divided his scenes; 1633 has
-acts only for <i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i> (in spite of s.d. ‘and so
-the scene begins’ with a new speaker at <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 120); acts
-and scenes, by speakers, for <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i>; and acts
-and scenes or acts and first scenes only, not by speakers and very
-imperfectly, for the rest.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_448" href="#FNanchor_448" class="label">[448]</a> <i>1 Ant. and Mell.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 100, ‘Enter above
-... Enter below’ ... (117) ‘they two stand ... whilst the scene
-passeth above’ ... (140) ‘Exeunt all on the lower stage’ ... (148)
-‘<i>Rossaline.</i> Prithee, go down!’ ... (160) ‘Enter Mellida,
-Rossaline, and Flavia’; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 190 ‘Enter Antonio and
-Mellida’ ... (193) ‘<i>Mellida.</i> A number mount my stairs; I’ll
-straight return. <i>Exit</i>’ ... (222) ‘<i>Feliche.</i> Slink to my
-chamber; look you, that is it’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_449" href="#FNanchor_449" class="label">[449]</a> <i>IV.</i> 220, ‘Enter Piero (&amp;c.) ... Balurdo and his
-Page, at another door’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_450" href="#FNanchor_450" class="label">[450]</a> <i>2 Ant. and Mell.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 194,
-‘<i>Antonio.</i> See, look, the curtain stirs’ ... (s.d.) ‘The curtains
-drawn, and the body of Feliche, stabb’d thick with wounds, appears hung
-up’ and ‘<i>Antonio.</i> What villain bloods the window of my love?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_451" href="#FNanchor_451" class="label">[451]</a> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter ... Maria, her hair loose’
-... (59) ‘<i>Maria.</i> Pages, leave the room’ ... (65) ‘Maria draweth
-the curtain: and the ghost of Andrugio is displayed, sitting on the
-bed’ ... (95) ‘Exit Maria to her bed, Andrugio drawing the curtains’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_452" href="#FNanchor_452" class="label">[452]</a> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 50, ‘While the measure is dancing,
-Andrugio’s ghost is placed betwixt the music-houses’ ... (115) ‘The
-curtaine being drawn, exit Andrugio’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_453" href="#FNanchor_453" class="label">[453]</a> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 112, ‘They run all at Piero with their
-rapiers’. This is while the ghost is present above, but (152) ‘The
-curtains are drawn, Piero departeth’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_454" href="#FNanchor_454" class="label">[454]</a> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 33, ‘And, lo, the ghost of old Andrugio
-Forsakes his coffin’ ... (125) ‘Ghosts ... from above and beneath’ ...
-(192) ‘From under the stage a groan’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 87, ‘They strike
-the stage with their daggers, and the grave openeth’. The church must
-have been shown open, and part of the crowded action of these scenes
-kept outside; at <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 114, ‘yon bright stars’ are visible.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_455" href="#FNanchor_455" class="label">[455]</a> <i>Fawn</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 638, ‘<i>Dulcimel.</i> Father,
-do you see that tree, that leans just on my chamber window?’ ...
-(<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 1) ‘whilst the Act is a-playing, Hercules and Tiberio
-enters; Tiberio climbs the tree, and is received above by Dulcimel,
-Philocalia, and a Priest: Hercules stays beneath’. After a mask and
-other action in the presence, (461) ‘Tiberio and Dulcimel above, are
-discovered hand in hand’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_456" href="#FNanchor_456" class="label">[456]</a> <i>W. You Will</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 373, after a dance,
-‘<i>Celia.</i> Will you to dinner?’ ... (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 1) ‘The curtains
-are drawn by a Page, and Celia (&amp;c.) displayed, sitting at dinner’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_457" href="#FNanchor_457" class="label">[457]</a> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 1, ‘One knocks: Laverdure draws the
-curtains, sitting on his bed, apparelling himself; his trunk of apparel
-standing by him’ ... (127) ‘Bidet, I’ll down’; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 1,
-‘Enter a schoolmaster, draws the curtains behind, with Battus, Nous,
-Slip, Nathaniel, and Holophernes Pippo, schoolboys, sitting, with books
-in their hands’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_458" href="#FNanchor_458" class="label">[458]</a> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 110, ‘He sings and is answered; from above a
-willow garland is flung down, and the song ceaseth’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_459" href="#FNanchor_459" class="label">[459]</a> <i>Satiromastix</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 1, ‘Horrace sitting
-in a study behinde a curtaine, a candle by him burning, bookes lying
-confusedly’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_460" href="#FNanchor_460" class="label">[460]</a> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 23, where the ‘canopie’, if a Paul’s
-term, may be the equivalent of the public theatre alcove (cf. pp. 82,
-120). The ‘bower’ in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii holds eight persons, and a recess
-may have been used.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_461" href="#FNanchor_461" class="label">[461]</a> Shorthose says (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 60) ‘Thou lean’st against
-a poast’, but obviously posts supporting a heavens at Paul’s cannot be
-inferred.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_462" href="#FNanchor_462" class="label">[462]</a> <i>Westward Ho!</i> uses the houses of Justiniano
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i), Wafer (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii), Ambush (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv),
-the Earl (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii), and a Bawd (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i), the shops of Tenterhook (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i) and
-Honeysuckle (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i), and inns at the Steelyard (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-iii), Shoreditch (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii), and Brentford (<span class="allsmcap">V</span>).
-Continuous setting would not construct so many houses for single
-scenes. There is action above at the Bawd’s, and interior action below
-in several cases; in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, ‘the Earle drawes a curten
-and sets forth a banquet’. The s.ds. of this scene seem inadequate;
-at a later point Moll is apparently ‘discovered’, shamming death.
-<i>Northward Ho!</i> uses the houses of Mayberry (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii;
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii) and Doll (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i), a garden
-house at Moorfields (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii), Bellamont’s study (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i), Bedlam (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, iv), a ‘tavern entry’ in London
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii), and an inn at Ware (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i).
-Action above is at the last only, interior action below in several.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_463" href="#FNanchor_463" class="label">[463]</a> <i>B. d’Ambois</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 177,
-‘<i>Tamyra</i>. See, see the gulfe is opening’ ... (183) ‘Ascendit
-Frier and D’Ambois’ ... (296) ‘Descendit Fryar’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 63,
-‘Ascendit [Behemoth]’ ... (162) ‘Descendit cum suis’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i.
-155, ‘Ascendit Frier’ ... (191) ‘<i>Montsurry.</i> In, Ile after, To
-see what guilty light gives this cave eyes’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 1, ‘Intrat
-umbra Comolet to the Countesse, wrapt in a canapie’ ... (23) ‘D’Amboys
-at the gulfe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_464" href="#FNanchor_464" class="label">[464]</a> The Q of 1641, probably representing a revival by the
-King’s men, alters the scenes in Montsurry’s house, eliminating the
-characteristic Paul’s ‘canapie’ of <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 1 and placing
-spectators above in the same scene. It is also responsible for the
-proleptic s.d. (cf. ch. xxii) at <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 153 for <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii.
-1, ‘Table, Chesbord and Tapers behind the Arras’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_465" href="#FNanchor_465" class="label">[465]</a> <i>Blurt Master Constable</i> has (<i>a</i>)
-Camillo’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i) with a hall; (<i>b</i>)
-Hippolyto’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i) where (136) ‘Violetta appears above’,
-and (175) ‘Enter Truepenny above with a letter’; (<i>c</i>) a chapel
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii) with a ‘pit-hole’ dungeon, probably also visible in
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; (<i>d</i>) Blurt’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-ii) which is ‘twelve score off’; (<i>e</i>) Imperia’s, where is most
-of the action (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i,
-ii, iii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, iii). Two chambers below are used; into one
-Lazarillo is shown in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 201, and here in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-ii he is let through a trap into a sewer, while (38) ‘Enter Frisco
-above laughing’ and (45) ‘Enter Imperia above’. At <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii.
-68 Lazarillo crawls from the sewer into the street. In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i
-and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii tricks are played upon Curvetto with a cord and a
-rope-ladder hanging from a window above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_466" href="#FNanchor_466" class="label">[466]</a> <i>Phoenix</i> has (<i>a</i>) the palace (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i) with hall; (<i>b</i>) Falso’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> vi;
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i); (<i>c</i>) the Captain’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii); (<i>d</i>) a tavern (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iv; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii) with interior action; (<i>e</i>) a law court
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i); (<i>f</i>) a jeweller’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ii, iii) with interior action. It will be observed that
-(<i>f</i>) is needed both with (<i>d</i>) and (<i>e</i>). There is no
-action above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_467" href="#FNanchor_467" class="label">[467]</a> <i>M. Term</i> has (<i>a</i>) Paul’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i,
-ii); (<i>b</i>) Quomodo’s shop, the Three Knaves (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, iii, iv; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i); (<i>c</i>)
-a tavern (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i); (<i>d</i>) a law court (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii);
-(<i>e</i>) a courtesan’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii). All
-have interior action and (<i>b</i>) eavesdropping above in a balcony
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 108, 378, 423; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv). Much action is
-merely in the streets.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_468" href="#FNanchor_468" class="label">[468]</a> <i>A Mad World</i> has (<i>a</i>) Harebrain’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv); (<i>b</i>)
-Penitent Brothel’s (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i), with interior action; (<i>c</i>)
-a courtesan’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii, vi; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v), with a bed and five persons at once, perhaps above, in
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; (<i>d</i>) Sir Bounteous Progress’s in the country
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, iv, v, vii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii). The action here is rather
-puzzling, but apparently a hall, a lodging next it, where are ‘Curtains
-drawn’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii. 103), the stairs, and a ‘closet’ or ‘matted
-chamber’ (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 27; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 3) are all used. If
-the scenes were shifted, the interposition of a scene of only 7 lines
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii) at London amongst a series of country scenes is
-strange.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_469" href="#FNanchor_469" class="label">[469]</a> <i>A Trick to Catch</i> has (<i>a</i>) Lucre’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii, iv; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iii;
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i); (<i>b</i>) Hoard’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv;
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii); (<i>c</i>) a courtesan’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i); (<i>d</i>)
-an inn (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii); (<i>e</i>) Dampit’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v); and away from London, (<i>f</i>) Witgood Hall,
-with (<i>g</i>) an inn (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, ii); (<i>h</i>) Cole Harbour
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i). Nearly all the action is exterior, but a window above
-is used at (<i>b</i>) in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv, and at (<i>e</i>) there
-is interior action both below in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv and perhaps above
-(cf. <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 72), with a bed and eight persons at once in
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_470" href="#FNanchor_470" class="label">[470]</a> <i>Puritan</i> has (<i>a</i>) the Widow’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, ii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ii, iii;
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii), with a garden and rosemary bush; (<i>b</i>) a
-gentleman’s house (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv); (<i>c</i>) an apothecary’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii); (<i>d</i>) a prison (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-v). There is interior action below in all; action above only in
-(<i>a</i>) at <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 1, ‘Enter Sir John Penidub, and Moll
-aboue lacing of her clothes’ in a balcony.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_471" href="#FNanchor_471" class="label">[471]</a> <i>Woman Hater</i> has (<i>a</i>) the Duke’s palace
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i, iii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii); (<i>b</i>) the
-Count’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii); (<i>c</i>) Gondarino’s (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ii); (<i>d</i>) Lazarillo’s lodging (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i, ii); (<i>e</i>) a courtesan’s (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii,
-iii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii); (<i>f</i>) a mercer’s shop (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv);
-(<i>g</i>) Lucio’s study (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i). There is interior action
-below in (<i>a</i>), (<i>e</i>), (<i>f</i>), and (<i>g</i>), where
-‘Enter Lazarello, and two Intelligencers, Lucio being at his study....
-Secretary draws the Curtain’. A window above is used at (<i>e</i>), and
-there is also action above at (<i>c</i>), apparently in a loggia within
-sight and ear-shot of the street.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_472" href="#FNanchor_472" class="label">[472]</a> The term is used in <i>The Faery Pastoral</i>,
-<i>Satiromastix</i>, and <i>Bussy d’Ambois</i> (<i>vide supra</i>); but
-also in <i>Sophonisba</i> (<i>vide infra</i>), which is a Blackfriars
-play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_473" href="#FNanchor_473" class="label">[473]</a> I take it that it was in this stand that Andrugio’s
-ghost was placed ‘betwixt the music-houses’ in <i>2 Antonio and
-Mellida</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_474" href="#FNanchor_474" class="label">[474]</a> The four plays which seem most repugnant to continuous
-staging, <i>Westward Ho!</i>, <i>Northward Ho!</i>, <i>A Mad World, my
-Masters</i>, and <i>A Trick to Catch the Old One</i>, are all datable
-in 1604–6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_475" href="#FNanchor_475" class="label">[475]</a> Elizabethan Plays: <i>Love’s Metamorphosis</i>,
-<i>Liberality and Prodigality</i>, <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>,
-<i>Poetaster</i>, <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, <i>Gentleman Usher</i>,
-and probably <i>All Fools</i>; Jacobean Plays: <i>M. d’Olive</i>,
-<i>May Day</i>, <i>Widow’s Tears</i>, <i>Conspiracy of Byron</i>,
-<i>Tragedy of Byron</i>, <i>Case is Altered</i>, <i>Malcontent</i>,
-<i>Dutch Courtesan</i>, <i>Sophonisba</i>, <i>Eastward Ho!</i>, <i>Your
-Five Gallants</i>, <i>Philotas</i>, <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, <i>Law
-Tricks</i>, <i>Fleir</i>, <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i>, <i>Knight of the
-Burning Pestle</i>. In addition <i>Fawn</i> and <i>Trick to Catch an
-Old One</i>, already dealt with under Paul’s, were in the first case
-produced at, and in the second transferred to, Blackfriars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_476" href="#FNanchor_476" class="label">[476]</a> Cf. p. 34.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_477" href="#FNanchor_477" class="label">[477]</a> <i>Lib. and Prod.</i> 903, ‘Here Prod. scaleth. Fortune
-claps a halter about his neck, he breaketh the halter and falles’;
-1245, ‘The Judge placed, and the Clerkes under him’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_478" href="#FNanchor_478" class="label">[478]</a> The fountain requires a trap. There is no action above.
-I cite the scenes of Q<sub>1</sub>, which are varied by Jonson in F<sub>1</sub>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_479" href="#FNanchor_479" class="label">[479]</a> In the prol. 27, Envy says, ‘The scene is, ha! Rome?
-Rome? and Rome?’ (cf. p. 154). The only action above is by Julia in
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ix. 1, before the palace, where (F<sub>1</sub>) ‘Shee appeareth
-above, as at her chamber window’, and speaks thence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_480" href="#FNanchor_480" class="label">[480]</a> <i>Sir G. G.</i> has, besides the London and Barnet
-road (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i), the houses of (<i>a</i>) Eugenia (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i-iii; <span class="allsmcap">II</span>; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i) and (<i>b</i>) Momford (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-iv; <span class="allsmcap">II</span>; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">V</span>). Both
-have action within, none above. In <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 140 persons on the
-street are met by pages coming from Momford’s ‘on the other side’,
-but (<i>b</i>) is near enough to (<i>a</i>) to enable Clarence in
-<span class="allsmcap">II</span> to overhear from it (as directed in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 202)
-a talk between Momford and Eugenia, probably in her porch, where (ii.
-17) ‘Enter Wynnefred, Anabell, with their sowing workes and sing’,
-and Momford passes over to Clarence at ii. 216. Two contiguous rooms
-in (<i>b</i>) are used for <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii (a single scene). One is
-Clarence’s; from the other he is overheard. They are probably both
-visible to the audience, and are divided by a curtain. At <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii. 128 ‘He draws the curtains and sits within them’. Parrott adds
-other s.ds. for curtains at 191, 222, 275, which are not in Q<sub>1</sub>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_481" href="#FNanchor_481" class="label">[481]</a> <i>Gent. Usher</i> has (<i>a</i>) Strozza’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, iii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii), where only a
-porch or courtyard is needed, and (<i>b</i>) Lasso’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">II</span>; <span class="allsmcap">III</span>; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iv; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, iii,
-iv), with a hall, overlooked by a balcony used in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 1 and
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 1, and called ‘this tower’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 5).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_482" href="#FNanchor_482" class="label">[482]</a> The visible houses of <i>All Fools</i> are (<i>a</i>)
-Gostanzo’s, (<i>b</i>) Cornelio’s, and (<i>c</i>) the Half Moon tavern,
-where drawers set tables (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 1), but not necessarily
-inside. Both (<i>a</i>) and (<i>b</i>) are required in <span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-i and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, and (<i>a</i>), (<i>b</i>), and (<i>c</i>) in
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_483" href="#FNanchor_483" class="label">[483]</a> <i>M. d’Olive</i> has (<i>a</i>) a hall at Court
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii); (<i>b</i>) Hieronyme’s chamber, also at Court
-(<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii); (<i>c</i>) d’Olive’s chamber (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii); (<i>d</i>) Vaumont’s (<span class="allsmcap">I</span>; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i); (<i>e</i>) St. Anne’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-i); of which (<i>b</i>) and (<i>d</i>) are used together in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-i, ii (a continuous scene), and probably (<i>c</i>) and (<i>e</i>) in
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. There is action within at (<i>a</i>), (<i>c</i>), and
-(<i>d</i>), and above at (<i>d</i>), which has curtained windows lit by
-tapers (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 48), at one of which a page above ‘looks out with a
-light’, followed by ladies who are bidden ‘come down’ (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i.
-26, 66).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_484" href="#FNanchor_484" class="label">[484]</a> <i>May Day</i> has (<i>a</i>) Quintiliano’s, (<i>b</i>)
-Honorio’s, (<i>c</i>) Lorenzo’s, and (<i>d</i>) the Emperor’s Head,
-with an arbour (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 203). The only interior action is in
-Honorio’s hall (<span class="allsmcap">V</span>). Windows above are used at Lorenzo’s, with
-a rope-ladder, over a terrace (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii), and at Quintiliano’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii). The action, which is rather difficult to track,
-consists largely of dodging about the pales of gardens and backsides
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 180; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 120, 185; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 83,
-168). Clearly (<i>a</i>), (<i>c</i>), and (<i>d</i>) are all used in
-the latter part of <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i, where a new scene may begin at 45;
-and similarly (<i>b</i>), (<i>c</i>), and (<i>d</i>) in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-iii, and (<i>b</i>) and (<i>c</i>) in <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_485" href="#FNanchor_485" class="label">[485]</a> <i>Widow’s Tears</i> has (<i>a</i>) Lysander’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i); (<i>b</i>) Eudora’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, iv; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-i); (<i>c</i>) Arsace’s (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii); all of which are required
-in <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii; and (<i>d</i>), a tomb (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, iii;
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>). There is interior action in a hall of (<i>b</i>), watched
-from a ‘stand’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 157; <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 1) without, and
-the tomb opens and shuts; no action above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_486" href="#FNanchor_486" class="label">[486]</a> In the <i>Conspiracy</i> the Paris scenes are all at
-Court, vaguely located, and mainly of hall type, except <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-iii, which is at an astrologer’s; the only Brussels scene is
-<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii, at Court. The <i>Tragedy</i> is on the same lines, but
-for <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, in the Palace of Justice, with a ‘bar’, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-iii, iv, in and before the Bastille, with a scaffold, and <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-ii and <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i at Dijon, in Byron’s lodging. In <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i.
-3 there is ‘Music, and a song above’, for a mask.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_487" href="#FNanchor_487" class="label">[487]</a> <i>C. Altered</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 1, ‘Iuniper a
-Cobler is discouered, sitting at worke in his shoppe and singing’;
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 1, ‘Enter Iuniper in his shop singing’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_488" href="#FNanchor_488" class="label">[488]</a> <i>C. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v. 212; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i;
-<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, iii, v, ‘Enter Iaques with his gold and a scuttle
-full of horse-dung’. ‘<i>Jaques.</i> None is within. None ouerlookes my
-wall’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> vii. 62, ‘Onion gets vp into a tree’; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-i. 42. In <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v action passes directly from the door of Farneze
-to that of Jaques.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_489" href="#FNanchor_489" class="label">[489]</a> <i>Malc.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 11, ‘The discord ... is
-heard from ... Malevole’s chamber’ ... (19) ‘Come down, thou rugged
-cur’ ... (43) ‘Enter Malevole below’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_490" href="#FNanchor_490" class="label">[490]</a> <i>Malc.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 163. This transition is
-both in Q<sub>1</sub> and Q<sub>2</sub>, although Q<sub>2</sub> inserts a passage (164–94)
-here, as well as another (10–39) earlier in the scene, which entails a
-contrary transition from the palace to the citadel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_491" href="#FNanchor_491" class="label">[491]</a> <i>Dutch C.</i> has (<i>a</i>) Mulligrub’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii) with action in a ‘parlour’
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 53); (<i>b</i>) Franceschina’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii;
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii, v; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i), with action
-above, probably in a <i>loggia</i> before Franceschina’s chamber, where
-she has placed an ambush at <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 12, ‘She conceals them
-behind the curtain’; (<i>c</i>) Subboy’s (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-i; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ii, iv; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii), with a ring thrown from
-a window above (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 56); (<i>d</i>) Burnish’s shop
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii), with an inner and an outer door,
-for (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 1) ‘Enter Master Burnish [&amp;c.] ... Cocledemoy
-stands at the other door ... and overhears them’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_492" href="#FNanchor_492" class="label">[492]</a> <i>Soph.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 32, ‘The Ladies lay the
-Princess in a fair bed, and close the curtains, whilst Massinissa
-enters’ ... (35) ‘The Boys draw the curtains, discovering Sophonisba,
-to whom Massinissa speaks’ ... (235) ‘The Ladies draw the curtains
-about Sophonisba; the rest accompany Massinissa forth’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_493" href="#FNanchor_493" class="label">[493]</a> <i>Soph.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 117, ‘The attendants
-furnish the altar’.... (162) ‘They lay Vangue in Syphax’ bed and draw
-the curtains’ ... (167) <i>Soph.</i> ‘Dear Zanthia, close the vault
-when I am sunk’ ... (170) ‘She descends’ ... (207) ‘[Syphax] descends
-through the vault’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_494" href="#FNanchor_494" class="label">[494]</a> <i>Soph.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ‘Enter Sophonisba and
-Zanthia, as out of a cave’s mouth’ ... (44) ‘Through the vaut’s mouth,
-in his night-gown, torch in his hand, Syphax enters just behind
-Sophonisba’.... (126) ‘Erichtho enters’ ... (192) ‘Infernal music,
-softly’ ... (202) ‘A treble viol and a base lute play softly within the
-canopy’ ... (212) ‘A short song to soft music above’ ... (215) ‘Enter
-Erichtho in the shape of Sophonisba, her face veiled, and hasteth in
-the bed of Syphax’ ... (216) ‘Syphax hasteneth within the canopy, as to
-Sophonisba’s bed’ ... (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 1) ‘Syphax draws the curtains,
-and discovers Erichtho lying with him’ ... (24) ‘Erichtho slips into
-the ground’ ... (29) ‘Syphax kneels at the altar’ ... (40) ‘Out of the
-altar the ghost of Asdrubal ariseth’. There is no obvious break in
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> Erichtho promises to bring Sophonisba with music, and says
-‘I go’ (181), although there is no <i>Exit</i>. We must suppose Syphax
-to return to his chamber through the vault either here or after his
-soliloquy at 192, when the music begins.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_495" href="#FNanchor_495" class="label">[495]</a> <i>E. Ho!</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 1, ‘Enter Maister
-Touchstone and Quick-silver at severall dores.... At the middle dore,
-enter Golding, discovering a gold-smiths shoppe, and walking short
-turns before it’; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 1, ‘Touchstone, Quick-silver[cf above
-and below, but Touchstone diff]; Goulding and Mildred sitting on eyther
-side of the stall’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_496" href="#FNanchor_496" class="label">[496]</a> At the end of <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii, which is before
-Security’s, with Winifred ‘above’ (241), Quick-silver remains on the
-stage, for <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii, before Petronel’s. The tavern is first
-used in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii, after which <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv, of one 7–line
-speech only, returns to Security’s and ends the act. Billingsgate
-should be at some little distance from the other houses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_497" href="#FNanchor_497" class="label">[497]</a> <i>E. Ho!</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 1, ‘Enter Slitgut, with a
-paire of oxe hornes, discovering Cuckolds-Haven above’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_498" href="#FNanchor_498" class="label">[498]</a> Clearly <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 346–64 (ed. Schelling) has been
-misplaced in the Q<sub>q</sub>; it is a final speech by Slitgut, with his
-<i>Exit</i>, but without his name prefixed, and should come after 296.
-The new scene begins with 297.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_499" href="#FNanchor_499" class="label">[499]</a> <i>E. Ho!</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 92, ‘Enter the Drawer
-in the Taverne before [i.e. in <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii], with Wynnyfrid’;
-he will shelter her at ‘a house of my friends heere in S. Kath’rines’
-... (297) ‘Enter Drawer, with Wynifrid new attird’, who says ‘you have
-brought me nere enough your taverne’ and ‘my husband stale thither last
-night’. Security enters (310) with ‘I wil once more to this unhappy
-taverne’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_500" href="#FNanchor_500" class="label">[500]</a> <i>Y. F. Gallants</i> has (<i>a</i>) Frippery’s shop
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i); (<i>b</i>) Katherine’s (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span>
-ii); (<i>c</i>) Mitre inn (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii); (<i>d</i>) Primero’s
-brothel (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i); (<i>e</i>)
-Tailby’s lodging (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ii); (<i>f</i>) Fitzgrave’s lodging
-(<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii); (<i>g</i>) Mrs. Newcut’s dining-room (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-vii); (<i>h</i>) Paul’s (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> vi). There is action within in
-all these, and in <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, which is before (<i>d</i>), spies are
-concealed ‘overhead’ (124).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_501" href="#FNanchor_501" class="label">[501]</a> In <i>Isle of Gulls</i> the park or forest holds a
-lodge for the duke (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i), a ‘queach of bushes’ (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span>
-ii), Diana’s oak (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iv), Adonis’ bower
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i), a bowling green with arbours
-(<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii-v), and the house of Manasses (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_502" href="#FNanchor_502" class="label">[502]</a> <i>Law Tricks</i> has (<i>a</i>) the palace (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i; <span class="allsmcap">II</span>; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i, ii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii), within which
-(p. 64, ed. Bullen) ‘Discover Polymetes in his study’, and (p. 78)
-‘Polymetes in his study’; (<i>b</i>) an arrased chamber in Lurdo’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i), entered by a vault (cf. p. 148, <i>supra</i>);
-(<i>c</i>) Countess Lurdo’s (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii); (<i>d</i>) the cloister
-vaults (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i, ii) where (p. 90) ‘Countesse in the Tombe’.
-Action passes direct from (<i>a</i>) to (<i>d</i>) at p. 89.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_503" href="#FNanchor_503" class="label">[503]</a> <i>Fleir</i> has (<i>a</i>) the courtesans’ (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-26–188; <span class="allsmcap">II</span>; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> 1–193; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 1–193);
-(<i>b</i>) Alunio’s (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 194–287); (<i>c</i>) Ferrio’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 1–54); (<i>d</i>) a prison (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 55–87); (<i>e</i>)
-a law court (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> 178–end); (<i>f</i>) possibly Susan and Nan’s
-(<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 189–500). Conceivably (<i>c</i>), (<i>d</i>), (<i>e</i>)
-are in some way combined: there is action within at (<i>b</i>), ‘Enter
-Signior Alunio the Apothecarie in his shop with wares about him’ (194),
-(<i>d</i>) ‘Enter Lord Piso ... in prison’ (55), and (<i>e</i>); none
-above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_504" href="#FNanchor_504" class="label">[504]</a> The action of <i>F. Shepherdess</i> needs a wood, with
-rustic cotes and an altar to Pan (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii, iii; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i,
-iii), a well (<span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i), and a bower for Clorin (<span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i;
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, v; <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii, v), where is hung
-a curtain (<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> ii. 109).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_505" href="#FNanchor_505" class="label">[505]</a> <i>K. B. P.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> 230, ‘Enter Rafe like a
-Grocer in ’s shop, with two Prentices Reading Palmerin of England’;
-at 341 the action shifts to Merrithought’s, but the episode at
-Venturewell’s is said to have been ‘euen in this place’ (422), and
-clearly the two houses were staged together. Possibly the conduit head
-on which Ralph sings his May Day song (<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 439) was also part
-of the permanent setting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_506" href="#FNanchor_506" class="label">[506]</a> <i>K. B. P.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> 71–438; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-1–524; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> 76–151.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_507" href="#FNanchor_507" class="label">[507]</a> The certain plays are <i>Epicoene</i>, <i>Woman
-a Weathercock</i>, <i>Insatiate Countess</i>, and <i>Revenge of
-Bussy</i>. I have noted two unusual s.ds.: <i>W. a W.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-ii, ‘Enter Scudmore ... Scudmore passeth one doore, and entereth the
-other, where Bellafront sits in a Chaire, under a Taffata Canopie’;
-<i>Insatiate C.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i, ‘Claridiana and Rogero, being in a
-readiness, are received in at one anothers houses by their maids. Then
-enter Mendoza, with a Page, to the Lady Lentulus window’. There is some
-elaborate action with contiguous rooms in <i>Epicoene</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>,
-<span class="allsmcap">V</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_508" href="#FNanchor_508" class="label">[508]</a> Cf. pp. 98, 117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_509" href="#FNanchor_509" class="label">[509]</a> I have noted bedchamber scenes as ‘perhaps above’ at
-Paul’s in <i>A Mad World, my Masters</i> and <i>A Trick to Catch the
-Old One</i>, but the evidence is very slight and may be due to careless
-writing. In <i>A Mad World</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 181, Harebrain is
-said to ‘walke below’; later ‘Harebrain opens the door and listens’. In
-<i>A Trick</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv. 72, Dampit is told that his bed waits
-‘above’, and <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v is in his bedchamber.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_510" href="#FNanchor_510" class="label">[510]</a> Cf. p. 116.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_511" href="#FNanchor_511" class="label">[511]</a> Cf. <i>Dr. Dodipoll</i>, <i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i>,
-<i>The Fawn</i>, and <i>Bussy d’Ambois</i> for Paul’s, and <i>Sir Giles
-Goosecap</i> and <i>Fleir</i> for Blackfriars. The early Court plays
-had similar scenes; cf. p. 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_512" href="#FNanchor_512" class="label">[512]</a> <i>C. Revels</i>, ind. 54, ‘First the Title of his Play
-is <i>Cynthias Revels</i>, as any man (that hath hope to be sau’d by
-his Booke) can witnesse; the Scene <i>Gargaphia</i>’; <i>K. B. P.</i>
-ind. 10, ‘Now you call your play, The London Marchant. Downe with your
-Title, boy, downe with your Title’. For <i>Wily Beguiled</i>, cf. p.
-126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_513" href="#FNanchor_513" class="label">[513]</a> Duff, xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_514" href="#FNanchor_514" class="label">[514]</a> Ch. ix; cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 221.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_515" href="#FNanchor_515" class="label">[515]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 2. ‘Cum priuilegio’ is in the
-colophons of Rastell’s 1533 prints of <i>Johan Johan</i>, <i>The
-Pardoner and the Friar</i>, and <i>The Wether</i>, and ‘Cum priuilegio
-regali’ in those of his undated <i>Gentleness and Nobility</i> and
-<i>Beauty and Good Properties of Women</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_516" href="#FNanchor_516" class="label">[516]</a> <i>Procl.</i> 114, 122, 155, 176. The texts of 1529
-and 1530 are in Wilkins, <i>Concilia</i>, iii. 737, 740; that of 1538
-in Burnet, <i>Hist. of Reformation</i>, vi. 220; cf. Pollard, <i>Sh.
-F.</i> 6, and in <i>3 Library</i>, x. 57. I find ‘Cum priuilegio ad
-imprimendum solum’ in the colophon of <i>Acolastus</i> (1540) and in
-both t.p. and colophon of <i>Troas</i> (1559); also ‘Seen and allowed
-&amp;c.’ in the t.p. of Q<sub>2</sub> of <i>Gorboduc</i> (<i>c.</i> 1570), ‘Perused
-and Alowed’ at the end of <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i> (1575), and
-‘Seen and allowed, according to the order appointed in the Queenes
-maiesties Injunctions’ in the t.p. of <i>The Glass of Government</i>
-(1575). Otherwise these precautions became dead letters, so far as
-plays were concerned.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_517" href="#FNanchor_517" class="label">[517]</a> <i>Procl.</i> 295 (part only in Wilkins, iv. 1; cf.
-Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 7). The ‘daye of the printe’ is in the t.ps. of
-<i>Thyestes</i> (1560), <i>Oedipus</i> (1563), <i>Gordobuc</i> (1565),
-<i>Four Ps</i> (1569), and the colophon of <i>Promos and Cassandra</i>
-(1578); the year and month in the t.p. of <i>King Darius</i> (1565).
-Earlier printers had given the day in the colophons of <i>Mundus et
-Infans</i> (1522), <i>Johan Johan</i> (1533), and <i>The Pardoner and
-the Friar</i> (1533).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_518" href="#FNanchor_518" class="label">[518]</a> Dasent, ii. 312; <i>Procl.</i> 395 (text in Hazlitt,
-<i>E. D. S.</i> 9; cf. Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 8).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_519" href="#FNanchor_519" class="label">[519]</a> <i>Procl.</i> 427 (cf. Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 9);
-<i>Procl.</i> 461 (text in Wilkins, <i>Concilia</i>, iv. 128; Arber, i.
-52); <i>Procl.</i> 488 (text in Arber, i. 92).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_520" href="#FNanchor_520" class="label">[520]</a> Arber, i. xxviii, xxxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_521" href="#FNanchor_521" class="label">[521]</a> Duff, xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_522" href="#FNanchor_522" class="label">[522]</a> <i>1 Eliz.</i> c. 1 (<i>Statutes</i>, iv. 1. 350).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_523" href="#FNanchor_523" class="label">[523]</a> App. D, No. ix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_524" href="#FNanchor_524" class="label">[524]</a> App. D, No. xii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_525" href="#FNanchor_525" class="label">[525]</a> App. D, No. xiii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_526" href="#FNanchor_526" class="label">[526]</a> <i>Procl.</i> 638, 656, 659, 687, 688, 702, 740, 752,
-775; Arber, i. 430, 452, 453, 461, 464, 474, 502; cf. McKerrow,
-xiii. A draft Bill by William Lambarde prepared in 1577–80 for the
-establishment of a mixed body of ecclesiastics and lawyers as Governors
-of the English Print (Arber, ii. 751) never became law.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_527" href="#FNanchor_527" class="label">[527]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 15; <i>F. and Q.</i> 4. Mr.
-Pollard stresses the difficulty of obtaining the hands of six Privy
-Councillors. Perhaps this is somewhat exaggerated. Six was the ordinary
-quorum of that body, which sat several times a week, while many of its
-members resided in court, were available for signing documents daily,
-and did in fact sign, in sixes, many, such as warrants to the Treasurer
-of the Chamber, of no greater moment than licences (cf. ch. ii). The
-signatures were of course ministerial, and would be given to a licence
-on the report of an expert reader. In any case the <i>Injunction</i>
-provides alternatives.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_528" href="#FNanchor_528" class="label">[528]</a> Arber, iii. 690; Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 23, ‘From 19<sup>o</sup>
-Elizabethe [1576–7] till the Starre-chamber Decree 28<sup>o</sup> Elizabeth
-[1586], many were licensed by the Master and Wardens, some few by the
-Master alone, and some by the Archbishop and more by the Bishop of
-London. The like was in the former parte of the Quene Elizabeth’s time.
-They were made a corporacon but by P. and M. Master Kingston, y<sup>e</sup> now
-master, sayth that before the Decree the master and wardens licensed
-all, and that when they had any Divinity booke of muche importance they
-would take the advise of some 2 or 3 ministers of this towne’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_529" href="#FNanchor_529" class="label">[529]</a> The references in the following notes, unless otherwise
-specified, are to the vols. and pages of Arber’s <i>Transcript</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_530" href="#FNanchor_530" class="label">[530]</a> i. 106; ii. 879.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_531" href="#FNanchor_531" class="label">[531]</a> i. 17, ‘No member or members of this Company shall
-hereafter knowingly imprint or cause to be imprinted any book,
-pamphlet, portraicture, picture or paper whereunto the law requires
-a license, without such license as by the law is directed for the
-imprinting of the same (1678)’; 22, ‘By ancient usage of this company,
-when any book or copy is duly entred in the register-book of this
-company, to any member or members of this company, such person to
-whom such entry is made, is, and always hath been reputed and taken
-to be proprietor of such book or copy, and ought to have the sole
-printing thereof (1681)’; 26, ‘It hath been the ancient usage of the
-members of this company, for the printer or printers, publisher or
-publishers of all books, pamphlets, ballads, and papers, (except what
-are granted by letters pattents under the great seal of England) to
-enter into the publick register-book of this company, remaining with
-the clerk of this company for the time being, in his or their own name
-or names, all books, pamphlets, ballads, and papers whatsoever, by him
-or them to be printed or published, before the same book, pamphlet,
-ballad, or paper is begun to be printed, to the end that the printer or
-publisher thereof may be known, to justifie whatsoever shall be therein
-contained, and have no excuse for the printing or publishing thereof
-(1682)’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_532" href="#FNanchor_532" class="label">[532]</a> Typical examples are i. 75 (1557–8), ‘To master John
-Wally these bokes called Welth and helthe, the treatise of the ffrere
-and the boy, stans puer ad mensam, another of youghte charyte and
-humylyte, an a. b. c. for cheldren in englesshe with syllabes, also
-a boke called an hundreth mery tayles ij<sup>s</sup>’; 77 (1557–8), ‘To Henry
-Sutton to prynte an enterlude vpon the history of Jacobe and Esawe out
-of the xxvij chapeter of the fyrste boke of Moyses called Genyses and
-for his lycense he geveth to the howse iiij<sup>d</sup>’; 128 (1559–60), ‘Recevyd
-of John Kynge for his lycense for pryntinge of these copyes Lucas
-urialis, nyce wanton, impaciens poverte, the proude wyves pater noster,
-the squyre of low degre and syr deggre graunted ye x of June anno 1560
-ij<sup>s</sup>’. The last becomes the normal form, but without the precise date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_533" href="#FNanchor_533" class="label">[533]</a> i. 155, 177, 204, 205, 208, 209, 231, 263, 268, 269,
-272, 299, 302, 308, 312, 334, 336, 343, 378, 382, 385, 398, 399, 415.
-It is possible that the wardens, intent on finance, did not always
-transcribe into their accounts notes of authorizations. Only half a
-dozen of the above are ascribed to the archbishop, yet a mention of
-‘one Talbot, servant of the archbishop of Canterbury, a corrector
-to the printers’ in an examination relative to the Ridolfi plot
-(Haynes-Murdin, ii. 30) shows that he had enough work in 1571 to
-justify the appointment of a regular deputy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_534" href="#FNanchor_534" class="label">[534]</a> ii. 35, 301. Collins remained clerk to 1613, when he was
-succeeded by Thomas Mountfort, who became a stationer (McKerrow, 196),
-and is of course to be distinguished from the prebendary of Paul’s and
-High Commissioner of a similar name, who acted as ‘corrector’ (cf. p.
-168).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_535" href="#FNanchor_535" class="label">[535]</a> i. 451 <i>sqq.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_536" href="#FNanchor_536" class="label">[536]</a> ii. 302, 359, 371, 377, 378, 414, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_537" href="#FNanchor_537" class="label">[537]</a> ii. 440, 444.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_538" href="#FNanchor_538" class="label">[538]</a> ii. 334, ‘vnder the hande of Master Recorder’; 341,
-‘vnder thandes of Doctour Redman and the wardens’; 342, ‘master
-Recorder and the wardens’; 346, ‘the lord maiour and the wardens’; 357,
-‘sub manibus comitum Leicester et Hunsdon’; 372, ‘master Crowley’;
-375, ‘master Vaughan’; 386, ‘master Secretary Wilson’; 403, ‘master
-Thomas Norton [Remembrancer]’; 404, ‘the Lord Chancellor’; 409, ‘master
-Cotton’; 417, ‘by aucthoritie from the Counsell’; 434, 435, ‘pervsed by
-master Crowley’; 447, ‘master Recorder’. For Talbot, cf. <i>supra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_539" href="#FNanchor_539" class="label">[539]</a> ii. 304; cf. ii. 447 (1586), ‘Entred by commaundement
-from master Barker in wrytinge vnder his hand. Aucthorised vnder the
-Archbishop of Canterbury his hand’. ‘Licenced’, as well as ‘authorised’
-or ‘alowed’, now sometimes (ii. 307, 447) describes the action of a
-prelate or corrector.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_540" href="#FNanchor_540" class="label">[540]</a> ii. 366.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_541" href="#FNanchor_541" class="label">[541]</a> ii. 428.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_542" href="#FNanchor_542" class="label">[542]</a> ii. 424, ‘alwaies provided that before he print he shall
-get the bishop of London his alowance to yt’; 424, ‘upon condicon he
-obtaine the ordinaries hand thereto’; 429, ‘provyded alwaies and he is
-enioyned to gett this booke laufully alowed before he print yt’; 431,
-‘yt is granted vnto him that if he gett the card of phantasie lawfullie
-alowed vnto him, that then he shall enioye yt as his owne copie’; 431,
-‘so it be or shalbe by laufull aucthoritie lycenced vnto him’; 444, ‘to
-be aucthorised accordinge to her maiesties Iniunctions’. The wardens’
-hands are not cited to any of these conditional entries.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_543" href="#FNanchor_543" class="label">[543]</a> ii. 307, 308, 336, 353, 430, 438, 439.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_544" href="#FNanchor_544" class="label">[544]</a> App. D, No. lxxvii; cf. Strype, <i>Life of Whitgift</i>,
-i. 268; Pierce, <i>Introduction to Mar Prelate Tracts</i>, 74.
-Confirmations and special condemnations of offending books are in
-<i>Procl.</i> 802, 812, 1092, 1362, 1383 (texts of two last in G. W.
-Prothero, <i>Select Statutes</i>, 169, 395).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_545" href="#FNanchor_545" class="label">[545]</a> ii. 459, ‘Master Hartwell certifying it to be
-tollerated’; 460, ‘authorised or alowed as good vnder thand of Doctour
-Redman &amp;c.’; 461, ‘certified by Master Hartwell to be alowed leavinge
-out the ij staues yat are crossed’; 464, ‘master Crowleys hand is to
-yt, as laufull to be printed’; 475, ‘aucthorised by tharchbishop of
-Canterbury as is reported by Master Cosin’; 479, ‘which as master
-Hartwell certifyithe by his hande to the written copie, my Lordes
-grace of Canterbury is content shall passe without anie thinge added
-to yt before it be pervsed’; 487, ‘sett downe as worthie to be printed
-vnder thand of Master Gravet’; 489, ‘Master Crowleys hand is to yt
-testyfying it to be alowable to ye print’; 491, ‘vnder the Bishop of
-London, Master Abraham Fraunce, and the wardens hands’; 493, ‘Master
-Hartwells hand beinge at the wrytten copie testifyinge his pervsinge
-of the same’; 493, ‘alowed vnder D<sup>r</sup> Stallers hand as profitable to be
-printed’, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_546" href="#FNanchor_546" class="label">[546]</a> Lambe notes (iii. 690) in 1636 that on 30 June 1588,
-‘the archbishop gave power to Doctor Cosin, Doctor Stallard, Doctor
-Wood, master Hartwell, master Gravett, master Crowley, master Cotton,
-and master Hutchinson, or any one of them, to license books to be
-printed: Or any 2 of those following master Judson, master Trippe,
-master Cole and master Dickens’. It will be observed that most of
-the first group of these had already acted as ‘correctors’, together
-with William Redman and Richard Vaughan, chaplains respectively to
-Archbishop Grindal and Bishop Aylmer. William Hutchinson and George
-Dickens were also chaplains to Aylmer. Hutchinson was in the High
-Commission of 1601. Richard Cosin was Dean of the Arches and a High
-Commissioner. Abraham Hartwell was secretary and Cole chaplain (Arber,
-ii. 494) to Archbishop Whitgift. Hutchinson, William Gravett, William
-Cotton, and George Dickins were or became prebendaries of St. Paul’s.
-Thomas Stallard was rector of All Hallows’ and St. Mary’s at Hill;
-Henry Tripp of St. Faith’s and St. Stephen’s, Walbrook. Most of this
-information is from Hennessy. Crowley was presumably Robert Crowley,
-vicar of St. Giles, Cripplegate, and himself a stationer, although his
-activity as a Puritan preacher and pamphleteer makes his appointment an
-odd one for Whitgift. Moreover, he died on 18 June 1588. There may have
-been two Robert Crowleys, or the archbishop’s list may have been drawn
-up earlier than Lambe dates it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_547" href="#FNanchor_547" class="label">[547]</a> Amongst the correctors who appear later in the Register
-are Richard Bancroft, John Buckeridge, and Michael Murgatroyd,
-secretaries or chaplains to Whitgift, Samuel Harsnett, William Barlow,
-Thomas Mountford, John Flower, and Zacharias Pasfield, prebendaries of
-St. Paul’s, William Dix, Peter Lyly, chaplain of the Savoy and brother
-of the dramatist, Lewis Wager, rector of St. James’s, Garlickhithe, and
-dramatist, John Wilson, and Gervas Nidd. Mountford and Dix were in the
-High Commission of 1601. I have not troubled to trace the full careers
-of these men in Hennessy and elsewhere. Thomas Morley (Arber, iii. 93)
-and William Clowes (ii. 80) seem to have been applied to as specialists
-on musical and medical books respectively.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_548" href="#FNanchor_548" class="label">[548]</a> ii. 463, 464, 508, 509, ‘Alowed by the Bishop of London
-vnder his hand and entred by warrant of Master [warden] Denhams hand to
-the copie’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_549" href="#FNanchor_549" class="label">[549]</a> A typical entry is now</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="r4">‘xiii<sup>to</sup> die Augusti [1590].</p>
-
-<p>Richard Jones. Entred vnto him for his Copye The twooe commicall
-discourses of Tomberlein the Cithian shepparde vnder the handes
-of Master Abraham Hartewell and the Wardens. vj<sup>d</sup>.’</p>
-</div>
-
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_550" href="#FNanchor_550" class="label">[550]</a> iii. 677. A number of satirical books were condemned
-by name to be burnt, and direction given to the master and wardens,
-‘That no Satyres or Epigrams be printed hereafter; That noe Englishe
-historyes be printed excepte they bee allowed by some of her maiesties
-privie Counsell; That noe playes be printed excepte they bee allowed by
-suche as haue aucthoritie; That all Nasshes bookes and Doctor Harvyes
-bookes be taken wheresoeuer they maye be found and that none of theire
-bookes be euer printed hereafter; That thoughe any booke of the nature
-of theise heretofore expressed shalbe broughte vnto yow vnder the hands
-of the Lord Archebisshop of Canterburye or the Lord Bishop of London
-yet the said booke shall not be printed vntill the master or wardens
-haue acquainted the said Lord Archbishop or the Lord Bishop with the
-same to knowe whether it be theire hand or no’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_551" href="#FNanchor_551" class="label">[551]</a> <i>Hunting of Cupid</i> (R. Jones, 26 July 1591),
-‘provyded alwayes that yf yt be hurtfull to any other copye before
-lycenced, then this to be voyde’; <i>Merchant of Venice</i> (J.
-Robertes, 22 July 1598), ‘prouided, that yt bee not prynted by the
-said James Robertes or anye other whatsoeuer without lycence first
-had from the Right honorable the lord chamberlen’; <i>Blind Beggar
-of Alexandria</i> (W. Jones, 15 Aug. 1598), ‘vppon condition that yt
-belonge to noe other man’; <i>Spanish Tragedy</i> (transfer from A.
-Jeffes to W. White, 13 Aug. 1599), ‘saluo iure cuiuscunque’; <i>Cloth
-Breeches and Velvet Hose</i> (J. Robertes, 27 May 1600), ‘prouided that
-he is not to putt it in prynte without further and better aucthority’;
-<i>A Larum for London</i> (J. Robertes, 29 May 1600), ‘prouided
-that yt be not printed without further aucthoritie’; <i>Antonio and
-Mellida</i> (M. Lownes and T. Fisher, 24 Oct. 1601), ‘prouided that he
-gett laufull licence for yt’; <i>Satiromastix</i> (J. Barnes, 11 Nov.
-1601), ‘vppon condicon that yt be lycensed to be printed’; <i>Troilus
-and Cressida</i> (J. Robertes, 7 Feb. 1603), ‘to print when he hath
-gotten sufficient aucthoritie for yt’; <i>When You See Me, You Know
-Me</i> (N. Butter, 12 Feb. 1605), ‘yf he gett good alowance for the
-enterlude of King Henry the 8<sup>th</sup> before he begyn to print it. And
-then procure the wardens handes to yt for the entrance of yt: He is to
-haue the same for his copy’; <i>Westward Hoe</i> (H. Rocket, 2 March
-1605), ‘prouided yat he get further authoritie before yt be printed’
-(entry crossed out, and marked ‘vacat’); <i>Dutch Courtesan</i> (J.
-Hodgets, 26 June 1605), ‘provyded that he gett sufficient aucthoritie
-before yt be prynted’ (with later note, ‘This is alowed to be printed
-by aucthoritie from Master Hartwell’); <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i> (E.
-Blount, 10 Jan. 1606), ‘prouided that yt be printed accordinge to the
-copie wherevnto Master Wilsons hand ys at’; <i>Fawn</i> (W. Cotton, 12
-March 1606), ‘provided that he shall not put the same in prynte before
-he gett alowed lawfull aucthoritie’; <i>Fleire</i> (J. Trundle and J.
-Busby, 13 May 1606), ‘provided that they are not to printe yt tell they
-bringe good aucthoritie and licence for the doinge thereof’ (with note
-to transfer of Trundle’s share to Busby and A. Johnson on 21 Nov. 1606,
-‘This booke is aucthorised by Sir George Bucke Master Hartwell and the
-wardens’).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_552" href="#FNanchor_552" class="label">[552]</a> Buck’s hand first appears to <i>Claudius Tiberius
-Nero</i> (10 Mar. 1607), and thereafter to all London (but not
-University) plays up to his madness in 1622, except <i>Cupid’s
-Whirligig</i> (29 June 1607), which has Tilney’s, <i>Yorkshire
-Tragedy</i> (2 May 1608), which has Wilson’s, some of those between
-4 Oct. 1608 and 10 March 1609, which have Segar’s, who is described
-as Buck’s deputy, and <i>Honest Lawyer</i> (14 Aug. 1615), which has
-Taverner’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_553" href="#FNanchor_553" class="label">[553]</a> i. 45, 69, 93, 100, &amp;c.; ii. 821, 843. In 1558–9, only,
-the heading is ‘Fynes for defautes for Pryntynge withoute lycense’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_554" href="#FNanchor_554" class="label">[554]</a> See the case of Jeffes and White in 1593 given in ch.
-xxiii, s.v. Kyd, <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_555" href="#FNanchor_555" class="label">[555]</a> i. 93, 100; ii. 853 (21 Jan. 1583), ‘This daye, Ric.
-Jones is awarded to paie x<sup>s</sup> for a fine for printinge a thinge
-of the fall of the gallories at Paris Garden without licence and
-against commandement of the Wardens. And the said Jones and Bartlet
-to be committed to prison viz Bartlet for printing it and Jones for
-sufferinge it to be printed in his house’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_556" href="#FNanchor_556" class="label">[556]</a> ii. 824, 826, 832, 837, 849, 851.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_557" href="#FNanchor_557" class="label">[557]</a> ii. 850.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_558" href="#FNanchor_558" class="label">[558]</a> The testimony only relates strictly to the period
-1576–86, which is nearly coincident with the slack ecclesiastical
-rule of Archbishop Grindal (1576–83). Parker (1559–75) may have been
-stricter, as Whitgift (1583–1604) certainly was.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_559" href="#FNanchor_559" class="label">[559]</a> i. 95, ‘Master Waye had lycense to take the lawe of
-James Gonnell for a sarten dett due vnto hym’; 101, ‘Owyn Rogers for
-... kepynge of a forren with out lycense ys fyned’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_560" href="#FNanchor_560" class="label">[560]</a> ii. 62.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_561" href="#FNanchor_561" class="label">[561]</a> i. 322.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_562" href="#FNanchor_562" class="label">[562]</a> v. lxxvi, ‘we do will and commande yowe that from hence
-forthe yowe suffer neither booke ballett nor any other matter to be
-published ... until the same be first seene and allowed either by us of
-her M<sup>tes</sup> pryvie Counsell or by thee [<i>sic</i>] Commissioners for
-cawses ecclesyastical there at London’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_563" href="#FNanchor_563" class="label">[563]</a> The fee seems at first to have been 4<i>d.</i> for
-‘entraunce’ (i. 94), with a further sum for books above a certain size
-at the rate of ‘euery iij leves a pannye’ (i. 97); plays ran from
-4<i>d.</i> to 12<i>d.</i> But from about 1582 plays and most other
-books are charged a uniform fee of 6<i>d.</i>, and only ballads and
-other trifles escape with 4<i>d.</i> Payments were sometimes in arrear;
-often there is no note of fee to a title; and in some of these cases
-the words ‘neuer printed’ have been added. On the other hand, the
-receipt of fees is sometimes recorded, and the title remains unentered;
-at the end of the entries for 1585–6 (ii. 448) is a memorandum that one
-of the wardens ‘brought in about iiij<sup>s</sup> moore which he had receved for
-copies yat were not brought to be entred into the book this yere’. A
-similar item is in the wardens’ accounts for 1592–3 (i. 559). Fees were
-charged for entries of transferred as well as of new copies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_564" href="#FNanchor_564" class="label">[564]</a> Various formulae are used, such as ‘assigned vnto
-him’ (ii. 310, 351), ‘turned ouer to him’ (ii. 369), ‘putt ouer vnto
-him’ (ii. 431), ‘sold and sett ouer vnto him’ (ii. 350), ‘which he
-affyrmeth yat he bought of’ (ii. 351), ‘by assent of’ (ii. 415), ‘by
-thappointment of’ (ii. 667), ‘by the consent of’ (ii. 608), ‘which he
-bought of’ (ii. 325), &amp;c. A transfer of ‘plaiebookes’ from Sampson
-Awdeley to John Charlewood on 15 Jan. 1582 (ii. 405) included, besides
-two plays, <i>Youth</i> and <i>Impatient Poverty</i>, which had been
-formerly registered, four others, <i>Weather</i>, <i>Four Ps</i>,
-<i>Love</i>, and <i>Hickscorner</i>, which had been printed before
-the Register came into existence. I suppose that Charlwood secured
-copyright in these, but was there any copyright before the entry of
-1582?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_565" href="#FNanchor_565" class="label">[565]</a> ii. 377. ‘Tollerated vnto him but not vnder the wardens
-handes’, 472, ‘beinge broughte to enter by John Woulf without the
-wardens handes to the copy’. Even in the seventeenth century ballads
-are sometimes entered without any citation of hands, and in 1643 it was
-the clerk and not the wardens whom Parliament authorized to license
-‘small pamphletts, portratures, pictures, and the like’ (v. liv).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_566" href="#FNanchor_566" class="label">[566]</a> ii. 365, ‘Translated by a French copie whereat was the
-bishop of Londons hand and master Harrisons’; 440, ‘by commaundement
-from master warden Newbery vnder his own handwrytinge on the backside
-of ye wrytten copie’; 443, ‘vnder his hand to the printed copie’; 449,
-‘by warrant of master warden Bisshops hand to the former copie printed
-anno 1584’; 449, ‘by warrant of master warden Bishops hand to the
-wrytten copie’; 457, ‘by warrant of the wardens handes to thold copie’;
-521, ‘with master Hartwelles hand to the Italyan Booke’; 534, ‘alowed
-vnder master Hartwelles hand, entred by warrant of the subscription of
-the wardens’, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_567" href="#FNanchor_567" class="label">[567]</a> ii. 434, ‘entred vpon a special knowen token sent from
-master warden Newbery’; 437, ‘allowed by tharchbishop of Canterbury,
-by testymonie of the Lord Chenie’; 460, ‘by the wardens appointment at
-the hall’; 504, ‘by warrant of a letter from Sir Ffrauncis Walsingham
-to the master and wardens of the Cumpanye’; 523, ‘alowed by a letter or
-note vnder master Hartwelles hand’; 524, ‘reported by master Fortescue
-to be alowed by the archbishop of Canterbury’; 633, ‘The note vnder
-master Justice Ffenners hand is layd vp in the wardens cupbord’;
-iii. 160, ‘John Hardie reporteth that the wardens are consentinge to
-thentrance thereof’, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_568" href="#FNanchor_568" class="label">[568]</a> An inventory of 1560 (i. 143) records ‘The nombre of all
-suche Copyes as was lefte in the Cubberde in our Counsell Chambre at
-the Compte ... as apereth in the whyte boke for that yere ... xliiij.
-Item in ballettes ... vij<sup>e</sup> iiij<sup>x</sup> and xvj’. From 1576 to 1579 ‘and a
-copie’ is often added to the notes of fees. The wardens accounts from
-1574 to 1596 (i. 470, 581) regularly recite that they had ‘deliuered
-into the hall certen copies which haue been printed this yeare, as by a
-particular booke thereof made appearithe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_569" href="#FNanchor_569" class="label">[569]</a> ii. 452, ‘Receaved of him for printinge 123 ballades
-which are filed vp in the hall with his name to euerie ballad’. The
-order of 1592 about <i>Dr. Faustus</i> (cf. ch. xxiii) suggests
-preliminary entry of claims in a Hall book distinct from the Clerk’s
-book.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_570" href="#FNanchor_570" class="label">[570]</a> ii. 414, ‘Graunted by the Assistants’; 449, ‘entred in
-full court’; 462, ‘entred in plena curia’; 465, ‘intratur in curia’;
-477, ‘by the whole consent of thassistantes’; 535, ‘aucthorysed to him
-at the hall soe that yt doe not belonge to any other of the Cumpanye’;
-535, ‘This is allowed by the consent of the whole table’; 663, ‘in open
-court’; 344, ‘memorandum that this lycence is revoked and cancelled’;
-457, ‘This copie is forbydden by the Archbishop of Canterbury’, with
-marginal note ‘Expunctum in plena curia’; 514, ‘so yat he first gett yt
-to be laufully and orderly alowed as tollerable to be printed and doo
-shewe thaucthoritie thereof at a Court to be holden’; 576, ‘Cancelled
-out of the book, for the vndecentnes of it in diuerse verses’; iii. 82,
-‘Entred ... in full court ... vppon condicon that yt be no other mans
-copie, and that ... he procure it to be aucthorised and then doo shew
-it at the hall to the master and wardens so aucthorised’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_571" href="#FNanchor_571" class="label">[571]</a> The register indicates that even at the time of entry
-the fee sometimes remained unpaid. But probably it had to be paid
-before the stationer could actually publish with full security of
-copyright.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_572" href="#FNanchor_572" class="label">[572]</a> Cf. p. 173.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_573" href="#FNanchor_573" class="label">[573]</a> I note twenty-two cases (1586–1616) in which the
-earliest print known falls in a calendar year later than the next
-after that of entry: <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>, 1592–4 (<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>
-probably earlier); <i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, 1592–9 (<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>
-probably earlier); <i>James IV</i>, 1594–8; <i>Famous Victories</i>,
-1594–8; <i>David and Bethsabe</i>, 1594–9; <i>King Leire</i>, 1594–1605
-(re-entry 1605); <i>Four Prentices</i>, 1594–1615 (one or more earlier
-editions probable); <i>Jew of Malta</i>, 1594–1633 (re-entry 1632);
-<i>Woman in the Moon</i>, 1595–7; <i>George a Greene</i>, 1595–9;
-<i>Merchant of Venice</i>, 1598–1600 (conditional entry); <i>Alarum for
-London</i>, 1600–2 (conditional entry); <i>Patient Grissell</i>, 1600–3
-(stayed by Admiral’s); <i>Stukeley</i>, 1600–5; <i>Dr. Faustus</i>,
-1601–4; <i>Englishmen for my Money</i>, 1601–16; <i>Troilus
-and Cressida</i>, 1603–9 (re-entry 1609); <i>Westward Ho!</i>, 1605–7
-(conditional entry cancelled); <i>Antony and Cleopatra</i>, 1608–23,
-(re-entry 1623); <i>2 Honest Whore</i>, 1608–30 (re-entry 1630);
-<i>Epicoene</i>, 1610–20 (earlier edition probable); <i>Ignoramus</i>,
-1615–30 (re-entry 1630). The glutting of the book-market in 1594
-accounts for some of the delays.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_574" href="#FNanchor_574" class="label">[574]</a> ii. 829 (1599), 833 (1601), 835 (1602), 837 (1603).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_575" href="#FNanchor_575" class="label">[575]</a> I find no entries of <i>Enough is as Good as a Feast</i>
-(<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>), <i>Thyestes</i> (1560), <i>Hercules Furens</i> (1561),
-<i>Trial of Treasure</i> (1567), <i>God’s Promises</i> (1577), perhaps
-reprints; of <i>Orestes</i> (1567); or of <i>Abraham’s Sacrifice</i>
-(1577) or <i>Conflict of Conscience</i> (1581), perhaps entered in
-1571–5. The method of exhaustions suggests that Copland’s <i>Robin
-Hood</i> (<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>) is the ‘newe playe called &mdash;&mdash; ’ which he
-entered on 30 Oct. 1560, and that Colwell’s <i>Disobedient Child</i>
-(<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>) is the unnamed ‘interlude for boyes to handle and to
-passe tyme at christenmas’, which he entered in 1569–70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_576" href="#FNanchor_576" class="label">[576]</a> His plays were <i>Sir Thomas Wyat</i> (1607), <i>Every
-Woman in her Humour</i> (1609), <i>Two Maids of Moreclack</i> (1609),
-<i>Roaring Girl</i> (1611), <i>White Devil</i> (1612), and <i>Insatiate
-Countess</i> (1613).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_577" href="#FNanchor_577" class="label">[577]</a> In <i>Nice Wanton</i> a prayer for a king has been
-altered by sacrificing a rhyme into one for a queen. The prayer of
-<i>Impatient Poverty</i> seems also to have been for Mary and clumsily
-adapted for Elizabeth. Wager’s <i>Enough is as Good as a Feast</i>
-may be Elizabethan or pre-Elizabethan. <i>Jacob and Esau</i> (1568),
-entered in 1557–8, is pre-Elizabethan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_578" href="#FNanchor_578" class="label">[578]</a> Reprints of 1559–85 include Heywood’s <i>Weather</i>
-and <i>Four Ps</i>, printed in England before the establishment of
-the Stationers’ Register, and Bale’s <i>Three Laws</i> and <i>God’s
-Promises</i>, printed, probably abroad, in 1538. John Walley, who
-seems to have printed 1545–86, failed to date his books. I cannot
-therefore say whether his reprints of the pre-Register <i>Love</i> and
-<i>Hickscorner</i>, or the prints of <i>Youth</i> and <i>Wealth and
-Health</i> (if it is his), which he entered in 1557–8, are Elizabethan
-or not.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_579" href="#FNanchor_579" class="label">[579]</a> Cf. App. L.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_580" href="#FNanchor_580" class="label">[580]</a> Cf. App. B. I classify as follows: (a) <span class="smcap">Companies
-of Men</span>: (i) Morals (3), <i>Delight</i>, <i>Beauty and
-Housewifery</i>, <i>Love and Fortune</i>; (ii) Classical (7),
-<i>Tully</i>, <i>A Greek Maid</i>, <i>Four Sons of Fabius</i>,
-<i>Sarpedon</i>, <i>Telomo</i>, <i>Phillida and Corin</i>,
-<i>Rape of the Second Helen</i>; (iii) Romantic (17), <i>Lady
-Barbara</i>, <i>Cloridon and Radiamanta</i>, <i>Predor and Lucia</i>,
-<i>Mamillia</i>, <i>Herpetulus the Blue Knight and Perobia</i>,
-<i>Philemon and Philecia</i>, <i>Painter’s Daughter</i>, <i>Solitary
-Knight</i>, <i>Irish Knight</i>, <i>Cynocephali</i>, <i>Three Sisters
-of Mantua</i>, <i>Knight in the Burning Rock</i>, <i>Duke of Milan
-and Marquess of Mantua</i>, <i>Portio and Demorantes</i>, <i>Soldan
-and Duke</i>, <i>Ferrar</i>, <i>Felix and Philiomena</i>; (iv)
-Farce (1), <i>The Collier</i>; (v) Realistic (2), <i>Cruelty of a
-Stepmother</i>, <i>Murderous Michael</i>; (vi) Antic Play (1); (vii)
-Episodes (2), <i>Five Plays in One</i>, <i>Three Plays in One</i>; (b)
-<span class="smcap">Companies of Boys</span>: (i) Morals (6), <i>Truth, Faithfulness
-and Mercy</i>, ‘<i>Vanity</i>’, <i>Error</i>, <i>Marriage of Mind
-and Measure</i>, <i>Loyalty and Beauty</i>, <i>Game of Cards</i>;
-(ii) Classical (12), <i>Iphigenia</i>, <i>Ajax and Ulysses</i>,
-<i>Narcissus</i>, <i>Alcmaeon</i>, <i>Quintus Fabius</i>, <i>Siege of
-Thebes</i>, <i>Perseus and Andromeda</i>, ‘<i>Xerxes</i>’, <i>Mutius
-Scaevola</i>, <i>Scipio Africanus</i>, <i>Pompey</i>, <i>Agamemnon and
-Ulysses</i>; (iii) Romantic (4), <i>Paris and Vienna</i>, <i>Titus
-and Gisippus</i>, <i>Alucius</i>, <i>Ariodante and Genevora</i>; (c)
-<span class="smcap">Unknown Companies</span>: (i) Morals (5), <i>As Plain as Can Be</i>,
-<i>Painful Pilgrimage</i>, <i>Wit and Will</i>, <i>Prodigality</i>,
-‘<i>Fortune</i>’; (ii) Classical (2), <i>Orestes</i>, <i>Theagenes and
-Chariclea</i>; (iii) Romantic (1), <i>King of Scots</i>; (iv) Farces
-(2), <i>Jack and Jill</i>, <i>Six Fools</i>. The moral and romantic
-elements meet also in the list of pieces played by companies of men at
-Bristol from 1575 to 1579: <i>The Red Knight</i>, <i>Myngo</i>, <i>What
-Mischief Worketh in the Mind of Man</i>, <i>The Queen of Ethiopia</i>,
-<i>The Court of Comfort</i>, <i>Quid pro Quo</i> (Murray, ii. 213).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_581" href="#FNanchor_581" class="label">[581]</a> <i>Love and Fortune</i> was printed in the next period.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_582" href="#FNanchor_582" class="label">[582]</a> <i>Mary Magdalen</i>; <i>Conflict of Conscience</i>.
-‘Compiled’ goes back to Bale, Heywood, and Skelton. Earlier still,
-<i>Everyman</i> is not so much a play as ‘a treatyse ... in maner of a
-morall playe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_583" href="#FNanchor_583" class="label">[583]</a> The prologue of <i>Mary Magdalen</i> has ‘we haue vsed
-this feate at the uniuersitie’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_584" href="#FNanchor_584" class="label">[584]</a> Wynkyn de Worde calls <i>Mundus et Infans</i> a ‘propre
-newe interlude’, and the advertising title-page is well established
-from the time of Rastell’s press.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_585" href="#FNanchor_585" class="label">[585]</a> <i>Conflict of Conscience</i>; cf. <i>Damon and
-Pythias</i>, the prologue of which, though it had been a Court play,
-‘is somewhat altered for the proper use of them that hereafter shall
-haue occasion to plaie it, either in Priuate, or open Audience’.
-The castings, for four, five, or six players, occur in <i>King
-Darius</i>, <i>Like Will to Like</i>, <i>Longer Thou Livest</i>,
-<i>Mary Magdalen</i>, <i>New Custom</i>, <i>Tide Tarrieth for No
-Man</i>, <i>Trial of Treasure</i>, <i>Conflict of Conscience</i>. I
-find a later example from the public stage in <i>Fair Maid of the
-Exchange</i>, which has ‘Eleauen may easily acte this comedie’, and a
-division of parts accordingly. There are pre-Elizabethan precedents,
-while <i>Jack Juggler</i> is ‘for Chyldren to playe’, the songs in
-<i>Ralph Roister Doister</i> are for ‘those which shall vse this
-Comedie or Enterlude’, and <i>The Four Elements</i> has directions
-for reducing the time of playing at need from an hour and a half to
-three-quarters of an hour, and the note ‘Also yf ye lyst ye may brynge
-in a dysgysynge’. Similarly <i>Robin Hood</i> is ‘for to be played in
-Maye games’. That books were in fact bought to act from is shown by
-entries in the accounts of Holy Trinity, Bungay, for 1558 of 4<i>d.</i>
-for ‘the interlude and game booke’ and 2<i>s.</i> for ‘writing the
-partes’ (<i>M. S.</i> ii. 343). A book costing only 4<i>d.</i> must
-clearly have been a print.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_586" href="#FNanchor_586" class="label">[586]</a> There are prayers in <i>All for Money</i>, <i>Apius
-and Virginia</i>, <i>Common Conditions</i>, <i>Damon and Pythias</i>,
-<i>Disobedient Child</i> (headed ‘The Players ... kneele downe’),
-<i>King Darius</i>, <i>Like Will to Like</i>, <i>Longer Thou
-Livest</i>, <i>New Custom</i>, <i>Trial of Treasure</i> (epilogue
-headed ‘Praie for all estates’). <i>Mary Magdalen</i> and <i>Tide
-Tarrieth for No Man</i> substitute a mere expression of piety. I do
-not agree with Fleay, 57, that such prayers are evidence of Court
-performance. The reverence and epilogue to the Queen in the belated
-moral of <i>Liberality and Prodigality</i> (1602), 1314, is different
-in tone. <i>The Pedlar’s Prophecy</i>, also belated as regards date
-of print, adds to the usual prayer for Queen and council ‘And that
-honorable T. N. &amp;c. of N. chiefly: Whom as our good Lord and maister,
-found we haue’. No doubt any strolling company purchasing the play
-would fill up the blanks to meet their own case. Probably both the
-Queen and estates and the ‘lord’ of a company were prayed for, whether
-present or absent, so long as the custom lasted; cf. ch. x, p. 311; ch.
-xviii, p. 550.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_587" href="#FNanchor_587" class="label">[587]</a> Cf. e. g. <i>Mary Magdalen</i> (which refers on
-the title-page to those who ‘heare or read the same’), 56, 1479,
-1743; <i>Like Will to Like</i>, sig. C, ‘He ... speaketh the rest
-as stammering as may be’, C ij, ‘Haunce sitteth in the chaire, and
-snorteth as though he were fast a sleep’, E ij<sup>v</sup>, ‘Nichol Newfangle
-lieth on the ground groning’, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_588" href="#FNanchor_588" class="label">[588]</a> <i>Three Ladies of London</i> (1584), <i>Three Lords and
-Three Ladies of London</i> (1590), <i>Pedlar’s Prophecy</i> (1595),
-<i>Contention of Liberality and Prodigality</i> (1602). <i>Lingua</i>
-(1607) is a piece of academic archaism. I cannot believe that the
-manuscript fragment of <i>Love Feigned and Unfeigned</i> belongs to the
-seventeenth century. Of course there are moral elements in other plays,
-such as <i>Histriomastix</i>, especially in dumb-shows and inductions.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_589" href="#FNanchor_589" class="label">[589]</a> There is little evidence as to the price at which
-prints were sold; what there is points to 6<i>d.</i> for a quarto.
-A ‘testerne’ is given in the epistle as the price of <i>Troilus and
-Cressida</i>, and in Middleton, <i>Mayor of Quinborough</i>, v. i, come
-thieves who ‘only take the name of country comedians to abuse simple
-people with a printed play or two, which they bought at Canterbury for
-sixpence’. The statement that the First Folio cost £1 only rests on
-Steevens’s report of a manuscript note in a copy not now known; cf.
-McKerrow in <i>Sh. England</i>, ii. 229.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_590" href="#FNanchor_590" class="label">[590]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Shakespeare.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_591" href="#FNanchor_591" class="label">[591]</a> Cf. App. L. In the above allocation <i>Leir</i> and
-<i>Satiromastix</i>, to each of which two companies have equal claims,
-are counted twice.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_592" href="#FNanchor_592" class="label">[592]</a> Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 148, gives a full list; cf.
-ch. xiii, s.vv. Queen’s, Sussex’s, Strange’s, Admiral’s, Pembroke’s,
-Worcester’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_593" href="#FNanchor_593" class="label">[593]</a> Cf. App. M. Can Moseley have been trying in some way to
-secure plays of which he possessed manuscripts from being <i>acted</i>
-without his consent? On 30 Aug. 1660 (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 249;
-Herbert, 90) he wrote to Sir Henry Herbert, denying that he had ever
-agreed with the managers of the Cockpit and Whitefriars that they
-‘should act any playes that doe belong to mee, without my knowledge and
-consent had and procured’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_594" href="#FNanchor_594" class="label">[594]</a> Printed from <i>Addl. MS.</i> 27632, f. 43, by F. J.
-Furnivall in <i>7 N. Q.</i> (1890), ix. 382. Harington died in 1612.
-An earlier leaf (30) has the date ‘29<sup>th</sup> of Jan. 1609’. The latest
-datable play in the collection is <i>The Turk</i> (1610, S. R. 10
-Mar. 1609). There are four out of six plays printed in 1609, as well
-as <i>The Faithful Shepherdess</i> (<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>), of which on this
-evidence we can reasonably put the date of publication in 1609 or 1610.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_595" href="#FNanchor_595" class="label">[595]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Heywood.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_596" href="#FNanchor_596" class="label">[596]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 364; <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 159. The
-King’s men played <i>The Malcontent</i>, probably after its first
-issue in 1604, as a retort for the appropriation of <i>Jeronimo</i>
-by its owners, the Queen’s Revels. The earliest extant print of <i>1
-Jeronimo</i> is 1605, but the play, which is not in S. R., may have
-been printed earlier. The Chapel boys seem to have revived one at least
-of Lyly’s old Paul’s plays in 1601. The Chamberlain’s adopted <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>, which had been Sussex’s, and Shakespeare revised for
-them <i>Taming of A Shrew</i> and <i>The Contention</i>, which had
-been Pembroke’s, and based plays which were new from the literary, and
-in the case of the last also from the publisher’s, standpoint on the
-<i>Troublesome Reign of John</i> and the <i>Famous Victories of Henry
-V</i>, which had been the Queen’s, and upon <i>King Leir</i>. But of
-course Sussex’s, Pembroke’s, and the Queen’s had broken.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_597" href="#FNanchor_597" class="label">[597]</a> Henslowe, i. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_598" href="#FNanchor_598" class="label">[598]</a> A single printer, Thomas Creede, entered or printed
-ten plays between 1594 and 1599, all of which he probably acquired in
-1594, although he could not get them all in circulation at once. These
-include four (<i>T. T. of Rich. III</i>, <i>Selimus</i>, <i>Famous
-Victories</i>, <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>) from the Queen’s; it is
-therefore probable that some of those on whose t.ps. no company is
-named (<i>Looking Glass</i>, <i>Locrine</i>, <i>Pedlar’s Prophecy</i>,
-<i>James IV</i>, <i>Alphonsus</i>) were from the same source. The
-tenth, <i>Menaechmi</i>, was not an acting play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_599" href="#FNanchor_599" class="label">[599]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 44; cf. ch. ix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_600" href="#FNanchor_600" class="label">[600]</a> The Folio editors of Shakespeare condemn the Quartos,
-or some of them, as ‘stolne, and surreptitious copies’; ‘piratical’,
-although freely used by Mr. Pollard and others, is not a very happy
-term, since no piracy of copyright is involved. The authorized Q<sub>2</sub> of
-<i>Roxana</i> (1632) claims to be ‘a plagiarii unguibus vindicata’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_601" href="#FNanchor_601" class="label">[601]</a> Introduction, xxxvi of his edition.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_602" href="#FNanchor_602" class="label">[602]</a> R. B. McKerrow in <i>Bibl. Soc. Trans.</i> xii. 294;
-J. D. Wilson, <i>The Copy for Hamlet 1603 and the Hamlet Transcript
-1593</i> (1918).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_603" href="#FNanchor_603" class="label">[603]</a> C. Dewischeit, <i>Shakespeare und die Stenographie</i>
-(<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxxiv. 170); cf. Lee, 113, quoting Sir G. Buck’s
-<i>Third Universitie of England</i> (1612; cf. ch. iii), ‘They which
-know it [brachygraphy] can readily take a Sermon, Oration, Play, or any
-long speech, as they are spoke, dictated, acted, and uttered in the
-instant’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_604" href="#FNanchor_604" class="label">[604]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 48; <i>F. and Q.</i> 64. More
-recently A. W. Pollard and J. D. Wilson have developed a theory
-(<i>T. L. S.</i> Jan.–Aug. 1919) that the ‘bad quartos’ rest upon
-pre-Shakespearian texts partly revised by Shakespeare, of which
-shortened transcripts had been made for a travelling company in 1593,
-and which had been roughly adapted by an actor-reporter so as to bring
-them into line with the later Shakespearian texts current at the time
-of publication. Full discussion of this theory belongs to a study of
-Shakespeare. The detailed application of it in J. D. Wilson, <i>The
-Copy for Hamlet 1603 and the Hamlet Transcript 1593</i> (1918), does
-not convince me that Shakespeare had touched the play in 1593, although
-I think that the reporter was in a position to make some slight use of
-a pre-Shakespearian <i>Hamlet</i>. And although travelling companies
-were doubtless smaller than the largest London companies (cf. chh. xi
-and xiii, s.v. Pembroke’s), there is no external evidence that special
-‘books’ were prepared for travelling. For another criticism of the
-theory, cf. W. J. Lawrence in <i>T. L. S.</i> for 21 Aug. 1919. Causes
-other than travelling might explain the shortening of play texts:
-prolixity, even in an experienced dramatist (cf. t.p. of <i>Duchess of
-Malfi</i>), the approach of winter afternoons, an increased popular
-demand for jigs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_605" href="#FNanchor_605" class="label">[605]</a> Cf. G. Wither, <i>Schollers Purgatory</i> (<i>c.</i>
-1625), 28, ‘Yea, by the lawes and Orders of their Corporation, they can
-and do setle upon the particuler members thereof a perpetuall interest
-in such Bookes as are Registred by them at their Hall, in their several
-Names: and are secured in taking the ful benefit of those books, better
-then any Author can be by vertue of the Kings Grant, notwithstanding
-their first Coppies were purloyned from the true owner, or imprinted
-without his leave’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_606" href="#FNanchor_606" class="label">[606]</a> Pollard, <i>F. and Q.</i> 10. Mr. Pollard seems to
-suggest (<i>F. and Q.</i> 3) that copyright in a printed book did not
-hold as against the author. He cites the case of Nashe’s <i>Pierce
-Pennilesse</i>, but there seems no special reason to assume that in
-this case, or in those of <i>Gorboduc</i> and <i>Hamlet</i>, the
-authorized second editions were not made possible by an arrangement,
-very likely involving blackmail, with the pirate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_607" href="#FNanchor_607" class="label">[607]</a> Letter in Grosart, <i>Poems of Sidney</i> (1877), i.
-xxiii. Pollard, <i>F. and Q.</i> 8, says that on other occasions
-Sidney’s friends approached the Lord Treasurer and the Star Chamber.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_608" href="#FNanchor_608" class="label">[608]</a> Pollard, <i>F. and Q.</i> 7, 11. I am not sure that the
-appearance of Bacon’s name can be regarded as a recognition of the
-principle of author’s copyright. He may have been already in the High
-Commission; he was certainly in that of 1601.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_609" href="#FNanchor_609" class="label">[609]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 49, 51, speaks of Burby as
-‘regaining the copyright’ by his publications, and as, moreover, saving
-his sixpences ‘as a license was only required for new books’. But
-surely there was no copyright, as neither Danter nor Burby paid for an
-entry. I take it that when, on 22 Jan. 1607, <i>R. J.</i> and <i>L. L.
-L.</i> were entered to Nicholas Ling, ‘by direccõn of a Court and with
-consent of Master Burby in wrytinge’, the entry of the transfer secured
-the copyright for the first time.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_610" href="#FNanchor_610" class="label">[610]</a> Arber, iii. 37. The ink shows that there are two
-distinct entries.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_611" href="#FNanchor_611" class="label">[611]</a> Fleay, <i>L. and W.</i> 40; Furness, <i>Much Ado</i>,
-ix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_612" href="#FNanchor_612" class="label">[612]</a> Pollard, <i>F. and Q.</i> 66; <i>Sh. F.</i> 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_613" href="#FNanchor_613" class="label">[613]</a> Roberts did not print the 1603 <i>Hamlet</i>, although
-he did that of 1604; but it must have been covered by his entry of
-1602, and this makes it a little difficult to regard him (or Blount in
-1609) as the ‘agent’ of the Chamberlain’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_614" href="#FNanchor_614" class="label">[614]</a> Pollard, <i>F. and Q.</i> 66; <i>Sh. F.</i> 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_615" href="#FNanchor_615" class="label">[615]</a> There are analogies in <i>Taming of the Shrew</i>, <i>2,
-3 Henry VI</i>, and <i>King John</i>, which were not entered in S. R.
-with the other unprinted plays in 1623, and were probably regarded as
-covered by copyright in the plays on which they were based, although,
-as a matter of fact, the <i>Troublesome Reign</i> was itself not
-entered.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_616" href="#FNanchor_616" class="label">[616]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_617" href="#FNanchor_617" class="label">[617]</a> They had risks to run. The Star Chamber fined and
-imprisoned William Buckner, late chaplain to the archbishop,
-for licensing Prynne’s <i>Histriomastix</i> in 1633 (Rushworth,
-<i>Historical Collections</i>, ii. 234).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_618" href="#FNanchor_618" class="label">[618]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 364; <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 159.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_619" href="#FNanchor_619" class="label">[619]</a> Moseley’s <i>Epistle</i> to F<sub>1</sub> (1647) of Beaumont and
-Fletcher says, ‘When these <i>Comedies</i> and <i>Tragedies</i> were
-presented on the Stage, the <i>Actours</i> omitted some <i>Scenes</i>
-and Passages (with the <i>Authour’s</i> consent) as occasion led them;
-and when private friends desir’d a Copy, they then (and justly too)
-transcribed what they Acted’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_620" href="#FNanchor_620" class="label">[620]</a> See <i>Epistles</i> to Armin, <i>Two Maids of
-Moreclack</i>; Chapman, <i>Widow’s Tears</i>; Heywood, <i>Rape of
-Lucrece</i>, <i>Golden Age</i>; Marston, <i>Malcontent</i>; Middleton,
-<i>Family of Love</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_621" href="#FNanchor_621" class="label">[621]</a> Jonson, <i>E. M. O.</i> (1600), ‘As it was first
-composed by the Author B. I. Containing more than hath been publikely
-spoken or acted’; Barnes, <i>Devil’s Charter</i> (1607), ‘As it was
-plaide.... But more exactly reuewed, corrected, and augmented since by
-the Author, for the more pleasure and profit of the Reader’; Webster,
-<i>Duchess of Malfi</i> (1623), ‘with diuerse things Printed, that the
-length of the Play would not beare in the Presentment’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_622" href="#FNanchor_622" class="label">[622]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 57; <i>F. and Q.</i> 117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_623" href="#FNanchor_623" class="label">[623]</a> The editors of the Shakespeare F<sub>1</sub> claim that they
-are replacing ‘stolne, and surreptitious copies’ by plays ‘absolute
-in their numbers, as he conceiued them’, and that ‘wee haue scarse
-receiued from him a blot in his papers’; and those of the Beaumont
-and Fletcher F<sub>1</sub> say they ‘had the Originalls from such as received
-them from the Authors themselves’ and lament ‘into how many hands the
-Originalls were dispersed’. The same name ‘original’ was used for the
-authoritative copy of a civic miracle-play; cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>,
-ii. 143.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_624" href="#FNanchor_624" class="label">[624]</a> The manuscripts of <i>Sir John Barnevelt</i> (<i>Addl.
-MS.</i> 18653), <i>Believe As You List</i> (<i>Egerton MS.</i> 2828),
-<i>The Honest Man’s Fortune</i> (<i>Dyce MS.</i> 9), <i>The Faithful
-Friends</i> (<i>Dyce MS.</i> 10), and <i>The Sisters</i> (<i>Sion
-College MS.</i>) appear to be play-house copies, with licensing
-corrections, and in some cases the licences endorsed, and some of
-them may be in the authors’ autographs; cf. Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i>
-59; Mönkemeyer, 72. Several of the copies in <i>Egerton MS.</i> 1994,
-described by F. S. Boas in <i>3 Library</i> (July 1917), including that
-of <i>1 Richard II</i>, are of a similar type.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_625" href="#FNanchor_625" class="label">[625]</a> Sir Henry Herbert noted in his office-book in 1633
-(<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 208), ‘The Master ought to have copies of their
-new playes left with him, that he may be able to shew what he hath
-allowed or disallowed’, but it was clearly not the current practice. In
-1640 (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 241) he suppressed an unlicensed play, and
-noted, ‘The play I cald for, and, forbiddinge the playinge of it, keepe
-the booke’, which suggests that only one copy existed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_626" href="#FNanchor_626" class="label">[626]</a> Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 155, prints it; cf. <i>1
-Antonio and Mellida</i>, ind. 1, ‘Enter ... with parts in their hands’;
-<i>Wily Beguiled</i>, prol. 1, ‘Where are these paltrie Plaiers? stil
-poaring in their papers and neuer perfect?’ By derivation, the words
-assigned to an actor became his ‘part’; cf. Dekker, <i>News from
-Hell</i> (1606, <i>Works</i>, ii. 144), ‘with pittifull action, like a
-Plaier, when hees out of his part’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_627" href="#FNanchor_627" class="label">[627]</a> In 1623 Herbert re-allowed <i>The Winter’s Tale</i>,
-‘thogh the allowed booke was missinge’, and in 1625 <i>The Honest Man’s
-Fortune</i>, ‘the originall being lost’ (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 229).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_628" href="#FNanchor_628" class="label">[628]</a> Cf. App. N.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_629" href="#FNanchor_629" class="label">[629]</a> The handing over of ‘papers’ is referred to in several
-letters to Henslowe; cf. <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56, 69, 75, 76, 81,
-82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_630" href="#FNanchor_630" class="label">[630]</a> He sends Henslowe an instalment ‘fayr written’, and on
-another occasion says, ‘I send you the foule sheet and y<sup>e</sup> fayr I was
-wrighting as your man can testify’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 72, 78).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_631" href="#FNanchor_631" class="label">[631]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 62.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_632" href="#FNanchor_632" class="label">[632]</a> <i>Birth of Hercules</i>, 3, ‘Notae marginales
-inseruiant dirigendae histrion[ic]ae’; Nashe, <i>Summer’s Last Will
-and Testament</i>, 1813, ‘You might haue writ in the margent of your
-play-booke, Let there be a fewe rushes laide in the place where
-<i>Back-winter</i> shall tumble, for feare of raying his cloathes: or
-set downe, Enter <i>Back-winter</i>, with his boy bringing a brush
-after him, to take off the dust if need require. But you will ne’re
-haue any wardrobe wit while you live. I pray you holde the booke well,
-that we be not <i>non plus</i> in the latter end of the play.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_633" href="#FNanchor_633" class="label">[633]</a> ‘Exit’ and ‘Exeunt’ soon became the traditional
-directions for leaving the stage, but I find ‘Exite omnes’ in Peele,
-<i>Edw. I</i>, 1263.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_634" href="#FNanchor_634" class="label">[634]</a> Mönkemeyer, 73.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_635" href="#FNanchor_635" class="label">[635]</a> <i>T. N. K.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iii. 69, ‘2 Hearses ready
-with Palamon: and Arcite: the 3 Queenes. Theseus: and his Lordes
-ready’, i.e. ready for <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv, which begins 42 lines later;
-and again <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 29, ‘3 Hearses ready’, for <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> v,
-beginning 24 lines later. So too <i>Bussy D’Ambois</i> (1641, not
-1607 ed.), <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 153, ‘Table, Chesbord and Tapers behind the
-Arras’, ready for <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_636" href="#FNanchor_636" class="label">[636]</a> <i>A Shrew</i>, ind. i, ‘San.’ for speaker; <i>The
-Shrew</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), ind. i. 88, ‘Sincklo’ for speaker; <i>3 Hen. VI</i>
-(F<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 48, ‘Enter Gabriel’; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 1,
-‘Enter Sinklo, and Humfrey’; <i>R. J.</i> (Q<sub>2</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 102,
-‘Enter Will Kemp’; <i>M. N. D.</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 128, ‘Tawyer
-with a Trumpet before them’; <i>1 Hen. IV</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii.
-182 (text, not s.d.), ‘Falstaffe, Haruey, Rossill, and Gadshil, shall
-rob those men that we haue already waylaid’ (cf. <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii); <i>2
-Hen. IV</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 1, ‘Enter Sincklo and three or
-foure officers’; <i>M. Ado</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iii. 38, ‘Enter
-Prince, Leonato, Claudio and Iacke Wilson’; <i>M. Ado</i> (Q and F),
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii, ‘Cowley’ and ‘Kemp’ for speakers; <i>T.N.K.</i> v. 3,
-‘T. Tucke: Curtis’, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 75, ‘Enter Messenger, Curtis’;
-<i>1 Antonio and Mellida</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 30, ‘Enter Andrugio,
-Lucio, Cole, and Norwood’; for other examples, cf. pp. 227, 271, 285,
-295, 330, and vol. iv, p. 43. The indications of speakers by the
-letters E. and G. in <i>All’s Well</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span>
-i, ii, vi, may have a similar origin. The names of actors are entered
-in the ‘plots’ after those of the characters represented (cf.
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 127).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_637" href="#FNanchor_637" class="label">[637]</a> <i>Alphonsus</i>, prol. 1, ‘after you haue sounded
-thrise’; 1938, ‘Exit Venus. Or, if you can conueniently, let a chaire
-come down from the top of the stage’; <i>James IV</i>, 1463, ‘Enter
-certaine Huntsmen, if you please, singing’; 1931, ‘Enter, from the
-widdowes house, a seruice, musical songs of marriages, or a maske, or
-what prettie triumph you list’; <i>Three Lords and Three Ladies of
-London</i>, sig. C, ‘Here Simp[licitie] sings first, and Wit after,
-dialoguewise, both to musicke if ye will’; <i>Locrine</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i. 1, ‘Let there come foorth a Lion running after a Beare or any other
-beast’; <i>Death of R. Hood</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii, ‘Enter or aboue
-[Hubert, Chester]’; <i>2 Hen. VI</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 33, ‘Enter Cade
-[etc.] with infinite numbers’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ix. 9, ‘Enter Multitudes
-with Halters about their Neckes’; <i>T. A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 70, ‘as
-many as can be’; <i>Edw. I</i>, 50, ‘Enter ... and others as many as
-may be’; <i>Sir T. More</i>, sc. ix. 954, ‘Enter ... so many Aldermen
-as may’; <i>What You Will</i>, v. 193, ‘Enter as many Pages with
-torches as you can’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_638" href="#FNanchor_638" class="label">[638]</a> Mönkemeyer, 63, 91.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_639" href="#FNanchor_639" class="label">[639]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_640" href="#FNanchor_640" class="label">[640]</a> e.g. <i>R. J.</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 94, ‘Tibalt
-vnder Romeos arme thrusts Mercutio in and flyes’; <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii.
-32, ‘Enter Nurse wringing her hands, with the ladder of cordes in her
-lap’; <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v. 95, ‘They all but the Nurse goe foorth, casting
-Rosemary on her and shutting the Curtens’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_641" href="#FNanchor_641" class="label">[641]</a> Cf. ch. xxi, pp. 133, 136.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_642" href="#FNanchor_642" class="label">[642]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 71; Van Dam and Stoffel,
-<i>William Shakespeare, Prosody and Text</i>, 274; <i>Chapters on
-English Printing, Prosody, and Pronunciation</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_643" href="#FNanchor_643" class="label">[643]</a> R. B. McKerrow, introd. xiv, to Barnes, <i>Devil’s
-Charter</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_644" href="#FNanchor_644" class="label">[644]</a> Pollard, <i>Sh. F.</i> 74; cf. his introd. to <i>A New
-Shakespeare Quarto</i> (1916).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_645" href="#FNanchor_645" class="label">[645]</a> Epistles to Heywood, <i>Rape of Lucrece</i>; Marston,
-<i>Malcontent</i>, <i>Fawn</i>; Middleton, <i>Family of Love</i>. In
-<i>Father Hubburd’s Tales</i> Middleton says, ‘I never wished this
-book a better fortune than to fall into the hands of a truespelling
-printer’. Heywood, in an Epistle to <i>Apology for Actors</i> (1612),
-praises the honest workmanship of his printer, Nicholas Okes, as
-against that of W. Jaggard, who would not let him issue <i>errata</i>
-of ‘the infinite faults escaped in my booke of <i>Britaines Troy</i>,
-by the negligence of the Printer, as the misquotations, mistaking of
-sillables, misplacing halfe lines, coining of strange and neuer heard
-of words’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_646" href="#FNanchor_646" class="label">[646]</a> ‘Proofs’ and ‘revises’ had come into use before 1619,
-for Jaggard, criticized by Ralph Brooke for his ill printing of
-Brooke’s <i>Catalogue of Nobility</i> (1619), issued a new edition as
-<i>A Discoverie of Errors in the First Edition of the Catalogue of
-Nobility</i> (1622), regretting that his workmen had not given Brooke
-leave to print his own faulty English, and saying, ‘In the time of this
-his vnhappy sicknesse, though hee came not in person to ouer-looke the
-Presse, yet the Proofe, and Reuiewes duly attended him, and he perused
-them (as is well to be iustifyed) in the maner he did before’; cf. p.
-261.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_647" href="#FNanchor_647" class="label">[647]</a> Cf. pp. 106, 107, 117, 127.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_648" href="#FNanchor_648" class="label">[648]</a> e.g. <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> (F<sub>1</sub>), ‘The Scene
-Gargaphie’; <i>Philaster</i> (F<sub>2</sub>), ‘The scene being in Cicilie’;
-<i>Coxcomb</i> (F<sub>2</sub>), ‘The Scene; England, France’ (but in fact there
-are no scenes in France!).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_649" href="#FNanchor_649" class="label">[649]</a> <i>The Marriage of Wit and Wisdom</i> has no acts, but
-nine scenes. The latish <i>Jacob and Esau</i>, <i>Respublica</i>,
-<i>Misogonus</i>, <i>Conflict of Conscience</i> have acts and scenes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_650" href="#FNanchor_650" class="label">[650]</a> <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i>, <i>Gammer Gurton’s
-Needle</i>, <i>Gorboduc</i>, <i>Gismund of Salerne</i>, <i>Misfortunes
-of Arthur</i>, <i>Jocasta</i>, <i>Supposes</i>, <i>Bugbears</i>,
-<i>Two Italian Gentlemen</i>, <i>Glass of Government</i>, <i>Promos
-and Cassandra</i>, <i>Arraignment of Paris</i>; so, too, as a rule,
-University plays. <i>Dido</i> and <i>Love and Fortune</i>, like the
-later private theatre plays, show acts only.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_651" href="#FNanchor_651" class="label">[651]</a> <i>Devil’s Charter</i>, <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>,
-<i>Philotas</i>, <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, <i>The Turk</i>,
-<i>Liberality and Prodigality</i>, Percy’s plays, <i>The Woman
-Hater</i>, <i>Monsieur Thomas</i>, <i>2 Antonio and Mellida</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_652" href="#FNanchor_652" class="label">[652]</a> Acts and scenes are marked in <i>Tamburlaine</i> and
-<i>Locrine</i>; acts, or one or more of them only, sometimes with the
-first scene, in <i>Jack Straw</i>, <i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, <i>Wounds
-of Civil War</i>, <i>King Leire</i>, <i>Alphonsus</i>, <i>James IV</i>,
-<i>Soliman and Perseda</i>, <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>, <i>John a Kent
-and John a Cumber</i>; a few scenes without acts in <i>Death of Robin
-Hood</i>. These exceptions may indicate neo-classic sympathies in
-the earlier group of scholar playwrights; some later plays, e.g. of
-Beaumont and Fletcher, have partial divisions. The acts in <i>Spanish
-Tragedy</i> and <i>Jack Straw</i> are four only; <i>Histriomastix</i>,
-a private theatre play, has six. Where there are no formal divisions,
-they are sometimes replaced by passages of induction or dumb-shows.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_653" href="#FNanchor_653" class="label">[653]</a> Cf. ch. xxi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_654" href="#FNanchor_654" class="label">[654]</a> Pollard, <i>F. and Q.</i> 124; <i>Sh. F.</i> 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_655" href="#FNanchor_655" class="label">[655]</a> Creizenach, 248.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_656" href="#FNanchor_656" class="label">[656]</a> <i>Melville’s Diary</i> (Bannatyne Club), 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_657" href="#FNanchor_657" class="label">[657]</a> R. Hudson, <i>Memorials of a Warwickshire Parish</i>,
-141.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_658" href="#FNanchor_658" class="label">[658]</a> Lodge, <i>Defence of Plays</i>, 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_659" href="#FNanchor_659" class="label">[659]</a> Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>, 133.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_660" href="#FNanchor_660" class="label">[660]</a> <i>Plays Confuted</i>, 167</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_661" href="#FNanchor_661" class="label">[661]</a> <i>School of Abuse</i>, 40.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_662" href="#FNanchor_662" class="label">[662]</a> Lodge, <i>Defence of Plays</i>, 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_663" href="#FNanchor_663" class="label">[663]</a> <i>Plays Confuted</i>, 165.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_664" href="#FNanchor_664" class="label">[664]</a> <i>Repentance</i> (Grosart, xii. 177).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_665" href="#FNanchor_665" class="label">[665]</a> Grosart, xii. 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_666" href="#FNanchor_666" class="label">[666]</a> Ibid. viii. 128.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_667" href="#FNanchor_667" class="label">[667]</a> Ibid. vii. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_668" href="#FNanchor_668" class="label">[668]</a> App. M; cf. E. Köppel (<i>Archiv</i>, cii. 357); W. Bang
-(<i>E. S.</i> xxviii. 229).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_669" href="#FNanchor_669" class="label">[669]</a> Grosart, vi. 86, 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_670" href="#FNanchor_670" class="label">[670]</a> Grosart, vi. 31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_671" href="#FNanchor_671" class="label">[671]</a> Sig. A 3<sup>v</sup>. <i>Farewell to Folly</i> was entered on
-S. R. on 11 June 1587 (Arber, ii. 471), but the first extant edition
-of 1591 was probably the first published, and the use of the term
-‘Martinize’ in the preface dates it as at least post-1589 (cf. Simpson,
-ii. 349).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_672" href="#FNanchor_672" class="label">[672]</a> Grosart, xi. 75.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_673" href="#FNanchor_673" class="label">[673]</a> <i>Strange News</i> (Nashe, i. 271); cf. <i>Pierce
-Penniless; his Supplication to the Devil</i> (Nashe, i. 198) and
-<i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (Nashe, iii. 130). The passage
-about ‘make-plays’ is in an Epistle only found in some copies of <i>The
-Lamb of God</i> (Nashe, v. 180).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_674" href="#FNanchor_674" class="label">[674]</a> This allusion is not in the extant 1592 editions of the
-pamphlet (Grosart, xi. 206, 258).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_675" href="#FNanchor_675" class="label">[675]</a> Ed. Grosart, i. 167.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_676" href="#FNanchor_676" class="label">[676]</a> Ed. McKerrow, i. 247.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_677" href="#FNanchor_677" class="label">[677]</a> Ed. Gosart, ii. 222, 322.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_678" href="#FNanchor_678" class="label">[678]</a> Ed. McKerrow, iii. 131.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_679" href="#FNanchor_679" class="label">[679]</a> Arber, ii. 620.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_680" href="#FNanchor_680" class="label">[680]</a> App. C, No. xlviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="transnote">Transcriber’s Notes:<br />
-
-1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been corrected silently.<br />
-
-2. Original spelling has been retained where appropriate.<br />
-
-3. Some hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have been
-retained as in the original.<br />
-
-4. The heading hierarchy used follows the original publication and consequently in some
-chapters the h2 level has been skipped.</p>
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